Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1058South Africa
Rataemane NO v SANTU Mofokeng Foundation N.P.C and Others (30124/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1058 (21 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rataemane NO v SANTU Mofokeng Foundation N.P.C and Others (30124/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1058 (21 September 2023)
Rataemane NO v SANTU Mofokeng Foundation N.P.C and Others (30124/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1058 (21 September 2023)
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sino date 21 September 2023
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Donation –
Mental
capacity
–
Photographer
concluding donation agreement for all his artworks – Health
was deteriorating and he later passed away
– Executor
seeking to have agreement declared invalid and return of artworks
– Contending that deceased was mentally
incapacitated –
Medical evidence showing that deceased was suffering from physical
conditions that were debilitating
– No evidence of mental
incapacity – Applicant failing to establish that deceased
lacked mental capacity when
he entered into donation agreement.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 30124/2019
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
21.09.23
In the matter between:
RATAEMANE,
SOLOMON
N.O
Applicant
and
SANTU
MOFOKENG FOUNDATION N.P.C
First Respondent
BARTZ
LUNETTA
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected 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 21 September 2023.
JUDGMENT
MALINDI J
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant seeks orders in terms of the
notice of motion as follows:
[1.1]
Declaring the Donation Agreement entered
into by the deceased Mr Santu Mofokeng (“Mr Mofokeng”)
and the First Respondent,
Santu Mofokeng Foundation NPC (“the
Foundation”) dated 16 November 2015 invalid
ab
initio
and unenforceable;
[1.2]
The First and Second Respondents
(“the Respondents”) return the artworks of Mr Mofokeng to
the Applicant within seven
days of the court order;
[1.3]
The Respondents render a complete and full
account to the Applicant of any and all transactions concluded by the
Respondents with
any and all third parties in respect of or in any
respect pertaining to the works of Mofokeng;
[1.4]
The Respondents pay to the Applicant all
the monies in their possession derived from the artworks of Mr
Mofokeng within seven days;
[1.5]
The Respondents handover to the Applicant
all the communication records, including attachments, in respect of
the artworks of Mr
Mofokeng;
[1.6]
The Respondents be interdicted and
restrained from dealing in any way with the artworks of Mr Mofokeng
or holding themselves out
as authorised to deal with or to represent
or to act as agents with regards to the artworks of Mr Mofokeng; and
[1.7]
The Respondents to pay the costs of suit on
the attorney and client scale.
[2]
At the commencement of proceedings counsel
for the Applicant, Mr Harms, indicated that although the Applicant
stands by the submissions
made in the Applicant’s heads of
argument the only prayer that he would address the court on is the
first prayer since a
finding in favour of the Applicant in respect
thereof would result in the rest of the prayers being upheld.
Conversely, that the
dismissal of the first prayer would result in
the rest of the prayers not successful.
The Parties
[3]
The Applicant herein is Mr Solomon
Rataemane, in his official position as the executor of Mr Mofokeng’s
deceased estate. He
was appointed executor on 1 February 2021. The
application was initially brought by Ms Boitumelo Johanna Mofokeng
(“Ms Mofokeng”)
who had remarried Mr Mofokeng on 15 March
2016. She was appointed administrator of the property of Mr Mofokeng
after his death
on 26 January 2020.
[4]
The First Respondent is the Foundation, a
non-profit company which has the stated objective of protecting the
legacy off Mr Mofokeng
in terms of the memorandum of incorporation
signed by Mr Mofokeng on 10 December 2015.
[5]
The Second Respondent is Ms Lunetta Bartz
(“Ms Bartz”), a consultant in the art world. She is cited
in these proceedings
because since 2008, she had worked closely with
Mr Mofokeng and he had asked Ms Bartz in 2009 to manage his life’s
work.
Ms Bartz did so until 2016.
[6]
The Third Respondent is the Master of the
High Court, against whom no relief is sought and has not participated
in these proceedings.
[7]
For convenience, the First and Second
Respondents shall be referred to collectively as the Respondents.
Background
[8]
Mr Mofokeng was a world-renowned African
photographer and author of several books on photography. He
passed away in January
2020.
[9]
During 2008 Mr Mofokeng approached Mr
Warren Siebrits (“Mr Siebrits”), with a view of housing
his artworks at Mr Siebrits’
gallery. He had arrived with
his large collection of photographs and requested that Mr Siebrits
“
take custody and care of them
”
.
