Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1005South Africa
Lekota v Sentinel Retirement Fund [2023] ZAGPJHC 1005 (7 September 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lekota v Sentinel Retirement Fund [2023] ZAGPJHC 1005 (7 September 2023)
Lekota v Sentinel Retirement Fund [2023] ZAGPJHC 1005 (7 September 2023)
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sino date 7 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No:
043822/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
DAVID
KESELWE LEKOTA
Applicant
And
SENTINEL
RETIREMENT FUND
Respondent
Delivere
d:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name
is reflected in it and is handed down electronically
by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by email
and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter
on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 7
September 2023.
JUDGEMENT
DUNN AJ:
Introduction and
background
1.
The applicant, Mr David Keselwe Lekota (
Mr
Lekota
), was a contributory member of
the respondent, i.e., the Sentinel Retirement Fund (
SRF
).
2.
On 30 September 2018, Mr Lekota, who had
been employed by Far West Gold Recoveries Pty Ltd, took his early
retirement and completed
the requisite documentation in respect of
his retirement benefits.
3.
It
is common cause between the parties that Mr Lekota exercised an
irrevocable option to receive a maximum lump sum payment equivalent
to one-third (
1
/
3
)
of his pension benefit and for the remainder to be paid on a monthly
basis as a lifelong annuity. The relevant application
form
called ‘
Application
for Retirement Benefit
’
comprises
some six pages and was signed by Mr Lekota on, it would appear, 5
October 2018.
[1]
4.
The
option admittedly exercised by Mr Lekota is reflected on the second
page of this form
[2]
under a section captioned ‘
Section
1: Lumpsum Option
’
where
the maximum one-third lump sum is appropriately selected and marked,
as well as a section captioned ‘
Section
2: Pension Options for Members with No Spouse
’
where
a five (5) years ‘
Terms
Certain Guarantee
’
is
also appropriately selected marked.
[3]
In making this selection, Mr Lekota self-evidently decided not to
select a full (i.e., 100%) withdraw of his retirement benefit/s.
5.
The fourth page of the abovementioned
application form is captioned: ‘
Acknowledgement:
Option to Elect Retirement Benefit
’
and
the portion of it that is currently germane to the issues in this
matter provides as follows:
‘
2.
I understand that:
a.
…
;
b.
…
;
c.
In terms of the Fund’s rules read
with the current legislation and income tax practice, a maximum of
one-third of the capital
value of my benefit may be commuted for a
lump sum.
The balance is payable
as a monthly pension
. This is
subject to certain exceptions which may or may not apply to me;
d.
…
;
e.
The Fund’s rules also provide
other
options relating to my benefit which have been explained to me
;
f.
The available options are subject to the
Rules;
g.
…
;
h.
It is incumbent on me
:
i.
To ensure that I understand the options
available to me and their consequences
;
ii.
To elect options best suited to my needs
and if necessary, to obtain advice from a financial advisor or
intermediary
;
iii.
To ensure that in completing the form,
i.e. elect the option that I intend to elect
;
i.
The fund is entitled to assume that I
understand my options and to give effect thereto
;
j.
Once the Fund gives effect to my options,
I
cannot revoke or change them
.
This includes:
i.
My choice to take a retirement benefit (if
I am eligible for another benefit);
ii.
An election to commute less than one-third
of my benefit for a lump sum, or to not commute at all (i.e. to take
the entire benefit
as a monthly pension);
iii.
Any other options elected, subject to
eligibility (including terms certain guarantee, spouse’s
pension, second and third tier
options, etc.);
3.
I also acknowledge that by signing this
document
:
a.
I waive any right to claim that I was
not informed of the consequences of my elections
;
b.
I will have no basis to dispute the
validity of any elections through the courts, the Pension Fund
Adjudicator or any other forum,
or to
seek an order that the Fund must change any option/s that I elected
;
c.
I understand that my reasons for
electing these options or any subsequent change in my financial or
personal circumstances do not
affect what is stated here
.
4.
I understand this declaration and sign
it voluntarily and without duress
.’
(Own underlining).
6.
During or about September 2022 Mr Lekota
instituted motion proceedings (
the
application
) against the SRF for an
order that the latter is to make payment to him of all the retirement
benefits the SRF holds under industry
number A 3672281 within
thirty (30) days from the date of this court’s envisaged order
together with costs of the application.
7.
The
basis upon which Mr Lekota avers that he entitled to all such
retirement benefits is essentially that he selected the maximum
one-third (
1
/
3
)
lump sum on the abovementioned application form for retirement
benefits:
[4]
‘…
with
the view that my retirement benefits will be paid in full and
the
Respondent’s office bearers never explained this to me when I
handed in the application
. Have
[
sic
] I
know that my retirement benefits were not to be paid in full then I
would never [
sic
]
chosen such option for a Maximum 1/3 lump sum
.’
(Own underlining).
8.
In
the remainder of Mr Lekota’s founding affidavit he explains how
drastically his circumstances have changed since his retirement
and
after the initial receipt of his selected retirement benefits.
It is quite evident that Mr Lekota is in dire financial
straits and
that he is quite unable to pay many of his crippling debts, including
the tuition fees owed for the tertiary education
of his children.
[5]
It is unnecessary to repeat the detail of these debts as they are
fully set out in the founding affidavit.
[6]
9.
Mr
Lekota approached the SRF on various occasions
[7]
and requested it to pay him the whole of his retirement benefit/s in
a lump sum. The SRF refused to do and explained to Mr
Lekota
that he could not revoke the option he had elected and which already
had been put into effect.
Mr Lekota’s
various attempts to commute his retirement benefit/s and the Pension
Fund Adjudicator’s determination
10.
As
a result of the SRF’s refusal to accede to Mr Lekota’s
request for the whole of his retirement benefit/s to be paid
to him,
Mr Lekota initially approached the Financial Sector Conduct Authority
(
FSCA
)
and lodged an enquiry with it
[8]
against the SRF in which he, after setting out his financial dilemma
in some detail (including the threatened repossession of his
motor
vehicle by Nedbank), proceeded to request that the SRF must:
[9]
‘…
change
my retirement to withdrawal to be able to settle my car and be able
to pay my sons school fee
[
sic
]
as
well as leading a better life compared to now please. The life
I am leading is suicidal is like I never worked before
[
sic
].’
11.
After
considering the enquiry lodged by Mr Lekota, the FSCA notified him
that it was not in a position to instruct the SRF to reverse
any
decision as it (i.e., the SRF) was acting legally in terms of its
rules that were binding on it.
[10]
12.
Aggrieved by the FSCA’s decision, Mr
Lekota next lodged a complaint with the Pension Fund Adjudicator (
the
Adjudicator
) on or about 20 August
2019.
13.
Almost
eight months later, on 29 April 2020, the Adjudicator published a
nine page written determination (
the
PFA’s determination
)
in terms of section 30 M of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956
(
the
Act
).
[11]
14.
An analysis of the PFA’s
determination shows that the adjudicator:
14.1.
was
fully cognisant of the nature of Mr Lekota’s complaint;
[12]
14.2.
correctly
identified the issue to be determined, i.e., whether or not Mr Lekota
is entitled to commute his retirement benefit to
a cash lump sum;
[13]
14.3.
considered
the SRF’s comprehensive response to the complaint;
[14]
14.4.
comprehensively and rationally reasoned why
the complaint ought to be dismissed on, among others, the following
grounds, namely:
14.4.1.
that
the rules of SRF are supreme and binding on it, on its officials,
members, shareholders, beneficiaries and anyone claiming
from the
fund;
[15]
14.4.2.
that
Rule 3.5
[16]
of
SRF’s Rules in essence provides that when a member leaves his
employer’ service he becomes an interim member with
the option
to make an election within twenty-four (24) months to become a
non-contributory member or claim a benefit;
[17]
14.4.3.
that
Mr Lekota provided the SRF with his retirement benefit application on
5 October 2018 in which he elected to commute a one-third
cash lump
sum benefit coupled with a five year guarantee period, and in which
application he also did not name or identify a spouse;
[18]
14.4.4.
that,
in view of the provisions of Rule 5
[19]
of SRF’s Rules, Mr Lekota, who was over the age of 50 years,
was indeed entitled to an early retirement benefit;
[20]
14.4.5.
