Case Law[2022] ZASCA 101South Africa
P A F v S C F (788/2020) [2022] ZASCA 101; 2022 (6) SA 162 (SCA) (22 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Family law – divorce – accrual – asset donation to trust – whether value thereof should be considered as part of donor spouse’s estate for purpose of calculating accrual.
Judgment
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## P A F v S C F (788/2020) [2022] ZASCA 101; 2022 (6) SA 162 (SCA) (22 June 2022)
P A F v S C F (788/2020) [2022] ZASCA 101; 2022 (6) SA 162 (SCA) (22 June 2022)
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sino date 22 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 788/2020
In
the
matter
between:
P
A
F
APPLICANT
and
S
C
F
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
P A
F v S C F
(788/2020)
[2022]
ZASCA 101
(22 June 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MOLEMELA and MAKGOKA JJA, and
MAKAULA and WEINER AJJA
Heard:
3 March 2022
Delivered:
22 June 2022
Summary:
Family law – divorce
– accrual – asset donation to trust – whether value
thereof should be considered as
part of donor spouse’s estate
for purpose of calculating accrual.
Civil
procedure – application for leave to lead further evidence on
appeal – condonation – late prosecution of
appeal –
principles restated.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal
Division
of the High Court,
Pietermaritzburg
(Kruger, D Pillay and Steyn JJ,
sitting as a court of appeal):
The
application for special leave to appeal is refused with costs,
including costs of two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Makgoka
JA
(Dambuza and Molemela JJA, and
Makaula and Weiner AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This is an application for special
leave to appeal against the order of the full court of the
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High
Court, Pietermaritzburg (the full
court). That court dismissed the applicant’s application for
leave to adduce further evidence
on appeal, and his application to
condone the late prosecution of the appeal. On further application to
this Court for special
leave to appeal, the application was referred
for oral hearing in terms of s 17(2)(
d
)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Superior Courts Act). The
parties were also notified that they should be prepared, if called
upon to do so, to argue the merits of the appeal.
[2]
The parties were married to each
other on 5 September 2001 out of community of property, subject to
the accrual system. On 24 June
2013, the applicant issued summons
against the respondent in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High
Court, Durban (the high court)
for a decree of divorce and ancillary
relief. It was common cause that the value of the applicant’s
estate had shown a greater
accrual than the estate of the respondent.
Accordingly, in her counterclaim, the respondent claimed an amount
equal to one half
of the difference between the accruals in the
parties’ respective estates.
[3]
The divorce trial commenced in the
high court on 18 February 2015. On 29 January 2015, a mere 20 days
before the commencement of
the trial, the applicant founded a trust
under the laws of the British Virgin Islands, pursuant to a
settlement agreement between
him and his brother, MJF, a solicitor
practicing as Queen’s Counsel (QC) in the British Virgin
Islands. The parties’
minor daughter is the sole beneficiary of
the trust, and the applicant’s brother is its sole trustee. The
applicant and the
respondent are the residual trustees.
[4]
On 30 January 2015, a day after the
trust was established, the applicant concluded a written deed of
donation with the trust. In
terms thereof, he donated a sum of
£115 000 to the trust. The donation, which was irrevocable
and unconditional, was
payable a year later on 29 January 2016, or on
the date of registration of transfer of an immovable property owned
by the applicant
in London, whichever occurred earlier. The donation
(at the time, equivalent to R2 205 362) was paid to the
trust in
March 2015. Also, during the same month, the applicant
transferred a sum of £125 000 (at the time, equivalent to
R3 377 481)
into the bank account of his father. This was
purportedly repayment of a loan advanced to him by his father
approximately 25 years
earlier.
[5]
Upon becoming aware of these
transactions, the respondent amended her counterclaim in September
2016 to include a prayer that the
calculation of the accrual should
take into account the value of the two transactions. On 26 April
2017, the high court granted
a decree of divorce, but reserved
judgment on the determination of the proprietary consequences of the
marriage. The court subsequently
gave judgment on this aspect on 13
November 2017. The high court concluded that the two transactions
were made with the ‘fraudulent
intention’ of depriving
the respondent of her rightful accrual claim. Consequently, it
ordered, among others, that the value
of the two transactions be
deemed to be part of the applicant’s assets for the purposes of
calculating the accrual.
[6]
The high court subsequently granted
the applicant leave to appeal to the full court. However, the
applicant failed to prosecute
his appeal timeously, and as a result,
the appeal lapsed. Before the full court the applicant abandoned the
appeal against the
order in respect of the payment to his father, and
applied for condonation of the late prosecution of the appeal to the
full court
and for leave to introduce further evidence on appeal. The
full court dismissed both applications.
[7]
The issue before this Court is
therefore whether special leave should be granted against the orders
of the full court, and if granted,
the merits of the case.
A consideration of the condonation application involves the
question whether there are reasonable
prospects of success on the
merits. I consider each of these issues, in turn.
