Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 659South Africa
Van Der Merwe and Another v Basson and Others (2019/39063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 659 (11 June 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Claim against the joint estate for the wrongful actions of the deceased. Does the claim lie against the joint estate or the separate estate of the deceased? The provisions of section 19 of the Matrimonial Property Act considered. There is no claim that lies within the contemplation of section 19 of the Matrimonial Property Act. Held: (1) The application is dismissed. Held: (2) Applicants to pay costs on attorney and own client scale jointly and severally.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Van Der Merwe and Another v Basson and Others (2019/39063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 659 (11 June 2024)
Van Der Merwe and Another v Basson and Others (2019/39063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 659 (11 June 2024)
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sino date 11 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Delicts by spouse –
Liability
–
Marriage
in community of property – Liability of widow for delicts of
deceased spouse – Undue enrichment committed
by deceased –
Claim of trustees lies against separate property of deceased –
No separate property of deceased
exists – Once marriage in
community of property ends so ends joint estate – Reduction
shall not fall against
half share of innocent party –
Application dismissed –
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
,
s 19.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2019/390634
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
11
June 2024
In
the matter between:
ANDRE
VAN DER MERWE N.O.
FIRST
APPLICANT
MARIA
ELIZABETH VAN DER MERWE
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
TERISA
DUCKETT BASSON N.O.
FIRST
RESPONDENT
TERISA
DUCKETT BASSON
SECOND
RESPONDENT
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
THIRD
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 10
June 2024
Summary
:
Claim against the joint estate for the wrongful actions of the
deceased. Does the claim lie against the joint
estate or the separate
estate of the deceased? The provisions of
section 19
of the
Matrimonial Property Act considered
. There is no claim that lies
within the contemplation of section 19 of the Matrimonial Property
Act. Held: (1) The application
is dismissed. Held: (2) Applicants to
pay costs on attorney and own client scale jointly and severally.
JUDGMENT
Moshoana, J:
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application in terms of which the trustees of the Vanina Trust,
IT389/01 (Vanina) claim three separate amounts against
the joint
estate of Ms Tersia Duckett Basson (the widow) and the late Jan
Willem Frederik Basson (the deceased). The amounts claimed
are R
333 750.00; R 51 250.00; and R 74 608.83 respectively.
These three separate amounts are claimed on the basis
that the
trustees of Vanina paid to the deceased those amounts for the
purposes of him defraying the debt owed by Vanina to the
South
African Receiver of Revenue (SARS). Instead of defraying the debt,
the deceased appropriated the funds for his personal benefit.
[2]
The
trustees, Mr Andre Van Der Merwe and Ms Maria Elizabeth Van Der Merwe
chose to proceed by way of motion proceedings as they
did not
anticipate any
bona
fide
dispute
of fact. The respondents, the widow cited in her capacity as an
appointed executor and in her personal capacity, had raised
three
legal objections (points in
limine
)
which were jettisoned at the hearing of this application. That having
been done, one legal question remained; namely, does the
undisputed
money claim lie against the joint estate of the widow and the
deceased or against the separate estate of the deceased,
if any
existed. Accordingly, this application turns on the interpretation of
section 19
of the
Matrimonial Property Act.
>
[1]
[3]
The
trustees contend that on proper interpretation of the section, since
the deceased did not have a separate property, the debts
attracted by
his conduct during the subsistence of the matrimony lie against the
joint estate of the matrimony. On the other hand,
the respondents
contend that since there is no longer a joint estate, which ceased to
exist after the death of the deceased, the
trustees’ claim
cannot lie against a non-existing joint estate.
Background facts
[4]
Given
the limited basis upon which this application oscillates, it is
obsolete for this Court to, in this judgment, provide a full
rendition of the facts of the present application. Salient background
facts shall suffice, and those are: During his lifetime,
the deceased
was engaged by the trustees to provide them with professional
services relating to bookkeeping and tax related services.
At the
relevant time, the deceased traded as a sole proprietor under the
name and style “Basson Consult”.
[5]
During
12 December 2017, Basson Consult informed the trustees that the
amounts R 105 000.00 and R 110 000.00, in respect
of the
financial years of 2016 and 2017 respectively were owed by the
trustees to SARS. The said amounts were paid into a trust
account
personally held by the deceased. On 22 August 2016, the deceased
informed the trustees that an amount of R 121 120.56
was owing
to SARS. Since the trustees had a credit of R 50 000.00 held by
the deceased, an amount of R 51 250.00 was
paid to defray that
debt. It later turned out that the deceased failed to defray the SARS
debt and had appropriated the funds for
his personal benefit.
