Case Law[2024] ZASCA 174South Africa
Sabdia N.O and Another v Soma and Another (845/2023) [2024] ZASCA 174; 2025 (4) SA 450 (SCA) (12 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Administration of deceased estate – s 51(1)(a) of Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 – freedom of testation – review in terms of rule 48 of the Uniform Rules of Court – whether executor is entitled to professional fees.
Judgment
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## Sabdia N.O and Another v Soma and Another (845/2023) [2024] ZASCA 174; 2025 (4) SA 450 (SCA) (12 December 2024)
Sabdia N.O and Another v Soma and Another (845/2023) [2024] ZASCA 174; 2025 (4) SA 450 (SCA) (12 December 2024)
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sino date 12 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
WILLS AND ESTATES – Executor
–
Professional fees –
Administration of deceased estate
– Whether executor is entitled to professional fees –
Provisions of will –
Remuneration clause – Executors
permitted to charge professional fees for services rendered –
Sanctioned by testator
in will – Intended executors to be
recompensed for any professional and legal services actually
rendered – Appeal
succeeds – Taxing master’s
allocator set aside –
Administration of Estates Act 66 of
1965
,
s 51(1)(a).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 845/2023
In the matter between:
SHIRAZ
SABDIA N O
FIRST
APPELLANT
(the joint executor of
the estate of the
late
Mahamed Faruk Sabdia)
RIAZ
SABDIA N
O
SECOND
APPELLANT
(the joint executor of
the estate of the
late Mahamed Faruk
Sabdia)
and
ANIEL KANJEE
SOMA
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE TAXING MASTER OF
THE
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE
HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Sabdia N O and
Another v Soma and Another
(845/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 174
(12 December 2024).
Coram:
MBATHA, HUGHES, KEIGHTLEY and UNTERHALTER JJA and
COPPIN AJA
Heard:
05 November 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 12 December
2024
Summary:
Administration of deceased estate –
s 51(1)
(a)
of
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
– freedom of
testation – review in terms of rule 48 of the Uniform Rules of
Court – whether executor is entitled
to professional fees.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (N V Khumalo J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel,
where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
1
The decision and ruling of the Taxing Master to disallow the entire
fee component of the bill of costs presented by
the applicants for
taxation under case number 75876/2013 is set aside.
2
The allocator of the Taxing Master is set aside.
3
The taxation of the bill of costs is referred to the Taxing Master.
The Taxing Master is directed to re-enrol
the taxation after notice
to the parties and to proceed to tax the bill of costs on a scale as
between attorney and client.
4
The applicant is ordered to pay the fourth and fifth respondents’
costs in the high court.’
JUDGMENT
Mbatha
JA (Hughes, Keightley and Unterhalter JJA and Coppin AJA concurring):
[1]
This matter concerns the following cardinal
questions of law. First, whether the executor, who is an attorney and
acts in his professional
capacity, on behalf of the deceased estate
in a lawsuit, was not entitled to remuneration as an attorney,
notwithstanding the express
provisions of the Last Will and Testament
(the Will). Second, whether the decision to disallow the payment of
such fees falls within
the discretion of a Taxing Master.
[2]
In 2006, the late Dr Mahamed Faruk Sabdia (Dr
Sabdia) instituted review proceedings against Mr Aniel Kanjee Soma
(Mr Soma) in the
Land Claims Court, relating to an immovable property
in Marabastad, Pretoria. Dr Sabdia died on 5 November 2013,
prior to
the final adjudication of the review proceedings. His sons,
Messrs
Riaz
and Shiraz Sabdia were appointed as executors of Dr Sabdia’s
estate (the executors). They were subsequently substituted
as
litigants in the Land Claims Court matter.
[3]
On 13 December 2013, Mr Soma brought an
eviction application against the estate of Dr Sabdia, the heirs and
three tenants. The eviction
application was successfully opposed by
the executors, represented by the attorneys Mothle Jooma Sabdia
Incorporated (MJS). The
court dismissed the application with costs on
a punitive scale (as between attorney and client).
[4]
On
19 September 2019, MJS set down the bill of costs for taxation before
the Taxing Master of the High Court (the Taxing Master).
The Taxing
Master upheld the objection by Mr Soma that the estate was not
entitled to recover the costs awarded by the court, save
for the
out-of-pocket expenses. The Taxing Master ruled that Mr Shiraz
Sabdia, who was also an attorney practicing at MJS, although
he acted
in his professional capacity on behalf of the estate in the lawsuit,
was not entitled to remuneration as an attorney,
notwithstanding his
co-executor approval. The finding was in line with the decision in
Estate
Fawcus v Van Boeschoten and Lorentz
(
Fawcus
)
.
[1]
In addition, the Taxing Master found that the executor’s
remuneration covered all the work done on behalf of the estate,
and
that neither Mr Shiraz Sabdia nor MJS was entitled to recover legal
costs for work done in their professional capacity. He
found support
for this conclusion in the judgments of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria,
Nedbank
Limited v Gordon N.O and Others
(
Nedbank
)
[2]
and
Die
Meester v Meyer en Andere
(
Meester
).
[3]
As a result, the Taxing Master disallowed the fees in the amount of
R465 265.
[5]
Aggrieved by the decision of the Taxing Master,
the executors instituted review proceedings, challenging the decision
of the Taxing
Master. The Taxing Master filed a report in terms of
rule 48 of the Uniform Rules of Court (the rules), in which he sought
the
dismissal of the review with costs. Mr Soma sought the same
relief.
[6]
The review application served before the high
court (per N V Khumalo J). On 9 December 2022, the high court
dismissed the application
with costs. Dissatisfied with the outcome
of the application, the executors sought leave to appeal the whole
judgment and order
of the high court. On 15 May 2023, the high court
dismissed the application, with costs. Undaunted, the executors
petitioned this
Court for leave to appeal. The appeal served before
us with the leave of this Court.
[7]
It is against this common-cause background that
I have to consider the following interconnected issues. First,
whether the high
court was correct in finding in favour of the Taxing
Master. The high court did so on the basis that in terms of s
51(1)
(b)
of
the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 (the Estates Act) the
executors were only entitled to their executor’s remuneration
and thus were not entitled to the punitive costs awarded in their
favour. The second issue is whether the high court was correct
in
finding that this was so irrespective of the provisions of the Will.
[8]
The high court in arriving at its decision
placed significant reliance on
Fawcus.
T
he
principles established in
Fawcus
were followed in
Meester
and in
Nedbank
.
In
Fawcus
,
the court ruled that an executor who is also an attorney and performs
legal services in a professional capacity for the estate
is not
eligible to receive compensation for those services, notwithstanding
his co-executor’s approval.
[9]
In
Meester
,
that court determined the interpretation of the term ‘remuneration’
as set out in s 51(1) of the Estates Act. It followed
the dictum in
Harris
v Fisher N.O.
(
Harris
),
[4]
where the court held that ‘[e]xecutors or administrators will
not be permitted, under any circumstances, to derive a personal
benefit from the manner in which they transact the business or manage
the assets of the estate’.
[5]
These decisions affirmed the principle that it is generally
considered a conflict of interest for an executor, who is also an
attorney, to act in his professional capacity for the estate and
claim professional fees in addition to the fees due to him as an
executor. In accordance with the
fiduciary
nature
of the executor’s responsibilities, if he were to act in his
professional capacity, he would only be entitled to re-imbursement
for out-of-pocket expenses incurred. His professional work as an
attorney is remunerated by way of the fees to which he is entitled
as
an executor.
[10]
Before
this Court, the executors submitted that their case was
distinguishable from the judgments relied upon by the high court.
The
distinction lay in the fact that Dr Sabdia had made provision in his
Will for the payment of the executors’ professional
fees. The
executors maintained that, consequently, there was no possible
conflict of interest in this case. They submitted that
this aligns
with the exception established in
Edmeades,
De Kock & Orffer v Die Meester
(
Edmeades
),
[6]
where the court quoted with approval the following from
Christophers
v White
[1847] EngR 768
;
50
E.R. 683
(footnotes omitted) ‘. . .[a] trustee is not allowed
to act as his own solicitor and then charge his
cestui
que
trust
with the amount of his professional fees.
The
rule admits of exception when the testator or creator of the trust
expressly authorises the trustee to retain his professional
costs,
shewing thereby, that he would rather run the risk of abuse, by
uniting the two characters, and pay the solicitor his costs,
than
lose his services as trustee
’
.
[7]
(Emphasis added.)
[11]
The executors asserted that the entitlement to
remuneration is supported not only by the terms of the Will but also
by the provisions
of s 51(1)
(a)
of the Estates Act, which permits the testator to determine the
executor’s remuneration. Furthermore, they posited that the
context and purpose of clause 4 of the Will (the remuneration clause)
should be the determining factors in its interpretation.
