Case Law[2025] ZACC 14South Africa
Shepstone and Wylie Attorneys v De Witt N.O. and Others (CCT 171/23) [2025] ZACC 14; 2025 (11) BCLR 1299 (CC) (1 August 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Trust law — whether trust bound by suretyship agreement — decision made at quorate meeting in absence of one trustee — interpretation of trust deed — distinction between unanimous-decision trusts and majority-decision trusts
Judgment
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## Shepstone and Wylie Attorneys v De Witt N.O. and Others (CCT 171/23) [2025] ZACC 14; 2025 (11) BCLR 1299 (CC) (1 August 2025)
Shepstone and Wylie Attorneys v De Witt N.O. and Others (CCT 171/23) [2025] ZACC 14; 2025 (11) BCLR 1299 (CC) (1 August 2025)
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sino date 1 August 2025
Latest amended version 4 August
2025.
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL
LAW – Trusts –
Suretyship
–
Legal
fees for trustee’s divorce – Trust deed’s
structure supported majority decision-making at properly
convened
meetings – Suretyship was validly authorized – SCA
erroneously required unanimity for all trustee decisions
–
Introduced an unsupported distinction between internal and
external matters – Misinterpreting trust deed –
Deed
of suretyship was validly authorized by two trustees at a duly
convened meeting – Trust was bound by it –
Appeal
upheld.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 171/23
In
the matter between:
SHEPSTONE
AND WYLIE
ATTORNEYS
Applicant
and
ABRAHAM
JOHANNES DE WITT
N.O.
First Respondent
R[...]
E[...] V[...]
N.O.
Second Respondent
S[...]
S[...] V[...]
N.O.
Third Respondent
T[...]
P[...] V[...]
N.O.
Fourth Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Shepstone and Wylie
Attorneys v De Witt N.O. and Others
[2025] ZACC 14
Coram:
Maya CJ, Madlanga ADCJ,
Kollapen J, Majiedt J,
Mathopo J, Rogers J, Theron J, Tolmay AJ and
Tshiqi J.
Judgment:
Tolmay AJ (unanimous)
Heard
on:
22 August 2024
Decided
on:
1 August 2025
Summary:
Trust law — whether trust bound by suretyship agreement —
decision made at quorate meeting in absence of one trustee
—
interpretation of trust deed — distinction between
unanimous-decision trusts and majority-decision trusts
ORDER
On
appeal from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal Division,
Pietermaritzburg):
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The order of the Supreme Court of Appeal is set aside
and substituted with
the following order:
“
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs.
(b) The
order of the High Court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The special point
in
limine
relating
to the alleged invalidity of the deed of suretyship is dismissed with
costs.’”
4.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the applicant in this
Court.
JUDGMENT
TOLMAY AJ
(Maya CJ, Madlanga ADCJ, Kollapen J, Majiedt J,
Mathopo J, Rogers J, Theron J
and Tshiqi J
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against the whole judgment and order of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
The applicant
is Shepstone and Wylie,
a law
firm.
The respondents are the trustees for the time
being of the Penvaan Property Trust (Trust).
[2]
The Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed
Shepstone and Wylie’s appeal against a High Court order
dismissing their application
to hold the Trust liable in terms of a
deed of suretyship signed on 25 May 2013. The deed of
suretyship bound the
Trust in
favour
of
Shepstone and Wylie for the personal indebtedness of Mrs M[...]
P[...] V[...] (Mrs V[...]) in respect of legal fees
incurred in
her divorce from Mr
T[...] W[...] V[...]
(
Mr V[...]). Mr and Mrs V[...]
were at that time trustees of the Trust.
At issue is
whether the Trust can be bound to the deed of suretyship where the
Trust Deed includes a quorum clause and the decision
to enter into
suretyship was made at a quorate meeting, but where one of the
trustees was absent. The High Court was only
required to decide
this issue as a point
in limine
(preliminary point). At
the centre of the dispute is the question whether two trustees were
authorised to enter into the
suretyship agreement with Shepstone and
Wylie.
Factual
background
[3]
The Trust is a property trust founded in 1994. In terms
of its Trust Deed (Trust Deed),
its beneficiaries are
Mr V[...], Mrs V[...] and Mr V[...]’s
descendants.
[4]
The Trust Deed further includes the following relevant
provisions:
(a)
Clause 4 requires the Trust to have at least two trustees (before
the 2001 amendment of the
Trust Deed, it required a minimum of
three trustees).
(b)
Clause 11 empowers the trustees to deal with trust property and trust
income for the Trust’s
benefit and purpose. This clause
furthermore provides that the powers will include the powers stated
in the appendix to the
Trust Deed (appendix).
(c)
Clause 13 regulates trustee meetings. Clause 13.2 requires a
quorum of two trustees at trustee
meetings (before the 2001
amendment of the Trust Deed, a quorum of three trustees was
required). Clause 13.4 provides
that a written resolution
signed by all trustees “shall be as effective as a resolution
taken at a meeting of trustees”.
(d)
Clause 14 states that all documents required to be signed on the
Trust’s behalf must be
signed by at least two trustees.
(e)
Clause 16 headed “disagreement between trustees” requires
the trustees present at
a meeting to elect a chairperson, and states
that Mr V[...] shall be the chairperson for as long as he is a
trustee.
(f)
Clauses 23 and 24 provide that the trustees shall use the trust’s
income and property
for “the welfare of all or any one or more
of the beneficiaries”.
[5]
The appendix
further sets out specific powers of trustees, including the power in
item 16 to guarantee the obligations of any beneficiary.
[1]
Item 26 of the appendix reads:
“
Provided
the Trustees unanimously agree, to conduct business on behalf of and
for the benefit of the Trust, and to employ Trust
property in such
business.”
[6]
In May 2013, the
trustees were Mr and Mrs V[...] and Mr Abraham Johannes de Witt
(Mr de Witt).
At that time, the Trust and its
trustees were involved in two court actions. First, the Penvaan
group of companies (the Penvaan Group),
in which the Trust
(and Mr and Mrs V[...]) had shareholdings, was being wound up
and one of the Penvaan Group’s creditors,
FirstRand Bank
Limited (FirstRand), sought to recover the money that it lent the
Penvaan Group by sequestrating the Trust, on the
basis of deeds of
suretyship that Mr V[...] alone had purported to sign on behalf
of the Trust for all of the Penvaan Group’s
debts to
FirstRand.
[2]
Second, Mr and
Mrs V[...] were divorcing, and Mrs V[...] was incurring
legal fees from her divorce attorneys, Shepstone
and
Wylie
.
[7]
On 16 May 2013,
Mrs V[...] gave notice to the trustees of an urgent trustee
meeting to consider two matters.
First, whether the Trust
should oppose an application by FirstRand to sequestrate the Trust
(and to instruct Shepstone and Wylie
to be the Trust’s
attorneys in the matter). Second, whether the Trust should sign
a suretyship for Mrs V[...]’s
debts to Shepstone and Wylie
for the legal fees she was incurring in her divorce action.
[3]
The meeting was scheduled
to be held on Thursday, 23 May 2013, in Tweedie,
KwaZulu-Natal. On Tuesday, 21 May 2013,
Mr V[...]
responded by email to her notice, stating that while in principle he
had no problem with the meeting, he was unable
to attend any trustee
meeting that week, due to the short notice. He also objected to
the meeting being held in Tweedie,
saying that it was too far, and
suggested the meeting rather be held in Penvaan, Vryheid, which was
closer to his home. He
also requested to be given proper
advance notice of a trustee meeting so that he could give the other
trustees dates well in advance
.
In
response, and on the same day, Mrs V[...], postponed the trustee
meeting to Saturday, 25 May 2013, and moved it
to Vryheid
to accommodate Mr V[...], but she also gave notice that if
Mr V[...] did not attend, the meeting would proceed
without him.
[8]
Mr V[...] did not attend the trustee meeting on 25 May 2013,
but Mrs V[...] and Mr de Witt did. At the meeting,
the two trustees resolved that the Trust would oppose its
sequestration by FirstRand, and that it would act as surety for
Mrs V[...]’s
legal fees to Shepstone and Wylie in her
divorce action against Mr V[...]. The two trustees also
signed the deed of
suretyship in favour of Shepstone and Wylie.
Following the 25 May 2013 resolutions, the Trust opposed its
sequestration
by FirstRand. While the matter before this Court
concerns the Trust’s resolution for the Trust to be surety for
Mrs V[...]’s
legal fees, the resolution to oppose the
Trust’s sequestration was the other resolution on the day of 25
May 2013, and
the trustees rely in this Court on the
High Court’s sequestration judgment dismissing FirstRand’s
sequestration
application.
[9]
FirstRand raised a
point
in
limine
that
without Mr V[...], the other two trustees lacked authority to
pass a resolution to oppose the sequestration. This
point was
rejected by the High Court in the sequestration judgment.
It was held that the two trustees were duly authorised
to oppose the
Trust’s sequestration and the point
in
limine
was
dismissed.
[4]
The Court
held that the fact that the suretyships were signed on behalf of the
Trust only by Mr V[...] was not in accordance
with clause 14 of
the Trust Deed’s requirement that documents must be signed by
at least two trustees. The suretyship
was therefore void
ab
initio
(from
the beginning).
[5]
FirstRand’s application to sequestrate the Trust was therefore
dismissed.
[10]
Years later, the
other resolution made at the 23 May 2013 meeting became
contested. This is the matter before us.
By 2019,
Mrs V[...]’s legal fees incurred in her divorce remained
unpaid.
[6]
Her debt to
Shepstone and Wylie amounted to R2 589 208. So, like
FirstRand, Shepstone and Wylie sought to
claim payment of
Mrs V[...]’s debts to it from the Trust and relied on the
25 May 2013 deed of suretyship
when it sued the Trust in
the High Court.
Litigation
history
[11]
In the High Court,
Shepstone and Wylie claimed payment of Mrs V[...]’s legal
fees from the Trust on the basis of
the deed of suretyship. The
Trust opposed the application on the ground that the deed of
suretyship, signed only by the two
trustees, was not duly authorised
by the Trust and was therefore legally incompetent. Only this
issue was determined by the
High Court as a point
in
limine
.
[7]
[12]
In a judgment
delivered on 10 June 2021, the High Court
(Bezuidenhout AJ) disagreed with the sequestration judgment’s
finding that Mr V[...] had participated in the meeting.
The High Court stated that “[t]he deed of suretyship
potentially imposes a significant obligation on the [T]rust in that
it accepts liability as surety and co-principal debtor for
Mrs V[...]’s debts to [Shepstone and Wylie]”,
[8]
and that Mr V[...]’s views regarding the deed of
suretyship, which was attached to the notice of the meeting, were not
known.
[9]
[13]
The Court referred
to
Parker
,
[10]
and held that it was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in that case that the principle that trustees must
act jointly is
part of our common law. The High Court held that here only
two of the three trustees acted jointly.
[11]
The Court also cited
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
,
[12]
which addressed the question of whether substantive decisions can be
governed by majority decision if the trust instrument does
not
expressly state as much.
[13]
The High Court reasoned that, on an external matter such as the
signing of the suretyship agreement, the trustees were
obligated by
the Trust Deed to act jointly.
[14]
[14]
As far as the interpretation of item 26 of the appendix
is concerned, the High Court concluded that the word—
“‘
provided’
appears to have been used as a conjunction, meaning generally ‘on
condition that’ or ‘on condition
or understanding that’
. . . and the question will be whether it relates to all the powers
set out in the preceding clauses
or simply to what is contained in
the remainder of [item] 26 [of the appendix].”
[15]
[15]
In the High
Court’s view, it was clear from the wording of the heading of
clauses 16.1 and 16.2 of the Trust Deed that the
latter itself
provides that the view of the majority shall prevail only in the
event of a disagreement between the trustees.
[16]
The Court stated that there was “. . . no
indication that the trustees had disagreed on the issue of the
signing of the deed of suretyship”, which was not referred to
in the email written by Mr V[...] on 21 May 2013,
and
there was no indication that he chose to abstain from the decision.
He simply did not participate in the trustee meeting.
[17]
[16]
The High Court
also relied on
Le
Grange
,
[18]
which stated, with reference to the decision of
Van
der Merwe
,
[19]
that if the majority of trustees arrive at a decision without
participation of all the trustees, unless the Trust Deed authorises
otherwise, a decision by the majority of trustees is not binding on
the trust. The High Court held that the trustees
had to
act unanimously when it came to exercising a power which had the
effect of making the Trust liable for Mrs V[...]’s
debts.
[20]
The
High Court stated that even if its view was wrong, and item 26
was not applicable to the exercise of the trustees’
powers in
this regard, in the absence of any other clauses in the Trust Deed,
the general principle prevails, namely that decisions
must be reached
unanimously, and the trustees must act jointly.
[21]
[17]
According to the
High Court, this was not the case with that particular
decision. Since there was no indication of a
disagreement,
“clause 16 did not come into play”.
[22]
The High Court was of the view that the deed of suretyship was
not duly authorised, dismissed the point
in
limine
and
declared that the deed of suretyship signed by Mrs V[...] and
Mr de Witt was not duly authorised.
[23]
[18]
Shepstone and Wylie unsuccessfully applied for leave to appeal
against this order and judgment.
Supreme Court of
Appeal
[19]
Aggrieved,
Shepstone and Wylie appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal
with the leave of that Court. They argued
that the 25 May 2013
trustee meeting was consistent with the Trust Deed, as reasonable
notice was given and the meeting
was quorate. Relying on
Van der Merwe
and
Le
Grange
,
Shepstone and Wylie contended that a majority decision is competent
if adopted by a majority of trustees present at a quorate
meeting and
where proper notice was given of the meeting.
[24]
They say that these requirements were met.
[20]
Shepstone and
Wylie further contended that the High Court misdirected itself
in finding that item 26 of the appendix required
unanimous joint
action by the trustees in executing the deed of suretyship. It
submitted that item 26, which requires
that trustees must
unanimously agree to conduct business on behalf of the Trust and to
employ Trust property in such business,
was only relevant if the
Trust wished to conduct business in a commercial sense.
Instead, the relevant provision was clause 11
of the Trust Deed,
which defines trustees’ general powers.
[25]
A unanimous decision on the suretyship was not required, as clause 16
allowed for majority decisions.
[26]
[21]
The Trust, on the
other hand, agreed with the High Court’s reading of
item 26 as requiring unanimous resolutions
to bind the Trust.
Since Mr V[...] did not express his views on the suretyship, or
abstain from voting, the 25 May 2013
resolution was
invalid.
[27]
Further,
the two trustees had no power to sign the deed of surety, as it was
not for the Trust’s benefit or any of
its beneficiaries’
welfare.
[28]
[22]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal produced two judgments.
[29]
Both agreed that Shepstone and Wylie’s appeal should be
dismissed but differed on the reasons for a dismissal.
Supreme Court of
Appeal majority
[23]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal majority (per Mbatha JA,
with Zondi JA and Mocumie JA concurring) noted
the trite
principles in
Thorpe
,
[30]
Coetzee
[31]
and
Nieuwoudt
[32]
that trustees are co-owners of a trust’s assets, and so, unless
the Trust Deed has a specific majority clause, they must
make
resolutions jointly to bind the trust.
[33]
The majority cited
Blockpave
[34]
to hold that, while trustees can internally disagree on matters,
externally they cannot disagree, and all trustees must participate
in
external matters.
[35]
It
was noted that the trustees all received notice of the urgent
meeting, but Mr V[...] did not attend or participate
via proxy.
His emails to Mrs V[...] expressed no view on the resolutions to
be passed.
[36]
Regarding
the reasonable notice requirement contained in clause 13.1 and
the requirement of a quorum in clause 13.2,
it was found that
the two trustees signing the deed of surety was contrary to the
clause 13.4 requirement that all trustees
signs written
resolutions.
[37]
[24]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal majority purportedly applied
Parker
.
It concluded that where a Trust Deed requires trustees to act jointly
to bind the trust, a majority decision will not bind
the trust if a
trustee did not participate in the decision-making. This was
said to be imperative when the decision involves
trust assets.
[38]
It considered it significant that Mr V[...] did not participate
in the 25 May 2013 decisions. The participation
requirement was not met merely because he received reasonable notice
of the meeting. On this aspect, it concluded that the
High Court was correct in holding that the trustees did not act
jointly in resolving to execute the deed of suretyship.
[39]
[25]
The Supreme Court
of Appeal majority further held that Shepstone and Wylie’s
reliance on the alleged majority clause in clause 16
of the
Trust Deed was misplaced, as the clause only applies in instances of
disagreement between trustees. It noted the fact
that there was
no disagreement on the 25 May 2013 decisions.
[40]
It relied on
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
as
authority for the principle that important decisions are to be taken
unanimously and found Shepstone and Wylie’s reliance
on
Le Grange
and
Van der Merwe
to be misplaced.
[26]
The majority
confirmed the High Court’s finding that the powers in the
Trust Deed had to be read with those in the appendix.
This led
to the finding that item 26 of the appendix, with its
requirement of unanimity among trustees, provided a caveat
on the
exercise of all of the trustees’ powers, including the power in
item 16 of the appendix to guarantee a beneficiary’s
obligations.
[41]
[27]
It was further
held that the Trust Deed does not envisage that a suretyship should
be concluded on behalf of a trustee or a beneficiary
for their
personal debts, as the Trust Deed states at clause 11, and
in the appendix’s preamble, that trustee powers
must be
exercised for the purpose and benefit of the Trust.
[42]
The wide terms of the deed of suretyship gave absolute protection to
Shepstone and Wylie, which could not be for the Trust’s
benefit. Accordingly, the Supreme Court of Appeal
majority dismissed the appeal with costs, including costs
of two
counsel.
Supreme Court of
Appeal minority
[28]
The Supreme Court
of Appeal minority (Kathree-Setiloane AJA, with Weiner JA
concurring) found that the Trust Deed does
not explicitly provide
that the decisions of the trustees may be taken by majority
vote.
[43]
It found that
following settled law, the trustees had to act jointly to bind the
trust, in the absence of a provision that
a decision may be taken by
a majority vote.
[44]
It rejected Shepstone and
Wylie’s reliance on
Van der Merwe
and
Le
Grange
,
by finding that both cases were distinguishable.
[45]
The trust deeds in those instances had majority vote clauses, whereas
the Trust Deed expressly required unanimity through
item 26 of
the appendix.
[46]
[29]
The minority
relied on
Endumeni
[47]
to interpret the Trust Deed as a whole.
[48]
It found that the appendix’s preamble required trustees’
powers to be exercised for the purpose and benefit of
the Trust.
[49]
The wording of item 26 made it clear that it was a proviso.
It held that since clause 11.1 of the Trust Deed
mentions the
appendix, the trustees’ exercise of power under this clause was
also subject to the appendix’s item 26
proviso.
[50]
Accordingly, all powers of the trustees had to be exercised jointly
and unanimously as per item 26, which is why the
Trust Deed did
not mention a majority vote.
[51]
[30]
The minority
rejected Shepstone and Wylie’s interpretation of clause 26’s
reference to “unanimous agree[ment]
to conduct business”
as meaning that unanimity is only required where the Trust is
conducting business in a narrow commercial
sense. It reasoned
that this ignored the wording of item 26. The minority
held that the term broadly referred
to exercising the powers in
items 1 to 25 of the appendix, that is conducting the business
of the Trust.
[52]
It
found that this interpretation led to a sensible business-like result
and protected the interests of the Trust and its
beneficiaries.
[53]
[31]
The minority held
that any exercise of the appendix powers by the trustees must be both
unanimous and for the Trust’s benefit
in order to bind the
Trust.
[54]
The
25 May 2013 decisions by the two trustees to execute the
deed of suretyship in favour of Shepstone and Wylie
was not
unanimously made by the trustees, and therefore the Trust was not
bound by the decision. The minority thus found
it unnecessary
to consider whether the deed of suretyship was for the Trust’s
benefit.
[55]
They agreed
with the majority’s order that the appeal should be dismissed
with costs, including costs of two counsel.
Applicant’s
submissions in this Court
Jurisdiction
[32]
In respect of
jurisdiction, Shepstone and Wylie points out that the
Supreme Court of Appeal majority concluded that
the
proviso in item 26 of the appendix which “places a caveat
on the exercise of those powers”, refers to all
of the powers
set out in the appendix.
[56]
The Supreme Court of Appeal minority adopted the same
approach.
[57]
Shepstone
and Wylie submits that, while the Supreme Court of Appeal
held that the Trust Deed was comparable
to the Trust Deed in
Coetzee
,
the Trust Deed in that case “contained no provision at all as
to whether decisions had to be unanimous or could be taken
by less
than all trustees acting together”. Shepstone and Wylie
submits that this reinforces the unavoidable conclusion
that the
Supreme Court of Appeal has now authoritatively stated
that the quorum and other provisions in the Trust
Deed apply only to
“internal” matters, that is those relating to
distribution of funds to beneficiaries, but that those
provisions
have no effect in relation to “external” dealings, such
as agreements with banks, contracts, appointing
attorneys to
represent the trust, and so forth.
[33]
According to Shepstone and Wylie, the Supreme Court of Appeal
majority judgment represents a material deviation from
the law as
previously expressed in the Supreme Court of Appeal,
and is wrong. The effect of the judgment is
potentially very
wide, given that, excluding this Court, all courts in the country
will be bound to follow it. Thus, Shepstone
and Wylie submits
that the matter raises an arguable point of law of general public
importance which ought to be considered by
this Court in terms of
section 167(3)(b)(ii) of the Constitution.
Leave to appeal and
merits
[34]
Shepstone and Wylie submits that the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Appeal has far-reaching consequences
not only
for itself, but for other parties that have concluded
ostensibly valid contracts with trusts. The argument is that
the Trust
Deed stipulates that legal documents needing execution must
be signed by at least two trustees and implicitly not by all three,
as long as reasonable notice is given to each trustee. If only
two trustees arrive for the meeting, they form a quorum and
can make
legally binding decisions. According to Shepstone and Wylie,
the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
ruling will
significantly impact trust transactions that have already been
concluded and those that are still in the process of
being concluded
nationwide and will drastically change the body of current legal
precedent.
[35]
Shepstone and Wylie argues that
Parker
did not hold
that, in order for the decision to be valid and binding on a trust,
all trustees have to sign the resolution reflecting
the decision or
actively attend and participate in the meeting. It submits that
the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
majority and
minority conclusions – that the wording of the additional power
in item 26 of the Trust Deed’s appendix
requires a
unanimous vote of all trustees in order to exercise any of the powers
listed in the Trust Deed’s other clauses –
are
incorrect. Lastly, it is contended that an appeal to this Court
is the only way to correct the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
judgment.
Respondents’
submissions in this Court
Jurisdiction
[36]
The Trust submits that neither this Court’s
constitutional nor its general jurisdiction is engaged. On
general jurisdiction,
the Trust submits that the issue whether the
Trust Deed authorises two of the three trustees present at a Trust
meeting, in the
absence of the third trustee, to validly authorise
the signing of a deed of suretyship involves no points of law; it
merely involves
the interpretation of the specific Trust Deed’s
provisions. This, it submits, is a factual question. It
contests
Shepstone and Wylie’s submissions that the
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment will affect other
trusts
or that the matter is of general public importance, as each
trust deed has its own peculiar provisions and purposes. It
submits
that there is no evidence that other trusts or institutions
dealing with trusts will be affected. Shepstone and Wylie’s
application does not request that any legal principle be revisited or
that the test for the interpretation of documents, as applied
by the
Supreme Court of Appeal, be revisited.
Leave to appeal
[37]
The Trust submits that Shepstone and Wylie’s application
lacks prospects of success, so it is not in the interests of justice
to grant leave to appeal.
Merits
[38]
The Trust aligns
itself with the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment.
It relies on a line of cases, including
Parker,
Thorpe
and
Nieuwoudt
,
saying it is trite that to bind a trust in dealings with outside
persons, all trustees must act jointly. It quotes
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts,
where
it is said that “as the facts of the
Parker
and
Van
der Merwe
cases
illustrate, a trust will consequently not be bound if (for example)
two trustees of a three trustee complement simply ignore
the third
trustee in taking a decision”.
[58]
[39]
The Trust argues that the Trust Deed is silent on how trustee
decisions are to be taken in meetings and whether a decision by the
majority of trustees can bind the Trust. It submits that the
clause providing for two trustees to constitute a quorum does
not
empower the quorate trustees to pass trust resolutions. In
fact, the Trust submits, the following Trust Deed provisions
require
unanimous agreement by the trustees to bind the Trust:
(a)
clause 13.4, which requires resolutions to be signed by
all
trustees, indicating that all trustees must act jointly (the Trust
submits that there is no difference between a written resolution
and
a resolution taken at a meeting);
(b)
clause 13.1, which requires reasonable notice of meetings
to all
trustees;
(c)
clause 16.1, which requires Mr V[...] to chair trustee
meetings,
indicating that without his presence at meetings no valid resolution
could be passed by the Trust;
(d)
clause 16.2, a majority clause which did not apply to
the
25 May 2013 meeting, given that there was no disagreement;
and
(e)
item 26 of the appendix, being an all-encompassing caveat
to all
trustee powers that expressly requires trustee unanimity. The
Trust further submits that the word “provided”
in item 26
of the appendix favours its reading that unanimity is required for
all exercises of trustee power.
[40]
The Trust agrees with the Supreme Court of Appeal
that it is not empowered to be surety for Mrs V[...]’s
debts to Shepstone and Wylie in her divorce, as the Trust’s
purpose is to acquire property and other assets, and clause 11
of the
Trust Deed requires trustees’ powers to be exercised for
the Trust’s purpose and benefit. Seemingly
for the first
time, it now contests the reasonableness of the notice of the
25 May 2013 meeting. The Trust therefore
argues that
leave to appeal should be refused with costs.
Analysis
Issues to be
determined
[41]
The following issues need to be decided:
(a)
whether this Court’s jurisdiction is engaged;
(b)
whether leave to appeal should be granted;
(c)
whether the Supreme Court of Appeal misstated the law;
and
(d)
whether, on a proper interpretation of the Trust Deed, two out of
three trustees could, at a duly
convened meeting of trustees, resolve
to bind the Trust to a deed of suretyship despite the absence of the
third trustee from that
meeting.
Jurisdiction and leave
to appeal
[42]
Shepstone and
Wylie’s ground for invocation of this Court’s
jurisdiction is that the Supreme Court of Appeal
changed trust law and thereby contradicted its own authority.
[59]
The consequence, so it is argued, is that everyone, especially
financial institutions that contracted in good faith with
trusts,
will now be in a position that a trust is not bound by a contract
unless all the trustees consented to it.
[43]
Reliance is placed by Shepstone and Wylie on
section 167(3)(b)(ii) of the Constitution. This section
can be divided into
two components. First, whether the matter
raises an arguable point of law and, second, whether the arguable
point of law
is one of general public importance, which ought to be
considered by this Court. Shepstone and Wylie says that this
Court’s
jurisdiction is engaged, because of an arguable point
of law – the point being that the Supreme Court of Appeal
altered the existing jurisprudence in relation to trusts,
contradicting even its own jurisprudence.
[44]
The argument is that until now it was well-established that—
(a)
the rule that all existing trustees must act unanimously can
be
altered by a trust deed;
(b)
a trust deed may allow for decisions to be made at a quorate
meeting
by only the trustees present; and
(c)
adequate notice of the
meeting and the opportunity to participate afforded to all trustees
is sufficient. It is clear from
the affidavits and argument
before us that the arguable point of law and the public interest
component only arose after the Supreme Court of Appeal
had spoken. The consequence is that the jurisdictional
threshold must be determined at this point.
[60]
[45]
This Court
explained in
Paulsen
[61]
that to engage this Court’s jurisdiction a point must be one of
law; it must be arguable; and it must not be one of fact.
[62]
Paulsen
went further to say that
for a matter to be of general public importance, it must transcend
the narrow interests of the litigants
and implicate the interests of
a significant part of the general public.
[63]
It was also held that the words “which ought to be considered”
rest on the well-established interests of justice
criterion.
[64]
This approach was later confirmed in
Tiekiedraai
[65]
where importantly the following was said:
“
Tiekiedraai
cannot be correct that the contractual interpretation before the
High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal
raises
an arguable point of law of general public importance. The sole
issue in clause 21 is the interpretation of its
specific
wording. Nothing of general or wider importance flows from it.
It might be different if the lease had been
a standard form document
in widespread use, affecting a large number of consumers; but
Tiekiedraai did not and could not make this
case.”
[66]
[46]
Paulsen
[67]
also considered the interests of justice and the Court noted that
this Court has not always been consistent in the case of appeals
emanating from the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[68]
Can one then conclude that the requirements of public interest or
interests of justice are met when the Supreme Court of Appeal
got the law wrong? Where the incorrect statement of the law
would have lasting consequences, the question should be answered
in
the affirmative. It must be in the interests of justice and of
general public importance that there is clarity regarding
the
applicable legal principles pertaining to this feature of trust law.
Uncertainty or a change in the long-established
legal principles
regarding the law will have an effect on any party who enters into an
agreement with a trust. As a result,
the matter will have far
reaching consequences which will be much broader than the narrow
interests of the parties.
[47]
In this instance,
the interests of justice will be rooted in the misstatement of trust
law by the Supreme Court of Appeal
as explained
above.
[69]
If this
stands uncorrected, lower courts will in future be bound by that
misstatement.
[48]
In
Jiba
,
[70]
where this Court dealt with the administration and application of the
Admission of Advocates Act,
[71]
it was held that the interpretation and application of that Act did
not establish a basis for this Court’s jurisdiction.
Regarding an arguable point of law of general public importance, the
following was said:
“
It
may well be that the majority in the Supreme Court of Appeal
here has erroneously interfered with the discretion
of the
High Court. However, this does not raise an arguable point
of law of general public importance. As outlined
above, the
error here lies in the factual assessment. A decision that is
based on wrong facts does not amount to an arguable
point of law.
The enquiry that is undertaken to correct it remains factual.”
[72]
[49]
The Court further held that:
“
The
wrong application of an established legal test too does not
constitute an arguable point of law. All that is required
to be
determined in such a case is whether the court whose judgment is
subject to an appeal has correctly applied the test to the
facts.
This issue ordinarily illustrates the presence of reasonable
prospects of success. It does not generate an argument
on the
content or scope of the legal principle itself but indicates an
incorrect application of that principle. This is relevant
to
the interests of justice inquiry which differs from
jurisdiction.”
[73]
[50]
Jiba
emphasises that it is not a mere misapplication of
the law to the facts that engages this Court’s jurisdiction.
This
Court held that a misapplication of the law to the facts does
not amount to an arguable point of law which ought to be considered
by this Court.
Jiba
is clearly distinguishable from the
matter at hand, as in this instance there is not merely a
misapplication of the law to the
facts but a misstatement of the law,
which does indeed amount to an arguable point of law, that ought to
be considered by this
Court.
[51]
In
Olesitse
,
[74]
this Court held that both the High Court and the
Supreme Court of Appeal “adopted an incorrect
‘legal
standard’ by applying the ‘once and for all
rule’ to facts to which the rule does not apply”
.
[75]
This Court held that this does not amount to a misapplication of the
law but instead to an error of law.
[76]
The Court further held:
“
In
Villa
Crop
,
it was held that an error of law which infringes upon the rights of
litigants to enjoy access to the courts, contrary to section 34
of the Constitution, raises a constitutional issue which engages the
jurisdiction of this Court. By parity of reasoning,
a
misapplication of the law which has the same effect, must perforce
raise a constitutional issue which engages the jurisdiction
of this
Court.”
[77]
(Footnotes
omitted.)
[52]
Where the Supreme Court of Appeal misstates the
law, the same reasoning should apply. Whether this did indeed
occur will be dealt with in the paragraphs that follow. In
principle, however, this Court’s jurisdiction is engaged
when
such a misstatement occurs. Leave should be granted.
Merits
[53]
The question now
is, did the Supreme Court of Appeal majority indeed
get the law wrong? The answer is yes.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal majority stated that it is
trite that “trustees must act jointly in taking decisions
and
resolutions for the benefit of the Trust and beneficiaries thereof,
unless a
specific majority clause provides otherwise
”
.
[78]
In terms of
Parker
[79]
and
Nieuwoudt
,
[80]
however, the principle is
that a trust deed can provide for something other than joint action
by trustees, and it can do so
through a majority clause.
The Supreme Court of Appeal majority therefore
construed the principle narrowly
with no authority for doing so.
[54]
The Supreme Court of Appeal introduced an
unwarranted distinction between decisions of trustees in relation to
internal
and external matters, and in so doing placed an incorrect
restriction on the proposition that the requirement of joint action
can
be modified by a trust deed. The Supreme Court of Appeal
also misconstrued provisions which are routinely encountered
in trust
deeds, even if precise formulations vary.
[55]
The Supreme Court of Appeal majority conflated
two distinct actions: the signing of the deed of surety by the two
trustees, and a written (round robin) resolution authorising the
signing of the deed of suretyship. The majority stated that
the
resolution of the two trustees at the 25 May 2013 trustee
meeting and the signing of the deed of surety were—
“
contrary
to the provisions of clause 13.4 of the trust deed, which provides
that a written resolution signed by all trustees for
the time being
or their respective alternates or proxies shall be as effective as a
resolution taken at a meeting of trustees.”
[81]
[56]
Contrary to what
the Supreme Court of Appeal majority said, the
resolution to sign the deed of surety was not a written
resolution in
terms of clause 13.4. It was a resolution taken at a
quorate meeting of trustees in terms of clause 13.1.
The
resultant signing of the deed of surety by the two trustees was not a
resolution. It was merely the execution of the
deed following
the resolution. Clause 14 of the Trust Deed provides
that such execution can be done by “at
least two trustees”.
That the resolution was not a clause 13.4 resolution is clear
from the fact that the resolution
is recorded in the minutes of the
25 May 2013 meeting.
Honoré
’
s
South African Law of Trusts
[82]
states in this regard that
Blockpave
—
“
sought
to draw a distinction between trustee decisions (as reflected in, for
example, the minutes of trustee meetings) and formal
‘resolutions’
signed by the trustees. The judgment creates the impression
that only the latter would bind a trust.
However,
there is no rule of trust administration that requires such a degree
of formality
.”
[83]
(Emphasis added.)
[57]
This takes us to
another error in the Supreme Court of Appeal
majority’s analysis of trust law. After
relying on
Le Grange
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal majority stated that
“[e]ven when the Trust Deed provides for a majority decision,
the resolution must be signed by all the trustees”.
[84]
This is plainly in conflict with the principle expressed in
Nieuwoudt
and
Parker
that a trust deed can
provide for decision-making other than by joint action. The
apparent reliance on
Le Grange
is misconceived.
Le Grange
stated that resolutions
signed by trustees are “usually” a manifestation of
trustees’ joint decision.
[85]
The Court went on to say that where (as on the facts of that case)
the majority (being two trustees) had signed a resolution
and the
third abstained, it would be placing “form over substance”
to insist on having the third trustee’s signature
on the
resolution.
[86]
[58]
The majority seemingly failed to appreciate the important
distinction between unanimous-decision trusts and majority-decision
trusts.
What we have here is of the latter. Thus, in a
trust of this type, where the Trust Deed includes a freestanding
majority
vote clause (as was the case in
Van der Merwe
and
Le
Grange
), the trustees must act
jointly
but are not
required to act
unanimously
. Absent a freestanding
majority clause (as was the case in
Parker
), the trustees must
act not only jointly but also unanimously.
[59]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal majority recorded that the High Court
had stated that
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
“
authoritatively
confirms that all important decisions are to be taken
unanimously.”
[87]
However, the High Court actually quoted
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
as
stating that “unless the trust instrument so provides –
as it usually does – it is doubtful whether matters
of
substance can be regulated by majority decisions”.
[88]
The important part of the principle, namely that a trust deed can
provide for decisions to be taken by fewer than all trustees,
was
overlooked by the Supreme Court of Appeal majority.
The reliance on
Blockpave
is also misplaced.
Blockpave
is clearly wrong when it
states that “externally trustees cannot disagree” and
that in the external sphere a trust “functions
by virtue of
resolutions, which have to be supported by the full complement of the
trust body”.
[89]
As has now been stated repeatedly, trust law allows for a trust deed
to provide for majority or quorate decision-making.
[60]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal majority’s misstatement
of the principles set out in
Nieuwoudt
and
Parker
and its reliance on the
principle set out in
Blockpave
have
the potential of changing trust law if uncorrected. That will
lead to the consequences envisaged by Shepstone and Wylie.
[90]
[61]
The central issue that needs to be decided now is whether the
deed of suretyship signed by the two trustees in favour of Shepstone
and Wylie was duly authorised by the Trust and the suretyship
agreement could be entered into by two trustees. In order to
answer this question, an interpretation of both the Trust Deed
and the appendix is required.
[62]
There is no clause in the Trust Deed that speaks directly to
this issue. The heading of clause 11 is “Powers of
the Trust”. Clause 11.1 provides that:
“
Any
trustee shall have the power to use the Trust property and income for
the benefit of the Trust and for which purpose they are
granted all
necessary powers and authority including (but without limitation) the
powers stated in the Appendix.”
[63]
Clause 11.2 empowers the trustees to ratify, adopt or
reject in their discretion contracts made on behalf of the Trust.
The important provisions are clauses 13 and 16.2.
Clauses 13 and 16 read thus:
“
MEETINGS
OF TRUSTEES.
13.1.
The Trustees may meet together for the despatch of business, adjourn
and otherwise regulate their
meetings as they think fit. Any
Trustee shall be entitled on reasonable written notice to the other
Trustees to summon a
meeting of the Trustees. All Trustees for
the time being in the Republic of South Africa shall be given
reasonable notice
of any meeting of the Trustees.
13.2.
Subject to 5 above, the quorum necessary at any such meeting shall be
two Trustees.
[91]
13.3.
A Trustee may be represented at a meeting of Trustees by a proxy
appointed as such in writing.
13.4.
A written resolution signed by all Trustees for the time being or
their respective alternates or proxies
shall be as effective as a
resolution taken at a meeting of Trustees.
. . .
DISAGREEMENT
BETWEEN TRUSTEES
16.1.
At and for each meeting of Trustees, the Trustees present, in person
or by proxy, shall elect a Chairperson;
provided for as long as
T[...] W[...] V[...] is a Trustee, he shall be Chairperson.
16.2.
In the event of any disagreements arising between the Trustees at any
time the view of the majority
shall prevail. Should there be an
equality of votes, the Chairperson shall have a second or casting
vote.”
[64]
Clauses 13.1
to 13.4 and clause 16.2 are modelled on clauses 73, 75 and 76 of
the Table B articles of association that
were contained in Schedule 1
to the now repealed 1973 Companies Act.
[92]
These provisions of the
Table B articles were, in turn, modelled on substantially similar
standard provisions in England and elsewhere.
In terms of
clause 13.1, the trustees may meet to “despatch business”.
On the face of it, there is no qualification
on the business they may
despatch at a meeting. In terms of clause 13.2, the quorum
necessary “at any such meeting”,
that is, a meeting for
the “despatch of business”, is two trustees. This
does not mean that the third trustee
does not need to be given
reasonable notice, but it does mean that if reasonable notice is
given and the third trustee does not
attend, the other two may meet
and “despatch business”.
[65]
Clause 16.1 deals with the chairing of meetings.
Since only a person present at a meeting may chair it, the provision
for Mr V[...]’s chairmanship could only apply to those
meetings at which he was present. If he did not attend
the
meeting, those present could choose someone else to chair it.
In the context of clause 16.1, clause 6.2, which
provides
that the view of the majority shall prevail, is referring to
disagreement among those attending the meeting. (This
is even
clearer in clause 73 of the standard articles previously
mentioned.) Only the views of those who attend a meeting
can be
relevant for purposes of a decision taken at such meeting. So,
if a meeting of trustees is properly constituted by
the presence of
two trustees, and those two trustees are in agreement on a particular
matter, clause 16.2 plays no part, since
there is no
disagreement.
[66]
Clause 13.4 is a
standard round-robin provision that permits decisions to be taken
without a meeting (its counterpart in the standard
articles was
clause 76). The policy behind the requirement that all
trustees must sign such a resolution is that, because
a meeting is
being dispensed with, a trustee who might disagree with a proposed
decision is deprived of the opportunity at a meeting
of persuading
his or her fellow trustees. If, however, all the trustees agree
on a course of action, the holding of a meeting
would be
superfluous.
[93]
In short, clause 13.4
is irrelevant where a decision is taken at a meeting.
[67]
Subject, therefore, to the provisions of the appendix to the
Trust Deed, the position is clear. Business, including a
decision
to sign the suretyship, could be despatched at a duly
convened meeting of two trustees. The meeting in this case was
duly
convened. Neither the High Court nor the
Supreme Court of Appeal held otherwise. It is
common cause
that after Mr V[...]’s indication that he
could not attend the meeting, the meeting was moved to his preferred
location.
However, his second request that he be given
reasonable notice and dates to choose from was ignored and the
meeting was held only
two days later than planned. However,
this issue was not raised in the High Court or the
Supreme Court of Appeal
and was only raised for the
first time in the written submissions. This is not an issue
properly before this Court and should,
therefore, not be
entertained. Since the two trustees at the meeting agreed that
the Trust should conclude the suretyship,
there was no disagreement
engaging clause 16.2. And because the decision was taken
at a meeting, clause 13.4 was
irrelevant.
[68]
Is there anything in the appendix that justifies a different
conclusion? Clause 11.1 of the Trust Deed, headed “Powers
of Trustees”, states that the trustees have the power to deal
with the trust property and income for the benefit and purpose
of the
Trust in their discretion, and that for this purpose “they are
granted all necessary powers and authority including
(but without
limitation) the powers stated in the Appendix”. The
appendix is a list of powers introduced thus:
“
Without
prejudice to the generality of any of the provisions of the
accompanying Deed constituting the above Trust the Trustees
shall
have the following powers which shall be exercisable in their sole
and absolute discretion for the purposes and benefit of
the Trust.”
[69]
The 28 numbered items that follow are thus the express powers
conferred on the trustees. They seem to encompass everything
that the trustees of such a trust might ever wish to do; but in case
the drafters missed anything, the introduction makes it clear
that
the list is without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred in the Trust Deed. Each item on the list must
be
understood as a separate power. Item 16 is the power to
guarantee obligations of any beneficiary of the Trust.
The only
itemised power which is prefaced by a requirement of unanimity is
item 26 – the power “to conduct business
on behalf
of and for the benefit of the Trust, and to employ Trust property in
such business”.
[70]
It is quite impossible to construe item 26 as
encompassing all the things that the trustees might ever decide to
do, including
the things listed in items 1 to 25 of the
appendix. Each item in the appendix is a discrete power.
If item 26
had been intended to cover all the activities and
transactions listed in items 1 to 25, it would not have featured
as a separate
item but would have been built into the introduction
preceding the listing of the powers. In other words, the phrase
“provided
the Trustees unanimously agree” would have been
inserted at the end of the current introduction, before the word
“namely”.
Item 26 must thus be separate and
distinct from other powers. The only meaning of which item 26
is sensibly capable
is that, provided the trustees are unanimous,
they may embark upon a business in the sense of a commercial venture.
[71]
Although this is perfectly clear from an examination of the
appendix on its own, it is reinforced when regard is had to
clauses 13
and 16 of the Trust Deed. The universal
requirement of unanimity by all trustees holding office would deprive
clauses 13 and 16
of any sensible field of operation:
no business could then be despatched at a quorate meeting of two
trustees, and no decision
of a majority could prevail in the event of
disagreement at a meeting.
[72]
The conclusion that must ineluctably follow is that the two
trustees were duly authorised to sign the agreement on behalf of the
Trust and the Trust did enter into a valid agreement with Shepstone
and Wylie. As a result, the appeal must be upheld.
Costs
[73]
Shepstone and Wylie has been substantially successful and is
therefore entitled to costs.
Order
[74]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The order of the Supreme Court of Appeal is set aside
and substituted with
the following order:
“
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs.
(b) The
order of the High Court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The special point
in
limine
relating
to the alleged invalidity of the deed of suretyship is dismissed with
costs.’”
4.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the applicant in this
Court.
For the Applicant:
S R Mullins SC
instructed by Shepstone and Wylie Attorneys
For the
Respondents:
M G Roberts SC
and E Roberts instructed by Moolman and Pienaar Incorporated
[1]
The introduction of the appendix and item 16 thereof reads:
“
POWER
TO THE TRUSTEES
Without
prejudice to the generality of any of the provisions of the
accompanying deed constituting the above Trust the Trustees
shall
have the following powers which shall be exercisable in their sole
and absolute discretion for the purposes and benefit
of the Trust,
namely:
. . .
16.
To guarantee the obligations of any beneficiary and/or any company
of which the Trust and/or beneficiary is a shareholder
and to bind
the Trust as collateral security for any such obligation undertaken
by the Trust, to mortgage, pledge or hypothecate
any asset forming
part of the trust property.”
[2]
See the High Court judgment on the Trust’s sequestration,
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Thomas Wilhelm Volker N.O.
,
unreported judgment of the High Court of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal
Division, Pietermaritzburg, Case No 4035/2013 (20 March 2013)
(sequestration judgment) at para 1.
[3]
Shepstone
and Wylie Attorneys v De Witt N.N.O.
[2023]
ZASCA 74
;
2023 (6) SA 419
(SCA)
(Supreme Court of Appeal
judgment) at para 4.
[4]
Sequestration judgment above n 2 at para 4.
[5]
Id
at paras 6 and 10.
[6]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 6.
[7]
Shepstone
and Wylie Attorneys v De Witt N.N.O
.
[2021] ZAKZPHC 38 (High Court judgment) at paras 2 and 51.
[8]
Id at para 28.
[9]
Id.
[10]
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa v Parker
[2004]
ZASCA 56
;
[2004] 4 All SA 261
(SCA);
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) at
para 15.
[11]
High
Court judgment
above
n 7
at
para 34.
[12]
Cameron et al
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
6
ed (Juta & Co Ltd, Cape Town 2018).
[13]
High Court judgment above n 7 at para 35.
[14]
Id at paras 38 and 48.
[15]
Id at para 44.
[16]
Id at para 45.
[17]
Id at para 46.
[18]
Le
Grange v Le Grange
[2017]
ZAKZPHC 2.
[19]
Van
der Merwe N.O. v Hydraberg Hydraulics CC; Van der Merwe N.O. v
Bosman
[2010]
ZAWCHC 129; 2010 (5) SA 555 (WCC).
[20]
High
Court judgment above n 7 at para 48.
[21]
Id
.
[22]
Id.
[23]
Id
at para 51.
[24]
Le
Grange
above
n 18 at para 16 and
Van
der Merwe
above
n 19 at para 16.
[25]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 14.
[26]
Id at para 16.
[27]
Id at para 17.
[28]
Id at para 18.
[29]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3.
[30]
Thorpe
v Trittenwein
[2006]
ZASCA 30; 2007 (2) SA 172 (SCA).
[31]
Coetzee
v Peet Smith Trust
2003
(5) SA 674 (T).
[32]
Nieuwoudt
N.N.O. v Vrystaat Mielies (Edms) Bpk
[2003]
ZASCA 128; 2004 (3) SA 486 (SCA).
[33]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at paras 20-23
and 25.
[34]
Steyn
N.N.O. v Blockpave (Pty) Ltd
2011
(3) SA 528 (FB).
[35]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 22.
[36]
Id at para 24.
[37]
Id.
[38]
Id at para 26.
[39]
Id at para 27.
[40]
Id at para 28.
[41]
Id at para 29.
[42]
Id at para 30.
[43]
Id at para 35.
[44]
Id.
[45]
Id
at para 36.
[46]
Id at paras 36-7.
[47]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA).
[48]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 39.
[49]
Id at para 40.
[50]
Id at para 42.
[51]
Id.
[52]
Id at para 43.
[53]
Id at para 44.
[54]
Id at para 43.
[55]
Id at para 45.
[56]
Id at para 29.
[57]
Id at para 41.
[58]
Cameron et al above n 12 at 382.
[59]
See
Parker
above
n 10;
Le
Grange
above
n 18;
Van
der Merwe
above
n 19;
Thorpe
above n 30 and
Nieuwoudt
above
n 32.
[60]
On
jurisdiction being a “threshold” requirement, see
S
v Boesak
[2000]
ZACC 25
;
2001 (1) BCLR 36
(CC);
2001 (1) SA 912
(CC) at para 11;
Fraser
v ABSA Bank Ltd
[2006]
ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC);
2007 (3) BCLR 219
(CC) at para 35;
Loureiro
v Imvula Quality Protection (Pty) Ltd
[2014]
ZACC 4
;
2014 (3) SA 394
(CC);
2014 (5) BCLR 511
(CC) at para 31;
Tuta
v The State
[2022]
ZACC 19
;
2023 (2) BCLR 179
(CC) at para 91 and
S
v Liebenberg
[2023]
ZACC 33
;
[2024] 1 BLLR 1
(CC);
2024 (1) BCLR 132
(CC);
2024 (2) SACR
269
(CC) at para 34.
[61]
Paulsen
v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Ltd
[2015]
ZACC 5; 2015 (3) SA 479 (CC); 2015 (5) BCLR 509 (CC).
[62]
Id
at para 20.
[63]
Id
at para 26.
[64]
Id
at para 30.
[65]
Tiekiedraai
Eiendomme (Pty) Ltd v Shell South Africa Marketing (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZACC 14; 2019 (7) BCLR 850 (CC).
[66]
Id
at para 13. See also
Big
G Restaurants (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
[2020]
ZACC 16; 2020 (6) SA 1 (CC); 2020 (11) BCLR 1297 (CC).
[67]
Paulsen
above
n 61 at para 15 and fn 52.
[68]
Id
at fn 52.
[69]
At [46] above.
[70]
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba
[2019]
ZACC 23; 2019 (8) BCLR 919 (CC).
[71]
74 of 1964.
[72]
Jiba
above
n 70 at para 58.
[73]
Id
at para 59.
[74]
Olesitse
N.O. v Minister of
Police
[2023]
ZACC 35; 2024 (2) BCLR 238 (CC).
[75]
Id at para 34.
[76]
Id. See also
Villa
Crop Protection (Pty) Ltd v Bayer Intellectual Property GmbH
[2022] ZACC 42
;
2023 (4)
BCLR 461
(CC);
2024 (1) SA 331
(CC) at paras 64-8.
[77]
Id.
[78]
Supreme
Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 20 (emphasis
added).
[79]
Parker
above n 10 at
para 15.
[80]
Nieuwoudt
above
n 32 at para 16 of Harms JA’s judgment (the
second judgment).
[81]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 24.
[82]
Cameron
et al above n 12.
[83]
Id at 378.
[84]
Supreme
Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 25.
[85]
Le
Grange
above
n 18 at para 14.
[86]
Id
at para 23.
[87]
Supreme
Court of Appeal judgment above n 3 at para 28.
[88]
High Court judgment above n 7 at para 35.
[89]
Blockpave
above
n 34 at para 38.
[90]
At [42] above.
[91]
Clause 13.2 originally read “three”, however, it
was amended to read “two” by an amendment signed
on
26 June 1998 and registered in January 2000.
[92]
61
of 1973. Clauses 73, 75 and 76 read:
“
73.
The directors may meet together for the despatch of business,
adjourn and otherwise regulate
their meetings as they think fit.
Questions arising at any meeting shall be decided by a
majority of votes. In the
event of an equality of votes, the
chairman shall have a second or casting vote. A director may,
and the secretary on the
requisition of a director shall, at any
time convene a meeting of the directors.
. . .
75.
The quorum necessary for the business of the directors, unless there
is only
one director, may be fixed by the directors, and unless so
fixed shall, when the number of directors exceeds three, be three
and when the number of directors does not exceed three, shall be
two.
76.
Subject to the provisions of the Act, a resolution in writing,
signed by
all the directors, shall be as valid and effectual as if
it had been passed at a meeting of the directors duly convened and
held.”
[93]
See McGuinness
Canadian
Business Corporations Law
2
ed (LexisNexis, Canada 2007) at 833-4 and Gower
The
Principles of Modern Company Law
3
ed (Stevens & Sons, London 1969) at 138. (I have cited an
old edition of Professor Gower’s well-known work,
since he was
there dealing with standard provisions corresponding with the Table
A articles of our 1973 Companies Act.)
See
also
Hood
Sailmakers Ltd v Axford
[1996]
4 All ER 830
(QB) at 833g-834g, dealing with regulation 106 in the
standard Table A in Schedule 1 of the English Companies Act,
1948. As appears from this case at 832j-833b, regulations 98,
99 and 106 were substantially the same as clauses 73,
74 and 75
of the Table A articles in our repealed 1973 Companies Act.
Regulation 106 was the round-robin clause.
sino noindex
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