Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 286South Africa
Arnaud v Balanced Future Fund (24757/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 286 (3 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Arnaud v Balanced Future Fund (24757/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 286 (3 May 2022)
Arnaud v Balanced Future Fund (24757/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 286 (3 May 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 24757/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
03 MAY 2022
In
the matter between:
JOHANN
ST
ARNAUD
Applicant
And
BALANCED
FUTURE
FUND
Respondent
REGISTRATION
NO: 12/8/33835
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicant is one of three surviving siblings of the deceased who
was
a member of the Balanced Future Fund, the First Respondent, which
is a pension fund registered in terms of section 4 of the Pension
Funds Act, Act 24 of 1956 (“the Act”).
[2]
The deceased died while he was still a member of the First Respondent
(hereinafter
“the Fund”) on 12 August 2018, certain
benefits became payable by the Fund to only the deceased’s
dependants
and nominees. This is in terms of section 37C of the Act.
[3]
The Applicant brings this application on his behalf and on behalf of
his
two siblings.
[4]
The Applicant seeks to review and set aside a distribution decision
made
by the Second Respondent (the board of the First Respondent) in
terms of section 37C of the Pension Funds Act, Act 24 of 1956 (“PFA”)
on the basis that the decision is irrational;
[5]
In terms of the impugned distribution decision the entire death
benefits
of Dan St Arnaud (“Deceased”) in the Fund were
paid to one Sean St Arnaud, the deceased's estranged, adult adopted
son (“the estranged son, Sean”), incorrectly and contrary
to a determination of the Pension Funds Adjudicator (“PFA”)
that had previously found exactly the same decision to be "unjust,
inequitable, irrational" and in which the Trustees
had “unduly
fettered their discretion”.
[6]
Applicant seeks an order setting aside this decision of the Fund and
Trustees;
and, that this court substitutes this decision with an
order that accords with the prayers of the Applicant set forth in the
Notice
of Motion or any such order as the Honourable Court deems fit.
[7]
It was submitted in the Applicant’s heads of argument that
should this
court consider it appropriate, it should set aside the
decision of the Fund and Trustees and order them to apply to the
Financial
Services Tribunal ("FST") for reconsideration (of
the decision of the PFA) in terms of section 230 of the Financial
Sector
Regulation Act, Act 9 of 2017 (“Financial Sector
Regulation Act” or “FSRA”).
[8]
This application also seeks to prohibit the Fund from deducting from
the
death benefit payable any costs other than costs expressly
allowed in terms of the Rules of the Balanced Future Fund.
[9]
That the costs of this application be borne by the First and Second
Respondents,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved on a scale between attorney and client.
[10]
The Applicant further alleges that, but for this impugned decision,
the benefits would, in
accordance with the wishes of the deceased,
which have been made abundantly clear in his lifetime, not have
devolved upon the estranged
son Sean, but upon the Applicant and his
two sisters; the three of them being the surviving siblings of the
deceased.
[11]
The First Respondent contends that in terms of section 37C, the board
is required to determine
whether there are dependants and/or
nominees. In the event that, as in this case, there is only (1)
dependant as defined in section
1 of the PFA, and zero (0) nominees,
the board was obliged to distribute the entire benefit to the only
dependant. That sole dependant
happens to be the deceased’s
estranged son Sean.
[12]
The term “dependant” is defined in section 1 of the Act
whereas “nominee”
is defined in section 37C of the Act.
[13]
Acting in terms of
section 37C of the Act, the Fund’s board of management (“the
board”) determined that only the
deceased’s estranged
adopted son, qualified as a “dependant” in terms of the
statutory definition and allocated
the entire benefit to him. The
Applicant and his siblings do not qualify as either dependants or
nominees as defined and contemplated
in the Act.
[1]
They are therefore not entitled to any benefit in terms of the
Act.
[2]
That should ordinarily
be the end of the matter.
[14]
The First Respondent contends that since neither the Applicant nor
his siblings are dependants
or nominees, as defined in the PFA, they
are not entitled to the relief they seek and the application stands
to be dismissed with
costs, including costs of two counsel.
