Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 788South Africa
Sono and Another v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2021/46542) [2023] ZAGPJHC 788 (3 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 July 2023
Headnotes
in December 2016, which consultation the deceased never attended. Nor was any consultation for such purpose arranged thereafter;
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 788
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Sono and Another v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2021/46542) [2023] ZAGPJHC 788 (3 July 2023)
Sono and Another v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (2021/46542) [2023] ZAGPJHC 788 (3 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_788.html
sino date 3 July 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
###
CASE NO:
2021/46542
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
03.07.23
In the matter between:
ELISABETH
BRIDGETTE GEGE SONO
First
Applicant
IRENE
DIKELEDI LOATE
Second
Applicant
and
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
First
Respondent
MARIA
ASINDO
Second
Respondent
MAVIS
HELEN KGADITSOE
Third
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
The applicants and the second and third
respondents are the biological sisters of the deceased, one Tiny
Salome Julia Modisakeng,
who died on 4 April 2021.
2.
The applicants seek an order in the
following terms in these proceedings:
(i)
That
the unsigned document titled ‘Last Will and Testament of Tiny
Salome Julia Modisakeng’
[1]
be declared the valid Last Will and Testament of the deceased in
terms of the Wills Act, 7 of 1953 (the
Wills Act);
(ii
)
That the deceased’s failure to comply
with the formalities set out in section 2(1)(a)(i), (ii), (iii) and
(iv) of the Act
be condoned;
(iii)
Alternatively to prayers (i) and (ii),
should the deceased estate devolve in accordance with the rules of
the
Intestate Succession Act, 81 of 1987
, the third respondent be
excluded as intestate heir;
(iv)
Costs of the application on the attorney
and client scale against those respondents who oppose the
application.
3.
The alternative relief in (iii) above was
expressly abandoned by the applicants at the hearing of the
application and need not therefore
be considered.
4.
Only the third respondent, a pensioner,
acting in person, opposed the application. The second respondent
filed a notice to abide
the court’s ruling.
5.
The applicants
seek
an order in terms of
section 2(3)
of the
Wills Act that
a document
drafted by an attorney appointed by the deceased for such purpose, be
recognized by the Master of the High Court, Johannesburg,
as one
intended to be the deceased’s will. (I shall refer to the
document as ‘the contested will’).
6.
It
is common cause that the formalities prescribed by
section 2(1)(a)
of
the
Wills Act were
not complied with in that the deceased did not
sign the document, whether in the presence of two competent witnesses
or at all,
nor was the will signed by two attesting witnesses,
whether in the presence of the testator or at all.
[2]
7.
In
terms of
s 2(3)
of the
Wills Act, the
Master of the High Court must
be ordered to accept the document as a will if certain requirements
are met. The section provides:
‘
If
a court is satisfied that
a
document
or the amendment of a document
drafted
or executed by a person who has died
since the drafting or execution thereof,
was
intended to be his will
or an amendment of his will, the court shall order the Master to
accept that document, or that document as amended, for the purposes
of the Administration of Estates Act, 1965 (66 of 1965), as a will,
although it does not comply with all the formalities for the
execution or amendment of wills referred to in subsection (1).’
(emphasis
added)
8.
Section
2(3)
of
the
Wills
Act is
clear:
the court must direct the Master to accept the document in issue as a
will once certain requirements are satisfied. First,
the document
must have been drafted or executed by a person who has subsequently
died. Second, the document must have been intended
by the deceased to
have been his or her will.
[3]
9.
That the applicant was aware of these
requirements is apparent from what is stated in par 35 of the
founding affidavit. There, the
following was said:
‘
35.
... in order for the court to declare the unsigned “
will
”
valid, the following factors ought to be proven:
35.1. [that] The document
in question reflects the wishes
as drafted and ought to have been
executed by the deceased;
35.2. [that]
The
deceased's relations with all siblings not being a surprise that she
would have intended the document to be her Will and testament
or
final instruction with regards to the disposal of the deceased's
estate.’ (own emphasis)
10.