Application to lead
further evidence
[8]
The evidence which the applicant
sought to introduce on appeal before the full court was the fact that
he had obtained a written
legal opinion regarding the lawfulness of
establishing a trust and making a donation to it, and the written
opinion itself. That
opinion was provided by Advocate André
Stokes SC (Stokes SC), who also represented the applicant during the
divorce trial.
The applicant asserted that he had established the
trust on the basis of that opinion, which was to the effect that the
establishment
of the trust, and the donation to it, would not be
unlawful, and the reasons for the donation were legitimate. The
applicant contends
that the opinion is relevant, because, according
to him, had the high court had such evidence before it, it would not
have concluded
that the donation be considered for purposes of
calculating the accrual
.
As to why the evidence was not introduced during the trial, the
applicant explained that during the trial, he had enquired from
Stokes SC as to the need to lead such evidence, but was advised that
it was unnecessary to do so.
[9]
Section 19
(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act, empowers
this Court to ‘receive
further evidence’. In
Colman v
Dunbar
1933 AD 141
(A) at 161-163, this
Court said that the relevant criteria as to whether evidence should
be admitted on appeal are: the need for
finality, the undesirability
of permitting a litigant who has been remiss in bringing forth
evidence, to produce it late in the
day, and the need to avoid
prejudice. This was approved by the Constitutional Court in
Rail
Commuters Action Group and Others v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail and
Others
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC) paras 41-43. Referring to
s 22
of the repealed Supreme Court Act
59 of 1959, which is similar to
s 19
(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act, the
court cautioned that the power to
receive further evidence on appeal should be exercised ‘sparingly’
and that such
evidence should only be admitted in ‘exceptional
circumstances’. In addition, the evidence must be ‘weighty,
material and presumably to be believed’. In
O’Shea
NO v Van Zyl NO and Others (Shaw NO and Others Intervening)
[2011]
ZASCA 156
;
2012 (1) SA 90
(SCA);
[2012] 1
All SA 303
(SCA)
para 9, this Court
considered that one of the criteria for the late admission of the new
evidence is that such evidence will be
practically conclusive and
final in its effect on the issue to which it is directed.
[10]
Measured against the approach set
out above, I am of the view that there is no merit in the applicant’s
application. First,
I discern no ‘exceptional circumstances’
to move this Court to exercise its power, which, it must be borne in
mind,
should be exercised ‘sparingly’.
[11]
Second, the evidence sought to be
introduced would not be ‘practically conclusive and final in
its effect’ on the issue
of the lawfulness of the donation. The
fact that the applicant acted on the basis of a legal opinion from
senior counsel is not
dispositive of the question as to whether the
value of the donation to the trust should be included in the
calculation of the accrual.
It is but one of the factors to be
considered.
[12]
Third, and as counsel for the
respondent correctly pointed out, the evidence sought to be
introduced is not of an incontrovertible
nature. It is not decisive
of the question for which it is sought to be introduced. On the
contrary, it raises more questions than
it answers, which can only be
explored in cross-examination, which cannot be done on appeal. Those
questions include why the applicant
sought a second opinion on the
same issue, which tends to suggest that the initial opinion was
unfavourable to the outcome he sought.
For all the above reasons, the
application to adduce further evidence on appeal must be dismissed.
Condonation
[13]
The high court granted the applicant
leave to appeal to the full court on 23 October 2018. The notice
of appeal was delivered
timeously on 7 November 2018. In terms of
rule 49(6)(
a
)
of the Uniform Rules of Court, the applicant had 60 days within which
to apply for allocation of the date of hearing of the appeal,
and to
lodge the appeal record. If no such application was made, the appeal
would be deemed to have lapsed in terms of the rule.
Thus, the
applicant had up to 6 February 2019 to apply for a date. He only did
so on 10 October 2019, when he also furnished the
record on appeal.
By then, the appeal had lapsed in terms of the deeming provisions of
rule 49(6)
(a)
.
[14]
The explanation for the delay was
provided by the applicant’s attorney. She stated that she was
under an erroneous impression
that the application for the allocation
of a date of hearing could only be made once the appeal record was
ready to be lodged.
As the appeal record was not ready by 6 February
2019, she did not apply for a date of hearing. The attorney further
explained
that there were difficulties in compiling the appeal
record. Certain documents were missing, including a bundle of the
respondent’s
trial exhibits, which was only furnished to her on
19 February 2019. The task of finalising the appeal record was only
completed
in September 2019, and the record was delivered to the
applicant’s attorney by the transcribers on 18 September
2019.
[15]
The
full court had to consider whether there was sufficient cause to
condone the applicant’s non-compliance with the rules.
The
basic principle is that a court considering condonation has a
discretion, to be exercised judicially upon a consideration of
all
the facts, and in essence, it is a matter of fairness to both
sides.
[1]
Among the factors
usually relevant are: (a) the degree of lateness; (b) the explanation
therefor; (c) the prospects of success;
(d) and the importance of the
case.
[2]
[16]
It seems common cause, or at least
not seriously contested, that much of the fault for the delay in
finalising the preparation of
the record can be attributed to the
transcribers. The full court was critical of the applicant’s
attorney for not taking
steps to compel the transcribers to complete
the appeal record timeously, and for her failure to explain this in
her affidavit.
