Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 158South Africa
Lotter v Trustees for Time Being of Phildi Trust (13754/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 158 (7 June 2024)
Headnotes
– and the appeal must fail…
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Lotter v Trustees for Time Being of Phildi Trust (13754/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 158 (7 June 2024)
Lotter v Trustees for Time Being of Phildi Trust (13754/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 158 (7 June 2024)
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sino date 7 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 13754/2023
In
the matter between:
KAREN
LOTTER
N.O.
Excipient/Defendant
and
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
PHILDI TRUST
Respondent/Plaintiff
In
re:
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING OF THE PHILDI TRUST
Plaintiff
KAREN
LOTTER
N.O.
Defendant
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
30 April 2024, supplementary note delivered on 3 May 2024
Delivered
electronically:
7 June 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
:
[1]
This is an exception taken by the defendant to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim on the basis that the pleading
lacks averments
necessary to sustain a cause of action on two distinct grounds. The
first is that ex facie the pleading there is
no vinculum iuris
between the plaintiff trust (the trust) and the deceased estate of
the late Mr Phillipus Van Staden (the
deceased) of which the
defendant is the executrix. The second is that the agreement upon
which the trust relies for its relief
is a pactum successorium and
thus invalid and unenforceable.
[2]
The deceased, who passed away on 10 August 2021, was divorced
from Ms Magaretha Van Staden (his ex-wife) on
21 October
2010. Earlier on 12 October 2009 the deceased and his ex-wife
concluded a written settlement agreement to
be incorporated in their
final order of divorce and this subsequently occurred. Relevant for
present purposes are the following
clauses in the settlement
agreement:
‘
The Phildi
Trust. As agreed between Husband and Wife the benefactors
[sic]
of the current life insurance of the two parties (see addendum A)
will be nominated to the Phildi Trust in the event of death of
either
Husband and/or Wife. The beneficiaries of the trust will remain as
presently nominated and will not change unless agreed
to by both
parties…
[clause 4]
The Husband will also
continue to pay all assurance
[sic]
contributions… (see
addendum A)…
[clause 6]
This Agreement shall
be binding upon the parties, and upon their heirs, executors,
personal representatives, administrators, successors,
and assigns
[clause 12]’
[3]
It bears mention that the trust seeks rectification of the word
“benefactors” in clause 4 to read “benefits”
but nothing turns on this for purposes of this exception. The cause
of action to which the exception is directed is pleaded as
follows:
‘
10.
On an appropriate interpretation of the agreement, the rights and
benefits accruing to the trust from
the agreement did so without any
need for the trust to inform the deceased of their
[sic]
acceptance of those rights…
Claim B: damages
14.
In breach of the agreement, the deceased:
14.1
Failed to nominate the Trust as the beneficiary of the policies; and
14.2
Discontinued the payment of the policies, causing their lapsing.
15. As a
consequence of these breaches, and upon the death of the deceased,
the Trust suffered loss in the value of the policies…
19. At the date
of his death, the policies would have entitled the Trust, had the
deceased complied with his obligations in
terms of the agreement, to
payment of the following sums, representing the damages suffered by
the Trust by virtue of the deceased’s
breaches calculated by
applying the aforegoing increases to the capital benefits recorded
therein:…’
[4]
There is no allegation in the pleading that the trust accepted the
benefits conferred upon it in clause 4 of the settlement
agreement.
Further, the addendum to the settlement agreement incorporated in the
order of divorce reflects that there is no nominated
beneficiary of
either of the two life policies in issue which means that, given the
deceased was the insured under both, on his
death the proceeds (had
the policies not lapsed due to his non-payment of the premiums) would
have accrued to his estate.
First
ground – no vinculum iuris
[5]
Self-evidently the trust is not a party to the settlement agreement
since it was concluded only between the deceased and
his ex-wife. The
defendant submits that clause 4 of the settlement agreement can only
be a contract for the benefit of a third
party (stipulatio alteri)
which benefit must be accepted by the third party (the trust) for it
to be enforceable.
