Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 956South Africa
Le Mottee NO and Others v Mkhwanazi and Another (A306/2021; A307/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 956 (8 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 December 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Applications – dispute of fact – post-marital registration of disputed pre-marital notarial deed – approach to disputes – dismissal of application – overturned and appeal upheld – order replaced with one of referral to trial
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Le Mottee NO and Others v Mkhwanazi and Another (A306/2021; A307/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 956 (8 December 2022)
Le Mottee NO and Others v Mkhwanazi and Another (A306/2021; A307/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 956 (8 December 2022)
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sino date 8 December 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A306/2021 and A307/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
8 DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
PETER
HERBERT LE MOTTEE NO.
First Appellant
LLOYD
ROBERT BALL NO.
Second
Appellant
SINQUMILE
NGOBANI NJONGWE
MKHWANAZI-SIGEGE
Third
Appellant
AMANDA
CLAIRE GILLET
Fourth
Appellant
NTOKOZO
JACK MKHWANAZI
Fifth
Appellant
ANDILE
PATRICK MKHWANAZI
Sixth
Appellant
BANELE
JAMES MKHWANAZI
Seventh
Appellant
and
BONGEKILE
CYNTHIA MKHWANAZI
First
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS
Second Respondent
Summary
:
Applications – dispute of fact – post-marital
registration of disputed pre-marital notarial
deed – approach
to disputes – dismissal of application – overturned and
appeal upheld – order replaced
with one of referral to trial
ORDER
1.
The appeal is
upheld.
2.
The order of
the Court
a
quo
is
replaced with the following:
2.1
The
application is referred to trial;
2.2
The notice of
motion shall be deemed to constitute a simple summons and the notice
of opposition shall be deemed to constitute a
notice of intention to
defend;
2.3
The applicants
are directed to deliver a declaration within 20 (twenty) days from
date of this order whereafter the normal rules
as applicable to
pleadings, notices and discovery shall apply as for trial;
2.4
The costs of
the application shall be reserved to be determined in the trial.
3.
The costs of
the appeal shall similarly be reserved for determination by the trial
court.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The issue in
this appeal is whether the learned Acting Judge in the Court
a
quo
was correct in dismissing the application before her without
considering a referral to oral evidence or to trial.
[2]
The applicant
in the Court
a
quo
has since passed away. He
was
the husband of the first respondent and the application was one for
authorisation of the post-marital registration of a pre-marital
notarial deed. The consequence of the relief sought was to change the
marital property regime of the spouses from one of in community
of
property to one of out of community of property. As a precursor
hereto a declaratory order was sought relating to the
preparatory
documents thereto, notably a power of attorney and a draft
antenuptial contract (ANC).
[3]
The validity of the documents
required for registration and in fact the reaching of an agreement
relating to the marital property
regime were disputed. The
learned Acting Judge in the Court
a
quo
acknowledged the dispute of
facts and summarily dismissed the application. The appeal is
about whether the correct approach
to the facts and the dismissal had
been taken.
Brief
summary of background facts
[4]
At the time
that the application was heard in the Court a quo, the initial
applicant, Mr Mkhwanazi had already passed away.
He was
subsequently referred to as the deceased and I shall for sake of
continuity do the same. The deceased initially intended
having his
application heard as one of urgency on 14 January 2020. The
deceased passed away on 4 January 2020 resulting therein
that the
executors of his deceased estate subsequently pursuing the
application.
[5]
The deceased
and the first respondent (Mrs Mkhwanazi) were married to each other
on 18 February 2016. At the time
of marriage no
antenuptial contract (ANC) had been registered with the office of the
second respondent, the Registrar of Deeds.
Accordingly the
marital property regime was that of a marriage in community of
property.
[6]
The deceased,
in his founding affidavit claimed that it was, from the outset the
intention of the parties to the marriage to be
married out of
community of property. The deceased further stated that, for
this purpose, he and Mrs Mkhwanazi had signed
a special power of
attorney and also initialled a draft ANC in January 2016. The
power of attorney was intended for a person
so authorised to appear
before a notary public to have the ANC executed on their behalf.