Further,
that this purpose and context is to be found in clause 5.3 of the
Will, which should be read with the remuneration clause.
[12]
The remuneration clause reads as follows:
‘
I
hereby direct that my Executors shall be entitled to charge and shall
be paid all usual professional fees and other fees and charges
from
business transacted, time spent and acts done by them or their
associates in connection with the administration of my estate.’
And
clause 5.3 reads as follows:
‘
I
direct my Executors to do everything necessary to retain possession
of the property for the benefit of my wife or other beneficiaries
(in
the event of my wife predeceasing me or in the event of our
simultaneous death), until such time as the dispute in relation
to
the title of the property is resolved at the Land Claims Court.
In
this regard, it is my wish that my Executors and/or my wife and/or my
other beneficiaries as the case may be, assume my position
as the
Applicant in the matter before the Land Claims Court or in any other
proceedings relating to the property, upon my death.’
The
inescapable conclusion to be drawn from these provisions of the Will
is that the executors were permitted to charge professional
fees for
services rendered. This was sanctioned by Dr Sabdia in his Will, even
though they were also acting in their fiduciary
capacity as
executors.
[13]
The
principles of interpretation were settled in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(
Endumeni
).
[8]
Endumeni
reiterated
that the process of interpretation is a unitary and objective
exercise that pays due regard to the text, context and
purpose of the
document or instrument being interpreted.
[9]
Equally trite, is the general principle of statutory interpretation
that the words used in the document should be understood in
their
normal grammatical sense, unless this would lead to absurdity. In
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
,
[10]
this Court cautioned ‘that the triad of text, context and
purpose should not be used in a mechanical fashion’.
[11]
In that regard, I will consider the text in the Will ‘in the
light of all relevant and admissible context, including the
circumstances in which the document came into being’.
[12]
[14]
Upon applying the aforementioned principles, I
find that the language utilised in the remuneration clause is
characterised by its
clarity and directness. The direction provided
is lucid and unequivocal, as it states that the ‘[e]xecutors
shall be entitled
to charge and shall be paid all usual professional
fees and other fees and charges from business transacted’. The
clause
explicitly grants the executors the authority to charge for
professional fees. In addition, it specifies that they have the right
to charge for time spent and actions taken by them or their
associates in connection with the administration of the estate.
[15]
It is clear that the remuneration clause
pertains to fees levied based on the duration of the professional
services rendered. In
other words, it is time based. Conversely, the
statutory rate for executors is a fixed percentage rate, regardless
of the time
spent or the nature and amount of work performed by them.
It is not time based, but performance based. This demonstrates that
Dr Sabdia
intended his executors to be recompensed for any
professional, and hence legal, services actually rendered by them.
[16]
This conclusion is underscored by the term
‘associates’ in the remuneration clause. Executors do not
usually have ‘associates’,
although they can exercise
their powers through an agent in the administration of the estate.
However, Dr Sabdia knew that one
of his sons was an attorney, whose
associates had already provided litigation services to him in the
Land Claims Court matter.
[17]
Clause 5.3 expressly directs the executors to
do everything necessary, until such time as the dispute in relation
to the title of
the property is resolved in the Land Claims Court. It
explicitly directs that the executors or wife or beneficiaries should
assume
Dr Sabdia’s position as an applicant in the pending Land
Claims Court matter. The purpose of clause 5.3 was clearly to mandate
the executors diligently to pursue legal proceedings in the Land
Claims Court until a final resolution was reached. This is an
important indicator that Dr Sabdia’s intention was that the
executors would be entitled to recoup their professional fees
for the
work performed in this regard by the associates in the legal firm.
[18]
Clause 5.3 further authorised the executors to
take action or defend any ancillary proceedings pertaining to the
property. It specifically
authorised the executors to seek recourse
in the courts of law. In this regard, the high court respectfully
overlooked clause 5.3.
It failed to ascertain the primary objective
of clause 5.3. This clause effectively illustrates the intention of
the testator and
the primary objective of the remuneration clause. In
order to fulfil his directions, the testator directed that the
attorneys even
though Mr Shiraz Sabdia is an executor, should be
compensated for their professional services.
[19]
In the context of the review
application in the Land Claims Court, it is important to note that Dr
Sabdia had consistently been
represented by MJS. It is evident from
the remuneration clause and clause 5.3 that Dr Sabdia desired the
continued legal representation
of MJS in the Land Claims Court
litigation, even after his demise.
[20]
Section 51(1) of the Estates
Act regulates the payment of an executor’s remuneration.
Section 51(1) reads as follows:
‘
Every
executor (including an executor liquidating and distributing an
estate under subsection (4) of section
thirty-four
)
shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (3) and (4), be
entitled to receive out of the assets of the estate-
(a)
such remuneration as may
have been fixed by the deceased by [W]ill; or
(b)
if
no such remuneration has been fixed, a remuneration which shall be
assessed according to a prescribed tariff and shall be taxed
by the
Master.’
[21]
Section 51(1)
(a)
expressly makes provision for the payment of
remuneration, as may have been fixed by the deceased in his Will. It
negates the conclusion
reached by the high court that such
remuneration is
ultra vires
the settled principles,
contra
bono mores
and in conflict with the fiduciary duties of an
executor. The high court unfortunately did not construe s 51(1)
correctly. It ought
to have recognised that there are two distinct
legislative frameworks in s 51(1) that govern the payment of an
executor’s
remuneration. Section 51(1) permits a testator to
determine remuneration of an executor, including the remuneration
that may be
earned by an executor who renders professional services
to the estate.
[22]
In
Fawcus
,
in highlighting the inherent nature of the duties of the executor,
the court held that even if the estate was successful in litigation,
costs awarded against the other party cannot be recovered by the
legal representative except for out-of-pocket expenses.
[13]
It
is unfortunate that the high court rigidly applied the principle in
Fawcus
.
It is unnecessary to decide upon the ambit of the principle
enunciated in
Fawcus
because
s 51(1
)(a)
of
the Estates Act determines the issue before us. Consequently,
Fawcus
does
not find application in this matter as Dr Sabdia had expressly
determined the renumeration of the executors in his Will.
[14]
One
of those exceptions is where the Will authorises the payment of such
fees in terms of s 51(1)
(a)
of
the Estates Act.
[23]
In conclusion, I find that the legislative scheme clearly envisages
two fee payment regimes, namely, the
one determined by the testator
or the one prescribed by the statute. The remuneration clause and
clause 5.3 of the Will sanctioned
the payment of professional fees
due to the executors and MJS.
[24]
The question whether the decision to disallow the payment of the fees
falls within the discretion of the
Taxing Master, raises a very
important issue. Though this issue was extensively dealt with in the
judgment of the high court, it
was not fully ventilated before us.
And given the conclusion to which I have come as to the primacy of
clause 5.3 of the Will in
determining the renumeration of the
executors, it is not necessary to deal with this aspect of the
appeal.
[25]
In the result, I make the following order:
1
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel,
where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
1
The decision and ruling of the Taxing Master to disallow the entire
fee component of the bill of costs presented by
the applicants for
taxation under case number 75876/2013 is set aside.
2
The allocator of the Taxing Master is set aside.
3
The taxation of the bill of costs is referred to the Taxing Master.
The Taxing Master is directed to re-enrol
the taxation after notice
to the parties and to proceed to tax the bill of costs on a scale as
between attorney and client.
4
The applicant is ordered to pay the fourth and fifth respondents’
costs in the high court.’
Y
T MBATHA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
A
T Lamey and C van Schalkwyk
Instructed
by:
Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Incorporated, Pretoria
Matsepes
Inc., Bloemfontein.
For
the respondents:
C
A Da Silva SC
Instructed
by:
LLM
Hurter Attorneys, Pretoria
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Estate
Fawcus v Van Boeschoten and Lorentz
1934
TPD 94.
[2]
Nedbank
Limited v Gordon N.O and Others
[2019]
ZAGPPHC 460 para 18.
[3]
Die Meester v Meyer
en Andere
1975
(2) SA 1
(T) at 13A-B.
[4]
Harris
v Fisher N.O.
1960 (4) SA
855 (A).
[5]
Ibid at 862E.
[6]
Edmeades,
De Kock & Orffer v Die Meester
1975
(3) SA 109 (O).
[7]
Ibid
at 114H-115.
[8]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA).
[9]
Ibid paras 18 and 19.
[10]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA).
[11]
Ibid para 25.
[12]
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013]
ZASCA 176
;
[2014] 1 All SA 517
(SCA);
2014 (2) SA 494
(SCA) para 12.
[13]
Estate
Fawcus v Van Boeschoten and Lorentz
1934
TPD 94
at 96.
[14]
Ibid at 98.
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