Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 96South Africa
Koch v Weiland N.O. and Another (16526/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 96 (18 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Koch v Weiland N.O. and Another (16526/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 96 (18 March 2022)
Koch v Weiland N.O. and Another (16526/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 96 (18 March 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 16526/2020
In
the matter between:
PAULUS
BERNHARDUS KOCH
Plaintiff
and
MICHELE
WEILAND
N.O.
First defendant
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN
Second defendant
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 18 MARCH 2022
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
The plaintiff sues the first defendant on
the basis of a contract for services rendered in the administration
and liquidation of
the estate of the late Priscilla le Roux.
The first defendant is the duly appointed executor of the estate,
having received
letters of executorship from the second defendant on
13 September 2020. The first defendant is the deceased’s
daughter, and
was nominated in the deceased’s will as executor.
2.
The plaintiff’s claim is for the
amount of R1 296 622,96, based on the prescribed rate for
the remuneration of executors
in terms of
section 51(b)
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 1965
, read with
regulation 8(a)
to
that Act, which is calculated at 3,5% of the gross value of the
assets of the estate.
3.
The plaintiff seeks, in addition, an order
that the first and second defendants be prohibited from finalizing
the estate pending
the final determination of the action.
4.
The first defendant excepts to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim on the basis that they fail to
disclose a cause of action.
This is because, so the first
defendant argues, in terms of the
Regulations
prohibiting the liquidation or distribution of the estates of
deceased persons by any person other than an attorney,
notary,
conveyancer or law agent
(“the
regulations”) (discussed below), the plaintiff is prohibited
from administering and liquidating deceased estates
unless he falls
into one of the categories of persons and institutions that are
allowed to do such work, or within the category
of persons and
institutions exempted from the ambit of the regulations. There
are no allegations in the particulars of claim
that indicate whether
the plaintiff is either so allowed or so exempted.
5.
In the circumstances, the first defendant
argues that the plaintiff has not disclosed a cause of action
entitling him to claim fees
for the services rendered as well as the
prohibition against the finalization of the estate by the defendants.
The
legal principles underpinning exceptions
6.
An
exception is a legal objection to the opponent's pleading,
complaining of a defect inherent in such pleading. Admitting for the
moment that all the allegations in the particulars of claim are true,
exceptions assert that even with such admission the particulars
do
not disclose a cause of action
[1]
in that, for example, they do not justify the conclusions drawn
therein, or that they are vague and embarrassing to such an extent
that the excipient is unable to plead to them
.
[2]
7.
The
object of an exception is to dispose of the case or a portion thereof
in an expeditious manner, or to protect a party against
an
embarrassment which is so serious as to merit the costs even of an
exception. Thus, an exception founded on the contention that
particulars of claim disclose no cause of action (such as the present
case) is designed to obtain a decision on a point of law
that will
dispose of the case in whole or in part, and avoid the leading of
unnecessary evidence at the trial.
[3]
8.
To
succeed, an excipient must persuade the Court that, upon every
reasonable interpretation of the particulars of claim, no cause
of
action is disclosed.
[4]
The Court must look at the pleading excepted to as it stands.
[5]
No facts outside those stated in the pleading may be brought into
issue (except in the case of inconsistency) and no reference
may be
made to any other document.
[6]
9.
It is against this backdrop that the first
defendant’s exception should be considered.
The regulations
10.
The regulations were originally promulgated
in terms of the Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers Admission Act 23
of 1934, as R910
in
Government Gazette
2080 of 22 May 1968 (as amended by R1030 in
Government
Gazette
2439 of 20 June 1969 and R1376
in
Government Gazette
3227 of 13 August 1971). They are reproduced in Meyerowitz
The
Law and Practice of Administration of Estates and their taxation
(2010 edition) (“
Meyerowitz
”).
11.
Regulation 1 contains definitions of the
institutions mentioned in the rest of the regulations.
12.
In terms of regulation 2, subject to the
provisions of regulations 3 and 4, no person other than an attorney,
notary or conveyances
as defined in section 1 of the Attorneys,
Notaries and Conveyancers Admission Act, 1934, or an agent in terms
of the section 22
of the Magistrates’ Courts Act, 1944 (a
so-called law agent) may liquidate or distribute a deceased estate.
