Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 556South Africa
S.C and Another v L.M (A2023/053792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 556 (12 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 June 2024
Headnotes
at First National Bank (“FNB”), as well as a credit card account held at Standard Bank. During September 2004, the insolvent procured life and disability cover for himself (as principal/first life assured) and the respondent (as second life assured) from Liberty Life (“Liberty Life” or “the insurer”). In terms of that policy the insolvent was listed as both the policy holder, owner and a beneficiary of the policy benefits pertaining to the respondent. [4] On 25 January 2019, Liberty Life paid an amount of R2,160 000.00 into the insolvent's bank account. This happened some eight months prior to the sequestration of the insolvent's estate. This was in respect of a disability claim
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.C and Another v L.M (A2023/053792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 556 (12 June 2024)
S.C and Another v L.M (A2023/053792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 556 (12 June 2024)
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sino date 12 June 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
INSOLVENCY – Solvent spouse –
Property
acquired during marriage
–
Appellants
contend respondent failed to put up sufficient evidence to prove
ownership – Respondent put up deed of transfer
which
reflects that she purchased property – Explanation for lack
of proof of payment by respondent reasonable –
Conclusions
sought to be drawn by appellants are largely speculative –
Property had been acquired by respondent by
means of her own money
– Appeal dismissed – Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, s
21(2)(c).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: A2023/053792
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES
12
June 2024
In the matter of:
S[…]
C[…] N.O.
First Appellant
JABULANI
KHUMALO N.O.
Second Appellant
And
L[…]
D[…] M[…]
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down is deemed to be
10h00 on 12 June 2024
JUDGMENT
MUDAU
J, (MALINDI AND WILSON JJ CONCURRING):
[1]
This
an appeal by the trustees of an insolvent estate against a successful
application in this division (per Maier-Frawley J) by
the wife of an
insolvent in terms of section 21(2) of the Insolvency Act
[1]
(“the Act”) with leave of the court below.
The
respondent is the wife of Mr AMF D[…] M[…] ('the
insolvent') whose estate was placed under final sequestration
by
order of court on 15 August 2019.
The
crisp issue to be determined in this appeal is whether the respondent
demonstrated that she acquired the proceeds from the sale
of the
immovable property registered in her names by a valid title against
the creditors of the insolvent as required by section
21(2)(c) of the
Act
.
Differently put, if the property has been acquired by the respondent
by means of her own money or from any other source other
than her
husband, then she holds it by a title valid as against the creditors
of her insolvent husband.
[2]
The respondent and
the insolvent were married to one another out of community of
property on 11 January 1992. The marriage at the
time the application
in the court below was launched still subsisted. All indications were
that the couple have continued to live
together as husband and wife.
[3]
The respondent was
during the relevant period the holder of three bank accounts: a
cheque account and a maximiser account held at
First National Bank
(“FNB”), as well as a credit card account held at
Standard Bank.
During
September 2004, the insolvent procured life and disability cover for
himself (as principal/first life assured) and the respondent
(as
second life assured) from Liberty Life (“Liberty Life” or
“the insurer”). In terms of that policy the
insolvent was
listed as both the policy holder, owner and a beneficiary of the
policy benefits pertaining to the respondent.
[4]
On 25 January 2019,
Liberty Life paid an amount of R2,160 000.00 into the insolvent's
bank account.
This
happened some eight months prior to the sequestration of the
insolvent's estate. This was in respect of a disability claim
submitted to the insurer under the disability portion of the policy
pertaining to the respondent. It is common cause that the claim
was
submitted on account of the respondent having been diagnosed with
cancer and so having suffered a disability as defined in
the policy.
[5]
Subsequently, and on
28 January 2019, the insolvent paid an amount of R2,135 000.00 into
the respondent's FNB maximiser account,
which had a zero balance
before this payment was received. In this regard the court
a
quo
concluded,
correctly, that since the insolvent was the policy holder, owner and
beneficiary of the disability portion of the respondent
under the
policy and in terms of the express wording of the contract, it is the
insolvent who, in the absence of any cession, rightfully
obtains
payment of benefit proceeds on the happening of the applicant's death
or in the event of the respondent suffering a disability.
