Case Law[2023] ZASCA 96South Africa
Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund v Guilherme (702/2022) [2023] ZASCA 96; 2023 (5) SA 409 (SCA) (13 June 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Claim against the Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund (the Fund) – money paid into attorney’s trust account subsequently stolen – whether the money was entrusted as provided in section 26(a) of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 – claim dismissed by the Fund, but upheld by the high court – appeal by the Fund dismissed.
Judgment
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## Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund v Guilherme (702/2022) [2023] ZASCA 96; 2023 (5) SA 409 (SCA) (13 June 2023)
Legal Practitioners Fidelity Fund v Guilherme (702/2022) [2023] ZASCA 96; 2023 (5) SA 409 (SCA) (13 June 2023)
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sino date 13 June 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 702/2022
In
the matter between:
LEGAL
PRACTITIONERS’ FIDELITY
FUND
APPELLANT
and
GUILHERME
CARLA
MARSHALL
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Legal Practitioners’
Fidelity Fund v Guilherme
(702/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 96
(13 June
2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA
ADP, SALDULKER, MOTHLE and MATOJANE JJA and DAFFUE AJA
Heard:
18 May 2023
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication on
the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and release to SAFLII. The date for hand
down is deemed to be 13 June 2023 at 11h00.
Summary:
Claim against the Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity Fund (the Fund)
– money paid into attorney’s
trust account subsequently
stolen – whether the money was entrusted as provided in section
26
(a)
of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 – claim dismissed
by the Fund, but upheld by the high court – appeal by the Fund
dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: The Western Cape Division of the High Court, (Savage
and Kusevitsky JJ concurring and Ndita J dissenting, sitting as the
full
court on appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Daffue
AJA (Dambuza ADP and Saldulker, Mothle and Matojane JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
At the heart of this appeal is the nature of a payment into the trust
account of an attorney who has been struck from the roll since then,
but failed to account fully for the funds deposited into his
trust
account. It is common cause that the attorney misappropriated the
money. Ms Carla Marshall Guilherme (Ms Guilherme), the
respondent in
the appeal before us, suffered a loss. She unsuccessfully lodged a
claim with the Legal Practitioners’ Fidelity
Fund (the Fund),
the appellant in this appeal, for payment of the misappropriated
amount whereupon litigation ensued.
Undisputed
factual background
[2]
It is apposite to deal with the relevant factual background before
considering
the parties’ submissions. The following facts are
common cause:
(a)
Ms Guilherme was previously married to Mr Bradley Clem Bartie (the
deceased) who committed
suicide on 10 May 2012; his attorney, Mr
Spencer was appointed executor of the insolvent deceased estate.
(b)
Upon the death of the deceased Ms Guilherme became the sole
beneficiary of the proceeds
of a life policy in the amount of R5
000 000, of which she received an immediate cash payment of R50
000.
(c)
The balance of the death benefit in the amount of R4 950 000
was initially
paid into Ms Guilherme’s Nedbank account. Mr
Spencer advised her to pay the money into his trust account as these
funds were
at risk as a result of the deceased’s liabilities
towards his creditors. Consequently, this amount was returned to the
insurer
and thereafter paid into a Capitec bank account which she had
opened for that purpose, where after the full amount was transferred
into Mr Spencer’s trust account on/or about 1 June 2012.
(d)
Ms Guilherme withdrew a total amount of R1.4 million over a period of
time from Mr Spencer’s
trust account. On 1 December 2016 Mr
Spencer transferred R2 750 032.76 into her Nedbank account
which she believed at
that stage to be the full amount owing to her.
(e)
Ms Guilherme became concerned with the ineffective manner in which Mr
Spencer was dealing
with her matter and his advice in respect of the
litigation by the bank against her. She terminated his mandate and
appointed a
new attorney who investigated the matter and made a
reconciliation of the money held by Mr Spencer and paid back to her.
He discovered
that an amount of R799 967.24 was still due to
her.
(f)
The new attorney further discovered that Mr Spencer had already been
suspended from
practice in April 2017 and eventually struck from the
roll in November 2017.
