Coetzee and Another v Master of The Free State High Court, Bloemfontein and Others (3148/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 225 (15 September 2022)

80 Reportability
Trusts and Estates

Brief Summary

Interlocutory Application — Irregular proceedings — Rule 30(1) — Fourth and Fifth Respondents sought to have Applicants’ main application declared irregular and set aside — Applicants disputed the Executor's supplementary liquidation and distribution account — Fourth and Fifth Respondents contended that the Applicants failed to object to the initial account and raised complaints regarding the clarity and scope of the relief sought — Court to determine if the proceedings were irregular and if the complaints were valid — Held, the Applicants' notice of motion was declared irregular as it lacked clarity and failed to address prior objections, warranting the setting aside of the application in accordance with Rule 30(1).

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned an interlocutory application brought in terms of Uniform Rule 30(1) to set aside alleged irregular proceedings in a pending main application. The interlocutory application was instituted by the Fourth and Fifth Respondents against the Applicants.


The Applicants in the main application were Emmarentia Coetzee and Kitty Potgieter, and the respondents included the Master of the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein (First Respondent), the executor (William Francios Bouwer N.O., Second Respondent), and other interested parties, including the Fourth Respondent (Marthinus Christiaan van den Heever) and the Fifth Respondent (Emmaron Boerdery CC), who brought the Rule 30 proceedings.


Procedurally, the dispute arose from the administration of a deceased estate and, in particular, from the treatment of a supplementary liquidation and distribution account. After the Applicants lodged an objection to that supplementary account and the Master dismissed the objection, the Applicants launched a main application seeking relief under section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965. The Fourth and Fifth Respondents then brought the present Rule 30 application to have the Applicants’ notice of motion and application declared irregular and set aside.


The subject-matter of the dispute concerned the permissible scope and formulation of relief in motion proceedings connected to objections to liquidation and distribution accounts in a deceased estate, and whether the Applicants’ motion papers were defective in a manner amounting to an irregular step causing prejudice.


Material Facts


The deceased (the Applicants’ and other respondents’ father), Barend van den Heever, died on 26 April 2017. The parties were described as the four children of the deceased, who were in dispute concerning aspects of the administration and distribution of the deceased estate.


An amended first and final liquidation and distribution account was filed by the executor on 25 May 2018 under section 35(5)(a) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965. It was common cause that none of the children lodged objections to that amended first and final account at the time it was advertised for inspection and objection in terms of section 35.


During 2020, additional assets of the deceased estate were discovered, identified in the judgment as shares. As a result, the executor prepared a supplementary first and final liquidation and distribution account dealing with the proceeds of the discovered shares.


That supplementary account was advertised from 19 March 2021 in the Volksblad and the Government Gazette. The Applicants lodged an objection to the supplementary account, which the Master dismissed. Following the Master’s dismissal, the Applicants launched the main application.


The Fourth and Fifth Respondents complained that the main application was irregular because, among other things, it did not clearly identify the Master’s decision sought to be set aside; it impermissibly raised issues beyond the supplementary account (including matters said to relate to the 2018 account); and it effectively attempted to mount a belated challenge to the first account which had already been finalised and implemented without objection.


There was also a dispute regarding alleged non-joinder of the Brakkuil Trust and the Wolwekop Trust, which the Fourth and Fifth Respondents contended had an interest in the litigation. The Applicants disputed that these trusts had a direct and substantial interest requiring joinder, and the court noted that their claims were still to be investigated by the Master and that no evidence established the requisite interest.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the Applicants had taken an “irregular step” in the main application, justifying relief under Uniform Rule 30(1), and whether the Fourth and Fifth Respondents had established prejudice sufficient for the court to exercise its discretion to set aside the step.


This required the court to determine whether the Applicants’ notice of motion and founding papers were procedurally defective in a material way, particularly by failing to identify with sufficient clarity the decision of the Master to be reviewed or set aside, and by including matters that, on the Fourth and Fifth Respondents’ case, fell outside the proper scope of a dispute limited to the supplementary liquidation and distribution account.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of procedural law to the content of the motion papers, and the exercise of a discretionary value judgment under Rule 30(3) as to whether the irregularity warranted setting aside the whole step, part of it, or permitting amendment, with particular regard to the requirement of prejudice.


