Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1405South Africa
Mthimunye and Others v Mthimunye and Another (037606/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1405 (4 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 December 2023
Headnotes
the Applicants submit that this Court should exercise its discretion in their favour and grant them the relief sought (removal of the First Respondent as executor of the deceased's estate; appointment of the First Applicant as the executor of the deceased's estate and an order that the First Respondent pay the costs of this application on the scale of attorney and client) for, inter alia, the following reasons:
Judgment
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## Mthimunye and Others v Mthimunye and Another (037606/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1405 (4 December 2023)
Mthimunye and Others v Mthimunye and Another (037606/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1405 (4 December 2023)
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sino date 4 December 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED YES
DATE
04/12/2023
CASE NO.:
037606/2022
In the matter between:
PORTIA
NOMSA MTHIMUNYE
First Applicant
THEMBA
MTHIMUNYE
Second
Applicant
NTSOHO
SHIMANGA
Third Applicant
and
EROL
BONGI MTHIMUNYE
First Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
WANLESS AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application in terms of which Portia Nomsa
Mthimunye, adult female
("the First Applicant")
,
Themba Mthimunye, adult male
("the Second Applicant")
and Ntsoho Shimanga, adult female
("the Third Applicant")
seek an order in terms of subsection 54(1)(a)(v) of the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 ("the Act")
that Eroll Bongi Mthimunye, adult male
("the First
Respondent")
be removed as the executor of the estate of
Mlungiswa Phillip Mthimunye
("the deceased").
The Master of the High Court is the Second Respondent in the
application. The Second Respondent does not oppose the
relief
sought by the Applicants in this application. Thus, the Second
Respondent has played no part in this application and,
regrettably,
has not come to the assistance of this Court in the resolution
thereof.
[2]
It is expedient in this particular matter to have regard to the
applicable principles of law prior to
applying the facts as set out
in the application
papers placed before this
Court.
The law
[3]
Subsection 54(1)(a)(v) of the Act reads as follows:
"54
Removal from office of executor
(1)
An executor may at any time be removed from his office:
(a)
by the Court:
(i)
to (iv) ..............
(v)
if for any other reason the court is satisfied that it is undesirable
that he should
act as executor of the estate concerned."
[4]
In the matter of
Van
Niekerk v Van Niekerk & Another
[1]
it was held,
[2]
in reference to
subsection 54(1)(a)(v) of the Act, that:
"In
considering an application under this section the court is vested
with a discretion and in the exercise of that discretion
the
predominant consideration will be the interests of the estate and
those of the beneficiaries."
[3]
[5]
As also stated in
Van
Niekerk
[4]
the well-established common law principle expressed in
Barnett
v Estate Beattie
[5]
that the court is vested with a discretion to remove an executor from
office
"...if
his personal interests are in entire conflict with the interests of
the estate"
was
affirmed by the erstwhile Appellate Division in
Grobbelaar
v Grobbelaar
[6]
.
In these two cases, as noted by Wallis J (as he then was) the
executor advanced a claim in his personal capacity against
the
estate, which claim was disputed and the acceptance of which would
have been contrary to the interests of the beneficiaries
in the
estate.
[6]
In the matter of
Meyer
(
supra
),
Margo J, stated the following
[7]
:
"Both
the statute and the case cited (Letterstedt v Broers) indicates that
the sufficiency of the cause for removal is to be
tested by a
consideration of the interests of the estate. It must therefore
appear, I think, that the particular circumstances
of the acts
complained of are such as to stamp the executor or administrator as a
dishonest, grossly inefficient or untrustworthy
person, whose
future conduct can be expected to be such as to
expose the estate to risk of actual loss or of administration in a
way not
contemplated by the
trust instrument."
