Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 686South Africa
Mamaila v Mamaila and Others (41975/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 686 (13 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary of relevant facts
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mamaila v Mamaila and Others (41975/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 686 (13 September 2022)
Mamaila v Mamaila and Others (41975/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 686 (13 September 2022)
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sino date 13 September 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
41975/2020
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
13/9/2022
In the matter between:
PATRICIA
MALULEKE MAMAILA
Applicant
and
MAKOMA
MARTHA MAMAILA
First Respondent
ESTATE
LATE MOHALE ENOS
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
Todd AJ.
Introduction
1.
This is Part B of an application
brought by the applicant to remove the first respondent as executor
of the estate of the Late Mohale
Enos Mamaila. The application is
brought in terms of the provisions of
section 54(1)(a)(iii)
and (v)
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
.
2.
The applicant seeks ancillary relief
including directing the first respondent to return the letters of
executorship issued to her
by the third respondent, and directing the
third respondent to appoint the applicant as executor in place of the
first respondent.
3.
The application included a part A in
which the applicant intended to seek interim relief, pending part B,
but Part A was not separately
enrolled, the interim relief was not
sought in advance, and consequently the matter turns on the primary
relief sought by the applicant,
being an order removing the first
respondent as executor and replacing her with the applicant.
Summary of relevant
facts
4.
The relevant facts are briefly these.
5.
The first respondent was the
biological mother of the deceased. The applicant was a customary law
wife of the deceased.
6.
The applicant’s status as a
customary law wife was initially disputed on the papers, and it
remains a subject of contestation,
but the matter has been somewhat
simplified after the applicant produced an order of this court,
sought and obtained on an unopposed
basis, dated 22 October 2020 in
which this court effectively declared the existence of the customary
marriage.
7.
This order was made after the
respective decisions of the third respondent not to appoint the
applicant as executor of the deceased
estate and to appoint the first
respondent as executor.
8.
The relevant sequence of events is
that the deceased died intestate in January 2020. During February
2020 the applicant applied
to be appointed as executor of the
deceased estate.
9.
During March 2020 the applicant’s
attorneys of record, upon enquiry at the office of the third
respondent, were informed that
the applicant could not be appointed
as executor in the absence of an original or certified copy of the
marriage certificate or
proof of registration of the marriage issued
by the department of home affairs.
10.
It transpired that the applicant’s
marriage to the deceased in terms of customary laws had never been
registered during the
lifetime of the deceased.
11.
On the advice of her attorneys the
applicant then set about applying to this court for an order that
would effectively cause her
customary marriage to be registered. That
application ultimately produced the order to that effect dated 22
October 2020.
12.
In the meantime, during July 2020 the
first respondent had applied to be appointed as executor of the
deceased estate. This was
approved and letters of executorship were
issued on 5 August 2020.
13.
After this court’s order on 22
October 2020 concerning the existence of the customary law marriage,
the applicant then launched
this application in December 2020.
Evaluation
14.
As indicated earlier, the application
is brought under the provisions of
section 54
of the
Administration
of Estates Act
(
the
Act
), and
specifically
section 54(1)(a)(iii)
and (v).
1cm; line-height: 200%">
15.
Those provisions state as follows:
“
54
Removal
from office of Executor
–
(1)
An Executor may at any time be removed from his office –
(a)
By the court –
…
(iii)
if he has by means of any misrepresentation or any reward or offer of
any reward, whether
direct or indirect, induced or attempted to
induce any person to vote for his recommendation to the Master as
executor or to effect
or to assist in effecting such recommendation;
or
…
(v)
if for any other reason the court is satisfied that is undesirable
that he should
act as executor of the estate concerned.
”
16.
The applicant relies, in addition, on
the provisions of
section 19
of the Act, which deals with a situation
in which more than one person is nominated for recommendation to the
Master for appointment
as executor.
17.
In fact, that section does not apply
in the present circumstances. I agree with the submission of Ms
Mbhalati, who appeared for
the first respondent, that the section
under which the Master was required to make an appointment in the
circumstances was
section 18
, which deals with the situation where a
person has died without having by will nominated any person to be his
executor.
18.
In any event, the applicant does not
challenge the correctness or appropriateness of the respective
decisions of the Master taken
at the time. Instead, the applicant
approaches this court under
section 54
of the Act, contending that
the first respondent, having been duly appointed as executor, should
now be removed by this court on
grounds arising either under
s54(1)(a)(iii)
or s
54
(1)(a)(v) of the Act.
19.
Mr Maleka, who appeared for the
applicant, submitted that the first respondent had secured her
appointment as executor on the grounds
of misrepresentation or some
other conduct of a similar kind which induced persons to support her
recommendation as executor. In
the alternative, he submitted that
there were grounds on which this court could hold that it is
undesirable that the first respondent
should continue to act as
executor of the estate.
20.
When pressed on what factual basis
was established on the papers for either of these propositions, Mr
Maleka essentially submitted
that the applicant’s status as
common law wife gave rise to an entitlement to be appointed as
executor, that since she and
her child were beneficiaries of the
intestate estate and the first respondent was not this meant that it
was undesirable for the
first respondent to continue to act as
executor, and that the first respondent had no legitimate interest in
continuing to serve
in that role.
21.
In my view, neither of the grounds on
which the applicant relies for approaching the court in terms of
section 54
of the Act are satisfied on the papers.
22.
The fact that the applicant has
established that she was a customary law wife of the deceased does
not by itself establish either
that there was anything wrong with the
Master’s decision not to appoint the applicant as Executor in
the absence of evidence
of the existence of the marriage at the time
he made that decision, or that there was anything improper about the
subsequent decision
to appoint the first respondent as executor. No
case has been made out on the papers for removal of the first
respondent under
either of the subsections relied upon by the
applicant.
23.
Furthermore, it would clearly disrupt
the winding up of the deceased estate to replace the first respondent
as executor at this
stage, more than two years after her appointment.
24.
In summary, no case has been made out
for this court to intervene under the provisions of
section 54.
1cm; line-height: 200%">
25.
In the circumstances the application
falls to be dismissed. Both parties sought an order for costs, and I
am satisfied that costs
should follow the result.
Order
The application is
dismissed, with costs.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
REFERENCES
For
the Applicant:
Adv. K J Maleka
Instructed
by:
Leshilo Inc. Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents:
Mr. L Mbhalati
Instructed
by:
Motanya Madiba Attorneys
Hearing
date:
07 September 2022
Judgment
delivered:
13 September 2022
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