Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 8South Africa
Ndwandwe v Trustees of Transnet Retirement Fund and Others (D7381/2020; D3438/2020) [2023] ZAKZDHC 8; 2025 (2) SA 211 (KZD) (22 February 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Ndwandwe v Trustees of Transnet Retirement Fund and Others (D7381/2020; D3438/2020) [2023] ZAKZDHC 8; 2025 (2) SA 211 (KZD) (22 February 2023)
Ndwandwe v Trustees of Transnet Retirement Fund and Others (D7381/2020; D3438/2020) [2023] ZAKZDHC 8; 2025 (2) SA 211 (KZD) (22 February 2023)
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sino date 22 February 2023
FLYNOTES:
DEATH BENEFIT AND
NOMINATION FORM
PENSION
– Death benefit – Nomination form – Fund not
following allocations of deceased – Transnet
Retirement Fund
– Rule 10.4(iii) of Fund Rules – Fund permitted
to make any distribution to nominees or
dependents that it deems
equitable – Deceased effectively had two spouses –
Conducting detailed investigation
– Given competing
financial demands of deceased's dependents, the Fund's decision
was one that a reasonable decisionmaker
could have reached.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO: D7381/2020
D3438/2020
In the matter between:
XOSHWAPHI
NDWANDWE APPLICANT
and
TRUSTEES OF TRANSNET
RETIREMENT FUND
FIRST RESPONDENT
MOMENTUM RETIREMENT
ADMINISTRATORS
SECOND RESPONDENT
THOWI ALVINAH
NGCOBO THIRD
RESPONDENT
MUSAWAKHE
SHOYISA FOURTH
RESPONDENT
MTHOKOZISI
NDWANDWE FIFTH
RESPONDENT
PRISCA NOBUHLE
MBAMBO
SIXTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
SHAPIRO
AJ
Introduction
[1]
Mkhawuleni Paulus Ndwandwe (“the deceased”) died on 19
September 2018.
He was survived by the applicant, Xoshwaphi Ndwandwe,
who he married in terms of customary law in 1988, and his common law
wife,
Thowi Alvinah Ngcobo, with whom he had been in a relationship
since 1983 and who is the third respondent.
[2]
There were five surviving adult children born of the relationship
between the deceased
and Mrs. Ndwandwe at the time of his death, and
two adult children born of his relationship with Ms. Ngcobo. The
deceased also
left two adult sons born of another prior relationship
(the fourth and fifth respondents, Musawakhe Shoyise and Mthokozisi
Innocent
Ndwandwe) and Nosipho Andiswa Mbambo, a minor child born of
a relationship with the sixth respondent.
[3]
At the time of his death, the deceased was employed by Transnet and
was a member of
the Transnet Retirement Fund, the first respondent
(“the Fund”). The death benefit payable arising out of
his membership
of the Fund was R3,940,673.55.
[4]
The second respondent, who are the Fund’s administrators,
abides the Court’s
decision and the review is not opposed by
the third to sixth respondents.
[5]
On 27 October 2000, the deceased completed a Beneficiary Nomination
Form in terms
of which he nominated the following persons to receive
a portion of the death benefit in the following percentages: Mrs.
Ndwandwe
(60 percent); two of his children with Ms. Ndwandwe (10
percent each), and two of his children with Ms. Ngcobo (10 percent
each).
[6]
Notwithstanding the nominees and percentages stipulated by the
deceased in the Nomination
Form, the Fund resolved on 18 March 2019
to apportion the death benefit as follows:
(i)
40 percent each to Mrs. Ndwandwe and Ms. Ngcobo; and
(ii)
3.66 percent each to the fourth and fifth respondents; and
(iii)
12.69 percent to the minor child, Nosipho.
[7]
It is this decision by the Fund that Mrs. Ndwandwe seeks to review
and set aside.
[8]
Mrs. Ndwandwe contends that the Fund committed a reviewable
irregularity in ignoring
the contents and stipulations contained in
the Nomination Form. She argues that the Fund failed to comply with
its own Rules and
did not apply the proper weight either to her
circumstances, or to those of her adult children, whilst
simultaneously placing too
much weight on the interests of Ms. Ngcobo
and the fourth and fifth respondents. Mrs. Ndwandwe does not appear
to challenge the
apportionment of the benefit to Nosipho.