The full court observed:
‘“
Final
instructions” were allegedly given to [the transcribers] on 6
June 2019. Notwithstanding this, the record was only delivered
to the
[applicant’s] attorney on 18 September 2019. No explanation has
been provided for the delay from 18 September 2019
until 9 October
2019 when the appeal record was eventually filed with the registrar.
There is also no explanation from [the transcribers],
in either the
form of a substantive affidavit or a confirmatory affidavit,
regarding the delay and the causes thereof.’
[17]
The full court was also not
impressed with the attorney’s explanation that she had
misconstrued the provisions of rules 49(6)
and (7) that the
application for a date could not be made without the lodging of the
appeal record. It described the explanation
as ‘terse’
and found it inadequate. I agree.
Even allowing for the fact that
the
delay in the preparation of the record was occasioned by the
transcribers, and that there was not much the applicant’s
attorney could do about it, there is still no proper explanation as
to what the attorney ‘misconstrued’ about rule
49(7)
(a)
.
The rule requires the application for a date to be filed
simultaneously with copies of the record. But it has an important
proviso,
which reads as follows:
‘
.
. . If the necessary copies of the record are not ready at that
stage, the registrar may accept an application for a date of hearing
without the necessary copies if –
(i) the application is
accompanied by a written agreement between the parties that the
copies of the record may be handed in late;
or
(ii) failing such
agreement, the appellant delivers an application together with an
affidavit in which the reasons for his omission
to hand in the copies
of the record in time are set out and in which is indicated that an
application for condonation of the omission
will be made at the
hearing of the appeal.’
[18]
The proviso is clear. If the record
was not available, the applicant’s attorney could have
requested the respondent’s
attorney to agree to file the record
later, failing which, she could have deposed to an affidavit
explaining to the registrar the
difficulties experienced by the
transcribers to finalise the preparation of the record. Even a
cursory reading of the proviso would
have made it clear that an
application for a date could be made without filing the record. The
applicant’s attorney does
not explain what part of this proviso
she ‘misconstrued’.
[19]
The full court further referred to
the trite principle that it is the duty of every legal practitioner
to be acquainted with the
rules of court. It thus concluded that the
attorney’s explanation was no excuse for not complying with the
rules. It referred
in this regard to
Moaki
v Reckitt and Colman (Africa) Ltd and Another
1968 (3) SA 98
(A), where this Court held, at 101G that:
‘
An
attorney who is instructed to prosecute an appeal is . . . duty bound
to acquaint himself with the procedure prescribed by the
Rules of the
Court to which a matter is being taken on appeal.’
The full court also
considered the decisions of this Court in
Kgobane and Another v
Minister of Justice and Another
1969 (3) SA 365
(A) at 369B-370A
and
Mbutuma v Xhosa Development Corporation Limited
1978 (1)
SA 681
(A).
[20]
The
full court further pointed out that the applicant’s attorney
was notified in writing by the respondent’s attorney
as early
as 21 June 2019 that the appeal had lapsed and that an application
for condonation would be necessary. The applicant’s
attorney
did not meaningfully respond to that letter, and failed to address
this aspect in her founding affidavit. It is a requirement
that an
application for condonation must be made as soon as possible after
the party becomes aware of its failure to comply with
the rules.
[3]
In this case, the application was only made some four months later,
on 10 October 2019, when the applicant delivered the appeal
record
and applied for a date of hearing. This, the full court remarked,
suggested that the applicant’s attorney was of the
view that
condonation was simply there for the asking. On these considerations,
the full court dismissed the applicant’s
application for
condonation of the late prosecution of the appeal and its
reinstatement. In this Court, the applicant persisted
in his
assertion that that the delay in prosecuting the appeal had been
fully and satisfactorily explained.
[21]
A
court considering a condonation application exercises a discretion in
the true sense, upon consideration of all the circumstances
of each
case.
[4]
In
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
[2015]
ZASCA 209
;
2016
(2) SA 199
(SCA) para 17, it was held that the relevant factors in
that enquiry generally include the nature of the relief sought; the
extent
and cause of the delay; its effect on the administration of
justice and other litigants; the reasonableness of the explanation
for the delay, which must cover the whole period of delay; the
importance of the issue to be raised; and the prospects of success.
The onus is on the applicant to satisfy the court that condonation
should be granted.
[5]
[22]
Because
the discretion exercised in this regard is one in the true sense, the
court’s decision can only be overturned on appeal
in narrow
circumstances. The approach of an appellate court to the exercise of
such a discretion is this: it will not set aside
the decision of the
lower court merely because it would itself, on the facts of the
matter, have come to a different conclusion;
it may interfere only
when it appears that the lower court had not exercised its discretion
judicially, or that it had been influenced
by wrong principles or a
misdirection on the facts, or that it had reached a decision which in
the result could not reasonably
have been made by a court properly
directing itself to all the relevant facts and principles.
[6]
[23]
Having carefully considered the
reasoning of the full court as set out above, I cannot fault its
approach or the conclusion it reached.
