Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 254South Africa
Ngwenya and Others v Masango N.O. and Another (2022/10496) [2022] ZAGPJHC 254 (26 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 April 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ngwenya and Others v Masango N.O. and Another (2022/10496) [2022] ZAGPJHC 254 (26 April 2022)
Ngwenya and Others v Masango N.O. and Another (2022/10496) [2022] ZAGPJHC 254 (26 April 2022)
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sino date 26 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022/10496
REPORTABLE:
NO
(OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
26
April 2022
In
the matter of:
NGWENYA,
GABISILE ESLINAH
First Applicant
MATHETSA,
SETHUTSE
Second Applicant
MODIPA,
THANDO
Third Applicant
and
MASANGO
N.O., NANTULI LUCKY
First Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives via email and upload to the
CaseLines file in
this matter. The date and time of hand down is deemed to be 10:00 on
26 April 2022.
Bester
AJ
[1]
On
6 September 2020, Mr William Sello Tshabalala passed away, triggering
a feud between two families left behind. Sadly, this is
a theme too
often requiring the attention of our courts. The first applicant
claims to have been the deceased’s first customary
wife.
However, the marriage was not registered in terms of the
Recognition
of Customary Marriages Act, 120 of 1998
. Although registration is not
a requirement for validity of a customary marriage,
[1]
a failure to do so creates the potential for challenges to the
existence of the marriage, as is the case here. The first respondent
contends that the deceased and the first applicant were not in a
customary marriage.
[2]
Ms
Masango, who is cited as the first respondent in her capacity as the
executrix of the deceased estate, had, by way of a court
order,
ensured the belated registration of her customary marriage to the
deceased.
[2]
However, the first
applicant contends that the order was not obtained on valid grounds,
and that in fact there had not been a customary
marriage between Ms
Masango and the deceased.
[3]
The second and third applicants are the
deceased’s and the first applicant’s adult sons. The
second respondent, the
Master, does not oppose the application.
[4]
The applicants brought an application
seeking the urgent removal of the first respondent as executrix of
the deceased’s estate,
alternatively that she be directed to
lodge a liquidation and distribution account for the estate. This
relief is sought ostensibly
as interim relief pending Part B of the
application, to be considered in the ordinary course, for a
declarator that the customary
marriage between the first respondent
and the deceased is invalid, alternatively that it is out of
community of property. The application
was formulated and pursued as
if the applicants sought an interim interdict. When queried, Mr
Seloane, appearing for the applicants,
conceded that the relief
sought was final in effect, and not interdictory in nature.
[5]
The
first respondent baldly denies that the first applicant is the
deceased’s (first) customary wife, and that the second
and
third applicants are the sons of the deceased. Although motion
proceedings are not designed to resolve factual disputes,
[3]
the dispute must be real, genuine, and
bona
fide
.
[4]
The first respondent has not seriously and unambiguously addressed
her denial of these facts. She merely states that she “
has
no knowledge of the allegations contained in this paragraph, denies
same and puts
the
applicants to the proof thereof
”.
[6]
The first applicant has set out in some
detail how the marriage between her and the deceased came about. The
inventory for the estate
appears to record both the second and third
applicants as major sons of the deceased. I thus conclude that
applicants, as persons
with an interest in the estate, have the
necessary standing to obtain the relief sought in this application.
[7]
Given the allegations regarding the
improper treatment of estate assets by an executor, I considered it
appropriate to entertain
the application on the urgent basis upon
which it was brought.
[8]
Section 54
of the
Administration of Estates
Act, 66 of 1965
, provides for circumstances in which the court may
remove an executrix from her office. The applicants rely on
section
54(a)(v)
, which provides as follows:
“
54
Removal from office as executor – (1) an executor may at any
time be removed from his office –
(a)
by the Court –
…
(v)
if for any other reason the court is satisfied that it is undesirable
than that he should act
as executor of the estate concerned; …”
[5]
[9]
The factual underpinning of the applicants
claim for the removal of the first respondent as executrix, is, to
say the least, sparse.
The essence of that case is encapsulated in
the following extract from the founding affidavit:
“
44.
My current attorneys of record have addressed correspondences to the
agents of the first respondent, pertaining
to the administration of
the estate. …
45. The
first respondent and her attorneys replied to my attorney’s
correspondence dismissively and uncooperatively.
…
…
48. It
is my submission that the conduct of the first respondent and her
attorneys, covert conduct in failing
to inform the applicants about
the status of the administration of the estate, more specifically
when confronted with a letter
from our attorneys dated 1 December
2021 (original sentence incomplete)…
49. The
aforementioned conduct is suspicious and questionable, and had
created a feeling of distrust in the applicants
as potential heirs or
beneficiaries in the estate. There had also been an altercation
between the applicants and the first respondent,
these altercations
gave rise to applications for a protection order being brought
against the second applicant. These applications
are still pending in
court. The first applicant is not willing to disclose anything
insofar as the estate is concerned.”
[10]
These statements reveal the subjective
views of the applicants, and do not set out facts to supports the
relief sought. The applicants
then list six alleged failures of the
first respondent to comply with the provisions of the
Administration
of Estates Act. The
complaint that the first respondent did not cause
a notice to be published in the Government Gazette and newspapers, as
required
by
section 29(1)
, was rebutted by her with a copy of the
published notice. Similarly, the allegation that she had not opened a
cheque account in
the name of the estate, as required by
section
28(1)(a)
and (b), was rebutted by proof of the existence of the
account attached to the first respondent’s answering affidavit.
