Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1493South Africa
Lange and Another v Henegan and Others (45732/18) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1493 (15 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 November 2023
Headnotes
in a testamentary trust by the first plaintiff, the only trustee and executor.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lange and Another v Henegan and Others (45732/18) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1493 (15 November 2023)
Lange and Another v Henegan and Others (45732/18) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1493 (15 November 2023)
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sino date 15 November 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 45732/18
(1) REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED. YES
DATE
15
November 2023
In the matter between:
LEANNE LYNNE LANGE
First Plaintiff
SANDRA LYNN KERR
Second Plaintiff
and
PATRICK LESTER HARVEY
HENEGAN
First Defendant
DAVID JOHN HENEGAN
Second Defendant
DANIEL
SCHUTTE
Third Defendant
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
LOUW AJ:
[1]
The late Mr Andrew James Henegan with identity number 5[...](“the
testator”) and his wife, the late Mrs Denice Henegan (“the
testatrix”) duly executed a joint will on 31 July
2014 (“the
joint will”).
[2]
In terms of the joint will the beneficiaries were, in equal
portions,
the first plaintiff, Mrs Leanne Lynne Lange (25%), the second
plaintiff, Mrs Sandra Lynn Kerr (25%), the first defendant,
Mr
Patrick Henegan (25%) and the second defendant, Mr David Henegan
(25%).
[3]
The first and second plaintiffs are sisters, the daughters
of the
testatrix. The first and second defendants are the brothers of the
testator. The first defendant elected to represent himself.
The
second defendant filed a notice to abide. The action was not defended
by the third and fourth defendants.
[4]
The joint will includes a provision that the bequest, in four
equal
portions, shall apply if either the testator or testatrix passes away
more than three months after the other without having
executed a
subsequent valid will. The testatrix passed away in April 2015
which left the testator as the surviving spouse.
In terms of the
joint will, the estate of the testatrix devolved upon the testator
who subsequently passed away more than three
months after the
testatrix.
[5]
Circumstances changed for the testator and the beneficiaries
in terms
of the joint will. In the present action, this court was called upon
by the plaintiffs to find that a document, in want
of compliance with
the formalities applicable to the execution or amendment of a will,
in terms of which the first and second plaintiffs
are the only
beneficiaries of the estate to the exclusion of the first and second
defendants, was in fact intended by the testator
to be his will.
[6]
Section 2(3)
of the
Wills Act 7 of 1953
provides that if a court is
satisfied that a document or an amendment of a document drafted or
executed by a person who has since
died, was intended to be his or
her will, it must order the Master to accept the will, although it
does not comply with all the
formalities applicable to the execution
or amendment of a will.
[7]
The requirements of the section are the following:
[7.1]
There is a document or an amendment
of a document, which implies that
it must be in writing;
[7.2]
The document, or the amendment
thereto, was drafted or executed by or
through a person who has since died; and
[7.3]
The deceased intended the document
or the amendment to be his will,
which would require extrinsic evidence to persuade the court that the
document or the amendment
was intended by the deceased to be his
will.
[8]
The witnesses who testified for the plaintiffs all had discussions
with the testator, some simultaneously, others individually. The
evidence indicated, to my mind, a clear intention by the testator
to
change the joint will to make the plaintiffs the sole beneficiaries
of his estate, to the exclusion of the first and second
defendants.
[9]
On 6 October 2017 the first plaintiff, in the presence of her
husband, Mr Lange, was instructed by the testator that he had changed
his will through Citadel Investments. The evidence
was
uncontroverted that he had changed his will wherein he bequeathed the
whole of his estate to the first and second plaintiffs,
in equal half
shares. He instructed the first plaintiff that the second
plaintiff’s proceeds would be held in a testamentary
trust by
the first plaintiff, the only trustee and executor.
[10]
The testator, so it was testified, explained to the first plaintiff
and her husband,
Mr Lange, that he had changed his will because of
the distressing conduct of his brothers, the first and second
defendants, in
the winding-up of their late father’s estate.
