Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 796South Africa
Lourenco and Another v Lourenco and Others (16945/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 796 (17 July 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lourenco and Another v Lourenco and Others (16945/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 796 (17 July 2023)
Lourenco and Another v Lourenco and Others (16945/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 796 (17 July 2023)
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sino date 17 July 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 16945/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In
the matter between:
RUDY
LOURENCO
First
Applicant
TANYA
CHAMMAS
Second
Applicant
and
TRACEY
LOURENCO
First
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
CAPITAL
LEGACY (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
In
re:
TRACEY
LOURENCO
Applicant
And
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Respondent
ORDER
[1]
The order under this case number handed down on 07
December 2020 by this court is rescinded.
[2]
The respondent is to pay the costs of this
rescission application on the scale as between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
Fisher J
Introduction
[1]
The
applicants seek to rescind a declaratory order granted by default
under section 2 of the Wills Act.
[1]
[2]
The order declares a certain document which, on
the face of it, comprises instructions and information provided to a
company, Legacy
Capital (Pty) Ltd (“Legacy”) which
specialises in drafting of wills and the administration of estates,
to be the last
will of Jose Manual Lourenco (“the deceased”).
[3]
The application is brought in terms of rule
42(1)(a) in that it was essentially taken
ex
parte
in that only the Master was
cited.
[4]
The question to be determined is whether the
applicants, on the facts, had an interest in the proceedings such
that they should
have been joined or at least given notice of the
application.
[5]
I turn to the material fact with this
question in mind.
Material facts
[6]
The deceased was the father of the applicants. The
respondent is the widow of the deceased. I will refer to the first
and second
applicants collectively as “the applicants”
and independently as Rudi and Tanya. I will refer to the first
respondent
as “the respondent”.
[7]
Tanya and the respondent have been duly appointed
as co-executors of the deceased estate.
[8]
In terms of the document so declared as will of
the deceased, the applicants would receive no inheritance. Their
contention has
been that the deceased estate should devolve according
to the laws of intestacy which would allow the applicants to share in
the
division of the estate.
[9]
It seems that there were initially discussions
between the parties to the effect that the estate would devolve as if
intestate.
There were also attempts to agree on the distribution of
assets. The first and final liquidation report was initially drawn by
Legacy which was assisting Tanya and the respondent to wind up the
estate.
[10]
During this administration of the estate,
the relationship between the respondent and the applicants broke down
over,
inter alia,
the
distribution of certain assets in Portugal and amounts claimed by
Rudi from the estate.
[11]
This disagreement appears to have been a catalyst
for the bringing by the respondent of the main application which was
launched
on 13 July 2020. The application was heard on 07 December
2020 and the order granted by default.
[12]
The applicants first gained knowledge of the
application on 19 February 2021 by email from a consultant at Legacy,
Mr Spamer Durr
who had been involved for some time in the
administration of the estate.
[13]
The applicants contend that they should have been
given notice of the application. They, thus, seek that the order
declaring the
document to be the will of deceased be set aside in
terms of rule 42(1)(a) on the basis that the order was taken in their
absence
and that they are interested parties.
[14]
It appears that they wish, in due course, to
challenge the proceedings on the basis that the document is not a
will as well as on
the basis that the deceased did not have the
mental capacity to make any will at the time of execution due to
severe ill health.
[15]
It emerged from the founding affidavit in the
rescission application that there is another will in existence. This
is a joint will
which was executed by the deceased and the mother of
the applicants at a time when they were married to each other in
community
of property. This will was allegedly never revoked.
Arguments
[16]
Mr Marumoagae, the respondent’s attorney,
made an able argument based on this joint will. He sought thereby to
challenge the
locus standi
of
the applicants. The argument raised is that, because the joint will
was not revoked within the legally permitted three months
after the
divorce of the deceased and the children’s mother, the joint
will arguably remains valid in the event that the
document was not
declared to be the last will of the deceased. Under such joint will
the children are not heirs. It is thus argued
that the children had
no interest in the declaration of the will and that it was their
mother that had the interest.
[17]
Adv Posthumus raises that the difficulty with this
argument is that it is based on the concession that order was indeed
taken in
the absence of an interested party in the form of the
children’s mother.
[18]
A further difficulty is that the respondent, in
her founding affidavit alleged that there were no other heirs and no
other interested
person in relation to the declaration sought. On the
respondent’s own admission this is false.
[19]
Adv Posthumus notes that Tanya is also joint
executor of the estate. On this basis at, very least, she would have
an interest
nomino officio
in
proceedings relating to the instrument under which the administration
of the estate would take place.
Discussion of
arguments with reference to general principles
[20]
On a plain reading of the rule, an applicant for
rescission need not necessarily be the affected party in whose
absence the order
or judgment was erroneously sought or granted.
[21]
Thus, the fact that it is conceded that the
applicants’ mother has an interest means that, even on the case
of the respondent,
there was an interested party in whose absence the
order was taken.
[22]
In
general terms, a judgment is erroneously granted if there existed, at
the time of its issue, a fact of which the court was unaware,
which
would have precluded the granting of the judgment and which would
have induced the court, if aware of it, not to grant the
judgment.
[2]
[23]
The main application was brought by the respondent
on the express basis that there was no party who would or could
dispute the relief.
This was patently false.
[24]
The respondent was aware also that Tanya as her
co-executor was of the impression that the administration the estate
would take
place in accordance with the laws relating to intestacy.
The respondent must have been aware that, at least in her official
capacity,
Tanya had a direct and legal interest in a change in the
administration of the estate.
[25]
There
is, to my mind, no doubt that the applicants’ or at very least
Tanya qua co executor had the necessary legal interest
in the
subject matter of application, which could be prejudicially affected
by the order of the court.
[3]
Conclusion
[26]
On the facts of this case, there can be no
conclusion other than that the order was taken by stealth in the
midst of a process which
dictated that, at very least, there should
be notice to the applicants.
Costs
[27]
The respondent’s assertion in the main
application that there were no other interested parties was false, to
her knowledge.
[28]
The respondent acted in bad faith in seeking and
taking the order. She also acted in breach of her fiduciary
responsibilities as
executor of the estate.
[29]
The applicants seek costs on a punitive scale. Not
only did the respondent bring the application without notice to the
applicants,
she also persisted in opposing the application for
rescission when there was no sound basis therefor.
Order
[30]
I make the following order:
[1]
The order under this case number handed down on 07
December 2020 by this court is rescinded.
[2]
The respondent is to pay the costs of this
rescission application on the scale as between attorney and client.
D FISHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
2
May 2023
Delivered:
17
July
2023
APPEARANCES:
For
the applicants:
Adv
I L Posthumus
Instructed
by:
Marto
Lafitte & Associates Inc
For
the respondent:
Clement
Marumoagae (with rights of the appearance at the High
Court).
[1]
7 of
1953.
[2]
Naidoo
v Matlala N.O
.
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) 153C-E.
[3]
De
Villiers v Gjn Trust
[2018]
ZASCA 80
;
2019
(1) SA 120
(SCA) 128A-129C.
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