Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1152South Africa
Wade v Master of the High Court of South Africa and Others (2022-060221) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1152 (11 October 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wade v Master of the High Court of South Africa and Others (2022-060221) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1152 (11 October 2023)
Wade v Master of the High Court of South Africa and Others (2022-060221) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1152 (11 October 2023)
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sino date 11 October 2023
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REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2022-060221
In the matter between:
SUMARIE WADE
Applicant
and
THE MASTER OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
First respondent
GRETCHEN
BARKHUIZEN-BARBOSA N.O.
Second respondent
TASMYN LEIGH
FITZGERALD
Third respondent
AMEY CAITLYN
FITZGERALD
Fourth respondent
JUDGEMENT
H A VAN DER MERWE, AJ:
1.
This
is an application in terms of section 2(3) of the Wills Act 7 of 1953
(the
Wills Act). The
applicant seeks an order directing the Master to
accept a document (the disputed document) to be the will of the late
Adrian John
Fitzgerald (the deceased). The applicant was, at a time
at least, a romantic partner of the deceased (more on this topic
follows
below). The first respondent is the Master. The second
respondent is the executor
[1]
appointed by the Master to administer the deceased estate, Ms
Gretchen Barkhuizen-Barbosa N.O. The third and fourth respondents
are
the deceased’s daughters, Ms Tasmyn Leigh Fitzgerald and Ms
Amey Caitlyn Fitzgerald. The application is opposed by the
second,
third and fourth respondents (the respondents).
2.
In the notice of motion, the applicant also
sought orders for the Master to cancel the appointment of the second
respondent and
to direct the Master to issue letters of executorship
to the applicant. These orders were abandoned in argument.
3.
The first page of the disputed document
reads as follows —
“
LAST
WILL AND TESTAMENT
ADRIAN
JOHN FITZGERALD
This is the last will and
testament of ADRIAN JOHN FITZGERALD dealing with the distribution of
my South African based assets.
1.
I hereby revoke, cancel, annul and make
void all previous wills, codicils, and other testamentary
dispositions heretofore made or
executed by me.
2.
I nominate SUMARIE WADE as the executor of
my will and administrator of my estate and effects, giving and
granting to her all such
powers and authorities as are allowed and
required by law especially that of assumption.
3.
All movable assets, including but not
limited to, vehicles and trailers, and all monies in the bank and all
investments are ceded
to SUMARIE WADE (SA ID No.[…]).
4.
My business UHURU INTERNATIONAL CONSULTING
(Uhuru) is to be closed and deregistered. The property owned by Uhuru
situated at 198
Pofadder Street, Kameelfontein Estate, Kameeldrift is
to be either transferred to SUMARIE WADE or sold and the proceeds
transferred
to SUMARIE WADE.
5.
All assets owned by Uhuru are ceded to
SUMARIE WADE.
6.
I direct that the administrator shall be in
respect of the said estate, have full power, in her discretion, to
take over all the
assets of the estate and effects, movable and
immovable, to sell any of the bassets [sic] as she shall deem fit.
7.
I want the cheapest possible cremation and
no funeral service. The cost of the cremation is to be paid for by my
estate.
8.
The beneficiary taking under this
shall take for her own sole and absolute use and benefit and
free from the debts of
and excluded from any community of property
with any spouse she has married or may marry.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have
hereunto set my hand at 18h00 this 2 [sic] day of October 2018 in the
presence of the subscribing witnesses.
All being present at the same
time and signing our names in the presence of one another.
Adrian John Fitzgerald
[signed]
……………
..
Signature
AS WITNESS
1.
Antoinette Leonie Cronje [signed]
……………
..”
4.
The second page of the disputed document
contains only the following at the top of the page —
“
Signature
2. Stephanas
Lourens Jacobs Cronje [signed]
………………
....
Signature”
5.
The signatures of the deceased and the two
witnesses appear on the disputed document where the word “signed”
appears
in square brackets above.
6.
The Master rejected the disputed document
without providing a reason for doing so. The applicant and the
respondents seem to accept
that it was the second witness’s
signature on the second page of the disputed document that led the
Master to reject it.
No other reason was suggested for the Master’s
rejection.