[9]
The Fund disagrees: it argues that it was not bound by the Nomination
Form and was
entitled to make an independent apportionment of the
deceased's death benefit to his qualifying dependents as defined in
the Fund's
Rules. The Fund defends its decision as being compliant
with its Rules (specifically Rule 10.4(iii)) as well as being
reasonable
and rational.
[10]
The review was instituted outside the 180-day period contemplated in
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
and Mrs.
Ndwandwe’s application for condonation in this regard is not
opposed by the Fund.
[11]
The Fund has instituted a conditional counterapplication in which it
seeks an order directing
Ms. Ngcobo and Nosipho’s mother, the
sixth respondent, to repay the funds that they have already received
as part of the
deceased’s death benefit.
[12]
On 4 September 2020, this Court granted interim interdicts under case
number D3438/2021 restraining
Ms. Ngcobo from disposing of the
portion of the death benefit that had been paid to her and that she
had invested with Sanlam and
directing her to disclose on oath the
exact amount of money that she received from the Fund and its
Trustees. Those orders remain
in operation.
The
issues in the application
[13]
Although the Record is lengthy and Mrs. Ndwandwe has raised several
grounds of review, there
are two core issues that require
determination.
(i)
Did
the Fund comply with the provisions of
Rule 10.4(iii)
of its Rules
when deciding how to apportion the deceased’s death benefit?
and
(ii)
Did
the Fund act reasonably and rationally in arriving at its decision?
The
regulatory scheme
[14]
The Fund is a retirement fund established in terms of the Transnet
Pension Fund Act (the TPFA”)
[1]
.
[15]
In terms of section 13 of the TPFA, the Fund was entitled to apply to
the Registrar of Pension
Funds for registration in terms of section 4
of the Pension Funds Act
[2]
(“the PFA”) and upon such registration, the whole of the
PFA would become applicable to the Fund
[3]
.
[16]
The Fund has not applied for registration under the PFA and its
Rules
[4]
were published in the
Government Gazette 21817 of 1 December 2000, as provided for in
section 14A(5) of the TPFA.
[17]
The Fund’s Rules are binding on each employer which employs or
employed members of the
Fund, members, pensioners, beneficiaries of
the Fund and the Fund itself
[5]
.
Conversely, the provisions of the PFA do not apply to the Fund.
[18]
Rule 10 of the Fund’s Rules
[6]
regulates the manner of distribution of benefits upon the death of a
member and, again, Rule 10.4(iii) deals with the Fund’s
powers
when confronted with a member who has nominated beneficiaries to be
paid all or part of the death benefit but where the
member also had
dependants, as defined in Rule 1.
[19]
According to Rule 1, “dependant” means a qualifying
spouse, a qualifying child, any
other person in respect of whom the
member was legally liable for maintenance including if such person
was, in the opinion of the
Trustees of the Fund, upon the death of
the member in fact dependant on the member for maintenance or was a
person in respect of
whom the member would have become liable to
maintain had he not died.
[20]
A ”qualifying spouse” is defined to mean the surviving
spouse(s) of a member in a
Recognised Marital Union existing at the
time of the death of the member and a recognised marital union is
defined as “a
legal marriage or a union according to Customary
Law, Common Law or a union recognised by the Trustees in their sole
discretion
to be a recognised marital union”.
[21]
A “qualifying child” means a child legally adopted or a
stepchild of a member at
the time of the member's death and a child
whom the Trustees believe would have been dependant upon the member
had the member not
died. Where the Trustees of the Fund so direct,
any other child may be included as qualifying child on terms and
conditions agreed
to by the Trustees.
[22]
In terms of Rule 10.4(iii):
‘
If
a Member has a Dependant and the Member has also designated in
writing to the Fund a Nominee to receive the benefit or such portion
of the benefit as is specified by the Member in writing to the Fund,
the Fund shall within 12 (twelve) months of the death of such
Member
pay the benefit or such portion thereof to such Dependant or Nominee
in such proportions as the Trustees may deem equitable:
Provided that
this paragraph shall not prohibit the Fund from paying the benefit,
either to a Dependant or Nominee contemplated
in this paragraph or,
if there is more than 1 (one) such Dependant or Nominee, in
proportions to any or all of those Dependants
and Nominees.’