There is no discernable
misdirection or an indication that the discretion was not exercised
properly. There is therefore no basis
for this Court to intervene and
substitute its discretion for that of the full court.
Prospects
of success
[24]
Good
prospects on the merits may compensate for poor explanation for the
delay.
[7]
However,
where special leave is sought, as here,
the
existence of reasonable prospects of success is insufficient for the
granting of special leave.
As pointed out in
Cook
v Morrison and Another
[2019] ZASCA 8
;
2019 (5) SA 51
(SCA) para 8, ‘something more,
by way of special circumstances, is needed’. This may include:
‘
that
the appeal raises a substantial point of law; or that the prospects
of success are so strong that a refusal of leave would
result in a
manifest denial of justice; or that the matter is of very great
importance to the parties or to the public.’
[8]
[25]
The
issue in this regard is whether the high court was correct in its
order that the amount donated to the trust should be deemed
to be
part of the applicant’s estate for the purpose of calculating
the accrual.
The
right to claim accrual is provided for in s
3
of the
Matrimonial
Property Act 88 of 1984 (the
MPA).
That section provides that at the dissolution of a marriage subject
to the accrual system, the spouse whose estate shows no
accrual or a
smaller accrual than the estate of the other spouse, acquires a claim
against the other spouse for an amount equal
to half of the
difference between the accrual of the respective estates of the
spouses.
[9]
[26]
Where
trust property is involved, the default position is that such
property does not form part of the personal estate of the trustee,
except in so far as he or she, as trust beneficiary, is entitled to
the trust property.
[10]
A
court can disregard this in two instances: where it finds that a
trust is a sham or simulated, or when it finds that there has
been
abuse of the trust form. In
Van
Zyl NO and Another v Kaye NO and Others
[2014]
ZAWCHC 52
;
2014 (4) SA 452
(WCC) para 16, it was explained that
the notion of a trust being a sham is premised upon the trust not
existing. If it is found
that a trust is a sham, the result is that
no effect will be given to the transaction and the ‘founder’
will remain
the owner of the ‘trust assets’ and neither
the ‘trustee(s)’, nor the ‘beneficiaries’
will
acquire any rights with regard to these assets.
[11]
On the other hand, piercing the trust veneer implicitly recognises
the validity of a trust in the legal sense, but finds that there
may
be a justification to disregard the ordinary consequences of its
existence for a particular purpose.
[12]
These two remedies are distinct from each other and should not be
conflated.
[27]
In her amended counterclaim, the
respondent accepted the formalities in respect of the trust, namely:
its formation in accordance
with the laws of the British Virgin
Islands; that the applicant’s brother was its sole trustee;
that the parties’ minor
child was the sole beneficiary, with
the applicant and the respondent as the residual beneficiaries; and
that the donation was
made to the trust and was accepted by the
applicant’s brother as the trustee. The upshot of these
averments was that the
trust was legitimately established, and that
the applicant could never retrieve the donation made to the trust.
Also, that the
donation, being unconditional, would yield no
quid
pro quo
for the applicant, and that the
parties’ minor daughter would benefit from the donation to the
trust.
[28]
It
was submitted on behalf of the applicant that given the above
admissions by the respondent in her pleadings, and the evidence
led
at the trial, the high court was precluded from making the
determination that the donation was made for the sole purpose of
reducing the respondent’s accrual claim.
It
was further submitted that during the trial it was never put to
either the applicant or the trustee (his brother) that: the donation
was simulated or that the trust was a sham; nor was it ever suggested
that the applicant still retained ownership of the money
which was
donated to the trust.
[29]
In
my view, the substance, rather than form, of the respondent’s
claim must be considered.
Properly
construed, the essence of the respondent’s allegations in para
26 of her counterclaim is this: by creating the trust
and making the
donation to it, the applicant abused the trust form to reduce her
accrual claim. Upon such premise, she requested
the court to go
behind the trust form, or ‘pierce the trust veneer’, and
order that the value of the donation be taken
into account when the
accrual is determined.
[30]
The high court was alive to this,
and it appears from record that this was the basis on which the trial
was conducted. This is also
consistent with the order it made, ie
that the value of the donation to the trust be deemed to be part of
the applicant’s
assets for the purposes of calculating the
accrual. This it could do only after piercing the trust veneer. The
result is that even
if the respondent’s claim was not properly
framed, the question whether the court should go beyond the trust
form, or pierce
the trust veneer, was fully ventilated during the
trial.
[31]
It
must be borne in mind that this Court has inherent jurisdiction to
decide a matter even where it has not been pleaded, provided
that
such matter was ventilated before it.
[13]
Here, it is not a case of an issue not having been pleaded. It was
pleaded, if only inelegantly so. As explained in
Van
Mentz v Provident Assurance Corporation of Africa Ltd
1961
(1) SA 115
(A) at 122, if the real issue emerges during the course of
the trial, it would be proper to treat the issues as enlarged where
this can be done without prejudice to the party against whom the
enlargement is to be used.
[14]
Given the manner in which the trial was conducted, there can be no
prejudice to the applicant.
