Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 957South Africa
Liebman v Liebman In re: Liebman v Liebman (24227/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 957 (5 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 December 2022
Headnotes
a continuing emotional attachment to one’s country of origin is insufficient to negative a domicile of choice.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Liebman v Liebman In re: Liebman v Liebman (24227/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 957 (5 December 2022)
Liebman v Liebman In re: Liebman v Liebman (24227/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 957 (5 December 2022)
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sino date 5 December 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 24227/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
5 December 2022
In
the matter between:
BRADLEY
BRETT LIEBMAN
APPLICANT
and
ATHOLL
DAVID VICTOR
LIEBMAN RESPONDENT
In
re:
ATHOLL
DAVID VICTOR LIEBMAN APPLICANT
and
BRADLEY
BRETT LIEBMAN
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for security for
costs. The applicant in this application is the respondent in the
main application, a sequestration
application. The parties are
referred to as they are cited in this application. The respondent,
Mr. A.D.V. Liebman, is the applicant’s
father.
[2]
Rule 47(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides as follows:
‘
A
party entitled and desiring to demand security for costs from another
shall, as soon as practicable after the commencement of
proceedings,
deliver a notice setting forth the grounds upon which security is
claimed, and the amount demanded.’
Background
[3]
The parties were engaged in acrimonious
litigation during 2019. The claim underpinning the sequestration
application represents
an amount due and owing to the respondent, by
the applicant, in terms of costs orders granted in favour of the
respondent. The
applicant also obtained costs orders against the
respondent.
[4]
Through the costs orders granted in his
favour, the respondent established a claim in terms of s 9(1), read
with
s 10
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
, against the applicant. In
the answering affidavit filed in the sequestration application, the
applicant admits his indebtedness
to the respondent in the amount of
R752 955.85. The applicant, however, denies that he is factually
insolvent, or that he has committed
an act of insolvency. He claims
that the sequestration is used for ulterior purposes and as an act
in
terrorem
. The applicant states
that if the respondent is afraid that he will not be paid, he can
attach the applicant’s right,
title, and interest in his claims
against the residue in trusts and companies that are in the process
of being wound up. The parties
built up a substantial property
portfolio over the years that is partly owned by companies and partly
owned by trusts. The applicant
is a director of the property-owing
companies and a beneficiary of all the property-owning trusts.
[5]
The following are relevant for
determining whether the respondent is an
incola
or
peregrinus
:
i.Both
the applicant and the respondent are citizens of the United States of
America (‘the USA’);
ii.The
respondent expressed his desire to retire and to move to the USA
after his wife passed away in June 2018, and the parties
entered into
negotiations regarding his exit from the Liebman Group of Companies
and the various property-owning trusts. The respondent
believed that
he would receive more advanced and better medical treatment in the
USA;
iii.The
respondent has an interest in an immovable property, a single
residence, in the USA described as [....] C[....] Avenue,
C[....]2,
CA [....] (‘the USA property’) in July 2021 in that the
immovable property is co-owned by the K&J Trust
of which he and
his daughter are the trustees;
iv.The
respondent returned to South Africa in 2018 to facilitate the winding
up of the companies and trusts. He left again for the
USA during
March 2020 and only returned fleetingly when the application for
security was heard in February 2022. He left again
for the USA
shortly thereafter;
v.
Prior to leaving South Africa in 2020,
the respondent shipped the furniture and movable assets from his flat
in Johannesburg, inclusive
of his favourite left-hand drive Toyota
Supra motor vehicle, to the USA. The respondent contends that the
furniture and assets
belong to his daughter as it was bequeathed to
her;
vi.In
the sequestration application, the respondent states that he is
‘currently residing at [....] 18
th
Street, S[....], C[....]3, United States of America, [....].’
vii.The
respondent avers that he traveled to the USA seeking medical
treatment, but the COVID-19 pandemic caused a delay in his
medical
treatment. He has been advised to delay his return to South Africa.
He considers himself to be domiciled in South Africa
and intends to
return to South Africa. He has a South African bank account with
ABSA, he is still a member of Discovery Health
Medical Aid, and he
has a Vodacom Cell phone contract. The respondent avers that he pays
the levies and insurance in respect of
a Plettenberg Bay immovable
property owned by the JSRM Trust and that he renewed his Fidelity
Fund Certificate with the Estate
Agency Board of South Africa for
2021;
viii.The
respondent is 85 years old and not in good health. Both his
daughters, with whom he has a close relationship, reside in
the
United States.
Applicable
legal principles
[6]
Section 1 of the Domicile Act, 3 of
1992, provides as follows:
‘
1. Domicile
of choice.
—(1) Every
person who is of or over the age of 18 years, and every person under
the age of 18 years who by law
has the status of a major, excluding
any person who does not have the mental capacity to make a rational
choice, shall be competent
to acquire a domicile of choice,
regardless of such a person’s sex or marital status.
(2) A
domicile of choice shall be acquired by a person when he is lawfully
present at a particular place and has the
intention to settle there
for an indefinite period.’
[7]
Section 5 of the Act provides that the
acquisition or loss of a person’s domicile shall be determined
on a balance of probabilities.
[8]
The
court stated in
Holland
v Holland
[1]
that domicile is an objective factual relation between a person and
the particular territorial jurisdictional area or country.
