Case Law[2023] ZASCA 56South Africa
Cohen N.O and Others v D (368/2022) [2023] ZASCA 56 (20 April 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
20 April 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Summary judgment - particulars of claim based upon incorrect trust deed - plaintiff verified an incorrect cause of action - defendants disclosed a bona fide defence - summary judgment refused.
Judgment
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## Cohen N.O and Others v D (368/2022) [2023] ZASCA 56 (20 April 2023)
Cohen N.O and Others v D (368/2022) [2023] ZASCA 56 (20 April 2023)
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sino date 20 April 2023
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 368/2022
In the matter between:
LEON
HOWARD COHEN N O
FIRST
APPELLANT
G[…] W[….]
D[…] N O
SECOND APPELLANT
JONATHAN SHAWN RABIE N
O
THIRD APPELLANT
JONATHAN ALFRED
LEONARD
CHAPMAN N O
FOURTH APPELLANT
COLLIN WILLIAM GREEN N
O FIFTH
APPELLANT
COLIN ANDERSON N
O SIXTH
APPELLANT
(Appellants cited in
their capacities as
trustees for the time
being of the Century
City Property
Investment Trust)
And
M[…]
L[…] D[…]
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Cohen N O &
Others v D[…]
(Case no 368/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 56
(20 April 2023)
Coram:
SALDULKER, MOCUMIE and NICHOLLS JJA and MALI and
SIWENDU AJJA
Heard
:
17 March 2023
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email,
publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be at 11h00
on 20 April 2023.
Summary:
Summary judgment - particulars of claim based upon
incorrect trust deed - plaintiff verified an incorrect cause of
action - defendants
disclosed a
bona
fide
defence - summary judgment
refused.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Allie J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
1
Summary judgment is refused.
2
The defendants are granted leave to defend the main action.
3
Costs shall be costs in the cause.’
JUDGMENT
Nicholls JA (Saldulker
and Mocumie JJA and Mali and Siwendu AJJA concurring)
[1]
The appellants, the defendants in the high
court, are the trustees of the Century City Property Investment Trust
(the Trust), a
trading trust run as a commercial enterprise. There
are 23 beneficiaries of the Trust consisting of the trustees, their
wives,
children and their respective family trusts. The respondent,
M[…] L[…] D[…] (Ms D[…]), the plaintiff
in the high court, is the ex-wife of the second appellant, G[…]
W[…] D[…] (Mr D[…]), one of the trustees.
During
the course of their marriage, Ms D[…] was a beneficiary of the
Trust by virtue of her marriage to Mr D[…]
until the date of
their divorce on 8 February 2019.
[2]
As a result of the sale of certain
properties to a third party in 2013 and 2014, the Trust earned
substantial capital gains. During
the 2014 and 2015 tax years the
trustees resolved to allocate the net income of the capital gains to
the 23 beneficiaries of the
Trust. This resulted in a net allocation
of R184 179 657 to the beneficiaries, of which two amounts
of R6 050 895
and R279 044.00, totalling R6 329 939, were
allocated to Ms D[…]. The amounts owing to the
beneficiaries is reflected
as a vested liability in the 2017 Annual
Financial Statements of the Trust.
[3] On
the basis of this allocation, Ms D[…] issued summons in July
2021 against the Trust for payment
of the amount of R6 329 939. The
matter was defended and after the Trust filed its plea, Ms D[…]
applied for summary judgment.
On 7 March 2022, the Western Cape
Division of the High Court (the high court) granted summary judgment
in favour of Ms D[…]
for an alternative amount. Because no
alternative amount had been claimed, an application for variation of
the order was brought
by the trustees, deleting any reference to the
alternative amount. The variation order was granted on 27 June
2022, the net
effect of which was to reduce the amount by deducting
the tax paid by the Trust on behalf of Ms D[…], in respect of
her
allocations. Leave to appeal to this Court was granted by the
high court on the basis that an important issue was raised, namely
whether ‘a court seized with summary judgment may consider the
common cause facts that are at variance with the pleadings’.
[4]
The
trustees advanced six grounds of appeal, but only three of these were
seriously argued. The first was that there was non-compliance
with
the peremptory requirements of rule 32(2)
(b)
of the amended rule 32. This sub-rule sets out what is required of a
plaintiff’s affidavit filed in support of an application
for
summary judgment.
