Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 196South Africa
Kruth v Rall N.O. and Others (14625/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 196; 2023 (6) SA 514 (WCC) (18 July 2023)
Headnotes
between the parties in April and May 2022 the applicant received a number of documents, including the Trust financial statements from 2017 to 2021 - the subject of prayers 1, 2.1, 2.2, 2.4 and 2.5 of the latest notice of motion dated 15 March 2022. The applicant now only seeks costs in relation to that relief. [8] The applicant has also been supplied with financial information
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Kruth v Rall N.O. and Others (14625/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 196; 2023 (6) SA 514 (WCC) (18 July 2023)
Kruth v Rall N.O. and Others (14625/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 196; 2023 (6) SA 514 (WCC) (18 July 2023)
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sino date 18 July 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 14625/2021
In
the matter between:
KARMIEN
KRUTH
Applicant
and
PHILIP
RALL N.O.
First
Respondent
LENETTE
JANSE DE WIT N.O.
Second
Respondent
TOERIEN
DE WIT N.O.
Third
Respondent
[in
their capacities as the trustees for the time being of the
ELBERT
DE WIT FAMILIE TRUST
, number
T813/94
]
LENETTE
JANSE DE WIT
Fourth
Respondent
MARYKE
SMIT
Fifth
Respondent
TOERIEN
DE WIT
Sixth
Respondent
ELBERT
DE WIT
Seventh
Respondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY ON 18 JULY 2023
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD, J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, a capital and income beneficiary of the Elbert
De Wit Family Trust (“
the Trust”
) seeks an order
directing the first to third respondents (“
the trustees”
)
to prepare the Trust’s financial statements and to provide her
with certain specified documents of the Trust.
[2]
All the capital and income beneficiaries of the Trust are
family members and are cited as respondents. The fourth respondent,
who
is also cited as second respondent in her capacity as a trustee,
is the applicant’s mother, Lenette. The sixth respondent,
who
is also cited as third respondent in his capacity as a trustee, is
the applicant’s older brother, Toerien. The fifth
and seventh
respondents are the applicant’s sister (Maryke) and younger
brother (Elbert Jr), respectively. It is convenient
to refer to all
of them by their first names. The only party who is not a family
member is the first respondent, who has been a
trustee from the
inception of the Trust, and is a retired attorney.
[3]
The application was initially opposed by all three trustees.
However, well after the launch of these proceedings, Lenette
delivered
an affidavit in which she effectively dissociated herself
from the trustees’ opposition. I permitted the admission of the
affidavit, and permitted all parties to deliver supplementary
affidavits in response to her affidavit. Clause 4.10 of the Trust
Deed of the Trust provides that “
[i]n the event of any
dispute between the Trustees at any time, the decision of the
majority shall apply and shall have the same
effect and consequences
as if it were the unanimous decision of the Trustees”
. And
clause 5.22 grants the trustees the power and authority to defend any
lawsuit in the name of the Trust. Thus, the majority
of the trustees,
consisting in this case of Toerien and the first respondent,
suffices. For convenience’s sake, I continue
to refer to the
trustees opposing the matter as “
the trustees”
.
[4]
There have otherwise been numerous supplementary papers (as
well as supplementary heads of argument) exchanged in these
proceedings
from both sides, in part, due to the fact that the matter
was initially launched on what was referred to as a semi-urgent
basis.
All those papers and pleadings have been considered for
purposes of this judgment.
B.
THE RELIEF SOUGHT
[5]
There have also been two amendments to the relief sought in
the
notice of motion. At the launch of these proceedings in August
2021 the applicant sought a list of specified financial
information
and documents of the Trust and of its associated companies. In
December 2021 the notice of motion was amended to include
a prayer
for provision of trust financial statements as from 2017 to 2021 (now
prayer 2.2) instead of “
financial statements for only the
last three years”
.
[6]
In March 2022 the amended notice of motion was further amended
to
include an order directing the trustees to comply with clause 8.2 of
the Trust Deed by preparing financial statements for the
years 2017
to 2021 (prayer 1) and to provide the 2017 to 2021 Trust financial
statements (prayer 2.1).
[7]
Then, after some ‘
without prejudice’
discussions
were held between the parties in April and May 2022 the applicant
received a number of documents, including the Trust
financial
statements from 2017 to 2021 - the subject of prayers 1, 2.1, 2.2,
2.4 and 2.5 of the latest notice of motion dated 15
March 2022. The
applicant now only seeks costs in relation to that relief.
[8]
The applicant has also been supplied with financial information
relating to Route 62 Investments (Pty) Ltd, one of the Trust-owned
entities of which she is a director, for the years 2017 to 2022.
That
information forms the subject of paragraph 2.5.6 of the further
amended notice of motion. She persists with the remainder
relief
sought in the further amended notice of motion, which is the
following:
Prayer
2.3:
All
valuations of the Trust capital as at February 2017.
Prayer
2.5:
Financial
statements, in either draft or final form, or end of year trial
balances for Caresso Properties (Pty) Ltd, Zero E (Pty)
Ltd and
Connected Property Investment (Pty) Ltd.
Prayer
2.6:
The
loan agreements in respect of mortgage bonds registered over trust
owned properties.
Prayer
2.7:
Copies
of loan account printouts for loans between each company in the group
and advances to any trusts or companies which a director
or trustee
has an interest.
Prayer
2.8
: An
explanation as to the origin and function of De Wit Group (Pty) Ltd
and any financial information
pertaining to it.
Prayer
2.9:
A
copy of the assets for any share swap agreement/s concerning the
trust or entities it owns.
Prayer
2.10:
Copies of the
last income tax returns submitted in respect of each of the companies
in the group and of the trust for the 2018 to
2020 tax years.
