Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 313South Africa
P.M.M N.O and Another v D.M N.O and Another (26855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 313 (4 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## P.M.M N.O and Another v D.M N.O and Another (26855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 313 (4 May 2022)
P.M.M N.O and Another v D.M N.O and Another (26855/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 313 (4 May 2022)
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sino date 4 May 2022
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Certain
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 26855/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
3
May 2022
In
the matter between:
P[....]
M[....]2
M[....]1
N
O
1
st
Applicant
(In
his capacity as appointed trustee of the
Tshedza
Business Trust, the LMZ Property
Trust,
the LMZ Business Trust and the LMZ
Family
Trust)
JEFFREY
GORDON
WISEMAN
N
O
2
nd
Applicant
(In
his capacity as nominee of Momentum Trust,
Trustee
of the Tshedza Business Trust, the LMZ
Property
Trust, the LMZ Business Trust and LMZ
Family
Trust)
and
D[....]
M[....]1
N
O
1
st
Respondent
(In
her capacity as appointed trustee of the
Tshedza
Business Trust, the LMZ Property
Trust,
the LMZ Business Trust and LMZ
Family
Trust
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
2
nd
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
(Judgment
was heard in open court but delivered electronically by uploading
onto Case Lines to the electronic file of this matter
electronically
submitted
to
the parties/their representatives
by Case Lines and Email)
[1]
The present application and counter
application before the court
stems from a marriage relationship which ran aground and settled on
the rocky shores of the divorce
courts door. The 1
st
applicant and 1
st
respondent were married to one another
but drifted apart into the divorce court where the estranged marriage
was finally dissolved
on 6 September 2021. The divorce proceedings
continued and unlike the Titanic, it took more than six years to be
laid to rest,
or so it looked.
[2]
The parties, while still in calm waters,
created four trusts (cited
above in the heading) and were appointed by the Master of the High
Court as trustees of the above mentioned
trusts. The Master issued
the necessary letters of authority on 30 April 2014.
[3]
It is common cause that the 1
st
respondent, for reasons of
her own, did not participate in the management of the trusts as was
required from the diligent trustee.
She however avers that the
conduct of the 1
st
applicant made it impossible for her to
attend to her duties as trustee. It is further common cause that the
1
st
respondent, despite being invited to attend to trustee
meetings on numerous occasions, she did not attend any meeting since
16
November 2017 until recently during 2021. For almost five years
she did not attend to trustee meetings. I will deal with her reasons
for not attending below.
[4]
Although the 1
st
applicant and 1
st
respondent
disagree with what the other one deposed to, there is in my view no
real material disputes as envisaged in Rule 6(5)(g)
of the Uniform
Rules of Court to refer the matter for oral evidence. I am satisfied
that the matter can be adjudicated on the papers
as is. See
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice Vol 2 p 01-69
and in particular
Plascon
Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A)
at 634.
In my view a robust approach in hearing and deciding in
this matter is warranted.
JURISDICTION:
[5]
The 1
st
respondent raised the issue of alleged lack of
jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter. The parties (referring
to the 1
st
applicant and 1
st
respondent were
residing in Klerksdorp in the now North West Province when the Mater
of the Pretoria High Court issued their letters
of authorization as
trustees for the respective trusts. Klerksdorp was then still within
the jurisdiction of this court. The divorce
action was also
instituted in this court during 2015 and the 1
st
applicant
has relocated to Gauteng since then.
[6]
The applicants and the 2
nd
respondent are subject to the
jurisdiction of this court and I am satisfied that this court has
jurisdiction to hear the matter.
LEGAL
POSITION:
[7]
The crux of the dispute is that the alleged conduct of the 1
st
respondent in not attending trustee meetings amounts to a breach of
her duties as trustee as envisaged in the Trust Property Control
Act
57 of 1988 9hereafter referred to as "The Act"). Section
9(1) of the Act provides that:
"A trustee shall in the
performance of his/her duties and the exercise of his/her powers, act
with care, diligence and skill
which can reasonably be expected of a
person who manages the affairs of other".