[6]
The trust raises two arguments in response. First, and ‘
as a
general proposition’
, courts are reluctant to determine the
interpretation of contracts on exception. Second, and in any event,
the general rule that
acceptance by a third party of benefits arising
from a contract is required for the establishment of a vinculum iuris
is subject
to certain exceptions, one of which is the so-called
Perezius exception and this, it is contended, applies in the present
case.
Given there is no dispute as to the requirements for a
stipulatio alteri I deal with each of the arguments raised by the
trust
with reference to the authorities upon which it relies.
[7]
Counsel for
the trust relied on a portion of para [39] in
Picbel
Groep Voorsorgfonds v Somerville and Related Matters
[1]
(which I will underline for ease of reference hereunder) but it is
necessary to quote from other paragraphs of that judgment as
well:
‘
[25]
The exception in this appeal concerns the settlement agreement, its
interpretation and its implications for
the right of one joint
wrongdoer to claim a contribution from other joint wrongdoers in
terms of s 2(12) of the ADA…
[26]
It is necessary first to say something about the proper approach to
issues such as these on exception. In
Lewis
v Oneanate (Pty) Ltd & another
[2]
Nicholas
AJA stated that an excipient bears the burden of persuading the court
that “upon every interpretation which the particulars
of claim”
and any agreement on which they rely “can reasonably bear, no
cause of action is disclosed”. And, in
Sun
Packaging (Pty) Ltd v Vreulink
,
[3]
Nestadt JA confirmed that there is no hard and fast rule that the
interpretation of agreements is to be avoided on exception. He
said:
“
As a rule,
Courts are reluctant to decide upon exception questions concerning
the interpretation of a contract. But this is where
its meaning is
uncertain . . .
In casu
, the position is different. Difficulty
in interpreting a document does not necessarily imply that it is
ambiguous . . . Contracts
are not rendered uncertain because parties
disagree as to their meaning.”
[27]
What these authorities mean in this case is that if the relevant
clauses of the settlement agreement (for
it is its terms that make or
break the funds’ cause of action for purposes of the
exceptions) can reasonably bear any meaning
that supports a cause of
action in terms of s 2(12) of the ADA, the exceptions must fail –
and the appeal must succeed. If,
on the other hand, the relevant
clauses of the settlement agreement can only reasonably bear the
meaning attributed to them by
the respondents, and they are incapable
of sustaining a cause of action based on s 2(12) of the ADA, the
exceptions must be upheld
– and the appeal must fail…
[39] The only
outstanding issue is whether the settlement agreement contemplated a
full settlement, as required by s 2(12),
as this is not expressly
pleaded. In order to determine this, it is necessary (and
permissible) to interpret the settlement agreement
that is relied on
in the particulars of claim, and which is “a link in the chain
of [the funds’] cause of action”.
[4]
In
Dettmann
v Goldfain & another
,
[5]
this court stated that courts are, in some instances, reluctant to
“decide upon exception questions concerning the interpretation
of a contract”. Those circumstances are, first, where the
entire contract is not before the court; and secondly, where it
appears from the contract or the pleadings that “there may be
admissible evidence which, if placed before the Court, could
influence the Court’s decision as to the meaning of the
contract”, provided that this possibility is “something
more than a notional or remote one
”
.
[40] In
this case, the entire settlement agreement is before the court and
there has been no suggestion, either in the
pleadings or in argument,
of the meaning of the settlement agreement being influenced by
admissible evidence being led in the trial.
Indeed, the parties are
ad idem
as to what the relevant clauses of the agreement mean
and I am of the view that that meaning is the only reasonable meaning
that
those clauses can have. The parties differ only in respect of
what the legal consequences may be as far as a cause of action based
on s 2(12) of the ADA is concerned. As it was put in the appellants’
heads of argument, the issue is ‘given the terms
of section
2(12), what
ex lege
is the effect of this settlement
agreement?’