Prayer
2.11:
Details of
Trust properties bonded in 2020, all amounts received therefrom and
details of how these funds were applied, to which
these entities were
advanced and for what purpose, and all trustees’ resolutions
taken in this regard.
C.
RELEVANT FACTS
[9]
The Trust was founded by the late Elbert De Wit Snr who passed
away on 26 February 2019 and left his entire personal estate to it,
and confirmed in his will that his wife and four children are the
named capital beneficiaries in equal shares.
[10]
The Trust is the sole shareholder of a group of entities
referred to in these proceedings as the De Wit Group, whose director
and
chief executive officer is Toerien. It also holds 100% of
the shares in Route 62 Investments (Pty) Ltd and 50% of shares in
Gasvoorsieners Boland (Pty) Ltd. It owns no fixed property or assets,
save for shares in three legal entities. It also does not
have a bank
account.
[11]
Before and soon after the death of Elbert Snr, the family was
engaged in discussions regarding possible distributions to be made
to
the beneficiaries for consideration by the trustees, but no agreement
was reached.
The first significant family meeting
in that regard was held on 17 December 2017 whilst Elbert Snr was
still alive, where the Trust
assets were valued, and possible
distribution was discussed. It was there that the beneficiaries
expressed their preferences for
specified assets, and the applicant
recorded a preference for only cash instead of assets as a form of
distribution.
[12]
There was also an email circulated whilst
Elbert Snr was alive, dated 21 February 2019, containing what the
parties agree were the
collective intentions of the beneficiaries and
of Elbert Snr. It is common ground that this email was not sent
pursuant to a resolution
of the trustees, and in any event, that no
final agreement was reached regarding distributions to be made.
[13]
By 24 March 2021, no agreement had been
reached regarding distributions and mediation attempts were
unsuccessful. From 8 April 2021,
a chain of correspondence ensued,
resulting in a proposal emanating from Maryke’s attorney
(Cloete Marais), apparently on
behalf of both
Maryke and
Lenette.
[14]
Sometime in early May 2021 the
applicant, Elbert Jr and Toerien, with the assistance of an attorney
(Ms Venter), agreed on terms
of a distribution proposal which was to
be forwarded as a counter-proposal to Maryke’s attorneys (“
the
beneficiaries’ proposal”
).
It is common cause that before
the
beneficiaries’ proposal
was forwarded, Toerien, at the
applicant’s request, drafted a
schedule
indicating how the applicant and Elbert Jr would be affected by the
beneficiaries’ proposal. There is a dispute between
the parties
regarding whether this schedule, which was forwarded by email to the
applicant and Elbert Jr on 16 May 2021, emanated
from the trustees or
from Toerien in his individual capacity, an issue to which I return.
What is common cause is that the beneficiaries’
proposal
appeared to be
significantly skewed in favour of
Maryke, and that the applicant rescinded from it as a result, and
obtained
the services of a forensic accountant, Mr Hilton
Greenbaum
.
[15]
With the assistance of Greenbaum, the applicant requested the
latest audited financial statements of the Trust and related
entities,
and was supplied with some financial documents for 2019. It
is in dispute whether these were audited financial statements or
management
accounts.
[16]
In addition to seeking the advice of a forensic auditor the
applicant also engaged the services of an attorney, Mr. Gootkin, who
exchanged correspondence with the trustees between 21 June 2021 and
22 July 2021. He requested financial information and documents,
some
of which continues to be sought in these proceedings, and similar to
these proceedings, the trustees’ refrain was that
no resolution
had yet been made regarding distributions to be made to the
beneficiaries, and accordingly, no vesting of rights
has yet occurred
entitling the applicant to the information she sought.
[17]
In August 2021 these proceedings were
launched on a semi-urgent basis, on the basis that Toerien is using
Trust assets to advance
his own commercial and business interests by
bonding trust property.
D.
THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
[18]
In summary, the applicant relies on the following bases for
the relief she seeks:
a.
The applicant has previously received distributions and/or
benefits from the Trust.
b.
In common law a trust beneficiary is entitled to demand
information about the state of investment of, and other dealings with
the
trust property and, in particular information regarding the
claimant’s share of it.
c.
The trustees have a duty to disclose to a beneficiary
information needed to enable the beneficiary to form a judgment as to
whether
the proposed course of action for which their consent is
required or sought is in their interest. On this score, the applicant
states that one of the reasons she rejected the May 2021 distribution
proposal was because she required further information as to
the value
of the Trust’s assets.
d.
The applicant invokes section 19 of the Trust Property Control
Act 57 of 1988 as a person having an interest in the Trust’s
property.
[19]
Regarding the latest amendment to the notice of motion -
prayers 1 and 2.1 - the applicant relies on an e-mail dated 6
December
2021 from Lenette in which the latter requested financials
for the Trust and related companies for the last five years. The
applicant
states that this shows that no financial statements had
been prepared for that period, contrary to the requirement in clause
8.2
of the Trust Deed.
[20]
In a supplementary set of heads of argument, an additional
basis for the relief sought by the applicant is added. An argument is
made that the applicant has been subjected to differential treatment
amounting to unfair discrimination, in the manner that she
has been
afforded access to the Trust’s information and documents when
compared to Toerien who is both a beneficiary and
a trustee and has
access to all the information concerning the Trust’s finances
and interests. As a result, it is argued
that she ought to be granted
access to all the information she requests to remedy the differential
treatment, unfair discrimination
and breach of the trustees’
fiduciary duties inflicted upon her by the trustees.
[21]
The mainstay of the opposition to the relief sought by the
applicant is that a contingent trust beneficiary with no vested
interest
in the trust assets (being shares in three companies in this
case) is not entitled to receive the detailed financial information
about trust assets and assets of other legal entities set out in
prayers 2.12 to 2.11 of the further amended notice of motion.
