Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 911South Africa
N and Others v Maluleke N.O and Others (5983/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 911 (25 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Application to freeze bank accounts of the Trusts pending accounting by trustees – applicants neither beneficiaries nor trustees having any direct legal interest in the affairs of the respective Trusts – neither the prior holding of the office of trustee in a trust nor being within a class of persons who may be nominated as a beneficiary confer locus standi – unless holding office as a trustee or until exercise of trustees discretion and nomination as beneficiary, no direct legal interest in the affairs of the Trusts – application dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## N and Others v Maluleke N.O and Others (5983/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 911 (25 November 2022)
N and Others v Maluleke N.O and Others (5983/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 911 (25 November 2022)
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sino date 25 November 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO:
5983/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED
NO
DATE:25
November 2022
In
the matter between:
SELINA
MMAZHAPELO N[....]2
FIRST APPLICANT
MPHO
LUCY N[....]2 SECOND
APPLICANT
M
C LEDIGWANE THIRD
APPLICANT
N
THABETHE FOURTH
APPLICANT
I
MUDZWIRI FIFTH
APPLICANT
M
MASINA
SIXTH
APPLICANT
DR
M POANE SEVENTH
APPLICANT
P
PHIRI EIGHTH
APPLICANT
B
NDLOVU
NINTH
APPLICANT
R
RESENGA TENTH
APPLICANT
J
SESHOKA
ELEVENTH
APPLICANT
T
KEHITLHITLE TWELFTH
APPLICANT
T
MATHEBULA THIRTEENTH
APPLICANT
AND
C
V MALULEKE NO
FIRST
RESPONDENT
C
P N[....]2 NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
T
OLIVIER NO
THIRD
RESPONDENT
E
VAN SCHALKWYK NO FOURTH
RESPONDENT
J
SNYMAN NO FIFTH
RESPONDENT
C
SCHALK NO
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS
EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK NINTH
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar
J
Heard
on:
21
November 2022
Delivered
:
25 November 2022 - This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives
by email, by being
uploaded to the CaseLines system of the GD and by release to SAFLII.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10H00 on 25 November
2022.
Summary:
Application
to freeze bank accounts of the Trusts pending accounting by trustees
– applicants neither beneficiaries nor trustees
having any
direct legal interest in the affairs of the respective Trusts –
neither the prior holding of the office of trustee
in a trust nor
being within a class of persons who may be nominated as a beneficiary
confer locus standi – unless holding
office as a trustee or
until exercise of trustees discretion and nomination as beneficiary,
no direct legal interest in the affairs
of the Trusts –
application dismissed with costs.
ORDER
It
is Ordered:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The 1st to 13th applicants are ordered to pay the respondents costs
jointly and
severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
3.
The costs are to be paid on the scale as between party and party and
are to include
the costs consequent upon the employment of senior
counsel.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J
1.
This
is an application in which the applicants seek various orders against
the 1
st
to 6th respondents who are the trustees for the time being of the
Nkoanyana Trading Trust
[1]
(“the
Trading Trust”) and the TS N[....]2 Legacy Trust
[2]
(“the
Legacy Trust”). None of the other respondents have
opposed the application.
[3]
The present application is interlocutory to the main
application brought under the present case number and in which
is
sought inter alia the removal of the trustees of both Trusts.
2.
The orders
sought in the present application are to join the 5
th
and 6
th
respondents in their capacity as trustees and also to join the 9
th
respondent in the main application. Besides the joinders, the
applicants also seek an order freezing the bank account of the
Trading
Trust and orders to compel an accounting and disclosure of
financial and management reports for the years 2019 to 2021 for both
trusts, to the applicants.
3.
The
applicants have also specifically sought an order that the Trusts
give account of various specific transactions entered into
by them
over the period 1 December 2021 up to 17 January 2022. In
addition they also sought an order compelling
the Master to
exercise his powers in terms of section 16
[4]
of the Trust Property Control Act
[5]
in the event of non-compliance by the respondents with any order
compelling them to account in the terms requested and in addition,
that the Master deliver a report to the court in which it is
indicated whether or not there any such accounting was satisfactory.
