Davies v Van den Heever NO (16865/17) [2019] ZAGPJHC 59 (1 March 2019)

80 Reportability
Insolvency Law

Brief Summary

Insolvency — Release of solvent spouse's property — Application in terms of section 21 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 — Applicant, married out of community of property, sought to have her estate released from her husband's insolvent estate — Dispute arose over ownership of the matrimonial home, with the applicant claiming it was purchased with her funds — Respondent, the trustee, alleged collusion between the applicant and her insolvent husband to prejudice creditors — Court held that the applicant proved her ownership of the property and that there was no evidence of collusion, thus ordering the release of the property from the insolvency proceedings.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned an application brought in the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg in terms of section 21(1) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 for the release of property from an insolvent estate. The proceedings were motion proceedings and turned on whether the applicant, as the solvent spouse married out of community of property, had established a title to property that was valid against the creditors of her insolvent husband.


The applicant was Lara Wendy Davies, the wife of the sequestrated debtor. The respondent was T.W. van den Heever N.O., cited in his capacity as the trustee of the insolvent estate of Mr Davies.


The procedural background was that Mr Davies’ estate was finally sequestrated on 19 April 2016 (following a provisional sequestration sought by ABSA Bank Limited). The respondent was appointed trustee under the Master’s reference number G284 4/2016. Thereafter, on 27 February 2017, the applicant was served with a notice in terms of section 21(5) indicating that the trustee intended to realise the matrimonial home and its contents in terms of the statutory provisions governing the vesting of a solvent spouse’s property in the trustee upon sequestration. The applicant launched the present application to have the relevant property and its contents released from the insolvency administration.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the Oaklands property (the matrimonial home) and its contents were truly the applicant’s property, acquired by her through a title valid against creditors, or whether—on the trustee’s version—the financial arrangements reflected collusion or an improper scheme designed to prejudice creditors.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant and the insolvent were married out of community of property on 3 April 1998 in terms of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984, and that the marriage still subsisted at the time of the application. It was also common cause that Mr Davies’ estate was finally sequestrated on 19 April 2016, and that the respondent was appointed as trustee after sequestration.


After his appointment, the trustee notified the applicant of his intention to realise the matrimonial home situated at […] S. Street, Oaklands, Johannesburg and its contents. The applicant asserted that the Oaklands property and its contents belonged to her and not to the insolvent, and should therefore be released from the insolvent estate.


The applicant’s factual basis for ownership was that she previously owned a property at ERF […] Abbotsford, which she sold (stating a sale amount of R4.1 million) and then purchased the Oaklands property for R5 500 000.00. She also relied on the Windeed and the transfer deed to support the contention that the property was always intended to be hers.


It further appeared from the papers that renovations were effected to the Oaklands property during July 2011 by Romicon Construction CC at a cost of R1 957 760.33. The applicant placed a value on the contents which the trustee sought to realise at R2 597 043.43, and stated the total value of the property and contents sought to be realised as R10 034 803.80.


A central area of factual controversy concerned the inference the trustee asked the court to draw from the way the spouses conducted their financial affairs. The trustee alleged that the insolvent and applicant had colluded to prejudice creditors (and potential creditors) and relied on, among other things, allegations that bond payments were made by the insolvent, that funds were channelled through the applicant’s account, that renovation-related invoices were addressed to the insolvent, and that certain payments were not reflected on the applicant’s bank statements. The trustee also relied on the insolvent’s dealings with an entity referred to as Delta Forklifts, and contended that the applicant had failed to disclose certain information, including receipt of specified amounts (including R120 000 and R50 000 reflected as transfers in December 2013, as described in the papers) and an amount of R600 000.00 linked to Delta.


Notwithstanding these allegations, the court recorded that there appeared to be no dispute about the sources of payment for the Oaklands property together with its renovation, which were set out as consisting of the proceeds of the prior Abbotsford property (R3 050 000.00), a first Nedbank mortgage bond (R2 505 700.00), a second Nedbank mortgage bond (R1 500 000.00), and a cash payment (R554 223.57).