This was despite the respondent’s contention
the payment was in effect hers or intended to be made to her and thus
properly
belonged to her, because it was a policy benefit to which
she was entitled following her disability claim.
[6]
The
court below also concluded, correctly, that by virtue of section 63
(1)(a) of the Long-Term Insurance Act
[2]
(“the LTI Act”) the benefit was protected from attachment
and thus did not ever form part of the property of the sequestrated
estate in the hands of the insolvent.
[7]
On 17 May 2019, an
amount of R2,740,000.00 was transferred from the respondent's FNB
cheque account into her FNB maximiser account.
This amount comprised
a portion of the proceeds obtained by the respondent from the sale of
an immovable property situate in Simons
Town, which she allegedly
owned.
On 3
July 2019, the insolvent's estate was placed under provisional
sequestration by order of court, which order was made final
on 15
August 2019. Subsequently, and on 2 August 2019, the appellants were
appointed as the provisional trustees of the sequestrated
estate.
[8]
Pursuant to
their appointment, on or
about 19 August 2019, the appellants attached the respondent's FNB
maximiser account under the provisions
of section 21(1) of the Act,
after an appropriate written notice addressed to the respondent was
issued, in which they informed
her of their intention to realise the
funds in the FNB maximiser account for the benefit of the creditors
of the sequestrated estate,
as envisaged in section 21(3) of the Act.
It is common cause that at the time of the attachment, the FNB
maximiser account reflected
a credit balance of R1,830 901.52,
whereas the balance in the FNB cheque account was R3176.79. The
Standard Bank credit card account
reflected a zero balance.
The value
of
R1,830 901.52
was however less than
the proceeds from the sale of the respondent’s Simons Town
immovable property being R2.7 million.
[9]
It is trite that upon
sequestration of an insolvent's estate, which brings about a
concursus
creditorum
,
all the insolvent's property vests in the Master of the High Court
until a trustee is appointed, and upon appointment, in the
trustee.
Section 21 of the Act
creates an additional consequence of such sequestration upon the
estate of the solvent spouse who is not living
apart from the
insolvent, by providing that all the property (or proceeds thereof)
belonging to the solvent spouse will vest in
the Master or trustee in
the same way as the estate of the insolvent spouse.
[10]
Section 21 (1) of the
Act states:
“
The
additional effect of the sequestration of the separate estate of one
of two spouses who are not living apart under a judicial
order of
separation shall be to vest in the Master, until a trustee has been
appointed, and, upon the appointment of a trustee,
to vest in him all
the property (including property or the proceeds thereof which are in
the hands of a sheriff or a messenger
under a writ of attachment) of
the spouse whose estate has not been sequestrated (hereinafter
referred to as the solvent spouse)
as if it were property of the
sequestrated estate, and to empower the Master or trustee to deal
with such property accordingly,
but subject to the following
provisions of this section”.
[11]
The respondent alleged that she purchased
the Simons Town property in approximately 2001 with her own monies.
However, since the
sale took place some 18 years before at that time,
she no longer had proof of the fact that she purchased same by
utilising her
own financial resources. As proof of ownership of the
property, the respondent put up a deed of transfer, dated 15 August
2001
which reflects that she purchased the property on 17 April 2001
from Moneyline 489 (Pty) Ltd for the sum of R179,500.00. She
subsequently,
sold the property for the sum of R4.3 million to Mr and
Mrs Van Rensburg on 27 January 2019. The property was transferred
into
the purchasers’ names during May 2019. It was from this
transaction that an amount of R2.7 million was thereafter transferred
from her FNB cheque account into the FNB maximiser account on 17 May
2019.
[12]
The appellants
contend that the respondent failed to put up sufficient evidence to
prove her ownership of the property that she
sold and, thus, the
proceeds. According to the appellants, it
can
be inferred that the property was not paid for by the respondent and
was not intended to be the property of the respondent.