7.
The deceased also appended his signature on
another document that is similar in appearance to the disputed
document, although its
content is different. This document deals with
the deceased’s “
UK based
assets
” according to its terms.
The third and fourth respondents are the beneficiaries under this
document. It contains the exact
same paragraph as the disputed
document that commences with the words “
IN
WITNESS WHEREOF
…”
8.
Mr Thompson who appeared for the applicant
conceded that the disputed document does not comply with
section
2(1)(a)(iv)
of the
Wills Act as
the second witness’s signature
is not on the first page of the disputed document. Hence, the
applicants’ case is based
on
section 2(3)
of the
Wills Act.
Section
2(3) reads as follows in relevant part —
“
If
a court is satisfied that a document …drafted or executed by a
person who has died since the drafting or execution thereof,
was
intended to be his will …, the court shall order the Master to
acce
pt
that document … for the purposes of the Administration of
Estates Act, 1965 (
Act
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).”
9.
I
am required to decide whether on the facts the deceased intended the
disputed document to be his will. If I am so satisfied, I
am required
to order the Master to accept it as the deceased’s will. I have
no discretion in the matter.
[2]
To decide this issue, I am required to have regard to the
circumstances surrounding the purported signatures of the deceased
and
the two witnesses- as they appear on the disputed document- and
the disputed document itself.
[3]
10.
The question that came up during argument
was whether the enquiry into the surrounding circumstances is limited
to the particular
moment that the deceased and the witnesses appended
their signatures on the disputed document, or whether I should take a
wider
view of the circumstances, such as how the disputed document
came to be created in the first place and whether it was drafted by
the deceased or someone else on his instructions and so on. The
reason why this question is pertinent is that while the applicant’s
affidavits cover the moment of the signature of the disputed
document, it deals with little else that bears on the intention of
the deceased in relation to the disputed document at the time of its
signature.
11.
It is clear however that the circumstances
after the signature of the disputed document are irrelevant, save as
far as those circumstances
may reveal a fact relevant to the moment
of the signature of the disputed document. Lewis JA stated the
following in
Van Wetten v Bosch
(
Van Wetten
)
—
“
It
was argued for Bosch, on the other hand, that the deceased had
changed his mind after 5 September 1997…
These
factors are not, in my view, relevant in determining what the
deceased's intention was at the time of writing the contested
will.
Evidence as to subsequent conduct is relevant only insofar as it
throws light on what was on the mind of the deceased at
the time of
making the contested will (as in
Schnetler
NO v Die Meester en Andere
.”
[4]
(footnote
omitted)
12.
In the founding affidavit the applicant
deals with the circumstances in which the deceased and the two
witnesses are alleged to
have appended their signatures as follows —
“
The
Deceased and the two witnesses signed “The will” in the
presence of each other containing the deceased’s wishes.
The
first witness Antoinette Leonie Cronje signed on the first page and
Stepanas Lourens Jacobs Cronje signed on the second page.
…
“
The
Will” was attested and signed by the deceased at our house in
Pretoria in the presence of two witnesses and in the presence
of each
other. The witnesses been [sic] Anoinette Leonie Crionje and
Stephanas Lourens Cronje whose confirmatory affidavits are
attached
hereto and marked
Annexure “EA8”
and “EA9”
.” (Boldface
in the original).
13.
None of the respondents were present at the
time when the disputed document was signed. It is therefore no
surprise that the allegations
quoted above are met with bare denials
in the answering affidavit.
14.
I
am satisfied that on the rules in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
(
Plascon-Evans
)
[5]
,
the respondents’ bare denials do not raise
bona
fide
disputes of fact. I am therefore to take it for granted that the
disputed document was signed as alleged by the applicant and the
two
witnesses.
15.
Mr Thompson argued that the content of the
disputed document indicates that it was intended by the deceased to
be his will. That
submission must be correct. The disputed document
calls itself a will in its opening lines and in its first paragraph.
The rest
of its contents is exactly the kind of language one would
expect to find in a will and there is nothing that would be out of
place
in a will.
16.
The only considerations that could stand in
the applicant’s way towards the order she seeks, is the
respondents’ affidavits
or if I find that the applicant should
have dealt with the facts in a more expansive fashion.