Ms Bartz was Mr Siebrits wife at the time and had therefore met Mr
Mofokeng in this context. Ms Bartz took up the task of being
specifically responsible to curate and commercialise Mr Mofokeng’s
artworks.
[10]
In May 2009, when Mr Siebrits’
gallery closed, Mr Mofokeng requested Ms Bartz to continue offering
him professional assistance
in managing his artworks. His request was
accepted. Their relationship continued for six years. This included
arranging international
exhibitions of Mr Mofokeng’s work in
London in 2009, Paris in 2011, Norway in 2012 and Berlin in 2014.
This included travelling
together to international and local
exhibitions.
[11]
In August 2015, Mr Mofokeng and Ms Bartz
concluded the “Exclusive Agency Agreement”, the purpose
of which was to entrust
Ms Bartz with the exclusive management of his
photographic collection and commercial prints. The Exclusive
Agency Agreement
terminated on or about 16 November 2015 when the
Donation Agreement was entered into on the same date, the result of
which was
to donate all Mr Mofokeng’s artworks to the
Foundation. The Foundation was further granted exclusive copyright
over those
artworks.
[12]
In 2013, Mr Mofokeng was involved in a
motor vehicle accident and began to suffer from slurred speech.
[13]
Mr Mofokeng suffered a deterioration in his
health and consulted numerous doctors in 2014 and 2015.
[14]
In October 2015, Dr Anderson disclosed to
Ms Bartz that Mr Mofokeng was afflicted with a terminal disease and
that his life expectancy
was about three years.
[15]
During this time Ms Mofokeng came back into
Mr Mofokeng’s life and excluded Ms Bartz from attending to Mr
Mofokeng either
professionally or as a guardian and confident.
[16]
As stated above, Ms Mofokeng
remarried Mr Mofokeng on 15 March 2016, four months after the signing
of the Donation Agreement.
Submissions
[17]
The Applicant’s primary submission is
that Mr Mofokeng was mentally incapacitated and did not have the
requisite mental capacity
to conclude the Donation Agreement at the
time that it was concluded. In support of this assertion, the
Applicant relies on the
appointment of Ms Mofokeng as the
administrator of Mr Mofokeng’s property in terms of
section 62
of the
Mental Health Care Act 17 of 2002
and submits that an
administrator in terms of the Act only gets appointed over persons
who are mentally ill or persons with severe
or profound intellectual
disability. This submission was not pressed on during argument.
Instead, the alternative was argued vigorously.
That is, that in the
event that it is found that Mr Mofokeng had the requisite mental
capacity to conclude the purported donation
agreement, the Applicant
submits that the conclusion and enforcement of the Donation Agreement
is contrary to public policy.
[18]
Reliance
was placed on the case of
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
[1]
,
which reads as follows:
“
These
provisions do not, in my view, necessarily exclude the existence of a
nil indebtedness, and do not provide a cogent answer
to the
arguments supporting the contrary view.
The
effect of what I conceive to be the proper interpretation of clause
3.4 and 3.14 was to put Sasfin, from the time the deed of
cession was
executed, and at all times thereafter, in immediate and effective
control of all Beukes' earnings as a specialist anaesthetist.
On
notice of cession to Beukes' debtors Sasfin would have been entitled
to recover all Beukes' book debts. In addition, Sasfin
would have
been entitled to retain all amounts so recovered, irrespective of
whether Beukes was indebted to it in a lesser amount,
or at all. This
follows from the provisions in clause 3.4 that Sasfin would be
'entitled but not obliged' to refund any amount
to Beukes in excess
of Beukes' actual indebtedness to Sasfin. As a result, Beukes
could effectively be deprived of his income
and means of support for
himself and his family. He would, to that extent, virtually be
relegated to the position of a slave, working
for the benefit of
Sasfin (or, for that matter, any of the other creditors). What is
more, this situation could, in terms of clause
3.14, have continued
indefinitely at the pleasure of Sasfin (or the
other
creditors). Beukes was powerless to bring it to an end, as clause
3.14 specifically provides that 'this cession shall be and
continue
to be of full force and effect until terminated by all the
creditors'. Neither an absence of indebtedness, nor reasonable
notice
to terminate by Beukes in those circumstances would, according to the
wording of clause 3.14, have sufficed to bring the
deed of cession to
an end. An agreement having this effect is clearly unconscionable and
incompatible with the public interest,
and therefore contrary to
public policy
.”