[23]
Rule 10.4(iii) is similar in its terms to section 37C(1)(bA) of the
PFA, which holds that:
‘
If
a member has a dependant and the member has also designated in
writing to the fund a nominee to receive the benefit or such portion
of the benefit as is specified by the member in writing to the fund,
the fund shall within twelve months of the death of such member
pay
the benefit or such portion thereof to such dependant or nominee in
such proportions as the board may deem equitable: Provided
that this
paragraph shall only apply to the designation of a nominee made on or
after 30 June 1989: Provided further that, in respect
of a
designation made on or after the said date, this paragraph shall not
prohibit a fund from paying the benefit, either to a
dependant or
nominee contemplated in this paragraph or, if there is more than one
such dependant or nominee, in proportions to
any or all of those
dependants and nominees.’
[24]
Given these similarities, I will be guided by the jurisprudence
developed by the Courts relating
to the exercise of the discretion
afforded to pension funds such as the Fund and the circumstances in
which I am permitted to interfere
with that discretion.
The
factual circumstances of the deceased’s dependants
[25]
I will refer to the deceased’s dependants in the wide sense,
including Mrs. Ndwandwe and
Ms. Ngcobo.
[26]
Mrs. Ndwandwe was 53 at the time of the deceased’s death. Their
five surviving adult children
(Nonhlanhla, Nokwazi, Bongisani, Busani
and Nkululeko) were born between 1981 and 1998. The deceased paid
Mrs. Ndwandwe R2,000
per month as maintenance. Nonhlanhla, Busani
(who lived with their mother) and Nkululeko were unemployed when
their father died.
Nokwazi and Bongisani were employed, earning
R9,000 and R10,000 per month respectively.
[27]
Ms. Ngcobo was 63 when the deceased died. She received an old age
pension of R1,600 per month
and R400 per month from an investment.
Her two surviving children with the deceased (Thembelihle and
Sthandile) were born in 1983
and 1989 respectively. Thembelihle was
unemployed and lived with her parents, whilst Sthandile was employed
by Transnet and earned
a monthly income of R20,000.
[28]
The deceased paid the sixth respondent R1,000 per month for Nosipho’s
maintenance.
[29]
Musawakhe and Mthokozisi, who are both adults, were unemployed when
the deceased died. The deceased
assisted them financially when the
need arose.
The
applicant’s grounds of review and the Fund’s defences
[30]
The parties’ contentions are set out at length in the papers,
and I will not repeat them
here. What follows is a summary of the
competing arguments.
[31]
Mrs. Ndwandwe advances several separate grounds of review, which in
summary are the following:
(i)
the Fund contravened Rule 10.4(iii) by ignoring the nominees on the
Nomination Form and the stipulated
allocation of benefits;
(ii)
the Defendant did not apply its mind to the evidence before it, i.e.
that the Fund knew that Mrs. Ndwandwe
had five dependents as opposed
to Ms. Ngcobo who only had one and therefore awarding the same
percentage of the benefit was irrational
and unreasonable;
(iii)
the Fund demonstrated its bias against Mrs. Ndwandwe when it decided
to pay Ms. Ngcobo and the sixth respondent
despite Mrs. Ndwandwe
disputing that decision;
(iv)
the Fund did not give it valid reasons for the “selective
distribution” to Ms. Ngcobo in the
sixth respondent;
(v)
the Fund did not take the deceased’s wishes as expressed in the
Nomination Form into account;
(vi)
the Fund’s decision to deviate from the Nomination Form was
irrational, unreasonable and lacked objectivity
because it was made
without any valid reasons;
(vii)
the Fund’s decision to allocate the same percentage of the
benefits to Mrs. Ndwandwe and Ms. Ngcobo amounts
to over providing
for Ms. Ngcobo’s maintenance and under providing for Mrs.
Ndwandwe and her children;
(viii)
the Fund failed to exercise its discretion to make the distributions
in a fair and equitable manner.
[32]
Although these grounds of review are advanced separately, they are
variations on the following
themes:
(i)
the Fund had no grounds in fact or in law to ignore the Nomination
Form and the percentages allocated
by the deceased;
(ii)
the Fund’s decision to do so is irrational, ignored relevant
evidence and led to an unfair result;
(iii)
the Fund demonstrated bias by making certain payments when it knew
that there was a dispute pending.
[33]
Whilst Mrs. Ndwandwe accepts that Ms. Ngcobo was a life partner of
the deceased, she disputed
that Ms. Ngcobo was a “qualifying
spouse” as defined in the Fund’s Rules.
[34]
I will deal with the Fund’s response to these grounds
thematically.