The remaining factual dispute relevant to the outcome was whether the balance/cash component was paid by the insolvent (or otherwise represented his contribution), or whether it was funded by a loan from the insolvent’s mother to the applicant. The applicant’s version was that the insolvent’s mother loaned money to her. Evidence was referenced from the enquiry process indicating that the insolvent’s mother stated that she had loaned money to the applicant without enquiring what it was for, that it was not reduced to writing, and that the applicant had said repayment would occur upon sale of the Oaklands property.


In addition, the trustee contended that an adverse inference should be drawn from the applicant’s failure to attend a section 152 enquiry, despite being subpoenaed, although it was common cause she furnished a doctor’s sick note.


Legal Issues


The primary legal question was whether, in the context of section 21 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936, the applicant (as the solvent spouse) had discharged the onus of proving that the Oaklands property and its contents were acquired by her through a title valid against the creditors of the insolvent spouse, such that the trustee was obliged to release that property from the insolvent estate.


This entailed an issue of the application of law to fact, informed by factual evaluation. The court had to consider whether the applicant’s asserted acquisition and funding of the property reflected a genuine transaction conferring valid title, or whether the arrangements were simulated or otherwise structured in a manner intended to defeat creditors’ rights, as contended by the trustee.


A secondary issue concerned whether the applicant’s non-attendance at the section 152 enquiry justified the drawing of a negative inference against her in the present application, and the legal character of a section 152 enquiry as an investigative mechanism rather than a determinative adjudication of rights.


Court’s Reasoning


The court began by setting out the statutory framework. In terms of section 21(1) of the Insolvency Act, upon the sequestration of the separate estate of one spouse married out of community of property, the separate estate of the solvent spouse also vests in the trustee upon appointment, in the same way as the insolvent spouse’s estate vests. The practical consequence is that property of the solvent spouse may initially fall under the trustee’s control, subject to later release upon proof that it is truly the solvent spouse’s property within the meaning of the Act.


The court then referred to section 21(2), which requires the trustee to release the property of the solvent spouse upon proof, among other things, that the solvent spouse acquired the property during the marriage by a title valid against the creditors of the insolvent spouse, or that it was acquired with property belonging to the solvent spouse (or the income or proceeds thereof), or falls within other statutory protections referred to in the section.


On the question of onus, the court applied the principle stated in Beddy N.O. v Van der Westhuizen 1999 (3) SA 913 (SCA) that in proceedings of this kind the solvent spouse bears the burden of showing that the true transaction resulting in the acquisition of the property was valid and conferred a valid title against the creditors of the insolvent spouse. The court expressed this as requiring the solvent spouse to demonstrate the true validity of title and its validity against creditors, including showing that the transaction was not simulated or designed to defeat creditors’ rights.


Turning to the factual matrix, the court evaluated the trustee’s opposition, which was largely based on inviting the court to infer collusion from the spouses’ financial arrangements, including the use of the same bank account and the insolvent’s role in making payments associated with the applicant’s properties. The court considered, however, that there was no real dispute on the accepted sources of payment for the Oaklands property, which included proceeds from the applicant’s prior property and the mortgage bonds.


The decisive factual question for the court became whether the remaining payment component should be treated as a concealed contribution by the insolvent (supporting the collusion theory) or as a loan to the applicant by the insolvent’s mother. The court noted the account given by the insolvent’s mother during the enquiry and held that, on the papers, there was no basis to reject the applicant’s version that the loan was made to her by the insolvent’s mother. The court rejected the inference sought by the trustee—that the loan was effectively made to the insolvent—as far-fetched on the material before it.


The court also rejected the proposition that collusion should be inferred merely because the insolvent paid the bond. It reasoned that there was no principle that spouses married out of community of property cannot support each other in running family affairs and each other’s affairs during the marriage. In assessing whether the conduct suggested a scheme aimed at creditors, the court also took into account the chronology: the antenuptial arrangement was concluded long before the sequestration, and the sequestration occurred only in 2016. The court considered that the evidence showed the insolvent had been involved in assisting the applicant with her affairs since the marriage, and found no evidence that his involvement from the beginning was done in anticipation of insolvency.