The issue is in my
view whether the absence of the 1
st
respondent for almost
five (5) years from any trustee meetings is sufficient to find that
she did not comply with the requisites
laid down in section 9 of the
Act.
[8]
It is common knowledge that a trust is not a legal persona but can be
seen as a legal institution
sui generis.
See
Braun v Blann
and Botha NNO
& Another
# 1984
(2) SA 850 (A) at 859H:"The trustee is the owner of
the trust property for purposes of administration of the trust butquatrustee he has no beneficial interest therein".
1984
(2) SA 850 (A) at 859H:
"The trustee is the owner of
the trust property for purposes of administration of the trust but
qua
trustee he has no beneficial interest therein".
[9]
In
Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and others
(2004) 2 SA (A) at 56;
and
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) at
[par]
Cameron JA held that:
"A trust is an
accumulation of assets and liabilities constituting an trust estate
which is a separate entity... with no legal
personality. It vests in
the trustees, and it must be administered by the trustees and it is
only through the
trustees that a trust can act".
[10]
The question is whether the conduct of the 1
st
respondent,
if measured against the above and what was held in
Sackville West
v Nourse 7 Another
1925 AD 516
at 534:
'7he standard of care
to be observed is accordingly not that which an ordinary man
generally observes in the management of his own
affairs, but that of
the prudent and careful man, or, to use the technical expression of
the Roman Law,
that
of the
bonus
et diligens paterfamilias".
[11]
It is not required of a trustee to be total impartial or no
connection with the beneficiaries,
but rather that he or she is
capable of bringing the necessary independent mind to bear the
business of the trust and of deciding
what is in the interests of the
trust. See
Hoppen
&
Others v Shub
&
Others
1987 (3) SA 201
(C) at
217F.
FACTUAL
ISSUES:
[12]
The question to answer is whether, under the prevailing circumstances
and on-going divorce
litigation between the 1
st
applicant
and the 1
st
respondent since 2015 until 6 September 2021
warranted the 1
st
respondent's absence at trustee
meetings. She alleged that at one meeting previously the 1
st
applicant spilled milk over her and that there was constant conflict
between them. The applicants denied this.
[13]
The 1
st
respondent avers that the 1
st
applicant, in the absence of the 1
st
respondent,
"appointed" his daughter from a previous marriage without
any resolution thereto, to take over the duties
of the 1
st
respondent. According to the 1
st
applicant, his daughter
was only assisting him with the daily administration of the trust and
that she was not "appointed"
as a co-trustee or in any
other capacity but to assist him in the absence of the 1
st
respondent.
[14]
The 1
st
respondent accuses the 2
nd
applicant of
bias and mala fides in that he did not assist her to obtain legal
representation. This is contrary the minutes of
the trustee meeting
held on 24 May 2015 where the 2
nd
applicant only offered
to assist the parties' legal representatives in positioning the
trusts but there was no "offer"
of assistance to be
provided with a legal representative.
[15]
The arguments on behalf the 1
st
respondent during
arguments (and in the 1
st
respondent's heads of arguments)
are in my view without substance. The alleged "refusal to use a
vehicle to make it possible
for her to attend a trustee meeting is
without merit. There is provision in the trust deed for virtual
meetings. The 1
st
respondent did not make use thereof. The
allegation that she, being in the minority, was overruled in
decisions taken is also no
reason for her to fail to attend meetings.
There is no clause in the deed of the trust for unanimous decisions.
Her allegations
towards the 2
nd
applicant of "misusing
trust assets for its own advantage as in the instance of Tshedza
Protective Services CC in Mahikeng
are without any proof.
[16]
I am satisfied that, taking into account the issue of dispute of
facts, and applying the
Plascon-Evans Rule, that no material disputes
arose to warrant a referral for oral evidence or trial. The
reasonable court will
be able to adjudicate the matter on the papers.
