Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 243South Africa
Anderson and Another v Du Plessis N.O and Others (12863/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 243 (5 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
5 June 2025
Judgment
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## Anderson and Another v Du Plessis N.O and Others (12863/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 243 (5 June 2025)
Anderson and Another v Du Plessis N.O and Others (12863/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 243 (5 June 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
WILLS
AND ESTATES – Will –
Massing
and adiation –
Statutory
requirements met – Testators massed their estates –
Adiated by accepting benefits under joint will –
Will
disposed of estate after testator’s death – Joint
will’s validity under German law and adiation precluded
alteration of its terms for massed estate – Election made to
adiate is irrevocable – Foreign wills complying
with lex
loci actus and dual wills are permissible for distinct assets –
Applicants established entitlement to relief
–
Administration of Estate Act 66 of 1965, s 37.
# THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No.: 12863/2024
Before the Hon Madam
Justice Slingers
Hearing:
05 May 2025
Judgment Delivered:
05
June 2025
In the matter between:
MARK
RICHARD
ANDERSON
First Applicant
CHRISTINE
ANN ANDERSON
Second Applicant
and
FRANCOIS
DU PLESSIS
N.O.
First Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Second Respondent
BARBARA
McGAVIN
ROLFE
Third Respondent
SIMON
ROLFE
Fourth Respondent
ANDERSON
STRATHERN TRUSTEE COMPANY LTD
Fifth Respondent
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives’ email addresses.
The date of hand-down
is deemed to be 05 June 2025.
JUDGMENT
SLINGERS J
Introduction
[1]
Harold John Anderson
(‘HJA’)
and Karin Renate Anderson
(‘KRA’)
executed a joint last will and
testament
(‘joint will’)
during their marriage as KRA stood to inherit her
German family’s accumulated wealth following her mother’s
death.
The applicants, who are the children of HJA and KRA,
allege that their parents agreed on the future planning for the joint
estate
to
inter alia
ensure
that KRA’s accumulated family wealth remained in the family.
[2]
After KRA’s death the German authorities
refused to accept the joint will as valid and binding. This
caused HJA to institute
proceedings in the District Court of Kassel.
In support of this application, HJA deposed to a sworn affidavit
wherein he
stated that KRA and he had drawn up a joint will dated 23
June 2001 in Kassel. He went on to depose that the testamentary
disposition complied with the requirements of the German Civil Code
in terms of Section 26(1) Nos. 1, 2 and 4 of the Introductory
Act to
the German Civil Code. In terms of the testamentary
disposition, he had become the sole heir of the deceased KRA.
[3]
HJA explicitly states in his sworn statement that
he has accepted the inheritance which included real estate property
in Italy.
Consequently, HJA requested that he be granted a copy
of the certificate of inheritance applied for below, with an
apostille, for
use in Italy.
[4]
On 28 April 2003, the District Court of Kassel
found the joint will dated 23 June 2001 to be effective as a joint
will on account
of the applicant’s South African citizenship
and that there is a binding effect in terms of the Berlin will
according to
Section 2269 of the German Civil Code .
[5]
HJA’s sworn statement evidences his election
to accept the benefits under the joint will.
[6]
After
28 April 2003 HJA dealt with the joint estate assets entirely as if
they were part of his estate
[1]
.
[7]
It is common cause that HJA commenced a
relationship with and married the third respondent. The fourth
respondent is the third
respondent’s son from a previous
marriage.
[8]
On 17 October 2018 HJA executed a new last will
and testament. In terms of this will and testament, HJA
nominated the first
respondent as executor of his estate and provided
for the third respondent to be the sole beneficiary of his entire
estate.
In 2021 HJA executed a further last will and testament
which addressed HJA’s assets situated within the United Kingdom
and
the Channel Islands. Both the applicants and the third
respondent are beneficiaries in terms of this will and testament.
[9]
HJA passed away on 20 May 2023 and on 5 July 2023,
the first respondent was appointed as the executor of HRA’s
estate in South
Africa in accordance with his 2018 will and
testament.