(g)
On receipt of a letter of demand addressed to him, Mr Spencer denied
that any amount was
still outstanding, but Ms Guilherme believed that
he had stolen her money, an aspect which is not in dispute.
(h)
A claim was submitted with the Fund on 13 September 2018 on behalf of
Ms Guilherme, but
eventually rejected on 15 July 2019 on the ground
that there was no entrustment as contemplated in s 26 of the
Attorneys Act.
(i)
Ms Guilherme stated in her founding affidavit:
‘
I would never,
under any circumstances, have paid the monies to [Mr] Spencer for any
other reason than that he as an attorney advised
me to do so. I also
felt comfortable because [Mr] Spencer was the executor of my late
husband’s estate and the money was
paid into [Mr] Spencer’s
trust account. At no stage had I any reason, as a traumatised and
grieving widow, not to trust [Mr]
Spencer’.
This
aspect was not disputed by the Fund. The Fund also did not dispute
that Ms Guilherme believed that Mr Spencer was acting in
her best
interest.
Litigation
history
[3]
On 17 November 2020 the Western Cape Division of the high court found
in favour of Ms Guilherme, ordering the Fund to pay to her the amount
of R 799 967.24 plus interest
a tempore morae
and
the costs of the application. It made a further order directing Ms
Guilherme’s attorneys to notify Standard Bank (the
bank) upon
receipt of payment from the Fund into their trust account. The bank
was a creditor of Ms Guilherme’s deceased
husband and she
allegedly stood surety for the debt. At the stage when the order was
made, the litigation between the bank and
Ms Guilherme was pending.
An application for leave to appeal was dismissed by the court of
first instance, but this Court granted
leave to the appellant to
appeal to the full court of the Western Cape Division. The full court
in a majority judgment dismissed
the appeal. Thereupon the Fund
requested and obtained special leave to appeal to this Court.
Grounds
of appeal
[4]
Several grounds of appeal have been raised. The Fund submitted that
payment
by the respondent of her money to an attorney for safekeeping
to hide it from the creditors of her late husband’s estate did
not constitute an entrustment for purposes of s 26 of the Attorneys
Act 53 of 1979 (the Attorneys Act), but rather a deposit for
safekeeping. Also, Parliament could never have intended that payment
of money into the trust account of an attorney for such purpose
would
constitute an entrustment as provided for in s 26. Furthermore,
entrustment entails that the attorney entrusted with the
money is
bound to hold it and pay it over (a) to a third person (b) upon
fulfilment of a particular condition, or the occurrence
of a
particular event, or (c) on the instruction of the depositor upon
conclusion of a particular matter or transaction which is
already in
place or about to come into existence. Finally, the appellant alleged
that it did not seek to import a further ‘element’
into
the concept of entrustment and the court a quo erred in this regard.
Section
26 of the Attorneys Act
[5]
Ms Guilherme’s claim, she being the successful plaintiff in the
court of first instance, was premised on subsec 26
(a)
of the
Attorneys Act. It needs to be recorded that at the stage when the
action was instituted on 13 September 2018, the
Legal Practice Act 28
of 2014
which repealed the Attorneys Act was not yet applicable.
[6]
The heading of s 26 is significant, it being ‘Purpose of the
fund.’
The relevant portion of the section, before its repeal
stipulated as follows:
‘
Subject to the
provisions of this Act, the fund shall be applied for the purpose of
reimbursing persons who may suffer pecuniary
loss as a result of
(a) theft committed by a
practising practitioner, his clerk or employee, of any money or other
property entrusted by or on behalf
of such persons to him or to his
clerk or employee in the course of his practice or while acting as
executor or administrator in
the estate of a deceased person or as a
trustee in an insolvent estate or in any other similar capacity.'
Evaluation
of the parties’ submissions
[7]
The Fund’s
main submission is that the legal concepts of ‘deposit’
(
depositum
)
on the one hand and ‘entrustment’ as contemplated in
subsec 26
(a)
of the
Attorneys Act on the other are clearly separate and distinct from one
another. A deposit (
depositum
),
as alleged, is an agreement in terms whereof a thing is delivered for
gratuitous safekeeping returnable on demand.
[1]
(I point out in the next paragraph that this submission is based on
an improper reading of the text.) By contrast, an entrustment
comprises (a) to place in the possession of something and (b) subject
to a trust, which connotes that the person entrusted is bound
to deal
with the property or money concerned for the benefit of others and
that the trustee is bound to hold and apply the property
for the
benefit of some person or persons or for the accomplishment of some
special purpose. Counsel for the appellant also referred
to the
combined effect of several judgments in support of his submission. As
I shall show, his submission must be seen in proper
perspective.
These judgments are fact-based and do not entail that Ms Guilherme’s
version does not amount to an entrustment.
[8]
As mentioned in the previous paragraph, the Fund submitted that the
payment
into the attorney’s trust account was a
depositum
,
ie a deposit of monies into the attorney’s trust account for
safe-keeping and not an entrustment of such monies for the
purposes
of the Attorneys Act. It submitted that the monies were deposited for
the purpose of hiding it from creditors of her deceased
husband’s
estate and could not be regarded as an entrustment that enjoys
protection of trust money in accordance with the
Attorneys Act. The
Fund’s counsel elected to rely on a definition of ‘deposit’
in
Wille’s Principles of South African Law,
but failed
to quote the definition in proper context. The authors, relying on
inter alia Grotius and Van der Linden and several
other authorities,
defined deposit as follows:
‘
Deposit (depositum
or beaergeving [in Afrikaans: bewaargewing]) is a contract in which
one person (‘the depositor’)
delivers to another (‘the
depository’) a thing for safekeeping, either gratuitously or
for reward, on the understanding
that the identical thing is to be
returned on demand in the same condition as received.’
[2]
The authors also state
that the subject matter of the deposit is usually movable property,
but may also be immovable property. This
is far removed from money
deposited into an attorney’s trust account.
[9]
As often
stated a unitary exercise must be undertaken in the interpretation of
contracts and legislation, taking into account text,
context and
purpose.
[3]
Recourse to
dictionaries to establish the ordinary meaning of words is often a
good starting point, but has its limitations. Different
meanings are
often recorded and this may give rise to further questions and/or
uncertainty. Litigants may selectively rely on a
specific meaning
that suits their case the best. Having recognised the pitfalls in
relying slavishly on dictionary meanings given
to words, it is
worthwhile to consider what the dictionaries tell us about the word
‘deposit’ (in Latin
depositum
).
The Shorter Oxford Dictionary provides three different meanings. The
first two are irrelevant in casu, whilst the third is ‘(t)o
place in a repository; to commit to the charge of any one for safe
keeping or as a pledge;
spec
,
to place in a bank at interest.’ A ‘
depositarius
’
is according to the same dictionary ‘a person with whom
anything is lodged in trust; a trustee; one to whom anything
is
committed or confided.’
Fowler’s
Modern English Usage
defines a depository as ‘a person or authority to whom
something is entrusted, a trustee.’ If these various
definitions
are considered, there can be little doubt that the
concepts of deposit and entrustment are not necessarily separate and
distinct
from one another as submitted on behalf of the appellant.
The judgments referred to in the next paragraphs confirm that
deposits
of money into attorneys’ trust accounts are, in
appropriate circumstances, akin to entrustment as provided for in
subsec
26
(a)
.
[10]
In
Industrial
and Commercial Factors (Pty) Limited v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board
of Control
[4]
(ICF)
the attorney attended to a transfer of property on behalf of the
seller. He arranged bridging finance in the course of his practice.
The attorney devised a fraudulent scheme and pretended to the
appellant that the seller needed bridging finance which was untrue.
The appellant paid the money into the attorney’s trust account
and the court held that it was done with the intention that
the
attorney would keep it for and on behalf of the seller who would
instruct the attorney how to deal therewith. Instead the attorney
stole the money. The court held that the money was entrusted to the
attorney as is required by subsec 26
(a)
and that the Attorneys Fidelity Fund should reimburse the appellant.
