Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 59South Africa
Ebeling v Koch and Others (Appeal) (A 169/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 59; [2025] 3 All SA 151 (WCC); 2025 (4) SA 584 (WCC) (21 February 2025)
Headnotes
at its Somerset West branch during the period 17 March 2014 to 8 May 2014 and which, so the
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ebeling v Koch and Others (Appeal) (A 169/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 59; [2025] 3 All SA 151 (WCC); 2025 (4) SA 584 (WCC) (21 February 2025)
Ebeling v Koch and Others (Appeal) (A 169/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 59; [2025] 3 All SA 151 (WCC); 2025 (4) SA 584 (WCC) (21 February 2025)
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sino date 21 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No:
A169/2024
In
the matter between:
LYDIA
LOUISA EBELING
Appellant
and
CECELIA
TANJA KOCH
First
Respondent
RALF
KOCH
Second
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS,
CAPE
TOWN
Third
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT,
PORT
ELIZABETH
Fourth
Respondent
Coram:
Justice R
Henney, Justice J Cloete
et
Justice C N Nziweni
Heard:
20
January 2025, judgment reserved 3 February 2025
Delivered
electronically:
21 February 2025
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
This is an appeal with leave of the court a quo against its judgment
and
order delivered on 22 January 2024, dismissing with costs the
appellant’s application to attach an immovable property
situated
in Mossel Bay (“the property”) and currently
registered in the name of the second respondent, in order to confirm,
alternatively to found and confirm, this court’s jurisdiction
in respect of an action to be instituted by her against the
first and
second respondents (the “main action”). An interim order
to this effect was also discharged by the court
a quo. The appeal is
opposed only by the first and second respondents. The third and
fourth respondents have not participated in
the proceedings.
[2]
The crisp issue for determination is whether the court a quo was
correct
in its finding that the appellant lacks locus standi in the
main action, and therefore failed to make out a case to found and/or
confirm jurisdiction by attaching the property for this purpose.
[3]
The appellant is the adopted daughter of the late Ms Edeltraud
Ebeling
(“the deceased”) who passed away on 31 December
2015. On 26 May 2013 the deceased executed a last will and
testament
(“the will”) in which she bequeathed her entire
South African estate to the second respondent. (She had a separate,
substantial estate in Germany as well). It is common cause that one
of the witnesses to the will was the first respondent, who
is married
to the second respondent. It is also undisputed that, in the event of
the will being declared invalid, the deceased’s
South African
estate would devolve upon the appellant who is her sole heir under
the laws of intestacy.
[4]
The appellant has already
launched an application in the Eastern Cape High Court, Gqeberha,
under case number 1989/2022 for the
will (which was accepted by the
fourth respondent) to be declared invalid on two principal grounds.
The first is that the deceased
lacked the requisite mental capacity
at the time when the will was executed, and was unduly influenced by
the first and/or second
respondents to do so. The second is that, in
any event, the second respondent is precluded from inheriting by
virtue of s 4A(1)
of the Wills Act.
[1]
That application is opposed by the first and second respondents (it
is unclear why the first respondent is opposing it, but that
is not
something we need consider for present purposes). In addition, and
although not apparent from the papers, we were informed
by counsel
during the hearing of the appeal that the second respondent has
brought a counter-application in those proceedings in
terms of
s 4A(2)(a) of the Wills Act. I return to these statutory
provisions later in this judgment.
[5]
Both the first and second respondents reside in Germany. The main
action
which the appellant wishes to institute against them in this
court is for the recovery of at least R1 449 000 in respect
of monies allegedly misappropriated by, or on behalf of and at the
instance of, the first and second respondents from the deceased’s
Standard Bank account held at its Somerset West branch during the
period 17 March 2014 to 8 May 2014 and which, so the
appellant alleges, was utilised in part to purchase the property
which was transferred jointly into the names of the first and
second
respondents on 16 September 2014.
[6]
In her will, the deceased appointed Mr Marthinus Boyens, an
attorney
practising in Jeffrey’s Bay, Eastern Cape, as the sole
executor of her South African estate. The fourth respondent issued
letters of authority to Mr Boyens on 26 February 2016 under
Master’s reference number 999/2016. Mr Boyens
passed away
on 22 November 2018 without having wound up the deceased’s
estate. The will makes no provision for the appointment
of an
executor in his stead, and without a new executor being appointed,
the deceased’s estate is effectively hamstrung with
no-one to
take its winding-up further, or to pursue any claims in its favour
such as the one which the appellant maintains should
be advanced
against the first and second respondents.