As the applicants’ heads of argument
addressed only the subsection’s
intention
requirement
, leave was sought by the
applicants’ counsel to file supplementary heads in order to
address the
drafting or execution
requirement,
which I granted. Although
both parties were afforded an opportunity to file supplementary
heads, only the applicants elected to
do so.
11.
The
facts peculiar to this case are these:
(i)
The
contested will is an unexecuted document that the deceased did not
draft personally;
(ii)
The
contested will had not been forwarded by the attorney who drafted
same to the deceased, who had thus not had sight thereof prior
to her
death;
(iii)
On
the evidence of the attorney, Ms Phaleng-Podile, the contested will
was yet to be discussed with the deceased and finalised at
a future
consultation to be held in December 2016, which consultation the
deceased never attended. Nor was any consultation for
such purpose
arranged thereafter;
(iv)
The
written document was never approved by the deceased prior to her
death, despite the lapse of a period of 5 years from the drafting
of
the will in October 2021 to the deceased’ s death in April
2021;
(v)
Whether
the writing indeed accorded with the deceased’s final
instructions and indeed represented an accurate expression of
her
intent was never confirmed by the deceased during the period of 5
years that elapsed until her death.
12.
Section
2(3)
of the
Wills Act is
cast in peremptory terms and does not permit
the exercise of judicial discretion - if the requirements in the
subsection have been
met, a court must issue the condonation order to
the Master and cannot in its discretion decide not to rescue the
document at hand,
Conversely, if such requirements have not been met,
a court cannot issue a condonation order.
[4]
13.
In
Bekker
v Naude en Andere
2003 (5) SA 173
(SCA), condonation was sought in respect of an
unexecuted document that the deceased had not drafted personally.
Bekker
concerned a joint will drafted by a bank official for the deceased
and his wife (appellant). The deceased and the appellant consulted
with an official of Absa Bank and requested that a joint will be
drawn up for them. They explained what they required, the bank
official took notes, whereafter a draft will was drawn up. The will
was posted to the deceased and appellant with the request that
they
sign it in the presence of witnesses. The will had not been signed,
despite the fact that it had been in the deceased’s
possession
for some 5 years. The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the qualifier
‘
drafted...by
a person who has died since the drafting...thereof
’
to the word ‘
document
’
must be interpreted literally to require personal drafting of the
document by the person who subsequently died.
[5]
As it was not, the appellant’s application was dismissed in the
court
a
quo,
whose
decision was upheld on appeal.
14.
The
aforesaid
ratio
in
Bekker
has
since been endorsed in subsequent Supreme Court of Appeal cases
.
[6]
15.
The
upshot of
Bekker
is that it will not be possible for an unexecuted document, drafted
by an attorney or other advisor to be rescue from invalidity
using
s
2(3)
of the
Wills Act. Where
the document is indeed executed (by the
act of signing it), then it will be irrelevant who drafted it.
[7]
16.
The contested will in
casu
was not personally drafted by the
deceased, nor was it executed by the deceased. In order to overcome
this difficulty, counsel for
the applicants submitted in
supplementary written heads filed on their behalf that
Bekker’s
case is distinguishable on its facts
and therefore need not be followed. I disagree. On the contrary, the
facts in
Bekker
are portentously similar to the facts in
casu,
the only slight difference being that
in
Bekker,
the
impugned document was in fact sent by the bank to the deceased for
approval and signature, whereas in
casu,
not even that was done
.
17.
The
applicants argue that ‘
It
is the uniqueness of the facts of the present application that
justifies a departure from the approach adopted by the Supreme
Court
of Appeal in Bekker v Naude. That uniqueness justifies an adoption of
a wider interpretation of the word “drafted”
as opposed
to a narrow interpretation thereof
.’
