Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 301South Africa
Gees v Duthie and Others (4024/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 301 (10 October 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAWCHC 301
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Gees v Duthie and Others (4024/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 301 (10 October 2024)
Gees v Duthie and Others (4024/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 301 (10 October 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2024_301.html
sino date 10 October 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case number: 4024/2024
In the matter between:
PETER
OTTO ALBERT GEES
Applicant
and
JOHN
MARR REX
DUTHIE
First respondent
ANTHONY
CRAIG PARKER
Second respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN
Third respondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
10 OCTOBER 2024
Delivered electronically
via email
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
The
facts of this matter are largely common cause. On 17 May 2001
Jean-Mary Duthi,
[1]
as
founder, executed the trust deed of the Woodbourne Trust, together
with Craig Ian Tingle (“Tingle”) and the first
respondent
(“Duthie”). The trust was duly registered by the
third respondent. Duthie and the second respondent
(“Parker”)
are currently the two trustees of the trust.
2.
On the day of the execution of the trust deed, 17
May 2001, Jean-Mary signed a declaration of appointment of the
applicant as protector
for the purpose of and subject to the
provisions of clause 33 of the trust deed, which regulates amendments
to the trust deed.
I shall set return to the provisions of
clause 33 and its proper interpretation.
3.
On
9 July 2002 Jean-Mary in writing nominated the applicant as her
successor as trustee, of the trust in terms of clause 4(b) of
trust
deed. She repeated that nomination in clause 11 of her will.
[2]
Clause
4(b) deals with the nomination of a person or persons to be appointed
as a trustee or trustees on the death or vacating of
office of an
existing trustee.
4.
On
1 December 2020 Jean-Mary and Duthie, in their capacities as trustees
and beneficiaries of the trust, and Parker in his capacity
as a
trustee, concluded an agreement for the amendment
[3]
of
the trust deed.
5.
Jean-Mary executed a last will on 2 October 2020,
and died on 31 July 2023. The applicant is the
executor of her
deceased estate, having been appointed as such in her
will. He brings this application in both his official and his
personal
capacity.
6.
Two issues arise for determination: first, whether
the applicant should be appointed as a trustee of the trust; and
second, whether
the amendment to the trust deed in 2020 was valid.
Principles of
interpretation
7.
The
case turns on the proper construction of clauses 4(b) and 33(a) of
the trust deed. The principles that apply to the interpretation
of documents such as the trust deed are by now well-established.
As appears from the relevant case law,
[4]
the
inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself, with meaning to be attributed to the language used in
the
light of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax.
8.
Regard must be had to the context in which the
provision appears, and the apparent purpose to which it is directed.
From the
outset one considers the context and the language together.
Context is provided by reading the particular provision in the light
of the document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its
coming into existence, including the parties’ subsequent
conduct.
9.
The process of interpretation is objective, not
subjective.
10.
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that
leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the
apparent purpose
of the document. The Court must however be
alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute what it
regards as reasonable,
sensible or businesslike for the words
actually used, that is, not to cross the divide between
interpretation and creating a contract
for the parties.
11.
Meaning is ultimately the most compelling and
coherent account the interpreter can provide, making use of the words
and sentences
that comprise the contested provision as they fit into
the larger structure of the document, its context and purpose. It is
not
a partial selection of interpretational materials directed at a
predetermined result.
12.
The issues in dispute are discussed against this
background.
The applicant’s
nomination as trustee in the context of clause 4(b) of the trust deed
13.
Clause 4(b) of the trust deed reads as follows:
“
The
Trustees shall be entitled, under
a
written instrument, to nominate the
person or persons who shall be appointed as Trustee or Trustees to
take the place of any Trustee
dying or vacating office for any reason
and to provide for the order of priority in which any persons so
nominated shall be appointed.
They shall further have the right by
subsequent written instrument to change or vary any nomination so
made before effect is given
thereto. The Trustees shall make such
appointments as shall be necessary to give effect to any nomination
or nominations made in
terms of this sub-clause.”
14.
Clause 4(b) of the trust deed entitles the
trustees, in writing, to nominate the person or persons who shall be
appointed as trustee
or trustees to take the place of any trustee
dying or vacating office. The trustees must make such
appointments as shall
be necessary to give effect to any nomination
or nominations made in terms of the provision. There are
accordingly two stages
to the process of substituting a deceased
trustee or one who has vacated office. At the first stage, a
replacement trustee is nominated.
