Mendile and Others v Master of the High Court and Others (654/2023) [2026] ZANCHC 5 (23 January 2026)

80 Reportability
Trusts and Estates

Brief Summary

Trusts — Appointment of trustees — Review of Master's decision — Applicants, as beneficiaries and trustees, challenged the Master's appointment of new trustees without affording them a hearing — Court held that the Master's decision violated the principles of just administrative action and was set aside.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a statutory review application brought in the High Court (Northern Cape Division, Kimberley) to challenge an administrative decision of the Master of the High Court, Kimberley (“the Master”) concerning the governance of a trust. The proceedings were framed as an application to review and set aside (i) the Master’s decision of 4 September 2019 to appoint additional trustees and (ii) the letters of authority issued on the same date authorising those appointees to act as trustees of the Badirammogo Trust (“the Trust”).


The applicants comprised eight individuals, including one serving trustee and several beneficiaries. The first respondent was the Master. The second to sixth respondents were the persons appointed by the Master as trustees on 4 September 2019. Numerous further respondents were cited, with the Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development cited as an interested respondent, although no substantive relief was sought against that party in the order ultimately granted.


The matter became unopposed in substance. A notice of intention to oppose was initially filed by a group of respondents, but a subsequent notice of withdrawal was delivered. The Master did not file an answering affidavit and did not oppose the merits, although he filed an explanatory report (not under oath) and resisted a costs order against his office.


The dispute concerned the lawfulness, rationality, and procedural fairness of the Master’s exercise of statutory powers under the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988, particularly in relation to the appointment of further trustees and the procedural protections owed to existing trustees and beneficiaries when such appointments are made.


2. Material Facts


The Trust was created and registered in 2004 under the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 as a vehicle for the economic empowerment of workers employed by Sonvrucht (Pty) Ltd and Charge Trust. The Trust held 45% of the issued shares in Sonvrucht (Pty) Ltd. Over time, a substantial number of beneficiaries elected to sell their participation shares back, in exchange for an agreed amount, after which they ceased to be beneficiaries; these persons were referred to in the judgment as the “erstwhile beneficiaries”.


During 2014, it became apparent to the erstwhile beneficiaries that the empowerment venture was financially benefiting the remaining beneficiaries substantially. The erstwhile beneficiaries accordingly sought to be reinstated as beneficiaries, but the judgment indicates that they did not pursue the matter until later developments.


In 2019, the Master requested the Trust’s accountants (rather than the trustees) to provide the Trust’s financial statements, without indicating the statutory authority or purpose for the request. This initiated extensive correspondence. When the trustees sought clarification, the Master disclosed that new trustees had been appointed and that the request was made at their behest.


On 24 March 2021, after a protracted period of enquiries, the Master informed the trustees that an investigation had been ordered in terms of section 16(2) of the Trust Property Control Act and that the investigation was initiated at the request of the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development. Documents later provided to the Trust’s attorneys during 2021 revealed, among other things, that an investigator (Mr Sebashe) had been appointed on 5 September 2016 to investigate the affairs of (inter alia) the Trust, and that the investigation related to “possible” irregularities.


The applicants’ factual case, as accepted for purposes of the review, was that throughout this process they were not informed of the investigation, its purpose or outcome, or that the appointment of additional trustees was being considered. They also contended that adverse findings were made in the investigation report against the trustees without interviewing them or the existing beneficiaries.


In the “Evaluation” section, the court identified certain matters as undisputed. These included that the Master failed to afford the applicants an opportunity to be heard, that the decision to order the section 16(2) investigation and to appoint further trustees was taken at the behest of the Department and disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries, and that the Master’s stated reason for the decision was to restore order and stability on the farms and in the Trust. It was also undisputed that the applicants were not advised or informed about the appointment of the second to sixth respondents, and that the investigator’s report stated that the appointment was to investigate “possible” irregularities across various empowerment schemes.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine whether the application was properly brought as a statutory review under section 23 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988, rather than exclusively as a review under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”) and Uniform Rule 53.


