THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPORTABLE
CASE NO: 584/2002
In the matter between:
MUSHAVHANI WILSON MADZIVHANDILA FIRST APPELLANT
NYAMUNDZHEDZI MADZIVHANDILA SECOND APPELLANT
JOYCE MULAUDZI THIRD APPELLANT
TSHAMUNWE MASINDI FOURTH APPELLANT
and
THIAMBIWI EUNICE MADZIVHANDILA FIRST RESPONDENT
MAELE JACKSON MUSHASHA SECOND RESPONDENT
CORAM: MTHIYANE JA, JONES and VAN HEERDEN AJJA
HEARD: 17 FEBRUARY 2004
DELIVERED: 24 MARCH 2004
Summary: Effect of agreement to hold property as nominee - whether
agreement in violation of s 23 of the Venda Public Service Act 8 of 1986 –
interpretation and application of s 23 of the Act - issue of illegality raised for
the first time on appeal.
________________________________________ __________________________
JUDGMENT
MTHIYA NE JA:
2
MTHIYANE JA:
[1] This appeal is concerned with the question whether certain assets which
were held in the name of the second appe llant (the second defe ndant) fell into the
joint estate of the first resp ondent (the plaintiff) and th e first appellant (the first
defendant), who were married in community of property. Upon the dissolution of
the marriage between the plaintiff and the first defendant by a decree of divorce on
25 March 1998 a division of the joint esta te was ordered. Th e second respondent
(the fifth defendant) who was appointed to receive and liq uidate the assets of the
joint estate was unable to do so because of a dispute which arose between the
plaintiff, on the one hand and the firs t defendant and his mother, the second
defendant, on the other, as to whether cer tain assets registered in the second
defendant’s name formed part of the joint estate or not. The disputed assets were
the following:
1.1 An immovable property described as Portion 2 of Stand 37 situated in
Thohoyandou (the Stand) and
1.2 Permission to occupy a business site at Tshilamba in the district of Mutale,
all buildings on this site as well as all rights in the business being conducted
thereon (the Site).
[2] The plaintiff instituted action in th e Thohoyandou High C ourt for an order
declaring that the Stand and the Site we re assets in the joint estate. In her
particulars of claim she alleged that dur ing the subsistence of the marriage she
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concluded an agreement with the first a nd second defendants in terms of which
the Stand and the Site were acquired by the spouses for the benefit of the joint
estate. It was alleged further that, in terms of this agreement, the Stand and the Site
were registered in the name of the second defendant because of impediments
connected to the plaintiff and the first defendant’s employment which prohibited
them from having any interest in any bus iness venture. (They were both civil
servants in the employ of the Venda Gove rnment.) In essence the plaintiff’s case
was that the second defendant was merely holding the assets as nominee.
[3] In their pleas, the first and second defe ndants averred that the latter was the
owner of the Stand and the holder of all the rights and interest in the Site, and that
the joint estate had no rights in respect of these assets. The agreement alleged by
the plaintiff was denied.
[4] The trial court found in favour of the plainti ff and made an order declaring
that the Stand and the Site were assets in the joint estate. As the Stand had already
been sold and transferred to a third party by the time of trial, the court ordered that
the proceeds of the sale (R250 000) be paid to the fifth defendant to be dealt with
in terms of the order providing for the divisi on of the joint estate. As regards the
Site, the fifth defendant was authorized to take possession of the assets constituting
the Site and to deal with them in accordance with the said order.
[5] The learned trial judge (Makgoba AJ) re fused leave to appeal. This appeal
is with the leave of this Court against his judgment and order. This Court also
granted the third and fourth appellants (the third and fourth defendants) leave to
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appeal against a ruling of the court a quo that there was to be no order as to costs
in respect of the plaintiff’ s unsuccessful claims against them in relation to certain
motor vehicles. The plaintiff had also clai med these vehicles as assets in the joint
estate. The reasons for denying the third and fourth defendants their costs are not
apparent from the record. Their appeal has, however, now fallen away because the
plaintiff has (very wisely it must be said ) abandoned the judgment and order in so
far as it relates to the third and four th defendants and te ndered costs. The
abandonment and tender were made in the plaintiff’s papers in opposition to the
petition for leave to appeal to this Court.
[6] At the commencement of th e appeal counsel for the defendants moved for
the amendment of the Notice of Appeal in order to introduce the invalidity of the
agreement relied on by the plaintiff as a further ground of appeal. In argument
before us counsel contended that the alleged agreement (if it existed) was illegal in
that it fell foul of the provisions of (int er alia) s 23 of the Venda Public Service
Act1, and that enforcement of this agreement would be against public policy as this
would defeat the purpose of the relevant statutory provisions. The alleged violation
was founded on the contention that as public servants the plaintiff and the
defendant were precluded from ‘having an interest in any business venture’.
[7] The amendment was opposed on behalf of the plaintiff on the basis that the
illegality and/or unenforceability of the agreem ent had not been raised in the court
1 Act 8 of 1986. The Act has now been repealed by s 43 (1) of the Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation No 103 of
1994) read with Schedule 4 thereof.
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a quo. Even in the notice of amendment th e point was taken only in relation to
the Site and not the Stand. Counsel for the plaintiff submitted that if reliance was
to be placed on s 23 of the Ac t reference should have been made to the statutory
provision in the pleadings or the defenc e formulated in such a way that it was
sufficiently clear on what statutory provisi ons reliance was placed. If the illegality
relied on did not appear ex facie the transaction but from the surrounding
circumstances, the circumstances should have been pleaded. There is a lot to be
said for this submission. Counsel for the defendants was however allowed to argue
the new ground of appeal as if the amendm ent had been granted. What follows are
grounds for that ruling.
[8] The approach to be followed where a ques tion of illegality is raised was laid
down in Yannakou v Apollo Club.2 Trollip JA writing for the majority said:
‘…it is the duty of the court to take the point of illegality mero motu, even if the defendant does
not plead or raise it; but it can and will only do so if the illegality appears ex facie the transaction
or from the evidence before it, and, in the latter event, if it is also satisfied that all the necessary
and relevant facts are before it.’
In the present case it is true that illegality was not raised pertinently in the plea. It
seems to me that even if the point had b een specifically raised the plaintiff would
not have conducted her case any differently . The question of illegality was raised
by the plaintiff herself. As I have already stated the plaintiff in her particulars of
2 1974 (1) SA 614 AD at 623H; see also F & I Advisors (Edms) Bpk en `n ander v Eerste Nasionale Bank van
Suidelike Afrika Bpk [1998] 4 All SA 480 (SCA) at 484d–e; Herbstein & Van Winsen The Civil Practice of the
Supreme Court of South Africa 4ed (1997) 914.
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claim alleged that the parties agreed that the Stand and the Site would be
registered in the name of the second defendant because of the ‘impediments
connected with the plaintiff and the defendant’s employment which prohibited
them from having any interest in any busin ess venture’. I do not consider that on
the facts of the present case there would be any unfairness to the plaintiff if the
amendment is granted3. In any event this court is on the basis of Yannakou v Apollo
Club entitled to consider the point mero motu. For these reasons the amendment
was allowed.
[9] I now turn to the merits. Three main submissions we re advanced on behalf
of the defendants. The first was that the plaintiff had failed to prove the agreement
upon which she relied in her particulars of claim, in terms of which the second
defendant would hold the disputed assets as a nominee for the joint estate. In this
regard, conflicting versions of the circ umstances under which the Stand and the
Site were acquired were put forward by the plaintiff and the first and second
defendants. The trial court made credibility findings in favour of the plaintiff and
her witnesses and against the defendant s and their witnesses and ultimately
accepted the plaintiff’s version as set out in her particulars of claim. It has often
been stated that, as a general rule, the tr ial court is in the best possible position to
decide on the credibility of witnesses before it and that a court of appeal will not
lightly interfere with its findings in this regard.
4 In this case, I am satisfied that the
3 Bank of Lisbon and South Africa Ltd v The Master and Others 1987 (1) SA 276 (A) at 290 D–F; see also Herbstein
& Van Winsen op cit 912 – 914 and the other authorities there cited.
4 Rex v Dhlumayo 1948 (2) SA 677(A) at 705-706.
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credibility findings made by the trial cour t were justified by the evidence before
it. In my view, it is not necessary to deal with the argument advanced by counsel
for the defendants that, in accepting the plaintiff’s version, the trial court
incorrectly relied on documents without proof of the authenticity thereof. Even in
the absence of such documents, the other ev idence before the trial court was such
that its finding that the plaintiff had proved her case on a balance of probabilities
cannot be faulted.
[10] The second submission made by counsel for the defendants was that the
agreement relied on by the plain tiff, if it existed, was inva lid in that its aim was to
defeat the objects of the Act, which precl uded civil servants in the employ of the
Venda government from ‘having an interest in any business venture’. For this
submission reliance was placed on s 23 of the Act. It reads:
‘23 Unless it is otherwise provided fo r in his conditions of employment –
(a) every officer and employee shall place the w hole of his time at the disposal of the
State;
(b) no officer or employee shall perfor m or engage himself to perform remunerative
work outside his employment in the public service, without permission granted
on the recommendation of the Commissi on by the Minister or an officer
authorised by the Minister;
(c) no officer or employee may claim any addi tional remuneration in respect of any
official duty or work which he perf orms voluntarily or is requested by a
competent authority to perform.’
[Emphasis added]
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[11] The construction placed by counsel on s 23 is not justified. On a proper
interpretation of the section th e intention of the legislatur e was to ensure that civil
servants placed the whole of their time ‘at the disposal of the State’. That much is
clear from the wording of sub-paragra ph (a) above. The use of the phrase
‘remunerative work outside his [the employee’s] employment’ in sub-paragraph
(b) relates to work done which consumes the time of the employee and reinforces
the notion that the section requires the em ployee to devote the whole of his time to
his employment. The mere fact that the plaintiff and the first defendant had an
interest in the Stand and the Site does not necessarily imply that their time was
consumed thereby or that ‘the whole of their time’ was not placed at the disposal of
the State. On the evidence neither the plaintiff nor the first defendant physically
participated in the operation of the busi ness on the Site or performed any other
‘work’ either regarding the Site or the Stand, although apparently they received
some remuneration from the bu siness run on the Site. It therefore follows that the
mere acquisition and holding of rights or in terests in the sites in question in this
case does not amount to a contravention of s 23 of the Act and the agreement
entered into between the spouses, on the one hand, and the se cond defendant, on
the other, cannot be regarded as illegal or unenforceable.
[12] The third and final submissi on advanced on behalf of the defendants was
that the plaintiff and the first defendant could not have acquired the disputed Stand
and the Site because they lacked the requisite intention (animus) to acquire the said
assets given that they believed that, as civil servants, they were precluded by the
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Act from doing so. The submission was doom ed to fail the moment it was made.
The question whether or not the plaintiff and the first defendant had the intention
to acquire the property concerned is not in issue in this case. That question would
have arisen if the plaintiff had been cl aiming transfer of ownership of the Stand
and of the permission to occupy the Site. Bu t this is not the case. All the plaintiff
asked for in the action was a declarator that the Stand and the Site were assets in
the joint estate. The submission is therefore without merit and falls to be rejected.
[13] In the result the appeal fails and the following order is made:
1. The appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to be paid by the first
and second appellants jo intly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved.
2. The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs incurred by the third
and fourth appellants up to the abandonment of the judgment and
order of the trial court in so far as it related to such appellants and the
tender made by the first respondent.
__________________
KK MTHIYANE
CONCUR: JUDGE OF APPEAL
JONES AJA
VAN HEERDEN AJA