Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 37South Africa
Dube v Ndlovu and Others (20/13909) [2022] ZAGPJHC 37 (25 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 January 2022
Headnotes
by Title Deed No: 43109/2010. The property will be referred to as Kagiso Property. In terms of the second Will the applicant was also appointed as the executor of the estate.
Judgment
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## Dube v Ndlovu and Others (20/13909) [2022] ZAGPJHC 37 (25 January 2022)
Dube v Ndlovu and Others (20/13909) [2022] ZAGPJHC 37 (25 January 2022)
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sino date 25 January 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 20/13909
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
25/01/2022
In
the matter between:
DUBE,
SIMANGELE JOHANNA
Applicant
and
NDLOVU
THULISILE
IRENE
First Respondent
MADLALA
BONGANI
ERIC
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH
COURT
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
FLATELA
A.J
Introduction
Can
a court nullify testator’s last and final Will and declare a
previous Will the final Will on the basis that the testator
failed to
bequeath an asset he previously bequeathed to a beneficiary?
[1]
The testator, Mr Samuel Madlala executed
three Wills in his lifetime. The first Will was executed in 2009, the
second Will in 2011
and the third and final Will in 2014. Mr Madlala
was married in community of property with Thelma Thandi Madlala.
Thelma Thandi
Madlala predeceased him. She died in June 2014. The
testator was involved intimately with two other women. The applicant,
who claim
to be his customary law wife brought this application to
have the testator’s second Will declared as his last will. Her
reasons
will be discussed below.
[2]
On 24 June 2011 the testator executed a
Will (the second Will) in terms whereof he bequeathed to the
applicant as a special legacy
his share in the property described as
ERF [....] Kagiso Township, Mogale City Municipality; Registration
Division IQ, Gauteng
Province, held by Title Deed No: 43109/2010. The
property will be referred to as Kagiso Property. In terms of the
second Will the
applicant was also appointed as the executor of the
estate.
[3]
On 2 February 2014 at Ladysmith, the
deceased executed a third Will and revoked all Wills and codicils
previously made by him. In
the third Will the deceased appointed his
heirs Thulisile Irene Ndlovu, the first respondent, Nomsombuluko
Ndlovu (the first respondent’s
mother and alleged customary law
wife) and Mandla Madlala, the second respondent. He bequeathed cash
to them. He bequeathed the
residue of his estate to his spouse Thelma
Thandi Madlala. The deceased appointed ABSA Trust as the Executor of
his estate. The
applicant does not feature at all in this third Will.
[4]
On 5 October 2018, the agent of the
Executor and the Estate Administrators prepared and submitted the
first and final liquidation
account of the estate of the late Samuel
Madlala. The Administrator of the estate regarded the Kagiso Property
as the residue.
He distributed it in equal shares between the first
and second respondent. The deceased spouse, Ms Thelma Madlala
pre-deceased
the deceased.
[5]
Having failed to convince the
administrators to transfer the Kagiso Property to her in terms of the
2011 Will, the applicant launched
these proceedings. In her Notice of
Motion, the applicant is seeking the following relief:
5.1.
Recognizing the Will dated 24 June 2011 as
the relevant and final Will in as far as the deceased intentions
regarding the property
ERF [....], Kagiso Township, Mogale City,
Gauteng;
5.2.
Accepting that all other Wills specifically
failed to deal with aforementioned property and that;
5.3.
Ownership of the property described as ERF
[....] Kagiso Township; Mogale City be transferred to applicant
5.4.
Interdicting the first and second
respondents from any attempt to sell and/or any attempt to evict
applicant from said property.
5.5.
Further and/or alternative relief.
[6]
In her founding affidavit the applicant
states that she is seeking the following relief:
6.1.
that the subsequent Will be declared null
and void, in line with the wish of the deceased in his last Will
dated 24 June 2011;
6.2.
that the first to third respondents be
ordered and directed to furnish the applicant with a full and final
distribution of the late
Samuel Madlala’s Estate, financial and
bank statements, up to the time when the matter was finalised by the
Master of the
High Court;
6.3.
that the first and second respondents be
directed that all the funds that have been unlawfully paid into their
bank accounts in
violation of the 2011 Will be recovered and that she
be provided for a share as well
6.4.
that the respondents be interdicted from
parading themselves as the sole heirs of her late husband Mr Samuel
Madlala.