The
Fund was not permitted to ignore the Nomination Form or the
deceased’s wishes.
[35]
The Fund argues that it is not bound to follow the contents or
percentages in the Nomination
Form.
[36]
It says that Rule 10.4(iii) endows the Fund’s Trustees with a
discretion to make an equitable
distribution to a member’s
nominees or qualifying dependents and that, in effect, the Nomination
Form is a non-binding guide.
[37]
The Fund argues that the deceased’s wishes are but one factor
to be considered in the exercise
of the discretion expressly
conferred upon it, and that the Court should not interfere in the
exercise of this discretion if the
decision made is reasonable and
rational.
The
Fund ignored relevant evidence and arrived at an irrational and
unfair decision.
[38]
The Fund denies that it ignored relevant evidence or arrived at a
decision that was either irrational
or unfair.
[39]
The Fund’s reasoning is set out at length in the report
submitted by its investigator and
in the answering affidavit.
[40]
Both Mrs. Ndwandwe and Ms. Ngcobo were financially dependent on the
deceased, and both had been
involved in long-term relationships with
him.
[41]
Whilst the Fund accepts that Ms. Ngcobo receives an old age pension,
it points out that Mrs.
Ndwandwe is ten years younger than her and
will also qualify for a pension in due course. Ms. Ngcobo has no
future prospects of
employment and has an adult child that is still
dependent on her.
[42]
Whilst the Fund accepts that Mrs. Ndwandwe has three adult unemployed
children, it argues that
Bongisani passed grade 12 and has the
capacity to earn at least a salary of R10 000 per month. Whilst
Nkululeko had to withdraw
from university, she qualified for tertiary
education and could also search for work with her grade 12
qualification. Busani was
partially dependent on the deceased and
received money only when required.
[43]
The Fund defends its decision to make apportionments to Mrs. Ndwandwe
and Ms. Ngcobo to the exclusion
of their adult children. It argues
that both the ladies will be able to utilize the money for their own
financial needs first and
will be capable of supporting their
children if they can then afford it and they require that support.
The Fund says that the payment
of 40% of the benefit to each also
insures against changing circumstances in the future.
[44]
The Fund points out that the fourth and fourth respondents do not
have the surviving parents
and live on their own. They were both
unemployed when the deceased died.
[45]
The Fund argues that it was entitled to recognize Musawakhe and
Mthokozisi as “dependents”
because they were in financial
need and that it was appropriate for the Fund to consider factors
such as their relationship with
the deceased, their financial
position, their future earning capacities and employment prospects as
well as the amount available
for distribution.
[46]
This is why a small portion of the death benefit was allocated to
each man.
[47]
The Fund says that it did not ignore the contents of the deceased’s
Nomination Form –
but that an allocation of 60% to Mrs.
Ndwandwe and 20% to two of her adult children, with only 20%
allocated to two of Ms. Ngcobo’s
children (with no provision
made for Ms. Ngcobo, Musawakhe, Mthokozisi or Nosipho) was not
equitable.
[48]
The Fund asserts that its decision was reasonable and rational and
was based on a consideration
of all the relevant material.
The
Fund was biased against Mrs. Ndwandwe.
[49]
The Fund denies that it was biased against Mrs. Ndwandwe. It says
that it was entitled to make
payments to Ms. Ngcobo and the sixth
respondent even if Mrs. Ndwandwe disagreed as it was acting in terms
of its Rules and in the
exercise of the discretion conferred upon it.
The
legal position
[50]
Rule 10.4(iii) permits the Fund to make any distribution to nominees
or dependents that it deems
equitable. The Fund’s Rules amount
to its constitution and are binding upon it
[7]
.
[51]
The Fund’s obligation (which is analogous to a qualifying
fund’s obligations under
section 37C(1)(bA) of the PFA) has
been expressed by the Supreme Court of Appeal to be the following:
‘
The
effect of s 37C(1)
(a)
,
as read with the definition of ‘dependant’, is to require
a fund, within a period of 12 months from the death of the
member, to
identify the dependants of the deceased who may potentially qualify
for an equitable distribution from the deceased’s
death benefit
in terms of s 37C. Having once identified the potential class of
dependants, the board of the fund is vested with
a large discretion
to determine, in the light of its assessment of their respective
needs, in what proportions the death benefit
will be distributed
among the class of dependants.’
[8]
.