Facts
[7]
The following facts are either common cause or cannot be seriously
disputed by either
party, namely:
7.1
the deceased died intestate on 24 June 2021. The deceased was
survived by the following
children, namely the First, Second and
Third Applicants, together with the First Respondent;
7.2
the deceased was married in community of property to the late Lydia
Mthimunye (mother to
the First and Second Applicants and the First
Respondent). The late Lydia Mthimunye died on 31 July 2017
leaving behind a
Last Will and Testament;
7.3
in terms of their mother's will the First Applicant and the First
Respondent were nominated
as co-executors;
7.4 at
the time of the deceased's death, the estate of Lydia Mthimunye had
not been finalised due to delays occasioned
by the First Applicant
and the erstwhile attorneys appointed by the First Applicant and the
First Respondent having lodged the
estate in the incorrect Master's
office;
7.5
following the death of the deceased and during or about July 2021 the
First Applicant and the First Respondent
engaged the services of the
First Respondent's current attorneys of record, MT Roselo
Incorporated
("MTRI").
A meeting was held with MTRI
in July 2021 whereat MTRI were given a mandate to assist the First
Applicant and the First Respondent
administer the estates of their
late parents;
7.6 in accordance
with their instructions, MTRI prepared and lodged the necessary
documentation with the Second Respondent;
7.7 on 21 July 2021
the First Respondent was appointed as the executor of the deceased's
estate; and
7.8 on 26 October 2021
the First Applicant and the First Respondent were officially
appointed by the Second Respondent as co-executors
of the estate of
the late Lydia Mthimunye.
The Applicants'
case
[8]
In broad summary the Applicants submit that this Court should
exercise its discretion
in their favour and grant them the relief
sought (removal of the First Respondent as executor of the deceased's
estate; appointment
of the First Applicant as the executor of the
deceased's estate and an order that the First Respondent pay the
costs of this application
on the scale of attorney and client) for,
inter alia
, the following reasons:
8.1 the First
Respondent has failed to disclose assets of the estate and is not
willing to disclose same so as not to prejudice
the other
beneficiaries of the estate;
8.2 the First
Respondent has appropriated certain motor vehicles belonging to
the estate for his personal use
without acknowledging same;
8.3 the inventory
of assets compiled by the First Respondent reflects the immovable
property only and no other assets; and
8.4 the First
Respondent failed to acknowledge the existence of the Third Applicant
as a beneficiary of the intestate estate
and has failed to properly
amend the documentation submitted to the Second Respondent in that
and other material respects.
The First
Respondent's case
[9]
On behalf of the First Respondent, it was submitted that the
Applicants had failed
to discharge the onus incumbent upon them to
prove, on a balance of probabilities, that this Court should grant
them the relief
sought for,
inter alia,
the following reasons:
9.1
it is clear from the aforegoing facts, that are either common cause
or not in dispute in
this matter, that there are two estates being
wound-up and that any disputes arising from the winding-up of estate
late Lydia Mthimunye
would affect finalising the winding-up of the
deceased's estate;
9.2
it is further apparent from the application papers that a dispute has
arisen between the
First Applicant and the First Respondent in
respect of their deceased's parents' home, being Erf 294 situated at
64 Tau Street,
Diepkloof Phase One, Diepkloof Extension, Gauteng
("the property");
9.3
initially the First Applicant and First Respondent had arranged to
buy the property together.