[1]
The second
ground is that the summary judgment was granted on a cause of action
which differed materially from what was pleaded,
or advanced in the
particulars of claim. Thirdly, it is contended that a
bona
fide
defence was disclosed.
[5]
Ms
D[…]’ particulars of claim were premised on an amended
trust deed dated 11 May 2015 (the amended trust deed). It
was pleaded
that during the period 1 March 2015 to 28 February 2017, on a date
peculiarly within the knowledge of the trustees,
they resolved to
pay, apply or appoint the realised capital gain for the benefit of
the beneficiaries. In terms of clause 5.1 and
5.2 of the amended
trust deed, the trustees were entitled to pay the whole or any
portion of the capital to any of the beneficiaries,
subject to an
aggregate sum of R50 million ‘. . . in such manner and upon
such terms and subject to such conditions, limitations
and
restrictions in all respect as the trustees may from time to time in
their sole and absolute discretion determine . . .’.
Ms D[…]
attached the signed Annual Financial Statements of the Trust for the
period ending 28 February 2017, which
showed a liability for
vested amounts in the sum of R184 179 657 in favour of the 23
beneficiaries, including an amount of R6 329
939 for Ms Deans.
[6]
The
various family members and family trusts were divided into Groups A
to G, with the Deans Family being Group D beneficiaries.
Ms D[…]’
entitlement to the monies was as a Group D beneficiary. Her claim was
thus grounded in the provisions
of the amended trust deed, and the
amount thereof confirmed by the 2017 Annual Financial Statements.
[7]
In
response to the particulars of claim, the trustees raised a special
plea of prescription. In this Court, the special plea was
abandoned.
As a result, it is unnecessary to deal with the question of
prescription.
[8]
In
their plea on the merits, the trustees admitted the relevant clauses
of the trust deed as pleaded by Ms D[…]. They also
admitted
that the first allocation of R6 050 895 was made to Ms D[…]
during the tax year ended 28 February 2014,
and the second
allocation of R279 044
during the tax
year ended 28 February 2015. The first allocation attracted income
tax of R727 576, which the Trust paid on
Ms D[…]’
behalf. The second allocation did not attract a tax liability.
[9]
The
trustees, in their plea, relied on clause 5.6 of the amended trust
deed to withhold payment to Ms D[…]. The clause provides:
‘
.
. .the Trustees shall be entitled . . . to withhold actual payment of
the whole of any part of the nett income and/or capital
gain applied
or appointed to any Beneficiary for such period and otherwise upon
such terms and subject to such conditions as the
Trustees may from
time to time in their sole and absolute discretion determine . . . ’
[10]
The
clause also makes provision for payment of any assessed taxes, for
which the beneficiaries may be liable, to be paid by the
Trustees.
This amount should be deducted from the sum payable to the
beneficiaries. Actual payment of the amounts withheld is to
be made
on the ‘vesting date or the date of death of the [b]eneficiary
concerned (whichever first occurs) . . . ’.
The vesting date is
defined in the amended trust deed as the date which the trustees ‘may
at any time in writing appoint
to be the [v]esting [d]ate’.
[11]
The
nub of the Trustees’ case is set out in their plea as
follows:
‘
In
the premises, the Plaintiff’s claim, if any, would only arise
upon the vesting date as defined or the death of the Plaintiff,
whichever occurs first, alternatively by the exercise of the
trustees’ discretion to effect payment, none of which have
occurred to date.’
[12]
In
her founding affidavit in support of the application for summary
judgment, Ms D[…] verified the cause of action as
set out
in her particulars of claim. She then dealt with the defences put up
by the trustees, as was required of her in terms of
rule 32(2)
(b)
.
Apart from denying that her claim had prescribed, she stated that the
trustees had not disclosed on what dates they had exercised
their
absolute discretion to withhold the actual payment of the capital
gains applied to the beneficiaries. In any event, stated
Ms D[…],
this provision only pertained to beneficiaries, and it was common
cause that with effect from 8 February 2019,
she was no longer a
beneficiary as a result of her divorce. Therefore, this clause could
not be invoked as a pretext for withholding
payment to her as an
acknowledged creditor of the Trust. Because of the above, she
submitted that there was no defence to her claim
and the plea and
special plea had been raised purely for the purposes of delay.