[52]
That discretion has also been described as a “wide
discretion”
[9]
, meaning
that the discretion is not unfettered but that if the Fund honestly
applied its collective mind to the facts placed before
it and neither
took into account irrelevant, improper or irrational factors nor
reached a decision that no reasonable decision
maker properly
directing itself could have reached
[10]
,
there is no legal basis on which to set aside or otherwise interfere
in its decision.
[53]
The last-mentioned point was expressed in the following way in the
oft-cited determination of
the Pension Funds Adjudicator in the
matter of
Stacey
(Koevort) v Old Mutual Protektor Pension Fund and Another
[11]
:
‘
It
should be noted that even if I may not necessarily agree with the
decision of the Board, that in itself is not a ground for setting
aside the board’s decision. This is because it is not my role
as a reviewing tribunal to decide on what is the fairest and
most
generous distribution. The test in law is whether the board has acted
rationally and arrived at a proper and lawful decision.’
[54]
Obviously, and notwithstanding the wide discretion conferred upon the
Fund, the decision must
still be one that is rational and equitable
as required by Rule 10(4)(iii).
Was
the Fund entitled to ignore the deceased’s wishes and allocate
the death benefit other than as nominated by him?
[55]
The answer to both questions must be yes.
[56]
Rule 10(4)(iii) plainly endowed the Fund with a discretion to make
distributions to nominees
or dependents that were equitable. It is
settled law that the provisions of the Rule (or, in analogous
situations, section 37C
of the PFA) takes precedence over any
nomination by a member of a fund
[12]
.
[57]
It has been held that the section 37C of the PFA
[13]
was intended to serve a social function and was enacted to protect
dependency even over the wishes of the deceased. The section
specifically restricts freedom of testation in order that no
dependants are left without support. A Fund is expressly not bound
by
a will, nor is it bound by the nomination form, whose contents are
merely a guide to the trustees
[14]
.
[58]
It is therefore not a sustainable ground of review that the Fund
applied its own discretion in
making the allocations to the
deceased’s dependants and ignored the Nomination Form. It was
obliged to do so.
[59]
In this regard, I have no difficulty in accepting that Ms. Ngcobo was
a “qualifying spouse”
as defined in Rules 1.1.40 and
1.1.41. She and the deceased were in a permanent relationship for
over three decades and she was
his common-law wife. They lived
together during the week, and they had children together. He
maintained her. The Fund was entitled
to recognise that union as a
“recognised marital union”
[15]
.
Did
the Fund ignore relevant information, rely on irrelevant information,
and come to an unreasonable and irrational decision?
[60]
I accept that Mrs. Ndwandwe disagrees with the Fund’s decision.
I also accept that the
Fund could have reached a different decision
on the allocations and could have apportioned the death benefit
completely or partially
in accordance with the Nomination Form. These
decisions could also have been rational and defensible.
[61]
That the Fund reached a different decision does not mean that
relevant information was ignored
or that irrelevant information was
relied upon.
[62]
The Fund did not ignore Mrs. Ndwandwe's financial circumstances, or
those of her surviving children.
The Fund concluded, correctly, that
Mrs. Ndwandwe would in due course, qualify for an old age pension and
that she was entitled
to the payment of a sizable benefit to
contributes towards her maintenance and, if required, to assist in
the maintenance of her
adult children.
[63]
The Fund was entitled to consider the educational levels reached by
Bongisani and Nkululeko as
relevant factors, and that Bongisani had
been employed by Transnet, albeit in a temporary capacity.
[64]
However, the Fund could not ignore the existing financial
circumstances or future needs of Ms.
Ngcobo and her adult children,
or Musawakhe amd Mthokozisi
[16]
.
[65]
That Mrs. Ndwandwe does not challenge the allocation to Nosipho
demonstrates that, at some level,
she accepts that the Fund was
obliged to look wider than the four corners of the Nomination Form,
not only in the exercise of its
discretion but in the discharge of
its duties in terms of its Rules.
[66]
Ms. Ngcobo is ten years older than Mrs. Ndwandwe and was also in need
of financial assistance.
[67]
The Fund was confronted with a situation where the deceased
effectively had two spouses, both
of whom required financial
assistance and would do so in the future. That was a material and
relevant consideration that the fund
not only considered but was
obliged to apply.