[11]
The conduct referred to is well-documented and clearly contained in
correspondence
between the testator and the first and second
defendants. The animosity between the brothers was obvious. I
have no reservations
in accepting the evidence reflecting the
uncomfortable acrimony and disputes between the brothers to be a
valid reason for excluding
them from the amended will. At the very
least it gives credence to what the testator told the first plaintiff
and Mr. Lange
[12]
Mr Lange confirmed the instructions given by the testator to the
first plaintiff
and his reasons for doing so. I found the
evidence of the first plaintiff and Mr Lange to be sincere, coherent
and corroborative
of each other.
[13]
On 31 October 2017, shortly before his passing, the testator again
informed the first
plaintiff that his affairs were all in order and
that, in support and confirmation of his previous instructions, all
she needed
was the minute of the meeting he had with Citadel
Investments, which he had left in his desk at his home. The first
plaintiff collected
the minute. The minute, so it is argued by the
plaintiffs, should be considered to be the testator`s last will and
testament.
[14]
Carien Preusse, a wealth manager at Citadel Investments, testified
that the testator
called her during September 2017 and requested an
urgent meeting with her. She was initially not available on short
notice, but
he insisted on meeting with her as soon as she could.
Preusse met with the testator on 2 October 2017 at his house in
P[…], Free State. She had with her a pre-prepared
document which she described as minutes with certain sections and
headings populated by Michelle Reid, an employee of Preusse.
[15]
During the meeting the testator was clear and adamant about the
changes that he wished
to effect to his will. These changes accord
with the evidence of the first plaintiff and Mr Lange. She
completed the section
headed “
Will
” on his
instructions in his presence. The recorded handwritten notes were:
“
Executor: Lee
Anne Lynn Lange (née Barnard)
Equal portions:
Sandra’s into trust (Lee Anne the trustee).
”
[16]
The document was signed by the testator in the presence of Preusse.
[17]
It is common knowledge that the testator neither completed nor
drafted the minute.
He signed the last page thereof. The question is
whether the testator drafted the will within the meaning of the term
“drafted”
as per the Act.
[18]
Brand J, as he then was, in Ndebele N.O. and Others v Master of the
Supreme Court
and Another (10338/96)[1999] ZAWCHC (15 December 1999)
held that:
“
[21]
The term "drafted" is not defined in the Act. It has
received
considerable judicial scrutiny, leading to different
conclusions as reflected in the case law to date. On the one hand
there is
an approach advocating a strict interpretation to the effect
that the document must be drafted
personally by the
deceased.
[See
e.g.
Olivier
v die Meester en andere
:
In
Re Boedel Wyle Olivier
1997
(1) SA 836
(T)
844 B and
Webster v The
Master and others
1996
(1) SA 34
(D)
41B – D.]
[22]
On the other end of the spectrum there is an approach which advocates
a liberal or flexible interpretation. According to this approach the
document does not need to be in the handwriting of the deceased,
or
to have been typed by him personally or even to have been dictated by
the deceased in order for it to have been "drafted"
by the
deceased within the meaning of the section. The underlying reasoning
to this approach appears for example from the following
dictum
by
Van
Zyl J
in
Back
and others NNO v Master of the Supreme Court
(1996)
2 All SA 161
(C)
174 a – c:
"The
reality of the situation is that computers and word processors have
become as pedestrian as pen and ink. Another reality
is that many
would-be testators give full instructions as to their final wishes to
their attorneys or bankers and the attorneys
of bankers have draft
wills prepared in accordance with such instructions. If a draft will
is subsequently perused and approved
in every detail by a testator,
he then, as argued by Mr
Hodes,
associates himself
with and adopts it as his own. On a flexible interpretation of
section 2(3)
, it may be regarded as having been drafted by him
personally. As long as it is incontrovertible that the testator
intended the
draft will to be his will, it should be totally
irrelevant whether he personally or physically drafted it with his
own hand or
his secretary typed it in accordance with his dictation,
or his attorney's or banker's secretary typed it in accordance with
his
instructions."
[See
also
Ex Parte
Laxton
1998
(3) SA 238
(N)
244 E - F and
Ex Parte
De Swardt and another NNO
1998
(2) SA 204
(C)
at 207 B-J.
[23]
It is apparent that, on the facts of this matter, insistence upon
personal
drafting will result in a dismissal of the application. It
is equally clear, however, that if I were to adopt the approach
approved
inter alia
by
Van Zyl
J
in the
Back
-case it can be said that annexure
JN4 had been ''drafted" by the deceased within the meaning of
section 2(3)
of the Act. As of the document under consideration in
the
Back
-case, it can on the uncontroverted evidence be
said of annexure JN4, that it had been "perused and approved in
every detail"
by the deceased and that the deceased had
"associated and adopted" annexure JN4 "as his own."
