Case Law[2022] ZASCA 156South Africa
Kuttel v Master of the High Court and Others (819/2021) [2022] ZASCA 156; [2023] 1 All SA 17 (SCA); 2023 (3) SA 498 (SCA) (16 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
16 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Trust and trustees – sale of shares owned by trust to company controlled indirectly by two trustees – whether sanction of court required for validity of sale – whether transaction open and bona fide – whether beneficiary who was not a trustee treated unfairly when not given opportunity to bid for shares.
Judgment
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## Kuttel v Master of the High Court and Others (819/2021) [2022] ZASCA 156; [2023] 1 All SA 17 (SCA); 2023 (3) SA 498 (SCA) (16 November 2022)
Kuttel v Master of the High Court and Others (819/2021) [2022] ZASCA 156; [2023] 1 All SA 17 (SCA); 2023 (3) SA 498 (SCA) (16 November 2022)
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sino date 16 November 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no. 819/2021
In the matter between:
PETER JOHN KUTTEL
Applicant
and
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION)
First Respondent
JOY KUTTEL NO
Second Respondent
JOHN ADRIAN LEVIN NO
Third Respondent
FRANCOIS PAUL KUTTEL
NO
Fourth Respondent
ADRIAN CHRISTOPHER
KUTTEL NO
Fifth Respondent
BARRY LYNTON ADAMS NO
Sixth Respondent
GRACE INVESTMENTS
THIRTY-TWO (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
SOUTHERN ROPES (PTY)
LTD
Eighth Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Kuttel
v Master of the High Court and Others
(Case
no. 819/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 156
(16 November 2022)
Coram:
Van der Merwe, Molemela and Plasket JJA and Musi
and Kgoele AJJA
Heard:
9 September 2022
Delivered:
16 November 2022
Summary:
Trust and trustees – sale of shares owned by
trust to company controlled indirectly by two trustees –
whether sanction
of court required for validity of sale –
whether transaction open and bona fide – whether beneficiary
who was not a
trustee treated unfairly when not given opportunity to
bid for shares.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Steyn J sitting as court of first
instance).
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of the
application to introduce further evidence
on appeal.
JUDGMENT
PLASKET JA (VAN DER
MERWE JA, MUSI AND KGOELE AJJA concurring)
[1]
The applicant, Mr Peter John Kuttel, who I shall refer to as Peter,
brought an application
in the Western Cape Division of the High
Court, Cape Town (the high court) for orders: (a) directing the first
respondent, the
Master of the High Court, Western Cape Division (the
Master), to appoint him as a co-trustee of the Padjoy Trust (the
trust); (b)
alternatively, reviewing and setting aside the Master’s
decision not to appoint him as a co-trustee of the trust; and (c)
declaring unlawful and invalid an agreement concluded between the
second to sixth respondents, the trustees of the trust (the
trustees), and the seventh respondent, Grace Investments Thirty-Two
(Pty) Ltd (Grace Investments), for the sale of the trust’s
shares in the eighth respondent, Southern Ropes (Pty) Ltd (Southern
Ropes), and the repayment of the purchase price.
[2]
In the high court, Steyn J granted an application brought by the
trustees to strike
out certain matter contained in the applicant’s
replying affidavit. She then dismissed the main application with
costs. She
also dismissed with costs an application for leave to
appeal. On petition to this court, however, an order was made
referring the
applicant’s application for leave to appeal to
oral argument in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
. An application was filed by Peter in this court for
the admission of further evidence on appeal. That application was
opposed
by the trustees. As we are seized with only an application
for leave to appeal, the application for the admission of further
evidence
does not require our attention: if leave to appeal is
granted, the appeal court will decide it, and if leave to appeal is
dismissed,
it will be moot.
The background
[3]
Mr Peter Clark Kuttel, known by the nickname ‘Padda’, was
the father of
Peter, the fourth respondent, Francois Kuttel (who I
shall refer to as Francois), and the fifth respondent, Adrian Kuttel
(who
I shall refer to as Adrian). He was the husband of the second
respondent, Ms Joy Kuttel. He died on 20 May 2019, after the launch
of the application. We were informed from the bar that Joy Kuttel
died about a week before the hearing of this application.
[4]
On 5 March 1981, the trust was created with Padda Kuttel being the
donor. He and his
wife Joy named it the Padjoy Trust. They, plus a
chartered accountant, were the original trustees. The purpose of the
trust was
to acquire and hold assets that were to be used for the
maintenance of Padda and Joy after Padda’s retirement as a
successful
businessman. On the death of the last-dying of them –
an event that has now occurred with Joy Kuttel’s recent death
–
the trust’s capital is to be distributed in equal shares to
Peter, Francois and Adrian.
[5]
The identity of the trustees has changed over time. Padda resigned as
a trustee due
to ill-health. Until recently, the trustees numbered
five. They were Joy Kuttel, Francois, Adrian and two independent
trustees,
namely Mr John Levin, the third respondent (Levin), and Mr
Barry Adams, the sixth respondent (Adams). Both Levin and Adams are
attorneys of considerable experience and expertise, especially in
commercial matters.
[6]
While Peter is a beneficiary of the trust, he is not, like his
brothers, a trustee.
The principal reason for this seems to be that
he lives in the United States of America and has done so for some 30
years. It is
also no doubt so that the enmity that has existed
between Peter and his father, in particular, as well as with the
family more
generally, probably also contributed to him being the
only beneficiary who is not a trustee.
[7]
The trustees decided in about 2012 to re-structure the trust’s
assets as well
as those of another, related trust. The process was
concluded in mid-2013. The purpose of the exercise was, according to
Levin
in a letter to Peter dated 11 April 2017, to achieve five
outcomes, namely to: (a) provide liquidity in the trust to fund Padda
and Joy’s retirement; (b) make certain cash distributions to
Francois and Adrian, in accordance with Padda Kuttel’s
wishes,
in order to equalize their benefits with those that Peter had
previously received; (c) consolidate the rope-making businesses
of
three entities, including Southern Ropes, at their fair value, in
Grace Investments; (d) sell a storage business to a company
registered in Namibia; and (e) consolidate the remainder of the
family’s assets into the trust, which would ultimately be
shared by the three brothers on the death of both of their parents.
[8]
The restructuring of the trust’s assets were, in the words of
Levin, a restructuring
of ‘the family’s various
interests’, the trustees having regard to ‘the purpose
for which the trust was
established’ and the wishes of Padda
and Joy Kuttel, particularly those of Padda Kuttel as donor. The sale
of the trust’s
shares in Southern Ropes to Grace Investments
was thus one part of a bigger process of consolidation of the trust’s
assets.
It was, however, only the validity of the Southern Ropes
transaction that was challenged by Peter. In this transaction, the
trust
sold its 81.6 percent shareholding in Southern Ropes to Grace
Investments for a purchase price of R32 386 866.19. Grace
Investments is owned in equal shares by two Namibian trusts that were
established for the benefit of Francois and Adrian respectively,
and
their families.
[9]
The restructuring process also involved a second family trust, the
Breemond Trust.
The beneficiaries of this trust were Padda and Joy
Kuttel, Peter, Francois and Adrian. It owned 81.6 percent of the
shares of Marine
Ropes International (Pty) Ltd (Marine Ropes) which,
in turn, owned all of the shares of Samson Ropes (Pty) Ltd (Samson
Ropes).