[13]
The
trustees in the affidavit opposing summary judgment, while admitting
the allocation to Ms D[…], and relying on clause
5.6 of the
amended trust deed, denied that she was entitled to payment of the
amount claimed until the vesting date or her death.
In any event,
because the amount had to be reduced by the payment made by the
trustees in respect of the tax liability, they contended
that the
quantum was in dispute. The Trustees admitted that Ms D[…]
ceased to be a beneficiary on 8 February 2019, the date
of her
divorce, but stated that this did not change any rights which may
have accrued to her during the period in which she was
a beneficiary.
Nor did it have any bearing on their absolute discretion to withhold
actual payment, which the amended trust deed
conferred on them.
[14]
It
appears that it was only at the hearing of the application for
summary judgment that both parties realised that it was not the
amended trust deed dated 11 May 2015 that was applicable, but rather
the original trust deed dated 13 June 2006 (the original
trust
deed). This was because the allocations had taken place in the 2013
and 2014 tax years, respectively, before the amended
trust deed had
come into effect in 2015. On the face of it, the fact that the
particulars of claim were premised on an incorrect
trust deed, should
have necessitated an amendment of the particulars of claim.
[15]
Notwithstanding
the above, and despite acknowledging that the particulars of claim
were drafted on the basis of the amended trust
deed and not the
original trust deed, the high court found this to be of ‘no
particular moment’. Ultimately, said the
high court, although
not pleaded by Ms D[…], it was common cause that the payment
had been withheld in terms of clause 15
of the original trust
deed. And despite the pleading being defective as a result thereof,
the parties argued the matter as though
clause 15.2 of the original
trust deed was applicable.
[16]
Clause
15.2 provided that:
‘
Until
the vesting date, the trustees shall have the power from time to time
and at any time, to accumulate any part of the income
of the Trust
for periods continuous or discontinuous as the trustees shall think
fit and shall hold any accumulations so made as
part of the capital
of the Trust for all the purposes hereof, but so that the trustees
may at any time and from time to time pay,
apply, or appoint in their
sole discretion, the whole or any part/parts of the said
accumulations as if the same were income arising
in the current
year.’
The
vesting date in the original trust deed was defined as 1 June
2056 or the date which the trustees may at any time in writing
appoint to be the vesting date.
[2]
[17]
The
high court found that the defence put up by the trustees was
‘incredibly peculiar’, because they had admitted the
allocation and had even made payment of tax in relation to the
allocations. While the high court accepted that the trustees had
the
power to make allocations and also to withhold payment, it found that
the trustees had not sufficiently pleaded the basis on
which they
withheld payment. Clause 15, although granting absolute discretion to
the trustees to withhold payment, had more expansive
provisions than
simply authorising the trustees to withhold payment and this absolute
discretion was subject to certain limitations
in terms of the
provision, so the high court found. It is these conditions and
restrictions that the trustees did not deem necessary
to explain to
the court.
[18]
Further,
the high court was of the view that by relying on the amended trust
deed as pleaded in the particulars of claim, the trustees
were
attempting to ‘dupe’ Ms D[…], the court or both.
This finding was made on the basis that the trustees were
well aware
that the incorrect trust deed was relied on by Ms D[…],
but nonetheless went along with the incorrect allegations,
presumably
to gain some tactical advantage. The court criticised the trustees
for not interacting with Ms D[…], presumably
to inform her
before the hearing of the summary judgment application that the
original trust deed was applicable. As such their
defence was not
brought on reasonable grounds. Nor did they plead their reasons for
withholding payment.
[19]
Accordingly,
the high court granted summary judgment in Ms D[…]’
favour. It did so on the basis that the trustees had
failed to
advance a reasonable and
bona fide
defence.
[20]
The
first question is whether Ms D[…] had failed
to
comply with the peremptory requirements of rule 32(2)
(b)
by advancing a case which was not
pleaded and was thus unverified. Rule 32(2)
(b)
provides that:
‘
The
plaintiff shall, in the affidavit referred to in sub-rule (2)
(a)
,
verify the cause of action and the amount, if any, claimed, and
identify any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which
the
plaintiff’s claim is based, and explain briefly why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for trial.’
