Le Roux and Another v Ontvanger van Inkomste and Another (6800/08) [2009] ZAFSHC 27 (12 March 2009)

80 Reportability
Trusts and Estates

Brief Summary

Succession — Joint wills — Revocation of election — Applicant, an 85-year-old man, sought to revoke his election made under a joint will with his deceased spouse, which had significant tax implications he was unaware of at the time of election — The South African Revenue Service treated the election as a donation subject to tax — The court considered whether the applicant's ignorance of the tax consequences was excusable and whether he should be allowed to retract his election — Held, the applicant was permitted to revoke his election due to his lack of understanding of the material consequences, which was deemed excusable in the circumstances.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter was brought as an application in the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein, concerning whether a surviving spouse who has adiated (accepted benefits under) a joint will may later be authorised to withdraw or revoke that adiation.


The applicants were Jacobus Stefanus Vogel Le Roux (in his personal capacity as surviving spouse) and Jacobus Stefanus Vogel Le Roux N.O., in his capacity as executor in the estate of the late Anna Susanna Elizabeth le Roux. The respondents were the Ontvanger van Inkomste (first respondent, representing the revenue authority’s position in relation to the tax consequence) and the Meester van die Hooggeregshof (second respondent).


The application followed after the surviving spouse had already signed an Act of Adiation, and it subsequently emerged that the revenue authority treated the adiation as giving rise to a deemed donation with donations tax consequences under section 58 of the Income Tax Act (as referred to in the judgment). The Master did not oppose the application, but filed a report outlining office practice regarding adiation/repudiation certificates. The first respondent opposed the relief.


The general dispute concerned the intersection between succession law principles governing election (adiation/repudiation) under a joint will, the requirement that an election be informed, and whether the court should, on grounds of equity and fairness, permit the withdrawal of an election where it was made in excusable ignorance of its legal consequences.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant (an 85-year-old man) and his late wife executed a joint will in which they “merged” their joint estate and, among other provisions, bequeathed all liquid funds to a trust. Their children were to act as trustees, and the trust was to make provision for the maintenance of the surviving spouse in the trustees’ discretion. Upon the death of the survivor, the trust assets would devolve upon the children of the marriage.


It was not in dispute that the only asset implicated was a cash amount of approximately R2 million, which would form both the estate asset and, following the testamentary scheme, the trust asset. The applicant was nominated as executor and arranged for the practical administration to be done by Smith, who performed estate administration work while associated with an auditing firm (and who was described as a lawyer by training but not practising as such).


It was common cause that the applicant adiated under the joint will. Shortly thereafter it emerged that the revenue authority treated the adiation as a deemed donation to the trust under section 58 of the Income Tax Act, on the basis that the applicant had received an insufficient counter-performance relative to the value of what passed to the trust. The donations tax exposure was stated to be R170 840-61, and the applicant asserted he did not have funds available to satisfy the assessment because his assets would, on the testamentary scheme, be located in the trust.


The court treated as undisputed that, prior to signing the Act of Adiation, the applicant had not been informed of the donations tax implication. This was supported by Smith’s confirmatory affidavit, which indicated that Smith himself had not appreciated the potential tax consequence until it was raised by the first respondent.


It also appeared from the documentation that the Act of Adiation did not reflect that the applicant understood all “material consequences” of the election in the sense contemplated by the Master’s office practice. The Master reported that his office requires written adiation/repudiation and ordinarily insists on a certificate by a suitably qualified person confirming that the implications and legal consequences have been explained and understood; because such a certificate did not appear on the adiation documentation, the Master’s office did not accept it. The result, on the papers, was that the Master required the applicant to provide an improved Act of Adiation and an adiation certificate confirming explanation of all material consequences, which the applicant could not truthfully provide given his case.