Levin explained to Peter in the letter of 11 April 2017 that
one of the objects of the restructuring process was to consolidate
the rope-making businesses of Southern Ropes, Marine Ropes and Samson
Ropes, at their fair value, into a new company, Grace Investments.
This object was achieved. The result was a zero-sum situation for the
trust, one asset being substituted by another of equal value,
with no
prejudice to the beneficiaries.
[10]
In order to understand the basis on which Peter challenged the
validity of the transaction, it
is necessary to consider his founding
affidavit. The answering papers will then be considered.
The papers
[11]
It is not in dispute that Peter was not informed of the trust’s
re-structuring at the time.
He only found out about it, and the
Southern Ropes transaction, in 2017. On making enquiries of the
trustees, he was informed that
the purchase price of the Southern
Ropes shares was 81.6 percent of the average of two independent
valuations procured for the
very purpose of ascertaining their fair
market value. He was also informed that the transaction had no effect
on the trust’s
balance sheet as one asset had simply been
substituted for another of equal value.
[12]
Peter took exception to not having been informed of the transaction
at the time. He said that
had he known about the trust’s
intention to sell its shares in Southern Ropes, he would have made a
‘counter-offer’
to purchase the shares for himself. He
asserted that despite the two independent valuations serving as the
basis for the determination
of the purchase price, the transaction
was not an arms-length transaction.
[13]
Despite having expressed an interest in making a ‘counter-offer’
to purchase the
shares, he took issue with the wisdom of the
trustees’ decision to sell the shares. He claimed that their
failure to notify
him of the transaction at the time was
‘disconcerting, unfair and inappropriate’. He asserted
that the trustees should
have obtained his consent to the transaction
or, at the very least, they should have notified him of the
transaction and the restructuring
of the trust’s assets.
[14]
Within the context of Southern Ropes owning two immovable properties
within which it conducted
its business, he then stated:
‘
In
any event, I am advised that by modern custom, the Court’s
confirmation is required for the purchase of immovable property
by a
trustee even when a co-trustee has confirmed that purchase. In the
present instance, the sale of the majority shareholding
in Southern
Ropes to Grace Investments was in effect a sale of the immovable
properties to Francois and Adrian, who are both trustees.’
[15]
Peter began a process to have himself appointed as a trustee. (The
relief claimed in relation
to this aspect of his case has not been
pursued in his application for leave to appeal.) He first approached
the trustees and requested
them to appoint him as a trustee. They
refused to do so. He then raised his concerns with the Master about
the administration of
the trust and about the Southern Ropes
transaction in particular. He focused, in this regard, on ‘the
failure of the Trustees
to obtain the sanction of the Court given
that the transaction effectively, and indirectly, facilitated the
transfer of the immovable
properties owned by Southern Ropes to two
of the Trustees’. He expressed the view that it would be in the
best interests
of the trust if he was a trustee and he requested the
Master to appoint him as a trustee, in terms of s 7(2) of the Trust
Property
Control Act 57 of 1988. By letter dated 25 April 2018, the
Master responded to Peter’s complaints. He dismissed them on
the
basis that, in terms of the wide powers afforded to the trustees
in terms of the trust deed, ‘the trustees have no obligation
to
notify the beneficiaries when exercising their said absolute powers’.
The Master also decided against appointing Peter
as a trustee.
[16]
Finally, Peter reverted to the attack on the Southern Ropes
transaction on the basis that a court’s
confirmation is
required ‘for the purchase of immovable property by a trustee
and even when a co-trustee or co-trustees have
authorized the sale’
and that in this case the sale of the shares of Southern Ropes
amounted to the sale of its immovable
property. He then concluded:
‘
For
this reason, the contract of sale is invalid at common law and falls
to be set aside. If set aside, it follows that the shares
must be
returned by Grace Investments to the Trustees.’
[17]
From the above, it can be concluded that the case made out by Peter
in relation to the Southern
Ropes transaction begins and ends with
his reliance on what he termed the ‘modern custom’ of
requiring a court’s
confirmation when a trustee purchases
immovable property from a trust. He also made the bald allegation,
unsupported by any facts,
that the transaction was not an arms-length
transaction. For the rest, he complained of not having been informed
of the transaction
at the time, his objection being that this failure
was ‘disconcerting, unfair and inappropriate’; that, had
he known
of the transaction, he would have tried to purchase the
shares for himself; and that his consent should have been acquired
or,
at the least, he should have been notified. None of these grounds
were raised in relation to the validity of the transaction but
to
support his case, now abandoned, that he should have been appointed
as a trustee.
[18]
Levin, for the trustees, deposed to a comprehensive answering
affidavit. He commenced his answering
affidavit by explaining that
Padda Kuttel’s purpose in establishing the trust had been to
create a vehicle to ‘hold
assets acquired or built up by the
Kuttel family (and Padda in particular) for the benefit of himself
and [Joy Kuttel] in the first
instance, and subsequent to the death
of the survivor of them, for the benefit of their children and their
descendants’.
To this end, the trustees were granted ‘wide
discretionary powers in order to act in the best interests of the
beneficiaries
and in the furtherance of the purposes for which the
Trust was established’. He asserted that the trustees had
always ‘attempted
to discharge their duties diligently, mindful
of their fiduciary obligations and the provisions of the Trust deed,
as well as the
objects of the Trust’.
[19]
Levin did not dispute that Peter had not been informed by the
trustees of the restructuring and
of the Southern Ropes transaction
that was one part of that process. He stated, however, that they were
not obliged to do so: the
trust deed did not require that
beneficiaries be notified or consulted when the trustees exercised
their discretionary powers and,
in any event, the shares in Southern
Ropes were sold at fair market value, independently determined. The
trustees were also not
required to provide Peter with an opportunity
to bid for the shares.
[20]
Southern Ropes had generated what Levin described as ‘reasonable
profits’ but this
was, in Padda Kuttel’s view, due
largely to his own business acumen and experience. With the
retirement of Padda and Joy
Kuttel imminent, the trustees decided to
sell the Southern Ropes shares and, in this way realise an asset that
‘would ensure
that Padda and Joy could live out their remaining
years in comfort’.
[21]
The decisions concerning the restructuring were not taken lightly.
The trustees considered the
issue with care and took legal and tax
advice from a prominent firm of attorneys in South Africa and another
in the United States
of America as well. After having done so, the
trustees applied their minds to such matters as their discretionary
powers in terms
of the trust deed, the purpose of the restructuring
process, the purposes for which the trust was established – and
they
decided to sell the Southern Ropes shares ‘at an
independently-determined market value’. They were satisfied
that neither
the trust nor the beneficiaries would be prejudiced by
the trust selling the shares for fair value and investing the
proceeds ‘with
a well-regarded asset manager (Alan Gray)’.
[22]
The trust had the power to sell the shares and invest the proceeds of
the sale. This is evident
from the trust deed. Clause 7
(a)
,
part of a clause headed ‘POWERS OF TRUSTEES’, provides
that the trustees ‘shall be entitled to realise in such
manner
as they shall determine any asset or investment held by them in trust
from time to time and to re-invest the proceeds in
terms of the
powers of investment hereinafter granted to them’. In terms of
clause 7
(b)
, the trustees are empowered to ‘make such
investments as they shall in their sole and entire discretion from
time to time
determine’; and they also have the power to
purchase both immovable and movable property and to sell, either by
public auction
or private treaty, ‘any immovable or movable
property held in trust by them in such manner and at such times as
they shall
from time to time determine’.