[22]
Since the Trust is a discretionary trust, the applicant has no
right to the income or capital of the Trust until the trustees have
exercised their discretion, which they have not so exercised. In
particular, the trustees have made no decision regarding distribution
of benefits. As a result, the applicant’s rights as a trust
beneficiary have not yet vested. The consequence, say the trustees,
is that the applicant has no right to the information she seeks in
these proceedings. To the extent that she has received any cash
payments, they were all loans, pursuant to informal arrangements and
family discussions, from companies owned directly or indirectly
by
the Trust.
[23]
In any event, the trustees state that, since the launch of
these proceedings the applicant has now received even more
information
than what she is entitled to. Rather, what the applicant
seeks to do is to force the issue of an early distribution of trust
assets
and achieve a transfer to herself.
[24]
The trustees also state that clause 8.2 of the Trust Deed does
not require audited financial statements but requires only financial
statements, which the Trustees may decide to have audited in terms of
clause 8.3.
E.
RELEVANT LAW
[25]
In
Doyle
v Board of Executors
[1]
the
court was dealing with a contingent beneficiary where the trustees
had a discretion, not merely regarding the mode of applying
the terms
of the trust, but whether or not to distribute to a particular
beneficiary.
[2]
The court
stated
[3]
that despite the
contractual nature of a trust, it is “. . .
unquestionable
that the trustee occupies a fiduciary office. By virtue of that
alone he owes the interest good faith towards
all beneficiaries,
whether actual or potential.”
Therefore, even contingent beneficiaries of a trust have vested
interests in the proper administration of the trust.
[4]
[26]
It
has also been held
[5]
that the
role of a trustee in administering a trust calls for the exercise of
a fiduciary duty
owed
to all the beneficiaries of a trust, irrespective of whether they
have vested rights or are contingent beneficiaries whose
rights to
the trust income or capital will only vest on the happening of some
uncertain future event.
[27]
It
has also been held
[6]
that a
trustee has a duty to disclose to the beneficiaries all the
information needed for them to form a judgment as to whether
a
proposed course of action for which their consent is required or
asked is in their interest.
[28]
Section 19 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988
provides as follows:
“
If
any trustee fails to comply with a request by the Master in terms of
section 16 or to perform any duty imposed upon him by the
trust
instrument or by law, the Master or any person having an interest in
the trust property may apply to the court for an order
directing the
trustee to comply with such request or to perform such duty.”
F.
DISCUSSION
[29]
Because of its centrality to these proceedings, it is most
convenient to begin by addressing a dispute which I have already
referred
to regarding whether the email and schedule sent by Toerien
on 16 May 2021 emanated from him as a beneficiary or as a trustee. In
my view, there are several indications in favour of the respondents
in this regard.
[30]
For one, it is common cause that the applicant had requested
Toerien to draft a proposal of how her distribution would look like
before she could agree to
the beneficiaries’
proposal
. That is the most probable purpose of the email and
schedule - to comply with her request. I have not been referred to
any other
document in the record which would have met her request.
And this purpose is supported by the clear terms of the e-mail, the
opening
line of which makes mention of numbers that were sent “
on
Thursday evening, but with very limited notes”
, and
thereafter sets out the intention of the e-mail namely “
to
outline the reasoning and assumptions used in support of the
numbers”
. According to the evidence in these proceedings,
the previous numbers could only be a reference to the beneficiaries’
proposal.
And the contents of the schedule support the version of the
trustees, namely that it was an annuity calculation explaining
distribution
payments that were to be received over time.
[31]
Another indication in favour of the respondents is that the
e-mail of 16 May 2021 was only addressed to the applicant and Elbert
Jr, not the other beneficiaries. This was clearly a follow-up to
their discussions in early May 2021, which had been held with
their
attorney Ms Venter.
[32]
Further, no trustees were copied in on the email, to indicate
that they were in support of a proposal being made at that point.
This is significant because, the clear terms of the beneficiaries’
proposal make it clear that it was subject to the trustees’
approval at a meeting to be convened on a future date. Clause 2.7 of
the final draft of the beneficiaries’ proposal states
as
follows: “
This agreement will be presented to the three (3)
trustees of the Trust as a proposal, and a request, to exercise their
unfettered
absolute discretion to implement the terms of this
agreement, at a trustees meeting convened within 21 days from 14 May
2021”
.
[33]
It is also clear from the papers that at the point when the
email was sent, the applicant was aware that the distribution to her
sister Maryke and her mother had not been finalized. That, after all,
was the point of drafting the beneficiaries’ proposal
in early
May 2021, which awaited her signature and agreement, for forwarding
to Maryke’s attorneys as a proposal. Given what
was happening
at that point, namely engaging the different beneficiaries and their
legal representatives for the purpose of soliciting
their
distribution proposals, it would make no sense for the trustees to
make a proposal to her at that stage.
[34]
It is correct that the e-mail of 16 May 2021 makes mention of a
trustees’ decision
regarding the valuation of the Trust.
However, given the factual matrix I have referred to above, that is
not enough to conclude
that the e-mail was sent on behalf of the
trustees. I am alive to the fact that Toerien holds multiple roles –
as beneficiary,
trustee and CEO of the De Wit Group. This is why it
is evermore so important to properly examine the purpose, context and
the clear
wording of the documents relied upon. After all, he was
already a beneficiary when he was invited by his father - the founder
of
the Trust - to become the CEO of the De Wit Group and to become a
trustee. In other words, the multiple roles were not an impediment
in
the eyes of Elbert Snr, the founder of the Trust.