that,
having regard to the provisions of Rule 5.2.1
[21]
of the SRF’s Rules and the requirement in the definition of
‘
pension
fund
’
in
section 1 of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 (
the
ITA
)
and specifically paragraph (ii) (dd) of the proviso thereto,
[22]
a member of the SRF is only permitted to take the entire retirement
interest as a cash lump sum if it does not exceed the amount
of
R247 500.00;
[23]
14.4.6.
that,
in the present instance, since Mr Lekota was paid a one-third cash
lump sum benefit in the amount of R285 724.79 (before
tax) he
was clearly not entitled to receive his entire retirement benefit in
a lump sum as it exceeded the prescribed amount of
R247 500.00.
Mr Lekota also receives a monthly pension in the amount of
R3 948.55;
[24]
14.4.7.
that,
by virtue of the provisions of Rule 3.5.5
[25]
of the SRF’s Rules, Mr Lekota, who elected to receive an early
retirement benefit in the form of a maximum one-third lump
sum
payment, is not entitled to revoke his election of this option;
[26]
14.4.8.
that
the maxim
caveat
subscriptor
was
applicable, based on the
locus
classicus
on
this topic, i.e.,
George
v Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
1958
(2) SA 465
(A) at 470B – E, and that Mr Lekota was bound by his
signature to the application form for his retirement benefit/s;
[27]
14.4.9.
that
Mr Lekota is bound by the SRF’s Rules by virtue of the
provisions of section 13 of the Act, that his election is
irrevocable,
and that he cannot commute his monthly pension, which he
is already receiving, to a cash lump sum;
[28]
and
14.4.10.
that
Mr Lekota’s complaint should be dismissed and, accordingly, was
also dismissed.
[29]
The effect of the
PFA’s determination
15.
Section 30 O of the Act, which is
captioned ‘
Enforceability of
determination
’
, provides as
follows:
‘
(1)
Any determination of the
Adjudicator shall be deemed to be a civil judgment of any court of
law
had the matter in question been
heard by such court, and shall be so noted by the clerk or the
registrar of the court, as the case
may be.
(2) A
writ or warrant of execution may be issued by the clerk or the
registrar of the court in question and executed by the sheriff
of
such court after expiration of a period of six weeks after the date
of the determination,
on condition that
no application contemplated in section 30P has been lodged
.
’
(Own underlining).
16.
Section 30 P of the Act, which is
captioned ‘
Access to court
’
,
provides as follows:
‘
(1)
Any party who feels
aggrieved by a determination of the Adjudicator may, within six weeks
after the date of the determination, apply
to the division of the
High Court which has jurisdiction, for relief, and shall at the same
time give written notice of his or
her intention so to apply to the
other parties to the complaint
.
(2) The division of the
High Court contemplated in subsection (1) may consider the merits of
the complaint made to the Adjudicator
under section 30A (3) and on
which the Adjudicator’s determination was based, and may make
any order it deems fit.
(3)
Subsection (2) shall not affect the court’s power to decide
that sufficient evidence has been adduced on which a decision
can be
arrived at, and to order that no further evidence shall be adduced.
’
17.
The PFA’s determination was published
on 29 April 2020. The application in these proceedings was
instituted on or about
14 September 2022. The application was
not instituted, and also does not purport to have been instituted, in
terms of section
30 P of the Act. In any event, Mr Lekota
has also not endeavoured to explain why the application, if it was
intended
to have been brought in terms of the latter section, was not
instituted timeously.
18.
I
must agree with the submission made by the SRF’s counsel that
there is simply no conceivable cause of action to be found
anywhere
in Mr Lekota’s application (inclusive of his replying
affidavit). Mr Lekota is not only bound by the election
he made
at the time he applied for his retirement benefit/s (i.e., an
irrevocable option to receive a maximum lump sum payment
equivalent
to one-third (
1
/
3
)
of his pension benefit and for the remainder to be paid on a monthly
basis as a lifelong annuity), but that he is also bound by
the PFA’s
determination, which determination – in the light of the
provisions of section 30 O (read with section
30 P, i.e.,
where the determination has not subsequently been changed by a court
with the requisite jurisdiction pursuant
to an application seeking
such change) of the Act affords the SRF the defence of
res
iudicata
in
these circumstances.