However, the First Respondent
appears to have had a change of heart;
9.4
on or about 8 November 2021, MTRI received an email from the First
Applicant expressing her dissatisfaction
at the appointment of the
First Respondent as executor in both estates. This prompted
MTRI on 8 November 2021 to call for
a meeting;
9.5
a meeting was held on 9 November 2021 which was attended by the First
Applicant and the First
Respondent. The First Applicant was
informed that:
9.5.1 the First
Respondent was no longer interested in buying the property with the
First Applicant;
9.5.2 the First Applicant
was offered the opportunity to purchase the property, failing which
the property would be placed on the
market for sale;
9.5.3 the First Applicant
must pay rent if she wishes to occupy the property, failing which the
property would be rented out to
any person willing to pay the rent
pending the finalisation of the administration of the two estates;
and
9.5.4 the First Applicant
was also reminded that she was liable for the municipal account;
9.6 the First
Respondent avers that at the aforesaid meeting the existence of the
Third Applicant was revealed, by the First
Applicant, for the first
time;
9.7 on or about 16
November 2021 the First Applicant sent an email to MTRI
requesting them to remove themselves
from the administration of the
parents' estates;
9.8 on or about 18
November 2021 MTRI sought to withdraw from the administration of both
of the estates and rendered their invoice
for payment before they
could release the files in respect thereof;
9.9 the First Applicant
failed to settle the invoice. Instead, on or about 15 December
2021, the First Applicant queried the
amount claimed on the invoice
and requested the Liquidation and Distribution
("L&D")
Account in respect of the estate late Lydia Mthimunye;
9.10 on or about 10
January 2022 MTRI wrote to the First Applicant informing her that
unless their invoice was paid, they would
proceed to administer the
estates on behalf of the First Respondent as he was adamant that they
should proceed;
9.11 on or about 10
February 2022, an email was sent to the First Applicant from MTRI
attaching the following:
9.11.1
the full and final L&D Account of the deceased's estate signed by
the First
Respondent;
9.11.2
the full and final L&D Account of the estate of Lydia Mthimunye
signed by the
First Respondent;
9.12 The First Applicant
was also reminded that, as co-executrix in the estate of the late
Lydia Mthimunye, she was required to
sign the relevant L&D
Account;
9.13 the First
Applicant was also advised that should she fail or refuse to sign the
same, she would be reported to the Master's
office, with a request
for her removal as co-executrix;
9.14 the First
Applicant failed to sign the L&D Account as requested. On
or about 24 February 2022, MTRI accordingly
reported her to the
Second Respondent and further requested a meeting with the Master in
order to request her removal as co-executrix;
9.15 on or about 25
February 2022 the First Applicant was served with a notice to vacate
the property which she had occupied
after the mother's death and in
respect of which she has not paid any rental or the municipal
account;
9.16 an eviction
application dated 14 April 2022 followed and was duly served on the
First Applicant on 19 April 2022;
9.17 on
18 August 2022 the Second Respondent addressed a letter to MTRI
requesting the said attorneys to provide
the following:
9.17.1
the municipal evaluation for the property;
9.17.2 an
explanation as to what happens to the other half-share of the
property;
9.17.3 an
amendment to the next-of-kin affidavit to include the Third Applicant
as the biological child of the deceased
as per the DNA Tests Results
Affidavit; and
9.17.4
that the Third Applicant be reflected in the L&D Account;
9.18 on
20 October 2022 the First Applicant instituted the present
application seeking to remove the First Respondent
as the executor of
the deceased's estate; and
9.19 on
1 December 2022 MTRI addressed a letter to the Second Respondent
seeking permission to advertise the deceased's
estate. Amongst
the annexures included in the said letter were all the documents and
information requested by the Second
Respondent including the amended
L&D Account and the amended next-of-kin affidavit from the First
Respondent reflecting the
addition of the Third Applicant as a
beneficiary of the deceased's estate.
[10]
Based,
inter
alia
,
on the aforegoing, it was submitted on behalf of the First Respondent
that the application for the removal of the First Respondent
by the
Applicants was grounded on the disharmony which had arisen between
the First Respondent and the First Applicant in respect
of the
property. Moreover, there was no factual basis for this Court
to grant the relief sought when this Court applied the
correct test
to be applied in motion proceedings.
[8]
The merits
[11]
Before dealing with the merits of this application
per se
, it
must be noted, despite the fact that the legal representative for the
Applicants did not pursue the point before this Court
during the
course of his argument with much enthusiasm (if at all), it was
submitted, in the Applicants' Heads of Argument, that
the nomination
of the Third Respondent as the executor of the deceased's estate was
somehow "improper" or "invalid".
[12]
In that regard, it was submitted that on or about 6 July 2021 the
First Applicant was taken by
the First Respondent to MTRI to fill in
documents which nominated him as the executor of the deceased's
estate. The
First Applicant did not make the appointment freely
and voluntarily. She was allegedly not in a good state as she
had tested
positive for Covid-19 and was still recovering.