On the merits, the central questions were whether the Master’s decision to appoint additional trustees under section 7(2) of the Trust Property Control Act was procedurally fair, including whether existing trustees and beneficiaries had a right, or at least a legitimate expectation, to be heard before such appointment; and whether the decision was reviewable under PAJA on the basis that it was taken for an ulterior purpose, under the unauthorised or unwarranted dictates of others, and/or was not rationally connected to the information before the Master and was unreasonable.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to established or undisputed facts, particularly procedural fairness and rationality in administrative decision-making, together with an evaluative determination as to whether the circumstances gave rise to a legitimate expectation of prior consultation notwithstanding the wording of section 7(2).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court first addressed the procedural route. Relying on the Supreme Court of Appeal’s discussion in Fesi v Ndabeni Communal Property Trust [2018] 2 All SA 617 (SCA), the court held that section 23 of the Trust Property Control Act creates a form of special statutory review. It accepted that this mechanism may allow a court to consider the merits broadly and is not confined to the narrower approach sometimes associated with PAJA review. The court was satisfied that the matter was properly before it as a section 23 review.


Turning to procedural fairness, the court recognised that a failure to give affected parties an opportunity to be heard ordinarily renders administrative action procedurally unfair under PAJA. It then engaged the authority of Moore NO and Others v Du Toit and Others (6900/2009) [2009] ZAKZPHC 66 (30 November 2009); 2009 JDR 1311 (KZP), which distinguishes between appointments under section 7(1) (where consultation is expressly required) and section 7(2) (which does not expressly require consultation). The Moore decision was treated as establishing that section 7(2) may impliedly exclude a strict obligation of prior consultation in some circumstances, particularly where urgent intervention may be needed to defuse conflict.


However, the court emphasised Moore’s qualification that the denial of a hearing under section 7(2) is not absolute, and that affected parties may have a legitimate expectation of being heard where the appointment may affect their interests or reflect adversely on existing trustees. Applying this to the facts it regarded as established, the court found that the applicants were unaware of the decisions and events affecting their rights, and that they were not afforded an opportunity to respond to allegations of malpractice reflected in the report. It reasoned that the appointment of the second to sixth respondents would affect the interests of beneficiaries and constitute an adverse reflection upon the serving trustees. On this basis, it concluded that the Master had an obligation to consult the applicants before appointing the additional trustees, and the failure to do so rendered the decision procedurally unfair.


Although the court indicated that a single established ground of review suffices, with reference to AllPay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency, and Others [2013] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 1 (CC), it nevertheless addressed the further PAJA-based complaints. It accepted that the Master’s decision to order a section 16(2) investigation and to appoint further trustees was taken at the behest of the Department and disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries and concluded that this meant the decision was taken for an ulterior purpose or motive and due to unauthorised or unwarranted dictates, engaging section 6(2)(e)(ii) and section 6(2)(e)(iv) of PAJA.


On rationality, the court reasoned that appointing additional trustees aligned with a disgruntled group would create two sets of people with conflicting interests and was therefore likely to destabilise the Trust, contradicting the Master’s stated aim of restoring stability. The court found that the decision bore no rational connection to the information before the Master, and it criticised the investigation report for lacking substantiated factual evidence and for not engaging with the relevant trust instrument. On these bases, it held that the decision was inconsistent with the rationality requirements captured in section 6(2)(f)(cc) of PAJA, and also found the decision irrational and unreasonable in the sense contemplated by PAJA.


Having concluded that review grounds were established, the court held the decision had to be declared unlawful and set aside. It granted the relief sought and held that there was no reason to depart from the principle that costs follow the result, awarding costs against the first to sixth respondents on the specified scale.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court reviewed and set aside the Master’s decision of 4 September 2019 appointing the second to sixth respondents as trustees of the Badirammogo Trust. It also set aside the letters of authority issued on 4 September 2019 authorising the second to sixth respondents to act as trustees.


The court ordered that the first to sixth respondents pay the applicants’ costs, jointly and severally, on a party and party scale (Scale C) as set out in Uniform Rule 69(7) read with Rule 67A(3).


Cases Cited


Fesi v Ndabeni Communal Property Trust [2018] 2 All SA 617 (SCA)


Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA)


Nel and another NNO v The Master (ABSA Bank Ltd and others intervening) 2005 (1) SA 276 (SCA)


Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co v Johannesburg Town Council 1903 TS 111


Mofokeng v Master of the North Gauteng High Court 2014 JDR 0039 (GNP)


Moore NO and Others v Du Toit and Others (6900/2009) [2009] ZAKZPHC 66 (30 November 2009); 2009 JDR 1311 (KZP)


AllPay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency, and Others [2013] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 1 (CC)


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (sections 33(1), 33(2), and 172(1)(a)–(b))


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (sections 6(1), 6(2)(e)(ii), 6(2)(e)(iv), 6(2)(f)(cc), 6(2)(h), and section 8)


Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 (sections 6(1), 7(1), 7(2), 16(1), 16(2), and 23)


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 53


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 69(7)


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 67A(3)


Held


The court held that the application was properly brought as a section 23 statutory review under the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988. On the merits, it held that the Master’s appointment of additional trustees on 4 September 2019 was unlawful because the applicants, as serving trustee(s) and beneficiaries with a direct and substantial interest, had a legitimate expectation of being heard before the appointment was made, and the Master’s failure to consult rendered the decision procedurally unfair.


