Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 862South Africa
Gumbi and Others v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (21700/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 862 (4 August 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Opposed application – interpretation of Last Will and Testament – the nudum praeceptum principle discussed – if no ‘gift over’, then such condition to be disregarded – if ‘gift over’ provided for, then bequest stands unless condition fulfilled – bequest can never be regarded as pro non scripto, only condition – property to be transferred to heiress – the applicants’ application dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gumbi and Others v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (21700/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 862 (4 August 2023)
Gumbi and Others v Master of the High Court, Johannesburg and Others (21700/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 862 (4 August 2023)
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sino date 4 August 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
21700/2021
DATE
:
4
th
August 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
GUMBI
,
ZAMANI PETRUS
First
Applicant
GUMBI
,
BHEKI HUMPHREY
Second
Applicant
GUMBI
,
THABO CHARLES
Third
Applicant
and
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
First
Respondent
FNB
FIDUCIARY (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
GUMBI
,
NOMVULA ESTHER
Third
Respondent
GUMBI
,
NSIZWA GODFREY
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Gumbi and Others v The Master of the High Court and Others
(21700/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ---
(04 August 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
01 August 2023
Delivered:
04
August 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 04 August 2023.
Summary:
Opposed
application – interpretation of Last Will and Testament –
the
nudum praeceptum
principle
discussed – if no ‘gift over’, then such condition
to be disregarded – if ‘gift over’
provided for,
then bequest stands unless condition fulfilled – bequest can
never be regarded as
pro non scripto
,
only condition – property to be transferred to heiress
–
the
applicants’
application dismissed.
ORDER
(1)
The first, second and third applicants’
application is dismissed with costs.
(2)
It is hereby ordered and directed that any and all
immovable properties registered in the name of Sipho Collen Gumbi
(‘the
deceased’), who died on 27 February 2020, shall be
transferred to and registered in the name of the third respondent.
(3)
The first, second and third applicants, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
third respondent’s
costs of the application.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The first, second and
third applicants are the biological sons of one Sipho Collen Gumbi
(‘the deceased’), who passed
away on 27 February 2020,
and the third respondent is the surviving wife. The fourth respondent
is the brother of the deceased
and all of the aforegoing persons are
the heirs and legatees in the Last Will and Testament of the
deceased. This opposed application
concerns a dispute in relation to
a clause in the Last Will and Testament of the deceased.
[2].
The applicants apply for an order declaring
a clause 3 of the Last Will and Testament of the deceased as
pro
non scripto
. Additionally, they seek an
order that the fixed and immovable properties of the deceased be
dealt with and distributed amongst
his heirs as if he had died
intestate. The applicants seek the aforesaid relief on the basis that
the aforesaid clause 3 incorporates
a so-called
nudum
praeceptum
, which, so the applicants
contend, should be completed disregarded. The third respondent, who
is the only one opposing the applicants’
application, contends
that, in terms of the applicable legal principles, the applicants are
not entitled to the relief claimed.
[3].
The issue to be considered in this
application is simply whether, all things considered, the applicants
make out a case and a valid
cause of action which translate into the
relief claimed by them. That issue is to be decided against the
factual backdrop and the
facts in the matter as set out in the
paragraphs which follow.
[4].
The deceased, who at the time of his
death on 27 February 2020 was married to the third respondent in
community of property, executed
his Last Will and Testament on 25
February 2011. In the relevant parts, clauses 3 and 4 of the Will
reads as follows;
‘
3.
I bequeath the residue of my estate to my wife, Nomvula Esther Gumbi
(ID[…]), with the proviso that she survives
me by a period of
7 (seven) days.
It
is my wish that my fixed property shall not be sold but retained as a
family home for my children
.
4
Failing my wife to the residue, I bequeath the residue of my estate
in equal shares to my children Petrus Zamani
Gumbi (born[…]),
Bheki Humphrey Gumbi (ID[…]) and Thabo Charles Gumbi (ID[…])
or the survivors of them, provided
however, that should any of them
predecease me leaving issue, alive at the date of my death, such
issue shall receive
per stirpes
that share which their
deceased parent would have received if living.
It is my wish that my
fixed property shall not be sold but retained as a family home for my
children.’ (My emphasis).
[5].
The dispute between the parties revolves
around the interpretation of clause 3, quoted above. It is the case
of the applicants that
the said clause incorporates a
nudum
praeceptum
and, as such, should be
disregarded and declared
pro non
scripto.
This would then mean, so the
submissions on behalf of the applicants go, that the immovable
property in the deceased estate should
be dealt with on the basis
that the deceased died intestate.
[6].
The third respondent disagrees. Her
evidence was that the fixed property, that they owned when the will
was executed in 2011, was
disposed of during 2015, whereafter she and
the deceased acquired a second property during 2016 and the intention
was that she
would become the owner of that property on the death of
the deceased to the exclusion of the applicants. All the same, the
issue
in dispute between the parties can and should be decided on the
basis that clause 3 is indeed a
nudum
praeceptum
and the question to be asked
is simply what legal consequences flow from such a provision. The
point is simply that the said clause,
properly interpreted, provides
that the residue of the estate of the deceased, which clearly
includes immovable property registered
in the name of the deceased,
was bequeathed to the third respondent. There is, however, a proviso
to the effect that the third
respondent should not sell the fixed
property in the estate, but same should be retained ‘as a
family home’ for the
children of the deceased. The difficulty
is that the will does not make provision for the eventuality of the
third respondent selling
or attempting to sell the fixed property.
