Case Law[2023] ZASCA 100South Africa
Spangenberg and Others v Engelbrecht NO and Another (717/21) [2023] ZASCA 100 (14 June 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Will – interpretation – context – terms clear and unambiguous – appeal dismissed.
Judgment
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## Spangenberg and Others v Engelbrecht NO and Another (717/21) [2023] ZASCA 100 (14 June 2023)
Spangenberg and Others v Engelbrecht NO and Another (717/21) [2023] ZASCA 100 (14 June 2023)
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sino date 14 June 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 717/2021
In the matter between:
IZAK FREDERICK
SPANGENBERG First
Appellant
MARIA CORNELIA
VAN DER
WESTHUIZEN Second
Appellant
CHRISTINA ALETTA W LA
COCK Third
Appellant
and
FRANKEL ENGELBRECHT
NO First
Respondent
GERTRUIDA
SPANGENBERG Second
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Spangenberg and
Others v Engelbrecht NO and Another
(Case
no 717/21)
[2023] ZASCA 100
(14 June 2023)
Coram:
PETSE AP, MBATHA, MATOJANE and WEINER
JJA and MALI AJA
Heard:
22
March 2023
Delivered:
14
June 2023
Summary:
Will
– interpretation – context – terms clear and
unambiguous – appeal dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Northern
Cape Division of the High Court, Kimberley
(Lever
J sitting as a court of first instance):
1 The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
2 The costs are to be
paid jointly and severally by the appellants, the one
paying
the others to be absolved.
JUDGMENT
Weiner JA (Petse AP,
Mbatha and Matojane JJA and Mali AJA concurring):
‘
Death
is not the end. There remains the litigation over the estate.’
[1]
Introduction
[1]
Thi
s
appeal
emanates from a dispute between the appellants, Izak Frederick
Spangenberg (Mr Spangenberg),
Maria
Cornelia Van Der Westhuizen (Ms van der Westhuizen) and Christina
Aletta W La Cock (Ms La Cock), and the respondents.
The
appellants are the children of Hendrik Hermias Spangenberg (the
deceased). The first respondent, Mr Engelbrecht NO, is cited
in his
capacity as executor of the estate of the deceased (the executor).
The second respondent, Gertruida Spangenberg (Mrs Spangenberg)
is the
widow of the deceased, and the step-mother of the appellants. The
dispute concerns the interpretation of the deceased’s
last will
and testament (the Will).
[2]
The deceased executed his Will in July
1992. He died on 15 January 2010. The Master of the High Court
accepted it as his last will
and testament. In the Will, the clause
which is relevant to the litigation reads as follows:
‘
1.
‘
I
give and bequeath my entire estate as follows: -
A…
B.
To my daughters Maria Cornelia Van der Westhuizen and Christina
Aletta Spangenberg
[2]
…the
following:
(i)
My plots 243 and 741 subject to the right of
habitatio
in favour of my spouse
[3]
until
her death or remarriage whichever may occur first.’
[4]
[3]
Several court applications followed the
death of the deceased, including one reviewing the decision of the
Master to appoint Mr
Engelbrecht as executor. As matters presently
stand, although some legal proceedings are still pending, the
executor’s power
to bring the application for the declaratory
order was not challenged.
The dispute
[4]
The dispute between the appellants and
respondents centred around the interpretation of clause B(i) of the
Will. The executor held
the view that, in granting the right of
habitatio
over both plot 243 and 741 (the two plots) to Mrs Spangenberg, she
was entitled to all the benefits concomitant therewith, including
the
right to receive all rentals for properties situated on the two
plots.
[5]
The appellants, on the other hand,
contended that it could not have been the deceased’s intention
to grant Mrs Spangenberg
a
habitatio
over plot 741, as he and the appellants had informally agreed to
divide plot 741 into three portions with each sibling being allocated
a specific portion. The deceased paid for the construction of the
homes on plot 741 for Ms van der Westhuizen
and
Ms La Cock. Mr Spangenberg developed some flatlets on his portion of
plot 741, from which he collected rentals. Accordingly,
the
appellants asserted that a
habitatio
would be inconsistent with this agreement.
[6]
The
appellants sought to rely upon extrinsic evidence for the
interpretation of the clause. They submitted that the right of
habitatio
was
defined in clause 4 of the ante-nuptial contract (ANC) concluded
between the deceased and Mrs Spangenberg in 1985. It provided
that
Mrs Spangenberg would have the right of
habitatio
over plot 243, until her death.
[5]
Therefore, the argument went, it was not necessary for the deceased
to repeat such definition and intention in the Will. Initially
the
appellants argued that clause 4 of the ANC should be incorporated
into the Will by reference. This argument was abandoned by
the
appellants in this Court.
[7]
After failing to obtain a satisfactory
response from the appellants, regarding the payments of rentals from
the properties on plot
741, to the executor on behalf of Mrs
Spangenberg, and having obtained an interdict in this regard for the
retention of such funds,
the executor launched the application for
declaratory relief. Lever J, in the Northern Cape Division of the
High Court, Kimberley
(the high court) granted the following
order, in favour of the executor against the appellants:
‘
1.
It is declared that the right of
habitatio
granted to the Second Respondent in terms of clause B(i) of the last
will and testament of the late Hendrick Hermias Spangenberg
extend
over the immovable properties described as Plot 243 and 741,
Olyvenhoutsdrift, district Keimoes, until her death or re-marriage,
whichever may occur first.
2.
It is declared that the right of
habitatio
, referred to in
paragraph 1 above, includes the rights and entitlement of the Second
Respondent to lease and sub-lease the said
properties and the rental
proceeds generated from the lease of all buildings situated on the
properties referred to in paragraph
1 above, for the duration of the
right of
habitatio
.
3.
It is declared that, for the duration of the right of
habitatio
,
no other person can occupy the properties referred to in paragraph 1
above, without the consent of the First Respondent.
2. [sic] The costs of
this application are to be borne by the Third, Fourth and Fifth
Respondents jointly and severally on the ordinary
party and party
scale, the one paying the others to be absolved.’
[8]
This appeal is with the leave of the high
court. The respondents contended that clause B(i) of the Will is
clear – Mrs Spangenberg
has the right of
habitatio
over both plots. This is the ordinary and natural meaning of the
clause. There was no ambiguity in the provisions of the clause
and,
in such circumstances, it was not permissible to incorporate the
extrinsic evidence referred to by the appellants, to determine
the
meaning of clause 4 of the deceased's Will.
Freedom of testation
[9]
Generally,
it is accepted that testators have the freedom to dispose of their
assets in a manner they deem fit, except insofar as
the law places
restrictions on this freedom. The Constitutional Court has accepted
that freedom of testation ‘is fundamental
to testate
succession’
[6]
and that it
forms part of s 25(1) of the Constitution,
[7]
in that it protects a person’s right to dispose of his or her
assets, upon death, as he or she wishes.
[10]
This
Court, in
Harvey
NO and Others v Crawford NO and Others
[8]
referred to this this principle as follows:
‘
The
right of ownership permits an owner to do with her thing as she
pleases,
provided
that it is permitted by the law
.
The right to dispose of the thing is central to the concept of
ownership and is a deeply entrenched principle of our common law.
Disposing of one’s property by means of executing a will or
trust deed are manifestations of the right of ownership. The
same
holds true under the Constitution.’
[9]
[Emphasis
added.]
[11]
The
principle of freedom of testation has been held to warrant
constitutional refuge through the right to privacy, coupled with
the
right to dignity, in terms of ss 14 and 10 of the Constitution,
respectively.
[10]
As stated by
Jafta J in
King
N O and Others v De Jager and Others;
[11]
‘
It
cannot be gainsaid that private testamentary bequests (when
juxtaposed to public trusts) relate to our most intimate personal
relationships and can very well be based on irrational and erratic
decisions which are located in the domain of the “most
intimate
core of privacy”. It is, therefore, apposite for the right to
privacy to play an active role in determining whether
judicial
interference can enter the perimeter of private testamentary
bequests. This, in turn,
buttresses
the point that when courts intervene in private testamentary bequests
of this nature there ought to be a lower level
of judicial
scrutiny
.
’
[12]
Principles of
Interpretation
[12]
The
‘golden rule’ for the interpretation of Wills and the
inherent limitation (that it should not contravene the law),
was, as
far back as 1914, described in
Robertson
v Robertson
thus:
[13]
‘
The
golden rule for the interpretation of testaments is to ascertain the
wishes of the testator from the language used. And when
these wishes
are ascertained, the court is bound to give effect to them,
unless
we are prevented by some rule or law from doing so
.’
[14]
[Emphasis added.]