[7]
The relief sought in the Notice of Motion
is starkly different from the relief sought in the founding
affidavit.
[8]
The application is opposed by the first
respondent only. The second respondent has since died. The third
respondent is not opposing
the application.
[9]
The applicant is seeking final relief. The
evaluation of the affidavits must be in accordance with the Plascon
Evans principle.
[10]
In
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd. v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
Corbett JA said the following to the approach in determining the
facts in motion proceedings for final relief
[1]
‘
It
is correct that, where in proceedings on notice of motion, disputes
of facts have arisen on the affidavits, a final order, whether
it be
an interdict or some other form of relief, may be granted if those
facts averred in the applicant’s affidavits which
have been
admitted by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by the
respondent, justify such an order. The power of the
Court to give
such final relief on the papers before it is, however, not confined
to such a situation. In certain instances, the
denial by respondent
of a fact alleged by the applicant may not be such as to raise a
real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact…If
in such a case
the respondent has not availed himself of his right to apply for the
deponents concerned to be called for cross-examination
under Rule
6(5)(g) of the Uniform Rules of Court. . . and the Court is satisfied
as to the inherent credibility of the applicants
factual averment, it
may proceed on the basis of the correctness thereof and include this
fact among those upon which it determines
whether the applicant is
entitled to the final relief which he seeks. . . Moreover, there may
be expectations to this general rule,
as, for example, where the
allegations or denials of the respondent are so far-fetched or
clearly untenable that the Court is justified
in rejecting them
merely in the papers’.
[11]
In support of the relief sought, the
applicant avers the following:
11.1.
She
met the deceased in 1998. They got involved in a love relationship
and moved in together as husband and wife
[2]
.
11.2.
In
2009 she and the deceased decided to buy the house which was bought
in 2010 and they only moved to their home in 2011
[3]
.
11.3.
Before
the deceased got possession of the title deed, the deceased deposed
to an affidavit at the police station which clearly demonstrated
his
intention to co-own the Kagiso Property with her
[4]
.
11.4.
On 24 June 2011, the deceased executed
second Will. In this Will the deceased awarded the Kagiso Property to
her. The deceased’s
mindset and intention has always been that
the applicant would inherit it.
11.5.
On
16
th
June 2013, she and the deceased married in terms of customary law.
The applicant attached a handwritten lobola agreement letter
allegedly between the deceased and her family
[5]
.
11.6.
There are no children born out of the
marriage, but the applicant avers that they built the house together
with the deceased for
themselves and for her child who was born prior
to the marriage.
11.7.
In
2014 the deceased executed the third will. in this third will, the
deceased made no mention of the Kagiso Property because he
clearly
knew in his mind that the Kagiso property has been bequeathed to
her
[6]
.
11.8.
The deceased died on 24 December 2014 in
her hands on his way to the hospital at his home eMnambithini. The
deceased had requested
the applicant to take him to his place of
birth to take care of him until his death.
[12]
She seeks a declaratory order to the effect
that the third Will is null and void; and to declare the second Will
dated 24 June 2011
as the deceased last Will.
[13]
The applicant states that the Master of the
High Court relied on the Will that had been revoked in denying her
rightful inheritance
despite receiving a letter from the deceased
attorneys regarding the Will dated 24 June 2011.
The
respondent’s case
[14]
The first respondent filed an answering
affidavit, and these facts arise from her answering affidavit:
14.1.
The first respondent is the daughter of the
deceased and one Ms Nomsombuluko Ndlovu whom the deceased bequeathed
cash to. The first
respondent was born in 1980.
14.2.
The first respondent avers that the
deceased was married in community of property to Thelma Madlala who
predeceased him. She attached
a marriage certificate.
14.3.
The first respondent alleges that in 2001
the deceased married one Nomsombuluko Ndlovu, her mother,
customarily. She attached the
letter of agreement between the two
families.
