Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 167South Africa
Du Plessis and Another v Cabral (098558/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 167 (25 February 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Du Plessis and Another v Cabral (098558/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 167 (25 February 2025)
Du Plessis and Another v Cabral (098558/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 167 (25 February 2025)
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sino date 25 February 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
# CASE
NO:098558/2023
CASE
NO
:
098558/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
24/02/2025
In the matter between:
Johannes
Hendricus Du Plessis NO
First Applicant
Nomsa
Ursula Sefanyetso NO
Second Applicant
And
Candice
Cabral
Defendant / Respondent
# Neutral
Citation:
Neutral
Citation:
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is deemed to be delivered.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application for money
judgment for fees incurred in an application for provisional
sequestration of the defendant’s
former husband which
sequestration order was set aside.
Background
[2]
The applicants, Johannes Hendricus Du
Plessis and Nomsa Ursula Sefanyatso, were joint trustees of the
insolvent estate of Dorian
Robert Cabral (“Mr Cabral”).
The respondent and her erstwhile husband were divorced and in terms
of the decree of divorce,
the husband had to pay maintenance for the
minor children. He defaulted and the sequestration proceedings were
initiated which
resulted in the final sequestration order been
granted during June 2021.
[3]
After
the sequestration order, the respondent, through her attorney,
requested the joint trustees of the insolvent estate to approach
the
Master of the High Court to grant the consent to conduct an inquiry
into the insolvent estate of Mr. Cabral in terms of section
152
[1]
of the Insolvency Act. This was on 17 March 2021. The Master of the
High Court granted the consent on 24 March 2021 to conduct
a section
152 inquiry in terms of the Act.
[4]
To enable the applicants to conduct an
inquiry, the respondent was required to indemnify the applicants and
all the creditors of
the insolvent estate against any/or all costs
relating to the administration of the insolvent estate and/or
the
inquiry
conducted.
The
respondent
agreed
and
signed
the indemnity agreement during March 2021.
The respondent submitted the claim which was the only one proved at
the creditors meeting.
The claim was in respect of arrear maintenance
of the minor children, legal costs and extra-mural expenses.
[5]
The applicants, through their attorneys,
conducted an inquiry into the insolvent estate.
At the hearing, Mr Cabral was called, so
was his new wife together with their business partners. The inquiry
ran on various dates
for a total of nine days and Mr Morris of Snaid
and Morris Inc represented the trustees of the insolvent estate. The
trustees determined
that there was a shortfall of R402 542-6. The
funds in the free residue account totalled R15 315.50 and following
the successful
appeal order, the funds were returned to Mr. Cabral as
the trustees were not entitled to retain them.
[6]
Following the setting of aside of the
sequestration on appeal, the bill for cost related to the inquiry was
presented to the trustees
and was accepted by them as fair and
reasonable and was found to be in accordance with the mandate given
to Mr Morris. The Master
of the High Court refused to tax the bill on
the basis that on the successful appeal sequestration order, the
intermission account
cannot be taxed.
Without the taxation, the trustees are not
entitled to recover the fees and costs incurred in the insolvent
estate.
[7]
Consequently, the demand was made against
the respondent in terms of the Indemnity Agreement. The respondent
refused to pay and
relied on section 73(1) of the Act as the reason
for non-payment. She denies that she concluded the Indemnity
Agreement, and that
the agreement did not comply with section 73(1)
of the Act. She states that when she signed the agreement, she was of
the view
that the applicants would conduct the inquiry themselves
without the need to use the attorneys and that in any event, she
never
consented to the attorneys to be used in the conduct of the
section 152 inquiry. She, furthermore, denies that the first
application
has the authority to act for the second application.
Issues for
determining.
[8]
The issue for determination is firstly,
whether the applicants required the consent of all the creditors to
conduction an inquiry
into the insolvent estate and secondly whether
the indemnity agreement entitles the applicants to recover the amount
claimed from
the respondent.