[15]
Section 37C read with section 1 of the PFA regulate the distribution
of benefits upon the death
of a member of a pension fund. The
relevant provisions of section 37C of the PFA provide as follows:
“
37C. Disposition
of pension benefits upon death of member.— (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any
law or in the rules of a
registered fund, any benefit (other than a benefit payable as a
pension to the spouse or child of the
member in terms of the rules of
a registered fund, which must be dealt with in terms of such rules)
payable by such a fund upon
the death of a member, shall, subject to
a pledge in accordance with section 19 (5) (b) (i) and subject to the
provisions of sections
37A and 37D, not form part of the assets in
the estate of such a member, but shall be dealt with in the following
manner:
(a) lf the fund within
twelve months of the death of the member becomes aware of or traces a
dependant or dependants of the member,
the benefit shall be paid to
such dependant or, as may be deemed equitable by the board, to one of
such dependants or in proportions
to some of or all such dependants.
(b) If the fund does not
become aware of or cannot trace any dependant of the member within
twelve months of the death of the member,
and the member has
designated in writing to the fund a nominee who is not a dependant of
the member, to receive the benefit or
such portion of the benefit as
is specified by the member in writing to the fund, the benefit or
such portion of the benefit shall
be paid to such nominee: Provided
that where the aggregate amount of the debts in the estate of the
member exceeds the aggregate
amount of the assets in his estate, so
much of the benefit as is equal to the difference between such
aggregate amount of debts
and such aggregate amount of assets shall
be paid into the estate and the balance of such benefit or the
balance of such portion
of the benefit as specified by the member in
writing to the fund shall be paid to the nominee.
(bA) If a member has a
dependant and the member has also designated in writing to the fund a
nominee to receive the benefit or such
portion of the benefit as is
specified by the member in writing to the fund, the fund shall within
twelve months of the death of
such member pay the benefit or such
portion thereof to such dependant or nominee in such proportions as
the board may deem equitable:
Provided that this paragraph shall only
apply to the designation of a nominee made on or after 30 June 1989:
Provided further that,
in respect of a designation made on or after
the said date, this paragraph shall not prohibit a fund from paying
the benefit, either
to a dependant or nominee contemplated in this
paragraph or, if there is more than one such dependant or nominee, in
proportions
to any or all of those dependants and nominees.
(c)
…”
(own emphasis).
[16]
The SCA interpreted Section 37C of the Act to mean that the benefits
must
be disposed of according to the subsection’s
statutory scheme. (
Kaplan & Another NNO v Professional &
Executive Retirement Fund & Others
1999 (3) SA 798
(A) at p83.
)
[17]
The subsection’s statutory scheme makes it clear that a benefit
payable upon the death
of a member can only be paid to dependants and
nominees, and where there are no dependants and nominees, to the
estate.
[18]
Where there is only one dependant, or where there are only
dependants, section 37C(1)(a) decrees
that the benefit should be paid
to that dependant or those dependants only. The board has no
discretion in this regard. It must
comply with the provisions of
section 37C of the Act. Issues of fairness and equity do not come
into consideration.
[19]
The term dependant is defined in section 1 of the act as follows:
“
dependant”,
in relation to a member, means-
(a) a person in respect
of whom the member is legally liable for maintenance;
(b) a person in respect
of whom the member is not legally liable for maintenance, if such
person-
(i) was, in the opinion
of the board, upon the death of the member in fact dependent on the
member for maintenance;
(ii) is the spouse of the
member;
(iii) is a child of the
member, including a posthumous child, an adopted child and a child
born out of wedlock.
(c) a person in respect
of whom the member would have become legally liable for maintenance,
had the member not died; (own emphasis)
[20]
The term dependant expressly includes an adopted child. It is common
cause that Sean was an
adopted child of the deceased. He therefore
qualifies as a dependant in terms of the statutory regime applicable.
[21]
The sole basis upon which the Applicant contends that Sean should be
denied the benefit is
that he and the deceased were estranged at the
time of the deceased’s death. There is no merit to this
contention.
[22]
The FST was confronted with the same issue in
Momentum Retirement
Annuity Fund vs VR KRZUS and Another (PFA53/2019) [2020] Financial
Services Tribunal (09 March 2020)
. 21. In that matter the facts
were that the deceased member and a spouse who was a sole dependant
were estranged for several years.
The tribunal found that the fact of
the estrangement did not disqualify her from receiving the benefit.
[23]
The Act does not define the term “nominee” in section 1.
In section 37C, the legislature
refers to a situation where:
“
the member has
designated in writing to the fund a nominee who is not a dependant of
the member, to receive the benefit or such
portion of the benefit as
is specified by the member in writing to the fund.”
[24]
It is therefore clear that what is
contemplated by the legislature is that in order for a person to
qualify as a nominee, that person
must have:
24.1
Been designated by the member in
writing to the Fund;
24.2
Must not be a dependant;
24.3
Been designated by the member to
receive the benefit or a portion of the benefit in writing to the
Fund.