The first respondent accepted (at least for purposes of opposition) that the applicant personally was not aware of the tax implication, but contended that Smith, as adviser, ought to have known of it, and that this ignorance should not be treated as reasonable or excusable. The first respondent also contended that the adviser’s lack of knowledge should be attributed to the applicant, so that the applicant should remain bound by the adiation.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, and in what circumstances, a surviving spouse who has elected to adiate under a joint will may later be granted relief to withdraw that election, and whether ignorance of a legal/tax consequence of the election can qualify as the kind of excusable ignorance that justifies intervention by a court.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal principles to established facts, coupled with an evaluative assessment grounded in equity and fairness. The factual premise that the applicant had not been informed of the donations tax implication was treated as common cause on the papers; the contest lay in whether that ignorance was legally relevant, whether it was excusable, whether adviser ignorance could be attributed to the applicant, and how the court’s equitable discretion should be exercised.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter from the premise, drawn from authority and academic writing, that an election to adiate (or repudiate) is, as a general rule, irrevocable once made, and cannot be withdrawn unilaterally. The court accepted that leave of the court is required for a surviving spouse to be released from an election already made.


In addressing the possibility of relief, the court relied on the principle (as formulated in the succession law authorities referred to in the judgment) that a beneficiary may obtain relief where the choice was made in excusable ignorance. The court also referred to case law indicating that relief may be accorded in exceptional cases where the ignorance leading to the election is excusable in the circumstances and where considerations of justice and equity support intervention.


The court observed that many reported decisions focus on whether the nature of the election had been explained rather than the full range of its material consequences, but held that this did not justify restricting relief only to ignorance about the existence or character of the choice. It reasoned that there was no sound basis for applying the court’s power so narrowly. Where it is clear that a surviving spouse was excusably ignorant of the legal consequences of the election, relief could follow. The court treated the donations tax implication as, in substance, a legal consequence of the adiation.


In evaluating the first respondent’s contention that the adviser’s ignorance should be attributed to the applicant, the court did not accept that this should preclude relief on the facts. The judgment emphasised that the applicant was elderly and demonstrably legally unsophisticated, and that he had been unaware of the tax consequence. It further noted that the assertion that Smith had not explained the tax implication because he himself was unaware of it stood uncontradicted on the papers.


The court placed substantial weight on fairness and equity as the applicable measure in this type of application, and evaluated the concrete prejudice and justice of the outcome. The applicant’s adiation meant that he would have no assets, would depend on discretionary trust allowances for his maintenance, and would be unable to pay the revenue authority’s assessment. The court considered that the first respondent would not be deprived of tax that would otherwise have been payable in the ordinary course based on prior earnings; rather, the first respondent stood to receive what the court characterised as a form of windfall or “bonus” arising from the applicant’s initial election. In those circumstances, and given the lack of informed consent to the election’s material legal consequence, the court held that justice and equity favoured permitting the applicant to withdraw the adiation.


On costs, the court treated the matter as one where the applicant sought indulgence from the court but where the first respondent had failed in its opposition. The court crafted a split approach, ordering that the estate pay costs only on the scale as if the application were unopposed, and making no order for the remainder of the costs.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted the substantive relief sought in prayers 1 and 2 of the notice of motion, thereby authorising the applicant to withdraw his earlier adiation.


The court ordered that the costs of the application be payable out of the deceased estate on the basis as if the application were unopposed, and it made no order in respect of the balance of the costs.


Cases Cited


Oxenham v Oxenham’s Executor 1945 WLD 57


Van der Merwe v Die Meester en ’n Ander 1967 (2) SA 714 (SWA)


Serfontein v Walton 1979 (1) SA 1059 (O)


T (1984) 46 SATC 121


T (1988) 15 SATC 58


Legislation Cited


Inkomstebelastingwet, section 58


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that while an election by a surviving spouse to adiate under a joint will is generally irrevocable, the court has the power to grant relief where the election was made in excusable ignorance and where justice and equity require that the surviving spouse be allowed to withdraw the election.