The court further held that the Master’s decision was taken at the behest of the Department and disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries, constituting an ulterior purpose and reflecting unauthorised or unwarranted dictates, and that the decision lacked a rational connection to the information before the Master. The decision and the resulting letters of authority were accordingly reviewed and set aside, with costs awarded against the first to sixth respondents.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 23 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 provides a special statutory review mechanism that permits a court to consider the merits of the Master’s authorisations, appointments, removals, decisions, orders, or directions under the Act, and to grant appropriate relief.


Although section 7(2) of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 does not expressly require prior consultation before the Master appoints a co-trustee, the denial of a hearing is not absolute. Where the appointment may affect beneficiaries’ interests or reflect adversely on serving trustees, affected parties may have a legitimate expectation of being heard, and procedural fairness may require consultation.


Once a ground of review is established under PAJA, the administrative action must be declared unlawful and remedied through a just and equitable order, with PAJA section 8 giving legislative content to the remedial discretion.


Administrative action is reviewable where it is taken for an ulterior purpose, due to unauthorised or unwarranted dictates, where it is not rationally connected to the information before the administrator, or where it is so unreasonable that no reasonable decision-maker could have so acted, as contemplated by PAJA section 6(2).

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY)
In the matter between:
CECILIA NOMVULA MENDILE
ROBERT KHUMOETSILE MEREETSILE
ERNEST SEGANENO
SIGNORIA GONGO
KAGISHO OUPA GOROGANG
JOSEPH LENTIKILE OBUKI
NONCEDILE NOMPUMELELO PRINCESS SILANI
LUCAS NTSHEKISANG
and
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, NORTHERN
CAPE KIMBERLEY
NICO SNYMAN VAN NOORDWYK N.O.
PHENYO ANDREAS BOTLHAODI
Reportable/ Not Reportable
Case no: 654/2023
1st Applicant
2nd Applicant
3rd Applicant
4th Applicant
5th Applicant
6th Applicant
7th Applicant
8th Applicant
1 st Respondent
2nd Respondent
3rd Respondent

MOEMEDICRONJELETOBANE
WONDERFULLUNKANIOOR
OMPHENETSE EDWIN DITAKE
LUCAS NTSHEKISANG
REGINALD MATSIPANE
MOSES MATLHOLE
RAPELANG MOOKETSI
SUSAN VAN WYK
FRANS MMOLAWA
JAFANE BOITHUTO
FORCE DIPANE
MOETI SUPING
JOHN MOTINGWE
DORA MOLANKANYANE
BOTUMILE MORUTLWA
JAMES SEGAMI
LUCAS KIEWIET
RUNBOY KGOSITIO
ERNEST MADITO
THE MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE, LAND
REFORM AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
4th Respondent
5th Respondent
61h Respondent
7th Respondent
8th Respondent
9th Respondent
10th Respondent
11th Respondent
12th Respondent
13th Respondent
14th Respondent
15th Respondent
16th Respondent
17th Respondent
18th Respondent
1 gth Respondent
20th Respondent
21st Respondent
22nd Respondent
23rd Respondent
Neutral citation: Mendife and Others v The Master of the High Court and Others
(654/2023) 23 January 2026.
Coram: MAMOSEBO Jet STANTON J.
Heard: 17 November 2025.
Delivered: 23 January 2026.

