Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 251South Africa
Lentsoane v Mokoena N.O and Others (2024/012066) [2025] ZAGPJHC 251 (7 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lentsoane v Mokoena N.O and Others (2024/012066) [2025] ZAGPJHC 251 (7 March 2025)
Lentsoane v Mokoena N.O and Others (2024/012066) [2025] ZAGPJHC 251 (7 March 2025)
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sino date 7 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 2024-012066
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 7 March 2025
In the matter between:
EULANDER
MATHAPELO LENTSOANE
Applicant
and
MAHLAPE
KHASIANE MOKOENA N.O.
First
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
KHOMOTSANA
PETRUS NYAPOTSE
Third
Respondent
NYAPOTSE
INCORPORATED
Fourth
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
D’OLIVEIRA
AJ
:
1
This is an application for a mandamus directing the first
respondent to comply with her obligations as executrix of the estate
of
Mamonyane Clara Mokoena (the deceased).
2
The deceased passed away on 25 November 2021.
3
The applicant was a friend of the deceased. She claims
that she contributed R80 000.00 towards the costs of the
deceased’s
funeral. It is in that capacity, as an alleged
creditor of the deceased estate, that the applicant has brought the
application.
4
The first respondent is Mahlape Khasiane Mokoena, who is the
daughter of the deceased. She was nominated by the deceased to be the
executrix of her deceased estate.
5
The second respondent is the Master of the High Court,
Johannesburg, who plays no active role in these proceedings.
6
The third respondent is Khomotsana Petrus Nyapotse, who is the
sole director of the fourth respondent.
7
The fourth respondent is Nyapotse Incorporated, the firm of
attorneys that was appointed by the first respondent on 20 February
2022 to be her attorney and agent to act on her behalf in all matters
pertaining to the administration of the deceased estate. I
will refer
to the third and fourth respondents as the “first respondent’s
attorneys”.
8
The first respondent’s attorneys been joined in the
application because the applicant seeks costs
de bonis propriis
against them.
9
The applicant has brought the application because she and her
attorney’s efforts to lodge her claim and have it dealt with
in
accordance with the provisions of the Administration of Estates Act
66 of 1965 (the Act) have been consistently and unreasonably
ignored
by the first respondent and her attorneys.
10
The facts in this regard, summarised, are that, between 21
October 2022 and 23 September 2023, the applicant’s attorney
addressed
no less than eleven letters, in which they,
inter alia
:
12.1.
sought a copy of the first respondent’s letters of executorship
(until the time
she was appointed in June 2023);
12.2.
asked when the estate would be advertised in terms of section 29 of
the Act;
12.3.
informed the respondents of her status as a creditor and her
intention to lodge a claim;
and later
12.4.
attempted to lodge the applicant’s claim against the deceased
estate.
13.
The first ten letters were written to the first respondent’s
attorneys. The last letter was written to the first respondent, and
copied to the first respondent’s attorneys.
14.
The last letter, dated 23 September 2023, specified that all
the
applicant’s attorney’s requests, notices and demands had
been ignored and warned that, should no response be received
within
five days, legal proceedings would be instituted. This letter, too,
prompted no reaction from either the first respondent
or her
attorneys.
15.
The first respondent’s attorneys not only ignored all
of the
applicant’s attorney’s attempts to obtain information
concerning the deceased estate, the section 29 publication
and the
anticipated date of the lodging of a liquidation and distribution
account, the first respondent’s attorneys treated
one of the
applicant’s attorneys’ employees, who was given the task
of delivering one of the letters by hand, in a
manner that can fairly
be described as abusive.
16.
The first respondent’s attorneys do not oppose the application.
The application is only opposed by the first respondent.
17.
The first respondent’s answering affidavit, however,
is
superficial and unsatisfactory.
18.
The first respondent says that the applicant’s attorney
has not
been responded to because she has needed time to grieve the passing
of her mother and of her brother.
19.
This is not a credible explanation for why the first respondent
or
first respondent’s attorney failed to react at all to any of
the letters of the applicant’s attorney. The deceased
passed
away on 25 November 2021, and the first respondent’s brother
passed away on 13 December 2022. The enquiries and attempts
made on
behalf of the applicant to lodge her claim against the deceased
estate started 11 months after the deceased had passed
away, and two
months before the brother passed away. They continued for another
eleven months.