[35]
What is more, the version of Toerien regarding the context and
purpose of the e-mail of 16 May 2021 is confirmed by Elbert Jnr, who
has deposed to a confirmatory affidavit and was part of the relevant
correspondence and discussions on this aspect. Even Lenette,
who is
both a trustee and beneficiary - similar to Toerien - and has now
broken ranks with the trustees, has not gone as far as
to suggest
that the trustees made such an offer to the applicant at that point.
[36]
For all these reasons, I conclude that the e-mail of 16 May
2021 did not emanate from the trustees, and was sent by Toerien in
his
individual capacity to assist his siblings, Elbert Jnr and the
applicant.
[37]
The e-mail and schedule of 16 May 2021 have taken great
significance in these proceedings and is referred to by the applicant
as
the May 2021 proposal which emanated from the trustees. It is
stated that the applicant requires the information she seeks in these
proceedings in order to form judgement as to whether the proposed
course of action by the trustees for which her consent is required
or
asked is in her interest. In other words, for the purpose of deciding
whether the May 2021 proposal is in her interest and to
enable her to
make a counter-proposal. Given my findings immediately above,
t
o
the extent that the applicant relies on the email and schedule of 16
May 2021 as a basis for the relief she seeks, it cannot avail
her.
[38]
In support of a case that she previously
received distributions or benefits from the Trust and that she
therefore has vested rights,
the applicant has set out a variety of
payments that she received, which may be summarised as follows:
a.
On 26 February 2017 she received a payment of R55,000, which
she claims is a dividend payment. The trustees dispute that this was
a dividend payment, and state that it was a loan payment from the De
Wit Group.
b.
Between March 2021 and May 2021, the applicant received three
monthly payments of R86,000, which she claims were agreed interest
payments on capital to be paid to her, as an interim arrangement. The
trustees dispute the applicant’s characterization of
these
payments and state that they were loan payments which were recorded
in the financial records of the company (Bester &
Van Der
Westhuizen (Pty) Ltd) as loans. The trustees also state that there
were no meetings or resolutions where these payments
were discussed,
or where it was agreed to make distributions to the applicant. Whilst
the applicant bears no knowledge of whether
a trustees’
resolution was taken in this regard, she has attached watsapp
communication from Toerien dated 28 February 2021,
in which he
committed to make monthly payments which he also referred to globally
as an ‘interest amount’. The applicant
has also attached
watsapp communication dated 7 June 2021, in which reference is made
to the fact that Toerien had apparently failed
to pay ‘interest
payments’ as previously agreed between them.
c.
From 13 November 2018 to March 2021, the applicant states that
she received monthly payments of R15,000 from one of the companies,
Prokdok (Pty) Ltd. The trustees state that there was only one such
payment from Prokdok, and it was a loan which was paid on 3
December
2018. At the same time, they state that she received two further loan
payments of R15,000, from BRV Worcester (Pty) Ltd,
and a further six
such payments from the De Wit Group between February 2019 and July
2019.
In reply, the applicant refers to an email
from Henk Mostert the financial director of the De Wit Group, dated
November 2016
regarding the first payment of R15 000 made
to her on 30 November 2018, in which Toerien refers to the payment as
income distribution.
She also refers to Henk Mostert’s email
dated 26 May 2021 in which payments made to the beneficiaries are
referred to as
dividends.
d.
In 2019 the applicant states that she received an amount of
R1 632 965 as proceeds of the sale of property which was
previously
owned by the Trust in Strand. The trustees state that the
applicant received a loan in the amount of R1,000,000 from the De Wit
Group. They dispute that the sale of the immovable property in Strand
was linked to this loan. In reply, the applicant states that
on 4
August 2019 she received a payment of R1 million, after the transfer
of property the property was registered on 30 July 2019,
and states
that the timing of the payment is too coincidental for it not to be
considered as proceeds of a sale.
e.
A payment which gained traction as the supplementary papers
progressed is in regard to sale of a Porsche motor vehicle which
previously
belonged to Elbert Snr. On 24 April 2020 the
applicant received an amount of R253 333, which she states was
the proceeds
of the sale of a Porsche motor vehicle. The applicant
refers to clause 5.1.1 of Elbert Snr’s will in which he
bequeathed
all his assets, including motor vehicles, to the Trust,
and that accordingly the Porsche was a Trust asset. Then, she refers
to
a wish expressed by her mother Lenette, at a meeting of 4 August
2019, for the Porsche to be sold and its proceeds to be divided
into
three parts, between the applicant, Maryke and Elbert Jr. The
applicant states that this wish was implemented, supported by
the
fact that two trustees were present at the meeting, namely her mother
and Toerien. The trustees admit that the payment of R253 333
was
made to the applicant, but state that it was a loan payment.
[39]
Having
surveyed all the evidence in the papers regarding these payments, it
is clear that there are disputes of fact on this issue.
This much is
admitted in one of the set of heads delivered on behalf of the
applicant. As I have intimated, some of these alleged
payments
mentioned above gained traction as the supplementary papers
progressed, with allegations and counter-allegations being
supplemented in supplementary affidavits. This is undesirable, and,
if anything, demonstrates why motion proceedings are not designed
to
resolve disputes of fact.
[7]
In my judgment, the issue regarding these disputed payments is not
appropriate for resolution based on
probabilities,
and there is nothing
exceptional about this matter which requires a departure from that
well-established principle
.
[8]
As a result, I am not satisfied that the applicant has demonstrated
that distributions have been made to her by the Trust.
[40]
Even Lenette, who claims that the Porsche payment was a
distribution from the Trust, bases this on her wishes which were
expressed
at a beneficiaries’ meeting. Given the context of
where this wish was expressed - a beneficiaries’ meeting - I
would
have expected some evidence of a later decision by the trustees
(including first respondent) in support of this wish. The same
applies in respect of the alleged payment received from the sale of
the Strand property.