The applicant’s
case
[10]
It is
the applicants’ case that massing and adiation occurred in
respect of the joint will of KRA and HJA. This follows
firstly
from the undisputed fact that KRA and HJA consolidated their property
into a single unit for joint disposition after the
death of the first
dying spouse. And secondly from HJA’s acceptance of the
benefits under the joint will as evidenced
by HJA’s affidavit
filed in support of his case in the District Court of Kassel to have
the validity and binding effect of
the joint will and testament
recognized
[2]
.
[11]
The applicants do not seek to set aside the 2018
will and testament, nor do they seek to have the first respondent
removed as executor
in terms thereof. The applicants do seek an
order directing
:
(i)
the second respondent to accept the joint last
will and testament of Harold John Anderson and Karin Anderson, dated
23 June 2001
to be the last will and testament of Harold John
Anderson in relation to his South African estate;
(ii)
the second respondent to accept as executor(s) of
the late Harold John Anderson’s South African estate such
executors as may
be nominated by the beneficiaries under the joint
will and that such executor(s) be appointed in the place of the first
respondent
but only insofar as it pertains to the 2001 last will and
testament;
(iii)
such executors shall wind up and distribute the
estate of the late Harold John Anderson to the extent that such
estate forms part
of or is derived from the massed estate under the
joint will as at the death of Karin Anderson in 2022; and
(iv)
to the extent that any assets in the South African
estate of the late Harold John Anderson were amassed after the death
of Karin
Anderson and were not derived from the massed estate under
the joint will, such assets be dealt with in accordance with the
provisions
of the last will and testament executed by the late Harold
John Anderson on 17 October 2018 at Plettenberg Bay.
[12]
It is the applicants’ case that in terms of
South African law of succession, once a party executes a joint will
with his/her
spouse, and massing and adiation has occurred on the
death of that spouse, then the surviving testator is bound to the
terms of
the joint will and cannot, after the death of said spouse,
seek to renege on that joint will.
[13]
The joint will continue to apply to the massed
estate and the surviving testator is bound to respect the terms of
the joint will.
Only the new assets acquired after the death of
the spouse may be dealt with in any subsequent will. However,
the massed
estate must be distributed in terms of the joint will.
The respondents’
case
[14]
The first, third and fourth respondents filed a
notice to oppose. However, only the third and fourth
respondents
(‘the respondents’)
filed an answering affidavit and actively opposed
the application as the first respondent subsequently filed a notice
to abide.
[15]
The
grounds on which the respondents opposed the application fluctuated.
Before the institution of legal proceedings and at
the stage of the
parties’ legal representatives exchanging correspondence, the
respondents accepted the validity of the joint
will in German law.
However, they disputed that the joint will could be enforced in South
Africa on the basis that it was
unconstitutional as it would restrict
and limit the testator’s freedom of succession and that it
would disinherit the third
respondent.
[3]
This was based on a legal opinion they obtained which
advised that:
’
22.
I am thus of the view that the 2001 – joint will of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson (which
in any event only dealt with their
assets in Germany and Italy) has no bearing on the late Mr.
Anderson’s South Africa estate
or on the validity and
enforceability of his South African will.’
[16]
The applicants provided the respondents with
a contrary legal opinion in support of their case that South African
laws recognize
the binding nature of previous joint wills where
adiation and massing occurred. The respondents expressed their
disagreement
with this opinion.
[17]
In their answering papers, the respondents raised
seven points
in limine,
which
were that:
(i)
the applicants failed to comply with peremptory
provisions of Rule 41A;
(ii)
the joinder of the 4
th
respondent constitutes a misjoinder as he has no
interest in the relief sought;
(iii)
the application does not comply with the
provisions of Rule 6(5)(b)(iii);
(iv)
the annexures to the founding affidavit have not
been marked according to the identification of the same reflected in
the founding
affidavit;
(v)
the annexure, assumably to be
MA
24
and part of the annexure assumably
to be
MA 4
referred
to in the founding affidavit were illegible;
(vi)
the relief sought in terms of paragraphs 1, 2 and
3 of the Notice of Motion is untenable in law;
(vii)
the 5
th
respondent has not waived service of the motion in
terms of the court rules and that the applicants have, as far as the
5
th
respondent
is concerned, not complied with the prescripts of Rule 4(3) and Rule
5(11); and
(viii)
the facts relied upon by the applicants for the
relief sought are premised entirely on unsubstantiated allegations,
and inadmissible
hearsay and unauthenticated evidence.