At the second stage, a replacement
trustee is appointed.
15.
The second-stage appointment is clearly to be made
by the remaining trustees – this is indicated by the last
sentence of clause
4(b).
Self-evidently,
the remaining trustees, acting collectively, are tasked with taking
the steps necessary to give effect to a nomination.
16.
What is in dispute between the parties is whether
the first-stage nomination, too, must made by the trustees
collectively, or whether
instead each trustee is entitled
individually to nominate his or her successor, to which effect will
be given by the remaining
trustees once the office of the nominating
trustee falls vacant. Duthie and Parker contend for the former
interpretation.
The applicant argues that, because of his
nomination by Jean-Mary as trustee in her stead, on her death Duthie
and Parker (the
remaining trustees) were obliged to give effect to
that nomination by appointing him as trustee in terms of clause 4(b).
11.
It is necessary to look at the wider context
appearing from the trust deed.
12.
Clause
4(a) of the trust deed provided for the appointment as the first
trustees of Jean-Mary, being the founder, of Duthie (who
is one of
Jean-Mary's four children), and of Tingle. Clause 19(b) of the
trust deed provided
[5]
that
the trust beneficiaries were JeanMary, her children, and the
grandchildren born or to be born of Jean-Mary and their further
descendants. The first trustees thus comprised the founder, a
trust beneficiary trustee, and an independent trustee.
13.
In terms of clause 34 (the interpretation clause
in the trust deed) the trustees are defined as meaning the trustees
for the time
being of the trust. In terms of clause 4(d), there
shall at all times be not less than two trustees.
14.
The powers of the trustees are set out in clause 7
of the trust deed. Clause 7(j) provides for wide residual powers:
“
Without
in any way derogating from the powers and authorities hereinbefore
vested in the Trustees, they shall have such ancillary
and/or
additional powers as shall be necessary or requisite to enable them
from time to time to deal with all matters appertaining
to the Trust
in such manner as they shall deem advisable in the interest of the
Trust.
”
15.
It
is a fundamental rule of trust law that, in the absence of contrary
provisions in the trust deed, the trustees must act jointly
if the
trust is to be bound by their acts (referred to as the joint action
requirement).
[6]
The
rule is of general application to the exercise of trustee powers.
Thus, for example, the residual powers conferred by clause
7(j),
absent any provision to the contrary, are to be exercised
collectively by virtue of the joint action requirement.
16.
In terms of clause 12 of the trust deed, in the
event of any disagreement between the trustees, the decision of the
majority of
them shall prevail. In the event of an equality of votes,
the matter under discussion shall be dropped.
17.
If the language of clause 4(b) is the point of
departure, the clause is clear and unambiguous. The trustees (plural)
are empowered
to nominate a person or persons to take the place of
any trustee dying or vacating office. They (that is, the trustees)
also have
the right by subsequent written instrument to change or
vary any nomination before effect is given thereto. The language is
consistent
with the joint action requirement.
18.
The applicant contends, however, that clause 4(b)
should be understood to mean that any trustee (individually) shall be
entitled
to nominate the person who shall be appointed as the trustee
to take the place of the nominating trustee on the latter’s
dying or vacating office. He argues that the employment of the
plural word
"Trustees"
at
the beginning of the first sentence of clause 4(b) gives rise to two
possible meanings. One is that all the trustees, acting
jointly, are
entitled to nominate a successor trustee. The other is that each of
the trustees, acting singly, is entitled to nominate
his or her
successor trustee. The former meaning is, according to the applicant,
contradicted by the immediate context, the wider
context, and the
purpose of the provision. It results in superfluity and absurdity.
The latter meaning gives rise to none of those
difficulties. It is
accordingly to be preferred.
19.
There
is no dispute that the power of assumption or subrogation
[7]
may
be given to trustees. Where such power is conferred on trustees
it is to be exercised by all of the trustees in office
at the time of
the assumption, unless the trust deed indicates the contrary.