[7]
A notary
public, Mr Grant Williams, also deposed to an affidavit.
Therein he stated that he was instructed to draft and register
the
ANC and that he was in possession of an original signed ANC. He
however only had a scanned copy of the signed power of
attorney and
the initialled draft ANC when the documents were entered into his
protocol.
[8]
These
documents indicated that a certain Wendy Noila Kapp (Kapp), acting in
terms of a special power of attorney, purportedly signed
by the
deceased and Mrs Mkhwanazi (then still Ms Makatini) on 17 January
2016, had appeared before the notary on 17 February 2016.
The
purpose thereof was to declare that the proposed marriage would be
out of community of property with exclusion of the accrual
system.
The ANC which was signed by Kapp and witnessed by two unknown persons
and thereafter notarized by the notary was
never registered in the
Deeds Office.
[9]
The notary has
subsequently been unable to locate the copy of the signed power of
attorney which was claimed to have been “scanned”
and
e-mailed to him and which would have been filed in his protocol.
He avers that he would not have
notarised
the ANC without
having had sight of the power of attorney, even though only scanned.
He
however confirmed that he had
not lodged the notarised ANC to be registered in the deeds office
because he was still waiting for
the original power of attorney and
attached initialled ANC to be forwarded to him but in the end, he
never received these documents.
This is why the ANC signed by
Kapp was never lodged in the Deeds Office and registered. The
deceased stated in his affidavit,
that he only found out about this
three years later. The only documents currently available are
the ANC referred to in paragraph
8 above, an unsigned power of
attorney and an un-initialled draft ANC.
[10]
Mrs Mkhwanazi conceded in her
answering affidavit that after the lobola negotiations had been
concluded, the possibility of the
signing of an ANC was discussed
between her and the deceased. This discussion was however
not acted upon although she
admitted that she and the deceased had
consulted the notary, and that he had been requested to draft an ANC
but that “
thereafter
consultations with my husband who really saw no need in having such a
stringent contract in our marriage which he was
convinced was to be
eternal and for the best, we did not proceed with the ANC
”.
[11]
On instructions of the deceased,
his then current attorney had prepared an ex-parte application for
the post-marital execution and
registration of an ANC which accords
with the one which he claims was authorised by the power of attorney
referred to in paragraph
6 above.
[12]
When presented with a
confirmatory affidavit to be deposed to for purposes of this ex-parte
application, Mrs Mkhwanazi declined,
denying that she and the
deceased had concluded any agreement or that she had signed any power
of attorney. These are the
denials which she persisted with in
the subsequent application which served before the court a quo.
The
proceedings in the Court
a quo
[13]
The learned Acting Judge in the Court
a
quo
in her judgement indicated
that it was “
evident
”
that there was a dispute regarding the agreement between the parties
to enter into an ANC prior to their marriage in February
2016 and
that there is a dispute as to whether Mrs Mkhwanazi had ever signed a
power of attorney and initialled the draft ANC.
[14]
The
learned Acting Judge then proceeded in finding that “
it
is trite that motion proceedings are decided on the papers filed by
the parties and in case there is a factual dispute which
can only be
resolved to oral evidence, it is appropriate that actual proceedings
should be used unless the factual dispute is not
real and genuine
”.
Hereafter the learned Acting Judge referred to
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeek Paints (Pty) Ltd
[2]
,
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[3]
and
Lohans
Civils (Pty) Ltd v Tokologo Local Municipality
[4]
[15]
In her judgement and after referring to
the facts and disputes in the matter, the learned Acting Judge
accepted the notary’s
evidence in the following fashion: “
I
accept Mr Williams’ statement but he would never have notarised
the ANC without having a sight of the signed power of attorney
together with the attached draft ANC, but without the signed
documents and in view of the first respondent’s denial that
she
signed these documents, I cannot find that it was the first
respondent’s signature on these documents
”.
The learned Acting Judge then further accepted the notary’s
version that the importance of the originally signed
documents was
such that without it he was not prepared to lodge the ANC for
registration in the deeds office. Dealing with
the denial of
the agreement between the parties by Mrs Mkhwanazi, the learned
Acting Judge concluded that she was not persuaded
that Mrs
Mkhwanazi’s version was “
unattainable
”
or false and (correctly in my view) found that it should not be
rejected on the papers.
[16]
Hereafter the judgement simply concluded
as follows: “T
he parties’
version about the agreement to enter into an ANC is material and
cannot be resolved on the papers. I therefore
grant the
following order: the application is dismissed with costs
”.
The
applicable principles
[17]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[5]
the
Court said the following at paragraph 26: “
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless
the circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
disputes because they are not designed to determine
probabilities
”.
[18]
The
same Court has almost half a century before determined this very same
principle as follows in Da
Mata
v Otto NO.
[6]
at
865G – H where affidavits delivered in motion proceedings lead
to a dispute of fact: “
If
the dispute of fact is genuine and is of such a nature that it cannot
be satisfactorily determined without the advantages of
a trial, which
affords the opportunity of estimating the credibility of witnesses
and observing their demeanor, it is undesirable
to attempt to settle
disputes of fact solely on the probabilities disclosed by affidavit
evidence
”.
[19]
A
few years later, in
Trust
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Western Bank Ltd
[7]
at
293H to 294E the Supreme Court of Appeal had, after “
careful
perusal
”
of the affidavits in an opposed application which had served before a
court
a
quo
come to the conclusion that the judge in the court
a
quo
“
did
not have sufficient reason to accept that the balance of
probabilities, which in his view, favoured Western Bank, would not
be
disturbed by the hearing of oral evidence
”
(this translation is taken from that
utilised
in
Essential
Judicial Reasoning
[8]
at paragraph 27).
[20]
The
issue of it being undesirable to determine real and genuine disputes
of fact (as opposed to spurious disputes which might be
addressed by
way of a “
robust
approach
”
[9]
)
is derived from the principle that “
it
is generally undesirable to endeavour to decide an application upon
affidavit where the material facts are in dispute.
In such a
case it is preferable that oral evidence be led to enable the Court
to see and hear the witnesses before coming to a
conclusion
”
[10]
[21]
Ordinarily
the approach of the Court is that where a factual dispute has been
foreseeable and when it does then actually arise,
it would lead to a
dismissal of the application
[11]
.
The exception to this approach is that where a party had been by
statute obliged to proceed by way of motion procedure,
he cannot be
penalized when a factual dispute arises
[12]
.
[22]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Neugarten & Others
[13]
Flemming
J (as he then was) at
699
C – D
stated that the “
court’s
function if there is factual dispute is to select the most suitable
method of employing viva voce evidence for the
determination of the
dispute
”.
The learned Judge then proceeded in discussing whether oral evidence
would be convenient, for example where the dispute
is “
comparatively
simple
”.
If not, a referral to trial would be more convenient.
[23]
A
referral to trial is also often advisable if the dispute of fact does
not fall within a “
narrow
compass or if its eventual scope is unclear
”
[14]
.
Evaluation
[24]
In the present
instance the learned Acting Judge in the Court
a
quo
did
not consider whether the factual dispute was foreseeable or not.
Had she done so, this should have led to the conclusion
that the
deceased did not foresee any dispute as, on his version, the
agreement had been discussed, a notary had been visited,
a draft
notarial deed had been prepared and a written power of attorney had
been signed by him and the respondent and all this
has been confirmed
by the notary. The conclusion should then have been that it was
not an appropriate matter where the application
should simply be
dismissed.
[25]
In addition
hereto, where part B of the application claims relief for the
execution of a post-nuptial notarial deed, this was claimed
in terms
of section 88 of the Deed Registries Act 47 of 1937 which obliged the
utilization of motion procedure. The exception
referred to in
paragraph 21 above, would then have militated against the penalty of
the dismissal of the application.
[26]
There was also
no apparent consideration given as to whether the leading of oral
evidence might “disturb” probabilities
either way which
may have assisted the Court in determining whether Mrs Mkhwanazi had
in fact signed the power of attorney and
once this has been
determined, it might impact on the probabilities relating to her
denial of an agreement regarding the marital
property regime.