[7]
The difficulties thus
faced by the appellant are two-fold. First, she is challenging the
validity of the deceased’s will in
the pending application in
the Eastern Cape High Court. Second, the sole executor appointed in
terms of the impugned will has ceased
to act as such. The outcome of
the litigation in the Eastern Cape High Court will determine whether
the fourth respondent is to
exercise his or her powers, under the
Administration of Estates Act,
[2]
in terms of s 18(1)(a), i.e. the appointment of an executor
where a person has died without having by will nominated
an executor;
or s 18(1)(e), i.e. the appointment of a substitute
executor where the appointed executor ceases for any
reason to act.
In the meantime there is no-one to protect and advance the interests
of the potential sole intestate beneficiary
of the deceased’s
estate, namely the appellant.
[8]
It is for this reason
that the appellant submits that she will have locus standi in the
main action. The court a quo correctly accepted
that all the
appellant has to show, for purposes of attachment of the property to
found and/or confirm jurisdiction, is a prima
facie cause of action,
and that the threshold for doing so is relatively low. In
Simon
NO v Air Operations of Europe AB and Others
[3]
it was held that:
‘
As
Logans was an
incola
of
the Court and ING Aviation a foreign
peregrinus
,
attachment of the monies in the bank account (which belonged to ING
Aviation) was necessary to found jurisdiction (
ad
fundandam jurisdictionem
)
i.e. to confer a
jurisdiction
which did not otherwise exist.
All
that remained for the appellant to establish was that he had a
prima
facie
cause
of action against ING Aviation. The requirement of a
prima
facie
cause
of action is satisfied if an applicant shows that there is evidence
which, if accepted, will establish a cause of action.
The mere fact
that such evidence is contradicted will not disentitle the applicant
to relief—not even if the probabilities
are against him. It is
only where it is quite clear that the applicant has no action, or
cannot succeed, that an attachment should
be refused
.
(
MT
Tigr:
Owners
of the MT
Tigr
and
Another v Transnet Ltd t/a Portnet (Bouygues Offshore SA and Another
Intervening)
1998(3)
SA 861 (SCA) at 868 B-H).
The
remedy of attachment
ad
fundandam jurisdictionem
in
order to create jurisdiction is an exceptional remedy and one that
should be applied with care and caution
(
Ex
parte Acrow Engineers (Pty) Ltd
1953
(2) SA 319
(T)
at 321G-H;
Thermo
Radiant Oven Sales (Pty) Ltd v Nelspruit Bakeries (Pty) Ltd
1969
(2) SA 295
(A) at 302C-D
).
But once all the requirements for attachment have been satisfied a
court has no discretion to refuse an attachment
(
Longman
Distillers Ltd v Drop Inn Group of Liquor Supermarkets (Pty) Ltd
[1990] ZASCA 39
;
1990
(2) SA 906
(A) at 914E-G).’
[my
emphasis]
[9]
However the court a quo
concluded that, despite the other requirements for attachment having
been satisfied, namely an incola applicant
and peregrinus respondent,
and a property to be attached within the area of this court’s
jurisdiction: (a) the appellant
is not the executor of the
deceased’s South African estate; and (b) unless and until the
will is set aside, the appellant
has no legal interest in that
estate. Having regard to the court a quo’s judgment granting
leave to appeal, it is apparent
that its attention was not drawn by
either counsel to the Supreme Court of Appeal decisions in
Gross
and Others v Pentz
[4]
or
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v July and Others
.
[5]
[10]
In
Gross and Others v Pentz
one of the beneficiaries of a
testamentary trust had instituted action against, amongst others, one
of the trustees of the trust
for his removal, and for an order that
he be held jointly and severally liable, together with certain of the
defendants, for repayment
to the trust of an amount of approximately
R530 000. The plaintiff’s cause of action was an alleged
breach by the trustee
concerned of his fiduciary duties in which, it
was also alleged, certain of the other defendants knowingly
participated. The trustee
resigned prior to the trial in the High
Court, but the plaintiff persisted in his claim for monetary relief
on behalf of the trust.
At the commencement of the trial the affected
defendants took the point that, upon resignation of that trustee, the
remaining trustee
(who was also a defendant but against whom no
specific relief was sought) was the only person who had locus standi
to pursue the
action. Ultimately the High Court found in favour of
the plaintiff on this point.