4.
This
application turns on 2 issues – firstly whether the joinder of
the 5
th
,
6
th
and 9
th
respondents should be granted and secondly, whether the applicants
have
locus
standi
[6]
to seek the orders that they do against the Trusts.
5.
For
convenience I propose dealing with the second issue first. Both
Trusts were established by the late Tsakane Stanley N[....]2.
Both Trusts are inter linked with the legacy Trust being the sole
beneficiary of the trading Trust
[7]
.
6.
Clause 1.1.2
of the Legacy Trust defines “the beneficiaries” as
follows:
“
1.1.2
the beneficiaries"
means that person or other persons who may from time
to time be
selected by the Trustees in their entire and absolute discretion to
be a beneficiary in respect of the income or capital
profits or
capital gains or capital or either under the Trust, from amongst the
members of the classes consisting of:-
1.1.2.1
Tsakane Stanley N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.2
Mpho Lucy N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.3
Selina Mmazhapelo N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.4
Khutso N[....]2 (Id: [....]);
1.1.2.5
K[....] N[....] N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.6
P[....] N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.7
K[....]2 O[....] N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.8
T[....] N[....]2 (Id no: [....])
1.1.2.9
Halamalani Nelfy N[....]2 (Id no: [....]);
1.1.2.10
The biological descendants of the beneficiaries set out in
1.1.2.1
to 1.1.2.8;
1.1.2.11
Any Trust established for the benefit of any of
the aforementioned;
1.1.2.12
Failing the existence of any members of the classes set out in the
sub-classes supra, only
in the event, only in that event, the nearest
blood relatives of the Founder;.
7.
From
what is set out in paragraph 6 above, the 1
st
and 2
nd
applicants are reflected as potential beneficiaries of the Legacy
Trust. In respect of the 3
rd
to 13
th
applicants, these are all tenants of properties owned by the Trusts
who purport to have an interest in the affairs of the Trusts.
Self-evidently, their tenancy and matters related to it do not confer
upon them any right to any of the orders sought in this
application
[8]
.
8.
When the
application was argued, counsel for the applicants asserted that the
1
st
and 2
nd
applicants had a “vested” or “contingent”
interest in the affairs of the Trusts by virtue of the fact that
they
were named as potential beneficiaries of the Legacy Trust.
Their interest in the Trading Trust was predicated upon this
“vested”
or “contingent” interest in the Legacy Trust
qua
sole beneficiary of the Trading Trust.
9.
It was common
cause:
9.1
that
the trustees of the Legacy Trust did not until 14 February 2022
exercise the discretion
[9]
conferred upon them in the Trust Deed to select from amongst the list
of potential beneficiaries, the beneficiaries of the Legacy
Trust.
9.2
that when the
beneficiaries were selected by the trustees, these did not include
either the 1
st
or 2
nd
applicants or any of their biological descendants.
10.
It
was argued for the 1
st
and 2
nd
applicants that given the formulation of clause 1.1.2 of the Legacy
Trust
[10]
, that they and their
minor children, by virtue of their falling within a “class”
of beneficiary, had an interest in
the Trusts and on that basis the
trustees owed them a fiduciary duty.
[11]
11.
The
1
st
and 2
nd
applicants previously served as trustees of the Trusts before they
were removed by order of court. They and their minor children
find themselves listed amongst the potential beneficiaries of the
Legacy Trust. However, inasmuch as they are listed as potential
beneficiaries, the Trust specifically provides that the actual
beneficiaries would only be those, selected from the list referred
to
in paragraph 6 above, who the trustees in their “entire and
absolute discretion” selected. Absent a selection
by the
trustees
[12]
, none of the
persons referred to in clause 1.1.2 of the Trust Deed can claim any
right to any benefit from the Legacy Trust and
it must follow, that
if they have no right, they have no interest
[13]
.
12.
I
was referred to Bouwer NO v Smit
[14]
in which it was held:
“
Even
if an applicant did not have an interest in the trust property, he
could still have locus standi by virtue of the common law
if he had a
sufficiently direct interest in the subject matter of the litigation”
13.