[15]
The first respondent disputes that the
applicant was married to the deceased but admits that they were in a
love relationship. The
first respondent states that she is not known
in the family and that the deceased family was not involved in the
purported lobola
negotiations between the deceased and the first
applicant. She disputes that the applicant was the lawful wife of the
deceased.
[16]
The first respondent denies that the
deceased’s intention was for the applicant to inherit the
Kagiso Property because the
deceased revoked the second Will, wherein
he bequeathed the Kagiso Property to her. The first respondent denies
that signature
in annexure JD4 which purports to be an affidavit
deposed by the deceased regarding co ownership of the property
is contested.
The signature is not like the signature in all three
Wills.
[17]
Furthermore, the first respondent avers
that the deceased was married in community of property at the time of
the alleged marriage
and the purchase of the Kagiso Property. The
deceased therefore had no authority to depose the property belonging
to the joint
estate.
[18]
The first respondent avers that the third
and last Will revoked the second Will and the applicant has no legal
or factual basis
for the relief sought.
[19]
In reply, the applicant avers that the
deceased wife, the late Thelma Thembi Madlala gave consent for her
and the deceased to marry.
She filed an affidavit by one Sizwe Happy
Madlala in support of her averments that it was the intention of the
deceased to leave
him the Kagiso Property. Sizwe is the grandson of
the deceased.
[20]
To counter the allegation of a different
signature in annexure JD4, the applicant also filed an affidavit from
the police confirming
that the commissioner of oaths was working at
that police station.
[21]
The replying affidavit clearly introduced
new facts which the respondents were not given an opportunity to
respond to.
It is trite that the applicant
must plead her case on the founding papers. The new case that she is
pleading on reply will be ignored.
[22]
In her heads of argument that applicant
avers that the requirements of customary marriage were fulfilled. I
will not deal with this
aspect in this matter. The applicant is not
relying on her alleged customary marriage to the deceased to claim
inheritance from
the estate. She relies on the 2011 Will.
[23]
It is trite that the final order may only
granted if the facts averred in the applicant affidavit which has
been admitted by the
respondent together with the facts alleged by
the respondent.
[24]
The pleadings in this matter were not a
model of clarity. Despite this the court was able to identify the
issue in this matter.
The issue is whether the Court can declare a
Will other than the last Will of the testator to be the last Will in
as far as the
Kagiso Property.
[25]
It is common cause that the deceased
executed three wills in his life time, the 2009 Will dated 23 October
2009, the second will
date 24 June 2011 and the third and last will
dated 3 February 2014.
Legal
principles on the interpretation of Wills
[26]
As stated earlier, the deceased executed
three Wills in his lifetime but only two are subject of this
application. Although the
first Will is not subject of this
application it is relevant for the purpose of ascertaining the
intention of the testator.
[27]
A testator has a right to revoke his /her
will as he pleases throughout his lifetime. He/she is allowed to
amend his /her Will as
many times as he/she pleases.
[28]
The issue to be determined by this court is
whether the deceased intended the second Will read with annexure JD4,
which is a copy
of an alleged affidavit deposed to in 2011 to be to
be his final Will within the meaning of s 2(3) of the Wills Act 7 of
1953 (the
Wills Act). Regarding
the affidavit purported to be deposed
by the deceased, the section provides:
‘
If
a court is satisfied that a document or the amendment of a document
drafted or executed by a person who has died since the drafting
or
execution thereof, was intended to be his will or an amendment of his
will, the court shall order the Master to accept that
document, or
that document as amended, 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 in subsection’.
[29]
The
golden rule for the interpretation of Wills is to ascertain the
wishes of the testator from the language used. Once the wishes
of the
testator have been ascertained a court is bound to give effect to
them.
[7]
It follows that where a
bequest has been made in an earlier testamentary disposition it would
require clear and unambiguous language
in a later testamentary
disposition to justify a court finding that the testator had intended
to revoke such bequest.
[8]
[30]
In
Ranbenheimer
v Ranbenheimer
[9]
the
court held that in interpreting a Will, a court must if at all
possible give effect to the wishes of the testator. The cardinal
rule
is that ‘
no
matter how clumsily worded a will might be, a will should be so
construed as to ascertain from the language used therein the
true
intention of the testator in order that his wishes can be carried
out’
.