The ‘uniqueness’ of the facts included certain
circumstances that evidenced the disharmonious relationship
between
the deceased and the third respondent at the time of the drafting of
the contested will, such that the contents of the
contested will were
said to be consistent with the deceased’s wish and desire to
disinherit the third respondent.
[8]
18.
The
facts on which the argument aforesaid is premised do not, however,
assist the applicants apropos the failure of the applicants
to meet
the drafting requirement. If anything, they relate to the intention
requirement, which I refer to below. The argument also
loses sight of
the doctrine of
stare
or
doctrine of precedent. The essence of the doctrine, for present
purposes, is that a High court is bound by previous decisions
of a
higher court, save that it is only the
ratio
decidendi
or
reason for the decision that is binding.
[9]
Thus, decisions on questions of fact are not binding,
[10]
but when a decision is such that legal consequences follow from
certain facts, the decision will be binding when similar facts
are
raised.
[11]
The Constitutional
Court has on several occasions professed its commitment to the
doctrine, emphasising the merit of legal certainty
and the like
treatment of similarly situated litigants.
[12]
I am accordingly bound by
Bekker
and
cannot find that it is distinguishable on its facts. Nor can I find
that a wider interpretation of the word ‘drafted’
is
permissible either in law or in
casu.
19.
As
regards the intention requirement, it is trite that the question is
not
what
the document means, but whether the deceased intended it to be
his/her will at all.
[13]
Evidence as to subsequent conduct is relevant only in so far as it
throws light on what was on the mind of the deceased at the
time of
making the contested will.
[14]
20.
The facts point to
the conclusion that the relationship between the deceased and third
respondent was tumultuous, unfriendly and
frosty at the time of the
drafting of the will. This conclusion was supported by the third
respondent’s own evidence at the
hearing of the matter and in
her papers. When regard is had to the contents of the contested will,
the deceased ostensibly did
not want the third respondent to benefit
from her estate upon her death. Heirs and beneficiaries in terms of
the document included
only the applicants, second respondent, the
first applicant’s sons (deceased’s nephews) and possibly
the deceased’s
cousins.
21.
The
difficulty in this case, however, on the facts peculiar to this case,
is whether the contested will was intended to function
as the final
expression of the deceased’s wishes, given that same had never
even been forwarded to the deceased for her approval
during the 5
year period preceding her death. The evidence of the attorney was
that a consultation was yet to be held with the
deceased discuss and
finalise the
draft
will she had prepared. As pointed out by Navsa JA in the
Van
der Merwe
case,
‘the greater the non-compliance with the prescribed
formalities, the more it would take to satisfy a court that the
document in question was intended to the deceased’s will.’
[15]
The fact that the contested will was never finalised and hence never
executed by the deceased for a period spanning 5 years prior
to her
death, may point to the fact that the deceased did not want it to
serve as her last will. However, it is not necessary for
me to make a
definitive finding in this regard, given the non-compliance with the
drafting requirement as outlined above.
22.
In the result,
the application falls to be dismissed. I am not persuaded that a
costs order against the applicants is warranted
in this case. The
applicants took various steps in the course of these proceedings to
procure compliance by the third respondent
with the rules of court,
however, to no avail. The third respondent seemingly refused to
comply with the directives of this court
which require the filing of
written heads of argument by each party, notwithstanding the case
management of this matter by the
Deputy Judge President of this
court. Moreover, she pursued an argument in open court on irrelevant
issues, which argument, however,
unequivocally exposed her
unjustifiable disdain, disrespect, jealously and bitterness not only
towards the first applicant but
also the deceased.
23.
Accordingly the following order is granted:
ORDER
:
26.1 The
application is dismissed.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 12
June 2023
Applicants’
supplementary heads received: 20 June 2023
Supplementary heads due
by 2rd Respondent: 23 June 2023, but none filed.