The
1
st
and 2
nd
applicants argued that the resolution of 14 February 2022 constituted
an attempt to amend the trust and that since they were potential
beneficiaries, such amendment was impeachable. I was referred
to Potgieter v Potgieter and Another
[15]
in which it was found that where there was any right, whether vested
or contingent, an attempt to amend the trust deed would
necessarily
affect the interests of the holder of that right and that this may
constitute an ‘interest’.
14.
This
argument is without merit. On a plain reading of clause 1.1.2
of the Trust Deed, it is readily apparent that the persons
referred
to in that clause, referred to as “classes” were intended
to comprise a list of those in respect of whom the
trustees were to
exercise their discretion in deciding who the beneficiaries of the
Trust would be. Furthermore, the resolution
of 14 February
2022, is in its terms
[16]
, an
exercise of the discretion conferred upon the trustees to select
beneficiaries and does not evince an intention to amend the
Trust
Deed. For this reason the decision in Potgieter is clearly
distinguishable.
15.
It
was argued for the respondents that, besides the fact that the
trustees had not appointed any beneficiaries until the resolution
of
14 February 2022, the mere fact that the 1
st
and 2
nd
applicants had themselves been trustees did not confer upon them the
status of beneficiaries who had accepted a benefit and now
had a
legal interest that was cast in stone in consequence. Any acceptance
would have had to have been predicated upon a nomination
in terms of
clause 1.1.2 to have been made first
[17]
.
16.
The entirety
of the case of the 1
st
and 2
nd
applicants hangs upon the peg of their having been named amongst the
classes of persons from whom the beneficiaries of the Legacy
Trust
would be selected, together with their having previously acted as
trustees of that Trust.
17.
Having regard
to the plain meaning of clause 1.1.2, the failure of the trustees
(which included the 1
st
and 2
nd
applicants while they were trustees) to exercise their discretion and
nominate beneficiaries does not transmute the persons named
within
the category of those who could be selected as beneficiaries, into
beneficiaries. Furthermore, the office of
trustee is a
fiduciary one which is separate and distinct from being a beneficiary
and the holding of such office similarly does
not transmute the
trustee into becoming a beneficiary.
18.
For the
reasons set out above, I find that neither the 1
st
nor the 2
nd
applicant, properly considered, can be regarded as beneficiaries of
the Legacy Trust. Since they are not beneficiaries,
they
have no legal interest in the affairs of the Trust and have none of
the rights (contingent or vested or otherwise) conferred
upon either
beneficiaries or trustees in terms of section 19 of the Trust
Property Control Act to demand an accounting.
19.
It follows
that the present application cannot succeed. Furthermore, and as
regard the first issue - absent locus to bring the present
application, the application for the joinder of the 5
th
,
6
th
and 9
th
respondents must also fail as must the order for the freezing of the
bank account.
20.
In regard to
the question of costs, this is a discretionary matter. I see no
reason to depart from the usual principle that
the costs must follow
the result. I would mention that although the 3
rd
to 13
th
applicants have played no role in the determination of the present
application and for the reasons set out above, themselves had
no
locus standi, they have associated themselves with the case for the
1
st
and 2
nd
applicants and ought to bear the costs equally with them.
21.
In the
circumstances, it is ordered:
21.1
The
application is dismissed.
21.2
The 1
st
to 13
th
applicants are ordered to pay the respondents costs jointly and
severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
21.3
The costs are
to be paid on the scale as between party and party and are to include
the costs consequent upon the employment of
senior counsel.
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
21 NOVEMBER 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
25 NOVEMBER 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
ADV. PA VENTER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VZLR ATTORNEYS.
REFERENCE:
MR. T FARI
COUNSEL
FOR THE
1
ST
,2
nd
,5
th&
6
TH
RESPONDENTS: ADV. PG CILLIERS SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
ALBERT HIBBERT
ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. A HIBBERT
No
Appearance for the 3
rd
, 4
th
, 7
th
–
9
th
Respondents
[1]
IT1870/10(T).