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Summary: Statutory review of the Master's decision to appoint further trustees -
Review in terms of section 23 of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 ("the Act')
- The denial of a right to be heard before the Master grants any order in terms of
section 7(2) of the Act is not absolute- The applicants had a legitimate expectation of
being heard - The Master's decision defies section 6(2)(e)(ii), 6(2)(e)(iv), 6(2)(f)(cc)
and 6(2)(h) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000- The Master's
decision is reviewed and set aside - The letters of authority appointing the second to
the sixth respondents as trustees are set aside.
ORDER
1. The decision by the first respondent taken on 04 September 2019 to appoint
the second to the sixth respondents as trustees of the Badirammogo Trust is
reviewed and set aside.
2. The letters of authority issued by the first respondent on 04 September 2019,
authorising the second to the sixth respondents to act as trustees of the
Badirammogo Trust are set aside.
3. The first to the sixth respondents shall pay the applicants' costs, jointly and
severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved, on a party and party scale C
as set out in Rule 69(7), read with Rule 67 A(3) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
JUDGMENT
Stanton J
Introduction:
[1] In this review application, the applicants seek an order that: (a) The decision
taken by the Master of the High Court, Kimberley ("the Master") on 04
September 2019 to appoint the second to the sixth respondents as trustees of

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the Badirammogo Trust ("the Trust") ("the decision"), be reviewed and set
aside; and (b) The letters of authority issued by the Master on 04 September
2019, authorising the second to sixth respondents to act as trustees of the Trust
be set aside.
[2] The first applicant was one of the initial trustees of the Trust, and she is still
authorised to act in this capacity. The first to the eighth applicants are
beneficiaries of the Trust.
[3] On 23 May 2025, the third to the twenty first respondents filed a notice of
intention to oppose the application, but on 13 June 2025, a notice of withdrawal
of their opposition to the application was filed and said to be on behalf of the
second to the twenty second respondents. The twenty third respondent is cited
merely as an interested party, there is no order sought against him/her.
[4] The Master did not oppose the application and did not file an answering
affidavit. He, however, filed a report, not under oath, in which he inter alia:
4.1 Confirmed that he does not oppose the application, except for the cost
order; and that he will abide with the decision of this Court;
4.2 Denied that the applicants' attorney of record did not have access to the
Master's file;
4.3 Explained:
(a) Why he requested the Trust's financial statements from the Trust's
auditors;
(b) That the section 16(2) investigation of the Trust Property Control
Act 57 of 1988 ("the Act") was initiated and requested by the
Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development
(''the Department") after a number of complaints were lodged with
different government departments and at the Master's office;
(c) Mr. M Sebashe was appointed as the investigator and his
section 16(2) report ("the report") indicates that malpractice took
place on the farms and in the Trust;

5
(d) In view of the complaints lodged at his office, he had to intervene
to restore order and stability on the farms and in the Trust, which
he attempted to do by re-instating some of the trustees who were,
according to him, forcefully and unprocedurally (sic) removed from
the Trust.
[5] The applicants, in response to the Master's report, filed a supplementary
founding affidavit, contending that the Master ought to have filed an answering
affidavit instead of submitting a report had he wished to properly oppose the
application. In addition, the applicants: (a) Deny that Mr. Steyn misled the court
in any way whatsoever; (b) Introduced the Master's directive, that formed the
basis of the review application in case number 61/2021 in this Court ("the
directive"), into evidence. In case number 61 /2021, the Department sought to
review the Master's decision to order the Department to pay the costs of the
section 16( 1) investigation. According to the applicants, the directive clearly
demonstrates how the applicants and other stakeholders' rights to fair and
transparent administrative action, had been infringed.
[6] Finally, the applicants seek an order of costs only against the first to sixth
respondents. The submission is that it is the aforementioned respondents'
action or in action that necessitated these proceedings. This application stands
to be adjudicated on an unopposed basis.
Relevant background:
[7] The Trust was created and registered in 2004 in terms of the Act as a vehicle
for the economic empowerment of workers employed by Sonvrucht (Pty) Ltd
("Sonvrucht'') and Charge Trust. The Trust holds 45% of the issued shares in
Sonvrucht. Subsequent to the registration of the Trust, a substantial number of
its beneficiaries elected to sell their participation shares back to the Trust in lieu
of receiving relatively small annual dividends. All the beneficiaries who sold
their shares were remunerated in an agreed amount, after which they ceased

their shares were remunerated in an agreed amount, after which they ceased
to be beneficiaries ("the erstwhile beneficiaries").