[68]
Musawakhe and Mthokozisi are adult, unemployed males with no other
source of support. They cannot
rely for any assistance on their
mothers, as the children of Mrs. Ndwandwe and Mrs. Ngcobo can.
[69]
This, too, is a relevant consideration that the Fund was justified in
considering.
[70]
The same principle applies to the apportionment to Nosipho
[17]
.
[71]
The Fund did not reach its decision in a vacuum. Its investigators
undertook a detailed investigation
and spoke to a wide range of
people.
[72]
The decisions that the Fund took were based on the information that
was provided and the circumstances
that applied when the deceased
died.
[73]
I cannot identify any "irrelevant factor" that the Fund
relied upon in reaching its
decision.
[74]
It was not irrelevant that Ms. Ngcobo was not only older than Mrs.
Ndwandwe but that she also
required maintenance. Certainly, Ms.
Ngcobo has fewer unemployed dependants then Mrs. Ndwandwe but that in
itself is not a reason
to treat Mr. Ndwandwe and Ms. Ngcobo
differently.
[75]
The benefit allocated to Mrs. Ndwandwe was not as generous as she
would have received under the
Nomination Form. However, it is not for
me to decide what is the fairest or most generous distribution.
[76]
I accept that the Fund applied its mind honestly to the facts that
were placed before it, and
I conclude that its decision is reasonably
supported by those facts. Given the competing financial demands of
the deceased's dependents,
the Fund's decision is one that a
reasonable decisionmaker could have reached. The decision does not
become irrational because
one factor in the “basket” of
factors which the Fund had to consider was not elevated above the
others, or given the
consideration, in the way that Mrs. Ndwandwe
wished, or even that another decision maker may decide may have
chosen. If it was
based on existing facts and rationally linked to
them, the decision cannot be disturbed on review.
[77]
The decision that the Fund took recognized the position of both Mrs.
Ndwandwe and Ms. Ngcobo
as well as the deceased's other children.
Given the full set of factors before the Fund, there were legitimate
reasons to depart
from the express terms of the Nomination Form which
did not adequately cater for Ms. Ngcobo or the fourth to sixth
respondents.
[78]
I am satisfied that the Fund's decision was reasonable and rational
and that it acted equitably
in making the allocations that it did.
Was
the fund biased against Mrs. Ndwandwe?
[79]
In my view, Mrs. Ndwandwe has conflated cause and effect.
[80]
The decision to make the allocations that are under review was
rational and defensible, and the
Fund was entitled to act in terms of
its decision.
[81]
In the absence of an interdict, the Fund was not obliged to withhold
payment to the other beneficiaries
and, to the contrary, was obliged
to pay them.
[82]
Doing so did not mean that the Fund exhibited any bias.
[83]
Whilst Mrs. Ndwandwe may have disputed to the allocations, it was for
her to seek relief either
before the Pension Funds Adjudicator or
this Court.
[84]
It may be true that the Fund's non-payment of 60% of the death
benefit to Mrs. Ndwandwe had an
adverse impact upon her and upon her
children. I do not seek to minimize this, but that effect does not
mean that the Fund was
biased or that it favoured one class of
beneficiaries over another.
[85]
In summary, the Fund's decision is not vitiated by any form of bias.
[86]
Further, and whether the Fund explained why it made payments to the
remaining respondents, its
decision to make the payments themselves
pursuant to its resolution to do so is not under review. It is only
the resolution of
18 of March 2019 that is.
[87]
For the reasons set out above, I conclude that the applicant has not
established any sustainable
grounds of review as advanced or as
contemplated in the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
and that, to the contrary, the Fund's decision is rational and
reasonable and in compliance with
Rule 10(4)(iii)
of its Rules.
The
Fund's conditional counter application
[88]
Given the view that I have taken of the main application, the
conditional counter application
falls away and no more need be said
about it.
The
interim interdict granted on 4 September 2020
[89]
In the same vein, the interim order granted by this Court under case
number D3438/2020 must now
be discharged.
Costs
[90]
Mrs. Ndwandwe has been unsuccessful in the main application and none
of her grounds of review
are sustainable.
[91]
However, it was not unreasonable for her to call in aid the
Nomination Form completed by the
deceased or to act in defence of her
own interests and those of her children. It is undisputed that they
are in challenging financial
circumstances.
[92]
The effect of my ruling is to deprive Mrs. Ndwandwe (and by
extension, her children) of a significant
portion of the deceased's
death benefit that would have been paid to them had the nominated
allocations been applied by the Fund.