In terms of regulation 1(1)(iv),
liquidation or distribution in relation to a deceased estate includes
the performance of any act
relating to the liquidation or
distribution of the estate other than the realisation, transfer or
valuation of estate assets or
of any right in or to such assets.
13.
The exemptions provided for in the
regulations are a
numerus clausus
.
Regulation 3 exempts the following persons permanently from the
provisions of regulation 2:
13.1.
Any board of executors as defined.
13.2.
Any trust company as defined.
13.3.
Any public accountant defined in the
prevailing legislation regulating accountants and auditors.
13.4.
Any person licensed as a broker or agent
under the Licences Act, 1962, and carrying on a business
predominantly consisting in the
liquidation or distribution of
deceased estates.
.
14.
Regulation 4 provides that the classes of
persons or institutions permanently exempt from the prohibition in
regulation 2 are:
14.1.
Any natural person nominated as executor by
any deceased person by a will registered and accepted int eh office
of the Master, in
so far as he or she is personally liquidating or
distributing the estate of such deceased person.
14.2.
The surviving spouse of or any person
elated by consanguinity or affinity up to and including the second
degree to a deceased person,
in so far as he or she is liquidating or
distributing the estate of such deceased person.
14.3.
Banking institutions under certain
conditions.
14.4.
Any person who is in the full-time service
of any other person who is lawfully liquidating and distributing the
estate of a deceased
person, in so far as he is assisting such other
person with or is acting on his or her behalf in any matter relating
to the liquidation
and distribution of the estate.
14.5.
Any person in the full-time service of a
trade union under certain conditions.
14.6.
Any person liquidating or distributing an
estate on the instructions of an attorney, notary, conveyancer or law
agent.
14.7.
Any person liquidating or distributing an
estate under the direction of the Master in terms of
section 18(3)
of
the
Administration of Estates Act, 1965
.
The issues for
determination
15.
The issues to be determined are, firstly,
whether the regulations are still in force, given that they had been
promulgated under
an Act repealed a long time ago. If the
regulations are in force, then the second issue is whether they apply
to the plaintiff’s
case. The final question that flows
from this is whether the particulars of claim disclose a cause of
action.
16.
I deal with each of these issues in turn.
Are the regulations
still in force?
17.
The
regulations
were originally promulgated by the Minister of Justice by virtue of
the powers vested in him by section 30 of the Attorneys,
Notaries and
Conveyancers Admission Act 23 of 1934. That Act was repealed in
its entirety by the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979,
with effect from 1 June
1979.
18.
The Attorneys Act catered for the
continuance of regulations made under an Act repealed by it, stating
in broad terms in section
86(3) that “
anything
done or deemed to have been done
”
under any provision of a law repealed by the Attorneys Act would
remain in force as if done under the Attorneys Act.
The
regulations therefore remained in force as if promulgated under the
Attorneys Act.
19.
The Attorneys Act was, in turn, repealed by
the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
with effect from 1 November 2018.
The
Legal Practice Act provides
, in
section 119(2)
, that any
regulation made under any law which is repealed by it and in force
immediately before 1 November 2018 remains in force,
except insofar
as it is inconsistent with the provisions of the
Legal Practice Act
or
until it is amended or revoked in terms of the Act. The
Legal Practice Act provides
, in addition, in
section 119(3)
that
“
anything done in terms of a law
repealed by this Act remains valid if it is consistent with this
Act
”.
20.
It seems that the regulations are
consistent with the
Legal Practice Act inasmuch
as the Act (in
section 94) empowers the Minister of Justice to make regulations
regarding many aspects of legal practice.
The Minister is also
given a general catch-all regulatory power in that he or she may make
regulations relating to “
any other
matter in respect of which regulations may or must be made in terms
of this Act
” (section 94(1)(o)).
The plaintiff in any event did not argue that the regulations are
inconsistent with the
Legal Practice Act.
21.
The
regulations, having been retained under the Attorneys Act and being
consistent with the provisions of the
Legal Practice Act, therefore
continue to remain valid under the
Legal Practice Act.
[7
]
Do
the regulations apply to the plaintiff’s case and, if so, are
the particulars of claim excipiable?
22.
The next question is whether the
regulations apply to the plaintiff, given the nature of the agreement
between the parties.
I deal with this question, as well as the
final question (the excipiability or otherwise of the particulars of
claim), under one
heading, as they are conveniently considered
together.
23.