[13]
Corbett
J, in
Aubrey
Smith
v
Hofmeyer NO,
[15]
referred to ‘the armchair approach’ in dealing with the
interpretation of a will. He stated that
:
‘
Generally
speaking, in applying and construing a will, the Court's function is
to seek, and to give effect to, the wishes of the
testator as
expressed in the will. This does not mean that the Court is wholly
confined to the written record. The words of the
will must be applied
to the external facts and, in this process of application, evidence
of an extrinsic nature is admissible to
identify the subject or
object of a disposition.
Evidence is not admissible, however,
where its object is to contradict, add to or alter the clearly
expressed intention of the testator
as reflected in the words of the
will. ...
in construing a will the object is not to ascertain
what the testator meant to do but his intention as expressed in the
will.
On
the other hand, in addition to receiving evidence applying the words
of the will to the external facts,
the
Court is also entitled to be informed of, and to have regard to,
all material facts and circumstances known to the testator
when he
made it. As it has been put, the Court places itself in the
testator's armchair.
Nevertheless,
the primary enquiry still is to ascertain, against the background of
these material facts and circumstances, the intention
of the testator
from the language used by him in his will
’
[16]
[Emphasis
added.]
[14]
In
Aubrey
Smith,
[17]
Corbett J presciently, espoused the interpretative principles
referred to in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
,
[18]
the seminal case, on interpretation of documents, where Wallis JA
stated that: ‘Interpretation is the process of attributing
meaning to the words used in a document, be it legislation, some
other statutory instrument, or contract, having regard to the
context
provided by reading the particular provision or provisions in the
light of the document as a whole and the circumstances
attendant upon
its coming into existence.
Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration must be given to the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar
and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to
those
responsible for its production. … The inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision itself, read
in context
and having regard to the purpose of the provision and the background
to the preparation and production of the document
.’[Emphasis
added.]
[15]
Although
Endumeni
did not deal with the interpretation of a will, the ‘golden
rule’ and the ‘armchair approach’ can now be
seen
in the light of the principles enunciated in
Endumeni.
In his article published in the Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
(PELJ),
[19]
Justice Wallis
opined that:
‘
There
are areas of interpretation that are untouched by the contents of
this paper, which has concentrated on contracts and statutes,
rather
than other areas of law. Perhaps the most obvious omission is the
fertile field of the construction of wills and the extent
to which
the
Endumeni
approach
to interpretation can be adapted to that situation. That is a
particular omission, given that in articulating his golden
rule Lord
Wensleydale specifically said that it applied to “wills and,
indeed statutes and all written instruments”.
Wills are of
course unilateral documents, but so are statutes, patent
specifications and judgments, yet they all demand a broadly
similar
approach.’
[16]
Justice
Wallis, in the PELJ article, referred to
Raubenheimer
v Raubenheimer,
[20]
which dealt with whether an implied term could be incorporated into a
will. Surprisingly, there was no specific reference to
Endumeni
in
Raubenheimer
.
Leach JA,
[21]
however, held
that a court is ‘
guided
by the same principles as those applied when implying tacit terms
into a contract –
it
applies the well – known ‘bystander test’ in the
light of the express terms of the will and the relevant surrounding
circumstances and considers whether it is a term ‘so
self-evident as to go without saying.’
[22]
Leach JA went on to adopt the ‘golden rule’ in his
interpretation of the will. He held that:
‘
In
interpreting a will, a court must if at all possible give effect to
the wishes of the testator. The cardinal rule is that “no
matter how clumsily worded a will might be, a will should be so
construed as to ascertain from the language used therein the true
intention of the testator in order that his wishes can be carried
out.”’
[23]
[17]
In
Bato Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs &
Others
,
[24]
the Constitutional Court held that ‘the emerging trend’
in interpretation of documents is ‘to have regard to
the
context in which the words occur, even where the words to be
construed are clear and unambiguous.’
[25]
The appellants latched onto this principle, in contending that, in
interpreting the clause in the Will, even if there is no ambiguity,
the surrounding circumstances and background facts will establish
that the intention of the testator was not as it appears in clause
B(i). They referred to the following chronology of events, in this
regard:
a.
The ANC was concluded on the 29
th
March 1985;
b.
In 1991 the deceased and his son, Mr
Spangenberg, entered into an agreement in respect of erf 741. The
deceased and the appellants
informally agreed to divide erf 741 into
three portions with each sibling being allocated a specific portion;
c.
The deceased executed his Will in 1992;
d.