[6]
Owing
to the fact that the amount due and payable to SARS was not settled,
the trustees attracted penalties to the tune of R 74 608.63.
On
20 August 2018, the deceased once again advised that an amount of R
67 500 was due and payable to SARS. All these amounts
were paid
to the deceased and no payments were transmitted to SARS.
Accordingly, the total claim that the trustees had against
the
deceased was R 333 750.00. Sadly, on 11 July 2019, the deceased
passed away having not repaid the total claim of the trustees.
On 24
June 2019, prior to his demise, the trustees made enquiries with SARS
and were informed that no returns nor payments were
made to SARS. The
trustees attempted to discuss the issue with the deceased at Basson
Consult offices during the month of June
2019 to no avail. Following
the demise of the deceased, Estate late J.W.F Basson was opened. The
widow was appointed as the executrix
of the estate. The liquidation
and distribution (L&D) account was approved on 30 March 2022,
with the claim of the trustees
not included. The trustees did not
file any objection to the L&D account.
[7]
That
notwithstanding, on 06 November 2019, the trustees launched the
present application claiming the amount misappropriated by
the
deceased from the widow in her capacity as executrix and in her
personal capacity as the widow of the deceased.
Analysis
[8]
The
sole legal question that arises for determination by this Court is
whether an innocent spouse should carry liability for the
delict
committed by a deceased spouse during the subsistence of their
marriage in community of property. This isolated question
calls for
the interpretation of section 19 of the Property Act. The section
reads:
“
19.
Liability for delicts committed by spouses
When a spouse is liable
for the payment of damages, including damages for non-patrimonial
loss, by reason of a delict committed
by him or when a contribution
is recoverable from a spouse …, such damages or contribution
and any costs awarded against
him are
recoverable from the
separate property, if any
, of that spouse, and only in so far as
he has no separate property, from the
joint estate:
Provided
that in so far as such damages, contribution or costs have been
recovered from the joint estate, an adjustment shall, upon
the
division of the joint estate, be effected in favour of the other
spouse or his estate, as the case may be
”. [Own
emphasis]
[9]
On the
undisputed facts of this case, the deceased, during his lifetime (a
spouse at the time) attracted liability to pay damages
for reason of
a delict (undue enrichment) committed by him. The default position
contemplated in section 19 is that those damages
are recoverable from
the separate property of the guilty spouse, if any exists. According
to section 1 of the Property Act, a separate
property is property
that does not form part of the joint estate. Based on this default
position, the claim of the trustees lies
against the separate
property of the deceased, if any existed. It appears to be common
cause that as at the launch of this motion,
there existed no separate
property of the deceased.
[10]
That
being the case, does it then mean that the claim as at the time it
existed would lie against the joint estate or not? Before
an attempt
is made to address this important question, regard must be had to the
definition of a joint estate. In terms of section
1 of the Property
Act, it means the joint estate of a husband and a wife married in
community of property. For purposes of answering
the question arising
out of this matter, the definition alone is, in my view, unhelpful.
The section does not address what I consider
to be a corollary yet
pertinent question: namely, how is a joint estate formed? To my mind,
the section only addresses the “when”
part of it. Based
on the section, undoubtedly, the joint estate comes into being when a
husband and a wife marry in community of
property.
[11]
A
joint estate is comprised of all assets that a spouse acquired prior
to the marriage as well as those assets accumulated during
the
marriage. This comprise issue agitates the question of what then
comprises
the
separate estate? It may not be necessary for the purposes of this
judgment to attempt an answer to this question. Could it be
that
section 18 is the only answer to the “comprise” question?
In terms of that section delictual damages form part
of the separate
property. As such, in order to build up a separate property, a claim
for damages is required. In the absence of
any, a separate property
may not germinate. It is so that assets that may be excluded from the
joint estate are those emanating
from an inheritance. Thus, an
inheritance may form part of a separate property.
[12]
It is
common cause in this matter that the widow and the deceased were
married to each other in community of property. Undoubtedly,
when the
deceased attracted the delictual liability there was a joint estate
in existence. Since it is common cause that there
was no separate
property of the deceased, notionally, those damages for the delictual
liability were recoverable from the joint
estate. A key question then
arises: when does the joint estate end? Axiomatically, because the
joint estate was begotten by a marriage
in community of property,
once that marriage ends, so ends the joint estate.