Conclusions
[27]
In
our view the learned Acting Judge in the Court
a
quo
had misdirected herself and had either not properly or otherwise at
all considered the issue of oral evidence being of assistance
to the
Court. None of the more “suitable methods” referred
to in paragraph 22 above had been considered.
In
our view the order of dismissal should be replaced by an order
catering for this. In the present instance,
particularly where
the executors will have to step into the shoes of the deceased as it
were, the customary order for referral
to oral evidence which will
allow those who made affidavits to be called as witnesses would not
be appropriate
[15]
. The
customary order that the founding papers (or the notice of motion),
should stand as simple summons, leading to the exchange
of pleadings
as for a trial should be followed
[16]
.
This would also cater for the adjudication of Part B of the Notice of
Motion, leading to a curtailment of proceedings, which
is one of the
aspects of which the executors of the deceased estate contend for.
[28]
Pursuant to
the fact that the right to relief claimed and the reasonableness of
both the launching of the application and the opposition
thereto can
be better determined by a Court with more benefit than either the
Court
a quo
or this Court, being the benefit of oral evidence, it would be
appropriate that costs should follow that event.
Order
[29]
In the
premises the following should be made:
1.
The application is referred to trial;
2.
The notice of motion shall be deemed to constitute a simple summons
and the notice
of opposition shall be deemed to constitute a notice
of intention to defend;
3.
The applicants are directed to deliver a declaration within 20
(twenty) days
from date of this order whereafter the normal rules as
applicable to pleadings, notices and discovery shall apply as for
trial;
4.
The costs of
the application shall be reserved to be determined in the trial;
5.
The costs of
the appeal shall similarly be reserved for determination by the trial
court.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree.
S
N I MOKOSE
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree.
M
BALOYI-MBEMBELE
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 12
October 2022
Judgment
delivered: 8
December 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
1
st
and 2
nd
Appellants: Adv
B D Stevens
Attorney
for the 1
st
and 2
nd
Appellants: Kotze
& Roux Attorneys Inc.,
Pretoria
For
3
rd
to 7
th
Appellants:
Adv
C H J Badenhorst
SC together
with
Adv N Notjé
Attorney
for the 3
rd
to 7
th
Appellants: Aaron
Stranger & Associates,
Johannesburg
c/o
Jacobson & Levy Inc., Pretoria
For
the 1
st
Respondent: Adv
K Mvubu together with
Adv
W Isaacs and Adv B Phala
Attorney
for the 1
st
Respondent: Ningiza
Horner Attorneys,
Johannesburg
c/o
Ledwaba Maswai Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
1957 (4) SA 234
C at 235E – G.
[2]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
A at 634H to 635C.
[3]
2009 (2) SA 277 (SCA).
[4]
Saflii
(2676/2019)
ZAFSHC 20 2021 (14 February 2020).
[5]
Supra at footnote 3.
[6]
1972 (3) SA 858 (A).
[7]
1978 (4) SA 281 (A)
[8]
Southwood,
Essential
Judicial Reasoning
,
Lexis-Nexis, 2015
[9]
Soffiantini
v Mould
1956
(4) SA 150E
at 154E - H
[10]
Harms
,
Civil Procedure in the Supreme Court
at
B6-45 relying on
Frank
v Ohlson’s Cape Breweries Ltd
1924
AD 289
at 294
[11]
Room
Hire Company (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949
(3) SA 1155
T at 1165
[12]
Deputy
Minister of Tribal Authorities v Kekana
1983
(3) SA 492
(B) at 497E -G and
AECI
Ltd v Strand Municipality
1991 (4) SA 688
(c) at 698I.
[13]
1987 (3) SA 695
(WLD).
[14]
See: Harms (supra) at B61 referring inter alia to
Pressma
Services (Pty) Ltd v Schuttler
1990
(2) SA 411C
at 419.
[15]
Metallurgical
and Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Company (Pty) Ltd
1971
(2) SA 388
W at 396
[16]
See:
Hy-Cap
Valcanising Co. (Pty) Ltd v S A Motor Trade Association
1946
WLD 495
sino noindex
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