Case Law[2024] ZASCA 179South Africa
Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Master of the High Court, Northwest and Others (945/2023; 1081/2023) [2024] ZASCA 179 (19 December 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 – whether the second to seventh respondents were lawfully appointed as trustees to the trust – whether the master of the high court had the power to authorise the second to seventh respondents to act as trustees, if not lawfully appointed – whether the counter-application was vitiated by lack of standing – whether the jurisdiction prerequisites to the amendment of a trust deed, laid down by s 13 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 were complied with.
Judgment
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## Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Master of the High Court, Northwest and Others (945/2023; 1081/2023) [2024] ZASCA 179 (19 December 2024)
Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Master of the High Court, Northwest and Others (945/2023; 1081/2023) [2024] ZASCA 179 (19 December 2024)
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sino date 19 December 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case
no: 945/2023
1081/2023
In the matter between:
GLENCORE OPERATIONS
SOUTH
AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
FIRST
APPELLANT
LETLHONGONOLO OBED
SEGADIKANA
TSHIKANE
SECOND
APPELLANT
TEBOGO RENEILWE
MOTHEO MAMOGALE
THIRD APPELLANT
and
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
NORTHWEST
PROVINCE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
REBONE EUGENE
MOREBODI
SECOND RESPONDENT
PATRICK MOTSAMAI
MOGOTSI
THIRD
RESPONDENT
MOTLALEPULE CHRISTINE
MATHIBEDI
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MACHAKE LUCAS MOSANE
FITH RESPONDENT
DANIEL MAKENA
SIXTH RESPONDENT
NICKY JOSEPH LEBETHE
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
JIM
MATSHO N.O
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
BAKWENA-BA-MOGOPA
TRADITIONAL COUNCIL
NINTH RESPONDENT
LAWRENCE MASHIGO
TENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Glencore
Operations South Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Master of the High
Court, Northwest and Others
(945/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 179
(19 December 2024).
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MOCUMIE, MBATHA and SMITH JJA and KOEN
AJA
Heard:
22 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 19 December
2024.
Summary:
Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 – whether the
second to seventh respondents were lawfully appointed as trustees to
the
trust – whether the master of the high court had the power
to authorise the second to seventh respondents to act as trustees,
if
not lawfully appointed – whether the counter-application was
vitiated by lack of standing – whether the jurisdiction
prerequisites to the amendment of a trust deed, laid down by s 13 of
the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 were complied with.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Northwest Division of the High Court,
Mahikeng
(
per Djadje J
,
sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal succeeds. The second to sixth
respondents, in their personal capacities, and the ninth respondent
(the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa
Traditional Council) are ordered to pay the
costs of the appeal, including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed, jointly
and severally, one or more paying, the others to be
absolved.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and
replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
It is declared that none of the second to seventh respondents is a
trustee of the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Trust (the trust).
(b)
The authorisation issued by the Master to the second to seventh
respondents, authorising them to act as trustees of the trust,
is
declared invalid and is set aside.
(c)
The counter-application is dismissed.
(d)
The second to sixth respondents, in their personal capacities, and
the tenth respondent (the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Traditional Council)
are
ordered to pay the costs of the application and counter-application,
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed,
jointly and
severally, one or more paying the others to be absolved.’
JUDGMENT
Mbatha JA (Dambuza,
Mocumie and Smith JJA and Koen AJA concurring):
[1]
The central issue in this appeal is
whether the trustees of the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Trust, number IT
33/2009 (the trust) were lawfully
appointed. This arises from the
appeal by the first appellant, Glencore Operations South Africa (Pty)
Limited (Glencore) and the
second appellant, Mr Letlhongonolo Obed
Segadikana Tshikane (Mr Tshikane) against the judgment and order of
the Northwest Division
of the High Court, Mahikeng, per Djadje J (the
high court). The high court dismissed their application for an order,
first, declaring
that the second to seventh respondents, namely,
Messrs Rebone Eugene Morebodi, Patrick Motsamai Mogotsi, Motlalepule
Christine
Mothibedi, Machake Lucas Mosane, Daniel Makena and Nicky
Joseph Lethabe (the respondents, otherwise they will be referred to
individually
by their surnames) were not trustees of the trust.