[13]
A
marriage may be terminated by death or divorce.
[2]
In
Maqubela
and Another v The Master of Gauteng Local Division Johannesburg and
others
,
[3]
it was
confirmed that the death of a spouse terminates a marriage in
community of property and the consequences thereof. In
Pelser
N.O. and Another v Lessing N.O. and Others,
[4]
the
learned Prinsloo J interpreted section 19 of the Property Act in the
circumstances of a divorce. Having surveyed case law and
eminent
authors like H.R Hahlo in his masterful work
The
South African Law of Husband and Wife 4
th
and
5
th
eds
,
the erudite Prinsloo J concluded thus:
“
[44]
Where section 19 is silent on the question of delictual debts not
paid during the existence of the marriage in
community of property,
it seems to me that the correct approach is that a delictual
liability which has not been paid during marriage
in community of
property
has
to be paid after its dissolution
out
of the half-share of the guilty spouse.” [Own emphasis]
[14]
Observably,
the learned Prinsloo J does acknowledge that section 19 is silent on
the issue. Thus, the part “
has
to be paid after its dissolution
”
is
the consequence of the mastery of interpretation. Of course, a
principle exists that when interpreting a statute, a court is
not
permitted to cross the divide between interpretation and legislation.
Legislation is the preserve of the legislature. To my
mind the
learned Justice, “read in” the words “has to be
paid after its dissolution”. Reading in is a judicial
activist
remedial measures that can be taken either to restrict or to extend
the scope of a statutory provision to rescue it from
invalidity on
constitutional grounds.
[5]
It is
my view that this reading in is impermissible in the absence of any
allegation of constitutional invalidity, as such, the
very sacred
divide, was with considerable regret crossed in my view.
[15]
It is
clear to me that the learned Judge did that in order to answer the
question raised in the matter, which was what happens to
the claims
if the joint estate no longer exists? In my view, such pertinent
question must be deferred to the Legislature. When
interpreting a
statute, one must have regard to the language of the legislation,
contextually and purposefully in order to emerge
with the intention
of the Legislature. In my view, if the section is contextually and
purposefully interpreted, the intention of
the Legislature is that
once a joint estate is dissolved, it cannot be reincarnated solely to
resolve what could have been. In
Maqubela
it was
held, correctly in my view, that the proceeds of life policies do not
form part of the joint estate after death because after
death, there
is no joint estate any longer.
[16]
It is
indeed so that on application of the
stare
decisis
rule,
Pelser
is
binding on me. However, I take a view, for reasons advanced above
that it is wrong in law when it concludes, after what I consider
to
be an impermissible interpretative mastery, that the delictual
damages are to be paid out of the half share after dissolution.
Additionally, the exposed mastery seeks to elevate a half share into
a joint estate. It is not. In fact, a half share is the consequence
of a dissolution of a joint estate. The section refers to a joint
estate in the absence of a separate property. The said joint
estate
has been given a technical meaning by the Legislature. That meaning
ubiquitously excludes a half share in my respectful
view. As an
additional point, the section refers to recoverable and not liable.
To my mind, recoverable simply means regained or
retrieved. In other
words, once a debt exists, such a debt could be regained or retrieved
from the joint estate. Differently put,
once the joint estate
dissipates, the recoverability against it dissipates too. At that
time there is no longer and husband and
wife capable of remaining in
a marriage in community of property.
[17]
On the
other hand, liable means responsible by law or legally answerable. If
recoverable meant liable, then what will be required
would be only
the existence of a joint estate as at the time of the debt. In other
words, once a debt exists in an estate where
there is no separate
property, the joint estate attracts liability from that point until
the joint estate may be sued posthumously.
This proposition, is in my
view, absurd. It seeks to keep a joint estate alive even after its
demise. After its demise –
division of joint estate (by death
or divorce) – what shall remain does not fit the definitional
requirements of the phrase
joint estate.
