Case Law[2023] ZASCA 36South Africa
Thomas and Another v Thomas (1223/2021) [2023] ZASCA 36; 2023 (4) SA 107 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Insolvency law – Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 – sequestration of insolvent estate – nature of a right, title and interest in an action (right of action) – incorporeal right – personal right – right formed part of an insolvent estate – trustees abandoned/waived right of action – right of action extinguished.
Judgment
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## Thomas and Another v Thomas (1223/2021) [2023] ZASCA 36; 2023 (4) SA 107 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
Thomas and Another v Thomas (1223/2021) [2023] ZASCA 36; 2023 (4) SA 107 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
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sino date 31 March 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 1223/2021
In the matter between:
JAMES WILLIAM
THOMAS FIRST
APPELLANT
MIDDELPLAAS-SUID
LANDGOED (EDMS) BPK SECOND
APPELLANT
and
BAREND JOHANNES THOMAS
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Thomas and
Another v Thomas
(1223/2021)
[2023]
ZASCA 36
(31 March 2023)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, MOCUMIE, NICHOLLS,
MOTHLE and MATOJANE JJA
Heard:
24 February 2023
Delivered:
31 March 2023
Summary:
Insolvency law –
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
– sequestration of insolvent estate –
nature of a right, title and interest in an action (right of action)
–
incorporeal right – personal right – right
formed part of an insolvent estate – trustees abandoned/waived
right of action – right of action extinguished.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Northern Cape Division of
the High Court, Kimberley (Mamosebo J sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Mocumie JA (Van Der
Merwe, Nicholls, Mothle and Matojane JJA concurring):
[1]
It is an unfortunate, albeit it not uncommon occurrence in the
farming community,
to find sibling rivalry brewing and escalating
over decades, to the point that it reaches this Court at exorbitant
litigation costs
and with familial ties irretrievably broken down, as
this appeal reveals.
[2]
Mr James William Thomas (the first appellant) and Mr Barend Johannes
Thomas (the respondent)
are brothers who owned farms adjacent to each
other. The respondent owned two farms. Around 1999, the respondent
encountered financial
difficulties and consequently ended up selling
his two farms to settle his debts. On 13 March 2000, Middelplaas-Suid
Landgoed (Edms)
Bpk (the second appellant), which is co-owned by the
first appellant and his son, bought one of the respondent’s
farms, namely
Middelplaats-South, No. 104 (Middelplaats). However,
after the signing of the purchase agreement, dispute after dispute
arose between
the first appellant and the respondent with the
inevitable result of them suing each other in various actions,
including the one
which is central to the appeal.
[3]
Following the sale of Middelplaats, the respondent refused to vacate
its premises.
The appellants sought an order to evict the respondent
and succeeded with costs. The respondent failed to pay the costs in
relation
to the eviction judgment. Consequently, the appellants
sought an order for his sequestration from the Northern Cape Division
of
the High Court, Kimberley (the high court).
[4]
As I have indicated, various disputes arose between the two brothers,
leading to litigation.
For present purposes it is only necessary to
refer to the action that the respondent instituted against the
appellants in the high
court during 2003. In that action, the
respondent initially claimed the delivery of certain livestock,
alternatively payment of
the alleged value thereof in the amount of
R663 111, as well as damages in the amount of R800 000.The
appellants defended
the action and it was enrolled for trial on 23
November 2004. At the commencement of the hearing, the respondent
amended his particulars
of claim. As a result, his claim was limited
to the delivery of certain livestock, alternatively payment of the
alleged value thereof
in the amount of R327 400. This led to a
postponement of the action.
[5]
Whilst this action was pending, the estate of the respondent was
sequestrated upon
the application of the first appellant. The final
sequestration order was granted on 17 March 2006. Only the first
appellant proved
a claim in the estate in the amount of R97 483.05
(based on a judgment debt). He, however, had to pay a contribution in
the
amount of R42 457.89. On 28 May 2010, the respondent was
rehabilitated.
[6]
Eight years later, on 15 November 2018, the respondent brought an
application before
the high court seeking relief in the following
terms:
‘
1.1
That it be declared that:
1.1.1
the applicant’s right, title and
interest in the action that the (as plaintiff) had instituted against
the James William Thomas
(as first defendant) and Middel-Plaas Suid
Landgoed (Pty) Ltd (as second defendant) under case number 202/2003,
in the Northern
Cape Division, Kimberley of the High Court of South
Africa [‘the court case’], be deemed not to form part of
his insolvent
estate;
1.1.2
The applicant’s creditors and the
trustees of his insolvent estate have, by not laying claim thereto,
waived all rights that
they may have had in the applicant’s
right, title and interest in the said action.