Grosskopf JA, writing for the majority, dealt with the matter
in some
detail. I quote:
‘
After considering
certain definitions of the word ‘entrust’….
Nicholas J concluded as follows:
“
From these
definitions it is plain that "to entrust" comprises two
elements: (a) to place in the possession of something,
(b) subject to
a trust. As to the latter element, this connotes that the person
entrusted is bound to deal with the property or
money concerned for
the benefit of others (cf Estate Kemp and Others v McDonald's Trustee
1915 AD 491
at 499). "(The trustee) is bound to hold and apply
the property for the benefit of some person or persons or for the
accomplishment
of some special purpose."
I do not understand
these passages, and similar remarks in the case of SVV Construction
(Pty) Ltd v Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers
Fidelity Guarantee
Fund
1993 (2) SA 577
(C) at 589G, to convey that the liability of the
Fidelity Fund is limited to those cases where the money or property
concerned
was impressed with a
trust
in the technical legal sense
of
the word.’
[5]
(My
emphasis.)
The learned judge then
dealt with the Afrikaans version of the section and the dictionary
meaning of ‘toevertrou’ (entrust)
and continued:
‘
Had it been the
intention of the Legislature to give 'entrust' the technical legal
meaning of placing money or other property with
an attorney subject
to a trust, it would have used an expression such as 'in trust aan
hom gegee' in the Afrikaans text of s 26(a).
In view of the
aforegoing I am satisfied that the appellant has shown a sufficient
element of entrustment to bring it within the
ambit of s 26(a).’
[6]
Later on the learned
judge concluded:
‘
In my judgment s
26(a) makes provision for reimbursement to either
(1) the person
by whom
the money has been entrusted; or
(2) the person
on
whose behalf
the money has been entrusted;
provided that such person
has suffered pecuniary loss.’
[7]
(My emphasis.)
[11]
In my view
both courts a quo correctly considered the case presented to it by Ms
Guilherme. The court of first instance came to
the correct conclusion
that there was no merit in the submission, as allegedly contended by
the Fund, that a third element was
applicable in respect of
entrustment. The case law relied upon by the Fund and quoted in the
judgment serves as proof that two
elements are applicable, but that
the second element may have different purposes in mind. This is
confirmed in
ICF
,
ie the property or money entrusted is to be held and applied for the
benefit of some person or persons or for the accomplishment
of some
special purpose.
[8]
The majority
of the full court relied on
ICF
and came to the correct conclusion, to wit:
‘
In light of the
decision in ICF it must follow that the concept of entrustment for
purposes of s 26(a) does not connote that the
person entrusted is
bound to deal with the property or money concerned for the benefit of
others, in the sense that it does not
include monies deposited by a
depositor such as the respondent who will provide instructions as to
the application of such funds
in trust in due course.’
[12]
The full
court distinguished the judgment of this Court in
Attorneys
Fidelity Fund v Mettle Property Finance
[9]
(Mettle),
followed
in
Attorneys
Fidelity Fund v Injo
[10]
(Injo)
from the facts in this case. In
Mettle
this Court confirmed that where the attorney acted merely as a
conduit in receiving money into his trust account to be paid out
to
another, no entrustment arises. I quote:
[11]
‘
It follows that
Mettle — in paying the initial purchase price in each
transaction to Langerak as the representative of the
mortgagor or
seller from whom Mettle had purchased a loan claim or a seller's
claim — was simply discharging its debt
to such mortgagor or
seller. The payment was unconditional and, the moment the initial
purchase price was paid into Langerak's
trust account in terms of the
Master Agreement, Mettle's debt was discharged. Langerak was no more
than a conduit for the money.
. .
This being so, there was
no 'entrustment' of money by Mettle to Langerak. In the words of
FH Grosskopf JA in the
Industrial and Commercial
Factors
case
:
“
Where money is
paid into the trust account of an attorney it does not follow that
such money is in fact trust money . . .If money
is simply handed
over to an attorney by a debtor who thereby wishes to discharge a
debt, and the attorney has a mandate to
receive it on behalf of the
creditor, it may be difficult to establish an entrustment.”’