[10]
[31]
Theron
JA said in
Pienaar
v Master of the Free State High Court
[11]
“
Where
a testator dies leaving more than one testamentary disposition the
wills must be read together and reconciled and the provisions
of the
earlier testaments are deemed to be revoked in so far as they are
inconsistent with the later ones. Where there is conflict
between the
provisions of the two wills, the conflicting provisions of the
earlier testament are deemed to have been revoked by
implication.”
Evaluation
I now deal with the
relevant clauses of the wills
The
2009 Will
[32]
The 2009 Will was executed by deceased at
ABSA BANK BRANCH in Midrand. In terms of this Will he bequeathed his
estate to his spouse
Thelma Thandi Madlala. This Will was executed by
the deceased exactly 10 years after he and the applicant allegedly
moved in together
as the husband and wife. The deceased appointed
ABSA BANK TRUST as executors of his estate.
[33]
In 2010, the deceased bought the Kagiso
Property. According to the Windeed search attached by the first
respondent, the property
in question was purchased in October 2010.
It was registered in the deceased’s name in December 2010.
[34]
In 2011, before the deceased received his
title deed, the applicant alleges that the deceased went to the
police station in Midrand
to depose to an affidavit. The alleged
affidavit is annexed JD4 in which it is alleged that the deceased
stated that he intended
to include the applicant in the ownership of
the Property.
The
2011 Will
[35]
On 24 June 2011, the deceased executed the
second Will and revoked any previous Wills made by him. In this Will,
the deceased deposed
of his estate as follows:
“
LEGACIES
As a special legacy, I
bequeath my share in the house being ERF[....] Kagiso Township to
Simangele Johanna Dube, Identity Number
:[....].
APPOINTMENT OF HEIRS
I hereby appoint as heir
of the balance of my estate, Thelma Thandi Madlala “
[36]
This Will has a reservation clause where
the deceased reserved the right to at any time to ‘
revoke
or alter this will by a new will or adding any codicil, and such will
or codicil signed by him in the presence of two competent
witnesses
signing as such in the presence of each shall be of full force and
effect’.
(My underlining).
The
2014 Will
[37]
On 3
rd
February 2014 at ABSA Bank in Ladysmith, the deceased executed the
third and final Will. It states that:
‘
I,
the undersigned Madlala (ID [....])
Married in of community
of property, hereby revoke all wills and codicils previously made by
me and declare this to be my will.
1.
Heirs
I bequeath my estate as
follows:
1.1
A cash amount of R200 000.00 (Two
Hundred Thousand Rand) to Thulisile Irene Ndlovu (Born 30-07-1980)
1.2
A cash amount of R100 000.00 (One
Hundred Thousand Rand to Nomsombuluko Elizabeth Ndlovu (Born 1
-11-1942)
1.3
A cash amount of R100 000.00(One
Hundred Thousand) to Bongani Eric Madlala (born 29-12-1970)
1.4
The residue to my spouse Thelma Thandi
Madlala’
[38]
The 2014 Will is totally different from the
previous Wills in that the deceased bequeathed cash to his children
and to Ms Nomsumbuluko
Ndlovu who is a mother to the first
respondent. In his previous wills, his children and Ms Nomsumbuluko
never featured.
[39]
The second notable change is that the
applicant is not mentioned at all in the Will. She was replaced as an
executor of the estate,
and she was not listed as one of the heirs.
She was not bequeathed any estate whether in cash or in property.
[40]
The applicant avers that she brought this
application because the Will dated 23 October 2009 and the Will dated
3 February 2014
have made no mention of the Kagiso Property.
According to the applicant, this was because the deceased had already
bequeathed Kagiso
Property to her in terms of the Will dated 24 June
2011 .
