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[2023] ZAFSHC 489
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Viljoen v Louw NO and Others (56/2020) [2023] ZAFSHC 489 (4 December 2023)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
WILLS AND ESTATES – Will –
Usufruct
–
Right
of usufruct over an immovable property and all movables therein –
Alleges that clause limits right to dispose
of movable property
unless prior approval and consent of sons is obtained –
Further that condition does not apply to
usufruct over immovable
property – Whether subject to sons' approval –
Intentions of testator bestowed an unconditional
usufruct –
Formulated right to satisfy both parties – Sons retained say
in usufruct – Applicant still had
prospect that sons will
allow her use – Plain reading of provisions in 2019 and 2020
wills contextually leaves no doubt
that usufruct was subject to
sons’ approval.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
no:
56/2020
In
the application between:
ADRI
VILJOEN
and
FRANCOIS
CARL LOUW N.O.
LILLY
RAUTENBACH N.O.
DIETER
VILJOEN
DANIEL
VILJOEN
DEWALD
VILJOEN
THE
MASTER OF THE FREE STATE
HIGH
COURT
Applicant
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
Third
Respondent
Fourth
Respondent
Fifth
Respondent
Sixth
Respondent
CORAM:
P R CRONJÉ, AJ
HEARD
ON:
7 SEPTEMBER 2023
DELIVERED
ON:
4
DECEMBER 2023
JUDGMENT
BY:
P R CRONJÉ, AJ
[1]
The Applicant was the second wife of the deceased testator, the Third
to Fourth Respondents
are his sons (“the sons”) from a
previous marriage.
[2]
She seeks an order declaring that clause 2.1 of the last Will of the
testator, dated
18 June 2020, affords her the right of
usufruct
over an immovable property and all movables therein. On her version,
the clause limits the right to dispose of movable property,
unless
she obtains the prior approval and consent of the sons and this
condition does not apply to the
usufruct
over the immovable
property.
[3]
During the testator’s lifetime he executed various Wills in
Afrikaans, some
handwritten and others typed. I freely translate the
provisions of all to English. On 27 February 2013, the relevant
part
of the Will read:
“
I
am presently married to Adri Viljoen, she shall have right of use of
all my houses, and she may also generate an income from the
houses,
it can only happen if she does not marry again. If she
remarries with whomsoever, she has 3 months to find another
place to
stay.
”
[1]
[4]
It is clear that this is an unconditional
usufruct
. The
Applicant states that the testator handed that Will to one Ms Torr,
employed by his attorneys, during or about February 2013
and
requested that it be kept safe.
[5]
During 2016, the testator informed Ms Torr that he was desirous to
amend that Will.
Ms Torr subsequently prepared a new Will.
On 1 April 2016, the deceased executed the Will. Whilst the
2013 Will was
handwritten, the Will of 2016 was typed. That Will did
not create a
usufruct
in favour of the Applicant.
[6]
On 5 November 2019, the testator executed a new Will, revoking the
2016 Will.
Freely translated the relevant parts read as
follows:
“
1.
The properties Fontein Street [...], Ficksburg and Imperani Street
[…], is bequeathed to my three
sons, jointly.
2.
If it carries the approval of the sons
,
I
propose that Adri Viljoen enjoys right of use of the family house
,
Fontein Street [...]. The sale of any assets excluded. It will
last as long as she remains unmarried. If she should
marry or
reside with another person, the usufruct will terminate. There
would also not be for any of the family of the applicant,
e.g. her
children or her family a profit or residence from the usufruct.
It shall be controlled by the sons.
3.
In the event that the house is not cared for, the sons may cancel the
usufruct.
”
[2]
[7]
That Will clearly provide for the approval of a
usufruct
by
the sons. During or about June 2020, the testator consulted with Ms
Torr and informed her that he was desirous to revoke the
previous
Will. The testator was adamant that the immovable property and
its contents must be bequeathed to his three (3)
sons, subject to the
Applicant’s usufruct and on condition that she does not
cohabitate with another man and/or does not
get married. On 18
June 2020, the testator perused the draft and executed it. This is
the contentious Will. The relevant
clauses read as follows:
“
I
bequeath my estate as follows:
2.1
My property at Fontein Street, Ficksburg and all movable assets in
the house, I bequeath
in equal parts to my sons DIETER, DANIëL
and DEWALD,
subject to a usufruct in favour of my spouse, ADRI
VILJOEN, until her death
.
The usufruct does not include
the sale of assets or goods and is subject to the approval of my
sons
.
2.2
The balance of my estate, movable or immovable, I bequeath in equal
parts to my sons DIETER,
DANIëL and DEWALD.”
[3]
[my
emphasis]
[8]
The meaning of the underlined portion has to be determined.
[9]
The Applicant states that the testator informed her during their
marriage that she
does not have to be concerned as he would ensure
that she has control over the property, that she may reside in the
property, and
enjoy the benefits thereof as well as the movable
property for the rest of her life.
[10]
It is an expansive property with twelve (12) rooms, which could be
used as a guesthouse or overnight
facilities, generating a
substantial annual income. She accuses the sons of selfish
greed. She was informed that the Fifth
Respondent will occupy one of
the rooms as from 25 August 2021, and this would constitute nothing
less than an abusive strong–arm
tactic.
[11]
On 28 August 2021 a meeting was held and the sons made it clear that
they would not grant a
usufruct.
The possibility of a rental
agreement would not be considered, and she has to vacate the property
not later than thirty (30) days
after notification.
[12]
The sons’ position was reaffirmed in a later letter. Thereafter
a host of correspondence was
exchanged until or about 3 October 2022.
[13]
The Master’s report, dated 25 November 2022, states that he/she
does not oppose the application
and that the Will of 18 June 2020 was
accepted.
[14]
The Third Respondent was the main deponent to the answering affidavit
and the founding affidavit for
a conditional counter-application. As
first point
in limine
it is stated that the founding affidavit
purports to have been signed and sworn to at Bloemfontein whereas the
police officer commissioned
it on the same date at Bethlehem. The
same argument is raised in respect of the affidavit of Mr Louw.
[15]
The second point
in limine
is that there was no compliance
with the provisions of Rule 41A for referral to mediation.
[16]
The Fifth Respondent stayed with the testator and the Applicant in
their house, which relationship
was initially amicable. The
Applicant would later force the Fifth Respondent to do homework up to
2 or 3 o’clock in
the morning. He was merely 9 years old.
The Applicant allegedly became very aggressive and the testator would
not tolerate
the Applicant’s conduct.
[17]
The Applicant never needed a residence as she stayed in a flat in
Bethlehem. She also earned
more than the testator.
Notwithstanding stating that it should not be seen that he badmouth
the Applicant, an incident happened
which caused the Applicant being
disinherited. That was the cause for the removal of the
usufruct
in the 2016 Will.
[18]
The acrimonious relationship between the testator and Applicant is
alleged to have commenced during
2013, which continued in 2015 when
the testator allegedly told the sons to switch off the lights, to
lock the door and to
keep quiet as the Applicant was outside
the house armed with a Brownie pistol. The testator allegedly
described the Applicant
as a woman of unsound mind. The sons
appended a transcript of a recording that the testator made whilst he
was driving with
the Applicant. It can be seen from the
transcript that the Applicant was confrontational. The sons state
that the testator
attached great value to his belongings.
[19]
In March 2015, the testator convened a meeting with the sons and
produced the 2013 Will. He asked
his sons how they would feel
if he provided a
usufruct
in favour of the Applicant. They
told him that, as a result of the poor relationship between them and
the Applicant, it would not
work. The relationship further
deteriorated at the end of 2016 when the Applicant would break things
and throw it at the testator.
[20]
During March 2017, the Fifth Respondent left the house after he
allegedly found the Applicant strangling
the testator. In 2017,
the testator read the 2016 Will to them. There was no
usufruct
in
it. This was apparently in line with the discussions in 2015.
The sons told the testator that it would be sensible
to sell the
house and open a guesthouse at another address. The testator agreed
that they could do as they deem fit. On 5 November
2019, the testator
signed his 2019 Will. He requested them to peruse the Will and asked
them whether they agreed. They would inherit
the house but if they
agree, the Applicant could have a
usufruct
. During that
time, the testator told the Third Respondent that he would not
divorce the Applicant since she was not a bad
person when she took
her medication. The 2019 Will was sent to them via WhatsApp.
[21]
In 2020 the testator sent his last Will via WhatsApp and they had no
doubt that the Applicant will
enjoy a
usufruct
only if they
approve of it. The sons state that the Will should simply be
read that the
usufruct
does not include the sale of assets or
goods, and the usufruct is subject to their approval
.
[22]
In September 2020 the testator contemplated selling the property and
according to the sons did not
envisage that the house should serve as
a residence for the Applicant until her death. When Ms Torr
read the Will after the
deceased’s death, she apparently was
unaware of the 2020 Will.
[23]
They state that the holder of a
usufruct
cannot sell immovable
property and that the interpretation of the Applicant does not
indicate the contrary. The sons make much of
the fact that the
Applicant received a good income and benefits. She does not
need income from the property.
[24]
In reply the Applicant states that the reference to Bloemfontein in
the commissioning of the respective
affidavits is incorrect as the
papers were prepared in Bloemfontein and erroneously did not state
Bethlehem.
[25]
Rule 41A only compels the filing of a notice whether the parties
agree to referral for mediation and
both parties did not comply.
In my view, the parties were so far apart, that mediation would on
probabilities have not succeeded.
It is nonetheless important
that parties consider same seriously as a Court may, in appropriate
circumstances, disallow costs.
[26]
The sons filed a notice of application to strike out certain
averments in the Applicant’s affidavit
as being vexatious,
scandalous and irrelevant. They furthermore complain that one of the
confirmatory affidavits amounts to hearsay.
The Applicant readily
concedes the point in respect of hearsay.
[27]
Mr Coetzer who appeared for the Applicant argues that Rule 6(15) of
the Uniform Rules of Court provides
that a Court shall not grant an
application to strike out unless it is satisfied that prejudice will
occur.
[4]
The Rule is not
absolute and a measure of common sense should be applied.
[5]
[28]
It is trite that relief sought by an applicant can only be granted in
the event of conflict between
the versions, unless the respondent’s
allegations are, in the opinion of the Court, not such as to raise a
real, genuine
or
bona
fide
dispute
of fact or are so far-fetched or clearly untenable, in which case the
Court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.
[6]
[29]
It is argued that the Court should follow a robust and common sense
approach.
[30]
A person enjoying a
usufruct
has
in any event no right to alienate the
corpus
unless expressly authorized by the Will. A Will stands to be
interpreted as any other legal document and the standard rules
of
interpretation is therefore applicable. The Courts, however,
tend to adopt a more liberal approach in construing a Will
as the
testator already passed away and the Court will be more benevolent
than it would have been in the interpretation of a contract.
[7]
[31]
In
Robertson
v Robertson’s Executors
[8]
the Court held:
“
The
golden rule for interpretation of testaments is to ascertain the
wishes of the testator from the language used. And when
these
are ascertained, the Court is bound to give effect to them unless
they are presented by some rule or law from doing so.
”
[32]
In
Aubrey
Smith v Hofmeyer N.O
.
[9]
it was stated that a Court is not confined to the written record and
the words of the Will must be applied to the external facts,
resulting in extrinsic evidence becoming admissible to identify the
subject or object of a disposition.
[33]
It is argued that the first sentence of Clause 2.1 is clear,
unambiguous and a
usufruct
was created. Clause 2.1 constitutes
a limitation of ownership by the sons. Ms Torr was not informed that
the testator intended to
leave the ultimate decision regarding the
right to
usufruct
in the hands of the sons. If the sons’
version is accepted, the conclusion would be that the testator could
have disinherited
the Applicant as he has done previously. The
testator disinherited his own daughter in the 2019 Will. He did
not do
so in respect of the Applicant. The sons have a vested
interest in the outcome of the relief, whereas Ms Torr does not and
she
has no reason to be dishonest. Attributing friendship
between the Applicant and Ms Torr is based on mere say-so.
[34]
Mr Cilliers, on behalf of the sons concedes that the Court has a
discretion to accept the affidavits,
notwithstanding defects in
commissioning.
[35]
In respect of the application to strike out, it is argued that each
case must be decided on its own
particular merits and in the light of
its particular circumstances. The general rule is that new
matter may not be introduced
in a replying affidavit but this is not
absolute.
[10]
It is
argued that prejudice is not a requirement when the application to
strike out hearsay is made. Allegations which
are immaterial
and irrelevant should be struck out, especially when they advance
damaging, vague and unsubstantiated allegations
regarding a party’s
conduct. The prejudice to the latter party arising from such
allegations was found to be “
evident
”.
[11]
[36]
New matter which is impermissibly raised in a replying affidavit
falls under the rubric of irrelevant
matter and is susceptible to
being struck out.
[12]
A
decision to strike out or not, is discretionary.
[13]
[37]
Bearing in mind the acrimonious relationship between the Applicant,
the testator and the sons, interpreting
clause 2.1 of the 2020 Will
as to require approval from the sons in respect of the sale of
movables only, is untenable and opportunistic.
[38]
Ms Torr, an administrative clerk, is criticized for not
particularizing the instructions that she received
from the testator
in respect of the 2020 Will, which was not read to the testator.
[39]
Reference is made to
King
and others N.N.O. v De Jager and others
[14]
where it was held:
“
[34]
The point of departure when interpreting wills is “to ascertain
the wishes
of the testator from the language used in the will”.
Courts are obliged to give effect to the wishes of the testator
unless
they are prevented by some law from doing so. The
“golden rule” for the interpretation of wills and this
inherent
limitation is famously described as follows in Robertson:
“
The
golden rule for the interpretation of testaments is to ascertain the
wishes of the testator from the language used. And
when these
wishes are ascertained, the court is bound to give effect to them,
unless we are prevented by some rule or law from
doing so.”
[40]
It is argued that the second sentence in Clause 2.1 is clearly aimed
at qualifying the
usufruct
. There is no ambiguity in
paragraph 2.1 and the
usufruct
was simply subject to the
approval of the sons. The sons contend that the various Wills, as
discussed with them by testator, and
the poor relationship that
existed between them and the Applicant, meant that the usufruct would
be subject to their approval.
The application stands to be
adjudicated on the sons’ version.
[41]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(
Endumeni
):
[15]
“
[18]
…The present state of the law can be expressed as follows.
Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the
words
used in a document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or contract,
having regard to the context
provided by reading the particular provision or provisions in the
light of the document as a whole
and the circumstances attendant upon
its coming into existence
. Whatever the nature of the
document, consideration must be given to the language used in the
light of the ordinary rules of grammar
and syntax;
the
context in which the provision appears
; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and
the material known to
those responsible for its production
. Where more than one
meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of
all these factors. The process is
objective not subjective. A
sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard
as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is
to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation. In a contractual context it is to
make a contract for the parties other
than the one they in fact made.
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
.
[19]
All this is consistent with the ‘emerging
trend in statutory construction’. It clearly
adopts as the
proper approach to the interpretation of documents the second of the
two possible approaches mentioned by Schreiner
JA in Jaga v
Dönges NO and another, namely that from the outset one considers
the context and the language together,
with neither predominating
over the other. This is the approach that courts in South Africa
should now follow, without the need
to cite authorities from an
earlier era that are not necessarily consistent and frequently
reflect an approach to interpretation
that is no longer appropriate.
The path that Schreiner JA pointed to is now received wisdom
elsewhere. Thus Sir Anthony Mason CJ
said:
‘
Problems
of legal interpretation are not solved satisfactorily by ritual
incantations which emphasise the clarity of meaning which
words have
when viewed in isolation, divorced from their context. The modern
approach to interpretation insists that context be
considered in the
first instance, especially in the case of general words, and not
merely at some later stage when ambiguity might
be thought to arise.’
More
recently Lord Clarke SCJ said ‘the exercise of
construction is essentially one unitary exercise’.”
(footnotes omitted) [my emphasis]
[42]
My views of the above factual and legal matrix are as follows. Clause
2.1 clearly creates a
usufruct
.
Unless it is made conditional, it vests in the person at date of
death. There is no dispute about this principle. The testator
bequeathed all his property to his sons. No limitation is placed on
their title and no condition/s are set for acquiring full title
over
all the property.
[43]
The
usufruct
states
that it is granted to the Applicant until her death. No condition is
set. Read up to here, the right to exercise a
usufruct
over
the property vested in the Applicant on date of death of the
testator.
[44]
It provides that the assets or goods may not be sold by her. Up to
this point there is still no restriction
on the right to use or
title.
[45]
It is from this point onwards that the dispute exists. The testator
anticipated that there may be a
need to dispose of movables. As the
Applicant has a right of use and may not need some or all of the
movables, she may deem is
opportune to dispose of it. This may be
done at any time by the sons, subject to the Applicant’s
consent. As user, one may
not dispose of another’s property
unless there is consent. Read with this in mind the testator
restricted all the parties
from dealing with the movable property as
they wish. He effectively imprisoned the Applicant and the sons in,
what both parties
agree, a hostile relationship. The clause therefor
makes sense in restraining the Applicant from disposing movables
without consent,
automatically restraining the sons from disposing of
it too.
[46]
What does the words
“
subject
to the approval of my sons”
then
mean?
[47]
As a suspensive condition, she needs the consent of the sons for
right of use.
[48]
Stripped of the words “
subject
to the approval of my sons”
,
the intentions of the testator is clear – he bestowed an
unconditional usufruct. The testator did not bestow on the sons
the
power to set their own terms for the
usufruct
.
[49]
The sentence can be dissected to be read in two ways. It can be read
as that the
usufruct
is
subject to the approval of the sons. It can also be read that only
the sale of the assets or goods are subject to the approval
of the
sons.
[50]
The reading of the words in itself does not fully answer the
question. In line with the approach in
Endumeni
,
one also has to consider the context in which the provision appears
and the material known to those responsible for its production.
Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of all these factors. The process is
objective not
subjective.
[51]
The 2013 Will gave the sons no say as to the right of use. It
gave recognition to the Applicant
for maintaining him. The
unconditional right would in that context be understandable. The 2016
Will makes no reference to the Applicant.
The 2019 Will places the
Applicant back on the scene. If the testator was resolved on cutting
ties with the Applicant in the event
of his death, one would not have
expected it. The relationship was clearly not as acrimonious as the
sons wish to portray.
[52]
Clause 2 of the 2019 Will starts of by qualifying the usufruct in
making it subject to the sons’
approval. It then states that
the movables may not be sold, not even with consent. Remarriage
also serves as a disqualifying
factor for the right of use.
[53]
Seen against this backdrop, one may conclude that the testator merely
reworded the sentences in the
2020 Will, but that the right of use
was in fact subject to the same conditions found in the 2019 Will.
[54]
Is there any other material that may serve as context for
interpreting the Will and determine the intentions
of the testator?
Mrs Badenhorst is the daughter of the Applicant. She paints a picture
of true love that existed between the testator
and the deceased in
December 2020, six months after making of the 2020 Will. Ms Torr’s
affidavit does not take it much further
as she merely drafted it,
which she says was not a monumental task as there was an existing
Will from which she presumably worked.
The deceased gave very limited
input.
[55]
I find that the testator was acutely aware of the strained
relationship between the sons and the Applicant.
He did not want to
disappoint the sons by granting the Applicant a right of use, but
also did not want to disappoint the Applicant
in closing the door of
the house on her.
[56]
He decided to formulate the right of use as best as he could to
satisfy both parties. On the one hand
the sons retained a say in the
usufruct
. On the other hand the Applicant still had the
prospect that the sons will allow her use. The door was not closed on
her.
[57]
The 2020 Will is but a shadow of the 2019 Will. The right of use,
however, remained the central piece
in both wills. The 2019 text was
handwritten and edited in a typed document constituting the 2020
Will.
[58]
The sons seek a declaratory order that the
usufruct
is
conditional on their approval. It is not
necessary to make such an order as a dismissal of the main
application has the same effect.
[59]
In respect of the first point in
limine,
I exercise my
discretion in favour of the Applicant as the issue needed to be
determined and there was not prejudice. In respect
of the second
point in
limine
, it is clear that mediation would have been
futile.
[60]
In respect of the application to strike out, I conclude that the sons
opened the door for a push-back
from the Applicant. They went much
further than what was placed on the table in the founding affidavit.
They could not suffer prejudice
as a result of the averments made,
which to a large extent was invited.
[61]
This application was voluminous and contained a host of accusations
and counter-accusations, which
were not all helpful. What is clear is
that the testator loved all the parties. Both sets of parties
harboured aspirations and
the Wills expressed the testator’s
attempt to satisfy the persons close to him. Whether the testator
have or could have foreseen
the result of the wording of his Will is
speculative. In retrospect he may have done it differently.
[62]
I conclude that a plain reading of the provisions in the 2019 and
2020 Wills, contextually, leaves
no doubt that the usufruct was
subject to the sons’ approval.
[63]
I carefully considered what cost order should be made. I cannot find
that either of the parties foresaw
the finer nuances that the other
party may raise. Both parties’ arguments were extremely
helpful and thorough. There
was little to prefer the arguments above
the other. In fairness to all the parties, the interest of justice,
and promoting the
right to have disputes of familial nature properly
ventilated before a Court, each party should pay its own costs. This
would be
fair and reasonable.
[64]
I make the following order.
ORDER:
1.
The Application is dismissed.
2.
Each party pays its own costs.
P R
CRONJÉ, AJ
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Adv
J C Coetzer
Stander
and Associates
Bloemfontein
On
behalf of the Third to Fifth Respondents:
Adv
H J Cilliers
Pieter
Skein Attorneys
Bloemfontein
[1]
The
original text in Afrikaans reads:
“
Tans
is ek getroud met Adri Viljoen, sy sal ook vruggebruik hê van
al my huise, en ook kan sy vir haar ‘n inkomste
vanuit die
huise genereer, dit kan net gebeur as sy nie weer trou nie. As
sy trou met wie ookal, het sy 3 maande kans om
vir haar ‘n
ander heenkome en blyplek te kry.
”
[2]
Afrikaans
text:
“
1.
Die eiendomme Fonteinstr[...], Ficksburg en Imperanistr [...],
bemaak ek aan my drie seuns, gesamentlik.
2.
Indien dit die seuns se goedkeuring wegdra stel ek voor dat Adri
Viljoen die vruggebruik van die familiehuis,
Fonteinstr[...], mag
hê, die verkoop van enige bates uitgesluit. Dit sal
geskied solank sy ongetroud is. Indien
sy sou trou of saambly
verval die vruggebruik. Ook sal daar nie vir enige van die
aangetroude familie, byv my vrou se kinders
of haar familie ‘n
wins of blyplek wees uit die vruggebruik daarvan nie. Dit moet
streng deur die erfgename beheer word.
3..
Indien die huis verwaarloos word of agteruit gaan staan dit die
seuns vry om die vruggebruik te stop.
”
[3]
Afrikaans
text:
“
2.1
My woning Fonteinstraat[...], Ficksburg en alle roerende goedere in
die huis bemaak ek in gelyke dele aan my seuns,
DIETER, DANIëL
en DEWALD,
onderworpe aan die
vruggebruik van my eggenote, ADRI VILJOEN, tot haar afsterwe.
Die vruggebruik sluit nie die verkoop van
bates of goedere in nie en
is onderworpe aan die goedkeuring van my seuns. Haar
vruggebruik sal verval indien sy weer sou
trou of saambly
.
2.2
Die restant van my boedel, roerend of onroerend bemaak ek in gelyke
dele aan my seuns, DIETER, DANIëL en
DEWALD.
”
[4]
Titty’s
Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
1974 (4) SA 362
(T) at 368 G
[5]
Smith
v Kwanonqubela Town Council
1999 (4) SA 947
(SCA) at para [15]
[6]
Wrightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and another
2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA)
[7]
Wills
& Trusts, Wills, Chapter 3, A22 – Introduction, page 86
(29)
[8]
1914
AD 503
at 507
[9]
1973
(1) SA 655
(C) at 657 E - H
[10]
Prophet
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2007 (6) SA 169 (CC)
[11]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum and another
2017 (4) SA 283 (SCA)
[12]
Van
Zyl and others v Government of the RSA and others
[2005] 4 All SA 96 (T)
[13]
Titty’s
Spar and Bottle Store
supra
[14]
2021 (4) SA 1
(CC)
at para [34]
[15]
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
(16 March 2012)