[41]
The
existence of disputes of fact was pointed out to the applicant in the
answering affidavit and was denied in the replying affidavit.
In the
supplementary heads of argument delivered on her behalf it is stated
that it is not necessary for this Court to decide any
of the disputes
of facts on the papers. I am constrained to point out that a court
faced with disputes of fact in motion proceedings
is entitled to
adopt a robust approach by dismissing the matter, especially where
the
applicant should have realised
when
launching the application that a serious dispute of fact was bound to
develop.
[9]
[42]
F
rom the papers before this Court, there is
no evidence of a decision made by the trustees to make capital
distributions from the
Trust to the beneficiaries. Instead, what
appears are negotiations that were held amongst different groupings
of the beneficiaries,
so that a proposal may be made to the trustees,
as demonstrated by the discussions and correspondence of May 2021
already discussed
above. This is further supported by the contents of
the replying affidavit in which the applicant relies on
correspondence dated
7 June 2021 from the trustees, recording that
they intended discussing the desirability of making capital and
income distributions
and requested an indication of her stance. As
the supplementary papers indicate, similar engagements continued
between the beneficiaries
and the trustees well into 2022. It is also
not disputed that one reason for the various payments made to the
applicant was that
she was in a strained financial position after a
divorce.
[43]
The significance of the finding that the applicant did not receive
distributions
or benefits from the Trust, lies in clause 1.8 of the
Trust Deed, which provides that the ‘vesting date’ is
“
the date which the Trustee[s] may determine as vesting
date, which shall indicate the time at which beneficiaries shall
acquire
vested rights with respect to the net trust assets”
.
No evidence has been established that the trustees have as yet
determined or indicated a ‘vesting date’ within the
contemplation of this clause.
[44]
Rather, the terms of the Trust Deed indicate that
beneficiaries may receive some payments before they receive any part
of the capital
assets. Clause 6.6 provides:
“
Subject
to the foregoing provisions, the Trustees shall be entitled to pay to
any of the Income Beneficiaries, in their sole discretion,
before
payment to any such beneficiaries of any part of the capital assets
,
such amounts from the income as the Trustees in their sole discretion
may deem reasonable and desirable;
provided that the
provisions of clauses 7.7 and 7.8 below shall apply mutatis mutandis
to the disbursement of Trust income
”
. (my
emphasis)
[45]
The
relevant part of clause 7.7 provides that “
no
rights or benefits from the Trust shall vest in any beneficiary
before actual transfer or handover of an asset to such
beneficiary
…”.
[10]
The result is that the beneficiaries’ rights to receive income
or capital from the Trust have not vested.
[46]
Still,
it has been held that even a contingent beneficiary has a vested
interest in the proper administration of the trust - as
against, for
example,
maladministration
by a trustee.
[11]
I
have already mentioned that, it was on the basis of alleged
maladministration and
abuse
of the Trust assets
by
Toerien that the applicant approached this Court on a semi-urgent
basis.
[47]
The applicant alleged in the founding affidavit that Toerien is using
Trust assets
to advance his own commercial interests, and had caused
a mortgage bond to be registered over immovable property owned by the
Trust.
There was otherwise very scant detail provided regarding these
serious allegations, a point which was raised in the answering
affidavit.
It was in the replying affidavit, after the trustees
complained about the scant details, that the applicant gave more
information
with regard to these claims, including an allegation that
soft loans may have been made to Toerien. This aspect continues to
contain
only vague allegations which no specificity to allow the
respondents to respond. They are in any event disputed. It needs
hardly
stating that the manner in which these allegations were
raised, which were the basis for bringing the matter on the semi
urgency,
is far from ideal. Making out a case in reply is
inappropriate. In any event, this is manifestly an issue which
remains in dispute.
[48]
Besides, clauses 5.1 to 5.8 of the Trust Deed grant trustees
wide discretion to deal with trust property and assets. In
terms
of clause 5 “
[t]he control and management of the Trust
and Trust assets shall rest with the Trustees who shall be entitled
to administer the
Trust in accordance with their own discretion and
to effect all actions in respect of the Trust as if the Trustees were
an adult
individual who has full and free right to deal with his own
property”
. It has not been shown that any of the trustees
acted beyond the scope of the trust deed in their dealings with trust
property
and assets.
[49]
In any
event, as the trustees point out, it is not disputed that the Trust
itself owns no immovable property, and would accordingly
not have
bonded property. In that context, if the applicant wished to make
allegations in regard to some of the companies associated
with the
Trust, it is incumbent upon her to be specific with her allegations
to make out her case in her pleadings, in line with
established legal
authorities. The applicant has simply failed to satisfy the Court
regarding these allegations. As a result, to
the extent that she
relies on alleged maladministration or abuse of Trust assets for a
right to the relief she claims, this cannot
assist her. In this
regard, the sentiments expressed by the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA)
in
Clutchco
(Pty)Ltd v Davis
[12]
are
apposite, that although a shareholder in a company has the right to
receive copies of the company's annual financial statements
and to
obtain copies of minutes of its general meetings, she does not have
an automatic right to the company's accounting records
“
on
a whiff of impropriety or on the ground that relatively minor errors
or irregularities have occurred
”.
Although these sentiments were expressed in the context of a company
shareholder, they are applicable in the circumstances
of this case.
[50]
As
for the case based on alleged unfair treatment and discrimination,
this legal argument surfaced for the first time in the applicant’s
supplementary heads of argument. Faced with this challenge, it was
argued in reply that the factual averments which formed the
basis for
this legal argument are contained in the papers. The Court was
referred in this regard to averments in the applicant’s
replying affidavit in which it is alleged that, in making the
proposal of 16 May 2021 which the applicant characterizes as a
distribution
proposal from the trustees, Toerien had all the
information as to the financial position of the Trust,
“
while
the rest of us are kept in the dark”
.