[23]
The breadth of the discretion granted to the trustees appears clearly
from clause 25. It states
that the discretionary powers vested in the
trustees by the trust deed ‘shall be complete and absolute and
any decision made
by them pursuant to any such discretionary powers
shall be unchallengeable by any Beneficiary affected thereby or by
any other
person’.
[24]
As explained above, the trustees approached two independent valuers
to value the Southern Ropes
shares. The valuations differed to an
extent – a not unusual occurrence – and so the trustees
took the average of the
two as the basis for determining the purchase
price of the shares. The valuations were, as Levin said,
comprehensive and one of
the valuers, Mr Christiaan Vorster of
Business Growth Africa, explained fully in a letter to Levin how the
immovable property owned
by Southern Ropes was factored into the
valuation – and why Peter’s assertion in the founding
affidavit that they had
not been taken into account was incorrect.
[25]
The trust deed also makes provision for the possibility of a trustee
purchasing property from
the trust. Clause 30 provides:
‘
No
trustee shall be disqualified by his office from contracting with the
trust nor shall any Contract entered into by the Trust
in which any
Trustee may be interested be invalidated or voided by reason of such
interest nor shall any Trustee so contracting
or being so interested
or acquiring any benefit under any Contract entered into with the
Trust be liable to account to the Trust
for any profits or benefits
realized by or under such Contract by reason only of his holding that
office, provided that he shall
have disclosed to the remaining
Trustees the nature of his interest before the making of the
Contract.’
[26]
Levin dismissed the notion that Francois and Adrian may have abused
their power in respect of
Grace Investments’ acquisition of the
Southern Ropes shares, and may thus have acted contrary to the
interests of the beneficiaries.
He said that ‘apart from the
fact that Adrian and Francois Kuttel were, either alone or together,
in no position to dictate
what the Trust did, and also did not
attempt to do so, [Peter’s] allegations against them overlook
the powerful presence
of Padda Kuttel, their father and donor, on the
board of Trustees, as well as the roles of their mother, Joy Kuttel,
and me, and
the role of independent advisors such as ENS’. What
is more, Levin said, Francois and Adrian ‘openly and in good
faith
disclosed their interests in the transactions before the
agreements were concluded (their interests, in any event, already
being
known) and obtained the consent of all of the Trustees’.
The issues
[27]
The application for leave to appeal is based on three grounds. The
first is that the confirmation
of a court should have been, but was
not, obtained for the Southern Ropes transaction, with the result
that the transaction is
invalid. The second is that the transaction
was, in any event, not open and bona fide. The third is that Peter
was treated unequally
and that, on account of this, the transaction
is invalid.
Judicial
confirmation of the transaction
[28]
The only point taken by Peter on the papers, apart from the now
abandoned attempt to be appointed
as a trustee (or, alternatively, to
review the Master’s decision not to appoint him), was that the
failure by the trustees
to obtain the judicial confirmation of the
Southern Ropes transaction resulted in its invalidity. The point is
based on the following
passage from the sixth edition of
Honore’s
South African Law of Trusts
in
relation to the purchase of trust property by a trustee:
[1]
‘
By
modern custom the court’s confirmation is required, at least
for the purchase of immovable trust property, even when a
co-trustee
has confirmed it.’
[29]
It was argued that because Southern Ropes owned immovable property
and because Grace Investments,
the shares of which were owned by two
trusts of which Francois and Adrian were the beneficiaries, acquired
a majority shareholding
in Southern Ropes, the sale of the shares
was, in effect, the sale of the immovable property and the ‘modern
custom’
referred to above applied to the transaction.
[30]
In order to deal with this argument, it is necessary to commence with
the legal position when
a person in a fiduciary relationship
purchases property in respect of which that relationship applies –
such as, typically,
when an executor of a deceased estate purchases
property from the estate,
[2]
or
when a trustee purchases property from the trust that they
administer.
[3]
In
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
,
[4]
Innes CJ set out the position in general terms when he stated:
Where one man stands to
another in a position of confidence involving a duty to protect the
interests of that other, he is not allowed
to make a secret profit at
the other’s expense or place himself in a position where his
interests conflict with his duty.
The principle underlies an
extensive field of legal relationship. A guardian to his ward, a
solicitor to his client, an agent to
his principal, afford examples
of persons occupying such a position.’
[31]
The general rule in such cases was set out as follows by Theron J
more than 60 years ago in
Peffers
NO and Another v Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers Fidelity
Guarantee Fund Board of Control
:
[5]
‘
The
general rule is that [the person in a position of trust] is incapable
of binding the estate under his administration by such
contracts. The
authorities and decided cases in which this rule of our law is
expounded deal for the most part with the incapacity
of persons such
as the tutors of minors or the executors of deceased estates –
whose positions are analogous to those of
administrators – to
make valid purchases of assets belonging to the minors or the
deceased estates, as the case may be; but
the principle underlying
the rule is equally applicable to any other kind of contract whereby
a person in a fiduciary position
may seek to acquire for himself
rights in and to the assets placed under his control. This principle
is, of course, the universally
respected one that no transaction
where interest and duty conflict should be recognised or countenanced
by the law.’
[32]
But, the learned judge continued, the general rule is not absolute
and is subject to exceptions.
He explained:
[6]
‘
In
certain exceptional cases, where the reason for the existence of the
general rule to which I have referred does not apply, or
rather does
not apply to the same extent as in the normal case, the Roman and
later the Roman-Dutch law has, however, always countenanced
a
relaxation of the rule. Thus it has always been accepted that a tutor
can validly purchase his pupil's property where the sale
to him takes
place by or with the authority of another entitled to act on behalf
of the minor: for instance, he can buy with the
authority of the
Court; or, where he has a co-tutor, he can buy from or with the
consent of the latter, provided that he does so
openly and in good
faith (
palam et bona fide
).
In the same way an executor can validly purchase the property of the
deceased estate subject to his administration with the authority
of
the Court, or – where he is not the only one appointed to
liquidate and distribute the estate – with the consent
of his
co-executor or co-executors, provided that he acted openly and in
good faith.’
[33]
The reason why a person in a position of trust is allowed to purchase
property entrusted to them
in these circumstances is apparent. It is
that the safeguards set out above ‘provide some guarantee that,
despite his position,
[the person in a position of trust] will be
treated as if he were a stranger to the estate entrusted to him’,
as the ‘circumstances
are such as to diminish the possibility
that the terms of the contract will be influenced by the conflict
between the purchaser’s
interest and his duty’.
[7]
Theron J summarized the position thus:
[8]
‘
To
sum up, then, the position is that despite the fact that the Courts
tend to look askance at such contracts there is nothing in
our law to
prevent an administrator from concluding a valid contract for the
acquisition of rights in and to the movable assets
entrusted to him,
provided the circumstances are such that he can really be said to
have acted as a stranger to the estate –
as, for instance,
where he has openly and in good faith sought and obtained the consent
of a co-administrator who was capable of
bringing an independent mind
to bear on the question as to whether the contract would be for the
benefit of the estate.’
[34]
There is a final, additional safeguard that applies in some cases. It
is, Theron J said, that
in South Africa, ‘the practice has
grown up and become settled of requiring the confirmation of the
Court in every case of
the sale of immovable property belonging to a
deceased’s estate to an executor’.