20.
The first respondent also states that she was completely unware
of
the letters from the applicant’s attorney, his attempts on
behalf of the applicant to obtain information about the estate,
and
his attempts to lodge the applicant’s claim. She
effectively places the blame for the lack of response on her
attorneys, indicating that her attorneys should account for their
conduct. This response is not acceptable for two reasons.
First, the first respondent was written to directly by the
applicant’s attorney, and ignored the letter herself.
Secondly,
it is the first respondent who is the executrix of the
estate. She ultimately bears responsibility for the conduct of the
attorney
and agent she has chosen to administer the estate on her
behalf.
21.
In the meantime, the first respondent admits that she continues
to
reside in the immovable property that was owned by the deceased. It
is apparent that she is in possession of the deceased’s
movable
property and is enjoying the benefit of such property. There is much
to be said for the case made out by the applicant
that the consistent
failure of the first respondent and her attorneys to react to the
applicant’s attempts to assert her
claim in the estate was a
deliberate stratagem to avoid and thereby stifle any claims against
the deceased estate.
22.
Section 35 of the Act prescribes that an executor shall, as
soon as
may be after the last day of the period specified in terms of the
notice referred to in section 29(1), but within six months
after the
letters of executorship have been granted, lodge the liquidation and
distribution account of the estate with the Master.
23.
The Legislature has limited the period in which the liquidation
and
distribution account should be lodged for good reason. The limited
time period compels those charged with the administration
of a
deceased estate to wind up the estate within a reasonable time,
protecting against abuse and the dissipation of the assets
to the
prejudice of creditors and heirs.
24.
The letters of executorship were issued by the Master in favour
of
the first respondent on 23 June 2023. The first respondent’s
answering affidavit, delivered on 9 April 2024, disclosed
for
the first time that advertisement in terms of section 29 of the Act
had taken place in the
Star
newspaper and the
Government
Gazette
in October 2023.
25.
The first respondent and her attorneys failed to lodge the
liquidation and distribution account within six months of the issue
of the letters of executorship. The liquidation and distribution
account had not been lodged by the time the applicant launched the
application on 5 February 2024. It had still not been lodged
by
the date of the hearing of this application on 28 January 2025.
26.
Section 36 of the Act provides:
“
36
Failure by executor to lodge account or to perform duties
(1)
If any executor fails to lodge any account with the Master as and
when required by this Act, … or to perform any other
duty
imposed upon him by this Act … the Master or any person having
an interest in the liquidation and distribution of the
estate may,
after giving the executor not less than one month's notice, apply to
the Court for an order directing the executor
to lodge such account …
or to perform such duty or to comply with such demand.
”
27.
Although the applicant did not make express reference to section
36
in her application, a proper case has been made out for relief under
this section, and under common law.
28.
The applicant has also made out a proper case for the order
that the
first respondent and the first respondent’s attorneys pay costs
on a punitive scale. Their conduct is unacceptable
and is deserving
of the court’s censure.
29.
The following order is made:
1.
The first respondent is directed to provide the applicant’s
attorney with a written
acknowledgement of the lodgement of the
applicant’s claim in the amount of R80 000.00 in the
deceased estate of the
late Mamonyane Clara Mokoena within 10 days of
the date of this order.
2.
The first respondent shall respond to and deal with the applicant’s
claim in accordance with the provisions of the
Administration of
Estates Act 66 of 1965
within 5 days of confirming the lodgement of
the claim in terms of paragraph 1 of this order.
3.
The first respondent shall lodge the liquidation and distribution
account of the deceased estate of the late Mamonyane Clara Mokoena
with the Master within 30 days of the date of this order.
4.
The first, third and fourth respondents are liable, jointly
and
severally, to pay the costs of this application on an attorney and
client scale.
A J D’OLIVEIRA
Acting Judge of the High
Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 7 March
2025.
HEARD
ON:
28 January 2025
DECIDED
ON:
7 March 2025
For the
Applicants:
M R Webbstock
Heads prepared by J C Van
der Merwe of J C Van Der Merwe Attorneys
For the
Respondent
Z Bingwa
Instructed by Nyapotse
Incorporated
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