[8]
I
agree, however, with the submission made by counsel for the
respondents that the applicant’s problem is textual: the
applicant’s interpretation would require a material reworking
of clause 4(b) along the following lines (counsel usefully
included a
version in his heads of argument where strikethrough indicates
deletion and underlining indicates addition, and I replicate
his
version here):
“
The
Trustees
Any Trustee
shall be entitled, under
a
written instrument, to nominate the
person or persons who shall be appointed as Trustee or Trustees to
take the place of
any
that
Trustee
dying or vacating office for any reason
and
to provide for the order of priority in which any persons so
nominated shall be appointed
.
They
He
or she
shall further have the
right by subsequent written instrument to change or vary any
nomination so made before effect is given thereto.
The Trustees shall
make such appointments as shall be necessary to give effect to any
nomination or nominations made in terms of
this sub-clause.'
20.
The applicant argues that a construction based on
the plain language of clause 4(b) as advanced by Duthie and Parker
renders the
nomination to which the trustee was to be a party
meaningless, and has the result that clause 4(c) cannot co-exist with
clause
4(b). Clause 4(c) provides as follows:
“
Anything
to the contrary hereinbefore contained notwithstanding, the Trustees
shall at all times have the right to nominate and
appoint such
additional Trustee or Trustees as they shall determine.
”
21.
I do not agree that clauses 4(b) and (c) cannot
co-exist on the plain language construction preferred by Duthie and
Parker.
The purpose, respectively, of clause 4(b) and of clause
4(c) is different.
22.
The applicant contends that on the respondents’
interpretation clause 4(b) would be meaningless when regard is had to
the
second sentence of clause 4(b):
"They
shall further have the right by subsequent written instrument to
change or vary any nomination so made before effect
is given
thereto."
23.
The initial pronoun
"[t]hey'
of this sentence would, on the
interpretation of Duthie and Parker, be a reference to the trustees
collectively. But effect
is only given to a nomination after a
trustee has died or vacated office. Thus, by the time effect is
given, the trustee who is
to be replaced is no longer a trustee.
On the interpretation favoured by Duthie and Parker, therefore, the
nomination to
which that trustee was a party is meaningless, as the
remaining trustees can simply change such nomination before giving
effect
to it. If the clause is purposively interpretated, the
purpose of clause 4(b) being to permit a trustee to nominate a
successor,
it means that each trustee may nominate his or her
successor, and the remaining trustees must given effect to such
nomination once
that trustee has died or vacated office.
24.
The applicant’s argument seems to me to be a
bridge too far given the clear wording of the clause. Clause
4(b) permits
the trustees to nominate one or more replacement
trustees, and to stipulate for the order of priority in which such
persons are
to be appointed. It provides for “succession
planning” by nominating designated persons to replace the donor
trustee,
the beneficiary trustee, or the independent trustee. This is
a power which must be exercised by the trustees collectively, in line
with the joint action requirement.
25.
Conferring a power to change or vary a nomination
by subsequent written instrument before effect is given to it
preserves a necessary
power to change the succession plan, as
circumstances may require. The only limitation on the power to
change or to vary
a nomination is that this must be done prior to
effect being given thereto. Regard being had to the fact that clause
4(b) obliges
the trustees to make such appointments as shall be
necessary to give effect to any nomination, a variation can only be
made prior
to the death of or the vacating of office by the trustee
in question.
26.
Clause 4(c) provides for the appointment of an
additional trustee or trustees, as opposed to a replacement trustee
or trustees.
The trustees have the power to appoint additional
trustees at any time during the existence of the trust, should it be
necessary.
The clause thus caters for a different situation.
There is no reason why clauses 4(b) and 4(c) should not co-exist,
given
that they address different situations.
27.
In
these circumstances, there is no basis to contend, as the applicant
does, that the ordinary language of clause 4(b) renders the
nomination process meaningless. The presumption against
superfluity
[9]
does
not come into play.
28.
The
applicant argues that, in the broader context, there is one fact of
great significance: Jean-Mary twice nominated the applicant
to
succeed her as trustee, and acted alone in doing so. She therefore
certainly was of the view that clause 4(b) authorised her
to nominate
her own successor. The importance of this lies therein that in
seeking to ascertain the intention of the parties,
a court must
examine all the circumstances surrounding the conclusion of the
contract - in this case the execution of the trust
deed -
"including
any relevant subsequent conduct of the parties"
.
[10]
29.
In
Kooij
v Middleground Trading 251 CC and another
[11]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
“
It
is true that a Court can, when interpreting a contract, have regard
to the parties' subsequent conduct in order to determine
what they
intended. This Court has, however, made it clear that the use of
such evidence is circumscribed. It laid down that
such evidence may
be accepted subject to three provisos. First, the evidence must be
indicative of a common understanding of the
terms and meaning of the
contract. Second, the evidence may be used as an aid to
interpretation and not to alter the words used
by the parties. Third,
that evidence must be used as conservatively as possible.”
30.
When considering the language of clause 4(b) in
the context of the trust deed as a whole and the joint action
requirement, I do
not think that the way in which Jean-Mary saw her
powers of nomination carries great weight. There is no evidence
as to her
understanding of the clause other than her unilateral
nominations. She may well have done so mistakenly. As
appears
form the discussion below, she further acted on her own
(without the assistance of the protector she had appointed under
clause
33) on two occasions in amending the trust deed. Her
conduct, whether in nominating her successor or appointing a
protector,
therefore does not add much of value to the debate.
31.
In the circumstances, I find that Duthie and
Parker are not obliged to appoint the applicant as trustee of the
trust.
The December 2020
amendment of the trust deed
32.
Clause 33 of the trust deed provides the
following:
“
AMENDMENT
OF TRUST DEED
(a)
During
the lifetime of the DONOR this Trust Deed may be amended from time to
time in such manner as shall be agreed upon between
the DONOR or such
person (hereinafter referred to as "the Protector”) should
the DONOR have appointed same during her
lifetime per sub-clause
33(c) hereunder, as the case may be, and the Trustees
.
[12]
(b)
After the death of the DONOR this Trust Deed
may be amended from time to time in such manner as may be agreed upon
between the Trustees
and the Protector who shall be nominated in
terms of the provisions of the next succeeding sub-clause.
(c)
The Protector shall be:-
(i)
Such person as shall be nominated by the DONOR
by written instrument during her lifetime or in her Last Will and
Testament;
(ii)
If the DONOR shall have failed during her
lifetime to nominate the Protector then the Protector shall be
nominated in writing by
the Executors of the DONOR'S Estate;
(iii)
The Protector nominated in terms of (i) or (ii)
above shall be entitled by written instrument to nominate his
successor and such
successor and each subsequent successor shall
similarly have the right to nominate his successor.
(d)
No amendment of the Trust Deed made pursuant to
the above provisions shall be of any force or effect to the extent
that:-
(i)
Any benefit shall be conferred by such
amendment on the DONOR or her Estate or
(ii)
Such amendment shall enable or make it possible
for the Trustees to confer any benefit on the DONOR or her Estate.'
33.
As
appears from the respondents’ papers,
[13]
on
28 September 2001 (four months after the execution of the trust deed)
the then trustees of the trust, being Jean-Mary, Duthie
and Tingle,
resolved to distribute trust property to three of the beneficiaries,
being Duthie's siblings Lynne, Caroline and Andrew.
On receipt of
this property, those siblings and their descendants would no longer
participate in any further trust distributions.
On the same day
the trustees resolved to amend clause 19(b) of the trust deed by
substituting clause 19(b) to provide that the
trust beneficiaries
would be Jean-Mary, Duthie, and Duthie's children (“the
beneficiary resolution”).
34.
At no time relevant to the beneficiary resolution
did Jean-Mary indicate to Tingle or Duthie as her co-trustees that
she had nominated
the applicant as the protector, or that it was
necessary to obtain the protector's consent to the beneficiary
resolution.
35.
At the time of the trust deed amendment in
December 2020 Jean-Mary, Duthie and Parker discussed the
appropriateness of increasing
the minimum number of trustees from two
to three; the fact that provision for the appointment of a protector
was no longer necessary,
given changed circumstances, and in
particular the fact that Duthie's siblings and their descendants were
no longer trust beneficiaries.
Again, Jean-Mary did not mention
that the applicant had been appointed as protector, or that the
protector had any role to play.
36.
The applicant says that, because of his
appointment as the protector, any amendment of the trust deed during
Jean-Mary's lifetime
required agreement between himself, as
protector, and the trustees. This argument rests solely on the
phrase “as
the case may be”
in clause 33(a). This phrase, so the
argument goes, indicates that there may or may not be a protector: it
depends on whether Jean-Mary
has appointed one. If the case is that
there is a protector, then the agreement to amend must be between the
protector and the
trustees.
37.
I agree with counsel for the respondents, however,
that the phrase does not have the effect contended for by the
applicant.
It seems to me that the phrase “
as
the case may be
”
in this context
simply means “either/or”. Thus, in terms of clause 33(a)
amendments to the trust deed during Jean-Mary’s
lifetime may be
done in two ways:
37.1.
By agreement between Jean-Mary (as donor) and the
remaining trustees; or
37.2.
if a protector has been appointed, by agreement
between the protector and the trustees.
38.
There is no sensible reason why, at the time of
establishing the trust and simultaneously signing the declaration of
the applicant’s
appointment as protector, Jean-Mary would have
intended that trust deed amendments should require not only the
agreement of herself
and the remaining trustees, but the agreement of
the protector in addition. The sensible and businesslike
construction of
clause 33(a) is that the role of the protector, if
appointed by the donor during her lifetime, was to participate in
considering
proposed amendments where this was considered necessary,
for example, in the case of a deadlock between two trustees.
39.
The fact that when the agreement to amend was
concluded, Jean-Mary was 92 years of age, does not advance the
applicant’s case.
It is speculation to say that it would
have been sensible for her to have the protection of the applicant.
There is no evidence
on record indicating that Jean-Mary required
protection.
40.
Irrespective
of the competing constructions of clause 33(a), any participation of
the protector in considering trust deed amendments
would not be on
the basis that his consent was a prerequisite for a trust deed
amendment. The provisions of clause 12 of the trust
deed
[14]
would
in any event apply to any consideration of an amendment by the
trustees and the protector. In the present case, the trust
deed
amendment was approved by all three of the trustees, constituting the
necessary majority, as well as the donor.
41.
In the circumstances, the December 2020 amendment
to the trust deed is valid.
42.
As indicated, on the papers the applicant’s
appointment as protector on 17 May 2001 was never acted upon or
communicated
to the other trustees. It only came to the attention of
Duthie and Parker after Jean-Mary's death. In fact, the
protector
did not take part in the amendment to the trust deed
effected on 28 September 2001 (amending clause 19(b) in relation to
beneficiaries),
four months after his appointment.
43.
The respondents argue that, for there to be an
effective appointment of a protector by the donor during her lifetime
in terms of
clause 33(a), the nomination by the protector in terms of
s 33(c)(i) must at least have been notified to the trustees.
Failing
this basic requirement, amendments to the trust deed might be
agreed to by the trustees and implemented (as was the case here),
only to be met with a hitherto undisclosed appointment of a protector
made over 20 years previously.
44.
I agree with this proposition, although it is not
strictly necessary to decide given the interpretation that I regard
as proper
in relation to clause 33(a).
Parker’s
authority as trustee
45.
In further support for the argument that the 2020
amendment to the trust deed was not validly done, the applicant
challenges Parker’s
authority as trustee on the basis that, to
the applicant’s knowledge, no letters of authority had been
issued by the Master
to Parker prior to 5 May 2022. This was
the date on which the Master had issued letters of authority to
Jean-Mary, Duthie
and Parker.
46.
In the answering affidavit Duthie puts up a
Master's certificate of 14 April 2014 authorising Parker to act as a
trustee, together
with Jean-Mary and Duthie after Tingle’s
resignation, such resignation being specifically noted. The
certificate is
dispositive of the challenge to Parker's authority.
47.
In his replying affidavit the applicant speculates
as to why the Master issued the letters of authority of 5 May 2022,
and suggests
that absent an explanation it may be inferred on the
probabilities that Parker was not a duly authorized trustee at the
time of
the amendment of the trust deed in 2020. The applicant
also strenuously criticizes the way in which Duthie dealt with the
issue in the answering affidavit, effectively saying that Duthie said
too much when he could have gone straight to the 2014 certificate.
48.
I
do not think that the inference suggested by the applicant is
justified. As counsel for the respondents pointed out, one
obvious possible reason for the issuing of fresh letters of authority
to the trustees collectively would have been because of the
change in
the composition of the trustees when Parker replaced Tingle.
The 2014 certificate refers to Tingle’s resignation;
the 2022
certificate is simply issued to Parker, Duthie and Jean-Mary.
Disputes of fact in motion proceedings are, in any
event, not decided
on the probabilities.
[15]
Parker’s
evidence that he was authorized at the time is supported by the
Master’s certificate. His evidence, and
Duthie’s,
in this respect is not so bald, sketchy or far-fetched as to fall to
be rejected on the papers. On
Plascon
Evans
,
that is the end of the matter.
49.
On the papers I find that Parker was duly
authorized as trustee at the time of the December 2020 amendment of
the trust deed.
Conclusion, and
costs
50.
In all of these circumstances, I am not inclined
to find in the applicant’s favour.
51.
The applicant submits that, in the event of his
application being unsuccessful, the costs of the application should
be born by Jean-Mary’s
deceased estate. This is because
his nomination as trustee was repeated in the will, and because
Jean-Mary had appointed
him as protector. His case is not
frivolous, and he brought it to fulfill Jean-mary’s wishes in
relation to the trust
as evident from her will.
52.
The applicant’s claim for his appointment as
trustee to the trust relies on the nomination of 9 July 2002 (albeit
repeated
in Jean-Mary’s will), whilst his dispute about the
amendment of the trust deed rested on his appointment as protector on
17 May 2001. These aspects involve the trust, and are not
related to Jean-Mary’s deceased estate. The applicant
did
not have to bring this application in his capacity as executor of the
estate, and there is no reason why the estate should
bear the costs.
Order
53.
I accordingly make an order as follows:
53.1.
The application is dismissed.
53.2.
The applicant is to pay the costs of the
application in his personal capacity, including the cost of counsel
on Scale C.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances
:
For
the applicant:
E. Fagan
SC and M. Smit, instructed by MacGregor Stanford Kruger Inc.
For
the first and second respondents
:
S. P. Rosenberg SC , instructed by Kaplan Blumberg Attorneys Inc.
[1]
The
parties refer to her as “Jean-Mary” in the papers, and I
shall do the same.
[2]
The
formulation in the will is a wider one, nominating the applicant as
her successor as trustee in respect of all trusts of which
she is a
trustee; but that obviously includes the Woodbourne Trust.
[3]
Entitled
“Agreement of Variation”.
[4]
See
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at paras [18]-[19];
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v
S
Bothma
&
Seun
Transport (Edms) Bpk
2014
(2) SA 494
(SCA) at paras [10]-[12];
Tshwane
City v Blair Atholl Homeowners Association
2019
(3) SA 398
(SCA) at paras [61]-[64];
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and another
2021
(6) SA 1
(CC) at para [68];
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and others
2022
(1) SA 100
(SCA) at paras [47]-[50].
[5]
Prior
to an amendment in September 2001.
[6]
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and Others
2005
(2) SA 77
(SCA) at para [15].
[7]
The
power of assumption combined with the power of to resign from the
trust: Cameron
et
al
Honor’s
South African Law of Trusts
(6ed)
at p 218.
[8]
Honore
supra
at
p 214.
[9]
See
Wellworths
Bazaars Ltd v Chandler’s Ltd and another
1947
(2) SA 37
(A) at 43.
[10]
G4S
Cash Solutions (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Zandspruit Cash and Carry (Pty) Ltd
and another
2017
(2) SA 24
(SCA) at para [12].
[11]
[2020]
ZASCA 45
(23 April 2020) at para [16].
[12]
Emphasis
supplied.
[13]
The
applicant seeks final relief on motion:
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
[14]
“
In
the event of a disagreement between the Trustees at any time, the
decision of the majority of them shall prevail and be of
the same
force and effect as if it were a unanimous decision of the
Trustees. In the event of an equality of votes, the
matter
under discussion shall be dropped.
”
[15]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009
(2) SA 277
(SCA) at para
[26]
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
J.G.S v S.E.S and Others (Appeal) (A283/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 543 (17 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 543High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Duthie v Cilliers and Associates (19275/2015 ; 19375/2015) [2024] ZAWCHC 400 (29 November 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 400High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Bezuidenhout and Others v Minister of Agriculture Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (2925/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 184; [2024] 3 All SA 744 (WCC) (27 June 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 184High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Magongo v Dercksens Incorporated (5087/2017) [2023] ZAWCHC 148 (9 June 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 148High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
G.W.X. v Magistrate of Regional Division of Western Cape Blue Downs Mashala N.O and Another (17268/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 142 (27 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 142High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar