Case Law[2024] ZASCA 132South Africa
Scholtz and Another v De Kock NO and Others (312/2023) [2024] ZASCA 132 (2 October 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
2 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Deceased estate – whether executrix bears duty to account to beneficiaries for deceased’s monies disbursed during the deceased’s lifetime.
Judgment
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## Scholtz and Another v De Kock NO and Others (312/2023) [2024] ZASCA 132 (2 October 2024)
Scholtz and Another v De Kock NO and Others (312/2023) [2024] ZASCA 132 (2 October 2024)
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#
FLYNOTES:
WILLS
AND ESTATES – Executor –
Duty
to account
–
To
beneficiaries for deceased’s monies disbursed during
deceased’s lifetime – RAF award paid into trust
account of sister who was attorney – Funds transferred to
investment account – Mere deposit of money into attorney’s
trust account does not establish fiduciary relationship –
Bulk of money paid to deceased – Deceased entitled
to
dispose of her assets in manner she deemed fit during her
lifetime.
# THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 312/2023
In the matter between:
# MICHELLE JACQUELINE
SCHOLTZ
FIRST APPELLANT
MICHELLE JACQUELINE
SCHOLTZ
FIRST APPELLANT
#
# MICHELLE JACQUELINE
SCHOLTZ NO
SECOND APPELLANT
MICHELLE JACQUELINE
SCHOLTZ NO
SECOND APPELLANT
and
# LEON DE KOCK
NO
FIRST RESPONDENT
LEON DE KOCK
NO
FIRST RESPONDENT
#
# THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
SECOND RESPONDENT
#
# LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
THIRD RESPONDENT
LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Scholtz
&
Another
v
De
Kock
NO
&
Others
(312/2023)
[2024] ZASCA
132
(02 October 2024)
Coram:
MAKGOKA, NICHOLLS, HUGHES and MOLEFE JJA and
MBHELE AJA
Heard:
02 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of the judgment is deemed to
be 11h00 on 02 October
2024.
Summary:
Deceased estate – whether executrix bears
duty to account to beneficiaries for deceased’s monies
disbursed during the
deceased’s lifetime.
Fiduciary relationship –
attorney and client – mere deposit of money into attorney’s
trust account does not establish
fiduciary relationship.
Relationship between
sisters – whether the nature of their financial arrangement
established fiduciary relationship to warrant
accounting –
whether in fact such accounting occurred.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Saldanha, Henney and Thulare JJ, sitting
as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs including costs of
two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and
replaced with the following order: ‘The appeal is dismissed
with costs.’
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Makgoka JA and Mbhele
AJA (Nicholls, Hughes and Molefe JJA concurring):
[1]
The main issue in this appeal is whether the first
appellant, Ms Jacquline Scholtz, (Ms Scholtz), owed her deceased
sister, and
by extension the latter’s testamentary
beneficiaries, a duty to account for an amount of R5 600 000 which
the deceased had
received from the Road Accident Fund (the RAF). Ms
Scholtz received the amount into her attorney’s trust account,
and later
transferred it into an investment account managed by her.
[2]
The full court of the Western Cape Division of the
High Court, Cape Town (the full court) held that Ms Scholtz was so
obliged to
account and overturned an order of a single Judge of that
Division (the court of first instance), which had dismissed the
application
of the first respondent, Mr Leon De Kock (Mr De Kock) to
account for the money. Ms Scholtz appeals with the special leave of
this
Court.
[3]
Mr De Kock and the deceased, Mrs Nicquelette
Veronique de Kock, were married
to
each
other.
Their
marriage
was
terminated
by
her
death
on
26 September 2018. Two minor children were born of the marriage. The
deceased and Ms Scholtz were identical twins. Ms Scholtz
is thus Mr
De Kock’s former sister-in-law and the aunt of the two minor
children. The minor children are the joint heirs
in the estate
of
the
deceased
(the
deceased
estate).
In
terms
of
the
deceased’s
Will, Ms Scholtz is the executrix in the deceased
estate. She is also a practising attorney. Although she was cited
both in her
personal capacity and as an executrix, relief was sought
against her only in her personal capacity and as an attorney.
[4]
Before
the court of first instance, Mr De Kock brought the application in
his nominal capacity as the guardian of his two minor
children who,
as mentioned, are joint heirs of the estate of their late mother. He
based his right to seek the relief on the so-called
Beningfield
exception.
[1]
Mr De
Kock sought an order compelling Ms Scholtz to render an account for
the R5 600 000 and for the debatement of that account,
and for the
payment to the deceased estate of whatever amount was found to be due
to it. The application was dismissed by the court
of first instance.
On appeal to it, the full court upheld Mr De Kock’s appeal.
[5]
The factual background is briefly this. In
November 2014 the deceased was awarded R7 067 736.80 by the RAF
following injuries she
had sustained in a motor vehicle
accident.
The
funds
were
paid
into
the
Trust
account
of
her
attorneys.
On 28
November 2014, the deceased instructed her attorneys to pay over the
nett proceeds
of
R5
600 000
into
the
trust
account
of
her
twin
sister,
Ms
Scholtz.
On
2 December 2014, the funds were transferred to an investment account
managed by Ms Scholtz. It is the amount of R5 600 000 that
formed the
basis of Mr De Kock’s application in the court of first
instance.
[6]
Ms Scholtz denied that she had any duty to account
to Mr De Kock. She nevertheless, gave the following explanation as to
how she
disbursed the funds that the deceased entrusted to her. In
short, she stated that she too, was involved in the same motor
vehicle
accident which gave rise to the deceased’s award from
the RAF. Her injuries were less serious than those of the deceased.
Both their respective claims against the RAF were lodged by their
father, also a practising attorney at the time. Their father
expended
professional time and defrayed their respective medical expenses.
[7]
Ms Scholtz further explained that a mistake
occurred when the RAF processed their claims, because of their almost
similar identity
numbers. The result was that her claim ‘was
effectively lost’ and treated as that of the deceased. In view
of this
the twin
sisters
,
and
their parents
, agreed that
the
deceased’s claim would be pursued and Ms Scholtz’s claim
abandoned. Furthermore, upon payment of the award for the
deceased,
the award would be distributed as
follows: (a) R500 000 thereof to their father as compensation for his
professional services; (b)
the rest to be shared equally between the
twin sisters. Pursuant to this agreement, R500 000 was paid to their
father
and
the
twin
sisters
each
received
R2 550 000. The
deceased
invested
her
R2
550 000
portion into
an investment venture
in which both
she and Ms Scholtz participated, which she managed.
[8]
At the invitation of the
court of first instance, Ms Scholtz explained how the deceased’s
award was expended. She stated that
between
December 2016 and December 2017, and on the instructions of the
deceased, she paid a total amount of R4 144 250 to the
deceased,
or to persons nominated by the deceased. Ms Scholtz stated that each
such payment
was made on the deceased’s specific instructions, and to her
satisfaction. Ms Scholtz emphasised
that she never acted as the deceased’s attorney in relation to
her RAF award.
[9]
Mr De Kock disputed Ms Scholtz’s explanation
as being improbable. In particular, he disputed that the deceased
would have
donated half of her award from the RAF to Ms Scholtz. He
contended that such conduct was irreconcilable with the deceased’s
conduct because she had created a testamentary trust for the benefit
of their minor children shortly upon receipt of the award
from the
RAF. He further argued that Ms Scholtz provided no documentary proof
evidencing the alleged donation although the facts
giving rise to the
deceased’s generosity are all capable of objective
verification. Mr De Kock demanded production of documents
evidencing
the nature of injuries suffered by both the deceased and Ms Scholtz,
the content of their claim forms with the RAF,
the money paid to Ms
Scholtz for her medical costs by the RAF and all other documents
generated in the process of their claims.
[10]
Mr
De
Kock
asserted
that
those
documents
would
confirm
whether
Ms
Scholtz’s injuries were indeed mistakenly
attributed to the deceased. He contended that the evidence would
reveal that Ms
Scholtz’s injuries were minor compared to those
of the deceased and that it was improbable that the deceased would
have agreed
to share her award equally with Ms Scholtz.
[11]
The
court of first instance approached the matter on the basis of Mr De
Kock’s allegation that Ms Scholtz owed the deceased’s
estate R5 600 000, being the RAF payout. The court therefore
proceeded on the footing that, on Mr De Kock’s allegation, Ms
Scholtz was a debtor of the deceased’s estate. Relying on this
Court’s judgment in
ABSA
v Janse van Rensburg
[2]
the
court of first instance concluded that there was no fiduciary
relationship between the deceased’s estate (represented
by Mr
De Kock) and Ms Scholtz as a debtor of the estate. As to the personal
relationship between the sisters, the court was prepared
to accept
that there could have been a fiduciary relationship between them in
relation to the deceased’s monies held in the
investment
account. In this regard, the court accepted Ms Scholtz’s
explanation that she had expended the payments on the
specific
instructions of the deceased, and that the deceased was satisfied
with how the monies were disbursed. Accordingly, the
court dismissed
Mr De Kock’s application.
[12]
The full court took a different view. It held that
the court of first instance erred in its conclusion that Mr De Kock
had failed
to establish a duty on Ms Scholtz to account. According to
the full court, that duty was two-fold. First, because there was
‘statutory
obligation on [Ms Scholtz] to have accounted, as an
attorney into whose trust account an amount of R5 600 000 was
deposited on
behalf of the deceased.’ Second, ‘for the
handling of the amounts in the Absa investment account in her name,
in which
she purportedly assisted the deceased; and the investments
she had made.’
[13]
The full court held that Ms Scholtz’s
explanation as to what happened to the money, was ‘no more than
skeletal . . .’,
and referred to her explanation as an attempt
to ‘circumvent the onus which otherwise rested upon her to
prove her explanation
in a contested debatement process.’
Consequently, the full court upheld the appeal with costs and ordered
Ms Scholtz to provide
a full and proper accounting of the amount of
R5 600 000, supported by documentary evidence.
[14]
In this Court, the parties persisted in their
respective stances adopted in the two lower courts. The issue remains
whether Ms Scholtz
was obliged to account for the R5 600 000. It is
to that issue we turn.
[15]
A
party who claims delivery of a statement and its debatement must
assert their right to receive such an account and the basis for
such
an entitlement – whether through a contract, a fiduciary
relationship or a statutory obligation.
[3]
They
must establish any contractual terms or other circumstances which
have a bearing on the accounting sought and a failure to
render such
an account.
[4]
[16]
In
the present case, Mr De Kock predicated the duty to account on his
allegation that Ms Scholtz stood in a fiduciary relationship
with the
deceased. The nature and basis of a fiduciary relationship was
explained by this Court in
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
[5]
as
follows:
‘
Where
one man stands to another in a position of confidence involving a
duty to protect the interests of that other, he is not allowed
to
make a secret profit at the other’s expense or place himself in
a position where his interests conflict with his duty.
. .There is
only one way by which such transactions can be validated, and that is
by the free consent of the principal following
upon a full disclosure
by the agent . . . Whether a fiduciary relationship is established
will depend upon the circumstances of
each case.’
[17]
The
existence of a fiduciary duty, its nature and extent, can only be
determined after a thorough consideration of the facts.
[6]
Mr De
Kock contends that the mere payment of the funds into Ms Scholtz’s
trust account
qua
attorney,
without more, established a fiduciary relationship between her and
the deceased, and thus an obligation for Ms Scholtz
to account to the
deceased. This contention found favour with the full court. But this
is at odds with this Court’s judgment
in
Joubert
Scholtz Inc v Elandsfontein Beverage Marketing
.
[7]
There,
it was held that there is no general fiduciary duty on an attorney to
account to her or his client merely because of payment
into an
attorney’s trust account. Such a duty arises where there is an
agreement of mandate, and its bounds are determined
with reference to
the terms of the mandate itself. There is no suggestion that there
was such an agreement between the deceased
and Ms Scholtz.
[18]
Furthermore,
the
argument
ignores
the
fact
that
the
money
was
kept
in
Ms
Scholtz’s trust account only for four days. To the extent there
might have been a fiduciary duty and an obligation to account,
she
had fully accounted. This is evidenced by the common cause fact that
on 28 November 2014 she received R5 600 000 into her trust
account
and that the same amount was transferred into the investment account
on 2 December 2014. Thus, the full amount and the
four days during
which it was in her trust account, had been accounted for.
[19]
Once the money was transferred to the investment
account, Ms Scholtz’s mandate as an attorney, and any ancillary
fiduciary
relationship there might have existed, was terminated.
Beyond the attorney-client relationship which existed for a short
while,
there remained a personal relationship between the identical
twin sisters with regard to how R5 600 000 was disbursed after it was
transferred into the investment account. Ms Scholtz, as the
respondent, explained that as per the family agreement,
the
R500 000
was
paid
to
their
father,
and
the
remainder
was
divided equally
between the deceased and her. This, Mr De Kock disputed. He asserted
that it was improbable that the deceased, having
just established a
testamentary trust for the benefit of her children, would donate half
of her award to Ms Scholtz.
[20]
There
was clearly a dispute of fact on the papers. One of the tools
available to a court when faced with disputes of fact is to
apply the
well-known
Plascon-Evans
.
[8]
The
principle is to the effect
that
an applicant who seeks final relief on motion must in the event of
conflict, accept the version set up by the respondent. That
is, the
respondent’s version must be accepted, unless it is, in the
opinion of the court, it is so far-fetched or clearly
untenable that
the court is justified in rejecting it merely on the papers.
[9]
[21]
It is so that a donation is not easily inferred.
However, on the facts of the present case, regard must be had to the
undeniably
strong bond between the identical twin sisters and the
fact that Ms Scholtz had abandoned her own claim against the RAF.
There
is also nothing untenable about the version that R500 000 was
paid to their father for his professional services. On these bases,
Ms Scholtz’s version that the deceased had paid her father R500
000 for his professional services, and made an irrevocable
donation
to her, cannot be described as far-fetched or untenable. In all the
circumstances, on the application of the
Plascon-Evans
principle, Ms Scholtz’s version
should have been accepted.
[22]
One of the bases upon which the full court held
that Ms Scholtz was obliged to account to Mr De Kock is that she
received the awarded
funds into her investment account. Assuming for
present purposes that such a duty arose, there is nothing to gainsay
Ms Scholtz’s
explanation of how the funds were expended. What
gives credence to her explanation is that she would have managed the
funds for
almost four years before her death. The funds were paid
into her investment account in December 2014, and the deceased passed
away
on 28 September 2018.
The bank
statements of the relevant account show that Ms Scholtz operated the
relevant bank account for approximately four years.
[23]
The records reveal that the bulk of the money was
paid to the deceased. This is
a
break-down
of
the
transactions.
R2 550 000
was
received
into
the
account
on
2 December 2014. For the period December 2014 and September 2018, the
investment account earned R1 287 515 as interest. R3 000
000 was paid
to the deceased
in
tranches
of
R1 000 000,
respectively
on
8
December
2016; January
2017, 19 January 2018. The last payment, of R606 735, was made to the
deceased shortly before her passing, on 19 July
2018. The rest of the
payments, totalling R537 515, were made to various people nominated
by, or on the instruction of, the deceased.
In sum, between December
2014 and September 2018, the investment account had credits of R3 837
515 and debits of R4 144 250. This
left a debit balance of R306 735
as at the time of the deceased’s passing, which, ordinarily,
would be a debt against the
deceased estate.
[24]
It is common cause that the twin sisters shared a
warm, close and trusting relationship. There is no suggestion that at
any stage
between the payment of the funds into the investment
account and the deceased’s death, the latter had expressed
dissatisfaction
about how the funds were managed. Similarly, there is
no suggestion that by the time she passed away, the deceased had
considered
that there was any money due to her by Ms Scholtz, or that
there was any accounting outstanding on
Ms
Scholtz’s part.
[25]
It must be emphasised that the funds were under Ms
Scholtz’s control for approximately four years before the
deceased’s
passing. This is sufficiently long enough
for
the
deceased
to
have
demonstrated
her
dissatisfaction,
if
any,
about
Ms Scholtz’s management of her funds. There is no hint of that.
It is also important to bear in mind that the deceased
was a person
with full mental capacity. She was entitled to dispose of her assets
in a manner she deemed fit during her lifetime.
Her children, in
whose interests Mr De Kock purports to act, have no right at law to
question her financial decisions during her
lifetime.
[26]
Accordingly the appeal must succeed. Costs should
follow the result.
[27]
The following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs including costs of
two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and
replaced with the following order: ‘The appeal is dismissed
with costs.’
T MAKGOKA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
N M MBHELE
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants:
R
W F MacWilliam SC (with him A Van Aswegen)
Instructed
by:
Spamer
Triebel Inc., Belville
Symington
& De Kock Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
S P
Rosenberg SC (with him T Tyler)
Instructed
by:
Snijman
& Associates Inc., Cape Town
Honey
Attorneys Inc., Bloemfontein
[1]
An
exception to the general rule that only an executor of an estate has
locus standi in relation to estate assets and transactions
was
recognized. The exception has its genesis in the English decision in
Beningfield
v Baxter
(1886)
12 AC 167
(PC), and accepted into our law in
Gross
& Others v Pentz
[1996] ZASCA 78
;
1996
(4) SA 617
(A) at 628G-H.
[2]
Absa
Bank Bpk v Janse Van Rensburg
[2002]
ZASCA 7
;
2002 (3) SA 701
(SCA) paras 15-16.
[3]
Absa
Bank Bpk v Janse Van Rensburg
[2002]
ZASCA 7
;
2002 (3) SA 701
(SCA) para 15.
[4]
Doyle
and Another v Fleet Motors PE (Pty) Ltd
1971
(3) SA 760
(A) at 762-763.
[5]
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
1921
AD 168
at 177-178.
[6]
Bellairs
v Hodnett and Another
1978
(1) SA 1109
(A) at 1130E-F;
Phillips
v Fieldstone Africa (Pty) Ltd
2004
(3) SA 465
(SCA) para 27;
Gihwala
and Others v Grancy Property Ltd and Others
[2016]
ZASCA 35
;
[2016] 2 All SA 649
(SCA);
2017 (2) SA 337
(SCA) para 53;
National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa obo Nganezi and Others v
Dunlop Mixing and Technical Services (Pty) Limited and
Others
[2019]
ZACC 25
;
2019 (8) BCLR 966
(CC); (2019) 40 ILJ 1957 (CC);
[2019] 9
BLLR 865
(CC);
2019 (5)
SA 354 (CC) para 58.
[7]
Joubert
Scholtz Inc and Others v Elandsfontein Beverage Marketing (Pty) Ltd
[2012]
ZASCA 6
;
[2012] 3 All SA 24
(SCA) paras 93-94.
[8]
Developed
by this Court in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
[9]
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008]
ZASCA 6
;
[2008] 2 All SA 512
(SCA);
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) para 12.
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