Plot 741 was at that stage undeveloped. In
1996 the deceased paid for and erected a house for Ms van der
Westhuizen
on her portion of erf 741. She
has lived on that property from 1996 to date;
e.
In 1996 Mr Spangenberg began to reside on
his portion of erf 741 and developed a number of flats thereon. From
1996 to date, he
has seen to the upkeep of the units that he caused
to be erected and has collected the income generated by those units;
f.
In 1998 the deceased erected and paid for
the house for Ms La Cock on her portion of erf 741. She has lived in
that house from that
date until the date of the application;
g.
In 2009 the deceased requested Mr
Spangenberg to erect a storage facility for himself on erf 741 in
order to enable him to remove
his plant and equipment from erf 243
which he did; and
h.
The deceased passed away on the 15 January
2010.
[18]
In
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd,
[26]
this Court held that ‘
…
to
the extent that evidence may be admissible to contextualise the
document (since
“
context
is everything
”
)
to establish its factual matrix or purpose or for purposes of
identification, ‘one must use it as conservatively as possible’
…The time has arrived for us to accept that there is no merit
in trying to distinguish between ‘background circumstances’
and ‘surrounding circumstances’. The distinction is
artificial and, in addition, both terms are vague and confusing.
Consequently, everything tends to be admitted. The terms ‘context’
or ‘factual matrix’ ought to suffice.’
[27]
[19]
The appellants
contended that, having regard to the chronology of events, outlined
in para 17 above, the language of the clause
and the use of the term
habitatio
did not demonstrate an intention to bequeath the undeveloped property
(as erf 741 was at the time of the execution of the Will)
to Mrs
Spangenberg. If the deceased had intended to afford Mrs Spangenberg
any right in respect of erf 741, he would
have used the word
usufruct
as opposed to
habitatio
in order to provide for her maintenance.
[20]
The
distinction sought to be drawn by the appellants is not understood. A
person who has a usufruct has the right to occupy a property
which
belongs to someone else. It grants the right to a person to make use
of another person’s property, enjoying the fruits
(profits and
other advantages of ownership) for a limited period of time whilst
ensuring that the property itself is preserved.
The holder of a
habitatio
has the lifelong right to live on the property or to let the property
out, but without the right to enjoy the fruits (profits or
other
advantages of ownership). It allows the holder of such right to live
in the house of another without detriment to the substance
of the
relevant property.
[28]
The
holder of such right may sublet.
[29]
She may also let the right of
habitatio
.
[30]
[21]
There is no reason
why a usufruct would have been a more appropriate right to bequeath
as the appellants would have it. Mrs Spangenberg
in exercising her
rights of
habitatio
is entitled to all the benefits that right bestows upon her. Her
maintenance was to be catered for from the rentals of the properties
on the two plots, as a right of
habitatio
grants her.
[22]
The
appellants also argued that as the residences were situated on two
different pieces of land, a right of
habitatio
can only be applicable to one piece of land, that is the one on which
the matrimonial residence was situated. They relied on
Endumeni
[31]
in submitting that having regard to the context surrounding the
execution of the Will, the
habitatio
could only apply to plot 243, as set out in the ANC. They contended
that the Will was indeed ambiguous and ‘uncertain in
application from collateral circumstances’. They relied further
on the ‘bystander test’ and submitted that the
court
should take into cognisance the relevant surrounding circumstances in
determining that the term of the will ‘is so
self-evident as to
go without saying’.
[32]
[23]
This, however, is not the position in the
present case. There is no ambiguity. The appellants claim that, if
this Court took cognisance
of the surrounding circumstances or
factual matrix referred to in the chronology of events, it would find
that it ‘goes without
saying’, that the deceased did not
intend to grant a right of
habitatio
over plot 741 to Mrs Spangenberg. This argument would require this
Court to ignore the clear wording of the Will, seen in the
light
of the circumstances prevailing at the time of its execution.
[24]
It
is trite that when a patent or latent ambiguity appears from a
written document, including a will, a court would be entitled
to
consider extrinsic evidence in order to evaluate, interpret and make
a finding on a clause in a document. This Court in
Engelbrecht
v Senwes Ltd
[33]
held:
‘
The
intention of the parties is ascertained from the language used read
in its contextual setting and in the light of admissible
evidence.
There are three classes of admissible evidence.
Evidence
of background facts is always admissible
.
These facts, matters probably present in the mind of the parties when
they contracted,
are
part of the context
and
explain the ‘genesis of the transaction’ or its ‘factual
matrix’. Its aim is to put the Court ‘in
the armchair of
the author(s)’ of the document.