[18]
These points were not pursued in argument at the
hearing of the matter.
[19]
The respondents do not dispute the following in
their answering affidavit:
(i)
HRA
inherited the massed estate
[4]
;and
(ii)
massing
and adiation occurred upon the death of KRA which resulted in HRA
inheriting the joint estate and enjoying the benefits
thereof.
[5]
[20]
During the hearing of the matter, the respondents
argued that the hearing could not proceed and that the application
stood to be
dismissed with costs due to the failure of the second
respondent, the Master of the High Court to actively participate in
these
proceedings.
[21]
The answering affidavit also raised the alleged
non-compliance of the 2001 joint will with the South African
formalities.
Non-compliance with
Uniform Rule 6(9)
[22]
The respondents took the point
in
limine
that the provisions of Uniform
Rule 6(9) had not been complied with that the non-participation of
the second respondent in the proceedings
prevented the hearing
thereof.
[23]
Uniform Rule 6(9) provides that:
‘
A
copy of every application to court in connection with the estate of
any person deceased, or alleged to be a prodigal, or under
any legal
disability, mental or otherwise, shall before such application is
filed with the registrar, be submitted to the Master
for
consideration and report; and if any person is to be suggested to the
court for appointment as curator to property, such suggestion
shall
likewise be submitted to the Master for report. Provided that
the provisions of this subrule do not apply to any application
under
rule 57 except where that rule otherwise provides.’
[24]
In the commentary to Erasmus, it has been
noted that the objective of Uniform Rule 6(9) is to avoid
applications being enrolled
only to be postponed so that a court can
have the advantage of the Master’s assistance. The
commentary goes further
to note that the subrule does not operate
when the Master’s involvement is neither legally necessary nor
of assistance to
the court.
[25]
In the present matter, the Master of the High
Court has been cited as the second respondent and has been served
with the application.
It is undisputed that on 18 September
2024 the second respondent penned an email wherein it stated that the
current application
must be finalised before the executor would be
able to proceed with the liquidation and distribution account. Thus,
the court
does have the input of the second respondent.
Furthermore, the relief sought is of such a nature that while it does
require
the second respondent’s compliance, nor does it require
his assistance.
[26]
In the circumstances, there is no merit to the
point
in limine
based
on the alleged non-participation of the second respondent.
Constitutionality of
the last will
[27]
In the
respondent’s heads of argument, they accept that massing does
not
per
se
result
in the unconstitutional limitation of the right of testation.
[6]
Consequently, I need not deal with this aspect further.
Lack of compliance
with the formalities required by SA law
[28]
Section 3
bis
(1)(a)of
the Wills Act, Act 7 of 1953 provides that
‘
A
will, whether executed before or after the commencement of this
section, shall-
(a)
not be invalid merely by reason of the form thereof, if such form
complies with the internal
law of the state or territory-
(i)
in which the will was executed;
(ii)
in which the testator was, at the time of the execution of the will
or at the time
of his death, domiciled or habitually resident; or
(iii)
of which the testator was, at the time of the execution of the will
or at the time of
his death, a citizen.’
[29]
In
Tomlinson
v Zwirchmayr
[7]
the
court found that the common law position which required compliance
with either the
lex
loci actus
or
lex
situs
had
been codified by section 3
bis
of
the Wills Act
.
Thus,
a last will and testament would be valid even where it failed to
comply with the requirements of the
lex
situs
but
complied with the requirements of the
lex
loci actus
.