[30]
19.
Mr Lekota’s ongoing complaint, right
from the outset through all its different phases referred to above,
is exactly the same
complaint and for that reason too it falls to be
dismissed on the basis of the
res
iudicata plea
invoked by the SFR.
Conclusion
20.
In the result the application is
dismissed. Ordinarily, the SRF would be entitled to a costs
order in its favour given the
justifiable success it has achieved in
this application. However, the SRF in a spirit of generosity
agreed to waive any costs
order that it would have become entitled
to. I must commend it for this fine gesture
vis-à-vis
a person in dire financial distress.
EW DUNN
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Counsel for the
Applicant:
In person (assisted by a
court translator, Mr Ngxito.
Counsel for the
Respondent:
Adv H Drake.
Instructed by:
Shepstone & Wylie
Attorneys, Sandton.
Date of hearing: Tuesday,
5 September 2023
Date of Judgment:
Thursday, 7 September 2023.
Judgment handed down
electronically
[1]
Annexure
DL 1
– CaseLines 01-13 to 01-18.
[2]
Ibid
- CaseLines 01-14.
[3]
Id.
[4]
Founding
affidavit (
FA
):
para 4.4, CaseLines, p. 01-8.
[5]
Ibid
,
para 4.6, CaseLines, p. 01-8.
[6]
Ibid
.,
paras 4.7 to 4.10, CaseLines, pp. 01-8 to 01-10.
[7]
At
least on 2 July 2019 and 10 July 2019. See, in this regard,
Answering affidavit (
AA
):
paras 30 to 32, CaseLines, pp. 01-52 and 01-53. See too: FA:
para 4.3, CaseLines, pp. 01-7 to 01-8
[8]
AA:
para 33, CaseLines, p. 01-53, read with annexure
AA 7
(Retirement Fund Enquiry Form) – CaseLines 01-159 to 01-165.
[9]
Ibid
.,
CaseLines 01-161.
[10]
AA:
para 33, CaseLines, p. 01-53, read with annexure
AA 8
– CaseLines 01-166.
[11]
Annexure
DL 2
– CaseLines 01-19 to 01-18.
[12]
Ibid
.,
paras 3.1 and 3.2, CaseLines 01-20.
[13]
Ibid
.,
para 5.1, CaseLines 01-24.
[14]
Ibid
.,
paras 4.1 to 4.5, CaseLines 01-21 to 01-23.
[15]
Ibid
.,
para 5.2, CaseLines 01-24. In this regard, the Adjudicator
also referred to:
·
section 13 of the Act, which
provides as follows: '
13.Binding
force of rules.
—
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the rules of a registered fund shall
be binding on the fund and the members, shareholders
and officers
thereof, and on any person who claims under the rules or whose claim
is derived from a person so claiming
.’;
and
·
the
case of
Tek
Corporation Provident Fund & Others v Lorentz
[2000] 3 BPLR 227 (SCA) where the court (
per
Marais, JA), at 239 D – E, held as follows:
‘…
What
the trustees may do with the fund’s assets is set forth in the
rules. If what they propose to do (or have been ordered
to do) is
not within the powers conferred upon them by the rules, they may not
do it
. They have no inherent
and unlimited power as trustees to deal with a surplus as they see
fit, notwithstanding their fiduciary
duty to act in the best
interests of the members and beneficiaries of the fund. It may seem
odd to speak of powers being beyond
the reach of the trustees and
the employer when the rules empower them to amend the rules but the
contradiction is more apparent
than real. First, their substantive
powers at any given moment are circumscribed by the rules as they
are at that moment. The
fact that power to change the rules exists
is irrelevant when assessing whether or not the particular exercise
of power in question
was intra or ultra vires. Secondly, there are a
number of qualifications in both the rules and the
Pension Funds Act
to
the exercise of the rule amending power conferred by
rule 21.
It
is unnecessary to spell them out; it is sufficient to say that the
trustees and the employer do not enjoy absolute autonomy
in that
regard
.’ (Own underlining).