[13]
It is reiterated that the second element of entrustment was absent in
Mettle
and
Injo.
The unique factual circumstances in
these two cases distinguish them from the facts in casu. Here, Ms
Guilherme acted on Mr Spencer’s
advice. He was her deceased
husband’s attorney and appointed as executor of the insolvent
deceased estate. He used his intimate
knowledge to advise her. Her
money was deposited into his trust account in the course of his
practice to be held in trust for her
until she ‘was required to
withdraw monies or when the estate was finalised’.
[14]
Grosskopff JA remarked in
ICF
, as quoted above, that the
legislature did not have ‘a trust in the legal sense of the
word’ in mind when s 26 was
enacted. Even if one accepts for a
moment the reliance on the principle applicable to trusts, the Fund’s
argument must also
fail. ‘Trust’ is defined as follows in
the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988:
‘
'trust'
means
the arrangement through which the ownership in property of one person
is by virtue of a trust instrument made over or
bequeathed-
(a)
to another
person, the trustee, in whole or in part, to be administered or
disposed of according to the provisions of the trust
instrument for
the benefit of the person or class of persons designated in the trust
instrument or for the achievement of the object
stated in the trust
instrument; or
(b)
to the
beneficiaries designated in the trust instrument, which property is
placed under the control of another person, the trustee,
to be
administered or disposed of according to the provisions of the trust
instrument for the benefit of the person or class of
persons
designated in the trust instrument or for the achievement of the
object stated in the trust instrument,
but does not include the
case where the property of another is to be administered by any
person as executor, tutor or curator in
terms of the provisions of
the
Administration of Estates Act, 1965
.’
[12]
[15]
Mr Spencer
who received the money in trust could be equated to a trustee as the
money had been placed under his control for the
benefit of Ms
Guilherme, the beneficiary. Mr Spencer as trustee was subject to a
fiduciary obligation. Every trust imports the
element of holding or
administering property in part for a person or object other than the
trustee. Nothing prevented Ms Guilherme
as the founder and depositor
from being a beneficiary, or indeed the sole beneficiary.
[13]
Therefore, there is no legal basis on which it can be argued that Ms
Guilherme as the depositor of the money to be kept in trust
may not
benefit. The submission made on behalf of the appellant to the
contrary has no legal foundation.
[16]
In
Bic
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of
Control
[14]
the attorney failed to account to the client who had instructed him
to invest the money in an interest-bearing account pending
compliance
with foreign exchange requirements. The money was not invested in
accordance with the client’s express instructions
as envisaged
in subsec 47(1)
(g)
of the
Attorneys Act. The attorney fled and apparently left the country. The
court held that the dealings were inextricably part
of the attorney’s
practice insofar as he had held himself out as an expert in the field
of foreign exchange matters. The
Fund was held liable for the
client’s loss. This judgment supports Ms Guilherme’s case
and certainly not that of the
Fund as submitted on its behalf. A
client would be entitled to deposit an amount into his/her attorney’s
trust account before
leaving the country for an extended overseas
vacation with instructions to pay a specified amount every month into
his/her bank
account to ensure that debit orders charged against the
account are met. This example is in line with what Ms Guilherme did
as
advised by Mr Spencer. Entrustment for the purpose of subsec 26
(a)
must be seen as an attempt by the legislature to protect the person
by whom or on whose behalf money was entrusted, that being
the person
who stands to suffer the pecuniary loss. The proceeds of the policy
fell into Ms Guilherme’s own estate. She was
the lawful
recipient thereof and at liberty to apply it in any way she wished
and/or as advised.
[17]
In
Du
Preez and Others v Zwiegers
[15]
this Court dealt with a delictual claim and the duty of an attorney
where the depositor was not an existing client. The attorney
was held
liable in delict in circumstances where he negligently made payment
without ascertaining what the depositor wanted done
with the money.
