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[2011] ZASCA 112
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Pienaar and Another v Master of the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein and Others (579/10) [2011] ZASCA 112; 2011 (6) SA 338 (SCA) (1 June 2011)
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THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case No: 579/10
In the matter between:
NELRI
PIENAAR
..............................................................................
First
Appellant
CHRISMARI
STEVEN
.................................................................
Second
Appellant
and
MASTER
OF THE FREE STATE HIGH COURT,
BLOEMFONTEIN
..........................................................................
First
Respondent
CYNTHIA
MERLE DU TOIT
..................................................
Second
Respondent
SUZETTE
MALHERBE
...............................................................
Third
Respondent
DERICK
DU TOIT
......................................................................
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral citation:
Pienaar
v Master of the Free State High Court
(579/10) [2011] ZASCA112 (01 June
2011).
Coram:
LEWIS, CACHALIA,
SHONGWE, THERON and MAJIEDT JJA
Heard: 10 May 2011
Delivered: 01 June 2011
Summary:
Will
─ Revocation by later testamentary instrument ─ Both
wills dealing with entire estate ─ Later will different
from
earlier ─ Later will impliedly revoked the earlier will in so
far as inconsistent with it.
_____________________________________________________________
ORDER
_______________________________________________________________
On appeal from:
Free State
High Court (Bloemfontein) (Kruger J sitting as court of first
instance):
1 The appeal is upheld with
costs.
2 The order of the court a quo is
set aside and replaced with:
‘
(a) It
is declared that the testament of the testator, Frederik Jacobus du
Toit, dated 28 May 2007, impliedly revoked the earlier
testament
dated 27 November 2006 in so far as inconsistent with the latter.
(b) The Sanlam Personal Portfolio
is to form part of the residue of the estate of the testator.
(c) The second respondent is to
pay the costs of this application.’
_______________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
_______________________________________________________________
THERON JA (LEWIS, CACHALIA,
SHONGWE, THERON and
MAJIEDT JJA concurring):
[1] The testator, Frederik
Jacobus du Toit, executed a will in November 2006. Approximately six
months later, in May 2007, he executed
another will. The question for
determination is whether the later will impliedly revoked the earlier
will, in part.
[2] The appellants are the
daughters of the testator. Their parents had divorced. The testator
subsequently married the second respondent,
Cynthia du Toit (Du
Toit), and they had a son, Derick du Toit (Derick), the fourth
respondent. The testator and Du Toit divorced
on 19 October 2006,
prior to the execution of both wills. The testator died on 30 June
2007.
[3] I do not propose to set out
the content of each will but merely to describe their essential
terms. In terms of the 2006 will
the deceased expressly revoked
previous wills and bequeathed: (i) his Sanlam Personal Portfolio to
Du Toit, in the event of it
being payable to his estate; (ii) an
immovable property and a motor vehicle to Derick; and (iii) the
residue of his estate to the
appellants. That will also made
extensive provision for the appointment of an executor and the
general administration of the estate.
[4] In terms of the 2007 will,
the deceased bequeathed an immovable property to each of his three
children (the appellants and Derick)
while Du Toit was granted
lifelong use of the property bequeathed to Derick. A cash amount was
awarded to the first appellant and
Derick, and as in the previous
will, the residue of the estate was to be shared by the appellants.
In the later will the Volkswagen
motor vehicle was bequeathed to the
testator’s son-in-law. In the 2006 will it was bequeathed to
Derick.
[5] The dispute in this matter
revolves around a Sanlam investment policy (the policy) valued at
approximately R827 000. Clause
1.1 of the 2006 will reads as follows:
‘
My
Sanlam Persoonlike Portefeule, indien betaalbaar aan my boedel, [is
bemaak] aan my vorige eggenote [Du Toit] en indien sy voor
my te
sterwe sou kom, sal hierdie bemaking aan haar verval en deel vorm van
die restant van my boedel.’
1
It was common cause that at the
time of his death the testator had three investments in his Sanlam
Personal Porfolio. The first
was made on 1 March 2002 and in it the
testator had nominated his first wife as the beneficiary. The
investment date of the second
investment was 2 March 2007, and Du
Toit was appointed the beneficiary. The third and disputed investment
was made on 22 March
2007 and no beneficiary was appointed in respect
of this policy.
[6] In October 2009, the third
respondent prepared a first and final distribution account, in terms
of which the policy was regarded
as part of the residue of the
estate. Du Toit and Derick lodged an objection against the account
with the Master. The Master sustained
the objection and determined
that the proceeds of the policy should be paid to Du Toit.
[7] The appellants instituted
proceedings in the Free State High Court (Bloemfontein) in which they
sought an order, inter alia,
to the effect that the estate of the
testator be administered in terms of the 2007 will, alternatively
that the 2007 will had impliedly
revoked the 2006 will, and more
specifically that the bequest of the policy to Du Toit in the 2006
will had been impliedly revoked
by the 2007 will.
[8] The application in the high
court was not opposed by the Master and the third respondent. The
testator had nominated Sanlam
Trust Limited as executor of his estate
and the third respondent was the latter’s representative. The
Master did, however,
file a report in support of his decision. He
explained that the policy was awarded to Du Toit as a bequest in
terms of the 2006
will, while the testator did not deal with it in
the 2007 will. The Master concluded as follows:
‘ …
daar
[is] geen botsende bepalings in die twee testamente … wat
betref die Sanlam Persoonlike Portefeulje nie. Omdat die twee
testamente saamgelees moet word, volg dit dat die Sanlam Persoonlike
Portefeulje as ‘n legaat aan die oorledene se vorige
eggenote
toegeken moet word.’
2
In respect of the motor vehicle,
the Master concluded that there was an inconsistency between the two
wills and that the bequest
in respect of the motor vehicle in the
2006 will had been impliedly revoked by the 2007 will.
[9] Du Toit did not file any
opposing affidavits in the high court but raised certain questions of
law for determination. The essence
of the questions raised were
whether the Master had correctly determined that the 2007 will did
not revoke the 2006 will, whether
the two wills should be read
together and whether the bequest of the policy had been revoked by
the later will.
[10] The high court (Kruger J)
dismissed the application reasoning that:
‘
Die
2007 testament verander net die manier waarop bates vererf; die 2007
testament herroep niks nie. Die standard herroepingsklousule
wat die
2006 testament inlei, is afwesig uit die 2007 een. Die testateur wou
in 2007 nie die 2006 testament herroep nie; hy wou
dit aanpas.’
3
The court found that it could not
be established that the testator had, in the later will, intended to
revoke the earlier bequest
to Du Toit. The appellants appeal to this
court with the leave of the high court.
[11] Where a
testator dies leaving more than one testamentary disposition the
wills must be read together and reconciled and the
provisions of the
earlier testaments are deemed to be revoked in so far as they are
inconsistent with the later ones.
4
Where there is
conflict between the provisions of the two wills, the conflicting
provisions of the earlier testament are deemed
to have been revoked
by implication.
5
[12] As I have
said, the 2006 will revoked all previous wills, codicils and other
testamentary writings while the 2007 will did
not contain a
revocation clause. But it is clear from a reading of the wills that
the testator’s intention in each was to
dispose of his entire
estate. He started both wills with the words ‘Ek bemaak my
boedel soos volg’.
6
He then, in
both wills, proceeded to dispose of his entire estate. The 2007 will
has a different scheme to that of the 2006 will.
In the later will
the testator bequeathed an immovable property to each of his children
and Du Toit was granted a right of lifelong
use in respect of the
property bequeathed to Derick. In the later will the testator dealt
more specifically with his property.
In my view, the 2007 will
represents, in the words of Broome J in
Price
v The Master
,
‘
a
completely new and different scheme and not simply a later set of
dispositions to be superimposed on an earlier set’.
7
Broome J went
on to explain that where there are two wills, which to some extent
contain similar provisions, but are in effect different,
and each of
the wills deal with the entire estate, then they cannot stand
together and the later will must be construed as having
impliedly
revoked the earlier.
8
[13] The testator dealt with the
residue of his estate in both wills. In the later will he disposed of
the residue differently.
And herein lies the inconsistency between
the two testaments. It must be assumed, in the absence of evidence to
the contrary, that
the testator had knowledge of the meaning of the
word ‘residue’. In the earlier will the residue consisted
of, inter
alia, a farm, two properties in a sectional title scheme
and other movable property, while in terms of the later will the
residue
comprised, inter alia, the policy, the farm and certain
movable property as the testator had made specific bequests of the
other
two immovable properties to each of the appellants.
[14] The
golden rule for the interpretation of wills is to ascertain the
wishes of the testator from the language used. Once the
wishes of the
testator have been ascertained a court is bound to give effect to
them.
9
It follows
that where a bequest has been made in an earlier testamentary
disposition it would require clear and unambiguous language
in a
later testamentary disposition to justify a court finding that the
testator had intended to revoke such bequest.
10
It is clear
from the language used in the 2007 will that the testator intended
that the policy should fall within the residue of
his estate. Such an
intention can be gathered with relative certainty from the scheme as
well as the terms of the later will. As
has already been mentioned,
at the time of his death, the testator had three investments in his
Sanlam Personal Portfolio. In respect
of two of these, he had
nominated his first wife and Du Toit as beneficiaries, respectively.
And the last Sanlam investment was
merely a part of his estate. It is
further clear from the 2007 will that he intended to leave the
unspecified assets to the appellants.
Those unspecified assets
included the third Sanlam investment. The necessary inference is that
the testator intended to change
his previous will.
[15] There was thus no need to
revoke the previous will: it contained important provisions for the
administration of the estate
that did not need to be changed. Where
change was intended it was clearly prefaced with the words that he
bequeathed his estate
‘as follows’.
[16] For these reasons the
following order is made.
1 The appeal is upheld with
costs.
2 The order of the court a quo is
set aside and replaced with:
‘
(a) It
is declared that the testament of the testator, Frederik Jacobus du
Toit, dated 28 May 2007, impliedly revoked the earlier
testament
dated 27 November 2006 in so far as inconsistent with the latter.
(b) The Sanlam Personal Portfolio
is to form part of the residue of the estate of the testator.
(c) The second respondent is to
pay the costs of this application.’
_______________
L V THERON
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
APPELLANTS: C A Human
Instructed by Hefer Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
SECOND
AND FOURTH
RESPONDENTS: S J Reinders
Instructed by McIntyre & van
der Post,
Bloemfontein
1
‘
My
Sanlam Personal Portfolio, if payable to my estate, is bequeathed to
my ex wife and if I should survive her, this bequest will
lapse and
form part of the residue of my estate.’
2
‘
.
. . there are no conflicting provisions in the two testaments . . .
regarding the Sanlam Personal Portfolio. Because the two
testaments
must be read together, it follows that the Sanlam Personal Portfolio
must be awarded to the deceased’s ex-wife.’
3
‘
The
2007 testament merely changes the manner in which the assets
devolve; the 2007 testament revokes nothing. The standard revocation
clause at the beginning of the 2006 will is absent in the 2007 will.
The testator did not intend for the 2007 will to revoke
the 2006
will; he wanted to amend it.’
4
Ex
parte Estate Adams
1946 CPD 267
at
268. The court referred to Van Leeuwen
Censura
Forensis
1.3.11.9;
Ex
parte Scheuble
1918 TPD 158
and
Ex
parte Mark's Executors
1921 TPD 284.
5
Vimpany
v Attridge
1927 CPD 113
;
Bredenkamp v The Master
1947 (1)
SA 388
(T);
Gentle v Ebdens Executors
1913 AD 119.
6
‘
I
bequeath my estate as follows.’
7
Price
v The Master
1982 (3)
SA 301
(N) at 304D-E.
8
At
304C-D.
9
Robertson
v Robertson’s Executors
1914 AD
503
at 507;
Cuming v Cuming
1945
AD 201
at 206
; Cohen NO v Roetz NO
[1991] ZASCA 173
;
1992
(1) SA 629
(A) at 639A.
10
Ex
parte
Adams
1946
CPD 267
at 268.