1.2
The trustees be authorised to relinquish on
behalf of the insolvent estate and in favour of the applicant, all
claims to the applicant’s
right, title and interest in the
action;
1.3
The applicant be authorised to pursue and
enforce the applicant’s right, title and interest in the action
for his own benefit…’
[7]
In his founding affidavit, and as the basis of the application, the
respondent alleged
that:
‘
It
follows that the trustees (and my creditors) abandoned my right,
title and interest in the court case, which was an asset in
my estate
by failing to lay claim thereto…As the trustees and my
creditors have abandoned my right, title and interest in
the court
case due to the failure to lay claim, thereto, I am entitled, even
after my rehabilitation, to apply for a declaratory
order that,
amongst others, my right, title and interest should not be deemed to
form part of a portion of my insolvent estate,
because my creditors
and the trustees of my insolvent estate have waived all the rights
that they may have had in it by not laying
claim thereto.’
[8]
The respondent also stated that the creditors, in the second
creditors’ meeting
held on 30 August 2006, resolved to accept
the trustees’ report and to authorise the trustees, in their
sole discretion,
to abandon any asset which could not be monetised.
As a result, his right, title and interest in the action was not
monetised.
[9]
The respondent submitted that the right, title and interest in the
action (the right
of action) was a personal right which became an
asset and formed part of the insolvent estate. When the trustees and
the appellants
did not lay claim, they effectively abandoned it. By
so doing they waived the right. Thus, the respondent was entitled to
pursue
it. The respondent submitted with reliance on
Van
Der Merwe, Ex Parte (Van Der Merwe)
1
that when the trustees abandoned the claim, it remained alive; it did
not perish and could still be pursued if not by the trustees,
then by
the respondent.
[10]
The appellants admitted that the trustees had abandoned the right of
action. Due to its nature
(a claim for the delivery of movable
property alternatively for payment of the value thereof), so they
contended, the right necessarily
perished when the trustees of the
insolvent estate waived such right and elected not to pursue the
litigation to its full conclusion.
[11]
The high court found in favour of the respondent. It found (at para
23 of the judgment), that
‘it is apparent that the judgment
creditor, the respondents in this instance, did not attach the
applicant’s right,
title and interest [in the action] and
thereby monetizing the claim’. Furthermore, it found at para
27:
‘
As
the applicant is now rehabilitated therefore pre-sequestration debts
should be extinguished…Regard being had to the absence
of
opposition at rehabilitation stage of all debts afforded to a
rehabilitated insolvent based on
s 129(1)(b)
of the Act, the
application [for a declaratory] stands to succeed.’
[12]
The parties used the concepts of waiver and abandonment
interchangeably. In this present context
these concepts (waiver and
abandonment) are essentially the same. It is trite that a party to a
contract cannot waive an obligation
but can waive a right.
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
, puts it thus:
‘
Waiver
of a right conferred by the terms of a contract is itself a contract,
but waiver of a right conferred by law, even in a contractual
context, is not.’
[1]
[13]
Van Huyssteen et al, explain that:
‘…
a
waiver may be effected by a unilateral act [though the general
principle is that a release from an obligation is a bilateral
juristic act requiring the co-operation of both creditor and the
debtor], for example where a party who has an election between
inconsistent alternative remedies abandons or ‘waives’
one of the alternatives by deciding on the other, or where the
benefit of a contractual provision – such as a condition –
intended to operate for the exclusive benefit of a particular
contractant, is unilaterally abandoned by that contractant.’
3
[14]
The general principles in South African insolvency law, as
encapsulated in the Insolvency Act
24 of 1936 (the
Insolvency Act),
are
that upon a declaration of insolvency by a court of law, an
insolvent is divested of their estate, the estate vests in the Master
and upon their appointment, the trustee(s).
4
In
De
Villiers NO Delta Cables (Pty) Ltd
this Court held that:
‘
It
has always been accepted that a trustee becomes the owner of the
property of the insolvent. The Legislature did not say so in
so many
words, but a transfer of
dominium
is
clearly inherent in the terminology employed in
s
20(1)
(a)
which
provides that a sequestration order shall divest the insolvent of his
estate and vest it first in the Master and later in
the trustee…It
also provides for a
vesting
in
the trustee. True, the subsection does not speak of a
divesting
but
it goes on to provide that the property so vests “as if it were
property of the sequestrated estate”. This
can only mean that
the property of the solvent spouse vests in the trustee to the same
extent as does the property of the insolvent.’
5
(
Original
emphasis
.)
[15]
The
Insolvency Act defines
both ‘immovable property’ and
‘movable property.’