Legal principles and
reasons
[9]
Once a person is sequestrated, his estate
is placed in the hands of the Master who then appoints the trustee to
manage the estate.
Section 18(3) states that “A provisional
trustee shall have the powers and the duties of a trustee, as
provided in this Act,
except that without the authority of the Court
or for the purpose of obtaining such authority he shall not bring or
defend any
legal proceedings and that without the authority of the
Court or Master he shall not sell any property belonging to the
estate
in question. Such sale shall furthermore be after such notices
and subject to such conditions as the Master may direct.”
It is evident from this section that the
provisional trustee has all the powers except that when he/she
institutes legal action
on behalf of the estate, the leave of court
is required to authorise him/her to do so.
[10]
Section 73(1) provides as follows:
“
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this section and section 53(4), the
trustee of an insolvent estate may with the prior written
authorisation of the creditors engage the services of any attorney or
counsel to perform the legal work specified in the authorisation
on
behalf of the estate: Provided that the trustee—
(a)
if he or she is unable to obtain the prior
written authorisation of the creditors due to the urgency of the
matter or the number
of creditors involved, may with the prior
written authorisation of the Master engage the services of any
attorney or counsel to
perform the legal work specified in the
authorisation on behalf of the estate; or
(b)
if it is not likely that there will be any
surplus after the distribution of the estate, may at any time before
the submission of
his or her accounts obtain written authorisation
from the creditors for any legal work performed by any attorney or
counsel, and
all costs incurred by the trustee, including any costs
awarded against the estate in legal proceedings instituted on behalf
of
or against the estate, in so far as such costs result from any
steps taken by the trustee under this subsection, shall be included
in the cost of the sequestration of the estate.”
[11]
In
Patel
v Paruk’s Trustee
[2]
Tindall
JA said the following on the correct
interpretation
of section 73(1):
“
The
original proviso, prohibiting the trustee from instituting or
defending any legal proceedings without the prescribed consent,
was
enacted, as between the trustee and the creditors, in order to
protect the estate from being dissipated in litigation. The
Legislature could not have intended that steps taken by a trustee to
institute or defend proceedings must necessarily be a nullity
because
the prescribed consent had not been obtained. An interpretation to
the contrary would bring about a result that, where
there is not
enough time to enable the trustee to obtain such consent, he may be
powerless to issue a summons timeously in order
to prevent a claim
due to the estate from becoming prescribed or to file a plea in order
to prevent a default judgment from being
obtained against the him.”
[12]
In the instant case, the respondent was the
only proven creditor, and the inquiry came at her instance. It is
therefore inapt to
suggest that the consent of the general body of
creditors should have been sought and given before the inquiry could
commence because
the consent alleged to have been missing would not
have been given because there was only one proof of claim by the
respondent.
[13]
The
respondent contends that she was of the view that the applicants
would conduct the inquiry themselves and impliedly not make
use of
the services of an attorney for that purpose. The answer to that
contestation was dealt with in
Muller
v The Master and Others
[3]
,
Preiss
J said the following on the interpretation and application of section
73(1) of the Act in disputed legal costs:
“
Section
73 empowers a trustee to obtain legal advice and to employ an
attorney or an attorney and counsel for legal proceedings
in which an
estate is involved. The costs so incurred are included in the costs
of sequestration. Section 73(2)
(a)
provides that all costs which are not
subject to taxation by a Taxing Officer of the Court, shall be taxed
by the Master according
to the latter's tariff.”
Although Preiss J dealt
with the controversy about the taxation of the costs,
the principle is clearly
articulated that the services of the attorney can be used and the
reason the costs need to be taxed is
to ensure that the insolvent
estate is protected from the disposition of its property through
legal costs.