This is the very definition of a
nudum
praeceptum
.
[7].
Therefore, the question to be considered is
what are the consequences of that particular clause in this matter.
[8].
The legal principles
relating to a
nudum praeceptum
are, in my view, as
follows. If a testator bequeaths property to a beneficiary, but
prohibits him or her from dealing with the property
in a certain way,
for example, alienating the property, such a prohibition will only be
valid if someone else has been nominated
by the testator to take the
property should the beneficiary contravene the prohibition. If no
provision is made for a substitute
or a so-called ‘gift over’
in the event of contravention of the prohibition, the prohibition is
called a
nudum
praeceptum
or
nude prohibition and is not legally binding. It bears emphasising
that it is the condition which is the
nudum
praeceptum
,
which is unenforceable and is to be regarded as
pro
non scripto
,
and not the clause in terms of which the bequest is made.
[9].
An example of a
nudum
praeceptum
is
a provision to the following effect: ‘I bequeath my farm to my
son on condition that he will never be allowed to sell or
encumber
the farm’. Such a provision in a Will is unenforceable and the
bequest should be made to the son without any conditions
attached to
same. On the other hand, the condition would be enforceable if the
bequest was formulated thus: ‘I bequeath my
house to my son on
condition that he will never be allowed to sell or encumber it.
Should he endeavour to sell or encumber
the house, it will devolve
upon my daughter’.
[10].
A
nudum
praeceptum
burdens
a bequeathed property with a condition that the heir can never sell
the property, and such a condition cannot be registered
against the
property. In that regard, the learned Authors of
Wills
and Trusts: A Practical Commentary on Wills and Trusts
by R P Pace and W Van
Der Westhuizen, (Lexis Nexus SA), opines as follows: -
‘
Should
the testator fail to appoint a further beneficiary on the condition
being fulfilled, the resolutive condition is considered
to be a
nudum
praeceptum
and
will be disregarded.’
[11].
This, in my judgment,
is an accurate summation of the law in relation to the doctrine of
nudum
praeceptum
–
no
‘gift over, no condition’. The rule of nude prohibition
is not itself a rule of construction, but rather a rule imposed
in
the interests of the freedom of owners to deal with their property as
they choose. I reiterate that this does not mean that
the bequest
must be considered invalid, but that the heir receives the
inheritance free of the condition.
[12].
The
learned Authors, Olivier, Strydom and van den Berg, of
Trust
Law and Practice
[1]
,
explains the
nudum
praeceptum
principle
as follows: -
‘
A
testator who attempts to deprive his fully contractually competent
legatee or heir of the right to control, or to dispose of the
property bequeathed to him, by placing the property in the hands of
an administrator, or by imposing a restriction on alienation,
will
not normally bind the beneficiary. Such restrictions are regarded as
nude and not enforceable.
Such
restrictions can be binding if provision is made for a successive
beneficiary if the first taker should fail to abide by the
imposed
restrictions.’
[13].
I respectfully adopt
this view and the authors’ elucidation of the legal principles
relating to
nudum
praeceptum
.
[14].
Applying these
principles
in
casu
, I
conclude that clause 3 and the bequest in terms thereof should stand
on the basis that the condition imposed by the testator
amounts to an
unenforceable
nudum
praeceptum
.
Even if the condition that the fixed property be retained as a family
home of the children is to be interpreted as a ‘gift
over’,
the applicants’ application should still fail. The simple point
is that, in terms of the applicable legal principles,
the conditional
bequest can never be treated and regarded as
pro
non scripto
.
It is only the condition which can be treated as such in the event
that no ‘gift over’ is provided for. The applicants’
case and their cause of action is therefore ill-advised and
misconceived – it is not sustainable. And for that reason alone
the application should fail.
[15].
Moreover, the proviso
and its effect would only kick in in the event of the condition being
fulfilled, which is not the case pleaded
in
casu
. The
applicants cannot possibly claim that the bequest should be
redirected when the condition is not met.
[16].
For all of these
reasons, I am of the view that the first, second and third applicants
are not entitled to the relief claimed in
this opposed application,
which falls to be dismissed.
Costs
[17].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[2]
.
[18].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule. The first, second and third
applicants should therefore pay
the third respondent’s costs of
this application.
[19].
I therefore intend awarding costs in favour of the
third respondent against the first, second and the third applicants,
jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
Order
[20].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first, second and third applicants’
application is dismissed with costs.
(2)
It is hereby ordered and directed that any and all
immovable properties registered in the name of Sipho Collen Gumbi
(‘the
deceased’), who died on 27 February 2020, shall be
transferred to and registered in the name of the third respondent.
(3)
The first, second and third applicants, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
third respondent’s
costs of the application.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
1
st
August
2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
4
th
August
2023 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE FIRST, THE
SECOND AND THE THIRD APPLICANTS:
Advocate J Chabangu
INSTRUCTED BY:
Makudubela Attorneys,
Lakefield, Benoni
FOR THE THIRD
RESPONDENT:
Advocate M J Ranala
INSTRUCTED BY:
M L Mateme
Incorporated, Mondeor, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND
AND FOURTH RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED BY:
No appearance
[1]
Olivier,
Strydom and van den Berg:
Trust
law and Practice,
at
pg 2-11;
[2]
Myers
v Abramson
,1951(3)
SA 438 (C) at 455
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