On the issue of the applicant’s failure to attend the section 152 enquiry, the court quoted the relevant part of section 152 and endorsed the view in the authorities that such an enquiry is an investigative procedure that does not contemplate a finding determinative of a person’s rights. On that basis, the court held there was no foundation to draw a negative inference from non-attendance. The court further reasoned that even if it were incorrect on the first point, it would still not draw the inference because there was insufficient information to determine whether the absence was wilful. The court noted that a medical certificate was produced, that there were no details about its contents before the court, and that there was no information showing that the applicant was warned of consequences despite her health condition.


Having applied the statutory test and the onus principle, and having rejected the adverse inferences sought by the trustee, the court concluded that the applicant had made out a case for the relief sought and that the application should succeed.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted an order directing the respondent trustee to release the property situated at […] S. Street, Oaklands, Johannesburg, together with its contents, from the insolvency proceedings instituted against the insolvent in terms of section 21(4) of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936.


The respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the proceedings.


Cases Cited


Beddy N.O. v Van der Westhuizen 1999 (3) SA 913 (SCA) (also reported as 1999 3 All SA 227 (A)).


Rends v Gutman N.O. and Others 2003 (1) SA 93 (C).


Snyman v Rheeder 1989 (4) SA 496 (T).


Coetzer v Coetzer 1975 (3) SA 931 (E).


Kilburn v Estate Kilburn 1931 AD 501.


Nedbank Ltd v The Master of the High Court, Witwatersrand Local Division, and Others 2009 (3) SA 403 (WLD).


Roux v Die Meester en 'n Ander 1997 (1) SA 815 (T).


Podlas v Cohen and Bryden NNO and Others 1994 (4) SA 662 (T).


Legislation Cited


Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 (sections 21(1), 21(2), 21(3), 21(4), 21(5), 23(1) as referred to in the judgment, and 152).


Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984.


Insurance Act of 1923 (referred to in the description of section 21(2) protections).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant, as the solvent spouse, discharged the onus of establishing that the Oaklands property and its contents were acquired by her through a title valid against the creditors of the insolvent spouse, and that the trustee was accordingly obliged to release the property from the insolvent estate under the statutory scheme of section 21.


The court further held that the inference of collusion sought by the trustee was not supported on the papers, including in relation to the alleged re-characterisation of a loan by the insolvent’s mother, and that the mere fact of spousal financial support (including bond payments by the insolvent) did not, on the facts, justify an inference of an improper scheme to prejudice creditors.


The court also held that no adverse inference should be drawn from the applicant’s failure to attend the section 152 enquiry, given the investigative nature of such enquiries and the absence of sufficient material to infer wilful non-attendance.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 21 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 operates so that upon sequestration of the estate of one spouse married out of community of property, the property of the solvent spouse vests in the trustee upon appointment, subject to release when the statutory requirements are met and proved.


In an application by a solvent spouse for release of property under section 21, the solvent spouse bears the onus to show that the true transaction by which the property was acquired was valid and conferred a title valid against the creditors of the insolvent spouse, which includes demonstrating that the acquisition was not simulated or designed to defeat creditors’ rights, as articulated with reference to Beddy N.O. v Van der Westhuizen 1999 (3) SA 913 (SCA).


A section 152 enquiry under the Insolvency Act is characterised as an investigative procedure aimed at obtaining information for administration of an insolvent estate; it is not a forum designed to make determinations of substantive rights, and non-attendance does not, without more, justify an adverse inference in subsequent proceedings concerning property release, particularly where wilfulness is not established on the available material.

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
>>
2019
>>
[2019] ZAGPJHC 59
|

