Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 625South Africa
Morewane N.O. v Rampoto N.O. and Others (2020/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 625 (29 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 August 2022
Headnotes
in trust for his brother Joseph Rampoto.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Morewane N.O. v Rampoto N.O. and Others (2020/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 625 (29 August 2022)
Morewane N.O. v Rampoto N.O. and Others (2020/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 625 (29 August 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2020/8534
Date
of hearing: 8 August 2022
Date
delivered: 29 August 2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
INTEREST
TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES
REVISED
In
the application between:
MILO MOREWANE
N.O.
Applicant
and
ELIAS RAMPOTO
N.O.
First Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF DEEDS,
JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Is a donation inter vivos of property which you do not own valid?
That is the crisp issue for determination in this case.
[2]
Applicant, the executor in the estate of the Late Magana Victor
Ntholi seeks an order, firstly, declaring that the late Poto
Jacob
Rampoto validly donated the immovable property situated at Erf [....]
M [....] Township, Registration Division I.R., The
Province of
Gauteng ("the property") to the late Ntholi, and, secondly,
that the property must be transferred to the
estate. First respondent
is the executor in the estate of the late Poto Jacob Rampoto, the
current registered owner of the property.
Second to fourth
respondents have not opposed the application.
[2]
A brief history of the matter is as follows:
[2.1] Fourth respondent
was the registered owner of the property until 2002.
[2.2] First respondent's
grandmother. Emily Rampoto resided in the property until her death in
1989.
[2.3] On 18 January 1989,
and after Emily Rampoto's death, the City Council of Katlehong (as it
was then) issued a letter in which
it stated that
the improvements
on the propertv
had been transferred to Emily Rampoto's heir,
Jacob Rampoto, to be held in trust for his brother Joseph Rampoto.
[2.4] The two brothers
continued to reside in the property. Later they rented out the
property so that they could pay for Joseph
Rampoto's care. He passed
away on 30 November 1999.
[2.5] On 7 June 2000
Jacob Rampoto entered into a written deed of donation in terms of
which he donated the property to Ntholi,
which reads (in part) as
follows:
"WHEREAS THE
DONOR
is the right full owner of the immovable property situated
and known as House no.[....] M [....] Section, Katlehong which is
comprised
of a four roomed house (herein referred to as the property)
WHEREFORE THE DONOR
hereby donates the said property to the done who hereby accepts the
donation. " (sic)
[2.6] On 6 February 2002
fourth respondent sold the property to Jacob Rampoto for R 3 432.19.
Transfer to Jacob Rampoto was effected
on 21 June 2002.
[2.7] Jacob Rampoto
passed away on 24 December 2002.
[2.8] On 12 April 2019,
nearly seventeen years after Jacob Rampoto's death, first respondent
was appointed as executor of his estate.
THE
LATE JOSEPH RAMPOTO'S CLAIM TO THE PROPERTY
[3]
Before I deal with the core issue in the matter, I must first briefly
touch on a submission made by first respondent. First
respondent has
taken the extraordinary position that the deceased, whose estate he
administers as executor, acted improperly by
donating the property to
Ntholi. He accuses Jacob Rampoto of failing to fulfil his obligations
as executor of Joseph Rampoto's
estate, of being dishonest, and of
failing to protect the interests of the estate. It is quite an
unusual situation.
[4]
First respondent alleges that the property was "given" to
Emily Rampoto, but that she passed away before she could
take
transfer thereof. The property, it is argued, then vested in her
estate, and was inherited by Jacob Rampoto, who held it in
trust for
Joseph Rampoto. Therefore, respondents say, Jacob Rampoto was not
entitled to donate the property, as it vested in Joseph
Rampoto's
estate.
[5]
In an affidavit deposed to in support of an application to evict the
Ntholi family, first respondent alleged that Emily Rampoto
was
allocated the house in terms of the
Housing Amendment Act. 2001
. and
that, at the time of the "application" it was in the
process of being transferred to her.I am not sure what application
is
being referred to.
[6]
This version cannot be correct. Firstly, the
Housing Amendment Act,
2001
amended the Housing Act, Act 107 of 1997 which came into
operation eight years after Emily Rampoto had already passed away.
Secondly,
the Housing Act did not provide for the allocation of
subsidized housing. Thirdly, the letter of the City Council of
Katlehong,
upon which first respondent relies, merely states that the
improvements on the property were transferred to Jacob Rampoto, to be
held in trust for Joseph Rampoto. There is no indication what right,
if any, Emily Rampoto had to the property itself, nor what
was
intended by the directive that it was to be held in trust for Joseph
Rampoto.
[7]
There is no evidence that Joseph Rampoto had any right to the
property. What I do have is a deed of transfer, which records
that
the property was transferred from fourth respondent to Jacob Rampoto,
in terms of section 13 (1) of the Upgrading of Land
Tenure Rights
Act, Act 112 of 1991. Transfer could only have been effected in terms
of this section if fourth respondent was satisfied
that Jacob Rampoto
held some type of land tenure right to the property, and that his
right was capable of being converted to ownership.
Therefore, Joseph
Rampoto's heirs could not have had any right to the property, and
Jacob Rampoto was entitled to dispose of the
property as he wished.
CAN
A DONOR DONATE FUTURE PROPERTY?
[8]
This brings me to the central question in the matter: Was the
donation by Jacob Rampoto of the property valid, even though he
was
not
[1]
the
owner thereof, only holding a land tenure right at the time of the
donation.
[9]
A donation is an agreement which is induced by pure benevolence
whereby a person who has no legal obligation to do so, undertakes
to
give something to another person, and in respect of which gift the
donor receives no consideration.
l
[10]
It is common cause that when the donation agreement was entered into,
fourth respondent was the registered owner thereof, and
Jacob Rampoto
only had a
spes
that he might take ownership at some stage in
future.
[11]
Voet
[2]
says
that anything
in
commercio
may be donated. He took the view that it was possible to donate all
of one's property, present and future. Grotius stated that
a donation
inter vivos of all property present and future was invalid, as it
impeded the making of a last will. However, Grotius
[3]
did
not oppose the donation of some of the donor's property, which the
donor did not yet own at the time when the donation was made.
Although I cannot find any writings specific to this subject, it
seems to me that the Roman-Dutch writers recognized that one can
donate property which you will only own at some future moment in
time. Van Leeuwen
[4]
was
of the same view as Grotius, that the donation of all of a donor's
estate, present and future, was invalid, as it precluded
the making
of a will. Van Leeuwen also did not have any objection to the
donation of part of a person's future property.
[12]
Voet
[5]
recognized
that one was able to donate the property of another, although he said
that the owner would have to acquiesce in the
donation
for ownership to transfer. However, the fact that the donor did not
own the property at the time of donation did not render
the donation
agreement itself invalid.
[13]
In Meyer v Rudolph
[6]
Mrs
Elsie Rudolph donated to her nephew (inter vivos) all of the cattle
that she would own at her death. By definition the donation
of the
cattle that she would own when she died would include those that she
did not yet own at the time of the donation. Broome
J said:
"In my opinion, the
weight of authority is in favour of permitting a donation of this
kind and the reasons for forbidding it
have ceased to operate. "
[14]
In Lawsa
[7]
the
author says:
"Everything which is
in commercio may be the subject of a donation. If the promise to
donate involves the property of a third
party,
[8]
dominium
will not be passed on transfer to the done unless the third party
acquiesces in the gift. If the third patty has not granted
permission, then the donee can only acquire ownership by means of
prescription. "
[15]
The above passage was quoted with approval in Savvides v Savvides and
Others
8
.
It appears, from the above authorities, that there is no impediment
to a person donating something that he does not own at the
time of
donation. The same principles apply to the sale of property. It is
possible, in South African law, to sell someone else's
property.
[9]
The
seller is obliged to acquire the property and to effect transfer of
ownership to the purchaser, and if he is unable to do so,
he will be
liable for damages. I see no reason why the same should not apply to
a donation agreement.
[16]
In Mc Bride v Jooste and another
[10]
the
Court granted an application for the return of a Porsche motor
vehicle which the first respondent alleged had been donated to
him.
The Court did so on the grounds that the donation agreement had not
been proven. The Court also considered the fact that the
alleged
donor was not the owner of the motor vehicle and said:
"It is important to
note that in a contract of donation the gift is made with the
intention that it should forthwith become
the property of the
recipient and that it would not be returned to the donor under any
circumstances. In my mind that presupposes
that the person making the
donation must have some title to the property which he intends to
donate, which title will give him
the right or power to dispose of
the property. "
[17]
The Court consequently found that even if the agreement had been
proven, it would not have been valid as the applicant had
not been
the owner of the vehicle at the time when it was allegedly donated.
In my view the above remark was an obiter dictum.
However, even if it
were not, I respectfully disagree with the learned Judge. There is no
authority that a donation is aimed at
transferring ownership
'forthwith'. In fact, the authorities are to the opposite effect,
that one may make a donation which will
only take effect far into the
future. Secondly, a donation is not cast in stone and can (with some
exceptions) be revoked at any
stage. The McBride judgment did not
deal with the authorities to which I have alluded, and I respectfully
do not believe that this
dictum reflects the common law position.
[18]
I find, therefore, that the donation agreement was valid, and that
effect should be given thereto.
[19]
I make the following order:
[19.1] It is declared
that the property known as Erf [....] M [….] Township,
Registration Division I.R, The Province of Gauteng
("the
property") was legally donated to the Late Magana Victor Ntholi
by virtue of the deed of donation dated 7 June
2000.
[19.2] Third
respondent is ordered to effect registration of transfer of ownership
to the Estate Late Magana Victor Ntholi;
[19.3] First
respondent is ordered to sign all documents required for the
aforesaid registration of ownership to be effected, failing
which the
Sheriff of Court is authorized and ordered to sign such documents.
[19.4] The first
respondent shall pay the costs of the application.
SWANEPOEL
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT:
Adv. N. Gavoor
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT:
Nzondo Kunene Mosea Inc
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
Adv M. Lebese
ATTORNEYS
FOR RESPONDENT:
Ratseke Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
8 August 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29 August 2022
[1]
Avis v Verseput
1943 AD 331
; Commissioner for Inland Revenue v
Estate Hulett 1990 (2) SA 786
[2]
Commentarius 39.5.10, 19; See also: Van der Linden, Koopmans
Handboek
1.15.1
[3]
Grotius Inleiding 3.2.11
[4]
R.D.L. 4.30.6
[5]
Commentarius 39.5.10
[6]
1917 38 NPD 159
[7]
Joubert, WA, The Law of South Africa (1979 Ed) Vol 8 para. 124; See
also Joubert v Enslin 1910 AD 5
[8]
1986
(2) SA 325 (T)
[9]
Grotius 3.14.9; Van Leeuwen CF 1.4.19.21; Alpha Trust (Pty) Ltd v
Van Der Walt
1975 (3) SA 734
(A); Ally and Others NNO v Courtesy
Wholesalers
(Pty) Ltd
1996 (3) SA 134
(N) at 142 C
[10]
[2015] ZAGPHC 20
(6 February 2015)
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