Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1440South Africa
L.L v C.H NO and Others (A018010/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1440 (12 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 December 2023
Headnotes
instead that the issue was so hotly disputed on the facts that it could not be determined on motion. In addition, applying the well-known rule, set out in Room Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Mansions (Pty) Ltd 1949 (3) SA 1155 (T) at 1162, that an application for final relief instituted in the knowledge that “a serious dispute of fact was bound to develop” will generally be dismissed, the court below refused LL’s application with costs. LL now appeals.
Judgment
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## L.L v C.H NO and Others (A018010/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1440 (12 December 2023)
L.L v C.H NO and Others (A018010/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1440 (12 December 2023)
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sino date 12 December 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No.A018010/2023
Case
No.
A018010/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NORT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
12/12/23
In the matter between:
LL
Appellant
And
CH
N.O.
First
Respondent
CH
Second
Respondent
CJB
Third
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Fourth
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fifth
Respondent
CORAM: OPPERMAN J, WILSON
J AND NOKO J
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom OPPERMAN J and NOKO J agree)
:
1
The question at the centre of this appeal is whether the
appellant, LL, established on the papers before the court below that
he
was in a universal partnership with EH. LL applied in the court
below for a declaration that there was such a partnership, and that
it had subsisted for many years before EH died on 21 July 2016. EH’s
daughter, CH, who is cited as the first respondent in
her official
capacity as the executor of EH’s estate, and in her personal
capacity as the second respondent, denies that
EH’s and LL’s
relationship ever amounted to a universal partnership.
2
The court below did not finally decide the issue either way.
It held instead that the issue was so hotly disputed on the facts
that
it could not be determined on motion. In addition, applying the
well-known rule, set out in
Room Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe
Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) at 1162, that an
application for final relief instituted in the knowledge that “a
serious dispute of fact was bound to
develop” will generally be
dismissed, the court below refused LL’s application with costs.
LL now appeals.
3
In my view, LL was right to proceed on motion, and the court
below was mistaken when it held that the factual version LL put up in
his founding affidavit had been materially disputed. It follows that
LL’s appeal must succeed, and that the order of the
court below
must be replaced with an order declaring the existence of the
universal partnership between LL and EH, and granting
ancillary
relief.
4
In giving my reasons for reaching that conclusion, I shall
first set out the nature of a universal partnership and the
requirements
for accepting that one has come into existence. I shall
then apply those requirements to the facts that ought to have been
accepted
as undisputed in the court below.
Universal partnerships
5
A
universal partnership is an agreement between individuals to share
their property and their gains and losses. The partnership
need not
be formed for a commercial purpose. It regularly comes into
existence, whether expressly or tacitly, between unmarried
cohabitees, although cohabitation is not essential. The requirements
for the existence of a universal partnership are the same
as those
for partnership in general. Where a tacit universal partnership is
alleged, a court will confirm its existence if the
conduct of the
parties is such that it is more probable than not that such a
partnership agreement had been reached between them
(
Butters v
Mncora
2012 (4) SA 1
(SCA) (“
Butters
”),
paragraphs 17 and 18).
6
A
partnership exists if “each of the parties brings something
into the partnership or binds themselves to bring something
into it,
whether it be money, or labour, or skill”; if the agreement is
struck for “the joint benefit of both parties”;
and if
the object of the partnership is material gain (
Butters
,
paragraph 11).
7
These requirements are now well-settled in law, and are fairly
regularly applied (see, for example,
Le Roux v Jakovljevic
[2019] ZAGPJHC 322 (5 September 2019)). The nature of the factual
inquiry can be quite complex, especially where a court is asked
to
draw inferences from conduct. Those seeking to prove the existence of
a tacit universal partnership may generally be well-advised
to seek
to do so by way of a trial action. There is, however, no reason why a
court ought not to infer the existence of a universal
partnership
from the undisputed and common cause facts that appear from the
papers in motion proceedings. The question is merely
whether, on
evaluating those facts as a whole, the probable inference is that
there was a universal partnership.
8
It is to an evaluation of the undisputed and common cause
facts disclosed on the papers in the court below that I now turn.
The papers in the
court below
9
LL is an architect. He met EH in June 1970. EH was already
married at that time, but LL says that it was a marriage in name
only.
EH continued to live with her husband at the matrimonial home
in Montgomery Park, and to work with him in a property development
business. However, according to LL, EH did not share a bed with her
husband. LL and EH fell in love and their relationship co-existed
with EH’s marriage until her husband’s death.
10
In 1982, LL sold his home in Auckland Park. LL put the
proceeds of that sale towards purchasing a house in Westcliff, which
was
registered in EH’s name. LL says that he and EH intended to
move in together at the Westcliff property, but that the property
required substantial renovation. The plan was apparently to turn it
into a multi-dwelling property, with LL and EH living together
in one
of the dwellings while renting the others out. LL moved his home and
his architectural practice to the Westcliff property.
In addition to
servicing the bond on the property, he undertook substantial
renovations at the property over several years. LL
knew that he was
enhancing a property that did not formally belong to him, but
considered himself to be preparing the property
to be the home that
he and EH would eventually share.
11
In 1990, EH’s husband became gravely ill. He relocated
to Germany and died on 11 December of that year. From about that time
CH also relocated from South Africa to Germany, after which LL says
that EH and CH became estranged from each other. They would
have
telephonic contact every few months, but were never, LL says, on good
terms. They met only twice between 1990 and 2016.
12
After EH’s husband died, LL and EH lived together at the
Montgomery Park property from time-to-time, with LL moving back and
forth between the Westcliff property and the Montgomery Park property
while the renovations to the Westcliff property were completed.
In
1995, work on the Westcliff property was finally completed, and EH
and LL moved in together there. The Montgomery Park property
was left
empty, but EH and LL worked together to renovate it into a
multi-dwelling property, units in which would be sold as part
of a
sectional title scheme. LL says that, while the property was owned by
EH, he funded and performed much of the work done on
the property.
13
Once the Montgomery Park property had been renovated, in 2002,
LL and EH sought to sell it, but LL says that EH’s expectations
of the price the property was meant to bring were too high, and as a
result the sale never went ahead. LL says that EH was not
keen on
renting the units on the property out either. As a result, the
property stood empty until 2017, when CH took it over, and
completed
the registration of the sectional title scheme with a view to selling
the dwellings EH and LL had constructed on it.
14
In 1993, EH and LL purchased LL’s parents’ home in
in Schulensee, Germany. They did so for 300 000 Deutsche Marks,
which was said to be about half the value of that property. The
proceeds of the sale were given to LL’s siblings and EH and
LL
gave LL’s parents a lifelong right of habitation at the
property. This, LL says, was his parents’ way of passing
on
LL’s inheritance before they died.
15
Between 1990 and 2016, EH’s health gradually declined.
She had persistent problems with her back, which required multiple
surgeries. She also developed thyroid problems, high blood pressure
and cataracts. It seems that EH eventually became so ill that
she
required extensive care, which LL says he provided. He also funded at
least some of her medical expenses.
16
As EH’s health continued to decline, LL foresaw the need
to ensure that he would have some formal claim to the properties that
EH shared with him. He prepared wills for both him and EH to sign,
each bequeathing their whole estate to the other. LL signed
a will
leaving his estate to EH, but EH never signed a will leaving her
estate to LL. LL says that this is because she did not
want to face
her mortality, but it seems to me that EH’s reasons for not
wanting to sign a will in favour of LL are not really
discernible
from the evidence.
17
It seems clear from the papers that EH suffered from dementia
towards the end of her life. The burden of caring for her became too
much for LL. He contacted CH and asked for help.
18
Two or three months before EH’s death, CH returned to
South Africa and arranged to have herself appointed as the curator of
EH’s estate. When EH died in July 2016, at the age of 76, CH
was appointed as the executor of EH’s estate. According
to LL,
CH promised, in a fairly vague way, to settle half of EH’s
estate on him, but never followed through.
19
In need of money, LL took steps to sell his parents’
property in Schulensee. This was now possible, as LL’s father
had
died in 2000 and his mother died in 2013.The property sold for
750 000 Euros. Presumably in the course of arranging that sale,
LL discovered that CH had transferred EH’s share of the
Schulensee property to herself. CH eventually received half the
proceeds of the sale.
20
In the two years following EH’s death, the relationship
between CH and LL, which could never have been particularly strong,
deteriorated markedly. They quarrelled about what was due to LL. CH
demanded that LL return EH’s ashes. CH ultimately took
steps to
terminate LL’s occupancy of the Westcliff property. Finally, in
September 2018, LL instituted these proceedings
in the court below.
21
The story I have told so far is taken from LL’s founding
affidavit. It is contested in a lengthy answering affidavit deposed
to by CH. However, that affidavit is noteworthy for its almost
complete failure to address the substance of LL’s case. There
is no serious dispute that LL and EH shared the property development
ventures that I have described; that they lived together after
EH’s
husband died; that they shared their possessions and expenses; that
they had a romantic relationship; and that LL cared
for and supported
EH on his own right up until just before her death.
22
The substance of CH’s affidavit is not directed at
contesting these basic features of LL’s story, but at trying to
place
a different gloss on them. The fact that LL and EH never got
married is asserted in support of the conclusion that there was never
a universal partnership. Much is made of EH’s failure to sign a
will. An aggressively idealised picture of EH’s marriage
to her
husband is painted. CH also denies allegations that LL simply does
not make (for example that LL and EH lived together from
1980). CH
accuses LL of frustrating her attempts to contact EH. CH also takes
issue with various gaps in the substantial documentation
that LL
annexes to his founding affidavit in support of his claims. However,
CH puts up no positive case that would exclude the
conclusion that LL
and EH shared the life that LL says they did. Nor does CH seriously
dispute the core facts LL relies upon in
his founding affidavit. CH’s
answering affidavit contains a great deal of chaff, but almost no
wheat.
23
Affidavits are about facts, not legal conclusions. In order to
create a material and genuine dispute, an answering affidavit must
clearly and unambiguously contradict the facts underlying the claim
advanced in the founding papers. In some cases, a bare denial
might
be enough. However, in most cases, a denial must be accompanied by a
positive factual version in which “a basis is
laid for
disputing the veracity or accuracy of the averment” being
answered (
Wightman t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(A), paragraph 13).
24
Even though CH had been substantially absent from her mother’s
life between 1990 and 2016, there is no suggestion that she
was
unaware of, or that she was not reasonably able to acquire knowledge
of, facts that might have thrown doubt on the core of
LL’s
version. But this she failed to do. I think the irresistible
inference is that there are no such facts available. In
other words,
CH put up no facts to contradict the LL’s version that he and
EH lived together as LL describes in his founding
affidavit, that
they shared the benefits and burdens of the property developments he
described, and the LL cared for and supported
EH in her final years.
25
It seems to me, therefore, that the question of whether and
when LL and EH had tacitly formed a universal partnership must be
decided
substantially on LL’s version.
Does LL’s
version sustain the inference that there was a tacit universal
partnership?
26
I think that LL’s papers do more than enough to sustain
the conclusion that there was such a partnership. LL and EH each
brought
something into the partnership. Most of the money was EH’s.
She appears to have taken on the lion’s share of the cost
of
purchasing and renovating the Westcliff property, of renovating the
Montgomery Park property and of purchasing the
Schulensee
property. The core of LL’s contribution seems to have been in
sweat equity. He renovated the Westcliff and Montgomery
Park
properties using his architectural skill, but he also funded a
significant portion of the renovation costs and serviced the
bond on
the Westcliff property. Most telling, in my view, was LL’s
keenness to share his interest in his parents’ home
with EH.
The purchase of LL’s parents’ home at half its true value
was designed to provide a substantial gain for LL.
LL and EH shared
that gain. CH does not dispute that fact, and she has sought to
benefit from it.
27
These transactions were plainly carried out
for the benefit of both LL and EH. They both lived in the Westcliff
property, and they
would both have benefited from the appreciation in
value of the Schulensee property and from the sale of the Montgomery
Park property
if it had gone ahead.
28
Finally, it follows from all this that,
while LL makes clear that EH was his life partner, their partnership
was also plainly at
least partly about material gain.
In my
view, the probable inference on the undisputed facts is that EH and
LL both intended to enter into, and did in fact tacitly
conclude, a
universal partnership. The partnership commenced on the death of EH’s
husband, and continued until EH’s
death twenty-six years later.