[2]
Second, the high court dismissed the
appellants’ application to review and set aside the appointment
of the respondents as
trustees as well as the authorisation issued by
the first respondent, the Master of the High Court Northwest Province
(the Master)
authorising the respondents to act as trustees.
Alongside the dismissal of the appellants’ application, the
high court granted
the orders sought in the counter-application, that
the trust deed be amended in line with the proposed amendments set
out in annexure
REM41 to the respondents’ answering affidavit.
In addition, Glencore was ordered to co-operate with the respondents
in the
execution of their duties as trustees, and to provide certain
documents relating to the trust to the respondents.
[3]
Pursuant to a joinder
application brought by itself, the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Traditional
Council (the traditional council), and its
secretary, Mr Lawrence
Mashigo, were joined as tenth and eleventh respondents respectively
in the application for leave to appeal
before the high court. In this
appeal, they have aligned themselves with the views of the
respondents.
Dissatisfied with
the outcome of the application and counter-application, the
appellants sought and were granted leave by the high
court to appeal
to this Court against the judgment of the high court.
[4]
The
first respondent, the Master; the eighth respondent, Kgosi Tebogo
Mamogale (the Kgosi); and the ninth respondent, Mr Jim
Matsho (the
administrator),
[1]
though cited,
did not enter the fray in the high court. The appeal is opposed by
the respondents, the traditional council and its
secretary. However,
after the delivery of the judgment the Kgosi obtained leave to appeal
to this Court against that judgment.
In the high court and before
this Court he elected to align himself with the grounds of appeal
raised by Glencore and Mr Tshikane
(the appellants).
[5]
In 2009 Glencore and
the
Bakwena-ba-Mogopa
community (the community) entered into a suite of agreements, in
terms of which the community acquired a 52 percent
undivided share in
the Rhovan Mining right. This entitled the community to a 26 percent
participation interest in the pooled resources
of the
Rhovan Mine. As per agreement between
the parties, a trust was established and registered on 4 August 2009.
The sole and
exclusive object and purpose of the Trust, as set out in clause 5 of
the Trust Deed is as follows: (a) to enter into
the suite of
agreement that will entitle it to participate in the Pooling and
Sharing Venture constituted in terms of the
Notarial Pooling
and Sharing Agreement; (b) to accept donations from the community in
terms of the Deed of Donation; (c) that the
trustees should strive to
attain the object and purpose for which the Trust was established and
(d) that the Trust is exclusively
and unconditionally a special
purpose vehicle which will be utilised only for the aforementioned
objects and purpose.
[6]
The non-implementation of the trust
deeds’ provisions gave rise to the dispute which served before
the high court. The failure
to appoint trustees in terms of the deed
of trust resulted in governance deficiencies which ultimately led to
the removal of the
Kgosi as a trustee. On 16 November 2018 the Master
removed the Kgosi from his
fiduciary
position and authorised the respondents to continue to act as
trustees.
[7]
The
appellants challenged the appointment of the respondents as trustees
before the high court, citing the contended illegality
and invalidity
of their appointment. In addition, the appellants contended that the
authorisation granted by the Master in terms
of s 6(1) of the Trust
Property Control Act 57 of 1988 (the Act) to the respondents is
invalid. In their answer to the application,
the respondents asserted
their valid appointment by the Traditional Council. They averred that
Glencore had acquiesced in their
lawful appointment and that their
appointment substantially complied with the provisions of the trust
deed. A counter-application
was filed by the respondents, seeking
Glencore’s co-operation, provision of specified documents and
amendment of the trust
deed. The high court dismissed the appellants’
application and granted the counter-application.
[8]
The trust deed, in clause 8.4, provides
that the Kgosi, as the traditional leader of the community, is
designated to be the founder
and the first trustee of the trust. It
provides that the Kgosi, or his successor in title shall, for the
duration of the trust,
remain a trustee and founder. The trust deed
further provides for the appointment of additional trustees within a
period of eight
months from the date of registration of the trust.