[32]
On behalf of the applicant, it was
submitted that there was no legal basis for the order made by the
high court, ie that the value
of the donation to the trust be deemed
as an asset in the estate of the applicant for the purposes of
calculating the accrual.
For this proposition, heavy reliance was
placed upon the decision in
MM and
Others v JM
2014 (4) SA 384
(KZP) (
MM
v JM
). There, the parties were married
out of community of property subject to the accrual system. In her
counterclaim, the defendant claimed that a family
trust was the alter ego of the plaintiff, and that its assets should
be deemed
to form part of his assets for the purpose of
determining the accrual of his estate. The plaintiff excepted to the
defendant’s
counterclaim on grounds, among others, that the
claim lacked the averments necessary to sustain a cause of action.
[33]
The
exception found favour with the court, which upheld it on the basis
that the defendant did not allege that the assets of the
trust were
the plaintiff’s property, nor that the trust was a sham. Ploos
van Amstel J drew a distinction between a court’s
consideration
of a claim for a redistribution order in terms of s 7(3) of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act) and
when it considers an
accrual claim in terms of
s 3
of the MPA. The learned judge made
three propositions.
[15]
First,
that an accrual claim was determined on a ‘factual and
mathematical basis’ and was not a matter of discretion.
Second,
that there was no authority in the MPA to have regard to assets which
did not form part of a spouse’s estate on the
basis that it
would be ‘just’ to do so. Lastly, that there was no legal
basis for an order that assets which in fact
did not form part of a
spouse’s estate should be deemed to form part of it for
purposes of determining the accrual.
[34]
In
RP v
DP and Others
2014 (6) SA 243
(ECP) (
RP
v DP
), Alkema J took the opposite view.
He embarked on a helpful analysis of the evolution of the court’s
common law power to
pierce the corporate veil and explained (at para
31):
‘
.
. . [T]he power of piercing either the corporate or the trust veil is
derived from common law and not from any general discretion
a court
may have. It is a function quite separate from, for instance, the
exercise of discretion in making a redistribution order
under s 7 of
the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act), and
must not be
confused or conflated with such power.’
[35]
Unqualified
and viewed in isolation, the propositions expounded in
MM
v JM
appear attractive. But contextually, they do not bear scrutiny.
Although the accrual claim only arises at the dissolution of the
marriage,
[16]
both spouses
acquire a protectable contingent right against each other during the
subsistence of the marriage, which the law will
protect in
circumstances of irregularity and a lack of bona fides.
[17]
Thus, upon vesting of such right, there is a legal obligation on both
spouses to satisfy the accrual claim (and hence to share
in their
respective gains) at the dissolution of their marriage.
[18]
Furthermore,
s 7
of the MPA obliges both spouses to furnish ‘full
particulars of the value’ of their estates. Therefore, an
accurate
reflection of the parties’ respective accruals is
necessary to give effect to the intention behind the legislature’s
provision of the accrual system in the first place.
[19]
[36]
Accordingly, where there is an
allegation that one of the spouses had sought to evade this
obligation by abusing the trust form,
for example, by transferring
assets to a trust in order to reduce the value of their estate, and
thus their accrual liability,
a
court is not precluded from enquiring into that issue. It is
empowered to
conduct an in-depth
examination of the facts to determine
whether
trust form had been abused. If this is established in that factual
enquiry, the court is empowered to
pierce
the trust veneer, and order that the value of such assets be taken
into account in the calculation of the accrual. This power
is not
based on the authority of the MPA or in the exercise of a statutory
discretion, but on the basis that a factual enquiry
has revealed
trust form abuse, upon which the piercing of the trust veneer
follows.
[37]
Viewed
in this light, it is clear that when a court pierces the trust
veneer, this has nothing to do with the exercise of a statutory
discretion in terms of either the MPA or the
Divorce Act. The
court
does so on the basis of its common law power, which was transplanted
from the principles of piercing the corporate veil in
the realm of
company law. See
WT
v KT
[2015]
ZASCA 9
;
2015 (3) SA 574
(SCA) (
WT
v KT
)
para 31.
[20]
As Professor Smith puts it:
‘
In
my view, Ploos van Amstel J’s finding in
MM
v JM
to the effect that “the amount of the accrual claim is
determined on a factual and mathematical basis and is not a matter
of
discretion” is an overly convenient explanation for refusing to
consider the value of the assets of an
alter
ego
trust in assessing an accrual claim. This is because, in order for
the contingent right to share in the assets of the other spouse
to
vest (and thus to ascertain whether the contingencies that establish
the claim have materialised), it is necessary for the divorce
court
to conduct an in-depth assessment of the facts of the case, based on
the reciprocal obligation placed on both spouses “to
furnish
full particulars of the value” of their estates within a
reasonable time of being requested to do so.’
[21]
[38]
The
learned author further opines that
MM
v JM
would have the effect of frustrating the objective of the accrual
system to achieve equal sharing and financial equality between
spouses who made financial and other contributions during the
subsistence of the marriage. This is so, as it would enable spouses
to reduce the true value of their accrual by transferring assets to a
trust.