17.
The respondents alleges that the
applicant’s claim that she was the life partner of the
deceased, right up to his death on
23 January 2022, is not
to be believed. In support of their challenge to the applicant’s
claim to have been the
deceased’s life partner, the second
respondent attaches messages exchanged between the deceased and the
applicant on a commonly
used instant messaging service called
“
WhatsApp
”.
The messages were exchanged between 12 August 2020 and
31 July 2021.
18.
According to the respondents, the deceased
left South Africa for the United Kingdom two years before his death.
Whilst there, the
deceased formed a romantic relationship with Ms
Dickins. The text messages indicates clearly enough that the
applicant formed the
view that the deceased had been unfaithful to
her. She says as much in the replying affidavit. According to the
applicant, the
deceased’s infidelity was a source of conflict
between them, but not such that it meant the end of their
relationship.
19.
None of these facts are however relevant,
if I were to apply the dictum in
Van
Wetten
quoted above. Irrespective of
what the allegations in the answering affidavit or the replying
affidavit may imply regarding the
relationship between the applicant
and the deceased, these are developments after the fact of the
signature of the disputed document.
It does not tell me anything
about the intentions of the deceased on 2 October 2018 when
he signed the disputed document.
20.
Ms Maharaj-Pillay who appeared for the
respondents, submitted that the facts on the relationship between the
applicant and the deceased
shows that the applicant is not a reliable
witness. In particular, she submitted that the applicant’s
allegation in the founding
affidavit that she was the deceased’s
“
life partner and they lived
together in a permanent relationship
”
is shown in the answering affidavit to be untrue. The applicant
qualifies this statement in the founding affidavit, where
she says
that the deceased went to the United Kingdom to seek medical
treatment in 2020. As stated above, the replying affidavit
reveals
that the applicant was aware of the deceased’s relations with
other women, but as it is her version that those relations
did not
end her relationship with the deceased, it is not clear to me on the
affidavits that the respondents have shown that the
applicant’s
version in the founding affidavit is incorrect.
21.
More
pertinently, in motion proceedings for final relief, factual disputes
are resolved in accordance with the rules in
Plascon-Evans.
The probabilities and the reliability or otherwise of the deponents
do not enter the picture.
[6]
I cannot make a credibility finding against the applicant, because
before I can do so, she should have had the opportunity to meet
the
challenge to her qualities as a witness in cross-examination.
[7]
Ms Maharaj-Pillay’s submissions therefore does not alter the
conclusion I have come to above on me accepting the applicant’s
version on the circumstances in which the disputed document was
signed by the deceased and the two witnesses.
22.
It remains for me to consider the paucity
of facts set out in the founding affidavit. As I pointed out above,
the founding affidavit
deals with the signing of the disputed
document, but not with the broader facts surrounding that event. The
question is whether
it should lead to me to conclude that the
applicant did not make out a case in terms of
section 2(3)
of the
Wills Act. In
my view, on the facts of this case, it does not.
Section 2(3)
has to do with a will that does not meet the formal
requirements for a valid will. Had it not been for the fact that the
second
witness’s signature appears on the second page of the
disputed document, the formal requirements would have been met.
23.
The requirement that both witnesses and the
testator must append their signatures on the same page of a will, is
to validate the
testator’s signature. If it had been sufficient
for a witnesses’ signature to appear on another page than the
one containing
the will and the testator’s signature, it would
not on its face serve to validate the testator’s signature. If
the
signatures of the testator and the witnesses are on the same page
as the text of the will and in close proximity to each other one
can
reasonably expect the witnesses to know or at least question the
reason for their signatures. If a signature on a different
blank page
sufficed, a witness’s signature can relatively easily be
obtained under some or other ruse, but not so easily
if the witness
can be expected to see the testator’s signature and the
document that contains the will.
24.
Based on facts that the applicant presented
to this court, there is no other reasonable inference than that the
deceased appended
his signature to the disputed document. It is clear
that the disputed document is a will in which the deceased is named
as the
testator, all that is required to make out a case in terms of
section 2(3)
is evidence that the deceased is the one who’s
signature appears on the disputed document.