A subsidiary procedural issue was whether non-joinder/misjoinder could appropriately be raised by way of Rule 30 in the circumstances, and whether the two trusts allegedly not joined had the requisite legal interest.


Court’s Reasoning


The court started from the text and purpose of Uniform Rule 30, emphasising that the rule provides a mechanism to set aside irregular or improper steps and confers a wide discretion on the court under Rule 30(3). The judgment treated prejudice as a settled prerequisite to success in a Rule 30(1) application, relying on authority that an irregular-step application will generally be granted only where the irregularity causes prejudice to the applicant seeking to set it aside.


In applying those principles, the court evaluated the complaints about the Applicants’ notice of motion, focusing particularly on prayer 1 in the main application, which sought an order that “the decision of the First Respondent be set aside in terms of section 35(10) of the Administration of Estate Act 66 of 1965.” The Fourth and Fifth Respondents contended that this was impermissibly vague because the Master had made multiple decisions related to the estate (including decisions concerning the first liquidation and distribution account and supplementary accounts), and the notice did not identify which decision was attacked. The Applicants’ answering position was that the Master had dismissed their objection, and they referred to a letter (Annexure “O”) reflecting that dismissal. The court nevertheless accepted the Rule 30 complaint, concluding that the relief sought in prayer 1 lacked clarity because it did not specify which Master’s decision was to be set aside.


The court also addressed the complaint that the Applicants were effectively attempting to revisit the first liquidation and distribution account finalised in 2018, despite having raised no objections at the time and without seeking condonation for a late challenge. The court accepted that, at that late stage, the Applicants could not revisit the first account in the manner suggested in their motion papers, and noted that the Master’s communication indicated that an aggrieved party ought to have pursued a review. The reasoning reflected acceptance of the Fourth and Fifth Respondents’ contention that reopening finalised issues would cause prejudice and was procedurally impermissible in the way it was attempted.


On the alleged non-joinder/misjoinder, the court considered whether Rule 30 could be used to challenge such defects. While acknowledging commentary indicating that non-joinder or misjoinder may be raised under Rule 30 (though the usual practice is to raise it by special plea), the court was persuaded on the facts that the two trusts were not shown to have the requisite direct and substantial interest in the relief sought. The judgment indicated that the trusts’ claims were still to be investigated by the Master, and that there was insufficient evidence before the court establishing the necessary interest. In any event, the court indicated that non-joinder should ordinarily be raised by special plea rather than through Rule 30 in the present context.


The court also dealt with the Applicants’ late filing of an affidavit, indicating that it would be condoned in the interests of justice given the family context and the importance of ensuring both sides had a fair opportunity to ventilate the dispute. This did not displace the conclusion that the motion papers, as framed, were irregular.


Finally, the court exercised its discretion under Rule 30(3). It found that the notice of motion constituted an irregularity and that the Fourth and Fifth Respondents had demonstrated prejudice, particularly because the lack of clarity as to the decision attacked would impede an effective response, and because the relief sought potentially implicated matters already finalised. However, the court concluded that the irregularity was not of such a nature that it required the entire action to be set aside without more; rather, fairness to all parties favoured an order allowing the Applicants an opportunity to substitute/amend their papers.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted the Rule 30 relief and ordered that the Applicants’ notice of motion and application be declared irregular and set aside in terms of Uniform Rule 30(1).


The Applicants were afforded 15 days to substitute their notice of motion and application.


The Fourth and Fifth Respondents were granted leave—if the Applicants failed to substitute timeously and/or satisfactorily—to apply on the same papers (suitably amplified if necessary) for an order that the Applicants’ main application be dismissed with costs.


As to costs, the court ordered that the costs of the interlocutory application would be costs in the main action.


Cases Cited


Afrisun Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v Kunene N.O & Others 1999 (2) SA 599 (T).


BSB International Link CC v Readam SA (Pty) Ltd and Another, In Re; Readam SA (Pty) Ltd v The City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2013/14167) [2014] ZAGPJHC 28 (7 March 2014).


Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka 1966 (2) SA 273 (A).


Northern Assurance Co Ltd v Somdaka 1960 (1) SA 588 (A) at 595.


Legislation Cited


Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, including section 35(5)(a) and section 35(10).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 30(1), Rule 30(2) (including Rule 30(2)(b)), Rule 30(3), and Rule 30(4).


