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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 620
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## Jansen Van Vuuren and Another v Momentum Provident Preservation Fund and Others (28160/2020)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 620 (30 August 2022)
Jansen Van Vuuren and Another v Momentum Provident Preservation Fund and Others (28160/2020)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 620 (30 August 2022)
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sino date 30 August 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
28160/2020
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
30 August 2022
In the matter between:
JANSEN
VAN VUUREN: JASON LEON
First Applicant
JANSEN
VAN VUUREN: WESLEY SHELDON
Second Applicant
And
MOMENTUM
PROVIDENT PRESERVATION FUND
First Respondent
METROPOLITAN
LIFE LIMITED
Second Respondent
RICARDO:
TRACEY
ANN
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
Todd AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an application brought under the
provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 2000
(“
PAJA
”)
in which the Applicants seek to review and set aside a decision taken
by the First Respondent in terms of
section 37C
of the
Pension Funds
Act, 24 of 1956
. The decision involved the allocation of a death
benefit that was payable on the death of the Applicants’
father. The First
Respondent decided to pay the whole amount of the
benefit to the Third Respondent.
2.
In addition to seeking to set aside the
decision of the First Respondent regarding the allocation of the
death benefit the Applicants
seek an order substituting that decision
with an order that the whole benefit be paid in equal shares to the
Applicants.
Background and summary
of material facts
3.
The deceased died on 14 October 2018. He
was a member of the First Respondent (
the
Fund
). On his death a death benefit
became payable under the rules of the Fund. This brought the
provisions of
section 37C
of the
Pension Funds Act into
play.
Although the Applicants claim a benefit in an amount marginally
higher than the amount declared by the Fund, nothing turns
on this
for present purposes. The amount declared by the Fund was
R653,288.42.
4.
The provisions of
section 37C
provide, in
relevant part, as follows:
“
(1)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any law or in
the rules of a registered fund, any benefit … payable
by such
a fund upon the death of a member shall … not form part of the
assets of the estate of such a member, but shall
be dealt with in the
following manner:
(a)
If the fund within 12 months of the
death of the member becomes aware of or traces a dependant or
dependants of the member, the
benefit shall be paid to such dependant
or, as may be deemed equitable by the fund, to one of such dependents
or in proportions
to some of or all such dependants.
(b)
…
(bA)
If a member has a dependant and the member has also designated in
writing to the fund a nominee to receive the benefit or such
portion
of the benefit as is specified by the member in writing ot the fund,
the fund shall within twelve months of the death of
such member pay
the benefit or such portion thereof to such dependant or nominee in
such proportions as the board may deem equitable:
….Provided
further that …this paragraph shall not prohibit a fund from
paying the benefit, either to a dependant
or nominee contemplated in
this paragraph or, if there is more than one such dependant or
nominee, in proportions to any or all
of those dependants and
nominees.”
5.
The
obligations imposed on a fund by these provisions have been dealt
with in a number of cases. In
Fundsatwork
Umbrella Pension Fund v Guarnieri
[1]
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated the following:
“
The
effect of
section 37C(1)(a)
, as read with the definition of
“dependant”, is to require a fund, within a period of 12
months from the death of the
member, to identify the dependants of
the deceased who may potentially qualify for an equitable
distribution from the deceased’s
death benefit in terms of
section 37C.
Having once identified the potential class of
dependants, the board of the fund is vested with a large discretion
to determine,
in the light of its assessment of their respective
needs, in what proportions the death benefit will be distributed
among the class
of dependants.”
[2]
6.
In the present matter, after conducting its
investigations the board of trustees of the Fund identified the Third
Respondent, Ms
Ricardo, as being the life partner of the deceased.
The Fund concluded that while the Applicants were indeed both
dependants of
the deceased in the legal sense, they were not
financially dependent on the deceased. By contrast, the Fund
concluded that Ms Ricardo
was financially dependent on the deceased.
The Fund decided in the circumstances to pay 100% of the death
benefit to Ms Ricardo.
7.