On the facts, the applicant’s election was made without knowledge of a significant legal consequence, namely the donations tax consequence treated by the revenue authority as arising under section 58. Given the applicant’s age, lack of legal sophistication, the absence of explanation of the material consequence, and the severe practical effect of leaving the applicant assetless and unable to satisfy the assessment, the court concluded that fairness required permitting withdrawal of the adiation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An adiation/repudiation election in the context of a joint will is not freely retractable once exercised; withdrawal requires judicial intervention rather than unilateral reversal by the beneficiary.


A court may grant relief from an election where the beneficiary acted in excusable ignorance when electing, and where equity and fairness justify the departure from the general rule of irrevocability.


Excusable ignorance is not confined to ignorance about the bare existence or nature of the choice; it may extend to ignorance of a material legal consequence of the election, where the circumstances show that the beneficiary did not understand that consequence and where it would be unjust to hold the beneficiary strictly to the election.


Applications of this nature require a case-by-case assessment, with the decisive enquiry being whether it is just and equitable to permit a change of position in light of the beneficiary’s knowledge, circumstances, and the practical impact of maintaining the election.

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[2009] ZAFSHC 27
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Le Roux and Another v Ontvanger van Inkomste and Another (6800/08) [2009] ZAFSHC 27 (12 March 2009)

