Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 397South Africa
Sheriff of the High Court, Cape Town West v Foster and Another (21464/2018 ; 8526/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 397 (28 November 2024)
Headnotes
on 15 June 2022, 21 July 2022, 28 July 2022 and 21 January 2023. Mr Foster did not attend that inquiry but was represented thereat by his previous attorney of record, Mr Van der Riet.
Judgment
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## Sheriff of the High Court, Cape Town West v Foster and Another (21464/2018 ; 8526/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 397 (28 November 2024)
Sheriff of the High Court, Cape Town West v Foster and Another (21464/2018 ; 8526/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 397 (28 November 2024)
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sino date 28 November 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Nos:
21464/2018 and
8526/2019
In the matter between:
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT,
CAPE
TOWN
WEST
Applicant
and
TREVOR
NORMAN FOSTER
Execution Creditor
and
CLEM
PATRICK
KIRST
Execution Debtor
IN
RE:
NTSWAKI
SEHUNELO
First Claimant
SHARMN
NATASHA KIRST
Second Claimant
BERLIN
KIRST
Third Claimant
Coram:
Justice J
Cloete
Heard:
10, 11, 12
June 2024 and 16 October 2024
Delivered
electronically:
28 November 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
These are interpleader proceedings in terms of uniform rule 58, where
the Sheriff is the applicant and the execution creditor (Mr Foster)
and second claimant (Ms Kirst) both lay claim to the
value of
movable property attached in execution. The first claimant’s
goods attached were released by agreement (she was
the lessor of […]
M[…] Road, Camps Bay, where Ms Kirst resided at the time
of one of the attachments). The third
claimant, who is the execution
debtor’s mother and Ms Kirst’s former mother-in-law, has
not participated since she
lacks the cognitive ability to do so. Ms
Kirst and the execution debtor (Mr Kirst) were previously
married to each other in
community of property and were divorced on
14 October 2014.
[2]
Mr Foster, and Mr and Ms Kirst, were previously
neighbours
who lived across the road from each other. Various
disputes arose between Mr Foster and Mr Kirst in relation to
Mr Kirst’s
alleged behaviour. These disputes culminated in
litigation between the two of them in this court. As a result of that
litigation
Mr Foster obtained three costs orders against
Mr Kirst, and Mr Kirst one costs order against Mr Foster.
[3]
The following bills of cost were taxed in favour of Mr Foster,
namely:
(a) on 8 October 2020 under case number 17605/2018
in the sum of R149 389.62; (b) on 8 October 2020 under
case number 21464/2018 in the sum of R37 603.65; and (c) on
12 May 2021 under case number 21464/2018 in the sum
of
R383 177.51. A bill of costs was taxed in favour of Mr Kirst on
18 May 2022 (seemingly also under case number 21464/2018)
in the
sum of R109 933.77. After set off, confirmed in writing, the
balance still due to Mr Foster in respect of the
third bill of
costs, excluding interest, is R273 243.74, and the net effect of
all of this, as far as could be gleaned from
the papers, is that
Mr Kirst is indebted to Mr Foster in the total sum of around
R460 000 excluding interest.
[4]
On about
23 December 2020 the Sheriff executed two warrants of execution,
in respect of the bills taxed in favour of Mr Foster
on
8 October 2020, at […] R[…] Heights, I[…]
C[…] Place, Camps Bay and […] T[…]
Avenue,
Camps Bay. On 4 January 2021, Ms Kirst laid claim to
certain of the items attached. Mr Foster then instituted
proceedings in the magistrates’ court against Mr Kirst in
terms of s 65 of the Magistrates’ Court Act.
[1]
The s 65 inquiry was held on 15 June 2022, 21 July
2022, 28 July 2022 and 21 January 2023. Mr Foster
did
not attend that inquiry but was represented thereat by his previous
attorney of record, Mr Van der Riet.
[5]
Between service of the first warrants and the s 65 inquiry,
Mr Foster
caused a further warrant of execution to be issued
against Mr Kirst on 21 July 2021 in respect of the third
bill of costs
taxed in his favour on 12 May 2021. On 15 May
2023 and 23 June 2023 respectively, the Sheriff executed this
warrant
as well, at […] R[…] Heights and Ms Kirst’s
rented premises, […] M[…] Road.