[9]
In
Kidbrooke
Place Management Association and Another v Walton NNO and Others
[10]
Binns-Ward J held that there was no reason why the same rule of
practice should not apply when an executor purchases trust property,
as there is ‘no material difference in the character of the
fiduciary relationship involved’ in the two instances.
And, in
Hoppen
and Others v Shub and Others
[11]
the principles set out in
Peffers
were affirmed in relation to the purchase of trust property by a
trustee, including that if the transaction ‘involves the
sale
of immovable property, the practice is that the consent of the Court
must
be obtained’.
[12]
[35]
It is clear that the ‘modern custom’ (which is over a
century old
[13]
) that is
relied upon is a rule of practice that only relates to the purchase
of immovable property. In order to attempt to bring
the Southern
Ropes transaction within the practice, it was argued on Peter’s
behalf that the sale of shares, when the company
concerned owns
immovable property, is akin to the sale of the company’s
immovable property. This proposition is fundamentally
flawed for two
reasons.
[36]
First, a share, according to
s 35
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, is
movable property. As the practice sought to be relied on only applies
to immovable property, that should put an end to the
argument.
Secondly, however, equating a shareholding in a company to
acquisition or ownership of its property is also flawed. It
is a
fundamental principle of company law that the assets of a company
belong to the company, and not its shareholders; and that
the
ownership of shares by shareholders only gives them a right to any
dividend that the company may declare.
[14]
That too disposes of this argument. The result is that there are no
reasonable prospects of success on appeal in relation to this
point.
Was the transaction
open and bona fide?
[37]
In cases in which a co-trustee obtains the consent of their
co-trustee to purchase trust property,
the sale must, in addition, be
open and bona fide. Theron set out the terms of this requirement in
Peffers
as follows:
[15]
‘
It
need hardly be pointed out that before one of the executors can grant
such consent to the acquisition of estate assets by the
other as will
serve to bring about a valid contract, he will have to embark upon an
enquiry of the same kind as the Court has to
pursue in the case to
which I have just referred, for he, like the Court, must satisfy
himself in regard to the bona fides of the
transaction and the
benefit of the estate.’
[38]
In this instance, Levin has explained how the trustees took their
decision. First, Francois and
Adrian disclosed their interests and
did so openly and in a good faith, although the other trustees
obviously knew of those interests.
Secondly, they took independent
advice from a firm of attorneys in this country and in the United
States of America. Thirdly, they
obtained two independent valuations
of the fair market value of the Southern Ropes shares and set the
purchase price with reference
to the average of the two valuations.
Fourthly, the trustees applied their minds to their powers in terms
of the trust deed, the
purpose of the restructuring and the purposes
for which the trust had been established. Fifthly, having done so,
they satisfied
themselves that neither the trust nor the
beneficiaries would be prejudiced by the transaction. Sixth, the
trustees also satisfied
themselves that neither Francois no Adrian
had abused their power by acting contrary to the best interests of
the beneficiaries.
Finally, having gone through this process, the
trustees consented to the transaction.
[39]
In
In
re Estate Black
[16]
the court held that the ‘question of the value of the property
according to the authorities is relevant chiefly as a test
of good
faith’. I have explained how the purchase price was determined
by the trustees. Peter’s criticism of the valuations
has been
explained satisfactorily and there is no other basis put forward for
an attack on the fairness of the valuations. I accept
that the method
employed reflects fair market value for the shares. The process that
I have described above, and the method for
the determination of the
price, together establish that the trustees satisfied themselves,
after due and proper enquiry, that the
Southern Ropes transaction was
open and bona fide. In my view, there are no reasonable prospects
that a court of appeal will arrive
at a different conclusion on this
issue.
Was there unfair
differentiation?
[40]
In his founding affidavit, Peter alleged that he should have been
informed of the Southern Ropes
transaction and that the failure on
the part of the trustees to do so was ‘disconcerting, unfair
and inappropriate’.
The remedy he claimed on this account was
an order appointing him as a trustee so that he could safeguard his
own interests as
a beneficiary. This relief is not the subject of
Peter’s application for leave to appeal.
[41]
The point that Peter was treated unfairly has re-surfaced in a new
guise. He now claims in his
application for leave to appeal that it
is a cause for the setting aside of the Southern Ropes transaction.
This point is based
on the following sub-paragraphs of his founding
affidavit where he dealt with the review of the Master’s
decision not to
appoint him as a trustee:
’
45.2
It is submitted that the Trustees should have, in fairness, afforded
all of the beneficiaries the opportunity to
purchase the shares. I
should have, at the very least, been notified of the proposed
transaction given my vested interest in the
Trust.
45.3
Had I been presented with the opportunity to purchase the shares in
Southern Ropes, I would have been a willing
buyer and, in all
probability, I would have offered a higher purchase consideration for
the shares than my brothers. At the very
least, I would have
questioned the Trustees’ proposed sale given the income then
being generated by Southern Ropes for the
Trust. That decision is,
for the reasons already articulated above, objectively irrational and
unlawful. The Master failed to consider
these relevant factors in the
decision to reject my complaint.’
[42]
I am prepared to accept that the above passage raised the issue
whether Peter was treated unfairly
by the trustees by not being
informed of the Southern Ropes transaction so that he could bid for
the shares (despite being of the
view that the transaction was
irrational and unlawful). In order to deal with this argument, it is
necessary to consider the terms
of the trust deed, the purpose of the
restructuring and the effect of the Southern Ropes transaction.
[43]
The trustees enjoy extensive powers to realise assets or investments
‘in such manner as
they shall determine’;
[17]
to invest assets ‘as they shall in their sole and entire
discretion’ determine and to acquire and dispose of movable
and
immovable property ‘in such manner and at such times as they
shall from time to time determine’.
[18]
In terms of clause 7
(h)
,
the trustees have ‘the right to consent and agree to any
reduction of capital, re-organisation or reconstruction of any
companies, the shares or other securities of which are from time to
time held by the Trust in such manner and upon such terms and
conditions as they shall in their sole and entire discretion
determine’. And in terms of clause 7
(l)
they have ‘such ancillary and/or additional powers as shall be
necessary or requisite to enable them from time to time to
deal with
all matters appertaining to the Trust in such manner as they shall
deem advisable in the interest of the Trust’.
[44]
The trustees are also given a virtually free hand as to how they
perform their functions. Clause
8 provides:
Subject to them giving
effect to the terms and conditions of this Trust Deed, the Trustees
shall, in administering the Trust, adopt
such procedure and take such
administrative steps as they shall from time to time deem necessary
or desirable.’
[45]
Even in relation to the distribution of income prior to vesting, in
terms of clause 20, the ‘sole
and absolute discretion of the
Trustees’ is emphasized throughout. The power of the trustees
to pay capital to beneficiaries
prior to vesting, in terms of clause
23, is also granted subject to the ‘sole and entire discretion’
of the trustees.
Finally, the extent of the discretion vested in the
trustees is exemplified by clause 25 which describes their powers as
being
‘complete and absolute’.
[46]
It is apparent from the selection of clauses that I have referred to
that Padda Kuttel’s
intention, when he created the trust, was
to give the trustees, of which he was one for many years, as free a
hand in the achievement
of the objects of the trust as possible. In
addition to their vast, untrammeled powers of administration, there
is a complete absence
throughout the trust deed of any obligation on
the trustees to inform the beneficiaries of their intentions, much
less to consult
with them or obtain their consent. This is also
apparent in relation to the sale of trust property to a trustee.
Clause 30 does
not require notice to or the consent of the
beneficiaries. It only requires that the trustee concerned disclose
their interest
to the other trustees before any contract is
concluded.
[47]
I turn now to the purpose of the restructuring. I have explained
above what the trustees intended
to achieve and how. Essentially,
they were engaged in a restructuring of the family business –
and the rope-making businesses
in particular. It is evident from this
that the trustees never intended to offer an opportunity to either
the world at large or
the beneficiaries as a whole to bid for the
shares in the rope-making businesses, including Southern Ropes. That
would have undermined
the purpose of consolidating the family’s
business interests. As Francois and Adrian were at the vanguard of
the family’s
business interests in South Africa and Namibia,
the objects of the restructuring could only have been achieved in the
way it was
carried out. As Peter’s business interests were
different to the family’s, and located in the United States of
America,
selling the Southern Ropes shares to him would not have
achieved the purpose of the restructuring.
[48]
From what I have set out above, it is apparent that the trustees had
ample discretionary power
to do what they believed was best for the
trust and the beneficiaries, that they had the power to decide how to
restructure the
trust’s assets and the power to decide with
whom they wished to contract. Peter, as a beneficiary had no right to
be informed
of the trustees’ plans or to be offered an
opportunity to bid for the Southern Ropes shares. His rights were
restricted to
his equal share of the capital on vesting. That
contingent right was safeguarded by the trustees by the open and bona
fide nature
of the Southern Ropes transaction, the fair process for
determining the purchase price and the zero-sum effect of the
transaction
on the assets of the trust.
[49]
To the extent that it may be said that Peter has been treated
differently as a beneficiary, that
differentiation was not
unjustified in the context of the powers of the trustees, the purpose
of the restructuring and the effect
of the Southern Ropes
transaction: as I have explained, Peter had no right to be given the
opportunity to bid for the shares and
no obligation was placed by the
trust deed on the trustees to give him notice or seek his consent;
the purpose of the restructuring
did not allow for him to have
purchased the shares because it was aimed at restructuring the family
business; and the differentiation
caused him, as a beneficiary, no
prejudice, for the reasons I have explained. There was thus a
rational reason why the shares were
offered to Grace Investments, and
not offered to Peter.
[50]
It is necessary to deal with the case of
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
[19]
because it was relied
upon by counsel for Peter to argue that he had been treated unfairly
with the result that the Southern Ropes
transaction was invalid. In
my view,
Griessel
is
distinguishable on the facts. Trustees had been given the power to
identify to select beneficiaries from among a group of people
described as ‘potential beneficiaries’. All beneficiaries
had the right to holiday, on a rotational basis, on a farm
in respect
of which the trust was the sole shareholder. De Kock was a
beneficiary. As a result of acrimony developing between De
Kock, on
the one hand, and his family, on the other, he was removed as a
beneficiary. Litigation ensued and was settled, with the
result that
De Kock was reinstated as a beneficiary. More litigation followed
when the parties could not agree on whether the reinstatement
meant
that De Kock’s right to holiday on the farm had also been
restored. He applied for an order to the effect that his
‘vested
rights, as a beneficiary’ in terms of the trust ‘be
reinstated’, including his right of access
to the farm.
[51]
Molemela JA held that it was not necessary to determine whether De
Kock’s right to holiday
on the farm was a vested right because
‘even beneficiaries who have contingent rights are entitled to
protection’.
[20]
She
proceeded to hold:
[21]
‘
In
this matter, the privilege of having a vacation on a farm situated in
a game reserve was taken away from the first respondent
while the
other potential beneficiaries continued to enjoy the same rights.
That constituted differential treatment without a justifiable
basis.
This was evidently prompted by the attitude of the first respondent
towards the development of the farm for commercial purposes,
which,
over the years, increased to the point that the first respondent
considered the second applicant, his own mother, to be
openly hostile
towards him.’
[52]
It is clear from the passage quoted above that Molemela JA found that
De Kock, as a beneficiary,
used to holiday on the farm. When that was
taken away from him, but not from other beneficiaries, he was treated
unfairly: he was
denied his entitlement ‘without a justifiable
basis’, as his alleged obstructive and contrarian behaviour did
not suffice
as a basis to justify this differentiation in
treatment.
[22]
[53]
For the reasons stated above, I conclude that to the extent that it
may be said that Peter was
treated differently to Francois and
Adrian, that differentiation was justified, and hence not unfair. In
the result, I do not believe
that the ratio of
Griessel
applies to the specific facts of this case. There are no reasonable
prospects of this point succeeding on appeal.
Conclusion
[54]
I have found that none of the three grounds raised by Peter in his
application for leave to appeal
have a reasonable prospect of success
on appeal. That being so, the application for leave to appeal must
fail. As the striking-out
application is ancillary to the merits of
the application for leave to appeal, it is not necessary to deal with
it save to say
that no grounds are apparent to me on which the high
court’s exercise of discretion could have been assailed.
[55]
I make the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of the
application to introduce further evidence
on appeal.
C Plasket
Judge of Appeal
MOLEMELA JA
[56]
I have read the judgment penned by my colleague, Plasket JA (the
majority judgment). Regrettably,
I am unable to agree with its
reasoning and conclusion. As the background facts have already been
set out in the majority judgment,
I focus only on the salient facts
which form the basis of my reasoning.
[57]
I must state at the outset that
the respondent did
not abandon its jurisdictional point; it persisted with the argument
that the high court did not have jurisdiction
to adjudicate the
matter on account of Grace Investments being a company registered in
Namibia. From my point of view, that preliminary
point regarding the
high court’s lack of jurisdiction has no merit, as the shares
that were sold are the property of a company
registered in South
Africa. In any event, the impugned agreement was entered into in the
Western Cape in South Africa. That being
the case, the Western Cape
High Court had the jurisdiction to adjudicate the matter. Thus,
nothing stood in the way of the consideration
of oral arguments
pertaining to the application for leave to appeal.
[58]
As regards the merits, I must mention that at the commencement of the
hearing, counsel for the
applicant
informed us
that the issue pertaining to the applicant’s appointment as a
Trustee was no longer being persisted with. This
was because Joy
Kuttel had passed away in the week preceding the hearing, the obvious
result, based on the terms of the Trust Deed,
being that the assets
of the Padjoy Trust (the Trust) would vest in the beneficiaries
within two weeks, thereby bringing an end
to the Trustees’
functions. It is for this reason that the issue concerning the
applicant’s appointment as a Trustee
need not detain us.
[59]
I
consider it necessary to, without much ado, clear the air surrounding
the creation of the Trust by underscoring the following
cautionary
remarks made by this Court in
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and Others
:
[23]
‘
The
core idea of the trust is the separation of ownership. . . Though a
trustee can also be a beneficiary, the central notion is
that the
person entrusted with control exercised it on behalf of
and
in the interests of another
. . . .
[T]he English law trust, . . . were designed essentially to protect
the weak and to safeguard the interests of those who
are absent or
dead. . . . [T]he trustee is appointed and accepts office to exercise
fiduciary responsibility over property
on
behalf of
and
in the interests of another
.’
(Own emphasis.)
There can hardly be any
doubt that in exercising their fiduciary duties, Trustees have an
obligation to consider the interests of
all
the beneficiaries.
