Harris and Others v Veritas Board of Executors SA (Pty) Ltd N.O and Others (33884/2021) [2026] ZAGPPHC 42 (28 January 2026)

78 Reportability
Trusts and Estates

Brief Summary

Succession — Interpretation of will — Applicants claiming inheritance of immovable property under a fideicommissum — Dispute over whether applicants, as descendants of predeceased child, are entitled to inherit — Court finding that the will allows for representation and that applicants are entitled to inherit their father's share as fideicommissaries — Condonation for late application granted.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a motion application in the High Court (Gauteng Division, Pretoria) concerning the administration of a deceased estate and, in substance, the interpretation of a testamentary disposition governing the devolution of an immovable property interest over successive generations. The application was brought in the context of an objection to a liquidation and distribution account and the Master’s response to that objection, with a consequential request for declaratory relief as to inheritance.


The applicants were Eldrid Emilyn Harris, Ruzanne Le Roux (née Harris), Coenraad Botha Harris, and Francois Daniel Harris, being the children of the late Rudolf Johannes Harris (Rudolf Junior) and the grandchildren of the late Jacoba Wilhelmina Harris (Jacoba). The respondents were Veritas Board of Executors SA (Pty) Ltd N.O. (first respondent, executor nominee), Hendrik Johannes Stephanus Bekker N.O. (second respondent, nominated representative), Caroline Naude (third respondent, the applicants’ paternal aunt and Jacoba’s daughter), and the Master of the High Court, Pretoria (fourth respondent).


Procedurally, the executor’s liquidation and distribution account in Jacoba’s estate reflected a determination that Caroline Naude was the sole heir of Jacoba’s relevant interest in the property. The applicants objected to the Master. The Master’s office overruled the objection on the basis that the Master lacked authority to interpret wills and directed the applicants to pursue the dispute in the High Court. The main application was filed outside the statutory period, necessitating an accompanying condonation enquiry.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned whether, on a proper construction of a joint will and the fideicommissary scheme created by it, the applicants could inherit by representation (per stirpes) the share that their father would have taken, notwithstanding that he predeceased his mother (the fiduciary).


2. Material Facts


The immovable property central to the dispute was the farm Hessiedeel 140 in the Reddersburg district (“Hessiedeel”). The relevant testamentary instrument was a combined will executed on 23 May 1970 by Rudolf Johannes Pretorius (Rudolf Senior) and Carolina Susanna Pretorius (Carolina Senior).


Under the will, Hessiedeel was bequeathed in equal shares to the testators’ two children, Johannes Lourens Pretorius (Lourens) and Jacoba, subject to conditions including division of the property between them, a usufruct in favour of the surviving testatrix, a provision regarding payment of bond debt, and restrictions on encumbrance and alienation. The clause pivotal to the dispute provided that upon the death of each child, that child’s share would pass to his or her lawful descendants by representation per stirpes, and failing such descendants, to the remaining heir of the immovable properties (or that heir’s lawful descendants).


It was common cause that, upon the deaths of Rudolf Senior and Carolina Senior, Lourens and Jacoba each became owners of 50% of Hessiedeel. It was also common cause that Jacoba had two children, Caroline Naude and Rudolf Junior, and that the applicants were Rudolf Junior’s children (thus Jacoba’s grandchildren). A further material chronological fact was that Rudolf Junior died on 30 November 2007, and Jacoba died on 6 May 2019, meaning Rudolf Junior predeceased the fiduciary (Jacoba) whose estate administration triggered distribution of her interest.


In the administration of Jacoba’s estate, the Master appointed the first respondent as executor, with the second respondent as nominee/representative. The executor’s liquidation and distribution account reflected that the third respondent (Caroline Naude) was the sole heir to Jacoba’s 50% portion of Hessiedeel. The applicants objected on the basis that they too were entitled to inherit under the will, in equal proportions, by taking the share that their late father would have inherited had he survived Jacoba.


The Master’s office overruled the objection, indicating that the Master could not interpret wills and that the applicants should approach the High Court. The applicants brought the present application, but did so approximately 19 days after expiry of the 30-day period in section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, which created a preliminary dispute about condonation. The third respondent opposed both condonation and the merits; she was the only opposing party on the merits.