The Court stated the legal principle as follows:
‘
It was also wrong,
in my view, to hold, as a corollary, that it was up to the depositor
to look after its own interests. Vis-à-vis
the depositor the
attorney is not just another member of the public who is entitled to
expect fellow citizens to take reasonable
care to protect their own
interests. An attorney into whose trust account money is paid owes a
duty to the depositor even if the
depositor is not an existing client
of the practice. That duty, at the risk of repetition, is to deal
with the money in such a
way that harm is not negligently caused, to
the depositor among others.’
[16]
The court of first
instance referred to this dictum and concluded that money can be
deposited into an attorney’s trust account
pending instructions
while the depositor is not a client of the attorney. It held that
such arrangement was not barred by law.
The full court relied upon
this same judgment in support of its finding that Ms Guilherme was
entitled to rely on the professional
advice of Mr Spencer to deposit
the funds into his trust account. Ms Guilherme would be entitled to
claim from Mr Spencer based
on delict, but this does not affect her
right to be reimbursed by the Fund for the loss suffered.
[18]
The court of first instance was aware of the pending action
instituted against Ms Guilherme
as surety for the debt of her
deceased husband. Therefore, it made a further order in terms whereof
her attorneys were required
to inform Standard Bank’s attorneys
on receipt of the amount payable by the Fund. The minority judgment
held that it would
be against public policy to allow Ms Guilherme to
be reimbursed, the reason being that no entrustment occurred as the
payment was
made ‘to evade liabilities and creditors of the
Respondent’s deceased’s husband’. It must be
emphasised
that Ms Guilherme was the beneficiary of a policy taken
out on the life of her deceased husband. She was entitled to the
proceeds
that became an asset in her estate. If the facts were
different, there might have been room to agree with the minority
judgment,
but we are bound by the particular facts of this case. In
the majority judgment this aspect was considered. It held that it
‘was
not unlawful or contrary to public policy in light of the
respondent’s version under oath that she would withdraw the
money
when required to do so, which could patently have included to
pay any debtor in due course’. I agree. Although there might
have been a questionable motive, the Fund elected not to make proper
enquiries and present sufficient facts to show that Ms Guilherme
participated in a fraudulent scheme to hide her assets from her
creditors.
Conclusion
[19]
I conclude that the Fund was not entitled to reject Ms Guilherme’s
claim. Her money
was entrusted to Mr Spencer in accordance with
subsec 26
(a)
. She is entitled to be reimbursed for the loss
suffered consequent upon the misappropriation of the funds by the
attorney. Therefore,
the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
Order
[20]
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
________________________
J
P Daffue
Acting
Judge of Appeal
Appearances:
For
appellant:
G Oliver
Instructed
by:
Brendan Muller Inc, Cape Town
Van
der Merwe & Sorour, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: G Van Rhyn Fouche
Instructed
by:
David Bayliss Attorneys, Johannesburg
Symington & De Kok,
Bloemfontein
[1]
F Du Bois et al
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
9 ed (2007) at 962; 8 Lawsa 2 ed part at 300.
[2]
Loc
cit
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
at
962; 8 Lawsa 2 ed part 1 at 300;
Price
NO v Allied-JBS Building Society
1979
(2) SA 262
(E) at 270B-C.
[3]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021]
ZACC 13
,
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) paras 65 and 66;
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited & Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd & Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99
,
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) par 25.
[4]
Industrial
and Commercial Factors (Pty) Limited v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board
of Control
1997
(1) SA 136 (SCA).
[5]
Ibid at 144A-E.
[6]
Ibid at 144I-J.
[7]
Ibid
at 145E-F.
[8]
ICF
loc cit at 144C.
[9]
Attorneys
Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Mettle Property Finance (Pty) Ltd
ZASCA 133;
2012
(3) SA 611 (SCA).
[10]
Attorneys
Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Injo Investments CC
[2015] ZAWCHC
112
;
2016
(3) SA 62
(WCC) par 32.
[11]
Mettle
loc cit paras 15-16.
[12]
Section
1 of Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988.
[13]
Cameron et al,
Honore’s
South African Law of Trusts
5 ed (2017) at 11.
[14]
Bic
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of Control
2003
(6) SA 757 (W).
[15]
Du
Preez and Others v Zwiegers
2008
(4) SA 627 (SCA).
[16]
Ibid para 21.
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