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[8] During 2014 it became apparent to the erstwhile beneficiaries that the
empowerment venture financially benefitted the remaining beneficiaries of the
Trust substantially, and the erstwhile beneficiaries accordingly wanted to be
reinstated as beneficiaries.
[9] The erstwhile beneficiaries, however, did not pursue the matter until 2019 when
the Master requested the Trust's accountants to provide him with all of the
Trust's financial statements. It is apposite to mention that the Master did not
request the trustees for the financial statements, and he gave no indication of
the purpose of the request or the statutory authority to support such a request.
This sparked a whole train of correspondence between various roleplayers.
[1 O] When the trustees requested the Master to inform them of the reason for this
request, the Master divulged that new trustees were appointed by him and that
the request is made at their behest.
[11] On 24 March 2021, after numerous enquiries spanning a period of two years,
the Master informed the trustees that:
11.1 He at some stage ordered an investigation in terms of the provisions of
section 16(2) of the Act; and
11 .2 The section 16(2) investigation was apparently initiated at the request of
the Department.
[12] On receipt of the documents, only provided by the Master to the Trust's
attorneys during 2021, it transpired for the first time that:
12.1 Mr. Sebashe was appointed on 05 September 2016 by the Master to
investigate the affairs of inter alia the Trust;
12.2 The Master was "tasked" by the Department "to investigate irregularities
that might have occurred or are currently ongoing in the Trust'';

7
12.3 Even before the section 16(2} investigation commenced, the purpose of
the investigation was to give effect to the primary objective of a certain
task team to have the participation shares of the erstwhile beneficiaries
restored;
12.4 The scope of the section 16(2) investigation was to investigate possible
irregularity in the administration of the Trust's financial affairs;
12.5 Mr. Sebashe allegedly conducted interviews with unidentified
"beneficiaries" of the Trust as part of his investigation, and who appeared
to be only the disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries;
12.6 Mr. Sebashe allegedly made requests for documentation .from the
trustees, but he did not state when and to whom these requests were
directed; and
12. 7 Mr. Sebashe made certain damning findings in the section 16(2} report
against the trustees of the Trust without interviewing any of them or any
of the existing beneficiaries of the Trust, and without any real evidentiary
substantiation for any of his findings.
[13] According to the applicants, during the whole protracted process, none of them
were ever informed of the investigation, its purpose, its outcome or of the fact
that consideration was being given to the possible appointment of further
trustees.
Legal arguments:
[14] The gist of the applicants' grounds for the review is that the applicants:
14.1 Have the right to just administrative action in accordance with section 33
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996;

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14.2 Have the legitimate expectation, and therefore the right, to be informed
of any facts that might detrimentally affect their rights as trustees and
beneficiaries of the Trust, and to be afforded the opportunity to address
any adverse allegations or facts that might affect any of their rights; and
14.3 Have the right to transparent and procedurally fair administrative action.
[15] Mr. JG van Niekerk SC, on behalf of the applicants, argued that:
15.1 It is abundantly clear that the circumstances which led to the
appointment of the second to the sixth respondents as trustees, had as
its genesis the "primary objective" of the so-called task team and the
Department, which "requested the Master to act in accordance with
section 16(2) of the Act". The aforesaid action was based on the one
sided and untested allegations of some of the erstwhile beneficiaries,
and led to a shockingly biased investigation in terms of section 16(2);
and a damning report, based on the mere say so of some individuals
who were accepted to be beneficiaries of the Trust, but who in fact had
divested themselves of any rights in that regard.
15.2 The Master, in his report, made quite an effort to paint the applicants
(and even their attorney) with the proverbial brush of maladministration
and fraud, without any specific substantiation of the said allegations. He
dismally failed to provide any explanation as to why it would have been
necessary to keep the said "facts" and allegations that came to his
knowledge, hidden from the applicants for a period of almost five years.
[16] Mr. van Niekerk contended that the Master's decision is reviewable in terms of
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 ("PAJA") as: (a) The
decision was taken for an ulterior purpose or motive, and because of the
unauthorised or unwarranted dictates of another person or body(s); (b) the
decision itself is not rationally connected to the information before the Master;

decision itself is not rationally connected to the information before the Master;
and (c) the exercise of the power or the performance of the function authorised
by the empowering provision, in pursuance of which the administrative action