They
contend that the insolvent is in fact the true or beneficial owner of
this property and that the insolvent estate is therefore
entitled to
the money they attached since the amount standing to the credit of
the FNB maximiser account at the time of attachment
was less than the
proceeds received from the sale of the property.
[13]
The appellants also
averred that since the respondent was a salaried employee for only
two years prior to her acquisition of the
property, it is
inconceivable she could have utilised her own funds to purchase the
property.
The respondent had been
full time employed at PAM since 1992 but conceded that she did not
receive a salary from PAM from 1992.
[14]
The appellants
provided documentary evidence to show that a mortgage bond was
registered over the property in 2004 in the amount
of R1,365 000.00.
However, by September 2014, a balance of R1.287 million was
outstanding on the loan. They further ascertained
that the respondent
had not received a salary in 2014 and had filed zero tax returns in
2017. Moreover, as evidenced by the insolvent's
bank statements, the
insolvent had paid the bond instalments in respect of the Simons Town
property for several months during 2013,
2014 and 2018, amounting to
approximately R360 000 00.
The
appellants relied on various correspondence dating back to March
2009, which shows that the insolvent gave instructions relating
to
construction on the immovable property, and that the property was
referred to as the insolvent’s property. But t
he
respondent explained that during a period of illness that she
suffered, the insolvent contributed towards payment of the monthly
bond instalments, as one would ordinarily expect to occur, given his
common law duty of support towards her.
[15]
In written
submissions and in argument before us, t
he
appellants contended that the respondent’s version falls
materially short from what is required to discharge the onus resting
upon her in terms of section 21 of the Act. They submitted that,
based on their factual allegations, it can be inferred that the
property was not paid for by the respondent and was not intended to
be the property of the respondent.
[16]
In
addition, they contended that the deed of transfer is not conclusive
proof of the fact that the respondent, and not the insolvent,
was the
owner of the property. This is because the trite legal position,
being that even though our system of land registration
generally
proves ownership, it is not necessarily conclusive. In
Gugu
and Another v Zongwana and Others
[3]
citing
Cape
Explosive Works Ltd v Denel Pty Ltd
[4]
where the SCA stated the following: ‘We have a negative system
of registration where the deeds registry does not necessarily
reflect
the true state of affairs.’
[17]
The
appellants relied in the court below and before this court on
Kilburn
v Estate Kilburn
[5]
.There, a husband had before his marriage passed and registered a
notarial bond for £500 as a second charge upon all hire
property in favour of his wife, and the court found as a fact that
although the bond purported to secure a sum of £500, which
the
husband had verbally promised to pay to his wife there was no serious
promise of £500 and no intention to pay the wife
that sum, but
that the whole intention of the spouses was that the wife should
claim the sum if and when the husband became insolvent.
Wessels ACJ
said, if she (the solvent spouse) “buys property with money
provided by the husband ostensibly for herself but
in reality, for
her husband's estate or even for the benefit of both the spouses,
then it is his property and forms part of his
estate; and the
property though registered in her name is not acquired by the
non-insolvent spouse by a title valid as against
the creditors of the
insolvent”.
[18]
Section 21 (2) (c)
states:
“
The
trustee shall release any property of the solvent spouse which is
proved-
(c)
to have been acquired by that spouse during the marriage with
the insolvent by a title valid as against creditors of the
insolvent;
or…”
[19]
The conclusions
sought to be drawn by the appellants are, at best, fundamentally
speculative and bear scrutiny. Unlike in
Kilburn
,
there is no basis in this case that can lead this court to conclude
that there was an agreement between the respondent and the
insolvent
husband that the property was bought by the insolvent with a purpose
to protect his assets in the event of his estate
being sequestrated.
As the court
a
quo
concluded,
firstly, the explanation tendered by the respondent that she no
longer has proof of payment by her of the immovable property
from her
own resources, given that this occurred some 18 years ago prior, is
not unreasonable. Secondly, the sequestration of the
insolvent's
estate eighteen years later could hardly have been in the
contemplation of the respondent and the insolvent. Thirdly,
a bond
was only registered against the property some three years after the
property was purchased for purposes of securing a loan
obtained from
the bank.
It is unlikely that the
respondent would have succeeded in
obtaining
registration of transfer of the property into her name, as the court
a quo
correctly reasoned,
unless the purchase price had been paid or its payment secured.
[20]
Equally, the fact
that the insolvent contributed towards the repayment of the bond
liability did not and could not confer upon him
a real right of
ownership in the immovable property. Importantly, the fact that the
insolvent contributed towards payment of the
monthly bond instalments
sometime after transfer, given the insolvent's common law duty of
support towards the respondent is of
no moment.
[21]
The
mischief that section 21 of the Act seeks to address is to hinder
collusion between spouses to the detriment of the insolvent
spouse's
creditors (
Beddy
No v Van Der Westhuizen
,
[6]
as Van Heerden JA put it in
De
Villiers NO v Delta Cables (Pty) Ltd
.
[7]
Also viewed from another viewpoint, 'to ensure that property which
properly belonged to the insolvent ends up in the estate', as
Goldstone J put it in
Harksen
v Lane NO and Others
).
[8]
[22]
In
Beddy
NO
[9]
relied
upon by the appellants, the immovable property was registered in the
wife’s name, the court on appeal concluded that
there was
enough evidence to justify an inference that the sale of the house to
the wife had been a simulated transaction, which
had amounted to
collusive dealing (donation) in order to prejudice creditors and save
the home for themselves.
[10]
The appellate court confirmed that it is the validity of the true
transaction that must be examined in order to ascertain whether
a
title valid against creditors has been established for the purposes
of section 21(2)(c) as even a donation can now find such
title.
[23]
However,
the merits of the matter in
Beddy
NO
[11]
relied upon by the appellants are markedly different to the facts at
hand. The hurdle for the appellants is, as indicated above,
firstly,
that the sequestration of the insolvent's estate could hardly have
been in the contemplation of the respondent or her
insolvent husband
eighteen years before the application in the court below was
launched. , the sequestration of the insolvent's
estate could hardly
have been in the contemplation of the respondent and her insolvent
husband. Secondly, one cannot conclude that
because the insolvent
contributed during some months over a three-year period to the
repayment of the bond after it was registered,
that the property was
therefore paid for by him or belongs to him as a donation can now
find such title.
[24]
In
addition, the insolvent had, as indicated above, a common law duty of
support. Accordingly, the respondent’s evidence that
she no
longer had proof of payment by her of the purchase price from her own
resources, given that this occurred some 18 years
before, is not
unreasonable. It follows that, the conclusions sought to be drawn are
at best for the appellants, largely speculative.
It accordingly
further follows that the appeal falls to be dismissed.
There
is no reason why the question of costs should not follow the result.
Order
[25]
The appeal is dismissed with
costs.
MUDAU J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
Hearing:
22 May 2024
Date of Judgment:
12 June 2024
APPEARANCES
For the
Appellant:
Adv. A Vorster
Instructed
by:
Cox Yeats Attorneys
For the
Respondents:
Adv. F Slabbert
Instructed
by:
Ewart Attorneys
[1]
Act No.
24
of 1936.
[2]
Act No. 52 of 1998.
[3]
2014 (1) All SA 203
(ECM) par 19.
[4]
[2001] ZASCA 28
,
2001 (3) SA 569
(SCA) at 579F.
[5]
1931 AD 501.
[6]
[1999] ZASCA 32; 1999 (3) SA 913 (SCA).
[7]
[1992] 1 All SA 192
(A);
1992 (1) SA 9
(A) at 13I.
[8]
[1997] ZACC 12
;
1997 (11) BCLR 1489
(CC);
1998 (1) SA 300
(CC) at
318E.
[9]
See footnote 6 above.
[10]
Id at p 917.
[11]
See footnote 6 above.
sino noindex
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