It was one in which each party shared all of their assets with the
other, akin to a marriage in community
of property. Although LL
suggests that a partnership started earlier than EH’s husband’s
death, I do not think that
the universal partnership could have
co-existed with EH’s marriage in community of property with her
husband. It seems to
me that EH could only have intended to enter a
universal partnership with LL after the death of her husband, when
the assets she
shared with LL became exclusively hers to share.
29
That is not the same as saying that a universal partnership
could never co-exist with a marriage in community of property. Much
depends on the nature and object of the partnership, the assets it
encompasses, and the arrangements that might be reached between
spouses married in community of property. In this case, however, LL
contends for a universal partnership that was itself akin to
a
marriage in community of property. The contention is that LL and EH
shared everything. On the facts of this case, EH could only
have
realistically formed the necessary intention to share all her assets
with LL as part of the universal partnership after her
marriage in
community of property with her husband ended. I accept, however, that
LL and EH had probably formed a partnership of
some sort before EH’s
husband died. Because the nature of the partnership changed on EH’s
husband’s death –
and took on a universal character –
I need not consider exactly what sort of partnership that was. It
seems clear, though,
that EH and LL shared assets and industry. Had
their partnership ended before EH’s husband died, LL would
probably have had
a claim based on the ordinary principles of
partnership and donation, where the donor’s intention is to be
considered in
assessing the rights of the parties.
Order
30
The appeal must accordingly succeed. It is clear from the
facts that LL and EH entered a universal partnership that encompassed
all of each party’s assets, and in which they shared in each of
those assets equally. At the point of EH’s death, each
party
owned half of the other’s estate.
31
In light of that fact, LL asked the court below to settle half
of EH’s deceased estate on him. On the facts of this case, that
seems to me to be an entirely appropriate outcome. It accords with
the approach taken by the Constitutional Court in
Bwanya v Master
of the High Court, Cape Town
2022 (3) SA 250
(CC), where it was
recognised that partners in a permanent life partnership in which the
partners have undertaken reciprocal duties
of support are entitled to
inherit as spouses would under section 1(1) of the Intestate
Succession Act 81 of 1987.
32
The effect of this is that LL is entitled to 50% of the assets
that fell into the partnership. He is also entitled to inherit a life
partner’s share of EH’s estate, in terms of
section 1
(1)
of the
Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987
.
33
Mr. Boden, who appeared for LL before us, asked that the costs
in the court below and in this court be paid by CH in her personal
capacity on the scale as between attorney and client.
34
CH’s conduct in this case has been unfortunate. It does
not appear that she ever came to grips with or fully recognised her
mother’s relationship with LL. Shortly before EH’s death,
she placed herself in charge of EH’s assets and ultimately
had
herself appointed
curator bonis
. That application was premised
upon EH being of unsound mind and incapable of managing her own
affairs. The application was brought
ex parte
and without
giving LL notice, in circumstances where CH must have known that LL
had an interest in how CH’s assets were to
be dealt with.
35
Having taken these steps, CH was able to sell EH’
s 1969
280
SL Mercedes Benz for R1.25 million in June 2016, one month before
EH died. CH transferred R1 million into an account opened by her
in
EH’s name on 15 July 2016. Soon after EH’s death, the
proceeds of the sale were then transferred into CH’s
personal
account.
36
CH became EH’s executor three weeks after EH’s
death. Yet CH failed to open the account required under
section 28
of
the
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
in which she was
required to deposit moneys held on the estate’s behalf. CH
misrepresented to the Master that she is permanently
resident in
South Africa in order to obtain letters of executorship.
37
Many of CH’s duties as an executor have gone
unfulfilled.
No liquidation and distribution
account has been filed with the fourth respondent, the Master.
Neither has a cash recapitulation
statement nor an income or
expenditure account. No estate duty account has been submitted.
No extension has been applied for. None of this
has been disputed or explained in CH’s answering affidavit.
In addition, an executor acts in a fiduciary capacity and avoids
conflicts of interest in the performance of their functions. CH’s
conduct has fallen far short of these obligations.
38
Moreover, it seems to me that CH could never seriously have
thought that LL was not entitled to a portion of EH’s estate,
and the pre-litigation correspondence on the record demonstrates that
she accepted that he was entitled to something. Yet her stance
in
this litigation has been one of dogmatic and unfounded opposition.
Her papers give LL no quarter. In particular, apart from
contesting
LL’s claims without the factual basis necessary to do so, CH
makes no effort to quantify the amount to which she
accepts LL is
entitled and to explain why she accepts that he is entitled to it. It
seems to me that this is reason enough to require
CH to pay the costs
of this litigation in her personal capacity.
39
I am not convinced that this means that CH is liable to a
punitive costs order, however. CH is a grieving daughter. Her
conduct,
though worthy of censure, must be assessed in that light. In
light of all the circumstances of this case, I think it is enough
that she be required to pay the costs of this litigation out of her
own pocket on the ordinary scale.
40
Mr. Boden also asserted that there is no basis on which CH can
maintain the detachment required of the executor of EH’s
estate,
and that a new executor must be appointed by the Master. I
accept that this must be so. CH’s failure to administer the
estate
in the manner required by law also makes it unrealistic for
her to continue as the executor.
41
For all these reasons, we make the following order –
41.1 The appeal
succeeds, with costs to be paid by the second respondent in her
personal capacity. The executor of the deceased
estate appointed in
terms of the order below is directed to pay those costs from the
second respondent’s share of the deceased
estate should those
costs not be paid by the second respondent within 30 days of
presentation of a taxed or agreed bill of costs.
41.2 The order of
the court below is set aside, and is substituted with the following
order –
“
1. It is declared
that a universal partnership existed between applicant and EH (“the
deceased”) during the period between
11 December 1990 and 21
July 2016, such that each owned half of the other’s estate.
2. It is declared that
the applicant is entitled to inherit half of the deceased’s
estate.
3. The first respondent
is removed from her position as the executor of the deceased’s
estate in terms of
section 54
(1) (a) (v) of the
Administration of
Estates Act 66 of 1965
.
4. The fourth respondent
is to appoint an executor of the deceased’s estate to replace
the first respondent by no later than
31 March 2024.
5. The executor of the
deceased’s estate must provide for, record and deduct the
applicant’
s 50%
ownership and its value from the assets of the
deceased’s estate in the ordinary course of its administration.
6. The executor of the
deceased’s estate and the fifth respondent are directed to take
the necessary steps to record and transfer
the applicant’
s 50%
ownership of the following immovable properties –
6.1 [...],
Westcliff, Joahnnesburg, also known as ERF [...], Westcliff,
Johannesburg.
6.2 Units 1, 2 and 3 of
Scheme [...], [...], [...], also known as ERF [...], Montgomery Park,
Johannesburg.
7. It is declared that
the applicant is entitled to 50% of the deceased estate’s
undivided half-share of the property known
as [...],
Molfsee-Schulensee, Germany. The second respondent is directed to
repatriate the proceeds of the sale of that property
to South Africa,
which must be deposited into the deceased’s estate’s bank
account within 30 days of a demand from
the executor appointed in
terms of this order.
8. It is declared that
the applicant is entitled to 50% of the funds held in HypoVereinbank,
Munich, Germany, under account number
[...] as at the date of the
deceased’s death. The second respondent is directed to
repatriate the funds held in that account
on the date of the
deceased’s death to South Africa, which must be deposited into
the deceased’s estate’s bank
account within 30 days of a
demand from the executor appointed in terms of this order.
9. It is declared that
the applicant is entitled to 50% of the deceased’s movable
assets including all jewellery. The second
respondent is directed to
provide a full inventory together with sworn valuations of all the
deceased’s movable assets within
10 days of the date of this
order.
10. The second respondent
is directed to account for the proceeds of the sale of the deceased’
s
1969
Mercedes Benz 280 SL and to make payment of the proceeds of that
sale into the deceased estate’s bank within 30 days of a
demand
from the executor appointed in terms of this order.
11. The second respondent
is to pay the costs of this application.
The
executor of the deceased estate is directed to pay those costs from
the second respondent’s share of the deceased estate
should
those costs not be paid by the second respondent within 30 days of
presentation of a taxed or agreed bill of costs
.”
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines, and by
publication of the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 12 December 2023.
HEARD ON: 1
November 2023
DECIDED ON: 12 December
2023
For the Appellant: CE
Boden
Instructed by JJS Manton
Attorneys
For the First, Second and
Third Respondents: P Marx
Instructed by Gerhard
Botha Attorneys
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