Two independent trustees are to be appointed by the Kgosi, with the
approval
of the Traditional Council (one of whom is to be an attorney
and the other is to be an accountant). Two further trustees are to
be
appointed by the Traditional Council, one trustee is to be appointed
by the Council of Headmen, and the three wards (namely,
the Bethanie,
Jericho and Hebron communities) are to each appoint a trustee.
[9]
It is common cause that since the
establishment of the trust, no advancements regarding the appointment
of trustees had been made
due to internal conflict. The respondents
were identified for appointment by a faction in the traditional
council, which appointment
lacked the endorsement of the Kgosi and
other community members in terms of clauses 8.4.2.1 and 8.4.2.2 of
the trust deed. This
put into question the legitimacy of both their
appointment and the authorisation by the Master.
[10]
Given the
authorisation for the respondents to continue to act as trustees, it
must be determined whether the Master was empowered
by s 6(1) to do
so. Section 6(1) provides as follows:
‘
Any
person whose appointment as trustee in terms of a trust instrument,
section 7 or a court order comes into force after the commencement
of
this Act,
shall
act in that capacity only if authorized thereto in writing by the
Master.’
(Emphasis
added.)
The
authorisation therein is only triggered by an appointment as per the
trust deed, s 7 of the Act, or the court. Section 6(1)
does not
empower the Master to authorise a trustee to act outside those three
jurisdictional factors. Consequently, the Master
could not authorise
the purported trustees who had not been validly appointed in terms of
the law to act as trustees. The high
court’s recognition of
their unlawful appointment outside the perimeters of the trust deed
was fundamentally irregular and
flawed.
[11]
In
considering the validity of the appointment of trustees, the first
port of call is to consider the nature of the office of a
trustee.
The office of a trustee is regulated by the trust instrument. In
Metequity
Limited and Another v NWN Properties Ltd and Others,
[2]
the court defined a trustee as ‘any person who acts as trustee
by virtue of an authorisation under s 6. That section envisages
in s
6(1) that the Master’s authorisation to act as a trustee is
granted to persons appointed as trustees in a trust instrument,
by
the Master or the court …. The Trust Property Control Act,
however,
as
a regulatory and control measure
provides in s 6 that such existing trustee shall not act without the
authorisation of the Master’.
[12]
The most trenchant criticism, from which
there is no escape for the respondents, is that the traditional
council, whether properly
constituted or not, was only entitled to
appoint two trustees and not six. The Council of Headmen and the
three wards were, by
virtue of the trustees’ appointments
deprived of representation in the trust. In addition, the two
independent trustees’
positions were also not filled. The high
court, in condoning their irregular authorisation by the Master,
failed to appreciate
that the Master acted outside his powers and
that the office of trusteeship must legally exist prior to the
issuing of the letters
of authority. The high court also failed to
recognise that the Kgosi or his successor in title were to be
trustees for the trust’s
duration, as it simply accepted the
Kgosi’s removal, which was initiated by the respondents, a
faction in the traditional
council.
[13]
The
importance of a properly constituted board of trustees was emphasised
in
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Parker and Others
,
[3]
(Parker)
where
this Court held that the trust could not be bound, while there were
fewer trustees than provided in the trust deed. Most significantly,
in the same matter this Court stated that ‘
who
the trustees are, their number, how they are appointed and under what
circumstances they have power to bind the trust estate
are matters
defined in the trust deed, which is the trust’s constitutive
charter. Outside of its provisions the trust estate
cannot be bound
’.
[4]
(Emphasis added.)
It
therefore follows, as held in
Parker
,
that ‘… the Master’s authorisation to act as
trustee is granted to persons appointed as trustees in the trust
instrument, by the Master or by the Court’.
[5]
[14]
The
high court failed to recognise the invalidity of the authority issued
by the Master. Its finding that ‘it cannot be said
that there
is irreparable harm to be suffered by the community being stuck with
unlawfully appointed trustees’, is indicative
of its failure to
appreciate the unlawfulness of the respondents’ appointment as
trustees. Once the high court had concluded
that the respondent’s
appointment was unlawful, it should have dismissed the
counter-application and upheld the application.