[22]
See also
YB
v SB and Others NNO
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) para 35, where it was remarked that the
viewpoint that
the
determination of an accrual claim ‘involves purely an
“arithmetical calculation” is an over-simplification
of
the issue and can therefore not be correct’, as it fails to
consider the in-depth factual enquiry referred to earlier
.
[23]
I agree with both observations.
[39]
In my view, the approach in
RP
v DP
that the power to pierce the trust
veneer is founded in the common law and exists independently of the
Divorce Act or
the MPA, and is thus in principle applicable to
marriages subject to the accrual system, is to be preferred to that
in
MM v JM
.
The latter’s approach is rigid, by seeking to confine the
court’s power to the MPA or the
Divorce Act, is
unduly
constricting. Where the trust form is abused to prejudice an
aggrieved spouse’s accrual claim, a court should exercise
its
wider power in terms of the common law to prevent such prejudice.
[40]
Lastly,
the holding in
MM
v JM
that ‘[there was no] legal basis for an order that [the values
of] assets which in fact [did] not form part of a spouse’s
estate should be deemed to form part of it for purposes of
determining the accrual’,
[24]
must
be considered to have been overturned by the decision of this Court
in
REM
v VM
[2016]
ZASCA 5
;
2017
(3) SA 371
(SCA) (
REM
v VM
).
Although no reference was made there to
MM
v JM
,
this Court, in principle, recognised that trust assets may be used to
calculate the accrual of a trustee or founder spouse’s
estate
on the basis that the trust form had been abused to prejudice the
other spouse’s accrual claim.
[25]
In the process, the court disapproved of a finding made in
WT
v KT
that
an aggrieved spouse, who was neither a beneficiary of the trust, nor
a third party who had transacted with it, had no standing
to impugn
the management of a trust because no fiduciary duty was owed to such
a spouse.
[26]
[41]
The test whether trust assets should
be taken into account when determining the
patrimonial
consequences of a marriage was enunciated by this Court in
Badenhorst
v Badenhorst
[2005]
ZASCA 116
;
2006 (2) SA 255
(SCA) para 9, as
follows:
‘
.
. . To succeed in a claim that trust assets be included in the estate
of one of the parties to a marriage there needs to be evidence
that
such party controlled the trust and but for the trust would have
acquired and owned the assets in his own name. Control must
be
de
facto
and not necessarily
de
iure
. A nominee of a sole shareholder
may have
de iure
control of the affairs of the company but the
de
facto
control rests with the
shareholder.
De iure
control of a trust is in the hands of the trustees but very often the
founder in business or family trusts appoints close relatives
or
friends who are either supine or do the bidding of their appointer.
De facto
the founder controls the trust. To determine whether a party has such
control it is necessary to first have regard to the terms
of the
trust deed, and secondly to consider the evidence of how the affairs
of the trust were conducted during the marriage.’
[42]
Badenhorst
concerned
a redistribution order in terms of
s 7(3)
of the
Divorce Act. The
question is whether this test is limited to marriages subject to
s
7(3)
and thus excludes marriages subject to the accrual system. To my
mind, there is no reason to confine this broad test in that way.
I
align myself with the view that the test is applicable to, among
others, marriages subject to an accrual system.
[27]
Both the redistribution order in terms of
s 7(3)
of the
Divorce Act
and
the accrual system in terms of
s 3
of the MPA, have as their
objective, equitable and fair patrimonial consequences of a marriage.
[43]
On the unique facts of the present
case, the
Badenhorst
‘control test’ does not find application. This is
because: the applicant does not seem to have either the
de
jure
or the
de
facto
control of the trust; there is no
evidence that the applicant’s brother is ‘either supine
or do[es] the bidding of’
the applicant; there is no ‘evidence
of how the affairs of the trust were conducted during the marriage’,
as the trust
was established shortly before the trial commenced; and
there is nothing in the terms of the trust deed that points to
possible
gain or control of the trust by the applicant. However, that
is not decisive. As explained earlier, where there are allegations
that the trust form has been abused to prejudice a spouse’s
accrual claim, a court is empowered to enquire into that and
make a
determination.
[44]
In other words, the absence of
‘control’ does not necessarily exclude the possibility of
trust form abuse. A court must
vigilantly examine the facts in each
case to determine allegations of trust form abuse. If such abuse is
established, a court is
entitled to pierce the trust veneer, despite
the absence of ‘control’. As explained in
Van
Zyl NO v Kaye NO
para 22, piercing the
trust veneer is:
‘
.
. . [A]n equitable remedy . . . one that lends itself to a flexible
approach to fairly and justly address the consequences of
an
unconscionable abuse of the trust form in given circumstances. It is
a remedy that will generally be given when the trust form
is used in
a dishonest or unconscionable manner to evade a liability, or avoid
an obligation.’
This description received
the imprimatur of this Court in
WT v KT
para 31 and
REM v
VM
para 17.
