Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 51South Africa
Delport v Le Roux and Others (D1703/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 51 (24 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Delport v Le Roux and Others (D1703/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 51 (24 November 2022)
Delport v Le Roux and Others (D1703/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 51 (24 November 2022)
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sino date 24 November 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D1703/2021
In
the matter between
JEANETTE
DELPORT
APPLICANT
and
MARIA
ELIZABETH
LE
ROUX
.
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BELINDA
RAATS (born Le Roux) SECOND
RESPONDENT
BERNICE
SPIES (born Le Roux). THIRD
RESPONDENT
KEATON
BEN LE ROUX (born Bates) FOURTH
RESPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
KWAZULU-NATAL
PROVINCIAL
DIVISION FIFTH
RESPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
.
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION SIXTH
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email, and released to SAFLII. The
date
for hand down is deemed to be 24 November 2022 at 15:30
ORDER
# The
following order is granted:
The
following order is granted:
The
application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
# Mlaba
AJ
Mlaba
AJ
[1]
Daniel Casparus Le Roux ("the
deceased") died on 10 October 2015. He had been married to the
first respondent, and their
marriage was in community of property. At
the time of his death they had separated and the deceased had moved
from Gauteng, where
he had been living with the first respondent in
their matrimonial home, back to Durban where he was living with the
applicant,
his cousin. The deceased had two children, the second and
third respondents, who were born out of his first marriage with
Loretta
Mavis Smit and prior to his marriage with the first
respondent. The fourth respondent was adopted by the deceased and
first respondent,
he is the grandson of the first respondent and the
son of the first respondent's daughter from the first respondent's
previous
relationship.
[2]
At the institution of these proceedings
the first respondent was still alive and she opposed the application.
She has however since
died. The second and third respondents oppose
this application and they are not legally represented. The fourth
respondent is not
opposing the application. The fifth and six
respondents have indicated that they will abide by the decision of
this court.
[3]
The applicant, represented
by Mr
Reddy
SC, seeks an order in the following
terms:
·1.
The fifth and sixth respondents are directed to accept as the last
will of the late Daniel Casparus Le Roux (Identity
Number: [....])
the document, a copy of which is annexed to the affidavit of Jeanette
Delport (the applicant) as annexure "F",
for the purposes
of the
Administration of Estates Act No. 66 of 1965
.
2.
The costs of this application
shall
be borne
by
the second
and
third respondents
who
oppose this application, the one paying
the other to be absolved.'
[4]
The applicant submitted that the
deceased moved into her home in Malvern, Durban which he shared with
his partner, Andries Du Plessis
("Andries"), in 2012 when
he separated from the first respondent due to marital problems. In
the three years until his
death on 10 October 2015 he suffered from
severe diabetes which caused the amputation of one of his legs. The
applicant and Andries
cared for the deceased and during this period
he had no contact whatsoever with his wife and children (the first,
second and third
respondents). It appeared that they wanted him out
of their lives.
[5]
The applicant further submitted that
while living in her home the deceased was introduced to Mr Simon Read
by her neighbour Mr Neville
Lionel Banks. Mr Read is an accountant
and was instructed by the deceased to prepare his last will. Mr Read
prepared the will for
the deceased and presented it to him and he
signed the will in the presence of Mr Read. Mr Read thereafter took
the will to Mrs
Deidre Trembling, who is the wife of Mr Read's
business partner. She signed the will as a witness even though she
had not witnessed
the deceased signing the will.
[6]
The will was thereafter signed by Mr
Neville Banks as a witness even though he too had not witnessed the
deceased signing his will
as a testator.
[7]
Mr
Reddy
accepts that the signing of the will
as witnesses,
by
both Mr Banks and Mrs Trembling, was not in accordance with ss 2(1)
(a) (ii) and (iii) of the Wills Act 7 of 1953 ("the
Act").
[8]
He
submits however that in terms s 2(3) of the Act, if the court is
satisfied it could declare
valid
the
deceased's
will
even
though
it
was
not
in
compliance
with
s
2(1) of the Act. He relied on several decided cases including
Webster
v The Master and others.
[1]
In
fact he submitted that s 2(3) is peremptory and that the court had no
discretion in this regard. Mr
Reddy
submitted
that the deceased had intended for the will to be his last will and
non-compliance with s 2(1) ought not to invalidate
his will.
[9]
In terms of the will, the deceased left
his entire estate to the following persons:
(i)
the applicant -
70%
(ii)
the second respondent -
10%
(iii)
the third respondent -
10%, and
(iv)
Andries H Du Plessis (the applicant's
partner) -
10%.
[10]
The applicant believed that the deceased left the majority portion of
his estate to her because
she had been looking after him in the final
years of his life and this to her was reasonable. She further
submitted that the deceased's
estate had been wound up as if he had
died interstate even though the first respondent had been informed
that the deceased had
left a will. The first respondent sold the
matrimonial home which she shared with the deceased during their
marriage and the applicant
sought to have her share in the deceased's
share of the estate in terms of the will. The deceased had no other
assets except his
share in the matrimonial home which the first
respondent sold for R1,4 million. An amount of R596 161.96, being the
deceased's
portion of the joint estate, is lying in the estate
account pending the finalization of this matter. The applicant is
seeking to
have this amount divided in terms of the deceased's will.
[11]
The will had been submitted to the sixth
respondent but was rejected by the sixth respondent. The applicant
however submits that
she has satisfied the requirements of s 2(3) of
the Act, and that the court should direct the fifth and sixth
respondents to accept
the will as the valid last will of the
deceased.
[12]
The second
and
third
respondents
oppose
the application
on the basis that the will is not in
compliance with s 2(1) (a) of the Act. Further to that, they dispute
that the deceased made
this will and submit that if he did he would
not leave such a large portion of his estate to a cousin, and
allegedly a lover, and
leave only a small share to his own children.
They further submit that the submission by the applicant that they
had left their
father and wanted nothing to do with him is false.
They had been supporting the deceased financially ever since he moved
to Durban
and had even purchased a wheelchair for him after his leg
was amputated.
[13]
They submitted that they loved their
father and had been in constant contact with him. They, together with
their children, had visited
him in Durban on several occasions and
the applicant is aware of such visits. The applicant would
occasionally contact them to
request necessities on behalf of the
deceased and they would provide those necessities for their father.
They had even supported
the applicant financially during that period.
The second and third respondents disputed that the applicant weaned
the deceased
off alcohol as he still was consuming alcohol. The
deceased had contracted diabetes long before he moved to Durban and
they had
been purchasing his medication for him and continued to do
so even after the deceased had moved to Durban.
[14]
The second and third respondents
submitted that the legal requirements of a valid will are
there
for
a reason
and that everyone
had
to
comply
therewith.
The deceased had not even changed his beneficiaries in the policies
that he held and upon his death the proceeds were
divided
accordingly. The applicant was not added as a beneficiary. She was
also allegedly in a romantic relationship with the deceased
even
though they were cousins, and Andries lived in the back room.
[15]
The second and third respondents
submitted in closing that despite s 2(3) of the Act, the court should
not validate the will as
it is not in compliance with s 2(1) of the
Act and that it was unlikely that the deceased would not have
informed them of the existence
of a will.
[16]
In terms of s 2(1) of the Act the
signature of the testator must be made in the presence of two or more
competent witnesses. The
witnesses must attest and sign the will in
the presence of the testator and each other; where the testator signs
the will with
a mark, a commissioner of oaths must be present and
specific certification formalities apply.
[17]
Section 2(3) of the Act provides:
'If
a court is satisfied that a document or the amendment of a document
drafted or executed by a person who has died since the drafting
or
execution thereof, was intended to be his will or an amendment of his
will, the court shall order the Master to accept that
document, or
that document as amended, for the purposes of the Administration of
Estates Act, 1965 (Act 66 of 1965), as a will,
although it does not
comply with all the formalities for the execution or amendment of
wills referred to in subsection (1).'
[18]
In
Logue
and another v The Master and others
[2]
the
court held that failure to comply with formalities should not defeat
the genuine intention of the testator. This requires that
the
applicant, who seeks to have the will validated in terms of s 2(3),
must demonstrate and persuade the court that the deceased
intended
the document to be his will. The court also stated in Logue that it
did not mean that it was unnecessary to comply with
any of the
prescribed formalities, but only that it was not necessary to comply
fully with all the formalities.