[6]
Ultimately, of the items attached, Ms Kirst laid claim to 3
motor
vehicles, 5 motorbikes/motorcycles, 5 bicycles, a trailer,
6 surfboards, 4 television sets, 4 computers and 2 office desks.
Another vehicle attached by the Sheriff, a VW Polo, is registered in
the name of her former mother-in-law, the third claimant.
Ms Kirst
does not lay claim to this vehicle although her evidence was that she
purchased it.
[7]
Mr Foster and Ms Kirst subsequently agreed to the release
of
“her” items from attachment, subject to payment by her
of R459 237.08 plus interest thereon of R94 507.82
to be
held in the trust account of her attorney of record pending
determination of the interpleader proceedings. This agreement
was
incorporated in an order granted by Henney J on 22 February
2024, and was complied with.
The
parties’ pleaded cases
[8]
Ms Kirst pleaded that she is the owner of all the items to which
she lays claim. She annexed registration documents pertaining to the
motor vehicles, trailer and motorbikes, plus supporting documentation
evidencing proof of purchase and payment for most items.
[9]
Mr Foster’s pleaded case was that at all material times Mr
and Ms Kirst were in a permanent life partnership, alternatively
a universal partnership, alternatively a partnership in terms
of
which: (a) they resided together as husband and wife in a common
household ‘
bearing’
income and expenses jointly;
(b) they carried on business together and/or Mr Kirst
carried on business in Ms Kirst’s
name; (c) they
acquired and held assets jointly but ostensibly in Ms Kirst's
name, alternatively Mr Kirst’s
assets, while still owned
by him, were ostensibly placed in Ms Kirst's name; and (d) the
purpose of recording and registering
assets in Ms Kirst’s
name was effected only ‘…
in order to frustrate the
rights of creditors, more particularly’
Mr Foster.
Onus,
status of record of s65 proceedings, witnesses and overview of
testimony
[10]
Although it was agreed that Ms Kirst bore the duty to begin, the
affected parties
(Mr Foster and Ms Kirst) could not agree on who
bore the onus. I return to this later.
[11]
No
agreement could be reached on the status of the record of the s65
proceedings. It was not referred to during Ms Kirst’s
testimony and Mr Foster, as previously stated, had not himself
attended that inquiry. Mr Van der Riet confirmed the
accuracy of the record during his evidence but given the absence of
any application by Mr Foster in terms of s 3(1)(c) of the
Law of
Evidence Amendment Act
[2]
–
despite his counsel being alerted to the need for such an application
– that entire record is inadmissible and I
thus do not deal
with it.
[12]
Ms Kirst testified in support of her claim that most of the items
were registered in her
name, or the purchases had been invoiced to
her and paid from her accounts. This much was not disputed.
Furthermore, (a) no
evidence was adduced (including by
Mr Foster) of any creditors of either Mr or Ms Kirst
whose rights could have
been frustrated, apart from Mr Kirst
being indebted to Mr Foster; and (b) Mr Foster did not
adduce any direct
evidence in support of his pleaded case, save for
the following. First, Ms Kirst’s affidavit testimony in
unrelated
proceedings as well as two confirmatory affidavits to which
she had deposed in the earlier litigation between Mr Foster and
Mr Kirst. Second, and this became common cause, Mr Kirst closed
his only bank account holding R12 000 in credit in October
2019,
and on 12 November 2019 transferred the Subaru vehicle and the
trailer which were later attached into the name of Ms Kirst.
[13]
Mr Foster testified in support of his claim and called two witnesses,
namely the Sheriff
who effected the attachments, Mr Ntsibantu, and
his previous attorney Mr Van der Riet. The evidence of these two
witnesses
was largely of a formal nature, but also included testimony
about what occurred when the first set of attachments took place in
December 2020. Given a concession made by Ms Kirst in
cross-examination it is not necessary to deal any further with their
testimony.
[14]
Save for the affidavits referred to above, Mr Foster’s
case was ultimately based
upon inferences he had drawn from his own
observations of how the Kirsts conducted their daily lives while they
lived across the
road from him; information he received from
Ms Kirst’s estranged brother-in-law, Mr Robert
Wrensch; and what Mr Foster
had pieced together from his own
investigation. It is against this background that I turn to deal with
the evidence relevant to
the main dispute.
Evidence
on the main dispute
[15]
Ms Kirst testified that she was born in London, where she also
currently lives. Her
parents reside in Monaco. Her father is a
multi-billionaire and hotelier. She first came to Cape Town on
holiday in 1995 where
she met Mr Kirst and returned to South
Africa later that year after becoming romantically involved with him.