[11]
On appeal, the court referred to what is known as the
Beningfield
exception, which is that while normally the executor or trustee of an
estate is the proper person to enforce rights of action on
behalf of
that estate, a beneficiary may do so where the executor or the
trustee will be the defendant, the rationale being that
a delinquent
executor or trustee cannot sue him or herself. The court held that:
‘
Clearly a
defaulting or delinquent trustee cannot be expected to sue himself.
The only alternative to allowing the
Beningfield
exception
would be to require the aggrieved beneficiaries to sue for the
removal of the trustee and the appointment of a new trustee
as a
precursor to possible action being taken by the new trustee for the
recovery of the estate assets or other relief for the
recoupment of
the loss sustained by the estate. This, in my opinion, would impose
too cumbersome a process upon the aggrieved beneficiaries.’
[6]
[12]
The court then turned to
consider whether a representative action in terms of the
Beningfield
principle is available to
beneficiaries who have no vested right to the future income or
capital of a trust. Corbett CJ held that:
‘
(w)hile
the rights of such beneficiaries are contingent, they do, as the
Court
a
quo
observed…
have vested interests in the proper administration of the trust.
Although there does not appear to be any authority
directly in point,
I am of the view that such a beneficiary may bring a representative
action…’.
[7]
[13]
Having considered the submissions made on behalf of the affected
defendants that this could
never apply if there is another so-called
innocent trustee (i.e. the remaining trustee in that case who
was also a defendant)
Corbett CJ stated:
‘
The liability
or immunity of such an "innocent" trustee is not in issue
in this case. What is in issue here is the procedural
question of
locus standi in judicio. It seems to me that this is a matter which
should be settled, and be capable of being settled,
in initio. If the
law be that a co-trustee is jointly and severally liable without
exception, then cadit quaestio, the argument
of appellant's counsel
necessarily fails. If on the other hand, there is room for an
exception to this general rule, then in a
case such as the present
one the appellant's general contention, if correct, would place the
claimant in an invidious position.
If, as appellant would have it,
the claimant cannot proceed if the one trustee is innocent, then he
would be compelled, in the
absence possibly of some admission, to
prove in legal proceedings that the so-called "innocent"
trustee is in fact liable
in law, even though he did not wish to
claim relief from such trustee; and all this merely to establish
locus standi to sue the
other "guilty" trustee. And if in
the end it transpired that the "innocent" trustee was in
truth not liable,
then he would have eventually established his lack
of locus standi, but it would have taken a trial action to do so.
This seems
to me to be a wholly impractical and undesirable
procedure. To obviate it I consider that the rule should be that
where in a case
such as this there are joint trustees, then for
the purposes of deciding the issue of the locus standi of
the claimant
both trustees must be assumed to be liable for the
breach of trust. If this rule be applied in the present case,
then this
disposes of the question of locus standi in favour of
the respondent...’
[8]
[14]
The principles established in
Gross and Others v Pentz
were
considered by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Standard Bank of
South Africa Limited v July and Others
. That case involved the
deceased estate of a Mrs Eunice Mbuqe, who died intestate on 19 March
2003, leaving two children,
Mrs Linda July and Mr Ray Mbuqe. Mrs
July was married to Mr Mlungisi July and they in turn had two
children who were the third
and fourth respondents on appeal.
Mrs July died, also intestate, on 13 June 2004 and her
brother, Mr Ray Mbuqe, on 5 November
2008. Mr Ray Mbuqe had been
appointed by the Master as the executor of his late mother’s
estate. He had caused her deceased
estate to transfer an immovable
property to his wife, Mrs Tembisa Mbuqe. The respondents applied to
the High Court for (amongst
other relief) an order setting that
transfer aside. The application was launched after Mr Ray Mbuqe’s
death. Accordingly,
at the time, there was no executor in the
deceased estate and no steps had been taken to ask the Master to
appoint another executor.
Moreover the estate had not yet been wound
up. The consequence of Mrs Linda July having also died intestate
was that her share
in her late mother’s estate devolved on her
husband, Mr July, and their two children. Mr July was also
appointed by
the Master as executor of Mrs Linda July’s
estate. The High Court, applying the
Beningfield
exception,
held that since the executor of Mrs Eunice Mbuqe’s estate
was deceased, the beneficiaries of Mrs July’s
estate had
locus standi to advance the claim to set aside the transfer of the
property.