[16]
Rule
3.5
provides as follows:
‘
The
following provisions will apply to a CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER who ceases
to be a CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER for reasons other than retirement
or
death:
3.5.1 Such person
will become an INTERIM MEMBER with the option to make an election as
envisaged in
Rule 3.5.2.
0cm; line-height: 100%">
3.5.2 Such person
must notify the FUND in writing within twenty-four months (24) of
ceasing to be a CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER of his/her
election to either
become a NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER or to claim a benefit for which
he/she is eligible in terms of the GENERAL
RULES. A person,
who was an interim member in terms of the rules of the TRANSFERRED
FUND on 30 June 2013, must make an
election within twenty-four (24)
of ceasing to be a CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER.
3.5.3 Should an
INTERIM MEMBER fail to notify the FUND of his/her election as
envisaged in Rule 3.5.2 within twenty-four (24)
months of leaving
the SERVICE of his/her last EMPLOYER such benefit shall be credited
to the UNCLAIMED BENEFITS ACCOUNT.
3.5.4 An INTERIM
MEMBER will become a NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER with effect from the
date on which the FUND receives his/her election
to become a
NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER provided his/her election is received by the
Fund before the expiry of the period referred
to in Rule 3.5.2.
3.5.5 The INTERIM
MEMBER'S election to become a NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER is
irrevocable.
3.5.6 A
NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER will only be entitled to a benefit in terms
of Rules 5 and 6. This shall not apply to a
person described
in paragraph (a) and (b) of the definition of NON-CONTRIBUTORY
MEMBERS.
3.5.7
A NON-CONTRIBUTORY MEMBER and an INTERIM MEMBER shall not be
eligible for DEATH COVER or DISABILITY COVER.
’
[17]
Ibid
.,
para 5.2, CaseLines, pp. 01-24 and 01-25.
[18]
Id
.
[19]
Rule
5.1.1 provides as follows:
‘
A
member may retire early if he/she is within 10 years of his/her
Normal Retirement Date and has reached the age of 50 years,
in which
event he/she shall receive the benefits referred to in Rule 5.2 read
with Rule 5.3.
’
[20]
Ibid
.,
para 5.3, CaseLines, p. 01-25.
[21]
Rule
5.2.1, which is captioned '
Lump
sum benefits
'
provides as follows:
'
Prior to the
commencement date of his/her Pension and his/her Flexible Annuity
(if applicable), a Member may elect to commute
a lump sum as allowed
by the Revenue Authorities from time to time.
If
the total Fund Credit does not exceed the limits set by the Revenue
Authorities from time to time, the whole of the Fund Credit
may be
taken as a lump sum
.'
[22]
Paragraph
(ii) (dd) of the proviso to the definition of ‘
pension
fund
’
in section 1 of the ITA provides that:
‘…
the
Commissioner … shall not approve a fund in respect of any
year of assessment unless the Commissioner is in respect
of that
year of assessment satisfied —
(i)
…
;
(ii)
that the rules of the fund provide—
(aa) …;
(bb) …;
(cc) …;
(dd)
that not more than one-third of
the total value of the retirement interest may be commuted for a
single payment, and that the
remainder must be paid in the form of
an annuity (including a living annuity), a combination of annuities
(including a combination
of methods of paying the annuity) or a
combination of types of annuities except where two-thirds of the
total value does not
exceed R165 000
,
where the employee is deceased or where the employee elects to
transfer the retirement interest to a pension preservation fund
or a
retirement annuity fund: Provided that in determining the value of
the retirement interest …
’
(Own
underlining).
[23]
Ibid
.,
para 5.4, CaseLines, p. 01-26.
[24]
Id
.
[25]
This
Rule is quoted in footnote 16 above.
[26]
Id
.
[27]
Ibid
.,
para 5.5, CaseLines, pp. 01-26 to 01-27. See too:
Brink
v Humphries & Jewell (Pty) Ltd
2005
(2) SA 419
(SCA).
[28]
Ibid
.,
para 5.6, CaseLines, p. 01-27.
[29]
Ibid
.,
para 5.7, CaseLines, p. 01-27.
[30]
See,
in the regards, SRF’s heads of argument (drawn by Adv (Ms) H
Drake): paragraphs 31 to 33, CaseLines, p. 04-119, as
well as para
46, p. 04-122.
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