[14]
I turn to the wording of the Indemnity
Agreement which is drafted as follows:
“
INDEMNIFICATION
FOR COSTS IN THE INSOLVENT ESTATE OF
DORIAN CABRAL
MASTER REFERENCE NUMBER:
G768/20
I the undersigned Candice
Cabral Identity (
omitted to protect privacy
) of Hertford Road
Bryanston Sandton. Do hereby indemnify the trustees of the
abovementioned estate together with all creditors
being secured
,concurrent or contingent creditors of any and all costs relating to
the administration of the estate and or any
inquiry run by the
trustees either upon my instruction or on their own fruition or
otherwise .Subject to that should any funds
be recuperated , and
subject to the Master’s approval, I am claim such costs from
the estate as costs of the administration.
Thus, done and signed at
BLACKHEATH on this 15
th
MARCH day of 2021. In the presence
of the undermentioned witnesses.”
[15]
The unambiguous wording of the indemnity
shows that the indemnity is for “any and all costs …
relating to… any
inquiry.” There is no basis for a wider
interpretation of the meaning of the words used by the parties to
exclude the costs
of attorneys or counsel.
[16]
There is no controversy that the respondent
signed the Indemnity and that the terms thereof are what they purport
to be. From the
face of it, it is evident that the agreement
envisaged inter alia, the costs related to the inquiry into the
estate. In my view,
that the sequestration order was set aside in an
appeal is of no moment. The Indemnity Agreement was not dependent on
any condition
and the parties agreed about its terms.
[17]
Mr Bolus submitted that because the
applicants had not sought the consent from the creditors to engage in
the services of the attorneys
in the conduct of the inquiry in terms
of section152 of the Act, they are in violation thereof and that the
claim for costs incurred
should not be favourably considered.This
argument is without merit because firstly, the consent of the Master
was sought and granted
before the inquiry could be embarked upon.
From the papers, there is no controversy with the consent given by
the Master of the
High Court. In any event, the consent by the Master
of this Court is not disputed. It is also not that Mr. Morris
conducted the
inquiry on behalf of the applicants for the days that
the proceedings took place wherein the respondent together with her
legal
representatives were present. The papers show that the
respondent’s own legal representatives advised her that it
would cost
effective for them not to continue to be present in the
inquiry. To suggest that there is no proof of the mandate given by
the
applicants to Mr Morris of Snaid and Morris Attorneys to assist
the trustees to conduct the inquiry. Accordingly, the defence must
fail.
[18]
I now deal the counterclaim by the
respondent. The respondent contends that her father who made the
payment was under the misapprehension
that the respondent was liable
for the costs. The respondent’s claim is based on what should
be an enrichment claim. She
does not make a case for enrichment. In
any event, it is permissible for a third party to pay a debt of
behalf of the debtor. In
our law, this is not unique, and it is
acceptable for the creditor to accept such payment. Having already
ruled that the indemnity
agreement is in order, I have no basis to
rule otherwise with the payment received by the applicants from the
respondent’s
father. Consequently, the counterclaim must fail.
Order
[19]
Having heard counsel for the
applicants and the respondent, it is ordered that:
19.1.
the Respondent shall pay the First and
Second Applicants the sum of R384,207.29.
19.2.
the Respondent pay interest on the
aforesaid amount of R384,207.29 to the First and Second Applicants a
tempore morae
at
the maximum permissible statutory rate from 5 September 2023 to date
of final payment.
19.3.
the counter-claim is dismissed.
19.4.
the Respondent shall pay the costs of this
application on scale “B”.
# ML SENYATSI
ML SENYATSI
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
: 03 September
2024
DATE
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN
:
24 February 2025
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Adv L.M. Olivier SC
Instructed
by:
Snaid & Morris Inc
Counsel
Respondent:
J.N. Bolus
Instructed
by:
Bolus Attorneys
[1]
Insolvency
Act, No: 24 of 1936
[2]
1944
AD 469
at 475
[3]
[1992]
4 All SA 470
(T) at p 474
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