Held


The court found that the Applicants’ main application papers constituted an irregular step under Uniform Rule 30(1) because the notice of motion did not clearly identify the decision of the Master sought to be set aside and because the papers, as framed, implicated issues beyond the proper scope in a manner that created procedural unfairness. The court accepted that the Fourth and Fifth Respondents would suffer prejudice if required to answer unclear and potentially overbroad relief that could affect matters already finalised in the estate administration.


The court held that the appropriate exercise of discretion under Rule 30(3) was to set aside the irregular notice of motion and application while allowing the Applicants an opportunity to substitute their papers within a defined period, coupled with leave to the Fourth and Fifth Respondents to seek dismissal if the substitution was not made timeously and/or satisfactorily.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A Rule 30 application is directed at setting aside an irregular or improper step in proceedings, and the court retains a wide discretion under Rule 30(3) as to the appropriate remedy, including setting aside the step in whole or in part and granting leave to amend.


Prejudice is a well-established requirement for success in a Rule 30(1) application. The applicant must allege and prove prejudice (including where appropriate “substantial prejudice”), and an irregular-step application will generally be granted only where the irregularity would cause prejudice to the party seeking to set it aside.


Where motion proceedings seek to set aside an administrative decision (including a Master’s decision in the context of estate administration), the relief sought must be framed with sufficient clarity to identify the impugned decision so that affected parties can plead and respond meaningfully.


Although non-joinder or misjoinder may be raised under Rule 30 in principle, the judgment reflected that the usual practice is to raise such objections by special plea, and that joinder depends on whether the absent party has a direct and substantial interest in the relief sought.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 225
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Coetzee and Another v Master of The Free State High Court, Bloemfontein and Others (3148/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 225 (15 September 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
Case
no: 3148/2021
EMMARENTIA
COETZEE                                               First

Applicant
KITTY
POTGIETER                                                         Second

Applicant
and
MASTER
OF THE FREE STATE HIGH COURT,
BLOEMFONTEIN                                                             First

Respondent
WILLIAM
FRANCIOS BOUWER N.O.                             Second

Respondent
RONEL
SWART                                                               Third

Respondent
MARTHINUS
CHRISTIAAN VAN DEN HEEVER             Fourth
Respondent
EMMARON
BOERDERY CC                                            Fifth

Respondent
BEFORE
:
CHESIWE, J
HEARD
ON:
19 MAY 2022
DELIVERED
ON:
15 SEPTEMBER 2022
[1]
This is an interlocutory application instituted by the Fourth and
Fifth Respondents,
that the main application launched by the
Applicants be declared irregular and be set aside in terms of Rule 30
(1). The application
is opposed.
[2]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents seek the following relief:

1.
That the Applicants’ notice of motion and application are
declared irregular and set aside in terms of Rule 30 (1);
2.
That the Applicants are afforded 10 days in which to substitute their
notice of motion and application;
3.
That the Applicants pay the costs of this application jointly and
severally;
4.
Should the Applicants fail to substitute their notice of motion and
application timeously and or satisfactorily,
the Fourth and Fifth
Respondents are granted leave to apply on the same papers suitably
amplified if necessary for an application
main application be
dismissed with costs.”
[3]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents raised amongst others, the following
causes
of their complaint against the Applicants’ notice of
motion and application:
First
complaint
, the Applicants seeking that the decision of the
First Respondent be set aside, is not identified in the notice of
motion:
Second
complaint
, with the Applicants in seeking relief that their
objection to the supplementary liquidation and distribution account
be sustained,
should be limited to the allocation of the shares. Part
of the complaint is also that numerous other issues not forming part
of
the supplementary liquidation and distribution account nor the
objection, are raised by the Applicants. The additional aspects
raised by the Applicants do not flow from the supplementary
liquidation and distribution account and the attempt to lodge
objections
outside the ambit of the account constitute an irregular
proceeding.
Third
complaint
,
the Applicants having failed to object and with this account being
implemented and executed, an attempt to impermissibly and belatedly

lodge objections against the first liquidation and distribution
account which had been finalised in 2018, duly advertised in terms
of
the
Administration
of Estate Act
[1]
, hereafter referred to as
(“the Act”), the revisit of the account is truly an
irregular proceeding.
[4]
Background on this matter briefly is that, the parties who are the
four children
of the deceased are in dispute of the estate of their
late father, Barend van den Heever, who passed away on 26 April 2017.
[5]
The Executor, that is the Second Respondent, filed an amended first
and final
liquidation and distribution account on 25 May 2018 in
terms of section 35 (5)(a) of the Act. None of the children raised an
objection
with regard to the amended first and final liquidation and
distribution account.
[6]
During 2020, additional assets of the deceased estate were found,
that being
the shares referred to in the second complaint. The
Executor therefore drafted a supplementary first and final
liquidation and
distribution account, that dealt with the proceeds of
these shares.
[7]
This supplementary account was advertised from 19 March 2021 in the
Volksblad
and Government Gazette, pursuant to that the Applicants
lodging an objection to the supplementary account. The Master
dismissed
the objection of the Applicants. The Applicants then
proceeded to launch the main application.
[8]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents launched the current interlocutory
application
to have the notice of motion and main application set
aside as its irregular in terms of Rule 30.
[9]
The court has to determine whether the proceedings, that is in terms
of Rule
30 (1) were irregular and whether the complaints as raised by
the Fourth and Fifth Respondents are permissible.
[10]
Counsel on behalf of the Fourth and Fifth Respondents submitted in
oral argument that additional assets
of the deceased were found and
must be added to the supplementary account. Secondly, Counsel
submitted that the main application
ought to be set aside as
irregular proceedings as with the relief sought by the Applicants is
vague and undetermined and unidentifiable.
Counsel submitted that the
litigation should be limited to the supplementary account as the
first account had no objections from
the Applicants. Counsel further
submitted that the Applicants failed to join the different trusts and
have a real interest in the
litigation as an order will be against
the sureties.
[11]
Counsel on behalf of the Applicants submitted in oral argument that
the main application is dealt with
in terms of section 35(10) of the
Act. Further that the Applicants are not attempting to deal or change
the first account, but
to amend it by supplementing it. Counsel
submitted that in the founding affidavit, the claim of Emmarentia of
R4 million was not
dealt with; nor was the vehicles belonging to the
deceased dealt with, including the policies that were paid into the
estate. Counsel
further submitted that certain assets were not dealt
with and were neither included in the first account. Thus, the
Applicants
seek relief for the inclusion of these claims as
mentioned.  And that the claims are not to be limited to the
supplementary
account, but to the second account as well.
RULE
30 (1) APPLICATION
[12]
Rule 30 (1) deals with irregular proceedings and provides as follows:

(1)
A party to a cause in which an irregular step has been taken
by any other party may apply to court to set it aside,
(2)
An application in terms of sub-rule (1) shall be on
notice to all parties specifying particulars of the irregularity
or
impropriety alleged, and may be made only if -
(a)
the applicant has not himself taken a further step in
the cause with knowledge of the irregularity;
(b)
the applicant has, within ten days of becoming aware of
the step, by written notice afforded his opponent an opportunity
of
removing the cause of complaint within ten days;
(c)
the application is delivered within fifteen days after
the expiry of the second period mentioned in paragraph (b)
of
sub-rule (2).
(3)
If at the hearing of such application the court is of
the opinion that the proceeding or step is irregular or improper,
it
may set aside in whole or in part, either as against all the parties
or as against some of them, and grant leave to amend or
make any such
order as to it seems to meet.
(4)
Until a party has complied with any order of court made
against him in terms of this rule, he shall not take any
further step
in the cause, save to apply for an extension of time within which to
comply with such order.”
[13]
A
Court will grant a Rule 30 (1) application if it is satisfied that
there is an irregular step. In
Afrisun
Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v Kunene N.O & Others
[2]
, Southwood J held as
follows:

With
regard to the Rule 30 application, Mr. van der Linde pointed out that
such an application will be granted only where the irregular
step
would cause prejudice to the applicant seeking to set it aside.”
[14]
The basis of Rule 30 (1) application is that the main application
lacks clarity and the Fourth and
Fifth Respondents cause of
complaints as contained in the notice of Rule 30 (2)(b) has not been
removed by the Applicants.
[15]
I paused to mention that Rule 30 (2)(b) that was filed by the Fourth
and Fifth Respondents was heard
on 30 September 2021 and the court
ordered as follows:

1.
Fourth and Fifth Respondents failure to within 10 days of becoming
aware of the Applicants’ irregular notice of motion
and
application serve a notice in terms of Rule 30 (2)(b) on the
Applicants, affording them an opportunity of removing the cause
of
the complaint, be condoned.
2.
Notice in terms of Rule 30 (2)(b) is declared effective and
operative;
3.
The Applicants are afforded 10 days after the granting of this
application, to remove the cause of the complaint.”
[16]
The
principles that govern the approach to an application in terms of
Rule 30 are stated in
BSB
International Link CC v Readam SA (Pty) Ltd and Another, In Re;
Readam SA (Pty) Ltd v The City of Johannesburg Metropolitan

Municipality and Another
[3]
,
the
Court held as follows:

[2]
Before I deal any further with the application it is necessary to
briefly restate the principles applicable to an application
in terms
of rule 30. The rule is designed to provide for the setting aside of
irregular steps taken in proceedings. The rule endows
the court with
a wide discretion (rule 30(3)). Important for present purposes is the
well-settled requirement of prejudice: proof
of prejudice is a
pre-requisite for success in an application in terms of rule 30(1)
(cf Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1966 (2) SA 273
(A);
Erasmus Superior Court Practice B1-193 and the cases referred to in
footnote 9). A party entitled to invoke the rule is not
obliged to do
so: as much is clear from the wording of rule 30(1): ‘a
party…may apply to court to set it aside’.
The applicant
in a rule 30 application accordingly, must allege and prove
prejudice, if not substantial prejudice.”
[17]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents in this matter contend that they
will be severely prejudiced if the
relief sought in the main action
is granted specifically referring to the supplementary account.
Furthermore, that the Applicants
failed to file an objection against
the first amended liquidation and distribution account in 2018.
[18]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents in the affidavit in support of the
Rule 30 (1) application, state
that the additional aspects raised by
the Applicants have been dealt with in the first liquidation and
distribution account to
which the Applicants had raised no objection
as the account was advertised for objection in terms of section 35 of
the Act. The
Fourth and Fifth Respondents at para 16 further state as
follows:

The
attempts by the applicants to impermissibly and belatedly lodge
objections against the first liquidation and distribution account
is
impermissible and constitute an irregular proceeding.”
[19]
A Court will grant a Rule 30 (1) application if it is satisfied that
there is an irregular step that
the party bringing such an
application has not taken any further step in the cause of the matter
with the knowledge of such irregular
step and has given the opponent
notice to remove such step within ten (10) days of the former
becoming aware of that irregular
step. Of importance is whether the
Applicants will suffer prejudice unless the irregular step is
removed. In
Afrisun Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v Kunene N.O and others
Supra,
the Court said the following:
“…
an
application will be granted only where the irregular step would cause
prejudice to the applicant seeking to set it aside.”
[20]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents raised five (5) complaints towards
the irregular step that they informed
the Applicants to remove the
cause of the complaints. The Applicants failed to remove the cause of
complaints.
[21]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents raised the issue with prayer 1 in
the notice of motion that the relief
sought by the Applicants to set
aside the decision of the First Respondent is not identified. The
Applicants in the answering affidavit
contend that the First
Respondent had dismissed the objection that was raised against the
estate. This is reflected in
Annexure “O”
on page
119 as follows:

Your
complaint or objection against the estate is dismissed. Under
the administration of the estate Act, it is duty of the
executor to
determine the liquidation and distribution of assets, to admit,
dispute or reject claims lodged against the estate.
Anyone aggrieved
by such duty or decision made, can take the executor for review.”
[22]
Prayer 1 of the notice of motion of the main application, the
Applicants’ relief is that:

That
the decision of the First Respondent be set aside in terms of section
35(10) of the Administration of Estate act 66 of 1965.”
[23]
In my view, the Fourth and Fifth Respondents are correctly objecting
to the relief sought in prayer
1 as the First Respondent has made
several decisions in respect of the estate, whether it is the first
liquidation and distribution
account, the first supplementary account
or the second supplementary liquidation and distribution account of
the estate, that indeed
is not clear in prayer 1 of the notice of
motion.
[24]
Furthermore, the second and third complaints are in respect of the
first liquidation and distribution
account that the Applicants’
objection should be limited to the additional assets (shares) and its
allocation which include
vehicles, proceeds of crops and liabilities
of the estate. Indeed, the first account was finalised in 2018
without any objections.
The mentioned additional assets may be dealt
with by way of amending the existing account or by way of a
supplementary account.
Furthermore, the First Respondent indicated
that: “on the basis the claim was dealt with in the first and
final account,
but was not objected to (See page 119 of
Annexure
“O”
)
[25]
Indeed, as correctly stated by the Fourth and Fifth Respondents, the
Applicants cannot revisit the
first account at such a late stage with
no application for condonation. The First Respondent in
Annuxure
“O”
had indicated that any aggrieved party should
have taken the matter on review.  The Applicants should probably
have approached
the court with a review application.
[26]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents raised a further issue with the
non-joinder or misjoinder by the Applicants
to join Brakkuil Trust
and the Wolwekop Trust which are entities that have an interest in
the relief sought.
[27]
The
question raised is whether or not Uniform Rule 30 is a mechanism that
can be utilized to challenge a misjoinder. In
Erasmus
Superior Courts Practice
[4]
,
the following is stated:

An
objection of non-joinder or misjoinder may be raised under this rule,
but the usual practice is to raise it by way of a special
plea.”
[28]
The Respondents contend that the Applicants failed to join Brakkruil
Trust and Wolwekop Trust. The
Applicants on the other hand, contend
that these two (2) trusts have no direct and substantive interest to
the proceedings or to
the estate of the deceased. I am inclined to
agree with the Applicants as the claim of these trusts are still to
be investigated
by the First Respondent, neither is there any
evidence before me that these trusts have a direct and/or substantive
interest in
the proceedings. In any event, non-joinder should be
raised as a special plea and not raised by means of a Rule 30
application.
[29]
With regard to the late filing of the Affidavit of the Applicants,
the court will condone such late
filing as this matter involves
siblings in dispute of their deceased father’s estate. It is in
the interest of justice that
both sides be given a fair chance to
ventilate their issues.
[30]
The Fourth and Fifth Respondents have shown that they will be
severely prejudiced if the relief sought
is granted as it will affect
issues that have already been finalised. Furthermore, the Applicants
by not clearly identifying what
must be set aside by the First
Respondent would prejudice the Fourth and Fifth Respondents in that
they would be unable to respond.
[31]
It is trite that the Court has a discretion that is to be exercised
judicially in determining whether
to grant or refuse an application
in terms of Rule 30.
[32]
Taking
into consideration that there has to be a balance by what is fair to
all parties, in
Northern
Assurance Co Ltd v Somdaka
[5]
, the Court said the
following:

The
Court has a discretion to be exercised judicially upon consideration
of the circumstances, to do what is fair to both sides.”
[33]
In the circumstances, where the notice of motion does constitute an
irregularity and the irregularity
is not of such a nature that it
requires the whole action to be set aside, in terms of Rule 30 (3)
the Court can make an appropriate
order that will enable the
Applicants to amend their papers. The Fourth and Fifth Respondents
cannot be faulted in seeking clarity
on the relief sought by the
Applicants. Bearing in mind that the Applicants, the Fourth and Fifth
Respondents are siblings opposing
each other, in the end, it is their
deceased father’s estate and there should be fairness on all
sides.
[34]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
The Applicants’ notice of motion and application are declared
irregular and are set aside
in terms of Rule 30(1);
2.
The Applicants are afforded 15 days in which to substitute their
notice of motion and application;
3.
Should the Applicants fail to so substitute their notice of motion
and application timeously and/or
satisfactory, the Fourth and Fifth
Respondents are granted leave to apply on the same papers, suitably
amplified if necessary,
for an order that the Applicants’ main
application be dismissed with costs;
4.
Costs to be costs in the main action.
CHESIWE,
J
On
behalf of the Applicant:  Mr JD de Beer
Instructed
by:

Kramer Weihmann
On
behalf of the Fourth and
Fifth
Respondents:
Adv. JJ Pretorius
Instructed
by:

Mcintyre & Van Der Post
[1]
Act 66 of 1965
[2]
1999 (2) SA 599 (T)
[3]
(2013/14167) [2014] ZAGPJHC 28 (7 March 2014)
[4]
Erasmus in relation to non-joinder or misjoinder, at B1-191
https://jutastat.juta.co.za/nxt/gateway.dll?f=templates&fn=default.htm&vid=Publish:10.1048/Enu
[5]
1960
(1) SA 588
(A) at 595