Evidence
of ‘surrounding circumstances’ is admissible only if a
contextual interpretation fails to clear up an ambiguity
or
uncertainty.
Evidence of what passed between the parties during the negotiations
that preceded the conclusion of the agreement is admissible
only in
the case where evidence of the surrounding circumstances does not
provide ‘sufficient certainty’
.
[34]
[Emphasis
added.]
[25]
Mrs
Spangenberg did not oppose the appeal, not by choice but due to a
lack of funds. This Court required assistance and Mr H van
Zyl of the
local Society of Advocates, to whom we owe a great debt of gratitude,
was appointed as the
amicus
curiae
for the hearing. He contended that if the intent of the testator can
be ascertained from the language used, there is no reason
to further
consider the further requisites as set out in
Endumeni
,
[35]
because the interpretation of the will is based only on the
subjective intention of the testator as can be ascertained from the
words used by the testator. It is only, so the argument went, in
cases of ambiguity that the principles in
Endumeni
would
become applicable.
[26]
Endumeni
is
a general exposition on the interpretation of documents. It does not
exclude a will. Whether one adopts the ‘golden rule’,
the
‘armchair approach’ or the unitary approach,
in
the interpretation of a will, a court must ascertain the wishes of
the testator from the language used. In endeavouring to ascertain
these wishes, the will must be read in the light of the circumstances
prevailing at the time of its execution.
[36]
[27]
There is no ambiguity in the words used in
the Will. Thus, relying on the contextual interpretation of the words
in the Will, there
is no place for the introduction of the
'surrounding
circumstances’ relied upon by the appellants.
What
the appellants seek to do is use the wording of the clause in the ANC
to create an ambiguity in the Will and thus introduce
extrinsic
evidence of surrounding circumstances. The ambiguity does not emanate
from the Will itself. It has been contrived through
the reference to
external documentation.
[28]
What is evident from the chronology of
events referred to by the appellants is that the deceased was at all
times fully aware of
the activity surrounding the development of plot
741. He executed his Will after the agreement between him and the
appellants that
each would be allocated a portion of plot 741. He
paid for the construction of his daughters’ residences and was
aware of
all the developments on the plot. But, he still saw fit not
to change his Will, which provides for the
habitatio
to apply to both plots. Mrs Spangenberg is and will probably be
in need of maintenance for a number of years. This averment
was not
denied by the appellants in the application. It is therefore probable
that the inclusion of plot 741 by the deceased, was
in order to see
to the financial well-being and maintenance of Mrs Spangenberg, as
found by the high court.
[29]
The contention of the appellants was that
the interpretation relied upon by the respondents, means that they
will be evicted from
their homes. But this is not necessarily so.
They will have to come to an agreement with the respondents in regard
to the rentals
payable. On their own version, the houses were, in the
main, built by the deceased and essentially at the cost of the
deceased.
[30]
Accordingly, the appeal must fail. The
issue that remains is that of costs. The appellants submitted that
the costs should be borne
by the estate but there seems to be no
rationale for this. Mrs Spangenberg also has an interest in the
estate and there is no reason
why she should be prejudiced by the
appellants’ ill-fated application and appeal.
[31]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1 The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
2 The costs are to be
paid jointly and severally by the appellants, the one
paying the others to
be absolved.
________________________
S E WEINER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellants:
B
Knoetze SC (with Boonzaier)
Instructed
by:
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
H
van Zyl
(heads
of argument prepared by H E De La Rey)
Instructed
by:
Kramer
Weihmann Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Ambrose
Pierce.
[2]
The
third appellant is now Christina Aletta W La Cock.
[3]
The
second respondent herein, Gertruida Spangenberg.
[4]
English
translation of the clause which in Afrikaans reads – ‘B(i)
my persele 243 en 741 Olyvenhoutsdrift, distrik
Keimoes, onderheweg
aan die reg van habitatio (woonreg) ten gunste van my eggenote,
GETRUIDA SPANGENBERG tot by haar dood of
hertroue, watter geval
ookal eerste mag plaasvind.’