[8]
Applying all these principles to the present matter the following is
evident. There is a single allegation (in paragraph
10 of the
pleading) that on an ‘
appropriate’
interpretation
of clause 4 of the settlement agreement the rights and benefits (in
the policies) accrued to the trust without any
need for the trust to
inform ‘
the deceased’
of its acceptance of those
rights. But the intention of clause 4 is plain: the deceased and his
ex-wife, who were the only parties
thereto, agreed that the
‘
benefactors’
of the policies ‘
will be
nominated to the Phildi Trust’
in the event of death of
either of them. I accept of course that the wording itself is poor,
but their joint express intention
is nonetheless clear. They
contracted for the benefit of a third party, viz. the trust.
[9]
Accordingly on this fundamental aspect there can be no uncertainty of
the kind envisaged in
Picbel
. As the Supreme Court of Appeal
made clear ‘
contracts are not rendered uncertain because
parties disagree as to their meaning’.
Clause 4 can
only reasonably bear one meaning on this score and given that ex
facie the pleading the trust did not accept
the benefits of the
rights bestowed upon it there is no pleaded vinculum iuris. In
addition the entire settlement agreement is
before the court. There
is no suggestion in the pleading, and nor was there in argument, that
the meaning of clause 4 might
be influenced by admissible
evidence being led in the trial. Moreover the contention in the
trust’s heads of argument that
because the divorce order
effectively dispensed with the necessity for the trust to accept the
benefit is not pleaded.
[10]
Turning now
to the trust’s second argument, namely that the provisions of
clause 4 fall within the so-called Perezius
exception. The legal
position was succinctly set out by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Hofer
and Others v Kevitt NO and Others
[6]
as follows:
‘
In
order to overcome the hurdle presented by the fact that there had
been no acceptance of the benefits by the appellants and the
other
more remote beneficiaries, Mr Walther endeavoured to invoke what may
be called “the exception of
Perezius”
.
Perezius
ad Cod
8.55 stated as a general rule that a
donation is recoverable unless accepted by the donee. He added,
however, the important qualification
that
“
in
the case of the settlement of property in a family the acceptance of
the first donee enures for the benefit of and is considered
an
acceptance by all the beneficiaries
”.
The
Perezius
exception has been received and applies to beneficiaries under
trusts created
inter vivos
in South Africa. See
Honoré
and Cameron
(
op cit
at 422 n 72, and cases there cited).
It was
pointed out, however, by Centlivres CJ in
Crookes’
case at 288E-H that the exception only applies if the
donated property is to remain in the family of the donor and also is
to be
inalienable and is to remain intact
. It is clear
from the provisions of the trust deed in the present application that
the trustees were empowered to sell the assets
and to invest the
proceeds in such manner as they in their sole discretion deemed fit.
There was also no prohibition of alienation
to persons outside the
family imposed on the ultimate beneficiaries of the trust capital.
Furthermore, the donor, Herbert, Charles
and Eleanora were only
entitled to the income of the trust and their acceptance of that
benefit cannot be regarded as an acceptance
of the capital which was
to go to the ultimate beneficiaries. The exception of
Perezius
cannot therefore apply to the present case.’
(my
emphasis).
[11]
I do not see how the Perezius exception can apply in the present
matter, since there is no allegation in the pleading
that the
defendant
is attempting to recover the “donation”
in clause 4
from
the trust. The whole pleading is to the
opposite effect. But in any event what is not pleaded is:
(a) the identity of
the trustees; (b) the identity of the
beneficiaries; and (c) the terms of the trust deed. There is no
allegation that
the trust is a family trust and the settlement
agreement is equally silent in this regard, and there is not a single
pleaded allegation
that the beneficiaries of the trust are family
members of the deceased and his ex-wife. The pleading thus lacks
averments necessary
to sustain a cause of action based on the
Perezius exception as well, and it is presumably for this reason that
counsel for the
trust did not persist with argument on this point.