COUNTERCLAIM
FOR
REMOVAL
OF THE
SECOND
APPLICANT:
[17]
The 1
st
respondent's counter application for the removal
of the 2
nd
applicant is based on her allegation that the
2
nd
applicant breached his duty of trust towards her. She
alleged that the 2
nd
applicant failed to avoid a conflict
of interest between his private interests and his duty as a trustee.
The averment made above
was repeated in the arguments on her behalf.
The further averment that he did not remain impartial because he
elected to be joined
as a party to the proceedings against her lacks
any persuasion. I am not persuaded at all that this counter
application has any
merit and ought to be rejected.
REMOVAL
OF A TRUSTEE:
[18]
Section 20(1) of the Act enables the court to remove a trustee from
office on application
by the Master of any interested party. The
court has to be satisfied that the requested removal will be in the
best interest of
the trust and the beneficiaries. See
Du Plessis
NO
&
Others v Fourie Van Niekerk
&
Others
2018 (4) SA 131
FB at [par 26), judgment delivered by
Daffue on 26 June 2018.
The Master indicated that it will abide
with the court's decision.
[19]
The question of removal of a trustee (with opposing counter
applications for similar relief)
was decided in
Gower and
Another v
Gower and Others 2016 (5) SA (SCA).
The court held that a mere conflict of interest between trustees
and beneficiaries or amongst the trustees was insufficient for the
removal of a trustee. Petse JA however held that
uthe overriding
question is always
whether
or not the
conduct of the trustee imperils the trust property
or
its
administration".
The court therefore should
exercise its discretion in terms of Section 20(1) of the Act to
remove a trustee from office with circumspection.
No Mala fides or
misconduct is required by the court to order the removal from office
of a trustee. The essential test is whether
such disharmony, as in
the present matter, imperils the trust estate or its proper
administration. See
Volkwyn N O v Clarke and Damant
1946 WLD 456
at 471.
It is therefore clear that the court may remove a trustee
from office in the event that such removal will be in the interest of
the trust and its beneficiaries.
[20]
The applicants aver that the removal of the
1
st
respondent as trustee will be in the best
interest of the trust and the beneficiaries for the following
reasons:
20.1 The
1
st
respondent has failed to attend meetings from
2016 to 2021or the respond to any requests from the applicants;
20.2 The 1st
respondent only started attending meetings after the application was
served on her;
20.3
The 1st respondent was not involved in the affairs of the trusts for
a period of five (5) years and
did nothing to safeguard the interests
of the trust;
20.4 The 1st
respondent failed to deliver any assistance as trustee;
20.6 The 1st
respondent seeks the "liquidation" of the trusts for some
financial reward and therefore does
not advance the interests of the
trust. This is what she perceives to happen although it was only one
of the probable suggestions
made by the 2
nd
applicant at
the 2015 meeting when the marriage boat of the 1st applicant and the
1
st
respondent sailed into troubled waters;
20.7 The 1st
respondent resides in a trust owned property but fails to maintain
such and pays no rent at all despite
receiving the amount of R 10
000,00 per month towards property expenses incurred. One of the
trusts also defrays the full operating
costs of the said property,
including rates and taxes and water and electricity consumed by the
1st respondent whilst residing
in the property.
[21]
The 2
nd
Respondent did not oppose the application and
abides with the court's decision.
[22]
I am therefore of the view that the
applicants have shown sufficient cause to have the 1
st
respondent removed from the office of trustee.
## The following order is
made:
The following order is
made:
1.
The application is granted
with costs;
2.
The counter application
is dismissed with costs.
J
HOLLAND-MÜTER
Acting
Judge of the Pretoria High Court
(Application
was heard on 12 April 2022)
(Judgment
delivered on 4 May 2022)
ON
BEHALF
OF THE
APPLICANTS:
BOOYYENS
ATTORNEYS:
Email:
marcel@booyenslaw.co.za
ADV
SF FISHER-KLEIN:
Email:
sfisherklein@gmail.com
ON
BEHALF
OF THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
THERON
JORDAAN
&
SMITH
ATTORNEYS
Email:
andre@tjs.co.za
leana@tjs.co.za
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