There is no room for
the exercise of a discretion by the high court in terms of s 6(1).
The failure to
appoint the trustees in terms of the trust deed should have been
dispositive of the matter.
[15]
Moreover,
the high court erred in finding that ‘the Master in appointing
the respondents acted in the interest of beneficiaries
of the trust,
being the community of Bakwena-ba-Mogopa’. That finding has no
foundation in law and is not the yardstick for
the appointment of a
trustee outside the realm of s 6(1). In
Gowar
and Another v Gowar and Others
[6]
(
Gowar
),
this Court held that for a person to have
locus
standi
to bring an application for an amendment of the trust deed, he or she
has to show sufficient interest in the trust property. The
respondents failed to do so. Referring to Cameron
et
al
,
[7]
this
Court in
Gowar
also held that ‘the provisions of s 13 have both subjective and
objective criteria. The former relate to the founder’s
lack of
foresight or contemplation and the latter relate to the prejudice to
the trust object, beneficiaries or public interest’.
This Court
in
Gowar
ruled that these criteria must be satisfied before the court can
intervene.
[16]
Following
upon my determination that the respondents’ appointment was
invalid, the orders granted in the counter-application
by the high
court should follow suit. First, the counter-application lacked the
necessary evidentiary support. Second, the finding
by the high court,
purporting to amend the trust deed following the unlawful appointment
of the respondents as trustees, was fundamentally
irregular and
flawed. It stands to be set aside. Third, the respondents had no
locus
standi
to seek the amendment of the trust deed as such amendments are
regulated by s 13 of the Act. In terms of that section amendments
may
only be sought by lawfully appointed trustees or persons with
sufficient interest in the trust property.
[8]
The
respondents did not make any allegations to establish their interest
in the trust property, and justifying the relief sought.
Fourth, the
respondents were not competent to hold the office of trustee as Mr
Morebodi, the second respondent had been disqualified
from holding
the office of trustee in terms of a high court judgment, a factor
which was ignored by the high court. And, the seventh
respondent had
also since passed away. Last, the credentials of the other
respondents remained shrouded in secrecy despite the
call by the
appellants that they be disclosed.
[17]
The high court
provided no proper reasoning to justify the orders it made. It merely
concluded that the ‘amendment of the
trust deed sought by the
respondents will have the effect of making the trust practical and
for the benefit of the beneficiaries’.
In fact, the proposed
amendments were to the detriment of the community as they sought to
endow the illegally appointed respondents
(who represented a faction
in the council) with all the powers.
[18]
Briefly, I set out
some of the proposed amendments which were set out in annexure REM
41. They are as follows: (a) the removal of
the Kgosi or his
legitimate successor, as first trustee, in the definition of Senior
Traditional Leader; (b) the substitution of
a definition of trustees,
by the removal of any natural or juristic person who may be appointed
to hold office as trustee, with
any natural person; (c) the extension
of the term of office from 3 to 5 years; (d) the removal of the
requirement to appoint two
independent professionals as trustees to
the Trust Board; (e) the removal of the right of the Council of
Headmen to nominate a
trustee and permitting the Traditional Council
to appoint four trustees instead of two; (f) the removal of the right
of the three
wards to each nominate a trustee; (g) the deletion of
the requirement that the nominated trustee be people who are ‘fit
and
proper to be the trustees as shall be determined by the Master’;
and (h) that the council would be empowered to nominate and
remove
all trustees, to appoint and authorise the remuneration of
non-independent advisors or consultants.
[19]
The purported
amendments granted by the high court had far reaching consequences,
as they prioritised the self-interest of the putative
trustees,
amongst other things, by removing the leader of the community, the
Kgosi and his successor in title as the first trustee
in the
definition of the Senior Traditional Leader. Noticeably, the
respondents also sought to extend the term of office of trustees
from
3 years to 5 years, whilst insulating the would-be trustees against
scrutiny by seeking the removal of the attorney and an
accountant as
independent trustees, and by further removing from the trust deed
‘the fit and proper person’ criteria
for the appointment
of trustees.