Further to that there is no nomination form that was signed by the
First
Applicant on the file at the Second Respondent's offices.
Subsequent to that nomination the First Respondent was appointed
by
the Second Respondent to be the executor of the deceased's estate.
The fact that the other two beneficiaries did not nominate
him was
not taken into consideration by the Second Respondent.
[13]
At the end of the day this Court is satisfied (putting aside the
question as to whether an application
in terms of subsection
54(1)(a)(v) of the Act would be broad enough to even encompass such a
ground for the relief sought) that
the Applicants have failed to
place before this Court sufficient facts, based on acceptable
principles of law, to enable this Court
to remove the First
Respondent as the executor of the deceased's estate on the basis that
somehow his appointment was either irregular
and/or improper and/or
invalid.
[14]
Certainly, the objective facts of this matter do not support such a
finding. In this regard,
the First Applicant alleges that she
raised an objection to the First Respondent's nomination with the
Second Respondent, which
objection was never responded to. This
letter is dated 4 March 2022, a period of eight months after the said
nomination was
made. The letter was also sent to the Second
Respondent:
14.1 a
few days after the First Applicant was reported to the Second
Respondent for failing or refusing to sign
the estate late Lydia
Mthimunye's L&D Account and requesting her removal as
co-executor; and
14.2 a
few days after the First Applicant was served with a notice to the
vacate the property.
[15]
Also, as correctly pointed out to this Court by the First
Respondent's Counsel, a proper reading
of this document reveals that
it is not an objection to the First Respondent's nomination but,
rather, a request for his removal
as executor. In addition
thereto, it is clearly stated by the First Applicant in the first
paragraph thereof that she nominated
the First Respondent as
executor. Nowhere in the letter does the First Applicant object
to the First Respondent's nomination.
The letter is concerned
with the conduct of the First Respondent in administering the
deceased's estate and his removal as executor.
[16]
In the premises, this Court holds that it should not remove the First
Respondent as executor
of the deceased's estate solely on the ground
that his nomination is somehow invalid or improper.
[17]
The Applicants place great weight on the alleged failure of the First
Respondent to fail to acknowledge
the existence of the Third
Applicant from an earlier date and the alleged failure of the First
Respondent to effect necessary amendments
to certain documentation in
the administration of the deceased's estate. In the opinion of
this Court any potential substance
these grounds had for the removal
of the First Respondent as the executor of the deceased's estate have
been cured by the actions
of the First Respondent as dealt with
earlier in this judgment
[9]
As
at 1 December 2022 the First Respondent has cured all requests in
relation to the aforegoing as emanating from the Second
Respondent.
It is also relevant to note that at no stage has the Second
Respondent threatened to institute proceedings in
terms of the Act
(which the Second Respondent is quite entitled to do) to remove the
First Respondent as the executor of the deceased's
estate.
[18]
With regard to the concerns raised by the Applicants that the First
Respondent has been concealing
or misappropriating assets of the
deceased's estate this Court, once again, is of the opinion that the
explanations provided therefor
by the First Respondent are not so
far-fetched or unbelievable as to be rejected out of hand. The
fact that certain motor
vehicles may no longer exist some four years
later after the estate of the late Lydia Mthimunye was reported in
2017, is not unreasonable.
Further, as correctly pointed out by
the First Respondent's Counsel, the First Applicant makes no mention
of other assets that
were in the L&D Account of their late mother
but did not appear in that of the deceased's estate. In
addition, if the
First Applicant knew of the existence of the two
motor vehicles mentioned and which she queries, she ought to have
brought this
information to the First Respondent's attention in order
that they could be included as such. The First Applicant failed
to do so and has provided no reasons for such failure to do so.
The First Applicant had an option to bring an objection before
the
Second Respondent. Subsection 35(7) of the Act provides for
interested parties to lodge a formal objection with the Second
Respondent if the L&D Account is not a true reflection of the
facts of a particular estate. The First Applicant failed
to do
so and, once again, has provided no reasons for that failure.