Freedom
of Testation
[41]
Freedom
of testation is an inherent foundational right to an individual’s
governance of their affairs. It affords them authority
over their
property and arrangement thereto. Erasmus AJA puts this position as
follows in
BoE
Trust Limited NO & others
[12]
:
‘
Section
25(1) of the Constitution provides that no one may be deprived of
property, except where the deprivation is done in terms
of a law of
general application. What is more, it entrenches the principle that
no law may permit the arbitrary deprivation of
property. The view
that section 25 protects a person’s right to dispose of their
assets as they wish, upon their death, was
at least accepted in
Minister of Education v Syfrets
,
although no decision to this effect was made. This view, is to my
mind, well held. For if the contrary were to obtain, a person’s
death would mean that the courts, and the state, would be able to
infringe a person’s property rights after he or she has
passed
away unbounded by the strictures which obtains while that person is
still alive. It would allow the state to, in a way,
benefit from
someone’s death. Francois du Toit, after having done extensive
research on freedom of testation in South Africa
and in other
jurisdictions, states the position thus:
“
Freedom
of testation is considered one of the founding principles of the
South African law of testate succession: a South African
testator
enjoys the freedom to dispose of the assets which
form
part of his or her estate upon death in any manner (s)he deems fit.
This principle is supplemented by a second important principle,
namely that South African courts are obliged to give effect to the
clear intention of a testator as it appears from the testator’s
will. Freedom of testation is further enhanced by the fact that
private ownership and the concomitant right of an owner to dispose
of
the property owned (the ius disponendi) constitute basic tenets of
the South African law of property. An owner’s power
of
disposition includes disposal upon death by any of the means
recognized by the law, including a last will. The acknowledgement
of
private ownership and the power of disposition of an owner therefore
serve as a sound foundation for the recognition of private
succession
as well as freedom of testation in South African law.”
[13]
‘
Indeed,
not to give due recognition to freedom of testation, will, to my
mind, also fly in the face of the founding constitutional
principle
of human dignity. The right to dignity allows the living, and the
dying, the peace of mind of knowing that their last
wishes would be
respected after they have passed away.
Did
the 2014 Will revoke the 2011 Will?
[42]
The nub of the applicant’s case is
that the 2011 is the final Will as far as the Kagiso Property is
concern. The applicant
avers that the fact that the 2014 Will is
silent on the Kagiso Property which was bequeathed by the deceased in
2011, therefore
the 2011 Will must be regarded as a final Will of the
deceased regarding the Kagiso Property. Simply put, her case is that
the
Kagiso Property must not be regarded as a residue but the
Executor and Master must regard the 2011 Will as the final will in as
far as her inheritance is concern. There is no merit in the
applicant’s argument. It is clear from the language used in the
2014 Will that the deceased intended to revoke all the wills and
codicils made by him and the 2014 replaced all wills and codicil
he
previously made including the 2011 Will. I have already alluded to
the differences between the 2011 and the 2014 Wills. In the
2014
Will, the deceased appointed his children as heirs and he bequeathed
cash to them as their inheritance. The deceased also
named
Nomsombuluko Ndlovu as one of his heirs and he bequeathed cash to her
too. Ms Nomsombuluko Ndlovu is one of his children’s
mothers.
He then bequeathed the residue of the estate to his late wife Thelma
Thembi Dladla. At the time of executing this will
Thelma was still
alive. It seems to me that the deceased knew exactly what residue of
the estate meant at the time of the execution
of the 2014 Will. He
named his heirs and the people he wanted to give inheritance and the
applicant is not one of them unfortunately.
In
my view, the 2014 Will is not even remotely similar to the 2011 Will.
It is a radical departure in character from the 2011 Will.
[43]
Regarding
the Freedom of testation as a constitutionally protected right
;Mhlantla J said in
Wilkinson
and Another v Crawford N.O. and Others
[14]
“
Freedom
of testation itself is constitutionally protected as it implicates
the rights to property, dignity and privacy. This Court
has
acknowledged that freedom of testation “is fundamental to
testate succession”
[44]
With regard to the allegation that it was
not the intention of the testator to revoke the 2011 Will, it bears
to mention that unlike
the first Will , this Will had an amendments
and alteration clause where the testator reserved the right to, at
any time, ‘
revoke or alter this
will by a new will or adding any codicil, and such will or codicil
signed by him in the presence of two competent
witnesses signing as
such in the presence of each shall be of full force and effect’.