[60]
In
Raath
v Nel
,
this Court stated as follows:
[24]
‘
It
is plain from the above that the trust is of the type which has
become very popular for estate planning and tax purposes (as
was the
case in
Rudman
).
It is undoubtedly a convenient and useful tax and estate planning
vehicle, but the caution sounded by this court in the past
is
apposite here. In
Nieuwoudt and Another
NNO v Vrystaat Mielies (Edms) Bpk
,
Harms JA raised a concern about business trusts where a trust is
formed for estate planning purposes, or to escape the constraints
of
corporate law, and yet everything else remained as before. A similar
concern was raised in
Land and
Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and Others
.
There, as is the case here, the dispute revolved around a family
trust. This court reaffirmed that a trust estate, comprising
of an
accumulation of assets and liabilities, is a separate entity, albeit
bereft of legal personality. . .’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[61]
It is also apposite to remind ourselves of what this Court
unanimously held in
Breetzke
NNO and Others v Alexander
[25]
in the context of a direct action brought by a beneficiary arising
from a breach of fiduciary duty, but equally apposite in the
context
of this matter. This Court said:
‘
While
the existence of a fiduciary duty in any given situation can only be
determined after a close examination of the facts, there
are
certain situations, such as, a trustee dealing with the trust of
which they are trustee, where the existence of a fiduciary
duty will
ordinarily arise. . . .
The
fiduciary must place the interests of the other party to whom the
duty is owed before their own
.’
[26]
(Own
emphasis)
[62]
In
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
(Griessel),
[27]
this Court, in a unanimous judgment, held that Trustees have an
obligation to treat all the beneficiaries even-handedly. This finding
was
made in the context of a
Trust
Deed that gave the Trustees wide discretionary powers, as is the case
in the matter under consideration.
[28]
This Court observed that differential treatment of beneficiaries may
be justified by the needs of a particular beneficiary. Notably,
this
Court held that even beneficiaries who have contingent rights are
entitled to protection. Unquestionably, the principle that
beneficiaries must be treated even-handedly is an important one.
[63]
My allusion to the authorities quoted above is intended to sketch the
backdrop against which
the issues for consideration in this matter
must be considered. Of critical importance is the trite principle
that notwithstanding
the wide powers given to Trustees by the Trust
Deed, at the end of the day, those powers must still be exercised
subject to the
law. Thus, the fact that
Padda was the driving
force behind Southern Ropes does not detract from the fact that the
assets of the Trust were separate from
Padda’s personal estate.
His position as Trustee was equal to that of the
Trustees and could not be an overriding consideration when decisions
regarding
the assets of the Trust were made.
The Trustees were
thus obliged to exercise their control over the Trust assets on
behalf of all the beneficiaries.
Thus, while
clause 8 of the Trust Deed gives the Trustees the power to, in
administering the Trust, ‘adopt such procedure
and take such
administrative steps as they shall from time to time deem necessary
and desirable’, it did not give them carte
blanche to treat the
beneficiaries discriminately without justification.
[64]
The respondents contended that the issue of unequal treatment of
beneficiaries was obliquely
raised. I disagree. To my mind, there can
be no doubt that the applicant was aggrieved by what he deemed to be
unequal treatment
towards him, at the hands of the Trustees. The
relevant averments are clearly set out in the founding affidavit.
They are also
alluded to in the replying affidavit (ie. in the parts
that were not struck out). Notwithstanding that the high court did
not pronounce
itself on the issue of unequal treatment, there can be
no doubt that it was squarely raised for determination. This is borne
out
by the following paragraphs of the founding affidavit:
‘
27.
Upon receipt of the information, I became very concerned about the
administration of the Trust as it was immediately apparent
to me that
my brothers, who are also Trustees, had substantially benefitted from
the restructuring and, specifically from the transaction.
28.1.
As a capital beneficiary of the Trust, I have a direct interest in
the proper administration of the Trust.
28.2.
Notwithstanding my direct interest, none of the Trustees thought it
necessary to advise me of the transaction until 2017.
Had I been
aware of the transaction, I would certainly have submitted a
counter-offer for the sale of Southern Ropes as it is,
in my view, a
highly successful and profitable business.
…
28.5.
As stated above, the alleged primary purpose of the restructure was
to fund my parent’s retirement. If this is so then
the decision
to conclude the transaction was irrational in light of the fact that
Southern Ropes had historically yielded a profit
of approximately
R9.5 million per annum after tax and accordingly the potential
dividend, from that shareholding alone would have
ensured that my
parents’ retirement could be funded more than adequately.
28.6.
By virtue of the fact that my brothers are both beneficiaries and
Trustees of the Trust, they were in a special and privileged
position
to ensure that the transaction was concluded at a time that was most
beneficial to them.
28.7.
The Trustees’ failure to notify me of the transaction was
disconcerting, unfair and inappropriate.
28.8.
The Trustees should have obtained my consent prior to the conclusion
of the transaction or, at the very least, notified me
of the
transaction and the restructure.
…
45.2.
It is submitted that the Trustees should have, in fairness, afforded
all of the beneficiaries the opportunity to purchase
the shares. I
should have, at the very least, been notified of the proposed
transaction given my vested interest in the trust.
45.3.
Had I been presented with the opportunity to purchase the Shares in
Southern Ropes, I would have been a willing buyer and,
in all
probability, I would have offered a higher purchase consideration for
the shares than my brothers. At the very least, I
would have
questioned the Trustees’ proposed sale given the income then
being generated by Southern Ropes for the Trust.’
It is clear from the
foregoing averments that the respondent’s contention that the
assertion pertaining to unequal treatment
was confined to the issue
of the applicant’s appointment as a Trustee, is devoid of
merit.
[65]
It is undisputed that Southern Ropes was a well-established
income-generating company. The 81.6
per cent shareholding in Southern
Ropes was undoubtedly one of the Trust’s key assets.
In
my view, by not affording the applicant the same opportunity offered
to his brothers, namely, to buy the 81.6 per cent shareholding
in
Southern Ropes, the Trustees denied the applicant the privilege of
having a stake in the running of that company. As mentioned
before,
it is accepted that differential treatment of
beneficiaries may be justified by the needs of a particular
beneficiary. It is of
significance that in casu, no plausible reason
was advanced for offering the privilege of buying Southern Ropes’
shares to
Francois and Adrian but not the
applicant, despite
the Trust Deed having accorded the three of them the same status.
Although Levin furnished reasons in a letter
dated
11 April 2017, this letter did not provide a plausible explanation
why the opportunity to buy Southern Ropes’ shares
was not
offered to the applicant.
[66]
On the contrary, Levin’s letter tellingly paints a clear
picture of the preferential treatment
extended to Francois and
Adrian. In that letter, he inter alia explained the restructuring of
the Trust assets as follows:
‘
10
In implementing the restructure, the trustees of the Padjoy Trust and
the Breemond Trust
took legal and tax advice from a prominent firm of
attorneys in South Africa, as well as attorneys in the United States
and exercised
their sole discretion in accordance with their
fiduciary duties, having regard to the purposes for which the Trusts
were established
and the wishes of your parents, particularly your
father.
11
The steps of the restructure were as follows:
11.1
The Breemond Trust settled all of its liabilities and distributed its
81.6% shareholding to Grace Investments
32 as nominee for the two
Namibian Trusts (established for the benefit of your brothers and
their families) which each own 50%
of the shares in Grace Investments
32.