[18]
Another
way of looking at it is that the learned Judge could be suggesting
that a half share then becomes a separate property. Perhaps
such a
situation may arise in an instance where the joint estate is
dissolved by divorce. In terms of section 7 (1) of the Divorce
Act,
[6]
a
court granting a decree of divorce may in accordance with an
agreement between the parties make an order with regard to the
division
of the assets of the parties. It is axiomatic that once
division happens, the divorced party become the sole owner of
whatever
assets is divided to him or her. Perhaps under those
circumstances there may be a separate property to speak of. I say
“may
be” because in truth it is “sole”
property as opposed to separate property. Separate to what? A
separate property
only exists where there is a joint estate. In the
absence of a joint estate there exists a sole owned property as
opposed to a
separate property.
[19]
The
learned Judge also considered a situation, which may be akin to the
present situation, where division is completed in a divorce
situation
to a point that the joint estate no longer exists. The learned Judge
stated that any creditors with contractual claims
against the former
joint estate, will therefore have to proceed in terms of section 17
(5) of the Property Act. He continued and
suggested that if the
surviving spouse is sued, she has to pay and thereafter exercise a
recourse action. With considerable regret,
I do not agree that the
situation regulated by section 17 ought to be conflated with the
situation regulated by section 19.
[20]
Section
17 is there for litigation by and between spouses. I take a view that
where an action lies against the joint estate within
the
contemplation of section 19, it will be incongruent for a spouse; in
seeking to protect her or his half share accept liability
of a claim
against the joint estate with a hope that he or she will seek refuge
from section 17 (5) of the Property Act. Such is
in direct conflict
with the proviso of section 19 that expressly states that where a
joint estate takes a knock for the misdemeanours
of the guilty
spouse, the innocent spouse is entitled to an adjustment in her
favour upon the division of the estate. This simply
means that where
the joint estate’s value is diminished, at the time of
division, the reduction shall not fall against the
half share of the
innocent party, but a favourable adjustment must happen.
[21]
Liability
against the joint estate does not magically arise. It happens only
if: (a) the guilty party did not have a separate property
and (b) a
favourable adjustment must happen upon division. The first
requirement operates in favour of innocent creditors, who
may have no
knowledge that the other spouse does not have a separate property.
Imagine a situation where access to the joint estate
was specifically
prohibited, this will operate unfairly against innocent creditors.
The second requirement operates in favour of
the innocent spouse. As
Hahlo felicitously puts it, it is a fundamental principle of the law
of delict, as it is of criminal law
that no one should be held liable
for the wrongs of another, each spouse is liable for his or her own
delicts and not for those
of the other spouse.
[22]
Having
excursed the relevant legal principle exposed above, my road to
Damascus culminates thus: On proper interpretation of section
19,
once the joint estate ends by termination of the marriage in
community of property, in this instance by death, no claim is
recoverable from the joint estate for a very simple reason that the
joint estate does not exist anymore. Section 39 (2) of the
Constitution enjoins me, when interpreting any legislation and
developing the common law or customary law, to promote the spirit,
purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. Although the widow is not
an accused person, I do not think it is out of kilter to align
with
the fundamental law of delict and accord her the rights contemplated
in section 35(h) of the Constitution, that is, the right
to be
presumed innocent. Thus, she cannot be held responsible for the
wrongs of the deceased. She is presumably innocent and cannot
take
liability in a situation where the joint estate ceased to exist.
[23]
As I
conclude, in my view, the situation contemplated in section 19 is
only available during the subsistence of a marriage. Once
the
marriage ends, so ends the joint estate. This Court does share the
melancholy of the trustees. They are, like the widow, innocent
victims. They trusted the deceased, unfortunately, they hanged their
hopes and aspirations on a wrong person. Their only answer
to this
melancholic situation was the procedure outlined in sections 29 to 35
of the Administration of Estates Act,
[7]
or an
action instituted against the estate of the deceased in a court with
competent jurisdiction. It truly escapes the comprehension
of this
Court as to why the trustees failed to lodge a claim in terms of the
Estates Act and/or institute an action against the
deceased estate.
[24]
Looking
at the other side of the coin, the deceased estate may be considered
to take the stead of a separate property contemplated
in the Property
Act. However, this Court does not decisively conclude that it is
separate property. As indicated above, separate
to what, since the
joint estate ended by reason of death. Nevertheless, on the available
evidence, the L&D account in Estate
late J.W.F Basson was
approved on 30 March 2022. The present application was in 2019
already launched.
[25]
In
opposing the application, the widow unequivocally stated that the
trustees must lodge a claim in terms of section 29 of the Estates
Act. This she did in an affidavit deposed to in December 2019. The
trustees were dismissive of the advice raised as a point
in
limine
.
