Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 454South Africa
Motsioa and Others v eJoburg Retirement Fund and Others (43479/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 454 (6 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Motsioa and Others v eJoburg Retirement Fund and Others (43479/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 454 (6 July 2022)
Motsioa and Others v eJoburg Retirement Fund and Others (43479/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 454 (6 July 2022)
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sino date 6 July 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 43479/20
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
4 July 2022
In the matter between:
PATIENCE
NTOMBIFUTHI MOTSIOA
First
Applicant
LESEISANE
JACOB THATO MOTSIOA
Second
Applicant
TEBOHO
BRIAN MOTSIOA
Third
Applicant
and
eJOBURG
RETIREMENT FUND
First
Respondent
THE
INDEPENDENT PRINCIPAL OFFICER
Second
Respondent
OF THE FUND
MATSHEPO
SELINA RANTO
Third
Respondent
MARAKE
CASBAY MOTSIOA
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME
J
:
[1]
In this matter the Applicants seek an order restraining the first and
second Respondents from
processing any payment over the pension
benefits of the late Johann Motsioa (the deceased) identity number
[....] who died on the
30
th
July 2020. Secondly that the
first and second Respondents are interdicted from transferring and or
paying any portion of the pension
benefits arising from the death of
the deceased to the third Respondent. Thirdly that the
customary marriage allegedly concluded
on 24 February 2018 between
the deceased and the third Respondent be declared void
ab initio
.
Lastly that the first and second Respondents be directed to revise
the distribution percentages of the pension benefits of the
deceased
and exclude the third Respondent.
[2]
The Applicants were granted relief in respect of Part A and soon
thereafter amended their notice
of motion in respect of Part B in
which they seek an order in the following terms:
a)
declaring the customary
marriage allegedly entered into on the 24 February 2018 by the late
Johann Motsioa and the third Respondent
null and void
ab
initio.
b)
That the first and second
Respondents be directed to revive the distribution percentages of the
pension benefits of the late Johann
Motsioa and exclude the third
Respondent.
c)
That first and second
Respondents be directed to pay the pension benefits of the late
Johann Motsioa to persons lawfully entitled
thereto.
[3]
The deceased Johann Motsioa signed a beneficiaries’ nomination
form on the 18
th
December 2019 in which he nominated each
of the second and third Applicants 40% of the proceeds of his
retirement fund and 20%
to his brother the fourth Respondent. The
deceased passed away on the 30
th
July 2020.
[4]
First Applicant and the deceased concluded a marriage in accordance
with civil rights on the 19
th
September 1996. The second
and third Applicants are the children of that marriage. The couple
resided at [....] W [....] S [....]
C [....], Kempton Park.
[5]
During or about the year 2007 the first Applicant left the common
home due to matrimonial problems
between her and the deceased. She
took with her the two sons to her parent’s home, she later
rented a place in the Vaal area.
One of the sons being the
second Applicant went to live with the deceased at the matrimonial
home in Kempton Park and save
for a short period between 2017 and
2018 the second Applicant lived there until the death of his father.
[6]
Shortly thereafter first Applicant filed a claim for the deceased
pension benefits. In February
2021 a lady from Momentum asked
her to furnish her with information about the marriage with the
deceased.
[7]
On the 25
th
May 2021 she received a letter from the first
Respondent under the hand of the second Respondent the letter
informed her that:
i)
An amount of R8 311 422.00
represents the total death
benefit that is due and
payable to all beneficiaries.
ii)
That the Death Benefits
Committee of the fund have allocated to her an amount of
R1 246 000.00.
iii)
That the allocation to her
is based on the fact that she was legally married to the deceased
although estranged. She still remained
a dependant of the deceased.
[8]
The writer of that letter said nothing about how the balance was to
be distributed all that the
letter said invited the Applicant to make
choices as to how she would like to access the benefit. Secondly she
was referred to
the provisions of Section 37 (c) of the Pension Fund
Act.
[9]
The first Applicant objected to the allocation and demanded to be
informed how the total benefits
were dealt with. On receipt of the
letter of objection the second Respondent replied on the 14
th
June 2021 and told the first Applicant that the committee decided to
award her the amount solely on the basis of her marriage but
took
into consideration that she and the deceased were not living together
since 2007, also that she was employed and not dependant
completely
on the deceased lastly that she had not been included in the
nomination form and that the deceased had a customary wife
with whom
he shared a relationship and who had supported the deceased since the
relationship commenced.
[10] It
is significant to note that in her email dated the 8
th
June 2021 addressed to the second Respondent the first Applicant made
it clear that the nomination form only dealt with 50% of
her late
husband’s portion meaning that her sons will each get 40% each
of his 50% and their uncle the fourth Respondent
will receive 20% of
the balance.
[11]
The Applicant decided to escalate her objection to the Pension Fund
Adjudicator on the 11
th
June 2021. In it she reaffirmed
her claim for 50% to be paid to her by virtue of the marriage.
[12]
The Pension Fund Adjudicator dealt with the complaint and dismissed
it and in the process endorsed the allocation
and determination made
by the first Respondent which was:
i)
Ms Rantso (third
Respondent) -
15%
ii)
PN Motsioa
(Applicant)
-
15%
iii)
Teboho (Second
Applicant)
-
25%
iv)
Thato (third
Applicant)
-
25%
v)
MP Motsioa
(Mother)
- 5%
vi)
ME Motsioa
(Sister)
-
5%
vii)
Ms Motsioa
(Niece)
-
5%
viii)
Morake
(Brother)
- 5%
[13]
First and second Respondents are not opposing the declaration of
invalidity of the customary marriage. Incidentally
the third
Respondent had also not filed any opposing affidavit.
[14]
The only prayer remaining is that the first and second Respondents
should revise the allocation and make
payment to persons lawfully
entitled to receive such payment and to revise the allocation.
[15] In
further submissions it was brought to my attention that the first
Applicant is not insisting of being
allocated her 50% in terms of the
marriage to the deceased. Her objection is that there is no basis to
have awarded 15% to the
third Respondent. She asserts that the 15%
should be allocated to her two sons.
[16]
Section 30 of the Pension Fund Act 24 of 1956 permits a party
aggrieved by a determination of the Pensions
Adjudicator to approach
the High Court for relief. It reads as follows:
i)
Any party who feels
aggrieved by a determination of the Adjudicator may within six weeks
after the date of determination apply to
a division of the High Court
which has jurisdiction, for relief, and shall at the same time give
written notice of his or her intention
so to apply to the other
parties to the complaint.
ii)
The division of the High
Court Contemplated in subsection (1) may consider the merits of the
complaint made to the Adjudicator under
Section 30 A (3) and on which
the Adjudicator’s determination was based and may make any
order it deems fit.
[17] I
deem appropriate to first dispose of the two points in
limine
raised by the first and second Respondents. The first one being that
the Applicants adopted an incorrect procedure in that the
Applicants
did not follow the provisions of Section 30P of the Pension Act in
that according to the Respondents the Applicants
on receipt of the
Adjudicators decision should have either approached the High Court or
the Financial Services Tribunal for a reconsideration
of the PFA’s
decision.
[18] I
am failing to understand that argument because it is exactly what the
Applicants did they exercised the
right to approach the High Court
for a review of the PFA’s ruling which is what is before the
Court. I accordingly dismiss
the first point in
limine
.
[19]
The second point in
liming
is that of misjoinder. It is
asserted that the second Respondent should not have been joined in
these proceedings as he is an employee
of the first Respondent and
carried out decisions of the Board of the First Respondent and has no
interest in the outcome.
[20]
The second Respondent is a vital functionary within the
administrative function of the first Respondent and
should be joined
for convenient sake no costs order is sought against the second
Respondent. The court in
Rabinowitz and Another NNO v NED-Equity
Insurance Co Limited
1980 (3) SA 415
(W) at page 419F
held as
follows:
“
I do not think
that the question whether joinder was competent in terms of Rule
10(3) is decisive in regard to the proper order
as to costs. The Rule
is not and was not intended to be exhaustive of the case in which a
Plaintiff may join separate in one action.
(
CF Lewis N.O. vs
Schoeman N.O. and Others
1951 (4) SA 133
NO
). Under common law a
number of defendants may be joined whenever convenience so requires
subject to power of the court to order
separation of the actions.”
[21]
The second Respondent has not indicated what prejudice will befall
him if he is left as a Respondent in this
matter. I accordingly rule
that the second point in
limine
is also without substance and
falls to be dismissed.
[22]
What is now remaining is the merits of this review. The
starting point is in my view the provisions
of Section 37 (c) of the
Pension Fund Act which has been recited at several instances in the
correspondence by the Respondents.
It is a long section comprising of
subsections.
[23]
Section 37 (c) governs the distribution and payment of the lump sums
benefits payable on death of a member
of a pension fund, provident
fund, pension and provident fund preservation fund and retirement
annuity funds. Its intention is
to protect dependants.
[24]
Section 1 of that Act defines dependant as spouses, children and
anyone proven to have been financially dependent
on the member at the
time of the member’s death or anyone who may in future have
become financially dependent on the member
for example a child
conceived prior to the death but born after the death of the member.
[25] A
Board of Trustees entrusted with making a determination as to a
proper distribution of the fund is normally
directed first by the
deceased member’s nomination secondly marital status and lastly
dependency. It is further correct as
the Respondents argue that once
the Trustees have identified all the dependents of the member they
then move on to the second step
which is to determine the nature and
extent of each dependants financial dependency on the deceased
member.
[26] In
this matter it is in determining both the first and second steps that
has resulted in the Applicants questioning
the rationale behind the
determination. In particular, the Applicants seek nullification of
the award made to the third Respondent
on the basis that she does not
qualify both as a dependant or based on her alleged customary
marriage with the deceased.
ALLOCATION
TO THIRD RESPONDENT
[27]
The first and second Respondents justify the allocation of 15%
benefit to the third Respondent on the basis
of a lobola letter dated
the 24 February 2018. They also rely on the affidavit by the
deceased’s brother the fourth Respondent.
In my view the two
documents take that aspect no further and it is neither proof of the
existence of a customary or the absence
thereof. I say this because
of what follows hereafter.
[28] It
is common knowledge that the third Applicant being the son of the
deceased says that the third Respondent
was a helper who came to do
housework once a week at the home. He lived with his father and
confirms that there was no intimate
relationship between his father
and the third Respondent. This is in direct opposition to the
affidavit of the fourth Respondent.
[29]
Secondly the third Respondent herself having being confronted with
the three affidavits coupled with a damaging
report compiled by
Molomafo Assessor decided to keep quiet and not respond thereto. She
is a married woman to another person and
can therefore never have
been legally married to the deceased by way of custom. The provisions
of the Recognition of Customary
Marriage Act require that before a
man concludes a customary marriage during the existence of a
civil marriage that second
marriage should have been consented to by
the partner or wife in the civil marriage.
[30]
Lastly the third Respondent’s name appears nowhere in the
nomination executed by the deceased.
[31] In
their opposing affidavit the first and second Respondents allege that
the reason for allocating 15% to
the third Respondent was not on the
basis of a customary marriage to the deceased but that the third
Respondent was a dependent
of the deceased. This is not what was
indicated in the emails to the Applicant by both the first and second
Respondents including
the PFA. The reason that third Respondent was a
dependant is raised for the first time in the answering affidavit.
This is disingenuous
and bad in law the Respondents can and should
not be allowed to rely on new or additional reason in review
application.
[32]
The decision by the Respondents to allocate a benefit to the third
Respondent was taken on wrong reason and
was irrational and falls to
be set aside.
ALLOCATION
TO FIRST APPLICANT
[33] It
is correct that first Applicant and the deceased were still married
in community of property at the time
of death. They however had been
living apart since the year 2007. The first Applicant is employed and
was strictly speaking not
dependant financially on the deceased. She
was also not a nominee like all the other beneficiaries with
exception of the second,
third and fourth Respondents.
[34]
The first and second Respondents used their discretion based more on
marriage than anything else to allocate
her the 15%. It must be
recalled that the first Applicant abandoned her claim of 50% of the
benefit based on her marriage and correctly
so. It is trite law that
community of property comes to an end when a marriage is terminated.
The proceeds of the Pension Fund
never formed part of the joint
estate of the deceased and the first Applicant accordingly never
became entitled to one half of
the proceeds by virtue of the marriage
in community of property.
[35]
Traverso AJP in
Danielz NO v De Wet
2009 (6) SA 42
C) at paragraph
41 to 43
confirmed that prior to death the proceeds of a life
police do not exist and do not form part of the joint estate.
[36]
The first Applicants counsel informed this Court that first Applicant
is not claiming more than what was
allocated to her she however would
like to see the 15% that was allocated wrongly to third Respondent
being reallocated to persons
lawfully entitled to.
[37]
The question that then remains is whether in terms of Section 30P
this Court has the right to decide to whom
the 15% must be redirected
to.
[38]
The first Applicant pleads the case of her two sons the second and
third Applicants and says that the Trustees
should revise and
allocate the 15% to them based on the fact that both still attend
college and need the money.
[39]
The Respondents argue that once the Trustee have made an award they
become
functus officio
and cannot reply to discussion on this
matter. I do not think that this is the correct meaning of Section
30P. Once a Court has
made a ruling setting aside a determination or
portion thereof it is incumbent that the Trustee carry out that
order.
[40]
The Court in
De Beers Pension Fund v Pension Funds Adjudicator &
Another
[2003] 2 ALL SA 239
C
found as follows:
“
An application in
terms of Section 30P is sui generis and a court in addition to its
powers to review, exercise jurisdiction analogous
to the original
jurisdiction. Consequently, a Court has the power to consider the
complaint but is required itself to assess the
merits of the
complaint and decide whether the adjudication determination was
correct in law. If not the Court will substitute
with its own
decision.”
[41] It
is common cause that the central and core intention of the Act as
Stipulated in Section 37 C is to protect
dependants. The Act serves
as a social function striving to ensue that no one who was
financially dependent on the member is left
without support.
[42]
The second and third Applicants are not only dependants of the
deceased they are heirs to his estate. Over
and above that they were
nominated by the deceased and still attend school. There is a strong
case in my view that the Trustees
should exercise their discretion in
reallocating the now available 15% to second and third Applicants.
[43]
The Applicants have no problem in the rest of the beneficiaries
retaining the amounts allocated to them.
This Court recognises the
fact that the fourth Respondent is still in full time employment as a
Teacher and is accordingly not
a dependent strictly speaking.
[44] It
is hereby directed that without usurping the discretionary powers of
the Trustees that they pay strict
adherence to the principles as set
out in
Sithole vs ICS Provident Fund and Another [2000] 4 BPLR 430
(PFA)
. It is common cause that second and third Applicants were
totally dependent on the deceased unlike the other beneficiaries. The
second Respondent in his letter to the first Applicant said the
following:
“
We can also
confirm that your two major sons had shared in the allocation of
death benefits and the fact that they both were students
was
considered.”
[45] In
conclusion I am persuaded that the application should succeed in so
far as setting aside the allocation
to the third Respondent and
revise the allocation by considering first the second and third
Applicants.
[46] In
the result I make the following order:
ORDER
1.
The application is granted
and I hereby order as follows:
1.1
The Pension Fund
Adjudicator’s determination in confirming the Trustees
allocation of a 15% benefits to the third Respondent
is hereby set
aside.
1.2
The Trustees of the first
Respondent are hereby directed to revise the allocation by
reallocating the 15% mentioned in 1.1 above
to persons lawfully
entitled thereto including the second and third Applicants.
2.
The balance of the
allocation are hereby confirmed.
3.
The first Respondent is
ordered to pay the Applicants taxed party and party costs which shall
include the costs of counsel.
DATED
at JOHANNESBURG this the 06 day of JULY 2022.
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING
:
03 MAY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
06 JULY 2022
FOR
APPELLANT
:
Adv N Mzizi
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
Messrs Phakedi Attorneys
FOR
1
st
& 2
nd
RESPONDENTS
: Adv Roelof Steyn
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
Messrs Minitzers Inc.
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