[30]
Therefore, based on the
decision by the District Court of Kassel on 28 April 2003 that the
joint will was valid and binding read
with section 3
bis
of the
Wills Act, there is no merit in challenging the validity of the joint
will on the grounds that it failed to comply with the
formal
requirements of South African law.
Two wills
[31]
The respondents argued there cannot be two valid
wills in respect of an estate. The respondents relied on
section 2(3) of
the Wills Act and section 14(1) of the Administration
of Estate’s act to support this submission. In contrast,
the
applicants argued that there is no statutory obstacle or
prohibition against two wills being valid and applicable to the
administration
of a single estate, but rather that there is a
statutory prohibition against two estates.
[32]
As set out above, HJA executed a 2018 and a 2021
will and testament to address different assets, some of which are
located in different
jurisdictions. The third respondent is a
beneficiary in terms of both the 2018 and the 2021 wills. The
first respondent
has been appointed as the executor in terms of the
2018 will.
[33]
It would be absurd to accept that because the
assets are located in different jurisdictions that HJA had multiple
estates which
required winding up on his death. The fact that a
testator has assets located in different jurisdictions does not
detract
from the fact that his assets constitute a single estate
which has to be administered by his testamentary documents.
[34]
It is apparent by the appointment of the first
respondent as executor in terms of the 2018 will that the respondents
accept the
validity of both the 2018 and the 2021 will. This
fact is destructive to the respondents’ argument that there
cannot
be multiple valid wills applicable to the administration of an
estate.
Massing and adiation
[35]
Section 37 of the Act states as follows–
“
If any two or
more persons have, by their mutual will, massed the whole or any
specific portion of their joint estate and disposed
of the massed
estate or of any portion thereof after the death of the survivor or
survivors or the happening of any other event
after the death of the
first-dying, conferring upon the survivor or survivors any limited
interest in respect of any property in
the massed estate, then upon
the death after the commencement of this Act of the first-dying,
adiation by the survivor or survivors
shall have the effect of
conferring upon the persons in whose favour such disposition was
made, such rights in respect of any property
forming part of the
share of the survivor or survivors of the massed estate as they would
by law have possessed under the will
if that property had belonged to
the first-dying; and the executor shall frame his distribution
account accordingly.”
[36]
The following are the requirements for statutory
massing–
(i)
the first dying testator must have died on or after 2 October
1967,
being the date on which the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
came into operation;
(ii)
there must be two or more persons as parties to the mutual will;
(iii)
the parties must make a mutual will (a mutual will is a joint will in
which
two or more testators have mutually benefitted one another in
the same document);
(iv)
the parties must mass the whole or part of their separate estate
assets into
a consolidated unit, and this unit must be disposed of in
the mutual will;
(v)
the mutual will must grant the survivor ‘a limited right’
in respect of any property which has been massed;
(vi)
the disposition of the massed estate must take place sometime after
the death
of the first dying;
(vii)
the survivor must adiate on the death of the first dying.
[37]
The undisputed facts of the matter are:
(i)
KRA died in 2002;
(ii)
there were two parties to the joint will, namely
KRA and HJA;
(iii)
KRA and HJA executed a joint will;
(iv)
KRA and HJA consolidated their separate estates
into a single unit, which would be administered in terms of the joint
will;
(v)
HJA was granted and received benefits in terms of
the joint will;
(vi)
the disposition of the consolidated estate
occurred after the death of KRA, as the first dying spouse; and
(vii)
HJA elected to receive benefits in terms of the
joint will after the death of KRA.
[38]
Thus, on the undisputed facts it has to be
accepted that the statutory requirements for massing have been met.
In any event,
the respondents did not deny or contest the issue of
massing in the answering affidavit. On the contrary, they
accepted that
both massing and adiation had occurred.
[39]
Furthermore, they did not dispute that the massed
estate was part of the current estate.
[40]
It is
trite that the acceptance of any benefit under the will of the first
dying amounts to adiation and that this adiation prohibits
the
survivor from altering or revoking his or her own dispositions in
terms of the joint will in regard to the massed estate.