6
Immovable property means in essence, rights to land and minerals that
are registrable in the Deeds Office. Movable property means
‘every
kind of property and every right or interest which is not immovable
property.’ According to
Silberberg
and Schoeman’s
The
Law of Property
,
7
a contractual claim, like the one in issue, is an incorporeal thing.
It is trite that an action is a procedural vehicle to enforce
that
personal right.
8
This Court, in
Stratgro
Capital (SA) Ltd v Lombard NO and Others
confirmed that the right of action ‘constitutes incorporeal
property which may be attached at the instance of a judgment
creditor
and sold in execution’.
9
[16]
The right of action in issue clearly falls within the meaning of
‘movable property’
as defined in the
Insolvency Act.
Thus
, it became vested in the trustees. By operation of law, the
trustees became the owners/holders of the right of action. They had
a
duty, not the right, to deal with the right of action as an asset in
terms of the
Insolvency Act, unless
, of course, they had been
authorised otherwise.
[17]
As I have demonstrated, it was common cause that the trustees had
abandoned the right of action
as they had been authorised to do.
Thus, the question is: what was the effect of the abandonment of the
right of action in the
circumstances?
[18]
In my view, the abandonment by its holders (the trustees)
extinguished the right of action. If
a legal representative informs a
court or the other party that a right of action is abandoned, no one
would dispute that that signifies
the end of the right of action. The
position is similar to a compromise (transactio) in respect of a
right of action that is the
subject of pending litigation. Our law is
clear that the compromise extinguishes that right of action and in
that case, replaces
it with new rights and obligations. Thus, the
right of action in issue had been extinguished long before the
rehabilitation of
the respondent.
[19]
It follows, that the matter is distinguishable from
Van
Der Merwe
.
There, the trustee abandoned rights to immovable property. After his
rehabilitation, the insolvent applied for, and obtained,
an order
that the immovable property be re-vested in him. When an owner
abandons or waives rights to a corporeal thing, that thing
is
obviously not destroyed, but becomes
res
nullius
(a form of
res
derelicta
),
10
which
Silberberg
and Schoeman’s
The
Law of Property
define as things ‘although susceptible to private ownership, do
not belong to anyone at a particular point in time’.
11
On this basis, an insolvent could reclaim a tangible thing after
rehabilitation.
[20]
In conclusion, once it was established that the right of action had
been abandoned by the trustees,
as was common cause between the
parties, the real question was the effect of that abandonment and not
the effect that the order
of rehabilitation had on the insolvent, as
the high court postulated. The effect must be that the alleged right
of action was extinguished
when the trustees as the owners of the
asset, abandoned it. The fact that the trustees abandoned the action
did not entitle the
respondent (a rehabilitated insolvent) to lay
claim on it. On these facts,
s 129
of the
Insolvency Act which
speaks
to the effect of rehabilitation on an insolvent, does not come into
the equation at all.
[21]
In the light of the conclusion that I have reached, it is unnecessary
to deal with the alternative
arguments raised by the appellants.
[22]
In the result the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
________________________
B C MOCUMIE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant: DJ
van der Walt
SC
Instructed
by: Duncan
&
Rothman Inc., Kimberley
McIntyre van der Post,
Bloemfontein
For
first respondent: DB
du Preez SC
Instructed
by: Engelsman
Magabane Inc., Kimberley
Kramer
Weihmann Inc., Bloemfontein
1
Van
Der Merwe, Ex Parte
[2008] ZAGPHC 88; 2008 (6) SA 451 (W).
[1]
RH
Christie, GB Bradfield
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
8 ed (2022) at 532; see also
Bester
v Sol Plaatjie Municipality
[2004] 2 All SA 31
(NC) at 43.
3
Van Huyssteen et al
Contract:
General Principles
6 ed (2020) at 578.
4
Section 20(1)
(a)
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
5
De
Villiers NO v Delta Cables (Pty) Ltd
1992 (1) SA 9
(AD);
[1992] 1 All SA 192
(A) at 17-18.
6
Section 2
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
7
Muller et al
Silberberg
and Schoeman’s The Law of Property
6
ed (2019) at 17.
8
In Afrikaans commonly known as ‘vorderingsreg.’
9
Stratgro
Capital (SA) Ltd v Theodorus NO and Others
[2009] ZASCA 142
;
2010 (2) SA 530
(SCA);
[2010] 3 All SA 27
(SCA)
para 16; see also
Marais
v Aldridge
1976
(1) SA 746
(T)
at 750A-C and
Brummer
v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd
1999
(3) SA 389
(SCA).
10
Van der Merwe
Sakereg
2 ed
(1989) at 224.
11
Muller et al
Silberberg
and Schoeman’s The Law of Property
6
ed (2019) at 38.
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