Meyerowitz
states,
at paragraph 12.23, that an executor cannot substitute another person
to act in his place,
[8]
but he
or she can appoint an agent under power of attorney to administer the
estate on his or her behalf.
[9]
An irrevocable power of attorney may not be granted.
[10]
24.
The plaintiff is well aware of the
prohibition against substitution, as it is expressly alleged in the
particulars of claim that
“
the
purpose of the agreement was not to substitute or surrogate the First
Defendant with the Plaintiff to act as executor in her
place, is
[sic] was to render services to the First Defendant against the fee
similar to and/or equivalent to the fee which the
First Defendant
will receive upon the successful liquidation and distribution of the
estate. The Defendant [sic] therefor
[sic] did not abdicate
from her responsibilities and duties regarding the administration of
the estate but delegated these to the
Plaintiff
”.
25.
The agreement between the plaintiff and the
first defendant stipulates that the first defendant, in her capacity
as duly authorised
executrix to the estate, nominate and appoint
(“
benoem and stel hiermee aan
”)
the plaintiff:
“…
as
my gevolmagtigde Agent om die Boedel te administreer, beredder en af
te handel volgens geldende landswette en teen die vasgestelde
Eksekuteursloon of sodanige ander loon as deur ons onderling
ooreengekom. Sonder om in enige mate my Agent se algemene magte
te beperk, magtig ek hom in besonder om:
(1)
Alle dokumente, opgawes, Likwidasie
en Distribusierekenings, Belastingopgawes e.d.m. te voltooi en te
teken
(2)
Bankrekenings in die naam van die
Boedel te open daarop te opereer en te sluit
(3)
Die Boedel te verteenwoordig in
enige aksies en/of gedinge aanhangig gemaak deur of teen die boedel
(4)
Alle dokumente met betrekking tot
die oordrag, sessie en/of vervreemding van enige boedelbates aan
erfgename, kopers, en/of eisers
to voltooi en te onderteken
My
Agent se wettige aksies in verband met die boedel en verwante sake
word hiermee geratifiseer asof ek persoonlik hierin opgetree
het en
sal hierdie Volmag van krag bly totdat die Boedel gefinaliseer is en
alle gelde verskuldig aan my Agent ten volle vereffen
is
.”
[“…
as my
authorised Agent to administer, distribute and finalise the Estate in
accordance with prevailing legislation and against payment
of the
prescribed executors’ fee or such other fee as we agree upon
between us. Without limiting in any way my Agent’s
general powers, I authorise him in particular to:
(1)
Complete and sign any documents,
returns Liquidation and Distribution accounts, tax returns and so
forth
(2)
Open bank accounts in the name of
the Estate, operate thereon and close them
(3)
Represent the Estate in any actions
and/or suits instituted by or against the estate
(4)
To complete and sign all documents
regarding the transfer, cession and/or alienation of any estate
assets to heirs, purchasers and/or
claimants
My
Agent’s lawful actions in respect of the estate and related
matters are ratified herewith as if I personally acted herein
and
this power of attorney will remain in force until the Estate has been
finalised and all monies owing to my Agent have been
paid in
full.
”
]
[11]
26.
According to Shand
The
Administration of Deceased Estates in South Africa
(3ed, 1973) at 95, an executor cannot authorise a person, natural or
legal, to assist him in the liquidation or distribution of
an estate
if such person is prohibited from taking part in such liquidation or
distribution (see).
27.
I have referred above to what the
regulations say as regards persons prohibited from liquidating or
distributing an estate.
The plaintiff describes himself as “an
adult male sole proprietor, conducting
his business under the name and style of Bejo Trustees”
.
Despite the name of his business, there is no indication that he is a
trust company as contemplated in the
regulation 1(1)(iv)
, namely “
a
trust company which was, on 27 October 1967, licenced as such under
the Licences Act, 1962, and carrying on a business of which
a
substantial part consisted of the liquidation and distributions of
deceased estates, but does not include a trust company in
which a
banking institution acquired or acquires, after that date,
financial interest otherwise than in exchange or substitution
for any
such interest held by such banking institution on that date
”.
28.
There is no indication on the particulars
of claim or on his letterhead (upon which the agreement between him
and the first defendant
is recorded) that he fulfils the requirements
for being a person either allowed to distribute and liquidate estates
under regulation
2, or that he is exempted under regulation 3.