[15]
On appeal, the argument of the appellant bank was that the High Court
wrongly applied the
Beningfield
exception; it should not have
done so, because there was no delinquent executor in place. There was
no executor at all, and similarly
no impediment preventing the
respondents from approaching the Master to make a new appointment.
The bank further contended that
Mr July and the grandchildren, while
heirs to Mrs Linda July’s estate, were not direct heirs to
Mrs Eunice Mbuqe’s
estate and were more remote than the
contingent beneficiaries in
Gross
.
[16]
The Supreme Court of Appeal rejected these arguments and held that
Mrs Linda July
was herself an heir of that estate, and died
intestate, and accordingly Mr July and the grandchildren had an
interest in the
proper administration of Mrs Eunice Mbuqe’s
estate. While acknowledging that the respondents would not have to
sue for
the removal of an executor, thus making the process less
cumbersome, and could merely request the Master to make a suitable
appointment
to the position, the court found that the
Beningfield
exception nonetheless applied. It held that:
‘
[25] In
my view, it is unnecessary for the respondents first to ask the
Master to appoint an executor to Eunice’s estate.
There is no
doubt that Linda could have sued Ray for maladministration of the
estate and would have been entitled to a declarator
that the transfer
of the first immovable property was invalid. She would have had
locus
standi
in
an action against him. The fact that she died before him should not
deprive her estate of that
locus
standi
.
And the fact of his subsequent death equally should not have deprived
her estate of the standing to sue. Equally, the executor
of Linda’s
estate (Mr July) and the contingent beneficiaries in her estate, Mr
July and the grandchildren, would then have
standing in an action
against the executrix of Ray’s estate (Tembisa) and his heirs,
Tembisa and their children.
[26] The bank is
correct in saying that Eunice’s estate needs an executor and
that if the respondents are successful
before the high court, an
executor would be needed to prepare a liquidation and distribution
account and to distribute the assets
in the estate.
However,
until a court finds that the transfer of the first immovable property
should be set aside, an executor will not know what
assets there are
to distribute
. It is unhelpful thus to assert that the
proper remedy for the respondents was to ask the Master to appoint an
executor in terms
of s 18(1)(
e
) of the Act. If they fail
in the high court there may be no assets to distribute…’
[my emphasis]
[17]
In the present matter the appellant finds herself in a similar
position. She is presently
not an heir of the deceased’s South
African estate, but she will become the sole intestate heir if the
application pending
in the Eastern Cape High Court is determined in
her favour. She also makes the point that the amounts withdrawn from
the deceased’s
bank account, and which she alleges were
utilised in part by the first and second respondents to purchase the
property in Mossel
Bay, constitute almost the entire South African
estate of the deceased (if not included, its sole asset is the sum of
R1 202.97
remaining in the Standard Bank account). The main
action which the appellant wishes to institute in this court is for
recovery
of the amounts withdrawn from the Standard Bank account, as
also any other amounts which it may be found were misappropriated by
the first and/or second respondents. Until that issue is determined
one way or the other, an executor will not know what assets
there are
to distribute.
[18]
As previously stated, the appellant relies on two principal grounds
for the relief in the
pending application in the Eastern Cape High
Court: the first is that the deceased lacked the requisite mental
capacity to execute
the will and was unduly influenced by the first
and/or second respondents to do so; and the second is based squarely
on s 4A
of the Wills Act. This provides in relevant part as
follows:
‘
4A
Competency of persons involved in execution of will
(1)
Any person who attests and signs a will as a witness, or who
signs a will in the presence and by direction of the testator, or who
writes out a will or any part thereof in his own handwriting,
and
the person who is the spouse of such person at the time of the
execution of the will
, shall be disqualified from
receiving any benefit from that will.
(2)
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1)---
(a)
a
court may declare a person or his spouse referred to in subsection
(1) to be competent to receive a benefit from a
will if the
court is satisfied that that person or his spouse did not defraud or
unduly influence the testator in the execution
of the will
;…’
[my emphasis]
[19]
Reverting to what was held in
Simon NO
(
supra
) I am
persuaded that the appellant has established a prima facie cause of
action (in the intended main action) against the first
and second
respondents. She has presented evidence which, if accepted, will
establish that cause of action. Moreover, and this
is sufficient for
present purposes, the first and second respondents do not dispute
that the first respondent signed the deceased’s
will as one of
the witnesses thereto which, if their counter-application in the
Eastern Cape High Court is dismissed, will result
in the second
respondent being disqualified to inherit as well as the will being
set aside, leaving the appellant as the sole intestate
heir of the
deceased’s South African estate. In that event, she will
clearly have an interest in the proper administration
of that estate.