Second
ground – pactum successorium
[12]
In
Borman
en De Vos NNO en ’n Ander v Potgietersrusse Tabakkorporasie Bpk
en ’n Ander
[7]
a pactum successorium was described as follows. For convenience I
adopt the English translation agreed between the parties with
references to other authorities omitted:
‘
A pactum
successorium (or pactum de succedendo) is, in short, an agreement in
which the parties regulate the devolution (successio)
of the estate
(or a part thereof, or a specific item forming part thereof) of one
or more of the parties after the death (mortis
causa) of the party or
parties concerned. An example of such an agreement is where A and B
agree to appoint each other as
heirs; or where A and B agree
that A will bequeath his estate (or a part thereof) to B;
or
where A and B agree that A will bequeath his estate (or a part
thereof, or a specific item belonging to him) to C
. An
agreement of this nature is contrary to the general rule of our law
that estates devolve ex testamento (by will) or ab intestato
(intestate), and is considered invalid except in the case where it is
embodied in an antenuptial contract.’
(my emphasis)
[13]
In the present matter it would be the third example in the quoted
passage that would apply if it is determined that clause
4 of the
settlement agreement is a pactum successorium. The trust argues that
the third example does not apply since clause 4,
on any reading, does
not regulate an inheritance. This argument is based on two
contentions. First, the proceeds of the policies
never formed part of
the deceased’s estate and therefore no inheritance was
contemplated. Second, ex facie the pleading the
rights and
obligations in terms of the settlement agreement vested immediately
since the deceased was obliged, again immediately,
to pay the monthly
premiums of the policies and ensure the nomination of the trust as
beneficiary.
[14]
To my mind
both of these contentions are misplaced. As to the first, the
proceeds of the policies would, for the reason already
given, have
been paid to his estate on the death of the deceased (but for the
nomination in clause 4 and had the policies not lapsed).
The
intention to bequeath this part of his estate was thus manifest.
Further, the deceased did not retain the right to revoke his
undertaking in clause 4, as occurred in
Ex
parte
Calder
Wood NO: in re Estate Wixley
[8]
upon which counsel for the defendant relied and where it was held
that:
‘
On the nature
of a
pactum successorium
, Mr
Jordaan
drew my attention
to
Ahrend and Others v Winter
1950 (2) SA 682
(T);
Varkevisser
v Estate Varkevisser and Another
1959 (4) SA 196
(SR);
Costain
and Partners v Godden NO and Another
1960 (4) SA 456
(SR) and
Borman en De Vos NNO en ’n Ander v Potgietersrusse
Tabakkorporasie Bpk en ’n Ander (supra)
. I think these cases
show that a
pactum successorium
is an agreement relating to
the succession to an estate, or a portion thereof, or to a specific
asset or benefit belonging thereto,
which postpones the devolution of
personal rights until the death of the owner and which prevents the
latter from bequeathing his
estate or property to another person when
otherwise he would be entitled to do so. It is the deprivation or
curtailment of testamentary
freedom that justifies the prohibition of
such an agreement. Accordingly, an agreement not to pass property
mortis causa
would be invalid on the same ground.
Does the contract
between the deceased and the beneficiary fall into this category? If
it does not, then it affords no assistance
to the applicant to
contend that the contract with the insurance company was but the
juridical act by which it was to be performed.
The foundation of a
pactum successorium
is that the person who
contracts with regard to his own succession purports to bind himself
to that contract. He does not seek to
retain the unilateral right to
revoke his promise. Should he do so, then the contract is not one
which conflicts with the general
rule of our law that inheritances
must devolve
ex testamento
or
ab
intestato
…
In the present case
in promising the beneficiary the proceeds of the policy if he were to
be killed, the deceased contemporaneously
retained the unilateral
right to revoke her nomination
. He explained to her the
conditions in the beneficiary appointment form, which plainly permit
of a revocation of the nomination
either expressly by written notice,
or impliedly by cession of the policy. Consequently her acceptance
was within the framework
of the beneficiary appointment form.