29.
The
first defendant’s counsel reminded me that courts are reluctant
to decide questions as to the interpretation of an agreement
by way
of exception.
[12]
This
reluctance relates, however, to questions as to
the
validity of an agreement and the question whether a purported
contract may be void for vagueness. This is not such a case.
30.
The
agreement concluded between the parties is quite clearly, on the
plain language thereof, a power of attorney granted by a principal
(the first defendant) to an agent (the plaintiff). The
plaintiff argues that, as his actions under the power of attorney
are
attributed to the first defendant,
[13]
the regulations do not apply to him. Even with the assistance
of the plaintiff under the agreement, it is the first defendant
who
is regarded as having acted, and therefore - since the first
defendant is exempt from the regulations by regulation 4(1), in
so
far as she is effectively “personally” liquidating or
distributing the estate – the plaintiff does not have
to make
any allegation in relation to his capacity under the regulations.
He merely has to plead the
facta
probanda
of an agreement of agency, which he has done.
31.
In any event, so the plaintiff argues, on a
construction of the particulars of claim as a whole he is claiming
purely contractual
damages for “loss of income” due to
the first defendant’s alleged repudiation of the agreement.
In this
regard, the plaintiff (having pleaded the terms of the
agreement) alleges as follows:
“
8.
On about 31 March 2021, prior to the Plaintiff’s finalization
of the liquidation distribution (sic) of the estate, the
Defendant
(sic) repudiated the agreement by terminating it before the Plaintiff
was able to fulfil his mandate,
alternatively
,
materially breached the agreement by terminating before the Plaintiff
was able to fulfil his mandate.
9. Have (sic) it not
been for the First Defendant’s repudiation, alternatively
breach, the Plaintiff would have been in a
position to complete his
performance in terms of the agreement and earn his remuneration upon
the completion thereof.
10. As a result of the
First Defendant’s repudiation,
alternatively
, breach,
the Plaintiff was prevented from fulfilling his mandate and earning
his commission and sustained damages, due to the potential
loss of
income, in an amount of R1 440 692,19.
11. At the time of the
early termination of the agreement, the Plaintiff has completed about
90% of the administration of the estate
on behalf of the First
Defendant.
12. The Defendant
(sic) claims payment of R1 296 622,96, calculated at 90% of
the loss of income due to the repudiation,
alternatively, breach of
the agreement by the First Defendant, which amount is due and
payable, alternatively will be due and payable
as soon as the estate
has been finalized.
13.
The above amount is calculated at 90% of the commission the Plaintiff
would have received, calculated at 3,5% (excluding VAT)
of the on the
(sic) gross value of the assets in the deceased estate in terms of
Section 51(b)
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
, and
the regulations thereto.
”
32.
I do not think that the plaintiff can evade
the implications of the regulations in this way.
33.
I
am of the view that, on a proper interpretation of the regulations
having regard to the approach set out in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality,
[14]
one
of the reasons for their promulgation must have been to protect the
public and to ensure that the administration of deceased
estates was
done in an orderly and lawful manner. Notably, the regulations
do not say that no person, save as provided for
in the regulations,
shall be appointed as executor.
[15]
They specifically say that no such person “
shall
liquidate or distribute”
a
deceased estate. This (sensibly so, given the purpose of the
regulations) refers to the acts involved in liquidating and
distributing an estate, rather than to where the responsibility lies
for those actions. This is consistent with Shand’s
interpretation to which I have referred earlier.
34.
It is clear from what has been pleaded that
it was the plaintiff who undertook the liquidation and distribution
of the account,
albeit that it was done in the name of the first
defendant. He emphasises his position by seeking an order that
the first
and second defendants (respectively, the duly appointed
executor and the Master) be prohibited from finalising the
administration
of the estate prior to the final determination of the
action. The first defendant patently did not administer the
estate
“personally”, as is required by
regulation 4(1).
To interpret the requirement of “personally” in the
regulations as to include liquidation and distribution via
an agent
would undermine the essence of the regulations.
35.
I agree with the submission by the first
defendant’s counsel that the grant of a power of attorney
without any regard to the
regulations allows the regulations to be
sidestepped, and enables a disqualified person to administer an
estate. If the plaintiff
could sue on the power of attorney for
an executor’s fee, then the plaintiff would effectively be
allowed to step into the
shoes of a layperson executor, while perhaps
(it is not known what the plaintiff’s position is in this
respect) being disqualified
from liquidating or distributing an
estate. This would be anomalous and would defeat the purpose of
the regulations. The
mere use of a power of attorney would enable
anyone to administer an estate, regardless of what the regulations
provide.