[5]
Clause
4 of the ante-nuptial contract reads as follows:
‘
Dat
voormelde HENDRICK HERMIAS SPANGENBERG aan voormelde CHRISTINA
GETRUIDA IMMELMAN ‘n bewoningsreg oor perseel 243, gedeelte
van perseel 452, Olyvenhoutsdrift nedersetting Afdeling Kenhardt
verleen vanaf datum van die afsterwe van gesegde HENDRICK HERMIAS
SPANGENBERG tot die sterftedatum van gesegde CHRISTINA GETRUIDA
IMMELMAN, mits dat die huwelik tussen die partye nog van krag
was
onmiddellik voor die afsterwe van gesegde HENDRICK HERMIAS
SPANGENBERG.’
The
English translation is:
That the
aforementioned HENDRICK HERMIAS SPANGENBERG grants to the
aforementioned CHRISTINA GETRUIDA IMMELMAN a right of occupancy
over
lot 243, part of lot 452, Olyvenhoutsdrift settlement [township]
Division Kenhardt from the date of the death of said HENDRICK
HERMIAS SPANGENBERG until the date of death of said CHRISTINA
GETRUIDA IMMELMAN, provided that the marriage between the parties
was still in force immediately before the death of said HENDRICK
HERMIAS SPANGENBERG (own translation)... .
[6]
Moosa
N.O. v Minister of Justice
[2018] ZACC 19
;
2018 (5) SA 13
(CC) para 18.
[7]
Section
25(1) provides ‘no one may be deprived of property except in
terms of law of general application, and no law may
permit arbitrary
deprivation of property.’
[8]
Harvey
NO and Others v Crawford NO and Others
[2019] ZASCA 147
;
2019 (2) SA 153
(SCA)
(overruled by the Constitutional Court in
King
N.O. and Others v De Jager and Others
but not in relation to these general principles).
[9]
Ibid
para 56.
[10]
Section 14 provides that: ‘Everyone has the right to privacy,
which includes the right not to have…(c) their possessions
seized;’
Section
10 provides that: ‘
everyone has inherent dignity and
the right to have their dignity respected and protected’.
BOE
Trust Ltd N.O.
(in their capacities
as co-trustees of the Jean Pierre De Villiers Trust 5208/2006)
[2012] ZASCA 147
;
2013 (3) SA 236
(SCA) para 27.
[11]
King
N.O. and Others v De Jager and Others
[
2021]
ZACC 4; 2021 (4) SA 1 (CC).
[12]
King
supra
at para 144;
Minister
of Education v Syfrets Trust Ltd
2006
(4) SA 205
(C);
Curators,
Emma Smith Educational Fund v University of KwaZulu Natal
2010
(6) SA 518
(SCA)
para 46.
[13]
Robertson
v Robertson
1914 AD 503.
[14]
Ibid
at
507.
[15]
Aubrey
Smith
v
Hofmeyer NO
1973
(1) SA 655
(C) (
Aubrey
Smith
).
[16]
Aubrey
Smith
supra
at
657
E-658C.
[17]
Aubrey
Smith
supra
footnote 16.
[18]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13; 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para 18.
[19]
Wallis
‘
Interpretation
Before and After Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
Municipality’
2012 4 SA 593
(SCA)
2019
PER
/ PELJ
22.
[20]
Raubenheimer
v Raubenheimer
[2012]
ZASCA
97; 2012 (5) SA 290 (SCA).
[21]
With
Mpati
P, Nugent, Cachalia and Wallis JJA concurring.
[22]
Raubenheimer
para
21.
[23]
Raubenheimer
supra
para 23.
[24]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs &
Others
[2004]
ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) para 89.
[25]
Ibid
para 90.
[26]
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd
2009
(4) SA 399 (SCA).
[27]
KPMG
para
39.
[28]
Hendricks
v Hendricks
[2015] ZASCA 165
;
2016 (1) SA 511
(SCA) at 514F.
[29]
LAWSA,
2
nd
Edition, vol 24 para 605.
[30]
Arend
v Estate Nakiba
1927 CPD 8
at 10.
[31]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
para 18.
[32]
Mulaudzi
v Old Mutual Life Assurance Company (South Africa) Limited
[2017] ZASCA 88
;
2017 (6) SA 90
(SCA) para 26.
[33]
Engelbrecht
v Senwes Ltd
2007
(3) SA 29 (SCA).
[34]
Ibid
paras 6-7 (footnotes ommitted), referred to with approval by the
Constitutional Court in
Eke
v
Parsons
2016
(3) SA 37
(CC) para 30.
[35]
Endumeni
para 18.
[36]
Aubrey
Smith
supra;
Strauss
v Strauss and Others
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 377 paras 30-31.
sino noindex
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