I consider,
therefore, that the retention by the deceased of the right to revoke
his promise made to the beneficiary effectively
prevents their
contractual relationship from being designated a
pactum
successorium
.’ (my emphasis)
[15]
As regards
the second contention it is indeed so that, upon conclusion of the
settlement agreement, the deceased became contractually
bound to his
ex-wife to pay the policy premiums and nominate the trust as
beneficiary of the policies, but this does not detract
from the
invalidity in law of his undertaking to make that nomination. As was
made clear in
McAlpine
v McAlpine NO and Another
:
[9]
‘
A
donatio
mortis causa
is, in my view, simply a species of
pactum
successorium
and it is not suggested that the agreements in this
case meet the special requirements for validity of a
donatio
mortis causa
, namely unilateral revocability and compliance with
testamentary formalities. (See Joubert (ed)
The Law of South
Africa
vol 8 paras 283-5.)
However,
whether they be donations or not, in my opinion the basic determinant
as to whether or not the reciprocal promises in clause
1 of agreement
B constitute
pactum successoria
is the so-called vesting test.
This test is applied by asking in a particular case whether the
promise disposing of an asset in
favour of another (whether by way of
donation or other form of contract) causes the right thereto to vest
in the promisee only
upon or after the death of the promissor (which
points to a
pactum successorium
);or whether vesting takes
place prior to the death of the promissor, for instance, at the date
of the transaction giving rise to
the promise (in which case it
cannot be a
pactum successorium
).’
[16]
Whichever way one looks at it the asset, being the proceeds of the
life policies, could only have vested in the trust
upon the death of
the deceased. The undertaking to nominate the trust as beneficiary
could not somehow have accelerated the trust’s
entitlement (had
the deceased complied with his undertaking) to payment of the
proceeds at some earlier date. It was not the obligation
that vested
but the right to the proceeds of the policies. Further, and although
submitted in the trust’s heads of argument
and advanced at the
hearing, the contention that the deceased in any event became obliged
to comply with clause 4 by virtue of
a court order (i.e. the
decree of divorce) the trust does not rely on this in the pleading;
it only relies on a breach of
the settlement agreement. It follows
that the second ground of exception must also be upheld. As to costs,
given the nature of
the arguments it is my view that scale B
should apply.
[17]
The following order is made:
1.
The defendant’s exception to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim is upheld;
2.
The
plaintiff is granted leave to serve a notice of intention to amend
its particulars of claim in terms of rule 28 within 15 court
days
from date hereof; and
3.
The
plaintiff shall pay the defendant’s party and party costs on
scale B.
J
I CLOETE
For
excipient
: Adv M De Wet
Instructed
by
: Nabal Attorneys (Mr R Nabal)
For
respondent
: Adv A Van Aswegen
Instructed
by
: Brand Attorneys (Ms C Brand)
[1]
2013 (5) SA 496
(SCA).
[2]
Lewis
v Oneanate (Pty) Ltd & another
[1992] ZASCA 174
;
1992 (4) SA 811
(A) at 817F-G. See too
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO & others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA) para 6;
Theunissen
& andere v Transvaalse Lewendehawe Koöp Bpk
1988 (2) SA 493
(A) at 500E-F.
[3]
Sun
Packaging (Pty) Ltd v Vreulink
[1996] ZASCA 73
;
1996
(4) SA 176
(A) at 186J-187B.
[4]
Van
Tonder v Western Credit Ltd
1966 (1) SA 189
(C) at 193H;
South
African Railways and Harbours v Deal Enterprises (Pty) Ltd
1975 (3) SA 944
(W) at 953A;
Moosa
& others NNO v Hassam & others NNO
2010 (2) SA 410
(KZP) para 17.
[5]
Dettmann
v Goldfain & another
1975 (3) SA 385
(A) at 400A-B. See too
Davenport
Corner Tea Room (Pty) Ltd v Joubert
1962 (2) SA 709
(D) at 715G-716E.
[6]
[1997] ZASCA 79
;
1998 (1) SA 382
(SCA) at 387E-J.
[7]
1976 (3) SA 488
(A) at 501A-D.
[8]
[1981] 4 All SA 389
(Z) at 397-398.
[9]
[1996] ZASCA 127
;
1997 (1) SA 736
(AD) at 750B-E.
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