[19]
In
Webster
[3]
where
the court held as follows, as cited from the headnote of the
judgement:
'...
s 2(3) of the Act was in most peremptory terms: when the Legislature
provided that a document which was sought to be declared
to be the
will of the deceased in terms of s 2(3) of the Act had to be "drafted
or executed by a person who had died since
the drafting or execution
thereof', it required that the document had to be drafted by such
person personally.'
[20]
The
court held further that:
[4]
'...
the Legislature had not intended to endow an unsigned document
drafted by someone other than the testator, not even an attorney,
with the status of a will: if the section were given such an
interpretation it would leave the door wide open to potential fraud,
and it would certainly not have the effect of ensuring the
authenticity of such a document.
What the Legislature had in mind
was that the intention of the testator as demonstrated in writing in
his own hand should not be
frustrated because the writing does not
comply in all respects with the requirements of s 2(1) of the Act.'
(My emphasis)
[21]
The facts herein are that the deceased
allegedly instructed Mr Read, an accountant, to draft his will. Mr
Read drafted the will
and took it to the deceased who signed it in
his presence. Mr Read then took the will to witnesses, who were not
present
to
witness
the
deceased
signing
the
will.
They
each
signed
as
witnesses
to the
will
at
different
places
and
at
different
times.
As
they
had
not
witnessed
the deceased signing the wills 2(1) of
the Act was not complied with.
[22]
There
is no certainty that the document was indeed signed by the deceased
and accordingly that the contents of the will are what
the deceased
intended for his estate upon his death. Mr Read's contention, which
appears in his affidavit,
[5]
is
that he drafted the will upon the instructions of the deceased and
that the deceased signed the document. Mr Read however is
not a
witness to the will. It is the persons who are present when the
testator signs the will who become witnesses to the will
and who can
attest to the above. In this case such persons were not present to
witness the deceased signing the will.
[23]
Section
2(3)
is
intended
to
cure
the
non-compliance only
when
the
document sought to be validated as the
deceased's will was drafted or executed by the deceased personally
thereby demonstrating
that the document was intended to be the
deceased's will.
[24]
In this case and in light of paragraph
20 above (especially the highlighted part), I am not persuaded that
the provisions of s 2(3)
are satisfied such that this court may
declare the will to be valid. This is because the will was not
drafted by the deceased personally.
Section 2(3) is peremptory. As an
accountant, Mr Read, ought to have ensured compliance with the
formalities as s 2(3) does not
mean that formalities have to be done
away with. They stand, and only is circumstances that are covered by
the section will a will
be declared valid. I am not persuaded that
those circumstances exist in this matter.
[25]
In
Webster
the court held that there had been
no compliance with any of the formalities set forth in s 2(1) of the
Act, and the court said
it was of the view that the Legislature's
intention was not to validate a document which does not comply with
any of
the
formalities
of
s
2(1)
of
the
Act.
[26]
Similarly, except for a signed document,
none of the other formalities as prescribed by s 2(1) of the Act have
been complied with.
The applicant failed to successfully substantiate
why the formalities were not complied with. Section 2(3) cannot
therefore be
relied upon successfully to validate a document that was
drafted by a professional person who ought to have complied with the
formalities
of a valid will but for no valid reason failed to do so.
[27]
In conclusion, having considered the
submissions by both parties, the court is not satisfied that the
document alleged to be the
deceased's will was what the deceased
intended to be his will for the purposes of the Administration of
Estates Act 66 of 1995.
Further, the requirement in s 2(1) (a) (ii)
of the Act is mandatory and the will, being the subject of this
matter, is invalid
for want of compliance with a statutorily required
formality
# Order
Order
[28]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
# Mlaba
AJ
Mlaba
AJ
APPEARANCES
For
Applicant: Adv.
Reddy
Instructed
by: P
Ramjathan & Associates
309
Lenny Naidu Drive
Bayview,
Chatsworth
Tel: 031
400 5204/5
Email: pravin@netactive.co.za
Ref: PR/16581
For
Respondents: Self
Email:
belinda.raats@schindler.com
Date
of hearing: 31
October 2022
Date
of Judgement: 24
November 2022
[1]
Webster v The Master and others 1996 (1) SA 34 (D).
[2]
Logue and another v The Master and others
1995 (1) SA 199
(N) at
203E-F.
[3]
Webster above fn 1 at 36B-C.
[4]
Ibid at 36C-E.
[5]
Volume 1 pages 46-49.
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