[20]
The
respondents’ suggestion that their appointment substantially
complied with the terms of the trust deed, and that the traditional
council has veto powers in relation to the nomination of trustees, is
misplaced. Absent the jurisdictional criteria required in
terms of s
6(1) of the Act, it was not legally competent for the high court to
authorise the exercise of statutory powers conferred
on it by s
13.
[9]
[21]
Turning to a related
issue, namely, that Glencore acquiesced in the appointment of second
to seventh respondents as trustees, I
emphasise the following
established legal principles. Trustees must be appointed in terms of
the trust deed. They must accept
their appointment and they
must be authorised by the Master to act as trustees. Trustees act in
a fiduciary capacity, hence they
must be lawfully appointed. Even if
Glencore acquiesced in the respondent’s unlawful appointment
such acquiescence cannot
make what is unlawful, lawful. Trustees
exercise control over trust assets, with powers to dispose of those
assets, hence the stringent
requirements for their appointment. The
finding by the high court in this regard, can therefore not stand.
[22]
In the result, I make
the following order:
1
The appeal succeeds. The second to sixth
respondents, in their personal capacities, and the ninth respondent
(the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa
Traditional Council) are ordered to pay the
costs of the appeal, including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed, jointly
and severally, one or more paying, the others to be
absolved.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and
replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
It is declared that none of the second to seventh respondents is a
trustee of the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Trust (the trust).
(b)
The authorisation issued by the Master to the second to seventh
respondents, authorising them to act as trustees of the trust,
is
declared invalid and is set aside.
(c)
The counter-application is dismissed.
(d)
The second to sixth respondents, in their personal capacities, and
the tenth respondent (the Bakwena-ba-Mogopa Traditional Council)
are
ordered to pay the costs of the application and counter-application,
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed,
jointly and
severally, one or more paying the others to be absolved.’
Y
T MBATHA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the first and
second appellants:
S Stein SC with I
Goodman SC,
Instructed by:
Werkmans Attorneys,
Johannesburg
Lovius
Block, Bloemfontein
For
the third appellant:
C Z
Muza with SD Mbeki
Instructed by:
Kgomo
Attorneys Inc, Mahikeng
Moroka
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the second – seventh respondents:
M
Mashele
Instructed
by:
Sifumba
Attorneys, Mahikeng
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the tenth and eleventh respondents:
L
Montsho-Moloisane SC
Instructed
by:
Lebala
Moloi Attorneys Inc, Pretoria
M M
Hattingh Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
Appointed
in terms of the Northwest Traditional Leadership and Governance Act
2 of 2005.
[2]
Metequity
Limited and Another v NWN Properties Ltd and Others
1998 (2) SA 554
(T) at 557G-H.
[3]
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Parker and Others
[2004] 4 All SA 261
(SCA);
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) (
Parker
).
[4]
Ibid
para 10.
[5]
Parker
at 557.
[6]
Gowar
and Another v Gowar and Others
[2016] ZASCA 101
;
[2016] 3 All SA 382
(SCA);
2016 (5) SA 225
(SCA)
paras 34-35.
[7]
E
Cameron
et al,
South
African Law of Trust
,
2002 at 517.
[8]
S
13 of the Act, which governs amendments to trust deed provides that
‘if a trust instrument contains any provision which
brings
about consequences which in the opinion of the court the founder of
a trust did not contemplate or foresee and which –
(a)
hampers the achievement of the objects of the founder, or
(b)
prejudices the interests of the beneficiaries or,
(c)
is in conflict with the public interest,
the court may, on
application of the trustee or any person who in the opinion of the
court has a sufficient interest in the trust
property, delete or
vary such provision or make in respect thereof any order which such
court deems just, including an order
whereby particular trust
property is substituted for particular other property, or an order
terminating the trust.’.
[9]
Ibid para 35.
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