[11]
The applicants also complained that the
first respondent failed to notify the first applicant to lodge an
affidavit in support of
her claim. However, no detail is provided,
and it is not apparent from the application what the possible
significance of this complaint
is.
[12]
The applicants also complain that the first
respondent failed to obtain the consent of the Master before
releasing money or property
out of the estate, as required by
section
21(1A).
This section is narrow in ambit. It provides as follows:
“
(1A)
The executor may before the account has lain open for inspection in
terms of
section 35(4)
, with the consent of the Master release such
amount of money and such property out of the estate as in the
executor’s opinion
are sufficient to provide for the
subsistence of the deceased’s family or household.”
[13]
The
founding affidavit contains no evidence that the first respondent had
released any money or property out of the estate. In her
replying
affidavit, read together with a supplementary affidavit filed
thereafter, the first applicant shows that two of the three
vehicles
listed as assets of the estate in the inventory, are currently
registered on eNATIS as owned by the first respondent.
The first
respondent did not seek to file an affidavit in response to these
allegations. She had almost a week to respond to them.
The
appropriate inference must be that she has no answer to this
evidence. Although registration on eNATIS is not proof of ownership
of the vehicles,
[6]
the change
in details certainly creates the impression that the first respondent
treats the vehicles as her personal property.
[14]
The applicants also complain that the first
respondent has to date failed to lodge a liquidation and distribution
account for the
estate.
Section 35
of the
Administration of Estates
Act pro
vides as follows:
“
35.
Liquidation and distribution accounts
(1)
An executor shall, as soon as may be after the last day of the period
specified in the notice referred
to in
section 29(1)
, but within –
(a)
six months after letters of executorship have been granted to him; or
(b)
such further period as the Master may in any case allow,
submit to the master an
account in the prescribed form of the liquidation and distribution of
the estate.”
[15]
The first respondent did not answer to this
allegation at all. I therefore accept that no account has been
lodged, and that no extension
had been requested from the Master. The
first respondent received her letters of executorship on 22 April
2021, and thus had to
lodge the liquidation and distribution account
by the latest in October 2021.
[16]
Section 36
of the
Administration of Estates
Act provides
as follows:
“
36.
Failure by executor to lodge account or to perform duties
(1)
If any executor fails to lodge any account with the Master as and
when required by this Act, or to lodge
any voucher or vouchers in
support of such account or any entry therein in accordance with a
provision of or a requirement imposed
under this Act or to perform
any other duty imposed upon him by this Act or to comply with any
reasonable demand of the Master
for information or proof required by
him in connection with the liquidation or distribution of the estate,
the Master or any person
having an interest in the liquidation and
distribution of the estate may, after giving the executor not less
than one month’s
notice, apply to the Court for an order
directing the executor to lodge such account or voucher or vouchers
in support thereof
or of any entry therein or to perform such duty or
to comply with such demand.
(2)
The costs judged by the Master or to such person shall, unless
otherwise ordered by the Court, be payable
by the executor,
de
bonis propriis.
”
[17]
The applicants, through their attorney,
gave the first respondent the required notice in a letter dated 1
December 2021. The applicants
are at least entitled to the
alternative relief for the lodging of the liquidation and
distribution account.
[18]
The
sufficiency of the cause for removal should be tested by considering
the interests of the estate.
[7]
Whilst a court will not hesitate to remove an executrix where there
is clear positive misconduct, not every mistake or neglect
of duty or
inaccuracy of conduct will sustain such an outcome.
[8]
Where there is a conflict of interest between the executrix’s
personal interests and the interests of the estate, the court
will
usually remove the executrix.
[9]
[19]
However, given the sparsity of facts in the
application, and the limited proof that the executrix had not
complied with her duties,
I am not satisfied that the applicants have
shown that it is in the best interests of the estate to remove the
executrix from the
office.
[20]
In the result I make the following order:
(1)
The first respondent is directed to lodge a
liquidation and distribution account for the estate of the late
William Sello Tshabalala
with the second respondent within 14 days of
date of this order.
(2)
The first respondent shall pay the
applicants’ costs of the application
de
bonis propriis
.
Andy
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
6 April 2022
Date
of judgment:
26 April 2022
Appearance
for the Applicants:
Mr VO Seloane
Instructed
by:
Seloane – Vincent Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
Adv F Matika
Instructed
by:
Nekhevha Mababo Attorneys
No
appearance for the Second Respondent
[1]
Section
4(9)
of the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act.
[2
]
In
terms of
section 4(8)
of the
Recognition of Customary Marriages Act
the
certificate is
prima
facie
proof of the existence of the customary marriage.
[3]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Limited v Van Riebeek Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634 E – 635 C.
[4]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA) at paras 12 and 13.
[5]
The sub-sections preceding this provision are indeed not relevant on
the case pursued by the applicants.
[6]
Marks &
Lamb Classic Cars CC v Kona
2019 JDR 0151 (GP) in par [17].
[7]
Die
Meester v Meyer en Andere
1975 (2) SA 1
(T) at 17 B, referring to
Volkwyn
N.O. v Clarke and Damant
1946
WLD 456
at 464.
[8]
Die
Meester supra
at 16 G - H, with reference to
Sackville-West
v Nourse and Another
1925 AD 516
at 527.
[9]
Grobbelaar
v Grobbelaar
1959 (4) SA 719
(A) at 724 G – 725 A;
Harris
v Fisher N.O.
1960 (4) SA 855
(A) at 861 H – 862 E.
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