[93]
To my mind, it would be neither just nor equitable to mulct Mrs.
Ndwandwe with the costs of this
application, which would have the
predictable result of reducing even further the amounts that she
receives from the Fund.
[94]
It is appropriate that each party pay their own costs in respect of
both the application under
case number D7381/2020, and under
D3438/2020
I
make the following orders:
1.
The
applicant’s application for orders reviewing and setting aside
the resolution taken by the first respondent on 18 March
2019
regarding the distribution and allocation of the death benefits of
Mkhawuleni Paulus Ndwandwe is dismissed.
2.
The
interim order granted by this Court under case number D3438/2020 is
discharged.
3.
Each
party is to pay their own costs incurred in respect of the
applications instituted under case number D3438/2020 and D7381/2020,
including all reserved costs.
SHAPIRO
AJ
APPEARANCES
Date of
Hearing: 17
February 2023
Date of Judgment
: 22
February 2023
Applicant’s
Counsel: Mr
N B Dlamini
Instructed
by: Ngidi
Incorporated Attorneys
Applicant’s
Attorneys
Suite 102, Ally Centre
5 – 7 Old Main Road
Isipingo Rail
KwaZulu-Natal…..4110
(Tel: 031 – 902
5771)
c/o Magubane Attorneys
Suite 101D, First Floor
Doone House
379 Anton Lembede Street
Durban
(Ref: NBD/DISTR/10/20))
(Tel:031 – 3014767)
Email:
advocatedlamini@mplanet.co.za
First & Second
Respondent’s Counsel: Ms T Prinsloo
Instructed
by: Werksmans
Attorneys
First & Second
Respondents Attorneys
The Central
96 Rivonia Road
Sandton
Johannesburg…2196
(Ref: Mr D Willans/Ms S
Passmoor/ag/
TRAN5164.39/#9218117v1)
(Tel: 011 535 8324 /
011 535 8119)
Email:
dwillans@werksmans.com
spassmoor@werksmans.com
c/o Garlicke &
Bousfield
7 Torsvale Crescent
La Lucia Ridge Office
Estate
Durban
(Ref:Victoria McDonald)
(Tel:
031 – 570 5300)
[1]
Act 62 of 1990
[2]
Act 24 of1956
[3]
Section 4 of the PFA requires every
pension fund to apply for registration prior to commencing any
pension fund business.
[4]
which appear at pages 1 to 56 of the
Record
[5]
Section 14A(6) of the TPFA
[6]
read together with the definitions
appearing in Rule 1
[7]
Gerson v Mondi Pension Fund and
Others
2013 (6) SA 162
(GSJ) at para [9]
[8]
Fundsatwork Umbrella Pension Fund
v Guanieri and Others
2019
(5) SA 68
(SCA) at para [8]
[9]
Gerson
,
at paras [12] and [13]
[10]
Jansen Van Vuuren and Another v
Momentum Provident Preservation Fund and Others
(28160/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 620 (30 August 2022) at para [21]
[11]
[2005] 1 BPLR 73 (PFA) at para [15];
cited with approval in, among others,
Gerson
at para [15]
[12]
Kaplan and Another NNO v
Professional and Executive Retirement Fund and Others
1999 (3) SA 798
(SCA) at 802C-803C
[13]
and, by parity of reasoning, Rule
10(4)(iii)
[14]
Mashazi v African Retirement
Benefit Provident Fund
2003
(1) SA 629
(W) at 632I-633A, cited with approval in
Mbatha
v Transport Sector Retirement Fund and Another
(0016223/19) [2020] ZAGPJHC 18 (19 February 2020) at para [3]
[15]
The Fund’s recognition of Ms.
Ngcobo as a “spouse” is also consistent with the
Constitutional Court’s
decision in
Bwayna
v Master of the High Court and Others
2022
(3) SA 250
(CC) (see the factors set out at paras [76] and [77])
[16]
Guarnieri,
above,
at 76D
[17]
The applicant’s counsel
conceded in argument that the allocations to Msawakhe, Mthokozisi
and Nosipho were reasonable. The
real complaint, according to Mr
Dlamini, was the over-provision for Ms. Ngcobo’s needs and the
concomitant under-provision
for Mrs. Ndwandwe’s needs.
Therefore, the focus was on one remaining factor of the Fund’s
decision. I deal with this
below.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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