36.
I conclude that the regulations therefore
do apply to the plaintiff.
37.
This
is not merely an issue so interwoven with evidence that it should
stand over for deliberation at a trial in due course.
[16]
It is an issue that goes to the root of the plaintiff’s claim,
and therefore the plaintiff’s status under the
regulations as a
person who may liquidate or distribute an estate is a necessary
element of his claim against the first defendant.
38.
The regulations create a situation akin to
that applying to an estate agent. In terms of section 56 of the
Property Practitioners
Act, 2019 (which repealed the Estate Agency
Affairs Act, 1976, with effect from 1 February 2022), an estate agent
is not entitled
to claim remuneration unless he or she is in
possession of a fidelity fund certificate or has access to the
required insurance.
The allegation in a claim for remuneration
that the plaintiff agent fulfils these requirements is one of the
core elements upon
which the entitlement to remuneration rests.
I am of the view that the same applies in the present case.
39.
The plaintiff has, apart from pleading the
agreement between him and the first defendant, made no allegation to
indicate that he
is, in fact, statutorily allowed to administer a
deceased estate. It does not matter that he was doing it on the first
defendant’s
behalf, and that she bore the ultimate
responsibility for the winding-up of the estate under the applicable
legislation.
In the circumstances, the particulars of claim
disclose no cause of action against the first defendant, and the
exception must
be upheld.
Order
40.
In the circumstances, it is ordered as
follows:
40.1.
The first defendant’s exception is
upheld.
40.2.
The plaintiff is given leave to amend his
particulars of claim so as to remove the cause of complaint as set
out in the first defendant’s
notice of exception, within 10
(ten) days of the date of this order, failing which the first
defendant is given leave to apply,
on notice to the plaintiff, for
the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim.
40.3.
The plaintiff shall bear the costs
occasioned by the exception.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
HEARING
DATE:
7 March 2022
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff
:
S. J. du Plessis, instructed by Gerrit Moller Attorneys
For
the first defendant (excipient)
:
Z. Joubert, instructed by Walkers Incorporated
[1]
Two
Oceans Aquarium Trust v Kantey & Templer (Pty) Ltd
2006 (3) SA 138
(SCA) 143I-J.
[2]
Miller
v Muller
1965
(4) SA 458
(C) 468D-G.
[3]
Lampert-Zakiewicz
v Marine and Trade Insurance Co Ltd
1975 (4) SA 597
(C) 599G-600A.
[4]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO
2001
(3) SA 960
(SCA)
965C–D.
[5]
Burger
v Rand Water Board
2007 (1) SA 30
(SCA) 32D-E.
[6]
Pretorius
v Transport Pension Fund
2019
(2) SA 37
(CC)
44F–G.
[7]
See,
for example, the reference to the regulations in the recent case o
f
Mlunguza and another v Master of the High Court and another
(21755/2018)
[2020] ZAWCHC 6
(11 February 2020) at para [30].
[8]
Section
52
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 1965
.
[9]
Bramwell
and Lazar NNO v Laub
1978
(1) SA 380
(W) 384A.
[10]
Soofie
v Hajee Shah Goolam Mahomed Trust and others
1985
(3) SA 322
(N) 328B-F.
[11]
My
translation.
As
an aside, this appears to me to be an irrevocable power of attorney,
which renders it unenforceable on the authority referred
to
earlier. The exception was however not taken on this basis,
and I say nothing more about it.
[12]
Francis
v Sharp
2004
(3) SA 230 (C).
[13]
As
to the nature of agency see Kerr
The
Law of Agency
(4ed, LexisNexis) at pp 3-4.
[14]
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para [18].
[15]
The
Administration of Estates Act deals
with this in
section 13(2):
“
No
letters of executorship shall be granted or signed and sealed and no
endorsement under section fifteen shall be made
to or at
the instance or in favour of any person who is by any law prohibited
from liquidating or distributing the estate of
any deceased person
.”
[16]
Versluis
v Greenblatt
1973
(2) SA 271
(NC) 278.
sino noindex
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