. . .
Pursuant to the
restructure
12.1
Francois’ and Adrian’s Namibian Trusts
now
indirectly own
Southern Ropes
, MRI and Salmon Ropes;
12.2
Padjoy Trust swapped its 81.6% shareholding in Southern Ropes for the
aggregate of cash or near cash of R8.8
million and a loan claim
against Southern Ropes of R23.6 million secured by a cession in
securitatum debiti
of 81.6% of the total issued shares of
Southern Ropes. This transaction had no effect on the Padjoy Trust
balance sheet in terms
of actual values as one asset, namely the
shares, was simply exchanged for another asset, namely the loan
claim, at the same value.
The loan claim has subsequently been repaid
and the cession cancelled;
12.3
Francois and Adrian received the benefits of their distribution to
their Namibian Trusts of:
12.3.1 cash …;
12.3.2 investments ….;
12.3.3 Krugerrands ……..;
and
12.3.4 a loan claim of
R23.6 million against Southern Ropes. The majority of these benefits
were used to pay Padjoy Trust, as described
above, which had the
effect of providing liquidity in Padjoy Trust;
12.4
Padjoy Trust sold the storage business including its property to a
new company registered in Namibia, the
shares of which were owned by
Adrian’s Namibian Trust effectively at cost which was
considered to be the market value;
12.5
The Breemond Trust was de-registered;
12.6 As
indicated above, the Padjoy Trust now holds all the family assets,
which are to be split between the three
brothers on the passing of
your parents.’ (Own emphasis.)
[67]
It is significant that Levin intimated that Padda’s purpose in
establishing the Trust had
been to create a vehicle to ‘hold
assets acquired or built up by the Kuttel family (and Padda in
particular) for the benefit
of himself and [Joy Kuttel] in the first
instance, and subsequent to the death of the survivor of them, for
the benefit of their
children and their descendants’. Despite
that stated purpose, the upshot of the restructuring was, by Levin’s
own admission,
to allow only Francois, Adrian and their families to
‘indirectly own Southern Ropes’ without having afforded
the applicant
the same golden opportunity.
This
flies in the face of the principle laid down in
Griessel
,
namely that a beneficiary has a right to be protected against
arbitrary and discriminatory treatment.
[29]
[68]
It bears mentioning that the sale of Southern Ropes’ shares to
Grace Investments, a company
owned by a Trust established for the
benefit of Francois, Adrian and their families, was by private
treaty. The applicant stated
that had he been aware of the
opportunity to buy the Southern Ropes shares, he would have made a
counter-offer. Quite apart from
not being able to make a
‘counter-offer’ as he asserted, it is obvious that he was
denied an opportunity of merely
making an offer that matched or
equaled that of his co-beneficiaries. To my mind, the failure to
merely avail the same economic
opportunity to the applicant
constituted unequal treatment.
[69]
I have not seen anything in the answering affidavit which comes even
close to being a rational
explanation for the unequal treatment set
out above. The highwater mark of Levin’s response was that
there was no obligation
for the Trustees to notify the applicant.
Considering that the applicant is a capital beneficiary and that the
provisions of clause
12 of the Trust Deed stipulate that subject to
the powers conferred on the Trustees, ‘the capital of the trust
shall be held
by the Trustees until the vesting date, whereupon the
capital then still held in trust shall vest in and be paid to the
Donor’s
children in equal shares’, one could have
expected that the applicant would, at least, have been notified about
the sale
of Southern Ropes; it was, after all, a significant
multi-million rand transaction which gave his co beneficiaries
‘indirect
ownership’ of a capital asset of the Trust.
This did not happen.
[70]
The applicant’s averments that there were enough assets to take
care of Padda and Joy was
not seriously disputed. Furthermore,
the
applicant’s assertions that Southern Ropes had historically
yielded profits amounting to millions of rands was not denied.
While,
in terms of the provisions of the Trust Deed, its Trustees were
entitled to redistribute assets to ensure that the needs
of Padda,
Joy and any other beneficiary were taken care of, it is equally clear
from the evidence that the Trust was well-off,
possessing several
valuable assets, including cash on hand of approximately
R8.5 million. Levin’s statement that Southern
Ropes
generated reasonable profits accords with the applicant’s
statement that Southern Ropes’ annual profit was about
R10 million per year after tax and sufficient to sustain a
comfortable lifestyle for Padda and Joy. Tellingly, the proceeds
of
the sale of shares were invested and not distributed to Padda and Joy
for purposes of sustaining their lifestyle. Under the
circumstances,
the substratum of the respondents’ assertion that the rationale
for selling Southern Ropes was to cater for
Padda and Joy’s
needs has disappeared. In any event,
it remains unclear how
the sale of the shareholding in Southern Ropes to two out of three
beneficiaries could conceivably benefit
Padda and Joy.
T
he
inference that the decision to sell the Trust’s majority
shareholding in Southern Ropes to Francois and Adrian’s
Namibian Trust was not motivated by Padda and Joy’s needs, is
ineluctable.
[71]
All things considered, there can be no doubt that the three
beneficiaries were not treated even-handedly. Rather, the evidence
suggests
that Francois and Adrian received preferential treatment.
The respondents’ argument that Francois and Adrian were, in
their
capacity as Trustees, not precluded from buying Trust assets
misses the point – t
he fact that they were
appointed as Trustees in addition to being beneficiaries did not
entitle them to more privileges than the
applicant. As Trustees, they
ought to act even-handedly in exercising their control over the
Trust’s assets, in the interests
of all the beneficiaries.
[72]
What is discernible is that although the applicant’s status as
a beneficiary was the same
as that of Francois and Adrian, the
collective decision of the Trustees granted Francois and Adrian
a
benefit that was not made available to the applicant, namely, the
ownership of the majority shares in Southern Ropes.
As
an aside, w
hat can also be gleaned from the evidence is that
at
the time when Francois and Adrian were
appointed as Trustees, there was already an unfortunate history of
tensions among family
members. Unfortunately, their inclusion as
Trustees, and the decision to offer Southern Ropes’ shares
exclusively to Francois
and Adrian seems to have exacerbated the
acrimony that already existed, perhaps predictably so.
[73]
It was submitted on behalf of the Trust that the applicant has not
been adversely affected by
the impugned transaction.
It
was argued that the sale of shares had a zero-sum effect on the
assets of the Trust, in the sense that the Trust received
compensation
for the shareholding that it lost and the applicant
would therefore benefit from the proceeds of the sale on Joy’s
death;
that Francois and Adrian had paid a market-related price for
the shares and that in terms of the provisions of clause 12 of the
Trust Deed, the value of all capital assets which were distributed
prior to vesting would be considered when vesting occurred.
In my
opinion, these contentions amount to cold comfort, as they fail to
consider the well-established rights and privileges that
come with
being a majority shareholder. It is trite that the shareholders who
own majority shares in a company are entitled to
control the exercise
of a majority of the voting rights associated with the shares of that
company; they have the right to appoint
or elect or control the
appointment of directors;
[30]
they also have beneficial interest in the securities of the
company.