|

Davies v Van den Heever NO (16865/17) [2019] ZAGPJHC 59 (1 March 2019)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO. 16865/17
In
the matter between:
LARA
WENDY
DAVIES                                                                                         Applicant
and
TW
VAN DEN HEEVER
N.O                                                                             Respondent
Summary:
Application in terms of
section 21
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
Husband in a marriage out of community of property sequestrated.
Property of the wife vested in the trustee. The applicant applies
to
have her estate released from the
insolvency
proceedings.
JUDGEMENT
Molahlehi
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Mrs Davis,
who is married out of community of property to Mr Davis seeks an
order in terms of section 21 (1) of the
Insolvency Act,
[1]
(the Act) to have a portion of the estate which, she contends belongs
to her, released from her husband’s insolvent estate.
[2]
The proceedings were
instituted following the order which sequestrated the estate of Mr
Davies (the insolvent) on 19 April 2016
under case number 45769/2014.
The applicant and her insolvent husband married out of community of
property on 3 April 1998 in terms
of the Matrimonial Property Act,
[2]
which marriage still subsists. The estate was finally sequestrated on
19 April 2016.
[3]
Following the
sequestration of the estate, Mr TW Van Der Heerver of D &T trust
(Pty) Ltd was appointed the trustee of the insolvent
estate under the
Master of the High Court's reference number G284 4/2016.
[4]
On 27 February 2017, the
applicant was served with notice in terms of section 21 (5) of the
Act. In terms of the notice, the trustee
informed the applicant that
he intended to realise the matrimonial home situated at […] S.
Street, Oaklands (the Oaklands
property) in terms of section 21 (3)
of the Act. This is the property which the applicant claims ownership
thereof and thus contends
should be released from the insolvent
estate.
[5]
The applicant's case is
that the above property with its contents should be released from the
insolvent estate because it belongs
to her and not the insolvent.
[6]
According to the
applicant the property was purchased from the proceeds of another
property which she previously owned at ERF number
[…]
Abbotsford. She sold that property for R4.1million and then bought
the property at Oaklands for the sum of R5 500 000,
00.
[7]
In contending that the
property was always intended to be hers, she relies on the Windee and
the Transfer Deed.
[8]
During July 14 July 2011,
Romicon Construction CC effected renovations to the property at the
cost of R1 957 760.33. The value of
the contents of the property
which the respondent seeks to realise is R2 597 043.43. The total
value of the property which the
respondent seeks to realize,
according to the applicant is the sum of R 10 034 803.80.
[9]
In brief, the applicant
contends that she purchased the property together with its contents
in her capacity and it is for that reason
that the property and its
contents need to be released from the insolvency proceedings.
The
respondent's case
[10]
Mr Van der Heever, the
insolvency practitioner, deposed to the answering affidavit in
support of the respondent’s case. He
confirms the order made in
favour of ABSA Bank Limited against the insolvent in the sum of R15
414 597, 66 during September 2009.
[11]
Following the above
order, ABSA instituted provisional sequestration proceedings against
the insolvent during February 2016, which
was finally, as stated
above, confirmed on 19 April 2016.
[12]
The essence of the
respondent's case is that the insolvent and the applicant have
colluded to prejudice creditors and potential
creditors of the
insolvent.
[13]
The allegation of
collusion between the insolvent and the applicant is alleged to have
arisen in the following circumstances:
a)
All
bond payments in respect of the Abbotsford property and the Oaklands
property were paid for by the insolvent.
b)
Payment
for the Oakland’s property was paid from monies obtained by the
insolvent from an entity known as Delta Forklifts
and his monthly
salary which was paid into the applicant's account.
c)
The
applicant received R600 000.00 from Delta and two other amounts from
the insolvent’s account on 3 December 2015 in the
sums of R120
000 and R50,000.00.
d)
The
invoices for the payment of renovations done at Oaklands property,
issued by Romicon Construction were issued to the insolvent
and
further that payment on the renovations does not reflect on the
applicant's bank statement.
e)
The
insolvent’s mother advanced money to the applicant which in
reality was on behalf of the insolvent.
f)
The
applicant's affairs, including running both of their bank accounts
were attended to by the insolvent.
g)
The
applicant could not have afforded the payment for the properties from
the salary she received as a teacher including the fact
that she
ceased teaching in 2000 when she opened the business of arranging
children's parties.
h)
Specific
contents of the Oaklands property were supplied by David Muirhead and
Association at the costs of R61 000.00 and R23,000.00
paid for by the
insolvent.
i)
The
insolvent signed the contract for the architectural alterations and
additions to the Oaklands property.
[14]
The respondent also
relied on the answers made during the section 152 inquiry. In
addition to all the other points made about the
inquiry, the
respondent placed emphasis on the fact that the applicant failed to
attend the inquiry. It is common cause that despite
the subpoena the
applicant did not attend the enquiry but submitted a sick note from a
doctor which she relied on as an explanation
of why she could not
participate in the inquiry. It was alleged based on what was said by
the insolvent at the investigation that
she, however, was still able
to lead a "normal life," of attending at shopping malls and
restaurants.
[15]
The other issue raised by
the respondent is that the applicant failed to disclose certain facts
in her application such as monies
from a business venture with
Delta Forklifts and also the salary of the insolvent which was paid
into her account salary, during
December 2013, in the amounts of R120
000,00 and R 50 000,00.
[16]
The respondent further
submitted that Romani Construction which carried out the renovations
at Oaklands property was paid R554 223,
58 in cash. The instruction
to renovate the property was made by the insolvent. There are other
amounts allegedly paid to Romani
CC which were not paid from the
applicant's bank account.
[17]
There are also other
items in the Oakland’s property in the sums of R61 000.00 and
R23 000.00 purchased from David Muirhead
which were paid for by the
insolvent.
[18]
As indicated above this
application is made in terms of s 21(1) of the Act which provides
that the effect of sequestration of the
separate estate of one of the
spouses married out of community of property shall upon the
appointment of a trustee, vest in the
trustee. This means that the
separate estates of the solvent spouse vests in the trustee in the
same way as that of the insolvent
spouse.
[19]
Following his
appointment, the trustee notified the applicant of his intention to
realise the Oakland property and its contents
in terms of s 23 (1) of
the Act.
[20]
In terms of s 21 (2) of
the Act the trustee is obliged to release the property of the solvent
spouse upon proving that:
a)
The
solvent spouse acquired the property during the marriage to the
insolvent spouse by a title valid against the creditors of the