IN
DIE HOOGGEREGSHOF VAN SUID-AFRIKA
(VRYSTAATSE
PROVINSIALE AFDELING)
Saak Nr. : 6800/08
In
die aansoek tussen:-
JACOBUS STEFANUS
VOGEL LE ROUX
1ste
Applikant
JACOBUS
STEFANUS VOGEL LE ROUX N.O.
2de
Applikant
In
sy hoedanigheid as Eksekuteur in die Boedel
van
wyle Anna Susanna Elizabeth le Roux
en
DIE ONTVANGER VAN
INKOMSTE
1ste
Respondent
DIE
MEESTER VAN DIE HOOGGEREGSHOF
2de
Respondent
(
VERWYSINGSNOMMER
: 779/08)
_____________________________________________________
AANGEHOOR
OP:
12
FEBRUARIE 2009
_____________________________________________________
UITSPRAAK
DEUR:
CILLIé,
R
_____________________________________________________
GELEWER
OP:
12
MAART 2009
_____________________________________________________
[1] Hierdie aansoek raak
die vraag of ‘n langslewende wat ‘n gesamentlike testament met
die eerssterwende adieër het daardie
adiasie later kan herroep.
Die applikant vra in smeekbedes 1 en 2 van sy Kennisgewing van Mosie
‘n bevel wat hom magtig om so
te doen. Die res van die smeekbedes
vloei eintlik daaruit voort en word eintlik oorbodig aangevra.
[2] Die omstandighede
waaruit die aansoek spruit, is betreklik eenvoudig – die antwoord
daarop minder eenvoudig. In ‘n gesamentlike
testament het die
applikant, ‘n 85-jarige man en sy oorlede eggenote, hul
gemeenskaplike boedel “saamgesmelt” en onder andere
alle “likiede
fondse” aan ‘n trust met hul kinders as trustees bemaak. Gemelde
trust moet dan na die diskresie van die trustees
voorsiening maak vir
die onderhoud van die langslewende. Dit is origens bepaal dat
wanneer die langslewende te sterwe kom, die
bates van die trust
vererf aan die kinders gebore uit die huwelik. Die enigste bate van
die boedel (en dus ook die trust) is ‘n
kontantbedrag van ongeveer
R2 miljoen. Die applikant is kragtens die testament die eksekuteur
in die boedel. Die fisiese bereddering
daarvan is egter deur hom
opgedra aan ene Smith, ‘n prokureur. Smith praktiseer egter nie as
sulks nie, maar is verbonde aan
‘n firma van ouditeure alwaar hy
boedelbereddering doen. Applikant het die gesamentlike testament
ge-adieër. Kort daarna
het dit egter geblyk dat die Kommissaris
van die Suid-Afrikaanse Inkomstediens (eerste respondent) die
applikant se adiasie as
‘n geagte skenking kragtens artikel 58 van
die Inkomstebelastingwet aan die trust beskou en wel omdat die
applikant ‘n onvoldoende
teenprestasie uit die boedel ontvang in
vergelyking met die omvang van die waarde van sy boedel wat nou die
trust toeval.
[3] In sy ondersteunende
eedsverklaring meld die applikant dat
“
Indien ek voor uitoefening van my
keuse om te adieër behoorlik en volledig ingelig sou wees
omtrent die skenkingsbelasing implikasies
van adiasie van die
gesamentlike Testament, met ander woorde dat ek myself daardeur sou
blootstel vir betaling van skenkingsbelasing
van R170 840-61, sou my
keuse beslis gewees het om die gesamentlike Testament eerder te
repudieer.”
Dat die applikant nie
voor adiasie ingelig was van hierdie konsekwensie nie, is gemeensaak.
Dit word bevestig deur die voormelde
Smith in sy ondersteunende
eedsverklaring. Trouens, dit is duidelik dat Smith self ook nie van
hierdie moontlike gevolg bewus
was voordat die eerste respondent
“toegeslaan” het nie. Die applikant verduidelik origens dat in
terme van die testament letterlik
al sy bates aan die trust vererf en
dat hy nie oor die fondse beskik om aan die eerste respondent se
aanslag te voldoen nie.
[4] Die eerste respondent
se houding is dat die applikant gebonde is aan sy adiasie. Dit word
oënskynlik deur eerste respondent
aanvaar dat die applikant self
nie bewus was van die belastingimplikasie voormeld nie. Dit word
egter aangevoer, namens die eerste
respondent, dat die applikant se
adviseur, gesegde Smith, daarvan bewus behoort te gewees het,
aangesien dit al na bewering sedert
1984 “bekend is onder
boedelberedderaars, prokureurs, ouditeure, handboek-skrywers... dat
gesamentlike testamente en adiasie
die gevolge en effek het... Twee
belastingsake het daarmee gehandel en is gerapporteer...
(1984) 46
SATC 121
T en (1988) 15SATC 58”. Dit word dan namens die eerste
respondent aan die hand gedoen dat die “beweerde fout nie redelik
of
geregverdig in die omstandighede was nie”.
[5] Die tweede respondent
(die Meester van die Hoër Hof) opponeer nie die aansoek nie,
maar meld in ‘n verslag aan die hof
onder andere as volg:
“
3.3 Vanweë die ernstige
implikasies wat ‘n keuse vir ‘n erfgenaam inhou, is dit praktyk
in my kantoor om aan te dring op
‘n skriftelike adiasie- of
repudiasiesertifikaat. My kantoor dring verder ook daarop aan dat ‘n
sertifikaat aan die voet van
die adiasie of repudiasie aangebring
word deur ‘n prokureur of iemand wat vanweë sy beroep oor die
nodige bekwaamheid daartoe
beskik waarin hy sertifiseer dat die
implikasies en regsgevolge van die handeling aan die betrokke persoon
verduidelik is, dat
hy verklaar het dat hy die gevolge van sy
handeling volkome verstaan, dit oorweeg het, besef wat die materiële
gevolge daarvan
sal wees, en na oorweging van al bogenoemde faktore
besluit het om te adieër of te repudieer.
3.4 Omdat die sertifikaat waarna
verwys word in paragraaf 3.2 hierbo nie op die adiasiesertifikaat
verskyn het nie, is dit nie deur
my kantoor aanvaar nie.”
[6] Dit is duidelik uit
die Akte van Adiasie wat deel vorm van die stukke dat die applikant
nie bewus gemaak was van al die “materiële
gevolge” (soos
die Meester dit stel) voor ondertekening van die Akte nie.
“Materiële gevolge” wat luidens die Akte
van Adiasie deur
hom verstaan word, is die feit dat “die kontant in my boedel ook te
laat vererf of... nie my gedeelte van die
kontant te laat vererf
nie”. Die Akte bevat soos reeds vermeld geen sertifikaat soos
vereis deur die Meester en waarna
supra
verwys is nie.
[7] Dit situasie is
bygevolg dat die Meester van die applikant ‘n verbeterde Akte van
Adiasie en ‘n adiasiesertifikaat verg.
Daarin word van die
applikant geverg om te bevestig dat al die materiële gevolge aan
hom verduidelik was voordat hy sy keuse
tot adiasie gedoen het. So
‘n sertifikaat sal klaarblyklik nie gegee kan word nie, want dit is
dan nou juis applikant se saak
dat al hierdie materiële gevolge
nie aan hom verduidelik was nie. Hierin het hy die ondersteuning van
die gesegde Smith wie
se taak dit dan nou juis was om dit aan die
applikant te verduidelik. Smith se bewering in sy eedsverklaring dat
hy dit nie aan
die applikant verduidelik het nie, omdat hyself nie
van die belastingimplikasie geweet het nie, is onweerspreek op die
stukke.
[8] Mnr. Claasen, namens
die eerste respondent, se betoog is dat Smith se onkunde aangaande
die belastingimplikasie van die adiasie
die applikant toegedig moet
word. Aldus, so is die betoog, moet die applikant gebonde gehou word
aan sy keuse. Ek het, gedurende
sy betoog aan mnr. Claasen, gevra of
hyself tevore bewus was van hierdie implikasie wat artikel 58 van die
Inkomstebelastingwet
op ‘n langslewende wat adieër kan hê
en sy antwoord was in die negatief.
[9] Dit is duidelik uit
die toepaslike gesag waarop beide advokate steun, dat so ‘n keuse
eenmaal gemaak nie eensydig en sondermeer
deur die langslewende
herroep kan word nie. Die verlof van die hof is daarvoor nodig. Die
gesagheggende skrywers Corbett Hofmeyr
& Kahn stel dit as volg in
hul bekende werk
Law
of Succession in South Africa
,
2e Uitgawe, bl. 19:
“
Once made the election is
irrevocable... This is subject to the right of a beneficiary to seek
relief from the court if the choice
was made in excusable ignorance
of rights.”
Die skrywers Meyrowitz:
Administration
of Estates and Estate Duty
,
2004 Uitgawe, par. 18.11 asook Bouwer:
Die
Beredderingsproses van Bestorwe Boedels
,
2de Uitgawe, bl. 464 erken nie so geredelik die reg van die
langslewende om met die tussenkoms van die hof van rigting te
verander
nie. Beide laasgenoemde skrywers aanvaar egter dat die
keuse met volle insig en begrip van die gevolge gedoen moet word
alvorens
dit as ‘n ingeligde keuse beskou kan word.
[10] Die meeste
gerapporteerde uitsprake waarna die advokate in betoog verwys het,
handel met die vraag of die aard van die keuse
hoegenaamd aan die
langslewende verduidelik was en nie soseer met die uitdruklike
materiële gevolge daarvan nie. Dit skyn