The Applicants were dissatisfied with the
decision. They brought a complaint to the Pension Funds Adjudicator
(
the Adjudicator
),
who handed down a determination on 9 July 2020.
8.
The
Adjudicator upheld the complaint. It set aside the decision of the
Fund and ordered it to reconsider the death benefit allocation.
In
its reasoning the Adjudicator summarised the responsibilities of a
board when dealing with the payment of death benefits and
referred to
the often repeated summary of those duties set out in
Sithole
v ICS Provident Fund and another
[3]
.
9.
The essence of the Adjudicator’s
reasons for setting aside the decision are to be found in paragraph
5.9 of the Adjudicator’s
decision:
“
The
facts indicate that the deceased nominated the complainants to
receive his death benefit and they were not allocated the death
benefit.
Section 37C(1)(bA)
provides that if a member has a dependent
and has also designated in writing to the fund a nominee, the board
should consider the
allocation of the death benefit to such
dependents and/or nominees. Therefore, the complainants should be
considered as nominees
of the deceased. The court
[4]
held in the matter of Gowing v Lifestyle Retirement Annuity and
others [2007] 2 BPLR 212 at 219B (PFA), that it is incorrect in
assuming that once a dependent is identified, the claim of a nominee
need no longer be entertained. The First Respondent is also
wrong in
relying on the fact that the complainants were not financially
dependent on the deceased. This confuses the nature of
the respective
type of a beneficiary. A nominee is not entitled to be considered as
a beneficiary because he or she was financially
dependent on the
deceased. The entitlement flows from the fact that the person
concerned was nominated by the deceased. Thus, the
complainants’
financial dependency on the deceased is irrelevant as they are
nominees. It is therefore not necessary for
the complainants to prove
their financial dependency on the deceased and the First Respondent
should re-consider its allocation
as their entitlement flows from the
fact that they were nominated by the deceased and no more is
required. The complainants need
not prove any dependency on the
deceased nor hardship in terms of loss of support from his demise.”
10.
Following this reasoning the Adjudicator
concluded that the board had acted irrationally and misdirected
itself in the way it had
applied the legal framework to the facts and
stated that the board should reconsider the allocation of the death
benefit in terms
of
section 37C(1)(bA)
of the Act in respect of the
complainants in their capacity as nominees.
11.
Following the Adjudicator’s
determination the Fund reconsidered the distribution of the death
benefit. Having done so, it
again decided to allocate the whole of
the death benefit to Ms Ricardo. In a letter dated 20 July 2020
addressed to the Adjudicator
and the Applicants the Fund explained
its reasons for this decision.
12.
In that letter the Fund explained that no
new information had been placed before its trustees following their
initial consideration
of the matter and consequently that the
trustees had reconsidered the matter on the strength of the
information that had previously
been made available to them. The
approach of the Fund, it went on to explain, was that the trustees
accepted that the Applicants
were dependants of the deceased as a
result of being children of the deceased. They were identified as
dependants together with
Ms Ricardo, and the trustees then applied
themselves to an equitable distribution of the benefit as
contemplated in
section 37C(1)(a).
1cm; line-height: 200%">
13.
The Fund explained that it had taken “a
basket of factors” into account in making its assessment of
what was equitable,
taking into account the dependency needs of each
of the three dependants it had identified for possible allocation of
a share of
the benefit (being Ms Ricardo and the two Applicants). The
factors it took into account included the nature and extent of
material
support provided, financial needs including special
circumstances, other sources of income, their ages and future income
earning
capacity, the nature of the relationship with the deceased,
the amount available for distribution, and the wishes of the
deceased.
14.
The Fund then explained its reasoning in
relation to each of the three potential beneficiaries identified in
this way, including
specifically Ms Ricardo and each of the
Applicants. The Fund also explained why notwithstanding having been
nominated as beneficiaries,
the deceased’s sister and brother
were not allocated any portion of the benefit.
15.
As regards the Applicants specifically, the
Fund stated the following:
“
Neither
of the deceased’s sons lived with him.
Since they already
qualify as dependants due to them being the children of the deceased,
they cannot also qualify as nominated non-dependant
nominees. The
deceased’s nominations in his case are therefore merely seen as
an expression of wish.
The trustees had to
consider the financial dependency needs of the sons in order to
determine whether any portion of the benefit
should be allocated to
them. The sons declared the following in sworn affidavits: “I
was not financially dependent on the
deceased… nor was there
any legal liability for support had the deceased not died”.
Furthermore, each were bequeathed
40% (R349,915.60) of the deceased’s
estate. The trustees therefore concluded that they were not
financially dependant on
the deceased.
If the amount
available for distribution was more than what was required to meet
the financial dependency needs of the only financially
dependent
dependant (TA Ricardo), the sons could have qualified for inclusion
in the allocation. However, as stated above, the
benefit available
for distribution is not sufficient to cater for the financial
dependency needs of TA Ricardo and still allow
for the non-dependent
nominees to receive a portion. For this reason, the trustees did not
allocate any portion of the benefit
to the sons.”
16.
The trustees asserted that they had
considered and they had taken into account all relevant factors and
excluded irrelevant factors
and had distributed the benefit in a
manner that was both equitable and reasonable as required by the
provisions of
section 37C
of the Act.
17.
Dealing with the reason why no part of the
benefit was allocated to nominees, the Fund continued as follows:
“
The
fact that certain dependants and the deceased’s nominated
beneficiaries were excluded from the benefit does not mean that
the
trustees only based their distribution decision on financial
dependency. While it plays a role in the distribution of a death
benefit under section 37C(1)(bA), the amount available for
distribution also has to be considered. In this case, the value of
the benefit was not sufficient to cover the needs of a financially
dependent dependant in a meaningful way and still allow for the
non-
financially dependent dependants and non dependent nominees to
receive a portion.”
18.
The Applicants remained dissatisfied with
the Fund’s decision following its reconsideration of the
matter. They then launched
the present application seeking to review
and set aside the Fund’s decision and substitute it with a
decision that the benefit
is payable to them in equal shares.
The applicable legal
principles
19.
In taking the relevant decision the Fund
was exercising a discretion that it undoubtedly had under the
provisions of
section 37C(1)
.
20.
It
is well established that the Fund enjoys a wide discretion –
also described by the Supreme Court of Appeal as a “large”
discretion.
[5]
21.
A reviewing body will not lightly interfere
with a decision taken in the exercise of a discretion of this kind.
The general principle
is that courts will interfere only where it has
been shown that the decision maker has taken into account irrelevant,
improper
or irrational factors, or where its decision can be said to
be one that no reasonable decision maker properly directing itself
could have reached: see for example
Sentinel
Retirement Fund v CV Bold and others
[2017] ZAJPPHC 83 at paragraph [30] referring to the English Court of
Appeal in E
dge and others v Pensions
Ombudsman and another
.
22.
Essentially the principle is that the
ordinary duty which the law imposes on a person who is entrusted with
the exercise of a discretionary
power is that they exercise the power
for the purpose for which it is given, giving proper consideration to
the matters which are
relevant and excluding from consideration
matters which are irrelevant.
23.
The
point that a court or tribunal will be slow to interfere with a
decision of the kind contemplated in
section 37C
has also been made
on a number of occasions by the Pension Fund Adjudicator.
[6]
24.
In
Bato Star
[7]
the Constitutional
Court approved the explanation of Hoexter on the reason for showing
appropriate deference to administrative
decision makers:
“
[46] In the
SCA, Schutz JA held that this was a case which calls for judicial
deference. In explaining deference, he cited with
approval Professor
Hoexter’s account as follows:
“
[A] judicial
willingness to appreciate the legitimate and
constitutionally-ordained province of administrative agencies; to
admit
the expertise of those agencies in policy-laden or polycentric
issues; to accord their interpretations of fact and law due respect;
and to be sensitive in general to the interests legitimately pursued
by administrative bodies and the practical and financial constraints
under which they operate. This type of deference is perfectly
consistent with a concern for individual rights and a refusal to
tolerate corruption and maladministration. It ought to be shaped not
by an unwillingness to scrutinize administration action, but
by a
careful weighing up of the need for and the consequences of judicial
intervention. Above all, it ought to be shaped by a conscious
determination not to usurp the functions of administrative agencies;
not to cross over from review to appeal.”
Schutz JA continues to
say that “[j]udicial deference does not imply judicial timidity
or an unreadiness to perform the judicial
function”. I agree.
The use of the word “deference” may give rise to
misunderstanding as to the true function
of a review court. This can
be avoided if it is realised that the need for courts to treat
decision-makers with appropriate deference
or respect flows not from
judicial courtesy or etiquette but from the fundamental
constitutional principle of the separation of
powers itself.”
(footnotes omitted)
25.
Nevertheless, and despite the existence of
a wide discretion under the provisions of
section 37C(1)
, the
decision must still be one that the Fund can rationally assert is
equitable in the sense contemplated in the subsection.
Evaluation
26.
Ms Crow, who appeared for the First
Respondent, submitted that the Applicants had failed to exhaust
internal remedies before resorting
to PAJA because they had not
challenged the fresh or “reconsidered” decision of the
Fund by bringing a further complaint
to the Pension Funds
Adjudicator. The Applicants had already followed this route. They had
been successful before the Adjudicator,
having secured an order that
the Fund should reconsider its decision, but they remained
dissatisfied when the Fund made the same
decision again. It seems to
me to be somewhat technical to insist that they should again have
referred the matter to the Adjudicator.
The better approach, in my
view, is to treat the Fund’s initial and subsequent decisions
as a continuing course of action
in respect of which the Applicants
have made use of their access to the Adjudicator and now seek to
attack the reconsidered decision.
In those circumstances I am
satisfied that I should consider the review application on its
merits.
27.
Ms Potgieter, who appeared for the
Applicants, described two main grounds on which the Applicants attack
the line of reasoning adopted
by the Fund in explaining its decision.
Both are primarily concerned with questions of fact.
28.
In the first instance the Applicants
contend that Ms Ricardo was, as a matter of fact, neither a life
partner of the deceased nor
financially dependent on him. In this
regard the Applicants point to an affidavit deposed to by the
deceased’s former spouse
disputing that Ms Ricardo was a life
partner, to the fact that Ms Ricardo had in fact made a claim for
expenses from the deceased’s
estate, which indicated that she
was supporting the deceased and not the other way around, and that Ms
Ricardo had provided financial
assistance to the former spouse of the
deceased. In those circumstances they contend that Ms Ricardo could
not as a matter of fact
be considered to have been financially
dependent on the deceased.
29.
I
have considered these points carefully. Where there are disputes of
facts on the papers I must of course, as Ms Crow submitted,
follow
the approach in
Plascon-Evans
[8]
.
I
must also bear in mind that these are review proceedings. The crucial
question is whether the Fund properly took into account
the factual
material presented to it. It is not relevant whether I agree with the
conclusions reached arising from those facts,
unless the Fund reached
conclusions that no reasonable decision maker could have reached in
the circumstances.
30.
I can find no basis on the papers to
interfere with or depart from the conclusions reached by the Fund
following its investigations.
The Fund’s conclusions of fact
appear to have been accepted by the Adjudicator too, treating Ms
Ricardo as a dependant in
her capacity as a life partner and as being
financially dependent on the deceased. Although she did indeed earn a
salary in an
amount of R250,000 per annum, this was clearly taken
into account by the Fund when it considered the extent of her
financial dependency
on the deceased. That she had contributed to the
deceased’s expenses does not seem to me to exclude the
possibility that
she was herself financially dependent on him.
31.
The second main criticism which the
Applicants direct at the Fund’s decision concerns the
conclusion that the Applicants had
not been financially dependent on
the deceased. In this regard the Applicants disavowed their initial
assertion that they were
not financially dependent on their father,
and stated that they were both, at the time of the Fund’s
reconsideration of its
decision, unemployed. This meant, they
submitted, that they should have been considered by the Fund to be
financially dependent
on the deceased. In addition, Ms Potgieter
submitted, the Fund had failed to take into account or to attach
sufficient weight to
the fact that the Applicants were nominated
beneficiaries of the deceased.
32.
In these respects, too, I can find no basis
for interfering with the Fund’s conclusions on the facts,
mindful of course that
these are judicial review proceedings. Both
Applicants had provided the Fund with a positive assertion that they
were not financially
dependent on the deceased. Although they
subsequently recanted from this stance, claiming that they had been
misled by Ms Ricardo
into making that assertion, they failed to
respond to subsequent invitations by the Fund to provide evidence of
the manner or extent
to which they were financially dependent on the
deceased. In those circumstances I cannot fault the Fund’s
conclusion that
they were dependants in their capacity as children of
the deceased, but not financially dependent on the deceased.
33.
This leads then to the final question
which, it seems to me, constituted the essence of the Adjudicator’s
reasoning, which
is whether the Fund may be said to have acted
irrationally by failing to attach sufficient weight to the fact that
the Applicants
were nominated beneficiaries of the deceased; and that
the matter could or should have been dealt with differently, applying
the
provisions of
section 37C(bA).
1cm; line-height: 200%">
34.
The evidence of exactly how or in what
manner the Applicants were nominated as beneficiaries of the death
benefit is unclear, and
no written nomination appears in the papers.
The Fund, however, dealt with the matter on the basis that they were
so nominated,
and for that reason I accept for the purposes of
deciding this application that the Applicants were indeed nominated
beneficiaries.
35.
In
Kaplan
and another NNO v Professional and Executive Retirement Fund
[9]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that the provisions of
section 37C
took
precedence over any nomination of a beneficiary under the rules of a
fund. The court concluded that all
benefits
payable in respect of a deceased member, whether or not subject to a
nomination, must be dealt with in terms of one or
other of the
subparagraphs in
section 37C.
1cm; line-height: 200%">
36.
Ms Potgieter sought to distinguish the
decision in
Kaplan
on the facts, pointing out that in that case the death benefit had in
fact been distributed between a dependant and two nominated
beneficiaries. I accept that that was so in that matter, but this
does not affect the point of law, which is that the provisions
of
section 37C
are peremptory and must be applied. In
Kaplan
the court considered that where
nominees are also dependants the situation falls under subsection
(1)(a).
37.
The
decision in
Kaplan
does not necessarily mean that a nomination should be ignored
completely where there are dependants. As the decision of the court
a
quo
in that case made clear,
[10]
the presence of non-dependant nominees as well as dependants falls
under subsection (1)(bA). And in my view even where nominees
are
dependants and the situation falls under subsection (1)(a) the fact
of a nomination may still be a relevant consideration in
deciding an
equitable allocation. The correct approach, it seems to me, is for
the Fund to determine which subsection to apply,
and then to decide
what allocation is equitable in the circumstances. The Fund was
required to select one subsection under which
it should make a
decision, and it could not apply two subsections at the same time.
Since the Applicants were dependants within
the meaning of (1)(a)
they were indeed considered for a possible allocation of the benefit,
as they were entitled to be.
38.
In this respect, it seems to me, the
Adjudicator’s approach was inconsistent with the reasoning of
the High Court in
Kaplan
,
which considered the nominees referred to in (1)(bA), as in (1)(b),
to be nominees who are not dependants
.
Subsection (1)(bA) does not expressly
refer to a nominee who is not a dependant, but this interpretation
appears to me to be more
consistent with the overall structure of the
section, and is how this court understood the position in
Kaplan.
In any event, it seems to me that
nothing ultimately turns on the question whether the Fund could or
should have applied subsection
(1)(bA) instead of (1)(a) since both
of those provisions require an allocation between the potential
beneficiaries that the Fund
“deems equitable” in the
particular circumstances.
39.
In communicating the outcome of its
reconsideration the Fund gave specific reasons for again deciding to
allocate the whole benefit
to the only person who it had established
was a financial dependent, explaining that the whole benefit was
insufficient to mitigate
the adverse financial consequences of the
death of the person on whom the beneficiary had been financially
dependent.
40.
In those circumstances I am unable to find
fault with the approach of the Fund in dealing with the matter as it
did. The Fund carefully
considered what weight to attach to the fact
of the Applicants’ standing as nominated beneficiaries and it
concluded that
it should treat them as dependents as contemplated in
paragraph 37C(1)(a).
41.
In any event, what the Fund was required to
do, whether under subsection (1)(a) or (1)(bA), was to determine an
equitable allocation
of the benefit. In its view it did so by
allocating the benefit to the only dependent who its investigations
had established was
financially dependent on the deceased, and it
made it clear that its decision to allocate the whole benefit to that
person was
primarily influenced by the consideration that the amount
of the benefit was insufficient to compensate her for the loss of
support
that flowed from the deceased’s demise.
42.
It is possible that the Fund could have
reached a different conclusion on the allocation. It could, for
example, have concluded
that although Ms Ricardo was the only
dependant who had been financially dependent on the deceased it would
nevertheless be equitable
to provide a proportion of the benefit to
each of the Applicants as well in light of their standing as
nominees. That that might
also have been a rational decision, or an
equitable decision, does not have the consequence that the decision
taken by the Fund
was irrational or inequitable, or that it fell
outside the ambit of the discretion afforded to the Fund under
section 37C.
There was more than one possible rational and equitable
decision available in the circumstances. I can see no basis on which
to
conclude that the decision the Fund took was inequitable or
irrational.
43.
In conclusion, the Applicants have not in
my view established grounds under PAJA on which to set aside the
decision reached by the
Fund in the exercise of the discretion
conferred on it by
section 37C.
1cm; line-height: 200%">
44.
Ms
Crow submitted that even if this court were minded to review and set
aside the decision, there are no exceptional circumstances
that would
warrant a decision of this court to step into the shoes of the Fund,
substituting its own decision for the Fund’s
decision regarding
the allocation of the benefit. She referred me in this regard to the
decision of the Constitutional Court in
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited
[11]
.
I would have been inclined to agree with that submission, but in
light of the conclusion that I have reached in the matter it
is not
necessary for me to consider the point further.
45.
As regards costs, both parties sought an
order for costs, I can see no reason why costs should not follow the
result.
Order
46.
In the circumstances I make the following
order: the Application is dismissed, with costs.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
For
the Applicant:
Adv. K Potgieter
Instructed
by:
Klopper Jonker Inc.
For
the First Respondent:
Adv. LS Crow
Instructed
by:
Shepstone & Wylie
Hearing
date:
6 September 2021 & 23 August 2022
Judgment
delivered:
30 August 2022
[1]
[2019]
2 BPLR 321 (SCA)
[2]
at
paragraph [8]
[3]
[2000]
4 BPLR 430 (PFA), at paragraphs 24 and 25
[4]
In
fact the decision referred to was one of the Pension Funds
Adjudicator and not a court.
[5]
in
Fundsatwork
– see the extract referred to in paragraph 5 of this judgment
[6]
S
ee
for example
Ditshabe
v Sanlam Marketers Retirement Fund
[2001] 10 BPLR 2579 (PFA) at 2582 F-G, and
Stacey
Koevort v Old Mutual Protektor Pension Fund
[2005] 1 BPLR 73 (PFA).
## [7]
2004
(4) SA 490 (CC)
[7]
2004
(4) SA 490 (CC)
[8]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 623 (A)
[9]
1999 (3) SA 798
(SCA) at 802J – 803B
[10]
Kaplan
and Another NNO v Professional and Executive Retirement Fund and
Others; Kaplan and Another NNO v VIP Retirement Annuity
Fund and
Others
1998
(4) SA 1234
(W), at 1237G; and see also
Fundsatwork
supra
at footnote 4 of the judgment.
[11]
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC)
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