[31]
In a nutshell, they have a say in how the company is run because they
have significant voting power when it comes to company decisions;
they can materially influence the policy of the company. Levin’s
phraseology that Francois and Adrian ‘indirectly own
Southern
Ropes’ is consistent with the rights and privileges mentioned
above. With a shareholding of 81.6 per cent in Southern
Ropes, the
Trust was practically seized with the running of Southern Ropes and
could essentially outvote all other shareholders
combined. The
enormity of the applicant’s loss is plainly incontrovertible.
The applicant’s assertion that he would
have submitted an offer
to buy the shares had he been aware of the Trustees’ decision
to sell them, is therefore understandable.
Without this Court’s
intervention, the applicant’s loss will be irreversible.
[74]
To sum up, t
he zero-sum argument and the
submission that Francois and Adrian paid a market-related price to
the Trust from which the applicant
will benefit on Joy’s death,
are factors that do not detract from the applicant’s loss of
the privilege to, like his
brothers, ‘indirectly own Southern
Ropes’, and the consequent benefits of that ownership. All the
aspects canvassed
above lead me to conclude that the agreement
pertaining to the sale of shares to Grace Investments, which
benefitted two beneficiaries
to the third beneficiary’s
detriment ought to be set aside. With respect, I am unable to agree
with the majority judgment’s
conclusion (at para 49 of the
judgment) that there was a rational reason why the shares were
offered to Grace Investments. This
is because in
Griessel
,
where a beneficiary’s
privilege of having a vacation on
a farm was taken away from him but the other potential beneficiaries
continued to enjoy the same
privilege, this Court held that such
differential treatment was without justification.
In
casu, the applicant was deprived of a far more significant privilege:
he was denied the privilege of being a beneficiary of a
Trust owning
majority shares in Southern Ropes while the other two beneficiaries,
Francois and Adrian, continued to enjoy the same
right, albeit as
beneficiaries of a different Trust.
[75]
In
Griessel
, this Court stated that discrimination may, under
certain circumstances, be justified by the needs of a particular
beneficiary.
I have demonstrated earlier, in para 70 above that the
assertion that the rationale for the sale of Southern Ropes shares
was to
cater for Joy and Padda’s well-being during Padda’s
retirement is without foundation. It follows that need has not been
established as the rationale for the differential treatment extended
to the applicant. Since no plausible explanation for this
differential treatment has been proffered by the Trustees, it
follows, by parity of the reasoning adopted in
Griessel
, that
this Court must find that such treatment is not justified. That being
the case, the applicant had a right to be protected
against arbitrary
and discriminatory treatment.
[76]
For all the reasons stated above, I am of the view that
the
applicant has good prospects of success on the merits of the appeal.
I would therefore grant him leave to appeal against the
judgment of
the high court and order the respondents to pay the costs of this
application.
MB
Molemela
Judge
of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For the
applicant:
H J De Waal SC and B J Vaughan
Instructed
by:
Bowman Gilfillan, Cape Town
Matsepes, Bloemfontein
For the
respondents: P
Farlam SC
Instructed
by:
Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs, Cape Town
Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Edwin
Cameron, Marius De Waal and Peter Solomon
Honore’s
South African Law of Trusts
(6 ed) (2018) at 224.
[2]
Ex
parte Lotzof and Others
1948
(3) SA 992
(O);
Pledge
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Kramer NO: In re Estate Selesnik
1975 (3) SA 696 (A).
[3]
Kidbrooke
Place Management Association and Another v Walton and Others NNO
2015
(4) SA 112 (WCC).
[4]
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mining Co Ltd
1921
AD 168
at 177-178.
[5]
Peffers
NO and Another v Attorneys, Notaries and Conveyancers Fidelity
Guarantee Fund Board of Control
1965
(2) SA 53
(C) at 56B-E.
[6]
At
56E-H.
[7]
At
56H.
[8]
At
58A-C.
[9]
At
57C-D.
[10]
Note
3 para 25.
[11]
Hoppen
and Others v Shub and Others
1987
(3) SA 201
(C) at 210A-G.
[12]
At
210G.
[13]
See
for example
In
re Estate Black
1918 CPD 603
at 604-605;
In
re Estate Hough
1919 CPD 160
at 161.
[14]
Princess
Estate and Gold Mining Co Ltd v Registrar of Mining Titles
1911
TPD 1066
at 1079-1080;
Dadoo
Ltd and Others v Krugersdorp Municipal Council
1920 AD 530
at 550-551;
The
Shipping Corporation of India Ltd v Evdomon Corporation and Another
[1993] ZASCA 167
;
1994 (1) SA 550
(A) at 565I-566H;
Clicks
Group Ltd and Others v Independent Community Pharmacy Association
and Others
[2021] ZASCA 167
;
[2022] 1 All SA 297
(SCA) paras 23-26.
[15]
At
57B-C.
[16]
Note
13 at 161.
[17]
Clause
7
(a)
.
[18]
Clause
7
(b)
.
[19]
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
[2019]
ZASCA 95
;
2019 (5) SA 396
(SCA).
[20]
Para
17.
[21]
Para
18.
[22]
Paras
18-19.
[23]
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and Others
2004
ZASCA 56
;
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) para 19-20.
[24]
Raath v
Nel
[2012] ZASCA 86
;
2012 (5) SA 273
(SCA) para 13.
[25]
Breetzke
NNO and Others v Alexander
[2020] ZASCA 97; 2020 (6) SA 360 (SCA).
[26]
Ibid para 10 and 36.
[27]
Griessel
NO and Others v De Kock and Another
[2019]
ZASCA 95; 2019 (5) SA 396 (SCA)para 17.
[28]
This is evident from para 10 of that judgment.
[29]
Griessel
para
17.
[30]
Section 2(2)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
provides:
‘
(2)
For the purpose of subsection (1), a person controls a juristic
person, or its business, if— (a) in the case of a juristic
person that is a company— (i) that juristic person is a
subsidiary of that first person, as determined in accordance with
section 3(1)(a)
; or (ii) that first person together with any related
or inter-related person, is— (aa) directly or indirectly able
to exercise
or control the exercise of a majority of the voting
rights associated with securities of that company, whether pursuant
to a
shareholder agreement or otherwise; or (bb) has the right to
appoint or elect, or control the appointment or election of,
directors
of that company who control a majority of the votes at a
meeting of the board; (b) in the case of a juristic person that is a
close corporation, that first person owns the majority of the
members’ interest, or controls directly, or has the right
to
control, the majority of members’ votes in the close
corporation; (c) in the case of a juristic person that is a trust,
that first person has the ability to control the majority of the
votes of the trustees or to appoint the majority of the trustees,
or
to appoint or change the majority of the beneficiaries of the trust;
or (d) that first person has the ability to materially
influence the
policy of the juristic person in a manner comparable to a person
who, in ordinary commercial practice, would be
able to exercise an
element of control referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).’
[31]
The
Companies Act defines
‘beneficial interest’ as
follows: , ‘beneficial interest, when used in relation to a
company’s securities,
means the right or entitlement of a
person, through ownership, agreement, relationship or otherwise,
alone or together with another
person to— (a) receive or
participate in any distribution in respect of the company’s
securities; (b) exercise or
cause to be exercised, in the ordinary
course, any or all of the rights attaching to the company’s
securities; or (c) dispose
or direct the disposition of the
company’s securities, or any part of a distribution in respect
of the securities, but
does not include any interest held by a
person in a unit trust or collective investment scheme in terms of
the Collective Investment
Schemes Act, 2002 (Act No. 45 of 2002).
sino noindex
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