[8]
Once an election to adiate (or repudiate) is made, it is
irrevocable.
[9]
[41]
In
terms of South African law, a survivor cannot accept the benefits
left to him or her in terms of a testamentary document of the
first
dying and then thereafter refuse to deal with his own estate in the
manner set out in that testamentary document.
[10]
[42]
Thus,
adiation of any benefit under the will of the first dying amounts to
adiation which prohibits the survivor from altering or
revoking his
or her own disposition in the joint will in so far as it pertains to
the massed estate.
[11]
[43]
When HJA accepted the inheritance, as set out in
his sworn statement filed in the District of Kassel, he adiated.
Thus, HJA’s
ability to deal with that portion of his estate
which formed part of the joint estate was limited as a result of his
election to
accept his inheritance under the joint will.
[44]
Given
that both massing and adiation have occurred, there is no reason to
hold that the terms of the 2001 joint will were not binding
on HJA
and does not apply to the disposition of the joint estate to the
extent that it existed at the time of the death of KRA
and has
continued to grow and accumulate since then. To the extent that HJA
acquired a new estate, those assets would be regulated
by the
provisions of the 2018 Will. To find otherwise would be
contrary to the principle of fairness and would allow a party
to
resile from an obligation to perform in terms of a promise after
receiving benefits under that promise.
[12]
[45]
Therefore, based on the facts and the applicable
legal principles, the applicants have established that:
(i)
massing and adiation in terms of the 2001 joint
will occurred;
(ii)
the joint will and testament is valid and binding
in South Africa.
[46]
Furthermore,
the
respondents have failed to establish any factual or legal grounds to
show that the applicants are not entitled to the relief
they seek.
[47]
In the circumstances, I make the following orders:
(i)
the second respondent is directed to accept the
joint last will and testament of Harold John Anderson and Karin
Anderson, dated
23 June 2001 to be the will and testament of Harold
John Anderson in relation to his South African estate;
(ii)
the second respondent is directed to accept as
executor(s) of the late Harold John Anderson’s South African
estate such executors
as may be nominated by the beneficiaries under
the joint will and that such executor(s) be appointed in the place of
the first
respondent but only insofar as it pertains to the 2001 last
will and testament;
(iii)
such executors shall wind up and distribute the
estate of the late Harold John Anderson to the extent that such
estate forms part
of or is derived from the massed estate under the
joint will as at the death of Karin Anderson in 2022; and
(iv)
to the extent that any assets in the South African
estate of the late Harold John Anderson were amassed after the death
of Karin
Anderson and were not derived from the massed estate under
the joint will, such assets be dealt with in accordance with the
provisions
of the last will and testament executed by the late Harold
John Anderson on 17 October 2018 at Plettenberg Bay;
(v)
the costs of the application shall be born by the
third and fourth respondents jointly and severally, one paying to
absolve the
other, such costs shall be costs on a party party scale
on Scale C.
SLINGERS, J
[1]
Founding
Affidavit p 17 paras 40 – 43
[2]
Holmes
‘ Executor v Rawbone
1954
(3) SA 703 (AD)
[3]
Paragraphs
19 and 20 of the opinion on page 53
[4]
Paragraph
26 of the founding affidavit, page 13 read with paragraph 15 of the
answering affidavit, page 103
[5]
Paragraph
44.2 and 44.3 of the founding affidavit, page 19 read with paragraph
25 of the answering affidavit, page 106.
[6]
[6]
Paragraph
26.3 of the respondent’s heads of argument
[7]
1998
(2) SA 840
[8]
Holmes’
Executor v Rawbone
1954
(3) SA 703 (AD)
[9]
Corbett
et al
The
Law of Succession in South Africa
2
nd
edition,
page 455
[10]
Union
Government v Larkan
1916
AD 212
at 224
[11]
Corbett
et al,
The
Law of Succession in South Africa
2
nd
edition,
page 439
[12]
Applicant’s
heads of argument
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