9
was purportedly taken, is so unreasonable that no reasonable person could
have so exercised the power or performed the function.
[17] In the final instance, Mr. van Niekerk argued that the Master, in failing to grant
the applicants an opportunity to be heard, whilst he had the legal obligation to
do so, did not comply with the audi et alteram partem principle.
Applicable law:
[18] Section 33( 1) and (2) of the Constitution provides that everyone has the right
to administrative action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair, and that
everyone whose rights have been adversely affected by administrative action
has the right to be given written reasons.
[19) PAJA was promulgated to give effect to this constitutional right. The applicants
rely on the following sections of PAJA:
'6. Judicial review of administrative action.
( 1) Any person may institute proceedings in a court or a tribunal for the judicial
review of an administrative action.
(2) A court or tribunal has the power to judicially review an administrative action if­
(e) the action was taken-
(ii) for an ulterior purpose or motive;
(iv) because of the unauthorised or unwarranted dictates of another person
or body;
(f) the action itself-
(ii) is not rationally connected to-
(cc) the information before the administrator; or
(h) the exercise of the power or the performance of the function authorised by
the empowering provision, in pursuance of which the administrative action
was purportedly taken, is so unreasonable that no reasonable person could
have so exercised the power or perform the function;'
[20] The following sections of the Act are relevant to the adjudication of this review
application:

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20.1 Section 6(1) of the Act provides:
'Any person whose appointment as trustee in terms of a trust instrument,
section 7 or a court order comes into force after the commencement of this Act,
shall act in that capacity only if authorized thereto in writing by the Master.'
20.2 Section 7 of the Act stipulates:
'(1) If the office of trustee cannot be filled or becomes vacant, the Master
shall, in the absence of any provision in the trust instrument, after
consultation with so many interested parties as he may deem
necessary, appoint any person as trustee.
(2) When the Master considers it desirable, he may, notwithstanding the
provisions of the trust instrument, appoint as co-trustee of any serving
trustee any person whom he deems fit.'
20.3 Section 16 of the Act, in relevant part, states:
'(1) A trustee shall, at the written request of the Master, account to the
Master to his satisfaction and in accordance with the Master's
requirements for his administration and disposal of trust property and
shall, at the written request of the Master, deliver to the Master any
book, record, account or document relating to his administration or
disposal of the trust property and shall to the best of his ability answer
honestly and truthfully any question put to him by the Master in
connection with the administration and disposal of the trust property.
(2) The Master may, if he deems it necessary, cause an investigation to be
carried out by some fit and proper person appointed by him into the
trustee's administration and disposal of trust property.'
20.4 Section 23 of the Act provides that:
'Any person who feels aggrieved by an authorization, appointment or removal
of a trustee by the Master or by any decision, order or direction of the Master
made or issued under this Act, may apply to the Court for relief, and the Court

11
shall have the power to consider the merits of any such matter, to take evidence
and to make any order it deems fit.'
[21] The present application is brought in terms of section 23 of the Act. The
Supreme Court of Appeal in Fesi v Ndabeni Communal Property Trust, 1
squarely addressed the issue on whether section 23 is the correct procedure in
casu, by stating:
' . .. They contended that the proper procedure would have been for the respondents
to launch an application in terms of PAJA and in accordance with Rule 53 of the
Uniform Rules, to review and set aside the decision by the Master to not issue the
letters of authority. In this regard it was contended on behalf of the Master that the
principle set out in the decision of this court in Oudekraa/ Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of
Cape Town and others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA) should apply, namely, that the
Master's decision remains valid until set aside by way of review.
Section 23 of the Act on which the respondents based their application in the court
below provides as follows:
• Any person who feels aggrieved by an authorization , appointment or removal of a trustee by
the Master or by any decision, order or direction of the Master made or issued under this Act,
may apply to the court for relief, and the court shall have the power to consider the merits of
any such matter, to take evidence and to make any order it deems fit."
This kind of review is dealt with by Professor Hoexter2 under the heading "Special
statutory review" (at 113) as distinct from a PAJA and other types of review. She points
out that this is sometimes a wider power than ordinary review and thus more akin to
an appeal but that it might well be narrower with the court being confined to particular
grounds of review or particular remedies. It would, of course, depend on the relevant
statutory provisions. In Ne/ and another NNO v The Master (ABSA Bank Ltd and others
intervening) 2005 (1) SA 276 (SCA}, paragraphs 22-23, this Court, with reference to

intervening) 2005 (1) SA 276 (SCA}, paragraphs 22-23, this Court, with reference to
Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co v Johannesburg Town Council 1903 TS
111, discussed statutory reviews of the kind in question and endorsed Professor
Hoexter's exposition. In Honore at 191, paragraph 119, the authors, in dealing with the
1 (2018] 2 All SA 617 (SCA) at para 53 - 54. See also Mofokeng v Master of the North Gauteng High
Court 2014 JDR 0039 (GNP) para 13.
2 C Hoexter Administrative Law in South Africa 2 ed (2012).