[45]
Even if the 2011 Will did not contain the
Revocation Clause, the 2014 Will had its own clear preamble different
to that of 2011
Will. It states, ‘
I,
the undersigned Madlala (ID [....]) Married in of community of
property, hereby revoke all wills and codicils previously made
by me
and declare this to be my will.’
This provision carries no margin of error to sustain finding contrary
to the testator intention.
[46]
The testator in the 2014 Will as in 2011
Will dealt with residue. In the 2011 Will he appointed Thelma Madlala
as heir and he bequeathed
the residue of the estate to her. It is
clear from these wills that the testator’s intention was for
his spouse Thelma Thandi
Madlala to inherit the unspecified assets.
The deceased have other properties in Gauteng and in KwaZulu Natal
according to the
attached First and Final Liquidation and
Distribution Account of the Estate of the deceased. He had not
specified these assets.
In 2014 Will he does not specify these assets
but state that the residue is bequeathed to his spouse Thelma Thandi
Madlala.
[47]
The applicant attached JD14 to show the
testator’s intention that he intended for her to inherit the
house. The JD14 was allegedly
deposed in the police station before
the 2011 Will was drafted on 16 April 2011. The 2011 Will was revoked
by 2014 Will.
[48]
The
language used in the 2014 Will clearly shows that the deceased never
intended the applicant to inherit from his estate and I
must give
effect to that. Brooms J words in
Price
v The Master and others
[15]
[1982]
2 All SA 147
N are apposite:
“
In
a situation such as this where there are two wills, the terms of
which are to some extent identical, but in the main they differ
and
each of which deals with the entire estate, I have great difficulty
in appreciating how they can be reconciled. I have no doubt
that they
cannot stand together and that the later must be construed as
impliedly revoking the earlier… This view accords
with the
general rule state
d by GARDINER,
J.P. in
Vimpany
v.
Attridge
1927
CPD 113
at 115:
"Each
of these wills disposed of the whole of his estate, and the one is
wholly in conflict with the other. Each was what the
Roman lawyers
would call a
testamentum
perfectum.
In
such circumstances, according to the law of Rome and also of South
Africa, the later will would ordinarily operate as a revocation
of
the earlier, even in the absence of a clause of revocation.”
[49]
In my view, the 2014 Will revoked the 2011
Will. The administrator of Estate and the third respondent were
correct to regard the
Kagiso Property as a residue of the estate.
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
_____________________
FLATELA
L
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 10h00 on
25 January 2022.
Date
of Hearing:
13 October
2021
Date
of Judgment:
25 January 2022
Applicants’
Counsel:
Adv Jabu J Mabaso
Instructed
by:
Frans Mashele Incorporated
Respondent’s
Counsel: Adv R Mthembu
Instructed
by:
S E Dube
Attorneys
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd. v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
(53 of 1984)
[1984] ZASCA 51
, para 8 to 9.
[2]
Para
8.1 of the Founding affidavit
[3]
Para
8.2 of the founding affidavit
[4]
Para
7.5 of the founding affidavit
[5]
Para
8.3 of the founding affidavit
[6]
Para
7.4 of the founding affidavit
[7]
Robertson
v Robertson’s Executors
1914
AD 503
at 507;
Cuming
v Cuming
1945
AD 201
at 206
;
Cohen NO v Roetz NO
[1991] ZASCA 173
;
1992
(1) SA 629
(A) at 639A.
[8]
Ex
parte
Adams
1946
CPD 267
at 268.
[9]
Raubenheimer
v Raubenheimer
(560/2011)
[2012] ZASCA 97
, para 23.
[10]
Per
Steyn J in
Masters
v Estate Cooper
1954
(1) SA 140
(C) at 143H-144A.
[11]
Pienaar
v Master of the Free State High Court
(579/10)
[2011] ZASCA112
[12]
BoE
Trust Limited NO & others
(846/11)
[2012] ZASCA 147
[13]
F
du Toit ‘The constitutionally bound dead hand? The impact of
the constitutional rights and principles on freedom of testation
in
South African law’ 2001
Stell
LR
222
at 224
[14]
[2021]
ZACC
[15]
Price
v The Master and others
[1982]
2 All SA 147
N
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