These
factual averments are denied in the papers. However, as I have
stated, the case of unfair treatment amounting to discrimination
is
not squarely raised in the papers in order to afford the respondents
and opportunity to deal with it. This is important because,
in order
for the applicant to be successful on this score, the Court would at
the very least need comprehensive evidence relating
to the access to
information granted to the remainder of the beneficiaries, whom I
assume are
“
the
rest of us”
that
are being kept in the dark. It is not sufficient to merely allege
that the applicant is disadvantaged as compared Toerien,
who is both
a beneficiary and a trustee. In order to reach the conclusion sought
by the applicant, the Court would need to compare
‘like with
like’,
and
compare the
circumstances
of each particular beneficiary, and assess whether their treatment by
the trustees was justified by their circumstances
.
[13]
The Court does not have sufficient information in order to reach such
a conclusion.
G.
PRAYER 1
[51]
I now turn to deal with paragraph 1, the amended order directing the
trustees to
comply with clause 8.2 of the Trust Deed. The applicant
explains that it came to her attention after delivery of the replying
affidavit,
that the trustees were acting in breach paragraph 8.2 of
the Trust Deed by failing to comply with their duty to prepare annual
financial statements of the Trust. She made this discovery after
having sight of an e-mail of Lenette dated 6 December 2021, in
which
the latter requested from her co-trustees copies of financial
statements for the Trust and the companies under it for the
previous
five years. On the basis of this e-mail, the applicant avers that the
inference is inescapable that no financial statements
had been
prepared for the previous five years.
[52]
The trustees dispute the alleged non-compliance with clause 8.2 of
the Trust Deed.
They have attached to their supplementary affidavit
(deposed on 15 February 2023) correspondence dated 7 and 9 December
2021 which
was sent in response to Lenette's e-mail of 6 December
2021, and in which Lenette was invited to view all the financial
information
she requested, with the assistance of the Trust’s
auditors if required. The e-mail stated that the financial statements
had
not been disseminated given certain undisclosed sensitivities.
[53]
The affidavit of Lenette, which was deposed on 20 February 2023
(after Toerien’s
allegations in this regard), makes no
reference to Toerien’s allegations regarding the invitation
that was allegedly extended
to her on 9 December 2021 to view the
financial statements which were available on that date.
[54]
Instead, Lenette has attached a letter addressed by her
attorneys to the Trust on 15 March 2022, in which it is alleged that
the
Trust had failed to have financial statements compiled for the
previous six years, and that they were belatedly compiled - it is
not
stated when - and Lenette was expected to ‘rubber stamp’
them upon a mere two days’ notice. It is also stated
that
Lenette requested that a meeting scheduled for 16 March 2022 be
postponed until she had been provided with the annual financial
statements for the previous three years. In response to these
allegations, the trustees have clarified that the meeting of 16 March
2022 was not in respect of all the financial statements of the Trust
which had long been prepared before then, but was in respect
of
rectified financials following the discovery of irregularities in
Gasvoorsieners Boland (Pty) Ltd.
[55]
The trustees have explained the history of the preparation of
the financial statements. They point to a decision made in 2020 for
the financial statements to be prepared, and an e-mail sent by the
Trust’s accountants on 6 May 2021 which attached annual
financial statements for the years 2016 to 2020. After compilation
and delivery of the financial statements in May 2021, the trustees
state that they were updated in December 2021. They state that, save
in respect of Gasvoorsieners Boland, proper accounting records
have
always been kept and maintained by the Trust in respect of each
company in which it holds shares directly or indirectly. The
affidavit has also set out allegations relating to improprieties at
Gasvoorsieners Boland which resulted in the financial information
of
that company not being kept up to date, and this is the reason they
state that this information needed amending in March 2022.
[56]
In response to these allegations, the applicant delivered a
notice in terms of Rule 35, demanding delivery of the financial
statements
for the years 2016 to 2020 which were allegedly attached
to the email of 6 May 2021, and they were provided to her. The
applicant
states that the financial statements she received in
response to her Rule 35 request are different to the ones she was
provided
with in or about May 2022 during the ‘without
prejudice’ discussions between the parties. She opines that the
financial
statements she received in response to her Rule 35 request
were in draft form, and that the statements she received in May 2022
were an advanced draft. In either event, she now complains that the
financial statements she has received were not signed by the
trustees.
[57]
From a reading of the applicant’s further supplementary
replying affidavit dated 28 March 2023, it is does not appear to be
in dispute any longer that financial statements had indeed been
prepared by the time she amended her relief to include what is
now
contained in prayer 1. At best, the applicant is cynical of these
allegations, which admittedly, were made late in the papers
in one of
the supplementary affidavits. However, the applicant is not in a
position to dispute that the financial statements existed
and had
been prepared by 6 May 2021, because, after all she received them in
response to her Rule 35 request. The fact of their
existence is
supported by the e-mails of 7 and 9 December 2021 from Toerien to
Lenette, in which the latter was invited to attend
at the business
premises to view the financial statements, with the assistance of the
auditors of the Trust if she so required.
The significance of the
offer of the assistance by the auditors lies in the fact that the
e-mail of 6 May 2021, which attached
the financial statements was
from the same auditors.