[19]
It is submitted on behalf of the
applicant that the conclusion of the Donation Agreement effectively
placed all of Mr Mofokeng’s
artworks under the control of the
Respondents, and reduced Mr Mofokeng to a beggar with no stable
income and no means to support
himself and his family. For this
reason, it is submitted that the agreement is contrary to public
policy.
[20]
The
First Respondent’s submission is that the Applicant has failed
to elaborate upon the assertions that the Donations Agreement
is
lacking fairness, justice and reasonableness as required in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
.
[2]
[21]
In
AB
v Pridwin Preparatory School
[3]
it
was held that abstract values of fairness and reasonableness are not
basis to escape the consequences of a contract because they
are not
substantive rules. The Constitutional Court has confirmed
Pridwin
by holding that courts must employ the constitution and its values
“
to
achieve a balance that strikes down the unacceptable excesses of
freedom of contract, while seeking to permit individuals the
dignity
and autonomy of regulating their lives.
”
This
means that the principle that contracts freely and voluntarily
entered into, should be honoured unless the party claiming that
a
contract is contrary to public policy can show that the contract
suffers excesses that the constitutional values, and demand
that the
contract or parts thereof are so oppressive that public policy
demands that a party should be freed therefrom.
[4]
[22]
The two submissions made on behalf of the
Applicant that the Donation Agreement placed Mr Mofokeng “
virtually
in the position of a slave, working for the benefit of the First
Respondent
”
and that what
exacerbates the situation is that “
at
the time of signing the purported donation agreement, Mofokeng was
battling with a terminal disease and therefore needed all
the
resources he could get at his disposal in order to, firstly, take
care of himself in his last days on earth, and, secondly,
secure a
good future for his family after his death.”
There
is no substantiation in respect of both submissions.
[23]
On the other hand, the First Respondent
made a submission that distinguishes the
Sasfin
case from the case of
Beadica
,
in that in
Sasfin
a doctor signed a deed of cession in favour of a finance company,
which had the effect of placing the company in control of the
doctor’s earnings and book debts irrespective of the amount to
which the doctor was indebted. This effectively deprived the
doctor
of his income and means of supporting his family. The court held that
an agreement having such an effect was clearly incompatible
with the
public interest and was, therefore, contrary to public policy. The
Second Respondent associate’s herself with these
submissions.
[24]
The Respondents, together,
demonstrated that Mr Mofokeng continued to receive earnings from the
sale of his artworks and was looked
after by Ms Bartz even though
there was no such obligation under both the Donations Agreement and
the Exclusive Agency Agreement.
As stated above, the common
background facts indicate the income made by Mr Mofokeng and how the
Second Respondent took care of
him both in regard to his
deteriorating health and for his general upkeep. In addition, Mr
Mofokeng kept his independent banking
accounts in which significant
amounts of money resided.
[25]
Mr Mofokeng’s position is summarised
in the First Respondent’s submissions as follows:
“
Accordingly,
in the period after the donation agreement had allegedly left Mr
Mofokeng with no source of income, he was paid directly
the sum total
of R217 500 over an 8-month period. … this was in
addition to any other sources of income that he might
have had. For
example, in early 2016, after the Donation Agreement was concluded,
Mr Mofokeng was awarded a prize for his photography
in the amount of
70 100 Euros. Nor does this sum total include the amounts paid
on his behalf to third parties.
”
[26]
When Mr Mofokeng was diagnosed with a
debilitating disease in 2015, he formed the view that he should
preserve his legacy hence
he agitated for the establishment of a
foundation. This evidence indicates that it was not mental incapacity
that had afflicted
him. The medical evidence before court
excludes mental incapacity. His wish to preserve his legacy was
expressed as far back
as 2009. At this time, he had also indicated to
the Second Respondent that none of his family members were capable of
assisting
him in that regard. He had already in 2010 executed his
last will and testament in which he sought to bequeath his artworks
to
the Smithsonian institute for that purpose.
[27]
At the time of the establishment of the
Foundation and the entering into of the Exclusive Agency agreement,
four people were involved
including Mr Mofokeng. That is, the Second
Respondent, Ms Lucia van Zyl and Ame Bell (nee Snyman). On the other
hand, the evidence
in support of Ms Mofokeng is as stated above. Ms
Mofokeng had been divorced from Mr Mofokeng at the relevant time, and
only remarried
him on 15 March 2015. She can therefore not testify as
to Mr Mofokeng’s mental capacity at the relevant time except in
speculative
terms.