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power of the court when there is a challenge in terms of the Act in relation to the
Master's appointment of trustees point out, with reference to section 23, that the
terminology of that section makes it plain that the court may consider that disputed
issue anew. At paragraph 154 (page 251} of Honore, the learned authors note that all
the Master's decisions in terms of the Act are subject to reassessment by the court.
They go on (page 252), to state that section 23 makes it plain that the substantive
justification for any action by the Master may be scrutinised. They also state the
following:
"[T]he substantive justification for any action by the Master may be scrutinised. The applicant
will in other words not have to establish that the Master committed a reviewable irregularity
but only that there are grounds for the court to substitute a decision it considers better. The
court is expressly empowe red 'to consider the merits' of the matter, to take evidence 'and to
make any order it deems fit'. This goes further than the entitlement to administrative justice
now embodied in statute under the Constitution."'
[22] I am accordingly satisfied that this application is properly before the Court as a
statutory review in terms of section 23 of the Act.
Evaluation:
[23] The following evidence is undisputed:
23.1 The Master failed to afford the applicants the opportunity to be heard;
23.2 The decision by the Master to order a section 16(2)-investigation and to
appoint further trustees was taken at the behest of the Department and
the disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries;
23.3 The reason advanced by the Master for taking the relevant decision was
"to restore order and stability on these farms and in the Trust";
23.4 The Master, with the second respondent, failed to advise or inform the
applicants, who had a direct and substantial interest in the decision,
about the appointment of the second to the sixth respondents; and

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23.5 The report of the appointed investigator states that he was appointed to
investigate "possible" irregularities in respect of various "black
empowerment schemes".
[24] The failure to have due regard to the audi alteram partem principle renders the
decision procedurally unfair as contemplated in section 3(2)(b) and 6(2)(c) of
PAJA. However, the Court in Moore NO and Others v Du Toit and Others
("Moore"), 3 distinguished between section 7(1) and (2) of the Act and held that:
' . .. [f]he Legislature intended in Section 7(2) of the Act, to impliedly exclude an
obligation upon the first respondent , to afford a hearing to any interested parties , before
acting in terms of the sub-section. Express provision was made in Section 7( 1) for prio r
consultation with interested parties because when the first respondent acts in terms of
this Section, he specifically does so in the absence of any provision in the Trust
instrument, to fill the vacancy in the office of trustee. That in doing so, he should act
with due regard to the views of interested parties is perfectly understandable. In acting
in terms of Section 7(2} the objective is entirely different. F. du Toit in his work South
African Trust Law Principles and Procedure pg. 59, citing the Law Commission
Reports: Review of the Law of Trusts para 7.4 says the following:
"The Master will in all probability exercise the discretionary power bestowed by the above
subsection if the appointment of a co-trustee will avail the trust administration of specialised
knowledge or expertise not possessed by a serving trustee or when the intervention of a co­
trustee is likely to diffuse any tension or friction between serving trustees inter se or between
serving trustees and trust beneficiaries".
An obligation to consult before appointing a co-trustee to diffuse a situation of conflict,
may unreasonably stultify a need for urgent intervent ion. Dealing with the situat ion
where a statute authorises emergency, ex ·parte, action the learned author Baxter4

where a statute authorises emergency, ex ·parte, action the learned author Baxter4
states that it might be implicit in the statue that unless natural justice is excluded
altogether , a hearing need only be given after the decision is taken. Section 7(2) clearly
does not expressly authorise such urgent intervention . but if one of the obiectives of
the section was to diffuse a situation of conflict, this may be considered as support for
my view that the intention of the Legislature was that a hearing is not to be afforded
before a decision is made.' (My emphasis underlined .}
3 (6900/2009} [2009) ZAKZPHC 66 (30 November 2009); 2009 JDR 1311 (KZP) paras 10 and 11.
4 Baxter Administrative Law at 587.