insolvent spouse or;
b)
To
be safeguarded in favour of a solvent spouse by s 28 of the Act or by
the Insurance Act of 1923;
c)
To
have been acquired with any such property belonging to the solvent
spouse or with the income or proceed thereof.
[21]
The onus in proceedings
of this nature, as stated in
Beddy
No v Van der Westhuizen,
[3]
is for the solvent spouse to show that the true transaction that
resulted in the acquisition of the property in question was valid
and
conferred a valid title on him or her. In other words, the solvent
spouse in seeking to have an estate released from the insolvency

proceedings has to demonstrate the true validity of her title and its
validity against creditors of the insolvent. Put in another
way the
solvent spouse has to show that the transaction (s) under which she
acquired the property was not simulated, or designed
to defeat the
rights of creditors.
[4]
[22]
Once the solvent spouse
has discharged the onus of showing that the property in question was
not acquired by improper methods intended
to prejudice the creditors,
the trustee is obliged to release such property from the insolvency
proceedings. The property would,
in other words, have been acquired
by the solvent spouse through her or his resources during the
marriage and such acquisition
would have vested on his/her a valid
title against the creditors of the insolvent spouses.
[5]
Evaluation
[23]
As stated above, the
respondent opposed the applicant's application on the basis that an
inference should be drawn from how the
applicant and the insolvent
conducted their affairs and that in doing so they colluded to
prejudice creditors and or potential
creditors of the insolvent. The
contention is partly based on the manner which the insolvent and the
applicant conducted their
financial affairs. He placed emphasis more
particularly on the fact that the two parties utilise the same bank
account and the
fact that payment of the applicant's properties was
done by the insolvent.
[24]
There seemed to be no
dispute as to the sources of payments for the Oaklands property,
together with its renovation. The payments
were effected in the
following manner:
a)
The
proceeds of aborts for the property, in the sum of R3 050 000.00;
b)
The
first Ned Bank mortgage found in the sum of R2 505 700.00;
c)
The
second  Ned Bank mortgage bond in the sum of R 1 500 000.00 and;
d)
Cash
payment of R 554 223.57.
[25]
It does also appear from
the above that the first payment for the Oaklands property came from
the proceeds of the previous property,
which was owned by the
applicant – Abbotsford property and the two mortgage bonds
obtained from Nedbank.
[26]
The remaining issue is
whether the insolvent or his mother made the balance of the payment
for the property. The version of the
applicant is that the loan was
made to her by the insolvent's mother.
[27]
The insolvent’s
mother indicated during the inquiry that she loaned money to the
applicant without inquiring as to what it
was for and that it was not
in writing. The applicant told her that she would repay the money
upon the sale of the Oaklands property.
[28]
Having regard to the
papers before this court I find no basis to reject the version of the
applicant that the loan was made to her
by the insolvent’s
mother.
[29]
The inference sought by
the respondent that the loan made to the applicant was effectively
made to the insolvent is in my view far-fetched
and stands to be
rejected.
[30]
The proposition that the
alleged collusion between the two should be inferred from the fact
that the payment of the bond was effected
by the insolvent is
unsustainable. There is in this respect, no principle that parties
married out of community of property cannot
support each other in the
running of the family affairs and also each other's affairs during
the marriage.
[31]
In concluding that there
was no collusion to prejudice the creditors consideration has to be
given to the fact that the antenuptial
contract was concluded in
April 1988 and the sequestration of the insolvent took place in
February 2016.
[32]
It has not been disputed
that since the time of the marriage the insolvent has been fully
involved in assisting the applicant with
the running of the affairs
of her estate. There is no evidence that the insolvent's involvement
from the beginning of the marriage
with the affairs of his wife was
done in anticipation of insolvency.
Failure
to attend the inquiry by the plaintiff
[33]
As indicated earlier in
this judgment the respondent contended that an adverse inference
should be drawn against the applicant for
failing to attend the
inquiry and answer questions about the property she claims should be
released from the insolvent estate.
The inquiry was conducted in
terms of s 152 of the Act, and the relevant portion thereof provides
as follows:

If at any time after the
sequestration of the estate of a debtor ... the Master is of the
opinion that the insolvent ... is able
to give any information which
the Master considers desirable to obtain ... he may by notice in
writing delivered to the insolvent
... summon him to appear before
the Master or before a magistrate or an officer in the public service
mentioned in such notice
... and to furnish the Master or the officer
before whom he is summoned to appear with all the information within
his knowledge
concerning the insolvent or considering the insolvent's
estate or the administration of the estate.”
[34]
The authorities are in
agreement that the inquiry in terms s 152 of the Act is simply an
investigative procedure which does not
envisage a finding or
determinative of a person’s rights.
[6]
This being the case I find no basis to draw a negative inference for
the non-attendance of the inquiry by the applicant. In any
case, even
if I were wrong in this regard, I would still not have made the
inference because there is insufficient information
to determine
whether the applicant’s absence was wilful. The report before
this court is that she produced a medical certificate
as an excuse
for not attending the hearing. There are no details as to what the
sick certificate said. There is also no information
that she was
warned of the consequences of her failure to attend despite her
health condition.
[35]
In light of the above
analysis, I find that the applicant has made out a case for the
relief sought, and accordingly the application
stands to succeed.
Order
[36]
In the premises the
following order is made:
1.
The
respondent is ordered to release the property situated at
[…] S. Street,
Oaklands, Johannesburg and its contents from the insolvency
proceedings  instituted against the insolvent
in terms of
section 21
(4) of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
2.
The
respondent is to pay the costs of these proceedings.
__________________
E Molahlehi
of the High Court,
Johannesburg
Representation
For
the Applicant: Adv O Ben-zeev
Instructed
by: Kokkoris Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv JL Kaplan
Instructed
by: Ian Levitt Attorneys
Heard:
19 November 2018
Delivered:
01 March 2019
[1]
Act 24 of
1936
[2]
Act 88 of
1984
[3]
[199] 3 All
SA 227 (A)
[4]
See
Rends v Gutman N.O. & others
2003 (1) SA 93
(C) at 97G;
Beddy N.O. v van der Westhuizen
1999 (3) SA 913
(SCA) at 916H to
917F; Snyman v Rheeder
1989 (4) SA 496
(T) at 505H to 506A; Coetzer
v Coetzer
1975 (3) SA 931
(E) at 936A
[5]
See Kilburn
v Estate Kilburn
1931 A.D. 501
at 507 to 508
[6]
See Nedbank
Ltd v The Master of the High Court, Witwatersrand Local Division,
and Others
2009 3 SA 403
(WLD); Roux v Die Meester en 'n Ander
1997
1 SA 815
(T) at 824B-C; Podlas v Cohen & Bryden NNO and Others
1994 4 SA 662
(T)