[58]
As I have already mentioned, Lenette’s affidavit is
silent regarding the invitation extended to her to view the financial
statements in December 2021. Instead, she continues to complain about
the meeting scheduled for March 2022, which she and the applicant
claim demonstrate that no financial statements had been prepared by
then. What is significant about Lenette’s complaints
is that
she repeatedly states that she was not provided with the financial
statements. Clause 8.4 of the Trust Deed requires that
the “
financial
statements and books of the Trust [be] accessible to all Trustees on
a reasonable basis at all times”
. The invitation extended
for her to view the financial statements in December 2021 meets this
requirement. As Toerien explained
in that invitation, the information
was considered too sensitive to disseminate. The basis provided for
not disseminating the statements
was not challenged by Lenette at the
time. There remains no explanation for why she did not take up the
offer to view the statements
as proposes in Toerien’s email. As
for clause 8.2, it merely requires preparation of the financial
statements. There is no
requirement for the financial statements to
be
provided
to Lenette as demanded in the correspondence
attached to her affidavit.
[59]
Thus the basis on which the notice of motion was amended -
Lenette’s email of 6 December 2021 and subsequent events of
March
2022, do not assist the applicant. The application of the
Plascon Evans
rule supports the version of the trustees.
[60]
What the applicant now complains about is that the
financial statements were not signed and that no trustees’
meeting was
called to approve them.
She adds that the
financial statements she eventually received in May 2022 were not
signed by either the auditors or the trustees,
and are not dated.
This, she says, is an indication that they were not prepared annually
within a reasonable time of the last day
of the financial year in
compliance with clause 8.2 of the Trust Deed, and had plainly not
been prepared prior to the launch of
these proceedings, but were
prepared in response to the further amendment to the notice of
motion.
[61]
Clause 8.2 provides as follows:
“
The Trustees shall
annually, within a reasonable time after the last day of the
financial year, prepare or cause to be prepared
financial statements
of the Trust, which shall include at least a balance sheet and income
statement.”
[62]
Clause
8.2 creates an obligation for the trustees to annually and within a
reasonable time after the last day of the financial year,
prepare or
cause to be prepared financial statements of the Trust, which shall
include at least a balance sheet and income statement.
The clause is
not prescriptive about the form that the financial statements should
take, save to set a minimum requirement of a
balance sheet and income
statement. It is a low threshold. There is no requirement for a
meeting to be held or for signatures from
trustees. I am accordingly
not satisfied that the only plausible inference to be drawn from the
facts is that no financial statements
had been drawn for the period
in issue.
[14]
[63]
As a result, I am not satisfied that the applicant has
made out a case that the trustees failed to comply with their
obligations
in terms of clause 8.2 of the Trust Deed, and that she
should obtain an order directing them to comply therewith. I have
also already
made a finding that as at 9 December 2021 the financial
statements had been prepared. As a result, the applicant has not made
out
a case for the relief sought in paragraph one of the further
amended notice of motion.
[64]
In
the same vein, I am not satisfied that a case has been made out for
relief in terms of
s
ection
19 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988. For successful
reliance on that provision, the applicant was required to
establish
that the trustees failed to perform a duty imposed upon them by the
Trust Deed.
[15]
H.
PRAYERS
2.1 – 2.11
[65]
Regarding the relief sought at prayers 2.3 to
2.11, in respect of which the applicant persists with her
application, the conclusions
and discussions already outlined above
apply. In particular, when she brought these proceedings, the
applicant claimed that she
needed this information in order to assess
the proposal made to her in May 2021, which she characterized as a
trustees’ proposal.
I have already found that the May 2021
proposal did not emanate from the trustees. Thus, the overall basis
for seeking this information
has not been established.
[66]
I am of the view that the applicant is
accordingly not entitled to the documents and information requested
in these prayers. As
the trustees point out, the requests for
information are extensive and unreasonably wide-ranging. Most
importantly, no legal right
has been established for this
information, as already discussed above. In addition to all
that is discussed in this judgment,
I also make the observations that
follow.
a.
In respect of
prayer 2.3,
the
applicant seeks valuations of the Trust capital as at February 2017.
The basis for this relief is said to be the May 2021 proposal,
which
she says emanated from the trustees. I have already made a finding to
the contrary.
b.
In prayer 2.5 the applicant states that she requires this
information because these are entities or businesses in which the
Trust
owns shares or has invested monies. I have already indicated
that I am not satisfied that the applicant received distributions or
benefits from the Trust, and accordingly it has not been established
that the applicant is entitled to this information.
c.
As regards prayers 2.6 and 2.11, in terms of which the
applicant seeks information relating to how trust assets are bonded
or not,
it has not been established why the applicant requires this
information. From what is contained in the papers this demand relates
to the allegations that Toerien abuses assets of the Trust for his
own benefit, a case which is made in reply. There is otherwise
no
indication from the papers for why the applicant requires this
information. I have already made a finding in this regard, that
the
abuse alleged has not been established. In any event, it appears that
the was provided with some of this information in May
2022.
d.
In prayer 2.7 the applicant requests loan account printouts for loans
between each company in the Group.
She states that she requires this
information as it is relevant to the state of investment of and other
dealings with the trust
property and in particular information
regarding her share of it. Given that, on the papers, I am not
satisfied that the applicant
received distributions or benefits from
the Trust, it has not been established that the applicant is entitled
to this information.
The same goes for prayer 2.10 in terms of which
the applicant seeks income tax returns submitted in respect of each
of the companies
in the Group and of the Trust on the same basis.
e.
As for prayer 2.8 in which the applicant seeks an explanation
as to the origin and function of the De Wit Group (Pty)Ltd as well
as
financial information pertaining to it, the applicant confirms that
the financial information has been provided to her, and
that what is
outstanding is the explanation as to the origin and function of the
entity. Amongst the documents provided to the
applicant following the
good faith discussions in May 2022, was an organogram explaining the
structure of private companies owned,
directly or indirectly, by the
Trust. The trustees state these documents and financial documents
provided to the applicant should
assist in explaining the function
and origin of the De Wit Group. In the latest heads of argument of
the applicant, it is stated
that “
if it is simply a holding
company then the trustees need only say so, but they have not”
.