25.
It
would have been different if the form of the disputed document was
such that it was not clear if it was intended to be a will.
For
instance, in
Van
Wetten
,
the form of the document in question was “…
a
somewhat incoherent document. It reads in part like a letter to
Nolan, the deceased sometimes recording his decisions, sometimes
giving instructions, sometimes offering explanations for his
decisions
…”.
[8]
Where the form, content or appearance of a document is such that it
could conceivably be something other than a will, such as a
letter or
an early draft of a will, then more evidence may be required.
26.
Ms Maharaj-Pillay argued that there is a
conflict between the disputed document and the other document that
deals with the deceased’s
property situated in the United
Kingdom referred to above. The conflicting provision is said to be
the sentence in the latter document
that reads: “
All
assets owned by Uhuru are to be divided equally between TASMYN LEIGH
FITZGERALD and AMEY CAITLYN FITZGERALD”.
The
conflict is said to lie in the fact in that the disputed document,
the assets owned by Uhuru are bequeathed to the applicant.
Mr
Thompson submitted that there is no conflict because the two
documents respectively deal with the deceased assets in South African
and in the United Kingdom. His submission is probably sound, but I
need not decide this issue, since it does not appear to me that
a
conflict between the two documents have any bearing on the deceased’s
intention in so far as the disputed document is concerned.
27.
I am therefore satisfied that the disputed
document was intended by the deceased to be his will. I am therefore
persuaded to make
an order directing the Master to accept the
disputed document, for the purposes of the
Administration of Estates
Act 66 of 1965
, as the will of the deceased.
28.
It remains for me to deal with an
application brought by the respondents to strike out allegations made
in the replying affidavit
by the applicant on the deceased’s
relations with other women, on the basis that it is scandalous,
vexatious or irrelevant.
The third and fourth respondents took
umbrage to those allegations because it paints the deceased, their
late father, in a negative
light. While I do not doubt that the third
and fourth respondents found it distressing to have read those
allegations, in my view
the applicant was entitled to deal with the
allegations made in the answering affidavit to the effect that the
deceased’s
relationship with her had come to an end. The
allegations the applicant made in the replying affidavit were germane
to that issue
and therefore permissible.
29.
The respondents also sought to strike out
certain allegations in the replying affidavit on the basis that it
would constitute new
material. To be sure the applicant put up
allegations in the replying affidavit that were not in the founding
affidavit, but those
allegations were made in reply to allegations
made in the answering affidavit and therefore also permissible.
30.
I make the following order:
(a)
The Master of the High Court is directed to
accept the document, the contents of which are quoted in paragraph 3
and 4 above, as
the will of the late Adrian John Fitzgerald.
(b)
The third and fourth respondents are
ordered to pay the costs of the application to strike out.
(c)
Otherwise, the costs are to be paid by the
deceased estate of the late Adrian John Fitzgerald.
H A VAN DER MERWE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard on: 2 October 2023
Delivered on:
11 October 2023
For the applicant:
Adv C Thomson
Instructed by :
Riekie Erasmus Attorneys
For the second, third
and fourth respondents:
Adv P Maharaj-Pillay
Instructed
by :
Cliffe
Dekker Hoffmeyr Attorneys
[1]
The
second respondent describes herself as ‘executor’ and
not ‘executrix’. The time may well have arrived
for
‘executor’ to be used to refer to males and females
alike.
[2]
Horn
v Horn
1995 (1) SA 48
(W);
Logue
v The Master
1995 1 SA 199
(N);
Ex
parte Maurice
1995 2 SA 713 (C).
[3]
2004
(1) SA 348
(SCA)
at
para 16.
[4]
Id
at para 20-21.
[5]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
3 SA 623
(A) 634H - 635C.
[6]
National
Scrap Metal (Cape Town) (Pty) Ltd v Murray & Roberts Ltd
2012
5 SA 300
(SCA) [21] – [22];
[7]
President
of the RSA v South African Rugby Football Union
2000 1 SA 1
(CC) [61] – [65]
[8]
The
full description of the document in issue in
Van
Wetten
appears in para [23]–[26] of the judgement.
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