[45]
What
is more, even in the absence of ‘control’, the piercing
of the trust veneer is still a remedy on the basis of the
proviso in
the
Badenhorst
‘control test,’ which was articulated as follows:
[28]
‘
.
. . It may be that in terms of the trust deed some or all the assets
are beyond the control of the founder, for instance where
a vesting
has taken place by a beneficiary, such as a charitable institution
accepting the benefit. In such a case,
provided
the party had not made the bequest with the intention of frustrating
the wife’s or husband’s claim
. . . the asset or assets concerned cannot be taken into account.’
(Emphasis added.)
[46]
In
my view, the facts of the present case fall neatly within the
proviso. This brings me to the high court’s conclusion that
the
value of the donation to the trust should be deemed as part of the
applicant’s assets for the purposes of calculating
the accrual.
This conclusion rested on four factors, namely:
(a)
the timing of the creation of the trust and the donation made to it;
(b)
the
fact that the trust was established in the British Virgin Islands;
(c)
the applicant did not consult
the respondent about the creation of the trust; and (d) that there
was no immediate need to provide
for the maintenance of the child. I
consider each, in turn.
The timing
[47]
As
mentioned already, the trust was created, and the deed of donation
concluded, only days before the trial commenced. One of the
issues in
dispute was the value of the applicant’s estate, upon which the
accrual payable to the respondent was to be calculated.
The applicant
offered no credible explanation for why
he
was genuinely motivated to create a trust for the parties’
daughter before the trial was due to start, where the issue
of
maintenance for the child was to be determined. What is more,
although the quantum of maintenance was an issue in the divorce,
the
applicant had repeatedly stated that affordability was not an issue
and that he could pay whatever the court decided was reasonable.
[48]
Closely allied to the timing of the
creation of the trust and the donation to it, are two further
considerations, namely (a) the
motivation why the applicant sought
legal advice about the creation of the trust, and (b) the transfer of
funds to the applicant’s
father. T
he
fact that,
prior to the creation of
the trust, the applicant had sought legal advice on his liability to
the respondent in respect of the respondent’s
accrual claim,
weighed heavily with the full court. It had regard to an affidavit
submitted by Stokes SC, in which he set out the
context in which the
applicant had sought the opinion from him. In paragraph 4 of the
affidavit, he mentioned that during preceding
consultations, it
emerged that the applicant ‘was very concerned about the amount
he was likely to have to pay [the respondent]
in terms of her accrual
claim’. Stokes SC further mentioned that the applicant had
previously consulted with another counsel
on the same issue, but that
he wanted a second opinion.
This
is an important consideration. It sets the tone for the creation of
the trust and the donation to it, as well as the payment
to the
applicant’s father.
[49]
As to the transfer of funds to the
applicant’s father, I mentioned earlier that
the
applicant abandoned the appeal in respect thereof before the full
court. Despite this, it remains a relevant consideration in
the
overall assessment of the applicant’s motive. The payment was
made at the same time as the donation to the trust, and
from the same
funds. This aspect is particularly important for two reasons. First,
before he reflected the ‘loan’ on
his balance sheet for
the first time before the trial commenced in February 2015, the
applicant had not made any mention of it.
As mentioned already, the
parties were, during the subsistence of the marriage, transparent
with each other on financial matters.
If it was a genuine loan, the
applicant would likely have informed the respondent about it. Second,
there is no explanation as
to why the loan had not been paid since
1990. It seems to be common cause that the applicant would have been
able to repay it earlier.
But he chose to repay it just before the
respondent’s accrual claim was to be determined in court.
Therefore, the timing
of the applicant’s payment to his father
strongly suggests that the ‘loan’, together with the
donation to the
trust, were both part of the applicant’s
stratagem to reduce his accrual liability to the respondent.
[50]
Although the timing of the creation
is not decisive, given what is stated above, it is one of the most
important considerations.
The applicant has not explained why he
could not create the trust after the finalisation of the divorce and
payment of the respondent’s
accrual. The inference is thus
irresistible that the creation of the trust, and the hasty donation
to it, were meant to thwart
the respondent’s accrual claim.
The
trust was established in the British Virgin Islands
[51]
The
high court considered this a relevant factor, because any attempt by
the respondent to challenge the manner in which the trust
was being
managed or to seek to recover assets from it was made more difficult
and expensive by the simple reason that it is in
a foreign
jurisdiction. It seems that the applicant’s wish was to place
the trust and the donation made to it out of the
respondent’s
reach. There is no credible explanation why the trust could not be
created in South Africa.
No
consultation with the respondent about the creation of the trust
[52]
The
applicant’s retort is that because the parties were married out
of community of property, he was free to do as he pleased
with his
separate asset. However, this disregards the fact that the parties
had historically consulted each other in respect of
major financial
matters, including the acquisition and disposal of immovable
property. Also, the parties had pooled assets and
acquired many of
them jointly. Furthermore, the trust and donation were purportedly
made for the benefit of their daughter. This
is a significant
financial decision affecting one’s child to which the mother
would ordinarily have been privy. Given these
considerations, the
fact that the respondent was not consulted on the creation of the
trust, stands out oddly, and assumes some
importance. This is
particularly so in the light of the respondent’s contingent
right to share in the accrual, as mentioned
earlier.