Accordingly save for this question, it seems that the prayer in
paragraph 2.8 has been satisfied.
f.
In prayer 2.9 the applicant requests information regarding
swap agreements which were in place, for purposes of evaluating the
schedule
provided to her by Toerien on 16 May 2021. Toerien has
explained that the schedule was an annuity calculation which showed
Elbert
Jr and the applicant how they could expect to receive
distribution payments over time. I have, in any event, already found
that
the schedule did not emanate from the trustees and cannot be
read as a course of action to be adopted by them and which required
her consent.
[67]
For all the reasons discussed in this judgment, I am not
satisfied that the applicant has made out a case for the relief she
seeks.
COSTS
[68]
From the launch of these proceedings, the applicant has sought
an order that the costs of this application should be paid from the
Trust funds, unless the matter was opposed, in which event the
respondents should pay the costs jointly and severally.
[69]
The trustees have set out the extent of information that has
been provided to the applicant since the launch of these proceedings,
including as a result of the May 2022 discussions, which is common
cause. In argument before me it was argued that, to the extent
that
the applicant has persisted with these proceedings beyond that date,
she should bear the costs in her personal capacity.
[70]
Given my findings on the merits of the matter, that would have been
the ordinary
course to adopt. However, as I have already indicated,
the trustees only clarified in affidavits dated February and March
2023
that the financial statements had been prepared as at 6 May
2021. This was a complete answer to the amended prayer 1 in the
further
amended notice of motion, and was inexplicably not given from
the time of the amendment in February or March 2022, until February
or March 2023.
[71]
There is also the belated participation of Lenette
in these proceedings, who states that, as a mother, trustee
and beneficiary she felt increasingly uncomfortable with the ongoing
litigation and sought to contribute towards the adjudication of the
matter. The filing of her affidavit at the 11th hour resulted
in a
postponement of the matter which was supposed to have been heard on
21 February 2023, and the trustees decry the conduct of
their
co-trustee in this regard which was not at all foreshadowed. Although
I did not find that, in the main the averments made
in her affidavits
assisted with the adjudication of the matter, I do not find it
appropriate to grant a costs order against her
in the individual
capacity in which she has sought to intervene.
I.
ORDER
[72]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
a.
The applicant’s case is dismissed;
b.
The costs of this application shall be paid from the Elbert De Wit
Family Trust funds.
N. MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
Adv
B. Gassner SC
Adv
R Fitzgerald
Instructed
by:
R.
Gootkin
Werksmans
Attorneys
For
the first to third respondents’:
Adv
C Maree
Instructed
by:
C
Venter
Venter
Attorneys & Conveyancers
[1]
Doyle
v Board of Executors
(1999
(2) SA 805 (C).
[2]
As
in
Braun
v Blann and Botha NNO and Another
[1984] ZASCA 19
;
1984 (2) SA 850
(A). See generally Cameron
et
al
Honore’s
South African Law
of Trust 5
th
ed at page 557 to 558 and Joubert (ed)
The
Law of South Africa (LAWSA)
2
nd
edition vol 31 at para 547. See also
Gross
and Others v Pentz
(1996 (4) SA 617 (A).
[3]
At
213B.
## [4]Doyleatat
628J. See alsoGriessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another(334/18)
[2019] ZASCA 95; 2019 (5) SA 396 (SCA) (6 June 2019) where it was
held that even contingent beneficiaries are entitled
to protection.
[4]
Doyle
at
at
628J. See also
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
(334/18)
[2019] ZASCA 95; 2019 (5) SA 396 (SCA) (6 June 2019) where it was
held that even contingent beneficiaries are entitled
to protection.
## [5]Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another(334/18) [2019] ZASCA 95; 2019 (5) SA 396 (SCA) (6 June 2019) para
16 -17.
[5]
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
(334/18) [2019] ZASCA 95; 2019 (5) SA 396 (SCA) (6 June 2019) para
16 -17.
[6]
Weyer
v Estate Weyer
1939 AD 126
at 145-146.
[7]
National
Director of Public Prosecutors v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009
(2) SA 277
(SCA) paras [26] – [27].
[8]
Harmse
Civil
Procedure in the Supreme Court
,
B6.45.
[9]
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949
(3) SA 1155
(T)
at 1162; Conradie v Kleingeld
1950
(2) SA 594
(O)
at 597.
[10]
Clause 7.8, which deals with a disqualified beneficiary, is not
relevant to these proceedings.
## [11]SeeGriessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Anotherparas
16 -17, referring toPotgieter
& another v Potgieter NO & others[2011]
ZASCA 181; 2012 (1) SA 637 (SCA) para 28.
[11]
See
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
paras
16 -17, referring to
Potgieter
& another v Potgieter NO & others
[2011]
ZASCA 181; 2012 (1) SA 637 (SCA) para 28.
[12]
See
Clutchco
(Pty)Ltd v Davis
2005 (3) SA 486
(SCA) at para 17.
[13]
E
Cameron
et
al Honore’s South African Law of Trusts
5
ed (2002) Thirteenth Impression 2016 at 316.
[14]
S
A Post Office v Delacy and Another
2009
(5) SA 255
(SCA)
at para 35.
R
v Blom
1939
AD 188
at
202-203.
[15]
Section 19
of
the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 provides as follows:
“
If
any trustee fails to comply with a request by the Master in terms of
section 16 or to perform any duty imposed upon him by
the trust
instrument or by law, the Master or any person having an interest in
the trust property may apply to the court for
an order directing the
trustee to comply with such request or to perform such duty.”
sino noindex
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