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[25] The Court in Moore, 5 however, cautioned that:
'The denial of a right to be heard, before the first respondent grants any order in terms
of Section 7(2), is therefore not absolute.
What has to be considered now is whether the applicants had a legitimate expectation
of being heard before the first respondent appointed the second respondent as a co­
trustee of the Trust. in terms of Section 7(2) of the Act. This issue was raised by Mr.
Thatcher, who was appointed as a curator-ad-litem to those descendants yet to be
born of Thorpe and his wife. Thorpe and his wife and his descendants are the income
beneficiaries of the Trust. Mr. Thatcher, relying upon a passage in Honore, supra at pg
198 Section 119, submitted that such a legitimate expectation existed on the part of
the applicants. The passage relied upon in Honore reads as follows:
"The Master's discretionary power is not attended bv any express requirement of consultation.
But in so far as the appointmen t of a co-trustee could affect the interests of beneficiaries or
indeed constitu te an adverse reflection upon the serving trustee, these parties mav have a
legitimate expectation of being heard before the appointment is made. It would in any event
clear!v be proper for the Master to consult interested parties before appointing a co-trustee.
But no procedure is prescribed ."' (My emphas is underlined.)
[26) Not only were the applicants not given the opportunity to dispute the fraudulent
allegations contained in the report, but they were unaware of the decisions and
events concerning their rights. There can be no doubt that the appointment of
the second to the sixth respondents would affect the interests of beneficiaries;
and constitute an adverse reflection upon the serving trustees. This is
especially so given that these respondents sold their participation shares to
Sonvrucht during 2007 for an amount of R20 000 each, and thereby agreeing
that they would forfeit all interest, title and ownership to capital, income and

that they would forfeit all interest, title and ownership to capital, income and
voting rights. I am persuaded that the Master had the obligation to consult with
the applicants before appointing the second to the sixth respondents as
trustees to the Trust.
5 Moore (Supra) paras 15 and 16.

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[27) In Al/pay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency, and Others(" Al/pay'), 6
the Constitutional Court confirmed that when one ground for review is
established, it is not necessary to deal with the remaining grounds for review,
and held that:
'Once a ground of review under PAJA has been established there is no room for shying
away from it. Section 172( 1 )(a) of the Constitution requires the decision to be declared
unlawfu l. The consequences of the declaration of unlawfulness must then be dealt with
in a just and equitable order under s 172(1 )(b). Section 8 of PAJA gives deta iled
legislative content to the Constitution's "just and equitable" remedy .'
[28) Despite Al/pay, I deem it prudent to also deal with the applicants' remaining
qualms.
[29) The decision by the Master to order a section 16(2)~investigation and to appoint
further trustees was taken at the behest of the Department and the disgruntled
erstwhile beneficiaries. The decision was thus taken for an ulterior purpose or
motive and as a result of the unauthorised or unwarranted dictates of the
disgruntled erstwhile beneficiaries, together with the second respondent, their
attorney. This flouts the provisions of section 6(2)(e)(ii) and (iv) of PAJA.
[30) The Master's decision resulted in the appointment of two groups of people with
conflicting views and interests. This would inevitably destabilise the Trust. To
my mind, the decision bears no rational connection to the facts at hand and falls
foul of the provisions of section 6(2)(f)(cc) of PAJA.
[31] In the final instance, the report is clearly characterised by a lack of any
substantiated factual evidence and no reference is made in the report to the
terms of the relevant trust instrument. It is also unclear to what "farms" the
Master refers; and there is no evidence of any instability or a lack of order on
the farm in which the Trust has an interest. The Master's decision is thus

the farm in which the Trust has an interest. The Master's decision is thus
irrational as it defies section 6(2)(f)(cc) of PAJA.
6 (2013] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 1 (CC) para 25.

16
[32) In as far as grounds for review have been established, the impugned decision
must be declared unlawful and set aside, and the applicants are accordingly
entitled to the relief sought.
[33] I find no reason why the costs should not follow the result. A cost order on a
party and party scale, scale C, is appropriate in the circumstances.
[34] Wherefore the following order is made:
1. The decision by the first respondent taken on 04 September 2019 to appoint
the second to the sixth respondents as trustees of the Badirammogo Trust
is reviewed and set aside.
2. The letters of authority issued by the first respondent on 04 September
2019, authorising the second to the sixth respondents to act as trustees of
the Badirammogo Trust are set aside.
3. The first to the sixth respondents shall pay the applicants' costs, jointly and
severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved, on a party and party
scale C as set out in Rule 69(7), read with Rule 67 A(3) of the Uniform Rules
of Court.
STANTON J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
I concur
. 'I,~ MA - SEBO J
JUD~B_ ~F'TJ-1,E:'' HIGH cguRT
NORq:eERN_,CAPE DIVIS ION ·~ .,_._.

Appearances
On behalf of the applicant:
On instructions of:
On behalf of the respondents:
Adv JG van Niekerk SC
Duncan & Rothman Inc.
No appearance.
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