[24]
In the circumstances it is hardly surprising that Mr
Petersen
,
on behalf of applicants, submitted that I should follow the decision
in the
Back-
case whereas second respondent's attorney,
Mr
Jacobs,
who appeared on her behalf, contended
that I should not.
[25]
Mr
Jacobs'
argument
in support of his contention was in essence that the
Back-
case
was wrongly decided in this respect. I do not agree. On the contrary,
I respectfully consider the judgment in the
Back
-case
to be well-reasoned and for the reasons set out therein and I
therefore find myself in agreement with the conclusion. My only
concern is whether I am in fact free to follow the judgment in
the
Back
-case.
This concern stems from a judgment of a full-bench in this division
in
Anderson
and Wagner NNO and another v The Master and others
1996
(3) SA 779
(C),
more particularly from the following
dictum
by
Thring
J
(with
Friedman
JP
concurring)
at 784 G-H of the report:
"To
me the words of
s 2(3)
of the Act are clear. The provisions of the
subsection apply only to certain documents. To come within the ambit
of the subsection
the document concerned, be it a will or an
amendment of a will, must have been drafted or executed by the person
concerned with
a certain intention. That intention must have been
that the document should itself constitute his will or an amendment
of his will,
as the case may be."
And
further at 785 G-H:
“
These
considerations all lead me to conclude that
s2(3)
of the Act must be
strictly, rather than liberally, interpreted. Whilst the pursuit of
equity (sometimes erroneously confused by
laymen with ‘justice’)
and the elimination of hardships are consummations devoutly to be
wished, their attainment can
often not be justified if it
entails the sacrifice of certainty and legal principle. I do not
think that the Legislature had such
a sacrifice in mind when it
placed
s2(3)
on the statute book.”
[26]
In the
Back-case
(at
171 d-e)
Van
Zyl J
·found
these
dicta
·to be
obiter
and
therefore not binding on him with regard to the drafting-requirement.
However, in the later full bench judgment of this
division in
Henwick
v The Master and Another
1997
(2) SA 326
(C)
334 H,
Foxcroft
J
expressed
the view that
Van
Zyl J
was
wrong in regarding the remarks by
Thring
J
in
the
Anderson
-case
as
obiter
.
With all due respect to
Foxcroft
J
and
the two judges who agreed with him, I again find myself in respectful
agreement with
Van
Zyl J.
I
am also of the view that the remarks by
Thring
J
were
indeed
obiter
in
the present context. I say this for two reasons. First, it should be
borne in mind that the document under consideration
by the full bench
in the
Anderson
-case
was in fact drafted by the deceased by his own hand (see 782A). The
question whether personal drafting is required was therefore
never an
issue in that case. Secondly, because the
ratio
decidendi
in
the
Anderson
-case
is in my view succinctly summarised by
Thring
J
in
the following passage (at 783E):
"I
am not satisfied on the information which has been placed before us
on the papers that the document was intended by the
testator to be an
amendment of his will. In my view it is at least as probable that it
was not, and that it constituted no more
than his instructions to the
first applicant as to how he intended his will to be altered."
[27]
In short, the decision in the
Anderson
-case turned on the
consideration of the third requirement, namely whether the deceased
intended the document
in casu
to be his will
(or an amendment thereto) and not on a consideration of the first
requirement, namely whether the document had been
drafted
by
the deceased. The statement by
Foxcroft J
on
the
Henwick
-case (at 334 H) that the strict approach
adopted by
Thring J
in the
Anderson-case
is
irreconcilable with the flexible approach advocated by
Van
Zyl J
in the
Back
-case is, in my respectful
view, a
non sequitur
. Thring J
advocates
a strict approach with reference to the
third requirement
-
i.e. with regard to the testator's intention. In fact, as far as I am
aware, no-one has thus far suggested that there should
be a flexible
approach to the issue of the testator's intention. I can see no
reason, however, why an insistence upon strict compliance
with the
third requirement would necessarily exclude a more flexible
interpretation of the term "drafted" in
section 2(3).