egter of veelal aanvaar
word dat waar die onkunde by keuse-uitoefening verskoonbaar is, die
hof so ‘n langslewende tegemoet behoort
te kom. In
OXENHAM
V OXENHAM’S EXECUTER
1945 WLD 57
word dit as volg gestel op bl. 63:
“
Relief may in exceptional cases be
accorded... if the ignorance which led him to elect is in the
circumstances excusable... when
it is
justus
et improbabilis
.”
[11] Dit is origens
duidelik uit die gerapporteerde uitsprake waarna die advokate verwys
het, dat elke geval op sy eie omstandighede
beoordeel moet word.
Daar is gevolglik geen sin in om te handel met die beslissings waarna
verwys was nie en ek is nie voornemens
om dit te doen nie. Die
beginsel is duidelik: As reg en billikheid verg dat so ‘n
langslewende deur die hof tegemoetgekom moet
word, behoort dit gedoen
te word.
[12] Mnr. Claasen, namens
die eerste respondent, het betoog dat die onkunde beperk moet word
tot gevalle waar die aard van die keuses
nie duidelik was vir die
betrokkene nie en dat dit nie tot die gevolge van die keuses
uitgebrei behoort te word nie. Daar is geen
rede waarom die hof se
bevoegdheid om ‘n langslewende toe te laat om sy aanvanklike keuse
te herroep, so beperkend toegepas moet
word nie. As dit duidelik is
dat hy verskoonbaar onkundig was aangaande die regsgevolge (want dit
is wat hierdie belastingimplikasie
in wese is) van sy keuse, behoort
hy toegelaat te word om dit terug te trek. Die beginsel dat
verstaanbare onkundigheid aangaande
die regsgevolge van ‘n keuse
verskoonbaar is in vergelykbare gevalle, is reeds in die saak van
VAN
DER MERWE v DIE MEESTER EN 'N ANDER
1967 (2) SA 714
(SWA) aanvaar. Hierdie uitspraak is met goedkeuring
gevolg in hierdie hof deur Van Heerden R, soos hy toe was, in
SERFONTEIN
v WALTON
1979 (1) SA 1059
(O) op 1069F.
[13] Indien eenmaal
aanvaar word dat billikheid die maatstaf is wat toepassing vind in
aansoeke van hierdie aard, is die onderhawige
applikant in ‘n
besonder gunstige posisie. Soos reeds gemeld, is die applikant 85
jaar oud en op die stukke duidelik onkundig
aangaande
regsaangeleenthede. Vanweë sy adiasie het hy geen bates meer
nie. Hy sal afhanklik wees van ‘n maandelike toelae
van die
trustees. Hy het nie die fondse om die eerste respondent se aanslag
te betaal nie. Hierdie regsimplikasie van sy keuse
was nooit aan hom
bekend nie. Die eerste respondent verloor nie aanspraak op belasting
wat andersins in elk geval vanweë
vroeëre verdienste deur
die belastingpligtige betaalbaar was nie. Dit is eerder ‘n geval
dat die eerste respondent ‘n
bonus wat hom sou toeval vanweë
die applikant se aanvanklike keuse nou nie langer sal ontvang nie.
Die applikant het my gevolglik
oortuig dat hierdie ‘n geval is waar
reg en billikheid verg dat hy toegelaat behoort te word om sy
aanvanklike adiasie terug
te trek.
[14] Koste:
Die advokate was dit nie
eens welke kostebevel gemaak moet word as die aansoek slaag nie.
Mnr. Claasen se houding was dat die
boedel in so ‘n geval ook die
koste van eerste respondent se opposisie moet betaal. Mnr. Reinders,
vir die applikant, betoog
dat eerste respondent met sy bestryding van
die aansoek homself op risiko vir ‘n kostebevel geplaas het, ten
minste wat die koste
teweeggebring deur die verskyning vir die betoë
betref. Inaggenome dat dit enersyds die applikant is wat die hof se
tegemoetkoming
vra en andersyds dat eerste respondent misluk het in
sy teenstand teen die aangevraagde bevel, meen ek dat ‘n gepaste
kostebevel
sal wees dat die boedel die koste alleenlik soos op
ongeopponeerde basis betaal en dat ten aansien van die die balans van
die koste
geen bevel gemaak word nie.
Bygevolg word die
volgende bevel gemaak:
1. Bedes 1 en 2 van die
Kennisgewing van Mosie word toegestaan.
2. Die koste van die
aansoek is betaalbaar uit die bestorwe boedel op die basis asof dit
‘n onbestrede aansoek was.
3. Ten aansien van die
balans van die koste word geen bevel gemaak nie.
____________
C.B. CILLIé, R
Namens die
applikant: Adv. S.J. Reinders
In
opdrag van:
McIntyre & Van
der Post
BLOEMFONTEIN
Namens die eerste
respondent: Adv. J.Y. Claasen SC In opdrag van:
Staatsprokureur
BLOEMFONTEIN
/sp