In
Chinatex
Oriental Trading Company v Erskine,
[2]
Chetty J explained that a domicile of choice can be acquired by
sufficing two elements (i) physical presence (an objective fact)
and
(ii) an intention to remain indefinitely (a subjective test). As far
as the first requirement, the objective test, is concerned,
Chetty J
stated with reference to
Johnson
v Johnson
[3]
that a person’s physical presence requires more than a ‘visit
or sojourn’ to the country. The longer the person
is settled at
a particular place, the greater the likelihood of a court regarding
the person as a resident there for the purposes
of domicile. The
second element,
animus
manendi
,
‘does not require an intention to remain permanently. The
person must display a state of mind which is consistent with the
intention of remaining indefinitely which intention need not be
irrevocable in order to show that a domicile of choice has been
acquired.’ In
Eilon
v Eilon
[4]
the court held that a continuing emotional attachment to one’s
country of origin is insufficient to negative a domicile of
choice.
Discussion
[9]
It
is a sad reality that courts often become the battlefields where
family feuds play out. The acrimony and bitterness between the
applicant-son and his respondent-father seep through every paragraph
of the affidavits filed. Both parties are motivated by their
respective ‘truths’, and as a result, an elderly father
seeks to sequestrate his son over a debt of R752 955.85. The
question
that this court needs to answer is whether the father is an
incola
or
peregrinus
of South Africa, and if found to be a
peregrinus
,
whether the court should order him to furnish security for the costs
of the sequestration application. In
NH
obo ERH v Schindlers Lifts SA (Pty) Ltd
,
[5]
Vahed J explained that an
incola
does not have a right which entitles him or her as a matter of
course to the furnishing of security for costs by a
peregrinus
.
The court has a broad judicial discretion in that regard, and the
fact that one party is a
peregrinus
will ‘feature heavily in the exercise of that discretion.’
The discretion must, as all discretions, be exercised judicially
taking into account all the relevant facts, as well as considerations
of equity and fairness to both parties,
[6]
against the constitutional backdrop that everybody has the right to
have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of
law
decided in a fair public hearing before a court.
[7]
[10]
The common cause facts in this matter
are that the respondent is an elderly man who suffers from various
health conditions and who
relocated to the USA, amongst others, to
obtain quality medical care. Both his daughters reside in the USA.
His only son, with
whom he has no relationship, resides in South
Africa. The respondent acquired the right to reside in a private
dwelling in the
USA, albeit through a trust. Nothing in the answering
affidavit suggests that the respondent has any support system in
South Africa.
His only remaining links with the country, except for
the business interests that are the proverbial bone of contention
between
himself and his son, is a bank account from which the medical
aid premiums are deducted, his Discovery medical aid, and a cell
phone contract. The respondent’s claim that he intends to move
back to South Africa to reside here permanently is not borne
out by
the facts. The respondent’s affidavit does not disclose
material issues in which there is a
bona
fide
dispute of fact that is capable
of being decided only after viva voce evidence has been heard.
[11]
The respondent shipped the contents of
his flat in Johannesburg to the USA before he left the country. He
claims in the answering
affidavit that the movable assets were
bequeathed to his daughter Jacqueline. The excerpt of the Will
attached to the answering
affidavit, however, reflects that the right
title and interest to the said Johannesburg flat was bequeathed to
the JJLG Trust subject
to a life-long usufruct in favour of the
respondent, with all the deceased’s movable assets being
bequeathed to the respondent.
The respondent traveled to South
Africa, with a one-way flight ticket just before the sequestration
application was heard but left
the country again soon after the
sequestration application was postponed pending the finalisation of
the current application. He
does not explain the remaining extent or
duration of the medical treatment that he needs to undergo before he
will return permanently
or how his medical needs will be sufficiently
tended to in South Africa. The respondent’s emotional and
commercial ties with
South Africa are not overlooked, but his
prolonged physical absence from the country within the factual
context as set out above,
substantiates a finding, despite his
unsubstantiated protestation, that he left South Africa with the
intention to stay in the
USA indefinitely. He is found to be a
peregrinus.
[12]
The respondent does not own any unbonded
immovable property in South Africa. He did not even attempt to make
out a case that he
has sufficient assets in the country to pay the
legal costs if the sequestration application is dismissed with costs.
[13]
No reasons exist to deviate from the
position that costs follow success. I do not find appropriate facts
substantiating a punitive
costs order.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The respondent, the applicant in the
sequestration application, is directed to furnish the applicant, the
respondent in the sequestration
application, with security for the
costs of the sequestration application;
2.
The registrar of this court is to
determine the form, amount, and manner of the security for the costs
and communicate same to both
parties in the prescribed manner;
3.
In the event that the respondent has
not furnished the applicant with the security for costs in the
amount, form, and manner determined
by the registrar within 15
(fifteen) days of the registrar’s decision, the applicant is
authorised to approach the court
on the same papers, duly
supplemented, for an order that the proceedings in the sequestration
application are stayed until this
order is complied with, or to apply
for the dismissal of the sequestration application;’
4.
The respondent is to pay the costs
of the application.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the applicant:
Adv.
M. D. Silver
Instructed
by:
David
Kotzen Attorneys
For
the respondent: Adv.
J. L. Kaplan
With:
Adv.
E. Dreyer
Instructed
by:
Michael
B Notelovitz Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
7 November 2022
Date
of judgment: 5
December 2022
[1]
1973
(1) SA 897
(T) at 903C-D.
[2]
[1998]
JOL 2697
(C) at 8.
[3]
1931
AD 391
at 441.
[4]
1965
(1) SA 703
(A) at 705A.
[5]
(7914/2018) [2020] ZAKZDHC 41 (1 September 2020).
[6]
International
Trade Administration Commission and another v Carte Blanche
Marketing
CC
and
another: in Re Carte Blanche Marketing
CC
and
another v International Trade Administration Commission and others
[2019] ZAGPPHC 33 at par [7].
[7]
Section
34, Constitution of South Africa, 1996.
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