The Eastern Cape court may only grant the counter-application if,
having regard to the plain wording of s 4A(2)(a)
of the Wills
Act, it is satisfied that the first and/or second respondents did not
defraud or unduly influence the deceased in
the execution of the
will, which in turn falls squarely into the other part of the
appellant’s case before that court.
[20]
Turning now to the position of the first respondent in relation to
the attachment of the
property in Mossel Bay to found and/or confirm
this court’s jurisdiction. It is common cause that the property
was initially
transferred into the joint names of the first and
second respondents; that following her release from a correctional
facility in
Germany in 2022 (on the version of these respondents this
occurred in January 2022) the first respondent (purportedly) sold her
undivided half share in the property to the second respondent on
4 July 2022 for R1 250 000; and registration of
transfer pursuant thereto occurred on 22 September 2022. The
first and second respondents allege there was nothing untoward
about
this sale ‘
as it was done purely for business and economical
reasons due to the first respondent’s pressing financial
circumstances’.
What has not escaped my notice however is
that: (a) the purported sale and transfer occurred around the
time the appellant
launched the proceedings in the Eastern Cape High
Court; and (b) despite having had the opportunity to do so, neither
respondent
produced any objective evidence of the actual payment of
the alleged purchase price.
[21]
In their answering
affidavit the first and second respondents alleged that
‘
(f)urthermore,
by virtue of the abstract system of transfer, it has become
irrelevant how it came about that first respondent’s
50% share
has been transferred to me as it has been done in full compliance
with our instructions and intentions. Further legal
argument will be
presented in this regard on our behalf at the hearing…’
.
No such argument was presented before us during the appeal. In any
event, although the abstract theory of ownership does not require
a
valid underlying contract, for example a sale, ownership will not
pass – despite registration of transfer – if there
is a
defect in the real agreement. The essential elements of such an
agreement are an intention on the part of the transferor to
transfer
ownership and the intention of the transferee to become the owner of
the property:
Legator
McKenna v Shea.
[9]
[22]
The appellant has not yet been able to institute the main action
given that her application
to found and/or confirm the jurisdiction
of this court failed in the court a quo. It is open to her, in the
main action, to seek
to have that sale and transfer set aside on the
basis of the absence of any real intention on the part of either the
first or second
respondents in relation thereto, or on any other
ground she chooses to rely upon. It would thus be premature for me to
assume,
without more, that the mere fact of transfer of the first
respondent’s undivided half share in the property to the second
respondent will pass muster. It is thus my view that, for present
purposes, the attachment of the property is sufficient to found
and/or confirm jurisdiction in respect of both the first and second
respondents. If a later court finds there was indeed a real
agreement
between the first and second respondents in relation to the property,
then so be it.
[23]
I would thus propose the following order:
1.
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of counsel, on
Scale C (party and party), and the first and second respondents
shall
pay such costs jointly and severally, the one paying, the other to be
absolved;
2.
The order granted by the court a quo on 22 January 2024 dismissing
the application with costs, and discharging the interim attachment
order and rule nisi issued on 25 January 2023, is set aside and
substituted with the following:
“
The interim
attachment order and rule nisi issued on 25 January 2023 and
extended on 24 March 2023 and 11 May 2023 is confirmed.
The first and
second respondents shall pay the costs of this application jointly
and severally, the one paying, the other to be
absolved, on the party
and party scale (Scale C) and including the costs of counsel as well
as all reserved costs orders.”
J I CLOETE
I
agree and it is so ordered.
R C A HENNEY
I
agree.
C N NZIWENI
For appellant
: Adv
C. Tait
Instructed by
:
Hildebrand Attorneys (Mr J. Hildebrand)
For 1
st
& 2
nd
respondents
: Adv L. J.
Joubert
Instructed by
:
Oosthuizen Marais & Pretorius Inc. (Mr J. Kruger)
For 3
rd
& 4
th
respondents
: no
opposition and no appearance
[1]
No. 7 of 1953.
[2]
No. 66 of 1965.
[3]
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA) at 228B-F.
[4]
1996 (4) SA 617 (SCA).
[5]
[2018] ZASCA 85
(31 May 2018).
[6]
At 628G-H
[7]
At 628I-629A.
[8]
At 630H-631C.
[9]
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA) at para [22].
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