No
immediate need to provide for the maintenance of the child
[53]
The
applicant suggested that the creation of the trust was reasonable, in
case he had more children in the future, or in the event
that he
might die unexpectedly. This appears to be disingenuous. And it
merely needs to be mentioned to be rejected. The fact of
the matter
is that the applicant was, in any event, obliged to maintain his
daughter. Had the donation not been made, the amount
of the donation
would have been available in the calculation of his accrual, and what
the respondent was entitled to as her accrual
share. This would
similarly apply in respect of the deceased estate in the event of the
applicant’s untimely passing.
Conclusion
[54]
In all the circumstances, upon a
conspectus of all the relevant facts, the high court was correct to
conclude that it was entitled
to go behind the trust form and order
that the value of the donation to the trust be taken into account as
part of the applicant’s
assets in calculating the accrual. The
appeal was correctly dismissed, and accordingly, there are no
prospects of success on the
underlying legal issue. Coupled with the
fact that there is no basis to interfere with the refusal to condone
the applicant’s
late prosecution of the appeal, it follows that
there are no special circumstances warranting the grant of special
leave to appeal.
[55]
In the result, the following order
is made:
The application for
special leave to appeal is refused with costs, including costs of two
counsel, where so employed.
T
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
applicant:
D Phillips SC (with him E S Law)
Instructed
by:
Strauss Daly Attorneys, Umhlanga
EG Cooper Majiedt Inc.,
Bloemfontein.
For
respondent: A M
Annandale SC (with her SI Humphrey)
Instructed
by:
Andrew Inc., Attorneys, Durban
McIntyre Van der Post,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Melane
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
1962 (4) SA 531
(A) at 532B-E.
## [2]Ibid.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
P E
Bosman Transport Works Committee and Others v Piet Bosman Transport
(Pty) Limited
1980 (4) SA 794
(A) at 800A-C.
[4]
Mabaso
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2004]
ZACC 8
;
2005 (2) SA 117
(CC) para 20.
[5]
Glazer
v Glazer NO
1963 (4) SA 694
(AD) at 702H.
[6]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC);
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) para 11.
[7]
United
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Hills and Others
1976 (1) SA 717
(A) at 720E-G;
Darries
v Sheriff, Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg and Another
1998 (3) SA 34
(SCA) at 40H-41E;
Valor
IT v Premier, North West Province and Others
[2020] ZASCA 62
;
2021 (1) SA 42
(SCA) para 38.
[8]
This
is not a closed list, as explained in
Westinghouse
Brake & Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Bilger Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1986
(2) SA 555
(A) at 564H-565E. See also
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Division, Pretoria v Moabi
[2017]
ZASCA 85
;
2017 (2) SACR 384
(SCA) para 21.
[9]
This
is subject to
s 8(1)
of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
,
which reads:
‘
Power
of court to order division of accrual
(1)
A court may on the application of a spouse whose marriage is subject
to the accrual system and who satisfies the court that
his right to
share in the accrual of the estate of the other spouse at the
dissolution of the marriage is being or will probably
be seriously
prejudiced by the conduct or proposed conduct of the other spouse,
and that other persons will not be prejudiced
thereby, order the
immediate division of the accrual concerned in accordance with the
provisions of this Chapter or on such other
basis as the court may
deem just.’
[10]
Section
12 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988.
[11]
Van
Zyl NO v Kaye NO
paras
16-22.
[12]
Ibid.
[13]
See
Shill
v Milner
1937
AD 101
(A) at 105.
[14]
See
also
Collen
v Rietfontein Engineering Works
1948 (1) SA 413
(A) at 433 and
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
1925 AD 173
(A) at 198.
[15]
MM
and Others v JM
para 19.
[16]
Brookstein
v Brookstein
[2016] ZASCA 40
;
2016 (5) SA 210
(SCA) para 19.
[17]
Reeder
v Softline Limited and Another
2001 (2) SA 844
(W) at 850-851;
RS
v MS
and
Others
2014 (2) SA 511
(GJ) para 13.
[18]
B
S Smith ‘Statutory discretion or common law power? Some
reflections on “veil piercing” and the consideration
of
(the value of) trust assets in dividing matrimonial property at
divorce – Part Two.’ (2017)
Journal
for Juridical Science
42(1):1-18 UV/UFS.
[19]
Ibid.
[20]
See
also M de Waal, P Solomon and E Cameron
Honoré’s
South African Law of Trusts
6 ed (2018) at 313-314.
[21]
Smith
fn 19 above at 10.
[22]
Smith
fn 19 above at 11.
[23]
See
also
BC
v CC and
O
thers
2012
(5) SA 562
(ECP) para 9.
[24]
MM
v JM
para 19.
[25]
REM
v VM
paras
19 and 20.
[26]
REM
v VM
para 20.
[27]
See,
for example,
YB
v SB and
O
thers
NNO
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) para 49.
[28]
Badenhorst
para 9.
sino noindex
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