Judgment delivered 3 July
2023
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be have been at
10h00 on 3 July 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Applicants:
Adv
CM Shongwe
Instructed
by:
Phaleng
Podile Attorneys
For
Third Respondent:
Ms
M H. Kgaditso (in person)
[1]
A
copy of this document is attached to the founding affidavit as
annexure ‘EBGS5’.
[2]
The
relevant parts of s 2(1)(a) of the Wills Act provides:
‘
(a)
no will executed on or after the first day of January, 1954, shall
be valid unless ─
(i)
the will is signed at the end thereof by the testator or by some
other person in his presence and by his direction; and
(ii)
such signature is made by the testator or by such other person or is
acknowledged by the testator and, if made by such other
person, also
by such other person, in the presence of two or more competent
witnesses present at the same time; and
(iii)
such witnesses attest and sign the will in the presence of the
testator and of each other and, if the will is signed by
such other
person, in the presence also of such other person; and
(
iv)
if the will consists of more than one page, each page other than the
page on which it ends, is also so signed by the testator
or by such
other person anywhere on the page; and...’
[3]
Van
Wetten v Bosch
2004
(1) SA 348
(SCA) at par 14.
[4]
See:
Van
der Merwe v The Master and Another
2010 (6) SA 544
(SCA), par 14.
[5]
Bekker,
par
20. The personal drafting of a document by the deceased is not
restricted to the production of a personally handwritten document
but also incorporates other acts of personal creation such as typing
or dictation by the deceased -
Bekker,
par
8.
[6]
See,
for example,
Van
Wetten v Bosch
,
cited in fn 2 above, at par 14, where the following was said: “…
The
meaning attributable to the phrase ‘drafted or executed’
has recently been clarified in Bekker v Naude en andere:-
the
document must have been created by the deceased personally.”
(footnote
excluded); and
Van
der Merwe v The Master and Another
(cited
in fn 3 above) at par 15; and
Crossman
v The Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others
(2020/7625)
[2021] ZAGPJHC 443 (26 August 2021) at par 61
.
[7]
See
too:
Mdlulu
v Delaray and Others
1998 1 ALL SA 434
(W) at 442f-h.
[8]
These
included that (i) the deceased had a year earlier sought the
eviction of the third respondent from her residence and had
deposed
to an affidavit in those proceedings in which she outlined the
disintegration of her relationship with the deceased,
pursuant to
which an order was granted evicting the deceased from her property;
and (ii) certain domestic violence proceedings
instituted by the
deceased against the third respondent, which proceedings, however,
did not culminate in an order against the
third respondent.
[9]
R
v Nxumalo
1039
AD 580
at 586;
Fellner
v Minister of the Interior
1954(4)
SA 523 (A) at 537.
[10]
R
v Wells
1949
(3) SA 83
(A) at 87-88;
Khupa
v SA Transport Services
1990
(2) SA 627
(W) at 636.
[11]
Harris
v Mnister of the Interior
1952
(2) SA 428
(A) at 452.
[12]
)
Ex
parte Chairperson of the Constitutional Assembly: In re
Certification of the Amended Text of the Constitution of the
Republic
of South Africa,
1996
1997
(2) SA 97 (CC);
Van
der Walt v Metcash Trading limited
[2002] ZACC 4
;
2002
(4) SA 317
(CC);
Daniels
v Campbell NO & Others
2004(5)
SA 311 (CC).
[13]
Van
Wetten v Bosch supra,
at
par 16.
[14]
Id,
par 21.
[15]
Van
der Merwe,
above
fn 3,at par 16.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S and Another v T (20/33629) [2023] ZAGPJHC 696 (13 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 696High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
S obo N v The Road Accident Fund (2016/33228) [2022] ZAGPJHC 746 (5 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 746High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
S and Another v M (26805/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 794 (11 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 794High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Local Authorities Pension Fund v SOS Media Productions (Pty) Ltd t/a Black Door (10870/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1285 (9 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1285High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Petroleum Industry Association v Fuel Retailers' Association (28818/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1301 (13 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1301High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar