H v H and Others (35593/2014) [2015] ZAGPJHC 69 (17 April 2015)

80 Reportability
Trusts and Estates

Brief Summary

Wills and Estates — Interpretation of will — Bequest ambiguity — Applicant sought a declaration that a reference to “Autocom (Pty) Limited” in the testator's will was intended to refer to “Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited” — First respondent opposed, asserting the will reflected the testator's true intention — Court held that the reference created a latent ambiguity due to the testator not owning shares in Autocom, allowing for interpretation based on extrinsic evidence — Declaratory order granted to clarify the testator's intention.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter was an application in the High Court concerning the interpretation of a bequest in a will, with an alternative claim for rectification should interpretation not resolve the dispute. The proceedings arose from uncertainty created by a reference in the will to shares in a company which, on the common-cause facts, the deceased did not own.


The applicant was the widow of the late Bruce Edward Hobbs (“the testator”). The first respondent was the testator’s son, who opposed the application. The second and third respondents were cited in their capacities as nominees of Standard Executors and Trustees Limited, and the fourth respondent was the Master of the South Gauteng High Court.


Procedurally, the matter came before the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, as an opposed motion. The applicant sought a declaratory order that the will’s reference to “Autocom (Pty) Limited” was intended to mean “Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited”, alternatively an order rectifying the will by inserting the word “Holdings” after “Autocom”. The first respondent contended that the will accurately reflected the testator’s intention and was capable of being carried out, and that a declaratory order was not competent where the relief was effectively rectification.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the proper construction of testamentary language where a bequest, on its face clear, becomes problematic when applied to the testator’s actual asset structure, particularly in relation to shareholdings held through a holding company and the consequences for a testamentary trust and the residue of the estate.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the testator held 100% of the shares in Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited (“Autocom Holdings”), and that Autocom Holdings in turn held 100% of the shares in Autocom (Pty) Limited (“Autocom”). As a result, the testator held no shares directly in Autocom.


It was also common cause that Autocom Holdings had no bank account or other assets and functioned as a holding vehicle, whereas Autocom was the active trading company and, by February 2014, had cash reserves exceeding R20 million. The testator was the sole director of both companies. During the testator’s lifetime, Autocom provided the income funding the applicant’s and the testator’s day-to-day living expenses and financial needs.


The will (dated 27 August 2013) was drafted by Teubes, a financial consultant/planner employed by Standard Bank of South Africa Limited. In the will, the testator bequeathed to the applicant his motor vehicles and an immovable property in Northcliff (the primary residence).


The will created a testamentary trust in which the applicant was the only income beneficiary. The testator bequeathed to the trustees R3 500 000 and also bequeathed “all the shares in, and loans to Autocom” to the trustees, subject to detailed trust provisions. Those provisions contemplated, among other things, that trustees could retain the shares and loans for as long as auditors considered them sound investments, and could arrange representation on the company’s board if necessary. The trust was to terminate upon the applicant’s death, with the capital then to be transferred to the first respondent.


The will further bequeathed the residue of the estate to the first respondent, without listing specific assets.


A critical consequence of the corporate structure was that, because the testator did not own shares in Autocom, the bequest of “shares in Autocom” could not operate as written, and absent an interpretive solution the value represented by the shareholding would fall into the residue, benefiting the first respondent.


Certain matters were advanced by the first respondent to support his position, including reliance on an earlier will (10 June 2002) and an email referencing a “big policy”, and it was common cause that an investment plan was called up in October 2013 and R4 million was paid to the first respondent. However, the court ultimately identified the decisive factual premise for resolving the interpretive question as the common-cause corporate ownership position and the language and structure of the 2013 will, rather than subjective impressions about intention.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the will’s reference to “shares in and loans to Autocom (Pty) Limited” should, on proper interpretation, be understood as a reference to Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited, given the common-cause fact that the testator owned no shares in Autocom; and, relatedly, whether the appropriate remedy was a declaratory order as to interpretation or rectification of the will.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact: the legal principles governing interpretation of wills and the admissibility/role of extrinsic circumstances had to be applied to the undisputed corporate ownership facts and the contents of the will. It also engaged a classification issue concerning latent ambiguity—whether words clear on their face became uncertain when applied to the external facts—and what interpretive approach was permissible in resolving such ambiguity.


A further issue was the competence of declaratory relief in this context: whether declaring the intended meaning of the words used constituted interpretation (and was competent), or whether it was in substance rectification (and thus required different treatment).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court distinguished between rectification and interpretation of a will, noting that they are different processes. While the applicant framed relief in both forms, the court considered that a declaratory order could be competent if the testator’s intention could be ascertained from the will construed in context. The court referred to authority where declaratory relief had been granted without rectification where a mistaken description could be corrected through interpretation, including Allen v Estate Bloch 1970(2) SA 376 (C), where a bequest misdescribed the asset but the intended subject-matter was ascertainable.


The court stated that in interpreting a will the task is to ascertain the testator’s intention as expressed in the will, rather than what the testator meant to do outside the document. It held that intention is derived from the language used and the context of the whole document, and endorsed the contextual interpretive approach articulated in Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA). The court also articulated the distinction between patent ambiguity (arising from the language itself) and latent ambiguity (arising when apparently clear words become uncertain when applied to external facts). It relied on Ex parte Eksekuteure Boedel Malherbe 1957 (4) SA 704 (C) for the settled principle that extrinsic evidence may be admitted to raise and remove latent ambiguities.


In addressing what materials may be consulted, the court referred to the “armchair approach”, citing Jowell v Bramwel-Jones & Others 1998 (1) SA 836 (W), and explained that the court may have regard to the material facts and circumstances known to the testator when the will was made. However, it emphasised that this process is objective, not subjective, and that it was not a case of equivocation; accordingly, extrinsic evidence of the testator’s intention was not admissible. It cautioned against substituting what seems reasonable or business-like for the words used, again with reference to Endumeni.


The court further referred to the principle that a will should be construed sensibly in light of extrinsic circumstances so as not to render it inoperative, and that courts adopt a “spirit of benevolence” favouring validity where wording is poorly drafted, citing Siebert v Barker NO 2011 JDR 1767 (GNP). It treated this as supporting a construction that gives effect to testamentary dispositions rather than allowing them to fail where a coherent meaning is available.


Applying these principles, the court found that the words “shares in and loans to Autocom” were not uncertain in themselves, but became uncertain when applied to the common-cause fact that the testator owned no shares in Autocom. This constituted a latent ambiguity. The court stated that the dispute could and should be decided by reference to the will’s language and context, and the objective fact of non-ownership of shares in Autocom.


The court insisted that the will must be construed as a whole and in accordance with its general scheme. It evaluated the first respondent’s contention that the testator, as an astute businessman, must have deliberately referred to Autocom rather than Autocom Holdings. The court held that this approach left unexplained the objective difficulty: the will would then be bequeathing something the testator did not own. It rejected as “clearly wrong” the submission that the will could be given effect as it stood in relation to the Autocom shares, because the asset was not owned by the testator. It further reasoned that the alternative suggestion—intentionally bequeathing an asset not owned so that it would fail and fall into the residue—would be a strange and unnecessarily complicated way of disposing of assets, particularly where the will elsewhere directly bequeathed benefits and created a structured trust arrangement.


Looking at the will’s overall structure, the court considered it to be a simple document primarily directed at making provision for the applicant through a testamentary trust, with a further mechanism ensuring that on the applicant’s death the trust capital would pass to the first respondent. The will’s inclusion of provisions contemplating trustee representation on the company’s board reinforced, in the court’s view, that the testator intended the trust to hold the relevant company interest and manage it in a way consistent with providing for the applicant during her lifetime.


On that basis, and leaving aside subjective impressions and opinions of deponents, the court concluded that the testator intended to bequeath the shares in Autocom Holdings to the trustees, and did not intend that those shares should fall into the residue of the estate. It found that the reference to shares in Autocom (Pty) Ltd was intended as a reference to Autocom Holdings (Pty) Ltd. Because the court found the intention clear through interpretation, it held it unnecessary to address the alternative claim for rectification.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted a declaratory order declaring that the words “Autocom (Pty) Limited” in clauses 1.2.3 and 2.2 of the will dated 27 August 2013 were intended to be a reference to “Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited”.


The court ordered the first respondent to pay the costs of the application.


Cases Cited


Allen v Estate Bloch 1970(2) SA 376 (C)


Ley v Ley Excecutors and Others 1951 (3) SA 186 (A)


Ex parte Rossouw, NO 1960 (1) SA 403 (GW)


Estate Levitas v Levitas' Minors 1962 (4) SA 385 (T)


Will NO v The Master and Others 1991 (1) SA 206 (C)


Ex parte Essery and Vial NNO: In re Estate Birkett 1980 (2) SA 392 (D)


Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)


Ex parte Eksekuteure Boedel Malherbe 1957 (4) SA 704 (C)


Jowell v Bramwel-Jones & Others 1998 (1) SA 836 (W)


Siebert v Barker NO 2011 JDR 1767 (GNP)


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the will’s reference to “shares in and loans to Autocom (Pty) Limited” created a latent ambiguity because the testator did not own shares in that company. Construing the will as a whole, and applying an objective contextual approach to interpretation, the court found that the reference was intended to mean Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited, the company in which the testator in fact held the shares. The court granted declaratory relief to that effect and found it unnecessary to consider rectification. Costs were awarded against the first respondent.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The interpretation of a will requires determining the testator’s intention as expressed in the will, derived from the language used and construed in the context of the document as a whole, rather than attempting to ascertain subjective intention external to the instrument.


A latent ambiguity arises where words that are clear on their face become uncertain when applied to external facts. In such cases, the court may have regard to material extrinsic circumstances available to the testator at the time of making the will to resolve the ambiguity, applying the “armchair approach” in an objective manner.


In resolving ambiguity, courts prefer an interpretation that gives validity and operative effect to testamentary dispositions and avoids rendering provisions inoperative, adopting a benevolent construction where poor draftsmanship would otherwise cause the bequest to fail, provided the construction remains grounded in the will’s language and scheme.


Where the testator’s intention can be ascertained through interpretation of the will (read contextually and against the common-cause facts), a declaratory order may be competent to clarify the intended reference, and it may be unnecessary to resort to rectification.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2015
>>
[2015] ZAGPJHC 69
|

|

H v H and Others (35593/2014) [2015] ZAGPJHC 69 (17 April 2015)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBERS: 35593/2014
DATE: 17 APRIL 2015
In the matter between:
[H…..], [J……]
[M…….]
..........................................................................................................
Applicant
And
H…], [S…….]
[B…….]
.................................................................................................
First
Respondent
ANNA HACQUEBORD N.O Second
Respondent
( in her capacity as nominee of
Standard Executors and Trustees Limited)
SANDRA STACEY VAN SCHLOOR N.O Third
Respondent
(in her capacity as nominee of
Standard Executors and Trustees Limited)
THE MASTER OF THE SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH
COURT Fourth Respondent
J U D G M E N T
WINDELL J:
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an application regarding
the interpretation of a bequest in the will of the late Bruce Edward
Hobbs (hereinafter referred
to as “the testator”). The
applicant is the wife of the testator. She seeks an order declaring
that the words “Autocom
(Pty) Limited” in the testator’s
will dated 27 August 2013, intended to be a reference to “Autocom
Holdings (Pty)
Limited”. In the alternative the applicant seeks
an order to rectify the will by inserting the word “Holdings”

after the word “Autocom”.
[2] The first respondent is the
testator’s son. He opposed the application and submitted that
the will reflects the testator’s
intention and that no mistake
was made in the drafting thereof. He contended that the will is in
accordance with the testator’s
instructions, and that it is
capable of being carried out.
BACKGROUND
[3] It is common cause that the
testator held 100% of the shares in a company known as Autocom
Holdings (Pty) Limited (hereinafter
referred to as “Autocom
Holdings”). Autocom Holdings held 100% of the shareholding in
Autocom (Pty) Limited (hereinafter
referred to as “Autocom”).
The testator in consequence thereof, held no shares in Autocom.
[4] Autocom Holdings has no bank
account or other assets, and is merely a vehicle for the purposes of
holding the testator’s
shares in Autocom. Autocom is a very
lucrative trading company. In February 2014 Autocom had cash reserves
in the excess of R 20
million. It holds the bank account and the
cash resources. The testator was the sole director of Autocom and
Autocom Holdings.
Whilst the testator was alive, Autocom provided all
the income for the day to day living expenses and financial
requirements of
the applicant and the testator.
[5] The first respondent stated that
the underlying asset in Autocom Holdings (the R20 million) was
intended for him. The first
respondent rely upon an earlier will of
the testator, dated 10 June 2002, in which the testator bequeathed in
trust, to the applicant,
only an amount of R1 250 000.00. At that
time the applicant was not the wife of the testator and was described
by the testator
as his “friend”.
[6] The first respondent further relied
upon an e-mail from the testator shortly before his death, wherein he
made mention of a
“big policy”. The first respondent
claimed that it was a reference to the R20 million. It is common
cause that the
testator called up an investment plan in October 2013
and that R4 million was paid over to the first respondent.
THE WILL
[7] It is undisputed that the author of
the will was one Teubes, a financial consultant and planner in the
employ of Standard Bank
of South Africa Limited.
[8] In the will the testator bequeathed
to the applicant all his motor vehicles and his immovable property in
Northcliff, which
was the primary residence of the testator and the
applicant.
[9] The will made provision for a
Testamentary Trust. The applicant is the only income beneficiary in
terms of the Trust. The testator
bequeathed to the trustees an amount
of R 3 500 000 to be held in trust by them. He also bequeathed all
the shares in, and loans
to Autocom, to the trustees, subject to the
Trust provisions.
[10] In terms of the Trust provisions
the trustees shall:
1. Deal with the capital at their
discretion in terms of the powers conferred on them in the will.
2. Retain any and all shares in and
loans to the company known as Autocom for as long as the auditors of
the company consider these
to be reasonably sound investments.
3. Should it become necessary, to
arrange for the Trust estate to be represented on the board of
directors of the company.
4. Shall pay, use or apply so much of
the net income and/or capital of the Trust as they in their sole
discretion consider necessary
or desirable for the welfare of the
applicant.
5. Terminate the Trust upon the death
of the applicant and pay and transfer the capital of the Trust as it
then exists to the first
respondent.
[11] Without making reference to any
specific assets, the testator bequeathed the residue of his estate to
the first respondent.
[12] Because the testator did not hold
any shares in Autocom, no effect can be given to those portions of
the will which makes reference
to the shares in Autocom, and it must
fall into the residue of the estate. The first respondent contended
that it was in any event
always his father’s intention to
bequeath to him the shares in Autocom Holdings and that it was never
the testator’s
intention to bequeath the shares in Autocom
Holdings to the Trust, of which the applicant is the income
beneficiary.
DECLARATORY ORDER OR RECTIFICATION
[13] The first respondent contended
that the case made out by the applicant was squarely aimed at
rectifying the will and that a
declaratory order was not competent.
[14] In Allen v Estate Bloch 1970(2) SA
376 (C), the testator had bequeathed “my share in stand 61
Richard Street, Selby Township”
when he did not own a share in
the stand, but 130 shares in a holding company which owned the stand.
After analysing the law,
Corbett J (as he then was) granted an order
declaring that the reference to the testator’s share in the
stand was intended
to be a reference to his 130 shares in the holding
company, finding it unnecessary to even rectify the will in those
circumstances.
[15] The rectification of a will is a
totally different process compared to the interpretation of the will.
Notwithstanding the
applicant’s choice of words, I am
satisfied that a declaratory order would be competent if the
intention of the testator
can be ascertained from the will. As is
clear from the majority of the cases dealing with the interpretation
of a will, and depending
on the facts and circumstances of each case,
an applicant would be entitled to a declaratory order. (See Ley v
Ley Excecutors
and Others
1951 (3) SA 186
(A); Ex parte Rossouw, NO
1960 (1) SA 403
(GW); Estate Levitas v Levitas' Minors
1962 (4) SA
385
(T); Will NO v The Master and Others
1991 (1) SA 206
(C); Ex
parte Essery and Vial NNO: In re Estate Birkett
1980 (2) SA 392
(D))
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
[16] In interpreting a will the court
must ascertain not what the testator meant to do when he made his
will, but what his intention
is, as expressed in his will. See Allen
v Estate Bloch supra. The intention can be derived from the language
used in the will
and the context of the whole document. In Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) Wallis JA set out the position as follows in paragraph [18]:
‘The inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision itself, read in context
and having regard to the purpose
of the provision and the background
to the preparation and production of the document.’
[17] The will or a portion thereof may
be ambiguous, either because there is a patent ambiguity arising from
the language used in
the will; or there is a latent ambiguity, when
words that are clear become uncertain or ambiguous when they are
sought to be applied
to the facts on the ground. In Ex parte
Eksekuteure Boedel Malherbe
1957 (4) SA 704
(C) at 711, Van Winsen J
stated the following with reference to the matter of Wilson N.O teen
Estate Wilson 1913 K.P.A:
'It appears to be clear that it has
long been settled that extrinsic evidence is to be admitted to raise
and remove latent ambiguities;
that a latent ambiguity arises from a
description in the will being made impossible, or uncertain in
application, from collateral
circumstances; and that accordingly,
when a bequest is made to a person by a wrong name, evidence may be
given to prove the error
in description, and who was meant by the
testator by the mistaken designation. The will in such case shows
that the testator intended
a benefit to some person whom he had
erroneously or defectively described; such error is discovered, not
from the will itself,
but in the search for the beneficiary.'
[18] In order to clear up this
ambiguity and to arrive at the testator's true intention, reference
may be had not only to the will
as a whole, but to all such extrinsic
evidence available to the testator when he made the will (the
armchair approach). See Jowell
v Bramwel-Jones & Others
1998 (1)
SA 836
(W) at 868B-E.
[19] Sitting in the testator’s
armchair, the court is entitled to have regard to all the material
facts and circumstances
known to the testator. This is not a case of
equivocation and extrinsic evidence of the testator's intention is
not admissible.
This process is objective, not subjective. The court
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they
regard as reasonable, sensible or business-like for the
words actually used. See Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni
Municipality supra at page 604 A-B.
[20] The court should follow a sensible
interpretation with reference to the extrinsic circumstances, to
ensure that the will is
not rendered inoperative. It should interpret
it in a “spirit of benevolence”, even if it might do some
violence to
the language. In Siebert v Barker NO 2011 JDR 1767 (GNP),
Tuchten J summarized it as follows:
‘If the testator's intention is
poorly expressed it may be ascribable to poor draftsmanship. In such
cases our Courts have
adopted a benevolent approach with a view to
lending validity to testamentary dispositions rather than to have
them struck down
as invalid because of vagueness or uncertainty. This
approach has given rise to the presumptions in favour of the validity
and
effectiveness of the dispositions in a will even when the words
used to express them are ambiguous or obscure. Voet states that
the
ordinary meaning of a word is generally not departed from unless it
is clearly contrary to the will of the testator. This principle
is
applicable when the retention of the ordinary meaning of the word
will have the effect that the disposition becomes inutile.
In cases
of ambiguous language it is hence considered most appropriate to
accept the meaning which will cause the disposition in
question to be
valid rather than to fail, provided that such interpretation is not
manifestly in conflict with a legal prohibition.
If something has
been wrongly written in a will, it should be interpreted benevolently
(benigne) inorder to give effect to the
presumed will of the testator
....’
CONCLUSION
[21] The words the testator used when
he bequeathed the shares namely, “shares in and loans to
Autocom”, are not in
themselves uncertain, but their
application to the extrinsic facts, (namely that he did not own any
shares in Autocom), give rise
to uncertainty. This is what is
described as a latent ambiguity.
[22] Having regard to the issues raised
on the papers and in argument, this dispute can and should be decided
only by reference
to the language , the context of the will and the
common cause fact that the testator did not own shares in Autocom.
[23] As in the case of the
interpretation of contracts, it is imperative that the will be
construed as a whole. This means that
all the clauses contained
therein must be read together and interpreted in accordance with the
general scheme of the will. (See
Corbett, Hofmeyr and Kahn, The Law
of Succession in South Africa (2001) 2nd ed at 476-8 and the
authorities cited there).
[24] The first respondent contended
that the testator was an experienced businessman who was well aware
of the difference between
the two companies Autocom and Autocom
Holdings. The testator therefore intended to make reference to
Autocom and not Autocom Holdings.
The first difficulty which the
first respondent faces with this approach is that it leaves
unexplained the unquestionable objective
fact that the testator
bequeathed something that he did not own.
[25] The first respondent further
contended that effect can be given to the will as it stands. This is
clearly wrong. Effect cannot
be given to that portion of the will,
since the asset is not owned by the testator. What the first
respondent is in fact saying
is that his father wanted to bequeath an
asset he did not own; thereby ensuring that effect cannot be given to
it, with the result
that the asset would then fall into the residue
of the estate. If it was the testator’s intention to entrust
the shares he
owned to the first respondent, why did he not bequeath
it directly to him? If the first respondent was correct, and I am of
the
view that he is not, it would indeed be a very strange and
complicated way of dealing with ones assets.
[26] The testator’s will is not a
lengthy complex document. It is a simple straightforward document.
When the will is read
as a whole, it mainly deals with the testator’s
intention to make provision for the applicant. Both applicant and
first respondent
agree that the testator was an astute businessman.
He was Autocom. The biggest asset in his estate was the shares he
held in Autocom
Holdings. There is a presumption in favour of the
validity and effectiveness of the dispositions in a will, even when
the words
used to express them are ambiguous. It is clear from the
contents and the context of the will that it was the testator’s

intention to deal with the shares in his will. He did not bestow the
shares to his son or to his wife. He made provision for a

Testamentary Trust and bequeathed the shares to the trustees. He even
made provision for the trustees to arrange for the Trust
estate to be
represented on the board of directors of the company should it become
necessary. The Trust provisions further provides
for the termination
of the Trust upon the death of the applicant and the payment and
transfer of the capital of the Trust as it
then exists to the first
respondent.
[27] On a careful consideration of the
language and contents of the will, coupled with the fact that the
testator did not own shares
in Autocom, and leaving aside the
subjective impressions and opinions of deponents, I have come to the
conclusion that it was the
testator’s intention to bequeath the
shares in Autocom Holdings to the trustees. It was not the testator’s
intention
that the shares in Autocom Holdings should fall into the
residue of his estate. The reference to the testator’s shares
in
Autocom (Pty) Ltd was intended to be a reference to Autocom
Holdings (Pty) Ltd. As the testator’s intention is clear, it

is unnecessary to consider, or to deal with the applicant’s
alternative claim for rectification.
[28] In the result the following order
is made:
1. Declaring that the words “Autocom
(Pty) Limited in clauses 1.2.3 and 2.2 of the will of the late BRUCE
EDWARD HOBBS dated
27 August 2013 is intended to be a reference to
“Autocom Holdings (Pty) Limited.
2. The first respondent is ordered to
pay the costs of the application.
LWINDELL
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel for applicant: Adv PJ Van
Blerk SC
Instructed by: Martini -Patlansky
Counsel for respondent: Adv C Acker
Instructed by: Pagel Schulenburg
INC
Date of hearing: 10 March 2015
Date of judgment: 17 April 2015