[21]
The
issue of Ms D[…]’ non-compliance with rule 32(2)
(b)
is inextricably bound up with whether summary judgment was granted on
a case that was materially different from that which was
pleaded in
her particulars of claim and that which she advanced in her affidavit
in the support of her application for summary
judgment. The cause of
action which Ms D[…] verified was that in terms of clause 5 of
the provisions of the amended trust
deed, the trustees applied
capital gains in the sum of R6 329 939 to which she
was entitled as a Group D beneficiary.
[22]
Insofar
as it was argued that the cause of action which Ms D[…]
verified was that payment of R6 329 939 was due
to her by
the trustees, this is misconceived. A cause of action is generally
defined as a set of facts which give rise to a claim
enforceable in
law. The set of facts which gave rise to her action was not the
non-payment of R6 329 939, as contended,
but her
entitlement to payment in terms of the relevant trust deed. It is
common cause that the incorrect trust deed was relied
on in the
particulars of claim. She therefore verified a defective cause of
action. Given the errors contained on the particulars
of claim, Ms
D[…] was neither able to correctly verify the cause of action
nor the facts upon which she relied.
[23]
It
was also contended on behalf of Ms D[…] that the trustees were
not obliged to rely on the amended trust deed, merely because
it had
been incorrectly pleaded by her. Instead, they knew very well that Ms
D[…] placed reliance on the 2017 financials
of the Trust and
these were peculiarly in their knowledge. Because both parties
finally argued the summary judgment application
on the basis that
clause 15 of the original trust deed was applicable, it was suggested
that her non-compliance with rule 32(2)
(b)
should be overlooked. This submission,
too, does not bear scrutiny. It matters not whether the correct cause
of action was argued
by both parties at the hearing.
[24]
In
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Roestof
(
Roestof
),
[3]
it was held that a technical defect due to some obvious and manifest
error which causes no prejudice to the defendants, can be
overlooked.
[4]
Wallis J did not follow this decision in
Shackleton
Credit Management (Pty) Ltd v Microzone Trading 88 CC and Another
(
Shackleton
).
[5]
Also dealing with the old rule 32(2), he stated that the suggestion
that a defective summary judgment application could be cured
if the
defence dealt with the merits of the claim, was incorrect. The fact
that a defence has been set out and argued, does not
cure the defect
in the particulars of claim or the summary judgment application. Such
a view, he stated, would amount to saying
that defects would be
overlooked if the defence deals with the merits of the claim. This
was not tenable.
[25]
Paragraph
25 of
Shackleton
sets
out why the approach in
Roestof
should
not be adopted:
‘
Insofar as the
learned judge suggested that a defective application can be cured
because the defendant or defendants have dealt
in detail with their
defence to the claim set out in the summons that is not in my view
correct. That amounts to saying that defects
will be overlooked if
the defendant deals with the merits of the defence. It requires a
defendant who wishes to contend that the
application is defective to
confine themselves to raising that point with the concomitant risk
that if the technical point is rejected
they have not dealt with the
merits. It will be a bold defendant that limits an opposing affidavit
in summary judgment proceedings
to technical matters when they
believe that they have a good defence on the merits. The fact that
they set out that defence does
not cure the defects in the
application and to permit an absence of prejudice to the defendant to
provide grounds for overlooking
defects in the application itself
seems to me unsound in principle. The proper starting point is the
application. If it is defective
then
cadit quaestio.
Its
defects do not disappear because the respondent deals with the merits
of the claim set out in the summons.’
[26]
It
is noteworthy that the learned authors in Erasmus Superior Court
Practice preferred the
Shackleton
decision
over the
Roesetof
decision. They suggested that the principles in
Shackleton
should be applied when dealing with the amended rule 32(2)
(b)
.
[6]
[27]
In
the present matter, it is immaterial whether one follows the
Roestoff
or the
Shackleton
approach. The defect in the particulars of claim is not merely some
technical defect. The reliance on the incorrect trust deed,
and
therefore on the incorrect clauses, goes to the heart of Ms D[…]’
claim. There is no evidence that the trustees
were aware of this
defect in the particulars of claim until the day of the hearing. But
even if they had been, it was not incumbent
on them to ‘interact’
with Ms D[…] in this regard, as found by the high court. Nor
does it assist Ms D[…]
that both parties may have argued on
the basis that clause 15 of the original trust deed was applicable.