At the time Mr Kirst,
who grew up on a farm in Namibia, was
employed in the film industry.
[16]
Ms Kirst did not have a work visa and enrolled at a hotel school
where she completed
three years of study. For as long as she could
remember her father has paid her a monthly allowance, and this
continued, in addition
to which, when she had no funds of her own,
her father paid all her other living expenses, including after she
moved in with Mr Kirst
and later married him (in community of
property) on 17 November 1998. The couple have two sons who were
born on 22 July
2007 and 13 March 2011 respectively.
[17]
In about 2000 the couple moved to the United Kingdom and Mr Kirst
started working
for her father. However Mr Kirst and Ms Kirst’s
sister (who is married to Mr Wrensch) did not get along which caused
major
problems within the extended family, in addition to which
Mr Kirst did not fit into the corporate world. They thus
returned
to South Africa in 2004, initially living with Mr Kirst’s
mother in Camps Bay. However Ms Kirst wanted to enter
the
property market and possibly build a hotel herself one day.
[18]
She thus
purchased a small property at 3[…] L[…] Street,
Penzance Estate, Hout Bay which as far as she knew was
registered in
her name. From her evidence it was clear that Ms Kirst was
unaware that in South Africa, where parties are married
in community
of property, registration of ownership of immovable property is
reflected in the Deeds Registry in their joint names
following the
abolition of a husband’s marital power by the Matrimonial
Property Act
[3]
on 1 November
1984. Mr Foster appeared to be unaware of this as well.
[19]
Mr Kirst made no financial contribution to the purchase of that
property or the renovations
which followed, but organised the labour
required and manned the site. He was also not remunerated. This
arrangement applied to
the subsequent properties purchased and sold
to which I refer hereunder.
[20]
After the renovation was complete Ms Kirst sold the Hout Bay property
and purchased a townhouse
at Woodhead Glen, Camps Bay. Because she
did not have sufficient funds to pay the full asking price, and as a
non-resident of South
Africa could not obtain a mortgage bond, the
bond was apparently registered in Mr Kirst’s name. However
Ms Kirst
serviced all the monthly bond instalments without any
financial assistance from Mr Kirst. This property too was
renovated
and thereafter sold. After a stint back in Hout Bay,
Ms Kirst purchased a property at 4[…] H[…] H[…]
Avenue, Camps Bay, financed also with a bond. Once it was renovated
she rented it out and sold it a few years later to the existing
tenant. She used the proceeds of the sale to settle the bond and put
the rest away in her own savings.
[21]
By that stage the family was living (seemingly in accommodation paid
for by Ms Kirst)
at 1[…] P[…] Avenue, Camps
Bay, next door to Ms Kirst’s mother-in-law who assisted
her with the children.
From her evidence it appears that she and her
former mother-in-law have a close relationship which continues to
this day. (Ms Kirst
also testified that she purchased the VW
Polo for her and registered it in her name on 4 November 2022,
despite the latter’s
declining mental health and her prior
admission to a care centre in May 2022, since she wanted her
mother-in-law to retain a measure
of independence and would drive
around with her in the VW Polo in the Camps Bay area).
[22]
Ms Kirst then purchased four plots in Milnerton which she believed to
be an up-and-coming
area and where a number of her friends lived. The
plots were acquired in an entity, Oribel Properties (Pty) Ltd
(“Oribel”),
and they were built through West Cape
Developers with Mr Kirst’s involvement being the same as
before. The houses were
built in stages and the overall cost financed
both from Ms Kirst’s savings and ‘
a little bit of
help’
from the bank. Mr Kirst was neither a director
nor shareholder of Oribel.
[23]
Ms Kirst subsequently sold three of the four Milnerton properties,
retaining 2[…] A[…]
Crescent, Milnerton for the
family to live in (they moved there in about 2011 or 2012).
Thereafter the marriage between Mr and
Ms Kirst broke down and
they divorced on 14 October 2014. According to Ms Kirst their
relationship changed after their
younger child was born in 2011. In
addition her sister and brother-in-law moved into the area and the
family infighting started
up again. In her words:
‘
It just got too
much. I walked away from my sister and I walked away from Clem and I
moved back to Camps Bay… I left him
in A[…]. He had
nowhere else to go. He hadn’t been working for several years.