[28]
I am fortified in my view that the decision of the full bench in
the
Anderson
-case
was indeed
obiter
with
regard to the drafting requirement by the judgment of
Combrinck
J
in
Ex
Parte Laxton
1998
(3) SA 238
(N)
242H-243A. The view expressed by
Foxcroft
J
in
the
Henwick
-case
to the effect.
[29]
In the circumstances I find myself free to adopt the
approach
advocated by
Van Zyl J
in
the
Back
-case.
As I have already indicated; the consequence of that approach in the
present matter is a finding that annexure JN4 had been
“drafted”
by the deceased within the meaning of
section 2(3).
”
I align myself fully with Brand J`s
reasoning.
[19]
Mr Henegan, the first defendant, acknowledged the apparent animosity
between the
brothers, but testified that it had been resolved. He
gainfully attempted to show that the plaintiffs were driven by greed
and
that a conspiracy and fraud had been committed by the plaintiffs
and the representatives from Citadel. No cogent and/or
permissible
evidence was presented to the court in this regard. Mr
Henegan’s evidence that the animosity was resolved is
contradicted
by the numerous exchanges of correspondence referred to
in evidence by the plaintiffs.
[20]
The facts, considered in light of the surrounding circumstances,
support my findings
and conclusion that the testator had the
necessary intention/animus testandi to amend the joint will when he
signed the minute.
[21]
This court’s approach to the matter is supported by the
judgment of the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Van Wetten and Another
v Bosch and Others
[2003] 4 All SA 442
(SCA). Paragraphs 16 and
26 of the judgment read as follows:
“
16.
In my view, however,
the real question to be addressed at
this stage is not what the document means, but whether the deceased
intended it to be his will
at all. The enquiry of necessity entails
an examination of the document itself and also of the document in the
context of the surrounding
circumstances
.
”
“
26.
These are not the words of a person giving instructions for the
drafting of his will.
They are the words of a person who
has made a decision to which immediate effect is to be given. They
are his will. The very words
used by the deceased are thus also
decisive of the question before the Court: the deceased intended the
document to be his will.
The surrounding circumstances, and in
particular
, as I have said, the handing over of the
documents in sealed envelopes to Van der Westhuizen, to be opened
only should something
happen to him,
lead to the same
conclusion
.” (emphasis added)
[22]
For these reasons I find that the plaintiffs have established on a
balance of probabilities
that the testator intended the minute,
annexure POC3 to the particulars of claim, to be his final
instruction with regard to the
disposal of his estate. In other
words, he intended it to be his will.
[23]
Consequently it is not necessary for me to deal with the alternative
relief in terms
of
section 2A
of the Act sought by the plaintiffs.
[24]
As far as costs are concerned, the following. The general rule is
that costs should
follow the event. However,
inter alia
because the mechanical application of any rule might lead to
unfairness, the general rule is subject to the overriding principle
that costs are in the discretion of the court. This discretion must
be exercised judicially, not arbitrarily, upon a consideration
of the
facts of each case. The nature of the proceedings, the conduct of the
parties, the relationship between them and the practical
effect of
the outcome of the proceedings are amongst many relevant factors to
be taken into account in the exercise of this discretion.
Factors
that I have taken into account, amongst others, is that the first
defendant as beneficiary in terms of the joint will was
duty bound to
defend the
status quo
. Also, as dictated by the authorities
referred to above, my ultimate finding on the merits was to an extent
dependant on policy
considerations and my findings in respect of the
evidence placed before me. Consequently, upon careful reflection, I
find that
justice would not be served by a mechanical application of
the general rule that costs should follow the event. My finding in
this
regard will be reflected in my order on costs.
ORDER
1.
Annexure POC3 to the particulars of claim in this action is declared
to be the will of the late Andrew
James Henegan with identity number
5[...].
2.
The fourth defendant is ordered to accept annexure POC3 to the
particulars of claim in this action as
the will of the late Andrew
James Henegan with identity number 5[...] for purposes of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
.
3.
Each party shall pay their own costs in the action.
A LOUW
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Johannesburg
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date
and time for hand down is deemed to be __ November 2023.
APPEARANCES
:
For the plaintiff:
Adv K Turner
Instructed by:
The
first defendant appeared unrepresented.
Date of hearing: 22 &
23 May 2023
Deemed date of judgment:
15 November 2023
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