Case Law[2023] ZASCA 48South Africa
De la Rey, Pieter Jacobus v PH de la Rey Family Trust and Others (084/2021) [2023] ZASCA 48 (11 April 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
11 April 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Equality Legislation – whether the Equality Court had jurisdiction, complainant making out no case that he had been discriminated against as defined or intended in the Equality Act – Equality Court’s conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction cannot be faulted.
Judgment
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## De la Rey, Pieter Jacobus v PH de la Rey Family Trust and Others (084/2021) [2023] ZASCA 48 (11 April 2023)
De la Rey, Pieter Jacobus v PH de la Rey Family Trust and Others (084/2021) [2023] ZASCA 48 (11 April 2023)
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sino date 11 April 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case no: 084/2021
In the matter between:
DE LA REY, PIETER
JACOBUS FIRST
APPELLANT
and
PH DE LA REY FAMILY
TRUST
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHRIS DE LA REY
TRUST SECOND
RESPONDENT
KOOS DE LA REY
TRUST THIRD
RESPONDENT
MARITA SCHOLTZ
TRUST FOURTH
RESPONDENT
JACO DE LA REY
KINDERTRUST FIFTH
RESPONDENT
MARIANNE HILL
TRUST SIXTH
RESPONDENT
DE LA REY, CHRISTIAAN,
N.O. SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
DE LA REY CHRISTIAAN
EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
FERREIRA, DAWID, N.O.
(in his representative
Capacities as trustee
of the 1
st
, 2
nd
,3
rd
and 5
th
Respondents)
NINTH
RESPONDENT
FERREIRA,
DAWID TENTH
RESPONDENT
DE LA REY, ANNA
BOUWER, N.O. (in her
representative
capacities as trustee
of the 1
st
,2
nd
,3
rd
and 5
th
Respondents) ELEVENTH
RESPONDENT
DE LA REY, ANNA
BOUWER TWELFTH
RESPONDENT
SCHOLTZ,
MARITA THIRTEENTH
RESPONDENT
HILL,
MARIANNE FOURTEENTH
RESPONDENT
VAN DEN BERG, GERT
PETRUS JOHANNES FIFTEENTH
RESPONDENT
BOAKE
INCORPORATED SIXTEENTH
RESPONDENT
BOAKE, BRUCE
DENNIS SEVENTEENTH
RESPONDENT
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA EIGHTEENTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
De
la Rey, Pieter Jacobus v PH de la Rey Family Trust and Others
(084/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 48
(11 April
2023)
Coram:
Ponnan ADP and Saldulker, Gorven, Mabindla-Boqwana
and Matojane JJA
Heard
:
9 March 2023
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives
via e-mail, publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down are deemed
to be delivered on 11 April 2023.
Summary:
Equality Legislation
–
whether
the Equality Court had jurisdiction, complainant making out no case
that he had been discriminated against as defined or
intended in the
Equality Act – Equality Court’s conclusion that it lacked
jurisdiction cannot be faulted.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
The Equality Court, Gauteng Division of the High Court
,
Pretoria
(
Van
Nieuwenhuizen J,
sitting
as
court
of first instance)
.
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
JUDGMENT
Saldulker JA (Ponnan
ADP and Gorven, Mabindla-Boqwana and Matojane JJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal emanates from a complaint that was instituted before the
Equality Court.
The appellant’s complaint or rather the most
intelligible approximation thereof is one of ‘discrimination’
under
the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair
Discrimination Act 4 of 2000 (the Equality Act). It arises from the
manner in
which he was allegedly treated differently when compared to
his other family members in the process of the distribution of his
grandfather’s estate.
[2]
The appellant, Mr Pieter Jacobus De la Rey, is the grandson of Mr P H
de la Rey (the
grandfather). In his lifetime, the grandfather, who
passed away on 31 August 1997, concluded a last will and testament,
in terms
of which he, inter alia, caused the first respondent, the P
H De la Rey Family trust (the family trust) to be created. The
beneficiaries
in equal shares were the grandfather’s three
children, one of whom was the appellant’s father, Mr Jacobus
(Koos) H
De la Rey. The other two are Christiaan de la Rey (the
eighth respondent) and Marita Scholtz (the thirteenth respondent).
The appellant’s
father passed away on 28 July 1999, rendering
the appellant and his sister, Marianne Hill (the fourteenth
respondent) as substituting
beneficiaries in terms of the trust deed.
In 1999, the trustees of the family trust resolved to create further
trusts, namely the
Chris de la Rey trust, the Koos de la Rey trust
and the Marita Scholtz trust (the second, third and fourth
respondents respectively).
There were three different categories of
respondents: (a) the members of the de la Rey family and their trusts
- the first to fifteenth
respondents fall into this category; (b)
persons or entities merely involved as service providers with those
in category (a) –
the sixteenth and seventeenth respondents
fall into that category; and, (c) the Master of the High Court,
Pretoria, against whom
no relief was sought. The proceedings were
withdrawn against the sixteenth and seventeenth respondents.