[25]
In
Matlonya v FundsAtWork Umbrella Pension Fund and another [2017]
2 BPLR 294 (PFA) at para 5.6,
The Adjudicator said:
“
5.6 The term
“nominee” is not defined in the Act and for a beneficiary
to claim to be a nominee, there must exist a
valid nomination form.
The nomination must be in writing and the beneficiary must not be a
dependant. The nominee is distinguishable
from a dependant in that, a
nominee is not by virtue of having been nominated entitled to a death
benefit. The board is not bound
by the nomination form completed by
the deceased, instead the nomination form serves merely as a guide to
assist it in the exercise
of its discretion (see
Mashazi
v African Products Retirement Benefit Provident Fund [2002] 8 BPLR
3703 (W) at 3705I—3706C).”
[26]
In
Gowing v Lifestyle Retirement Annuity and Others [2007] 2 BPLR
212 (PFA)
at para 7.3, the then Adjudicator said:
“
7.3 A nominee is a
person designated in writing by the deceased to receive the benefit,
or a portion thereof. “Dependant”
is defined in section 1
of the Act to include a broad category of persons who were
financially dependent on the deceased (factually
or legally), or who
stood in a particular family relationship to him, such as a spouse or
child, major or minor, or who would have
become legally dependent on
the deceased had the deceased notionally been alive.”
[27]
The Applicant and his siblings have not been designated by the member
in writing to the Fund
to receive the benefit or any portion of the
benefit. They do not, therefore, qualify as nominees and must be
excluded from the
distribution.
[28]
The Applicants are at liberty to produce that nomination if they
claim it exists. The Fund
has not, despite a diligent search, been
able to find any nomination designating the Applicant and his
siblings to receive the
benefit.
[29]
In the heads of argument filed on behalf of the Applicant, his
counsel submits at paragraph
63:
“
63. The Applicant
contends, for various reasons that have been made throughout the
course of this matter, from as early as directly
after the making
known of the first decision of the Trustees to award all benefits to
the estranged son, that the deceased would
have completed and
provided a nomination form; and that this form, which the Fund, the
Third Respondent, the fund administrator,
Robson and Savage ("Robson
Savage', and the Fourth Respondent, the employer, PG Bison ("PG
Bison") were duty-bound
to obtain and keep safely, has been lost
or destroyed.”
[30]
From the above paragraph it becomes clear that no designation in
writing to the Fund existed
as at the date of the deceased’s
death. The allegation that it may have existed in the past but was
lost or destroyed is
not supported by any facts and is fictional in
nature.
[31]
That the benefit does not form part of the deceased’s estate is
trite. The deceased’s
testament is not relevant to these
proceedings. The will cannot be used as a basis to contend that the
Applicant and his siblings
are entitled to receive a benefit in the
Fund.
[32]
In paragraph 2 of the heads of argument filed on behalf of the
Applicant, it is suggested that
one of the alternative prayers sought
is an order that the Fund should apply to the Financial Services
Tribunal (“FST”)
for reconsideration (of the decision of
the PFA) in terms of section 230 of the Financial Sector Regulation
Act, Act 9 of 2017
(“Financial Sector Regulation Act” or
“FSRA”).
[33]
Counsel for the Respondents submitted that such an order was not
sought in the notice of motion.
It cannot be sought in the heads of
argument. Counsel further submitted that it was open to the applicant
to amend his notice of
motion and seek that order if he so wished.
The Respondents’ Counsel had not exercised that option. There
is merit in both
submissions.
[34]
The Court cannot competently choose for the Respondents which forum
they should approach to
resolve their grievances.
[35]
Having regard to the statutory provisions and decisions analysed
above, it becomes abundantly
clear that the application by the
Applicant is devoid of merit and cannot succeed.
[36]
In the circumstances I make the following order:
The
application is dismissed with costs including costs of two Counsel
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Judgment: 3 MAY 2022
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv. M. Tromp
Instructed
by: St Arnaud Attorneys
398
Central Park Way
Strubenkop
Village
Lynnwood
PRETORIA
Tel:
012 348 0852
Fax:
086 623 2754
On
behalf of the Respondents: Adv. S. Khumalo S.C.
With: Adv. A. Mbatha
Instructed
by: Jonathan Mort Inc.
2
Hermitage Terrace
Richmond
JOHANNESBURG
e-mail:
vbell@mortlaw.net
[1]
Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit P 327 paragraph
38; Page 354
para 141.
[2]
Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit P 344 para 99.
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