This was not the case
that the trustees came to court to meet.
[28]
I
am not convinced on the facts of this matter that one even has to
determine what is required to verify a cause of action under
the
amended rule 32 or what should be contained in the affidavits of a
plaintiff and a defendant, respectively. Nor is the question
whether
reliance can be placed on facts not pleaded but which emerged during
argument. Whether under the old rule 32 or the amended
rule 32, what
has not changed is that a defendant, to successfully oppose a summary
judgment application, has to disclose a
bona
fide
defence.
[29]
The
only decision to trace the history and reasoning behind the amended
procedure for summary judgment in detail is
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security
and Fire
(
Pty)
Ltd
;
E
& D Security Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
(
Tumileng
).
[7]
As
observed by Binns-Ward J in
Tumileng
,
most of the old authorities still apply in determining whether a
defendant has disclosed a
bona
fide
defence. All the defendant is required to do is disclose a genuine
defence, as opposed to ‘a sham’ defence.
[8]
Prospects of success are irrelevant and as long as the defence is
legally cognisable in the sense that it amounts to a valid defence
if
proven at trial, then an application for summary judgment must fail.
[30]
Be
it the original trust deed or the amended trust deed which is
applicable, both require a court to interpret the extent of the
trustees’ discretion and when vesting takes place. The defence
of the trustees that, prior to the date of vesting, their
discretion
when to make actual payment is absolute and unfettered, cannot be
considered as unreasonable and
male
fides
. It is certainly not a ‘sham
defence’ in any sense of the word.
[31]
The
high court failed to consider the test to be applied in deciding
whether to grant summary judgment. This was, and remains, whether
the
facts put up by the defendants raise a triable issue and a
sustainable defence in the law, deserving of their day in court.
[9]
The defendants must fully disclose the nature and grounds of their
defence and the material facts on which it is founded. All a
defendant has to do is set out facts which if proven at trial will
constitute a good defence to the claim.
[10]
[32]
On
the facts so disclosed, the trustees have put up a sustainable
defence which is
bona fide
,
namely that until vesting occurs the decision to make payment is
solely within their discretion. In the context of summary judgment,
all the trustees are asking for is their day in court. They have met
this threshold and summary judgment should accordingly be
refused.
[33]
As
far as costs are concerned, both parties asked for the costs of two
counsel in respect of this appeal. The appellants sought
a punitive
costs order against the respondent. This is unjustified and there is
no reason why the usual costs order should not
be appropriate.
[34]
In
the result I make the following order:
1
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
1
Summary judgment is refused.
2
The defendants are granted leave to defend the main action.
3
Costs shall be costs in the cause.’
_______________________
C H NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
H
Loots SC (with him, M A McChesney)
Instructed
by:
BDP
Attorneys, Cape Town
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
F
J Gordon-Turner (with her, A J Brouwer)
Instructed
by:
Mandy
Simpson Attorneys, Cape Town
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
From
1 July 2019 rule 32 was amended to provide that an application for
summary judgment could only be made after the defendant
had filed a
plea. The rule also provides that a plaintiff's affidavit in a
summary judgment application may explain why the defence
as pleaded
does not raise any issue for trial.
[2]
Clause
1.17.1 of the Original trust deed, dated 13 June 2006.
[3]
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Roestof
2004
(2) SA 492
(W) at 496F-H, followed in
Coetzee
and Others v Nassimov
2010 (4) SA 400
(WCC) (
Coetzee
).
[4]
Coetzee
at 402B-403A.
[5]
Shackleton
Credit Management (Pty) Ltd v Microzone Trading 88 CC and Another
[2010] ZAKZPHC 15;
2010 (5) SA 112
(KZP);
[2011] 1 All SA 427
(KZP)
para 25.
[6]
D
E van Loggerenberg and E Bertelsmann,
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
2 ed 2015
at D1-404.
[7]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E & D
Security Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
(3670/2019;
3671/2019)
[2020] ZAWCHC 52
(15 June 2020)
[8]
Ibid
para12.
[9]
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Joint Venture
Zek
Joint Venture
[2009]
ZASCA 23
;
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA);
[2009] 3 All SA 407
(SCA) para 32.
[10]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank
Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 418H-419A.
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