The deponent to the replying affidavit simply retorted thus: “
For
obvious reasons, the point in limine is not good in law and stands to
be dismissed
.”
This Court is acutely aware that Mr Jacobs, counsel for the widow and
the executrix informed the Court that all points
in
limine
were
not persisted with.
[26]
However,
the advice, although raised as a point
in
limine
,
is strictly not a point
in
limine
but a
full defence to this entire application in my view. The fact that the
advice was limited to the invocation of the procedure
as opposed to
an institution of an action is of no moment. The fact remains, the
advice is to proceed against the estate of the
deceased, which is the
legally correct approach in whatever form it takes. The legal
position is such that a court is entitled
to deal with a point of law
even if raised and abandoned by a party.
[27]
I now
turn to the issue of costs. In her supplementary opposing papers, the
widow prayed for punitive costs, particularly because
the present
application amounts to an abuse of the Court processes. In
particular, she alleged that the route elected by the trustees
is
misinformed, amounts to negligence and is manifestly bad in law. I
fully agree with the contention that this is misguided litigation.
The trustees were under legal advice from the inception of this
application. On face value, it could be argued that the trustees
had
hoped that their interpretation of section 19 of the Property Act
would find favour from this Court. That said, it was also
palpably
perspicuous that “the horse had bolted”, there was no
longer a joint estate in law. Prudence dictates that
unless guided by
sheer recklessness, proceeding with the present application needed to
depart from a carefully guided premise.
Perusal of the heads prepared
on behalf of the trustees reveals that the trustees were alive to the
factual reality that a deceased
estate was involved. It is accepted
in the heads that a claim lies against the deceased estate within the
purview of the Estates
Act, however, on reliance of
Nedbank
Limited v Steyn and others,
[8]
the
trustees believed they have a choice to proceed against the
executrix. The choice they have, which they never lost, is to proceed
against the deceased estate, either through the procedure
contemplated in the Estates Act or by way of action in the High
Court.
They chose neither. Instead, they are barking up the wrong
tree.
[28]
A
proper reading of
Steyn
reveals
that the facts are highly distinguishable. In
casu
,
the trustees unlike Nedbank in
Steyn
have
no contractual claim nor delictual claim against the widow nor the
joint estate. The solitary claim they have lies against
the deceased
estate and before me, they are not proceeding against the deceased
estate, as they should, if they wished to emulate
Steyn
.
Reliance was also placed on
LAWSA,
[9]
which,
if correctly cited in the heads, wrongly concluded, in my considered
view, that a shortfall may be claimed from the joint
estate in the
event of death. Simply put, this litigation forayed by the trustees
fall squarely within the realm of “taking
chances”.
Accordingly, this Court takes a view that the trustees proceeded
frivolously and vexatiously. The widow should
not be left impecunious
because of such unguided litigation. Thus, a punitive costs order is
warranted.
[29]
For
all the above reasons, I make the following order:
Order
1.
The
application is dismissed
2.
The
applicants are to jointly and severally pay the costs of this
application on a scale of attorney and own client, the one paying
absolving the other
.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Mr. F.J. Labuschagne
Instructed
by:
JVK Attorneys,
Houghton
Counsel for the
Respondent: Mr. A. Jacobs
Instructed by:
Jonk Attorneys, Johannesburg
Date
of Hearing:
20 May 2024
Date
of Judgment:
11 June 2024
[1]
88 of 1984 (“
Property
Act
”).
[2]
See
EB
(born S) v ER (born B and others; KG v Minister of Home Affairs and
Others
[2023] ZACC 32; 2024 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2024 (1) BCLR 16 (CC).
[3]
2022 (6) SA 408
(GJ) (“
Maqubela
”).
[4]
[2014] ZAGPPHC 521 (25 July 2014) (“
Pelser
”).
[5]
See
National
Coalition For Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Justice
[1998] ZACC 15; 1999 (1) SA 6 (CC); 1998 (12) BCLR 1517 (CC).
[6]
70 of 1979.
[7]
66 of 1965 (“
Estates
Act
”).
[8]
[2015] ZASCA 30
;
[2015] 2 All SA 671
(SCA) (“
Steyn
”).
[9]
Clark et al “Marriage” in
LAWSA
3 ed vol 28(2) at para 88. The sub-chapter being referred is:
“Proprietary Consequences of Marriage and Liability
for debts
of joint estate after death”.
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