[3]
The appellant instituted proceedings against the respondents in the
equality court
under the Equality Act. The complaint was supported by
an affidavit and annexures in excess of 200 pages. As best as one can
discern
from the complaint, it seems to be contended that the vesting
date of the family trust should have been during 2001 and that the
conduct of the trustees meant that the appellant did not receive the
inheritance to which, in his view, he was entitled personally,
to the
exclusion, it must be said, of his children. Although several grounds
were sought to be advanced, in the debate before this
court the case
came to be confined to one of discrimination. The appellant alleged
that he had ‘been discriminated against
. . . against my
rights by birth and my
de jure
and/or
de facto
full and
equal and/or eventual full and equal enjoyment in terms of the
outcome of my rights by birth and/or freedom to my inheritance(s)
. .
.’
Despite the voluminous
complaint filed, the appellant did not properly substantiate the
basis on which this ground was raised in
the context of an equality
court application.
[4]
Accompanying the particulars of complaint in the equality court, was
a draft order
consisting of some 16 pages, almost all of which was
plainly unintelligible. Unsurprisingly, the respondents denied that
the equality
court had jurisdiction to hear the matter or to grant
any of the relief sought. Subsequently, the appellant also launched a
virtually
identical application for the same relief in the Gauteng
High Court, Pretoria. The appellant attempted to have the proceedings
consolidated. However, De Vos J ruled that the question of the
jurisdiction of the equality court should be dealt with first. After
several further procedural skirmishes that are not presently
relevant, the matter came before Van Nieuwenhuizen J, in the equality
court, who upheld the respondents’ contentions that the
equality court did not have jurisdiction to deal with the appellant’s
complaint. This appeal is with the leave of that court.
[5]
In terms of s 13 of the Equality Act, the appellant had the burden to
make out a prima
facie case of discrimination. In that, he failed. It
is important to recognise that not all differentiation would
constitute discrimination.
Unlike mere differentiation,
discrimination is differentiation on illegitimate grounds.
[1]
Discrimination is defined in s 1 of the Equality Act as:
‘
any
act or omission, including a policy, law, rule, practice, condition
or situation which directly or indirectly–
(a)
imposes burdens, obligations or disadvantage on;
or
(b)
withholds benefits, opportunities or advantages
from any person on one or more of the prohibited grounds.’
‘
Prohibited
grounds’, is defined in s 1 of the Equality Act, as follows
:
‘
(a)
race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social
origin, colour, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion,
conscience, belief, culture, language, birth and hiv/aids status; or
(b)
any other ground where discrimination based on
that other ground-
(i) causes or perpetuates
systemic disadvantage;
(ii) undermines human
dignity; or
(iii) adversely affects
the equal enjoyment of a person’s rights and freedoms in a
serious manner that is comparable to discrimination
on a ground in
paragraph
(a)
’
[6]
The appellant’s complaint does not arise out of any ‘wrong’
that
the Equality Act, and thus the equality court, was created to
address. It is simply that he did not receive his due when entitled
to same, because those in control wrongly chose not to distribute
those benefits to him. His complaint is thus indistinguishable
from a
plethora of other civil cases that come before our high and
magistrates’ courts daily. The appellant is guilty of
having
cherry-picked certain words or phrases appearing in the Equality Act
to support the argument that his complaint falls within
the scope and
ambit of the Equality Act. This, however, does not meet the criticism
that the complaint is not one envisaged by
the Equality Act and is
not why the equality court was created.
[7]
The appellant asserts that he has been discriminated against,
firstly, when compared
to his sister and secondly, when certain legal
principles pertaining to the interpretation of his grandfather’s
trust deed
is considered. But that ignores the fact that the types of
discrimination at which the Equality Act is aimed must be
discrimination
on ‘one or more of the prohibited grounds’.
The prohibited grounds fall into two categories: (i) the specific
grounds
defined in subsection
(a)
, none of which save for
birth are relied on by the appellant; and (ii) the generic grounds
defined in subsection
(b)
. Before us, counsel was unable to
point to any other ground contemplated in
(b)
. The appellant’s
case thus came to rest on
(a)
.
[8]
The appellant made out no case that he was denied anything because of
or arising from
his birth. On the contrary, it is by virtue of his
birth that he became entitled to benefit. It is really the manner in
which he
should receive those benefits that he complains. In the
premises, the appellant has obviously not been discriminated against
as
defined or intended in the Equality Act. It follows that the
equality court’s conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction cannot
be faulted.
[9]
In the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
_______________________________
H K SALDULKER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
T
J Botha
Instructed
by:
Cilliers
& Reynders Attorneys, Centurion
C/O
Vanessa Graham Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondents
J
Roux SC (with CL Markram-Jooste)
1
st
,2
nd
,3
rd
,5
th
,6
th
,7
th
,8
th
,9
th
,11
th
and
12
th
Instructed
by:
Delport
Van Berg Inc, Pretoria
For
15
th
respondent:
T
A LL Potgieter SC
Instructed
by:
E
Y Stuart Inc c/o, Pretoria
Mcintyre
Van der Post INC, Bloemfontein
[1]
Currie
and De Waal
Bill
of Rights Handbook
9.4(a).
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