[19]
Insofar as the furniture is concerned the First Respondent explains
that he did not include it
because the First Applicant is currently
occupying the property and had informed him that during the lifetime
of the deceased the
First Applicant had replaced all of the furniture
since same was old and had substituted it with her own modern
furniture.
[20]
With regard to the firearm the explanation of the First Respondent is
that he only recently had
access to the bedroom of the deceased since
the First Applicant is occupying the property. Upon learning of
the firearm he
took same to the South African Police Services for it
to be destroyed.
[21]
Having regard to the aforegoing, it is clear that this Court will
not, in the exercise of its
discretion, remove the First Respondent
as executor of the deceased's estate for allegedly concealing or
misappropriating assets
of the deceased's estate. This is
particularly so in light of the fact that,
inter alia
, the
First Respondent is still assisted by MTRI in the administration of
that estate; the Second Respondent has no difficulties
therewith and
other alternative remedies are available to the Applicants in terms
of the Act.
Conclusion
[22]
It is clear from the contents of this judgment that the Applicants
have failed to discharge the
onus incumbent upon them to prove, on a
balance of probabilities, that they are entitled to the relief
sought. Upon the application
of the
Plascon-Evans
test,
where there are disputes of fact these disputes of facts in the
present matter are genuine and
bona fide
. The disputes
of facts as raised by the First Respondent are not far-fetched or
unbelievable so as to be rejected by this
Court. If anything,
they are accepted as being more probable than those placed before
this Court in support of the Applicants’
version. In the
premises, the application must be decided on the version as put
forward by the First Respondent. On
that basis, there are no
grounds for this Court, in its discretion, to grant to the Applicants
the relief sought and,
inter alia
, remove the First Respondent
as the executor of the deceased's estate in terms of subsection
54(1)(a)(v) of the Act.
[23]
In arriving at this decision the overriding consideration in this
Court declining to exercise
its discretion in favour of the
Applicants is that mere disagreements between heirs and the executor
of a deceased's estate, or
even a breakdown in the relationship
between one of the heirs and the executor (as in the present case) is
insufficient for the
discharge of the executor in terms of subsection
54(1)(a)(v) of the Act. It must be shown that,
inter alia
,
the executor has conducted himself in such a manner that it has
actually affected his proper administration of the estate.
Bad
relations between an executor and an heir will not lead to the
removal of the latter unless this will prevent the proper
administration
of the estate.
Costs
[24]
With regard to costs, it is trite that costs fall within the general
discretion of the court.
It is also trite that unless unusual
circumstances exist, costs should normally follow the result.
No such circumstances
have been brought to the attention of this
Court.
[25]
In the premises, the Applicants should pay the costs of this
application.
Order
[26]
This Court makes the following order:
1.
the application is dismissed;
2.
the First Applicant; the Second Applicant and the Third Applicant are
to pay
the costs of this application, jointly and severally the one
paying the others to be absolved.
______________________
B.C. WANLESS
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
28
August 2023
Date of judgment:
4 December 2023
Appearances
On behalf of the
Applicant:
Mr. T. Mukwani
Instructed by:
T. Mukwani Attorneys
On behalf of the
Defendant:
Adv. I. Keatotswe-Matlou
Instructed by:
M. T. Raselo Incorporated
[1]
Unreported
judgment of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court (Pietermaritzburg); case
number 6361/2010; delivered on
17 December
2010
[2]
At
paragraph [4]
[3]
Die
Meester v Meyer en Andere
1975 (2) SA 1
(T) at 17 F, a passage
approved by the Constitutional Court in Gory v Kolver NO and Others
(Storke and Others Intervening) 2007
(4) 1907 (CC) at paragraph [56]
[4]
At
paragraph [5]
[5]
1928
CPD 482
at 485
[6]
1959
(4) SA 719
(AD) at 724 F-G. See also Webster v Wester en
Andere
1968 (3) SA 386
(T) at 388 C-D
[7]
At
paragraph 17B
[8]
Subparagraph
19.9 ibid
[9]
Subparagraph
19.9 ibid
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