He had no money so, I left him the house
and my father rented me a
house at number 1[…] F[…] Rd in Camps Bay… I
wanted the children to have a place
that they knew
[i.e. the
Milnerton property]
so I didn’t want to take that away from
them…’
[24]
The Consent Paper incorporated in their Decree of Divorce reflects
that Ms Kirst was
the sole director and shareholder of Oribel
(which was the registered owner of 2[…] A[…] Crescent);
Mr Kirst would
have a usufruct over the property; and once it was
sold the full net proceeds would be invested for the children’s
benefit.
[25]
After returning to Camps Bay (it would seem that the children still
spent a lot of time
with Mr Kirst as well), Ms Kirst started a
small business importing costume jewellery which she ran for a few
years. She explained
that its purpose was not for any real financial
gain but more to keep herself occupied. Mr Kirst had no
involvement, which
Mr Foster later confirmed in his testimony. Also,
around 2014, Ms Kirst came across another development opportunity, a
property
comprising two plots with the residence portion at
[…] T[…]Avenue, Camps Bay.
[26]
Her idea was to build a hotel on the plot that was empty. She was
referred to various documents
and email communications which
confirmed her evidence that her father financed the purchase of this
property. Although registration
of transfer only took place in 2015,
she moved to T[…] Avenue about two months after the divorce on
17 December 2014.
According to her Mr Kirst assisted her
and the children with that move, thereafter visiting the property
very frequently to
see the children and to help with them. On the
rare occasion he stayed over. She also testified that she sold the
remaining Milnerton
property in 2016. Her father also paid for all of
the plans etc in respect of the hotel which she intended to build,
but it did
not come to fruition.
[27]
In about August 2018, Ms Kirst purchased a further property at
[…] R[…]
Heights, […] I[…] C[…]
Place, Camps Bay. It was purchased, with guidance from her father, in
a trust
specifically created for the purpose of her acquiring
immovable properties as investments. Her father put up the funds
required
for its purchase and Ms Kirst began operating it as an
Airbnb through local agents. Again Mr Kirst had no involvement. This
business
ran very successfully (apart from during the Covid-19
pandemic) and she also lived there for a few months around the time
the Sheriff
made the first attachments in December 2020.
[28]
In 2019, Ms Kirst asked Mr Kirst to move into […] T[…]
Avenue to protect
her and the children following a nasty incident at
her home there. He took up occupation of the separate downstairs flat
and also
had free use of the large number of vehicles, motorbikes and
the like which she had purchased (her children are avid
motorcyclists,
cyclists and surfers and Mr Kirst too enjoyed
most of these activities). Although they now resided again under the
same roof,
there was no question of them reconciling. During the few
months she (and it would seem the children) stayed at the R[…]
Heights property, Mr Kirst remained at […] T[…]
Avenue and looked after the pets.
[29]
Over this period and thereafter, apart from her income from the
Airbnb business (and a
little from her jewellery business while it
still operated), Ms Kirst’s father continued to pay her
allowance of £2 000
per month. In addition he paid all of
the children’s expenses and other expenses when she asked him
to do so. Mr Kirst,
who remained unemployed, made no financial
contribution. Ms Kirst was referred to correspondence with her
father in this regard
which supported her testimony. In 2019 she had
also decided to return to the United Kingdom permanently with the
children.
[30]
Although this plan later had to be put on hold when interference by
her sister and brother-in-law
(to whom Mr Foster, on his own version,
was feeding information about the alleged activities at the Kirst
home) caused severe tension
between herself and her father, Ms Kirst
did not want the children to see their father ‘
destitute on
the streets’
and saw no reason why he should not spend as
much time as possible with the children before her move back to the
United Kingdom.
She and the children eventually only left South
Africa on 25 July 2023. Before leaving, both the T[…]
Avenue and R[…]
Heights properties were sold and she received
the full net proceeds as agreed with her father. Mr Kirst accompanied
her and the
children to London to see the boys settle in and after a
month he returned to South Africa.
[31]
Ms Kirst gave detailed evidence about how each of the items
attached by the Sheriff
and to which she lays claim, were either paid
for by her or her father, or a combination of their respective
initial contributions.
Two of these, the Subaru vehicle and trailer
had previously been registered in Mr Kirst’s name although
she appeared
unable to explain why. The same applied to another
vehicle, a Mitsubishi Colt, which the Sheriff did not attach as he
could not
locate it (it was stored along with another trailer in
Clanwilliam where Ms Kirst kept her speedboat).