The court treated the key disputed matter as one of interpretation and legal consequence, namely whether Rudolf Junior’s predecease of Jacoba prevented his descendants from inheriting in terms of the fideicommissary scheme, or whether their interest was preserved/accelerated by substitution and representation.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were, first, whether the applicants should be granted condonation for the late institution of proceedings contemplated by section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, following the Master’s refusal to sustain their objection to the liquidation and distribution account.


Second, and substantively, the court was required to determine whether, on a proper interpretation of clause 2(i)(d) of the will and the nature of the fideicommissary disposition it created, the applicants (as descendants of a child of the testators) could inherit by representation per stirpes the portion that their late father would have taken, despite the fact that he died before the fiduciary (Jacoba) and before distribution became exigible.


The dispute was predominantly one of law and the application of law to undisputed facts, centred on the classification and incidents of a fideicommissum (including fideicommissum multiplex), the presence or absence of an implied survivorship requirement, and the legal operation of representation (per stirpes) in the context of successive fideicommissary beneficiaries.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On condonation, the court applied section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, which permits a court application within 30 days of the Master’s decision, or within such further period as the court may allow. The court accepted the applicants’ explanation for the delay and agreed that the third respondent would not be prejudiced by condonation, particularly as any prejudice could be addressed through a costs order. The court also emphasised that the matter had a long and protracted history involving close family members and that the interests of justice favoured resolving the interpretive dispute to achieve clarity, finality, and closure. Condonation was therefore granted, but the applicants were directed to bear the costs of the condonation application.


On the merits, the court construed the will as creating a fideicommissum governing Hessiedeel over generations, with the children of the testators initially taking subject to a condition that on their deaths their shares would devolve upon their lawful descendants by representation per stirpes, and failing such descendants, to the remaining heir or that heir’s lawful descendants. The court highlighted that the will did not explicitly provide for the scenario in which one of Jacoba’s children predeceased her, and it did not explicitly provide that predecease would disqualify that child’s descendants from inheriting.


The court relied on the principles articulated in Erasmus NO v Estate Late Booysen 2014 (4) SA 547 (SCA) regarding fideicommissary succession, particularly in the context of a fideicommissum multiplex. The judgment treated Erasmus as definitive on the point that, in a fideicommissum multiplex, the ordinary implication of a survivorship condition applicable in other contexts does not necessarily apply, and that the death of a fideicommissary prior to vesting does not terminate the fideicommissum but may result in acceleration of the substitute’s interest, giving effect to the testator’s intention.


Applying these principles, the court reasoned that clause 2(i)(d) expressly contemplated succession to a child’s share upon that child’s death, and it did so by directing transfer to the child’s lawful descendants by representation stirpsgewys (per stirpes). The court held that Rudolf Junior’s predecease of Jacoba was not a bar to his children inheriting under the will. Instead, Rudolf Junior’s entitlement (in the fideicommissary chain) was treated as passing to the applicants as substitutes in accordance with the will’s representation mechanism.


In the court’s analysis, upon Rudolf Junior’s death, the right to inherit did not disappear; rather, it vested in the applicants, and the fideicommissum did not come to an end. The applicants, as the second fideicommissaries in the chain, were therefore capable of inheriting the portion Rudolf Junior would have taken had he survived Jacoba.


On costs for the main application, the court considered that neither the applicants nor the third respondent was responsible for the confusion regarding interpretation, and that both the bringing of the application and the opposition were bona fide. In that context, the court exercised a discretionary judgment that it was appropriate for the costs of the main application (excluding condonation) to be paid from Jacoba’s estate.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for non-compliance with the 30-day period in section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, but ordered the applicants to pay the costs of the condonation application, jointly and severally.


On the merits, the court issued declaratory relief that, on a proper interpretation of the will of Rudolf Senior and Carolina Senior dated 23 May 1970, the applicants are the lawful descendants (“wettige afstammelinge”) of the testators and are entitled, through representation, to inherit the portion of the immovable property share that their predeceased father (Rudolf Junior) would have inherited had he survived Jacoba.


The costs of the main application were ordered to be paid from the estate of the late Jacoba Wilhelmina Harris (also referred to in the order as Jacoba Wilhelmina Claasen), excluding the separate costs order relating to condonation.


Cases Cited


Erasmus NO v Estate Late Booysen 2014 (4) SA 547 (SCA).


Mahomed's Estate v Moosa 1946 NPD 516.


Ex parte Dell 1957 (3) SA 416 (C).


Legislation Cited


Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 (section 35(10)).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that condonation should be granted for the late institution of the application under section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, but that the applicants should pay the costs of the condonation application.


The court further held that, properly construed, the will created a fideicommissary succession in which a deceased child’s share would devolve upon that child’s lawful descendants by representation per stirpes, and that the fact that the applicants’ father predeceased the fiduciary did not disqualify the applicants from inheriting. The applicants were declared entitled to inherit, by representation, the share their father would have taken had he survived Jacoba.


The court held that the costs of the main application should be borne by the deceased estate, given the bona fide nature of the dispute and opposition, with the separate qualification that condonation costs were for the applicants’ account.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court may condone non-compliance with the 30-day time period in section 35(10) of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 where the explanation for delay is accepted, prejudice is absent or can be addressed by costs, and the interests of justice favour adjudication of the dispute.


A testamentary disposition requiring a beneficiary (fiduciary) to pass property to another (fideicommissary), potentially over multiple generations, constitutes a fideicommissum, and where it provides for successive fideicommissaries it is characterised as a fideicommissum multiplex.


In the context of a fideicommissum multiplex, the death of a fideicommissary prior to vesting does not necessarily terminate the fideicommissum; rather, the substitute’s interest may be accelerated, in order to give effect to the testator’s intention as expressed in the will.


Where a will provides for devolution to “lawful descendants” by “plaasvervulling” and “stirpsgewys,” the principle of representation per stirpes applies, with the result that descendants may inherit the share their predeceased parent would have received, absent a clear contrary intention in the will.

I
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA •
GAUTENG DIVISION PRETORIA
DELETE WHICHEVER IS NOT APPLICABLE
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED
28 JANUARY 2026 .
DATE
In the matter between:
ELDRID EMIL YN HARRIS
RUZANNE LE ROUX (nee HARRIS)
COENRAAD BOTHA HARRIS
FRACOIS DANIEL HARRIS
and
Case number, 33884/202
F st Applican
Sec • d Applican
Th rd Appl ican
Foui h Applican
VERITAS BOARD OF EXECUTORS.SA (PTY) LTD N.O. First
HENDRIK JOHANNES STEPHANUS BEKKER N.O. Second
; espondent
'
• espondent
CAROLINE NAUDE
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
JUDGMENT
MINNAARAJ
Third
Fourth
i
spondent
spondent

2
Introduction:
[1] In this judgment, dealing with a lineage of family members reference
be made to the individual family members' first names. is should
be construed as a sign of disrespect. The reference to th
intended solely to facilitate a clear understanding of the c
[2] As a further point of departure, the subject immovable
farm Hessiedeel 140 in the Reddersburg district ('Hessied: el').
[3] Rudolf Johannes Pretorius ('Rudolf Senior') and Caro! na Susann
Pretorius ('Carolina Senior') were married, and they were e parents f
Johannes Lourens Pretorius ('Lourens') and Jacoba Wilh lmina Harri
('Jacoba').
[4] Lourens was married more than once, but he had no chil ren. Jacob
was married and blessed with two children: Carolina Nau: e ('the thir
respondent') and Rudolf Johannes Harris ('Rudolf Junior').
[5] The applicants are the four children of Rudolf Junior. 11 ey are the
grandchildren of Jacoba. The third respondent is their pate al aunt.
[6] Rudolf Senior and Carolina Senior signed a combined will on 23 May
1970 ('the will'). In relation to Hessiedeel, clause 2 of the will
"lndien die Testatrise die Langslewende van ans is dan maak ans
hiermee ans gesamentlike baedel as valg:

3
(i) Alie onroerende eiendomme in gelyke dele a n ans se n
JOHANNES LOURENS PRETOR!US en ans do ter, JACO A
WILHELMINA HARRIS (gebore PRETORIUS) on erworpe a n
die volgende voorwaardes:
(a) Oat ons genoemde kinders die gemeld
tussen hulle sat verdee/ van Noord na Suid en da
waarop die geboue gelee is dan toegeken moet
genoemde seun en die ander gedeelte aan o
dogter.
(b) Die gemelde eiendomme sa/ onderhewig
lewenslange vruggebruik van die Testatrise.
(c) Die gemelde eiendomme word aan ans geno mde kinder.
bemaak vry van a/le verbandskuld, welke erbandskul
betaa/ moet word uit die van
lewensassuransies op die !ewe van die Test
(d) Ons genoemde kinders sal nie geregtig
geme/de eiendomme te verpand, verbind, te vervreem o
te verkoop nie, maar sodra hulle te sterwe
de/e oorgaan na hulle wettige afstammelinge
plaasvervul/ing staksgewys en by gebreke Vi n sodanig
afstammelinge sat sy of haar dee/ oorg an na on
oorblywende erfgenaam van die vaste eiendo
haar wettige afstammelinge."

4
[7] Upon the deaths of Rudolf Senior and Carolina Senior, H ssiedeel w s
inherited by Lourens and Jacoba, who each became 50°/c. owners.
[8] When Jacoba passed away, her 50% portion in Hessie el had to e
inherited by her lawful descendants ('wettige afsta
stipulated in clause 2(i)(d) of the will.
[9] Relevant is the passing of Rudolf Junior on 30 Novembe 2007. Rud If
Junior passed away before his mother, Jacoba, who pass d away on O
May 2019.
[1 OJ The fourth respondent appointed the first responde t as execut r
of the estate of the late Jacoba and nominated the seco d responde t
as the first respondent's nominated representative. The fir t and seco
respondents are jointly referred to as 'the executor'.
[ 11] In terms of the L & D Account in the estate of the lat Jacoba ('t e
L & D account'), the executor determined that the third res ondent is t e
sole heir of Jacoba's 50% portion of Hessiedeel.
[12] On 4 June 2020, the applicants' legal representa ives official y
objected to the fourth respondent against the L & D accou
the executor. The objection conveyed to the fourth respo ent was th. t
the interpretation given to paragraph 2(i)(d) of the will was disputed a d

5
that the applicants were entitled to inherit the 50% portio of Hessied el
in equal proportions to that inherited by the third respond nt.
[13] On 20 April 2021, the fourth respondent's As istant Mas er
considered the applicants' objection to the L & D account. The objecti , n
was overruled, as the fourth respondent lacks the autho ty to interpr t
Wills. The applicants were directed to prove their claim/o jection in t e
High Court.
[14] Following correspondence between the appl cants' leg I
representative and the executor, the applicants lodged thi
The applicants are seeking the following relief:
1. It is declared that, on a proper interpretation of the
RUDOLF JOHANNES PRETORIUS and CAROLIN
PRETORIUS, signed on 23 May 1970 at Red
applicants are the lawful descendants ('wettige afs mmelinge'
of the Testators.
2. The Applicants, through representation, are entitled o inherit the
portion of the immovable property with the third res ondent tha
their pre-deceased father, the late Rudolf Johannes
have inherited, had he survived his late mot r, Jacoba
Wilhelmina Harris.
3. The cost of the application is to be paid by the estat of the late
Jacoba Wilhelmina Claasen.

6
[15] Only the third respondent is opposing the applicat
[16] The issue in dispute is whether the appli h
representation, are entitled to inherit that portion of Hessi ir
father, Rudolf Junior, as fideicommissarius, would have in erited had e
survived his mother, the late Jacoba, who was the fiduc ry under t e
fideicommissum created by the will.
Condonation:
[17] In terms of section 35(10) of the Administration of E tates Act, 6
of 1965 ('the Estates Act'), any person aggrieved by any d. ection of th
Master or by a refusal of the Master to sustain an obj ction lodge
against an L & D account, may apply by motion to the Cou within thirt
days after the date of such direction or refusal or within such furthe
period as the Court may allow, for an order to set aside he Master'
decision and the Court may make such order as it may thin fit.
[18] The applicants' objection to the L & D account in the state of th
late Jacoba was overruled on 20 April 2021. The appl ants' main
application was delivered about 19 days after the expiry of he 30 days
prescribed in section 35(10) of the Estates Act.
[19] The third respondent, in her answering affidavi , took the
applicants to task for the lateness of the application and r failing to
bring a condonation application.

7
[20] The applicants subsequently, on 18 August 202 , delivered n
application to condone the lateness of this application, hich the th rd
respondent opposes.
[21] The applicants explain the late submission of the m in applicati n
and tender the costs of the condonation application. T e applican '
explanation is accepted, and I agree with them that the thi d responde t
will not be prejudiced if the condonation is granted. An o der for cos s
will address any such prejudice.
[22] The events leading up to the main application ave a Ion ,
protracted history, and they involve direct family members The intere t
of justice dictates that condonation be granted and that the dispute ove
the interpretation of the will be addressed for legal clarit finality an
closure.
[23] In the premises, condonation for the late delivery f the main
application is granted, and the applicants will be liable for he costs o
the condonation application.
Legal position:
[24] The issue for determination is whether the appli ants could
inherit, as fideicommissaries, when their father (Rudolf unior) had
predeceased their grandmother (Jacoba).

8
[25] On a reading of paragraph 2(i)(d) of the will, the followi
provisions should be highlighted (I provide my translation n English):
a. Sodra ons kinders te sterwe kom (When our
away)
b. sat hulle dele oorgaan na hulle wettige afsta
wyse van plaasvervulling staksgewys (their
transfer to their lawful descendants by way of repre entation p r
stirpes)
c. en by gebreke van sodanige afstammelinge sa sy of haa
dee/ oorgaan na ons oorblywende erfgenaam v n die vast
eiendomme of sy of haar wettige afstammelinge. (and absen
such lawful descendants, his or her portion will tr nsfer to ou
remaining heir of the immovable properties or his r her lawfu
descendants.)
[26] Ex facie the will, Rudolf Senior and Carolina Senior left
Hessiedeel to their two children. Still, they provided that, up n the death
of their children, that child's relevant portion of Hessiedeel w uld devolve
on that child's lawful descendants.
[27] The will does not explicitly provide for a situation w ere one of
Jacoba's children predeceases her. There is no explicit pro sion in the
will that should one of Jacoba's children predecease her, hat child's
lawful descendants would not be entitled to inherit in terms o the will.

9
[28] My reading of the will and the applicable legal principles s
contrary to any interpretation that the applicants, becau
(Rudolf Junior) predeceased their grandmother (Jacoba),
entitled to inherit under the will.
[29] As stated in Erasmus NO v Estate Late Booysen 14 (4) SA
(SCA), at par 8:
'The provision in the will, stipulating the succ sion
ownership of the farm over several generations, is nown in o r
law as a fideicommissum. In Corbett et al's he Law
Succession in South Africa, it is said that:
J'.'.\ testamentary fideicommissum is a disposition o property b
will to a beneficiary (known as the fiduciary) subject
requiring the fiduciary, either absolutely or upon th
a condition, to pass on the property either wholly
another beneficiary (known as the fideicommissary) '
[30] Where a fideicommissum provides for the fid commissa
property to be passed on to successive fideicommissari
case, the fideicommissum is termed a fideicommissum mu iplex.1 Thi
contrasts with the situation where the fideicommissum pro ides for th
property to be passed on only once,
fideicommissum unicum (or simplex).2
1 See lvlahomed's Estate v Moosa 1946 NPD 516 at 518; MM Corbett, G Hofmeyr & Kahn The Law
of Succession in South Africa 2 ed (2001) at 260
2
See, for example, J Voet (1723) Commentarius Ad Pandectas 36.1.17 and 28; Ex Par Dell l 957 (3)
SA 416 (C); Erasmus (supra)

[31] In Erasmus (supra), the following was stated in respect of
fideicommissum multiplex:
'[19] The high court lost sight of the following qua lication to t at
which has been quoted earlier from Jewish Colon I Trust, viz:
'In the ordinary form offideicommissum, created b
fiduciary is a human being taking a beneficial i
fideicommissary is a human being, there is implie
to the fideicommissary a condition of survivorsh (viz that is
institution as heir is conditional on his surviving th
But this implication does not exist in e
fideicommissum .... '
[20] In Corbett et al's The Law of Succession in S uth Africa it is
said that a fideicommissum multiplex constitutes a exception to
the general rule stated in the aforsaid passage in J
Trust and, referring with approval to Ex parte S
learned authors say that where a fideicommissum i
death of the fideicommissary prior to vesting does t result in t e
termination of the fideicommissum but bring about t e
acceleration of the interest of the substitute. Effect s to be giv n
to the intention of a testator expressed b creating a
fideicommissum multiplex.
[21] Johannes Voet, in his Commentarius Ad Pand etas, says:
'4c proinde cum in Hollandi a uni us fratris filii et lterius fratr. s
nepotes simul ad intestato ad patrui defuncti here "fatem non

II
capita, sed in stirpes veniant, etiam voluntas hae testatoris e m
recepit interpretationem, ut in stirpes potius, q am in cap "ta,
hereditas fratrum liberis ac nepotibus delata intellt atur'
[22] Sir Percival Gane's translation of this passag
following:
'Since therefore in
grandsons of another brother come together in int stacy into t e
inheritance from a deceased uncle not by heads,
this wish of the testator has also received the inte
the inheritance is understood to have been con
children and grandchildren of brothers by stocks
heads.'
Voet also records that, in a context such as this,
intention to the contrary is absent in a will, it is pres
direction is that the succession of descendants foll
upon intestacy (ie per stirpes rather than per capita).
portions of the original text read as follows: 'in dub, . . . potiu
successive secundum ordinem dilectionis et sue ssionis ab
intestato. '
[23] The principle of representation in our law of succession
entails that, where an ancestor leaves desc ndants, a
presumption arises that the descendants should inherit per
stirpes (each stem of the family taking the same s are). This
principle has the natural consequence that, in r law, in
circumstances where a grandchild's parents predec ased that

12
grandchild's grandparents, the grandchild will ordi arily inheri
from his or her grandparents. A grandchild is not dis ualified fro
inheritance merely as a result of the fact that one
grandchild's parents predeceased his or her grandp rents.
[24] The strength of Jonique's claim to inheritance is ompounde
by the presumption in our law against a testato having th
intention to disinherit descendants.'
[32] In my view, Erasmus is definitive and on point with espect to th
case before me. The fact that Rudolf Junior predecease
Jacoba, was not a bar to his children inheriting under th
contrary, the will expressly provided that upon the death o any child, h s
or her share will transfer to that child's lawful descenda ts by way f
representation per stirpes.
[33] Upon Rudolf Junior's passing, his right to inherit
vested in the applicants. The fideicommissum did not com to an end n
the death of Rudolf Junior (the first fideicommissa
fideicommissary's children, being the applicants herei (the seco d
fideicommissaries), could indeed inherit as his substitute.
Costs:
[34] Neither the applicants nor the third respondent w the author of
confusion on the interpretation of clause 2(i)(d) of the will. T e

13
application, and the third respondent's opposition to the ap lication, ar
bona fide.
[35] Under the circumstances, it would be appropriate fa the costs o
this application (excluding the costs occasioned by the a plication fa
condonation) to be paid from the estate of the Late Jacob Wilhelmin
Harris.
Consequently, I make the following order:
1. The applicants' non-compliance with the 30 days pres ribed by th•
provisions of section 35(10) of the Administration of Esta s Act, 66
1965, is condoned.
2. The applicants, jointly and severally the one paying th
absolved to pay the costs of the condonation application.
3. It is declared that, on a proper interpretation of the will oft e late Rudo f
Johannes Pretorius and Carolina Susanna Pretorius ('th Testators' ,
signed on 23 May 1970 at Reddersburg, the applicants
descendants ('wettige afstammelinge') of the Testators.
4. The Applicants, through representation, are entitled
portion of the immovable property with the third respond
pre-deceased father, the late Rudolf Johannes Harris,
inherited, had he survived his late mother, Jacoba Wilhel ina Harris.
5. The cost of the application is to be paid by the estate of th
Wilhelmina Claasen.

14
Gauteng Div ion, Pretori

Heard on
For the Applicant
Instructed by
For the Third Respondent
Instructed by
Date of Judgment
15
: 24 October 2025
: Adv. M Leathern SC
Rautenbach
: Bekker, Bergh & More Attorn ys
: Adv. R van Schalkwyk
: Naude and Naude Attorneys
: 28 January 2026
Adv J