[2]
IT002126/2016(T)
[3]
The
3
rd
,
4
th
,
7
th
,
8
th
and 9
th
respondents did not oppose the application.
[4]
The
section provides: “
(1)
A trustee shall, at the written request of the Master, account to
the Master to his satisfaction and in accordance with the
Master's
requirements for his administration and disposal of trust property
and shall, at the written request of the Master,
deliver to the
Master any book, record, account or document relating to his
administration or disposal of the trust property
and shall to the
best of his ability answer honestly and truthfully any question put
to him by the Master in connection with
the administration and
disposal of the trust property. (2) The Master may, if he deems it
necessary, cause an investigation to
be carried out by some fit and
proper person appointed by him into the trustee's administration and
disposal of trust property.
(3) The Master shall make such order as
he deems fit in connection with the cost of an investigation
referred to in subsection
(2).”
[5]
57
of 1988
[6]
A
beneficiary of a trust has the right to an accounting in terms of
both section 19 of the Trust Property Control Act which provides
“
If
any trustee fails to comply with a request by the Master in terms of
section 16 or to perform any duty imposed upon him by
the trust
instrument or by law, the Master or any person having an interest in
the trust property may apply to the court for
an order directing the
trustee to comply with such request or to perform such duty.”
and
also in terms of the common law – see Mia v Cachalia
1934 AD
102
.
[7]
The
trust deed was amended to stipulate “
The
beneficiary shall mean the TS Nkoana Legacy Trust, IT2126/2016, duly
registered on 22 July 2016”
[8]
See
Maitland Cattle Dealers v Lyons
1943 WLD 1
at page 19; and Moodley v
Moodley
1953 (3) SA 860
(N) at 862C-D
## [9]The
Trust Deed provides that:
“21.1
The Trustees shall use, pay, distribute or apply the whole or
portions of the Trust income, in such proportions and at such
time/s
as they in their sole, absolute and unfettered discretion determine,
for the benefit of or to all or any one or more of
the
beneficiaries”and
“28.
The discretionary powers vested in the Trustees in terms of this
deed shall be complete, exclusive and absolute and
any decision made
by them pursuant to any such discretionary powers shall be binding
and unchangeable by any beneficiary affected
thereby or by any other
person”.
[9]
The
Trust Deed provides that
:
“
21.1
The Trustees shall use, pay, distribute or apply the whole or
portions of the Trust income, in such proportions and at such
time/s
as they in their sole, absolute and unfettered discretion determine,
for the benefit of or to all or any one or more of
the
beneficiaries”
and
“
28.
The discretionary powers vested in the Trustees in terms of this
deed shall be complete, exclusive and absolute and
any decision made
by them pursuant to any such discretionary powers shall be binding
and unchangeable by any beneficiary affected
thereby or by any other
person
”
.
[10]
Paragraph
6 supra
[11]
Greissel
N O & Others v De Kok & Another
2019 (5) SA 396
(SCA) at
paragraph 19
[12]
Braun
v Blann and Botha NNO and Another
[1984] ZASCA 19
;
1984 (2) SA 850
(A) at 867A-B
[13]
Whether
to claim insight into the affairs of the Trust, an accounting or for
that matter the removal of a trustee – see
Ras and Others NNO
v Van Der Meulen and Another
2011 (4) SA 17
(SCA) at 20C-D
[14]
2019
JDR 1166 (GP) at paragraph 26
[15]
2012
(1) SA 637
(SCA) at 649D-E
[16]
The
preamble to the resolution reads
“
That
by virtue of clause 1.1.2 of the trust deed, the trustees hereby
appoint the below beneficiaries, as income and capital profits
beneficiaries, capital gains or capital beneficiaries, under the
trust:”
[17]
Cameron
Wunsch and de Waal, Honore’s Law of Trusts, Fifth Edition,
p499 in which it is stated”
No
form is prescribed for acceptance, but it is advisable for a
beneficiary with sufficient understanding to write to the trustee
accepting the benefits under the trust. A mere mental attitude
of approbation does not amount to acceptance. An unequivocal
expression of intention to accept is needed.”
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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