[28]
The
test whether a person was, at the relevant time, capable of managing
the particular affair in question or that they could understand
and
appreciate the transaction that they entered into was set out in
Pheasant
v Warne
[5]
and
Theron
v AA LIFE Assurance Association Ltd
.
[6]
The
enquiry into mental capacity is an objective assessment of a person’s
mental capacity at the time of contracting or executing
a particular
affair. Admissible evidence has to be tendered.
[29]
Ms Mofokeng has sought to rely on medical
evidence. By this time, the following medical reports had been made:
Mr Mofokeng suffered
from slurred speech after a motor vehicle
accident in 2013; On 7 May 2015 Dr Anderson diagnosed Mr Mofokeng
with progressive supranuclear
palsy; On 27 October 2015 Dr Anderson
referred Mr Mofokeng to physical therapy, speech therapy and
occupational therapy. Doctor
Anderson described Mr Mofokeng ‘s
condition as a Parkinson’s Plus Syndrome where the patient has
the inability to look
up or down, has multiple falls with serious
injuries, has dysphagia with the inability to speak and communicate.
[30]
It is clear from this medical evidence that
at that time of the conclusion of the Foundation Agreement Mr
Mofokeng was suffering
from physical conditions that were
debilitating. There is no evidence of mental incapacity in the
circumstances. The only evidence
available is that of the Second
Respondent to the effect that Mr Mofokeng was in sound mind several
years before and at the time
of the signing of the Donation Agreement
dated 16 November 2015. Ms Mofokeng re-entered Mr Mofokeng’s
life only on 15 March
2016 and cannot testify as to his mental
capacity before then. She has not provided admissible evidence
required to assess a person’s
medical condition or capacity at
the time of entering into an affair or transaction.
[31]
I therefore come to the conclusion that the
Applicant has not made out a case on the papers that Mr Mofokeng
suffered mental incapacity
at that time of the establishment and
signing of the Foundation Agreement, and the memorandum of
understanding on 10 December 2014
and resolutions
preceding the signing of the Donation Agreement.
[32]
As Mr Harms properly submitted, a finding
that the Donation Agreement was properly entered into would dispose
of the remaining prayers.
The Respondents have made the same
submission but proceeded to address various preliminary points.
The Applicant would not
be entitled to the relief of the return of Mr
Mofokeng’s artworks and the money derived from them; a full
account by the
Second Respondent for all matters concerning Mr
Mofokeng’s artworks; an interdict preventing the Second
Respondent and the
Foundation from dealing with and presenting
themselves as agents or representatives of Mr Mofokeng’s
artworks.
[33]
The balance of the prayers flow from
the agreements entered into as a result of the Donation Agreement.
Their validity has not been
impugned. It is not necessary to go into
the defences in respect of these further prayers as the defences were
proferred in the
event that the Donation Agreement was found to be
invalid.
Conclusion
[34]
The Applicant has failed to establish that
Mr Mofokeng lacked mental capacity when he entered into the Donation
Agreement and resulted
in the donation of his artworks to the
Foundation. The evidence of the Second Respondent establishes that he
in fact had mental
capacity to enter into the Donation Agreement, the
Exclusive Agency Agreement and
[35]
In the circumstances the following order is
made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The Applicant is to pay the costs of the First and Second
Respondents, including costs of counsel.
G MALINDI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL FOR APPLICANT:
Adv
NS Nxumalo
INSTRUCTED BY:
Mthembu Inc
Attorneys
COUNSEL FOR 1
ST
RESPONDENT: Adv
JJ Meiring
INSTRUCTED BY:
Webber Wentzel
COUNSEL FOR THE 2
ND
RESPONDENT: Adv P Wainwright
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Von Lieres, Cooper & Barlow Attorneys
DATE OF THE HEARING: 14
November 2022
DATE OF
ORDER: 17
August 2023
DATE OF
REASONS: 21
September 2023
[1]
1989
(1) (A) at paragraph 13f-14a.
[2]
2020
(5) SA 247 (CC).
[3]
2019
(1) SA 327 (SCA).
[4]
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC) at paragraph 71.
[5]
1922
AD 481 at 488.
[6]
[1995] ZASCA 61
;
1995
(4) SA 361
(A).
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