[32]
When she was intending to leave South Africa towards the end of 2019
(an email to her father
dated 5 November 2019 confirmed that the
planned departure date had been 10 December 2019), because
Mr Kirst had
not made any contribution to the children’s
maintenance despite having undertaken to do so in the Consent Paper
incorporated
in their Decree of Divorce, he agreed to transfer the
Subaru, Colt and trailer into her name in lieu of such payments. As
previously
stated it is common cause that these items were
transferred into the name of Ms Kirst on 12 November 2019.
Her evidence
was further that she only discovered that an actual
amount(s) was owing by Mr Kirst to Mr Foster in respect of
the taxed
bills of cost during 2022, when the attorneys attending to
the transfers of R[…] Heights and […] T[…]
Avenue
to the respective purchasers received an email from Mr
Foster’s attorney asking for Mr Kirst’s whereabouts.
[33]
Ms Kirst was referred to three affidavits to which she had
deposed. The first was
her founding affidavit in an application for
the sequestration of the estate of a Mr Jonathan Sykes on
28 April 2023
in which she alleged that she and her ‘
husband’
Mr Kirst had jointly entered into an agreement with Mr Sykes
for the sale of motor vehicles for profit, including that
initially
‘
we’
made a good return. Her response was that her
reference to Mr Kirst as her husband was an oversight and she
had not regarded
this as important at the time, her primary concern
having been to secure payment of the sum owed solely to her as
reflected in
the written acknowledgement of debt annexed to her
affidavit.
[34]
Her evidence was further, as reflected in that affidavit, that it was
she who was the plaintiff
in an action instituted against Mr Sykes
for payment of the same sum, resulting in default judgment against
him, because only
she had loaned him the amount in question. She
maintained that Mr Kirst had no involvement in her financial dealings
with Mr Sykes
and also that the attorney who took instructions from
her in the presence of Mr Kirst must have mistakenly concluded they
were
jointly involved in that business since Mr Kirst ‘
did
speak a little about what I had been through’.
[35]
The second and third affidavits were confirmatory ones deposed to by
Ms Kirst in prior
proceedings between Mr Foster and Mr Kirst,
although only one of them appears to have found its way into the
papers before this
court. As I understood it, in both these
affidavits Ms Kirst had confirmed the truthfulness of Mr Kirst’s
allegations,
but only insofar as they related to her. Accordingly
averments made by Mr Kirst in his affidavits that he was a
self-employed businessman,
the breadwinner of the Kirst family, and
might have to sell ‘
my’
property at […] T[…]
Avenue, cannot properly be attributed to Ms Kirst, although she
had confirmed his
allegation that she was his wife at the time. Her
explanation was that ‘
perhaps this was a typo. I don’t
know why he kept calling me his wife… I was confirming
probably the rest of the affidavit
rather than the comment of being
his wife’.
[36]
Cross-examination of Ms Kirst elicited the following. She
conceded that she misled
Mr Ntsibantu (the Sheriff) when he arrived
at the Rontree Heights property to effect the first attachment in
December 2020, by
telling him she did not know of Mr Kirst’s
whereabouts. She claimed that she did not want yet another
altercation involving
Mr Foster in front of her children. She also
maintained it was the Sheriff who suggested Mr Kirst, who was present
at the time,
was her boyfriend, denying she had told him this as Mr
Ntsibantu later testified.
[37]
She also conceded she had been made aware by Mr Kirst that Mr Foster
obtained ‘
a judgment’
against him with costs which
he subsequently unsuccessfully attempted to have rescinded, but she
stated this was the extent of
her involvement in their litigation
since she did not wish to be drawn into it. She had not funded any of
Mr Kirst’s own
attorney’s fees. She later testified that
Mr Foster himself had emailed her demanding payment, but since it had
nothing to
do with her she was certainly not going to pay. When it
was pointed out to her that Mr Kirst would have been made aware of
the
first taxation in about June 2019, at a time when he still had
the vehicles and trailer in question registered in his name, she
replied that she thought this only had to do with the then pending
s 65 inquiry, which could not have been the case since
those
proceedings were only instituted after January 2021. She also
maintained the only reason why Mr Kirst closed his bank account
in
October 2019 was because he could not afford the bank charges.
[38]
The divorce, she supposed, could be described as amicable. Mr Foster
might, as he claimed,
have been under the impression that she and Mr
Kirst were married after she moved into […] T[…]
Avenue, but she did
not consider her private life to be any of his
business, and had not confided in him about her personal situation
with Mr Kirst.
She claimed to have been careless in her affidavits in
the earlier proceedings and apologised for this. She denied that the
Sykes
acknowledgement of debt executed on 26 October 2022
reflected only herself as creditor since by then Mr Kirst was well
aware
he should have no assets (or claims) in his name. She stated it
was because only she was owed the money and Mr Kirst never had assets
save for the Subaru, Colt and trailer she previously bought.
[39]
With regard to the VW Polo her evidence was that her former
mother-in-law had owned a 20
year old Mercedes A Class which became
very expensive to run. Ms Kirst thus bought her the VW Polo since it
was ‘
cheaper, lighter and easier’
. The vehicle was
registered in the name of her former mother-in-law since the latter
wanted to retain her previous vehicle registration
number of C[…].
[40]
When asked why she had referred to Mr Kirst as self-employed in her
divorce summons, she
replied that her attorney at the time advised
that ‘
this is sort of the normal how things are set up’
.
According to her it was the same attorney who suggested that payment
of maintenance by Mr Kirst for the children be included in
their
Consent Paper as a ‘
nominal figure just so that we could put
something in there for the documents’.
The Consent Paper
reflects that Mr Kirst would contribute to the children’s
maintenance as from 1 November 2013
by contributing towards
their day-to-day, medical and educational expenses pro rata according
to his means from time to time; and
that pending any process for
determining the quantum thereof, he would pay R1000 per month for
both children. When asked how she
contemplated him ever paying, she
replied ‘
I don’t know, it didn’t really bother
me to be honest. I was self-sufficient, my father pays for most
things, so really
it wasn’t an issue for me at the time’.
It was only when she planned to return permanently to the United
Kingdom in 2019 that she felt Mr Kirst should at least give up
the
vehicles and trailer in lieu of unpaid maintenance since their
proceeds would be ‘
better than nothing’
.
[41]
Regarding the transfer of the vehicles and trailer into her name in
November 2019, she
was asked what she thought Mr Kirst would drive
once she sold them, to which she replied this was not her concern. It
was suggested
that it was most unlikely Mr Kirst would have put
himself in that position. She responded:
‘
I was planning
my own life, to start my own life again back home with my family,
with my two sons and how he ran his life was no
longer my
responsibility any more… and he would have had to grow up and
get a job like the rest of the world and fend for
himself to be
honest… He could have driven his mother’s car if he
needed a car that badly.’
[42]
I now turn to Mr Foster’s testimony. He was not aware when
Ms Kirst moved into
[…] T[…] Avenue that she and
Mr Kirst were already divorced. From his observations over an
extended period of time
they conducted themselves as a married
couple. In addition, at some point, Mr Wrensch contacted him to ask
him to feed information
about the Kirst’s activities (which Mr
Foster provided) and Mr Wrensch told Mr Foster the Kirst divorce had
been a sham.
Mr Wrensch was not called by Mr Foster to testify
and accordingly no weight can be attached to this. Similarly, no
weight
can be attached to Mr Foster’s testimony that in
2017 he came across the Kirsts at a restaurant in Camps Bay when they
told him they were celebrating 21 years together, and that the Kirsts
had jointly owned 10 immovable properties, since none of
this was put
to Ms Kirst when she testified.
[43]
Mr Foster took the court in detail through the documentary evidence
he had pieced together
to support his view that the Kirsts pooled
resources for joint profit, but ultimately, apart from the affidavit
evidence to which
I have already referred and external registration
records, Mr Foster was unable to produce anything of substance to
counter Ms Kirst’s
testimony about the actual sources of
the funds she had accumulated. The gist of Mr Foster’s
testimony in chief is perhaps
best summarised by the following
evidence he gave:
‘
As I mentioned
in the evidence and the items in examples referred to, they operated
as a household where they conducted themselves
together. The
comingling of assets was taken to the extreme by the transfer of the
very few items that were in his name and to
suggest that one has no
assets, no income and no liabilities and to have access to those
assets and to have made those transfers
before and after the marriage
as is detailed from the totality of that, it indicates that it is
irrational and improbable that
it could be that you have absolutely
no expenses, no income and that the truth is that if they are in
collusion to portray otherwise,
is as I stated here that they have
comingled everything on paper in her name, but on proper analysis and
detailing of the timing
and the acquisition and utilisation and
everything in totality, it is not credible…'
[44]
During cross-examination Mr Foster accepted that ‘
the
divorce was not specifically for me’.
He claimed that
according to a ‘
record’
he had seen, Mr Kirst
had been a director of Oribel at one stage, but did not know why this
too was not put to Ms Kirst
during her unchallenged testimony on
this score.
[45]
Mr Foster also accepted that 3 of the 4 Milnerton properties were
sold (along with those
acquired, renovated and sold before then)
prior to the Kirst’s divorce in October 2014. To this should be
added that the
W[…] Close, Camps Bay property was awarded to
Ms Kirst in the divorce. He agreed that even when the last
Milnerton
property (2[…] A[…] Crescent) was sold in
2016 there were no issues between himself and Mr Kirst as yet. The
Kirsts
would thus not have needed to conceal any assets from him at
that stage. He accepted that Ms Kirst’s father paid
entirely
for the acquisition of both the R[…] Heights and T[…]
Avenue properties, and that after Ms Kirst sold 2[…]
A[…]
Crescent she did not purchase and renovate any other immovable
properties for sale and consequent profit.
[46]
As far as the transfers of the Subaru, Colt and trailer from Mr Kirst
to Ms Kirst
in November 2019 are concerned, Mr Foster agreed
that the first order obtained in his favour was in October 2018 and
the second
in February 2019 (although the two bills of cost in
question were only taxed in October 2020). According to Mr Foster,
both Kirsts
would have been aware, at the latest by February 2019, of
the looming consequent costs for which Mr Kirst would be liable. He
was
unable to proffer any reasonable explanation why, in these
circumstances, the Kirsts nonetheless waited over 8 months until
November
2019 to take steps to put these vehicles and trailer beyond
his reach.
[47]
Mr Foster further testified that ‘
the funding, that was
provided by the father, yes, but the profits of all the properties,
my understanding from the evidence is
that they directly benefited
from it’.
Whether
Mr Foster or Ms Kirst bears the onus
[48]
The legal
position is conveniently summarised in Erasmus: Superior Court
Practice
[4]
as follows:
‘
The reasoning
in the cases in which the onus of proof has been considered seems to
indicate that, when the sheriff interpleads,
the claimant ought to be
made plaintiff if the goods at the moment of seizure were in the
judgment debtor’s possession, because
his possession implies a
prima facie title in him which enures to the benefit of the execution
creditor; but if the goods at the
moment of seizure were in the
claimant's possession, he would have the prima facie title, which the
execution creditor would have
to displace, and so the execution
creditor ought to be the plaintiff.’
[49]
In the present matter the items to which Ms Kirst lays claim
were attached by the
Sheriff at three separate addresses, namely […]
M[…] Road, […] R[…] Heights and […] T[…]
Avenue. On a conspectus of the evidence given during the hearing, the
only address which can safely be accepted as having been
occupied
jointly by Mr and Ms Kirst is […] T[…] Avenue; and
only two items were attached at that address, namely
the Subaru and
another vehicle, a VW Combi Transporter. It must therefore follow
that Mr Foster bears the onus in respect of the
items attached at […]
M[…] Road and […] R[…] Heights, and Ms Kirst
bears the onus in respect of
the two items attached at T[…]
Avenue.
Mr
Foster’s claim to the third claimant’s vehicle (the VW
Polo)
[50]
Mr Foster’s case is that unless the third claimant herself lays
claim to her vehicle,
or is represented by a curator ad litem for
this purpose, his claim must succeed, given his “partnership”
argument.
[51]
This cannot be correct. On Mr Foster’s own version, when
Ms Kirst bought this
vehicle for her former mother-in-law, the
latter already lacked the cognitive ability to manage her own
affairs. I also disagree
with the submission made on behalf of
Ms Kirst that this court is entitled to take account of her
evidence in deciding whether
Mr Foster has a claim to that vehicle on
the basis that execution is a process of court, and this court has
the inherent power
to regulate its own process.
[52]
Put simply, it is undisputed that the third claimant lacks the
cognitive ability to defend
the attachment of her vehicle. Ms Kirst
herself lays no claim to it. If Mr Foster wishes to pursue the
attachment of
the VW Polo any further, he should approach court for
the appointment of a curator ad litem to assist the third claimant in
these
interpleader proceedings, since only he and the third claimant
are still affected by that attachment. In addition the Sheriff cannot
reasonably be expected to keep the VW Polo under attachment
indefinitely unless – and this is entirely unclear to me –
the amount paid by Ms Kirst into her attorney’s trust
account in terms of Henney J’s order somehow nonetheless
included the value of that vehicle. In my view it would be
appropriate, in these circumstances, to place a time limit on this
attachment.
Evaluation
[53]
One must have sympathy for Mr Foster. It was clear from his testimony
that he was convinced
of the correctness of his case. I have
deliberately set out the evidence on the “partnership”
issue in some detail,
because it demonstrates that Mr Foster has
failed to discharge the onus which he bears.
[54]
While I might have suspicions about the manner in which the Kirsts
conducted their affairs
there is simply not enough evidence to show
on a balance of probabilities that: (a) a partnership of any
kind existed between
Mr and Ms Kirst; and (b) to the extent that the
Sykes sequestration application indicated a specific partnership or
joint venture,
the items attached by the Sheriff, and claimed by
Ms Kirst, were acquired as a consequence of any profits made in
terms thereof.
[55]
Regarding the vehicles and trailer transferred by Mr Kirst to
Ms Kirst in November
2019, and again while I might have
suspicions, Mr Foster’s own timeline when weighed against the
evidence about Ms Kirst’s
planned imminent departure from
South Africa at the time, must tip the scales in her favour; and on
the facts which she proved
in relation to the onus she bore, I cannot
find that they were not purchased out of her own funds, or those of
her father, or a
combination of the two. The same applies to the VW
Combi Transporter which, apart from the Subaru, was the only other
item attached
by the Sheriff at […] T[…] Avenue.
[56]
That being said, it is also clear that Ms Kirst, who is
obviously intelligent and
well-educated, has little difficulty at
times in being economical with the truth. This much is amply
demonstrated by her attempts
to explain away her previous affidavits,
her misleading of the Sheriff, and the circumstances of Mr Kirst’s
closure of his
bank account. It can also safely be said that Mr
Foster cannot fairly be criticised for relying on the truth of those
affidavits
and other falsehoods to advance his case.
[57]
I acknowledge that, as became apparent during her evidence, her
motive for “looking
after” Mr Kirst was to ensure the
emotional wellbeing of her children, but she will nonetheless have to
bear the consequences
of those untruths. The most appropriate way for
her to do so is to order that, notwithstanding her success in these
proceedings,
Mr Foster should not be ordered to pay her costs.
[58]
The following order is made:
1.
Save for the Volkswagen Polo vehicle registered in the name of
the third claimant (“VW Polo”) the execution creditor’s
claim to the items attached by the applicant on 23 December 2020, 15
May 2023 and 23 June 2023 respectively, is dismissed;
2.
The second claimant is declared the owner of the movable goods
to which she has laid claim in these proceedings, and the monies held
in trust as security for the execution creditor’s claim in
terms of the order granted on 22 February 2024 shall be released
to
the second claimant, subject however to the terms of paragraph 4 of
that order;
3.
The execution creditor’s claim to the VW Polo is
postponed sine die subject to paragraph 4 below;
4.
Unless the execution creditor makes application by Friday
31 January 2025 for the appointment of a curator ad litem for
the
third claimant to represent her, the attachment of the VW Polo
shall automatically lapse; and
5.
The execution creditor and the second claimant shall each pay
their own costs, including any reserved costs orders.
J I CLOETE
For
execution creditor
: Adv
K Engers SC
Instructed
by
: Brian Segal Attorneys (Mr B Segal)
For
second claimant
: Adv D Baguley
Instructed
by
: Assheton-Smith Ginsberg (Mr A Ginsberg)
[1]
No 32 of 1944.
[2]
No 45 of 1998.
[3]
No 88 of 1984.
[4]
No 2ed, vol 2 at D1 Rule 58-3 to 58-4, with reference
to
Bruce
NO v Josiah Parkes & Sons (Rhodesia) (Pvt) Limited
1972 (1) SA 68
(R);
Zandberg
v Van Zyl
1919 AD 302
at 308;
Gleneagles
Farm Dairy v Schoombee
1949 (1) SA 830
(A) at 836;
Ebrahim
v Deputy Sheriff, Durban
1961 (4) SA 265
(D) at 267D.
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