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[1998] ZASCA 82
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Administrators in the Estate of the late John Herbert Richards v Nichol and Another (620/96) [1998] ZASCA 82; 1999 (1) SA 551 (SCA); [1998] 4 All SA 555 (A) (25 September 1998)
CASE NO 620/96
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter between:
THE ADMINISTRATORS IN THE ESTATE
OF THE LATE JOHN HERBERT RICHARDS
Appelants
a
nd
MARION JOAN NICHOL (born
F
EYDER)
F
irst Respondant THE INTESTATE HEIRS IN THE ESTATE
OF THE LATE JOHN HERBERT RICHARDS
Second Respondant
CORAM :SMALBERGER,HARMS,SCOTT,ZULMAN et
PLEWMAN JJA
HEARD
:10 SEPTEMBER 1998 DELIVERED :25
SEPTEMBER 1998
JUDGEMENT
SCOTT JA/....
2 SCOTT JA:
The appellants are the administrators of the estate of the late John
Herbert Richards ("the deceased") who executed a will in 1953 and died childless
two years later. In his will he bequeathed to his widow certain movable property
as well as the right to occupy the upper or lower portion of his immovable
property in Sea Point,
Cape
, and thereafter directed the administrators (who were
appointed as such in terms of the will) to "stand possessed" of the whole of the
residue of his estate in trust and from the income to pay certain annuities to named
beneficiaries, including the deceased's widow and stepdaughter. Any surplus
income was to be used to pay annuities to certain other members of his family. On
the death of the widow a house was to be purchased "at a cost not exceeding
3000" for use by the deceased's stepdaughter and stepgrandchild. The latter
(who is the first respondent) was then, in addition, to be paid an annuity on an
3 increasing scale. Provision was made in clause 12 of the will for the
establishment of a trust in respect of the residue of the estate upon the death of the
longest living beneficiary under the preceding provisions of the will or at an
earlier date if the administrators deemed this not to be inconsistent with their
obligations to any remaining beneficiaries. The beneficiaries of the trust were to
be selected by the trustees from two classes of persons to whom I shall refer later
in this judgment.
Clause 12 included terms which the appellants considered may be
invalid as constituting an improper delegation of testamentary power. The clause
purported, for example, to empower the administrators to create a trust and to
authorize them in their absolute discretion to determine such matters as who the
trustees were to be, what they were to be paid and the terms and constitution of the
trust. A consequence of the failure of the trust would have been a partial
4
intestacy. Although the appellants were of the view that the objectionable
portions of clause 12 were severable from its remaining provisions and that the
requirements for a valid testamentary trust had been satisfied, they nonetheless
approached the Cape Provincial Division for an order declaring that the deceased
had not died intestate as to the residue of his estate and that a valid trust had been
created in respect of the residue, and for an order appointing the appellants as
trustees with discretionary powers of investment.
In addition, certain relief was sought in relation to the present day value of the house to be purchased for use by the first respondent
who by then was
the sole surviving beneficiary under the preceding provisions of the will. That
relief was ultimately granted and as it is irrelevant to the issue in the present
appeal need not be referred to any further.
On 7 November 1995 Motala AJ issued a rule nisi in respect of the
5
relief sought and appointed a curator ad litem to represent the interests of absent
heirs upon a possible intestacy. On the return day the matter came before Farlam
J and Louw J who held the provisions in question to be invalid as constituting an
improper delegation of testamentary power but nonetheless severable from the
remainder of clause 12 of the will. The Court found that on a proper construction
of the clause a valid trust had been created in respect of the residue of the estate
and appointed the appellants as trustees to the trust. The judgment has since been
reported. See Administrators, Estate Richards v Nichol and Another
1996 (4) SA
253
(C). The questions in issue in this appeal relate solely to the powers of
investment afforded to the appellants so appointed.
In the notice of motion an order was sought:
"... authorising Applicants, in their discretion, to invest and from time to
time to reinvest, any assets in the estate in such suitable trustee investments
and/or securities quoted on any licenced Stock Exchange and/or in licensed
unit trusts as Applicants may deem appropriate."
6
Paragraph (d) of the rule nisi issued on 7 November 1995 was in terms identical
to the above. The court a quo, however, declined to make paragraph (d) of the
rule final. Instead, it substituted a new paragraph (d) in its order. In terms of the
new paragraph the Johannesburg Stock Exchange was substituted for "any
licensed Stock Exchange" and three provisos were added. The substituted
paragraph (d) reads:
"(d) ... authorising applicants in their discretion to invest and from time
to time to reinvest any assets in the estate in such suitable trustee
investments and/or securities quoted on the Johannesburg Stock
Exchange and/or licensed unit trusts as applicants may deem appropriate, provided, however, that:
(i) at no time may an amount exceeding 50% of the value of the
trust assets be invested or reinvested in shares quoted on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange or in licensed unit trusts;
(ii) before any such investment or reinvestment in shares or unit
trusts is made applicants shall obtain advice from an
independent stockbroker and the written approval of such
stockbroker to each such investment or reinvestment; and
(iii) a quarterly report shall be rendered to the Master setting out
details of such investments in shares or unit trusts." (262 E -I)
7
The present appeal, with the leave of the Court a quo, is against the order just
quoted to the extent that it differs from the order claimed in the notice of motion
and repeated in the rule nisi.
It is necessary at the outset to refer by way of background to certain
facts and circumstances which emerge from the papers and which have a bearing
on the questions in issue.
The appellants who were appointed as executors and administrators
in terms of the will (and who are now also the trustees) are a partner in a well-
established firm of
Cape Town
attorneys and the Board of Executors. The latter
is described in the papers as a leading financial institution. According to Mr Brian
Bechet, its senior general manager in charge of the management of the portfolios
of private individuals and trusts, all investment decisions are based on an on-going
programme of investment analysis and research. Personal interviews are
8
conducted with the senior management of companies in which investment is being
considered and the Board's investment strategy committee which comprises
professionals with specialist knowledge and investment experience meets on a
regular basis to review broad investment strategy. The Board, he says, deals with
all
South Africa
's major stockbroking firms and receives and analyses their
investment research. Its approach is a conservative one and according to Bechet,
only those investments which measure up to the Board's "stringent criteria" are
included in any portfolio.
The will makes no provision for the distribution of the capital of the
trust - the deceased expressed the desire that the trust "shall continue in
perpetuity". Clause 12 requires the income to be used as follows:
"(a) Firstly, to assist brothers and sisters and children and grandchildren
of brothers and sisters of either myself or my wife, the said HELEN
MARGARET RICHARDS (born Wake) who shall apply to the
Trustees for such assistance and shall appear to the Trustees to be in
9
need of financial assistance through no fault or moral defect on their
own part. If there be no applicants in any year or if there be a surplus
of income after rendering such assistance as the Trustees shall deem
desirable, then the Trustees may devote the income or the surplus
thereof to the second object of the Trust.
(b) Secondly, to assist such Institution of a charitable nature as the
Trustees may from time to time select provided only that the
Institutions selected shall have as their chief object the welfare,
education, and/or maintenance of children orphaned or otherwise
lacking the support of their parents or either of them, whether such
children be European, Coloured or Native, provided further,
however, that in selecting the particular Institution to be benefitted and the proportions payable to each respectively, the Trustee
shall as
far as possible endeavour to benefit Institutions in England and in
South Africa in equal shares."
If the trust is to endure for a long period, if not in perpetuity, it is clear, having
regard to the effect of inflation on the value of money, that the trustees will be
obliged to invest the assets of the trust in such a way as not only to provide
adequate income but also to obtain a capital growth to the extent of at least
preserving the capital in real terms. Should the capital invested - which is now in
10
the region of R4 million - be permitted to erode in value in real terms, it is
inevitable that the real income available for the trust beneficiaries will increasingly
reduce and, unless the process is arrested, eventually cease to be of any significance.
Investigations carried out by the appellants show that many if not
most of the potential beneficiaries in the first category live in
England
. There are
also, it would seem, potential beneficiaries living in
Canada
. As far as the second
category is concerned, the will expressly directs the trustees as far as possible to
benefit institutions in
England
and
South Africa
in equal terms.
Finally it is necessary to refer to certain provisions in the will which
confer powers of investment on the appellants. I shall ignore the provisions of
clause 12 dealing with the powers of the trustees which were held to be invalid by
the Court a quo; although the invalidity was, of course, a consequence of the
11
extensive nature of those powers. In terms of clause 4 of the will, the appellants
in their capacity as administrators were afforded power in relation to the residue
of the estate-
"... at their own absolute discretion [to] retain, release or reinvest any
proceeds of any realisation of the whole or part in such manner and upon
such security as to my Administrators may seem fit."
Clause 11 (in terms of which the appellants were appointed as executors and
administrators) similarly confers wide powers. After dispensing with the need for
the furnishing of security, the clause concludes:
"My Executors shall have the power to sell, deal with and dispose of any
asset in my Estate and my said Administrators shall in addition to the
powers of investment conferred upon them in Clause 4 of this my Will,
have full power at their absolute discretion to realise or acquire property,
both movable and immovable, also power to settle, adjust or compromise
any claim due to or by me or my Estate, and power to deal with any
investments and to apportion or discriminate between capital and interest
in their discretion."
It is apparent from these provisions that the deceased had considerable confidence
12
in the appellants, being his chosen executors and administrators, and intended
them to have wide discretionary powers of investment.
In Sackville West v Nourse and Another
1925 AD 516
this Court had
occasion to consider the standard of care required of a trustee in relation to trust
property. It was held that the standard was higher than that which an ordinary
person might generally observe in the management of his or her own affairs. Such
a person, it was pointed out, was free to do what he liked with his property and not
infrequently selected investments which were of a speculative nature, particularly
when the potential profits were high. A person in a fiduciary position such as a trustee, on the other hand, was obliged to adopt
the standard of the prudent and
careful person, that is to say, the standard of the bonus et diligens paterfamilias
of Roman law, and was accordingly, as Kotze JA concluded at 535, "obliged, in
dealing with and investing the money of the beneficiary, to observe due care and
13
diligence, and not to expose it in any way to any business risks". The need to
avoid risks was emphasized in the judgments of both Solomon ACJ and Kotze JA.
Both contain dicta to the effect that a trustee is obliged to avoid investments which
are "attended with risk" (at 520) or involve "business risks" (at 535) and which
cannot be made without "safety and security" (at 534).
On the strength, no doubt, of these and similar dicta it was for many
years the generally accepted practice for trustees, who had not been given wider
powers of investment, to confine the investment of trust property to what are
called trust or trustee investments. These include government or municipal stocks,
fixed deposits, loans on mortgage bonds and also immovable property. (See for
eg Jonsson v Estate Jonsson and Others
1945 NPD 66
at 70; Peffers, NO and Anoth
er Attorneys, Notariess and Conzveyancers Fidelity Guarantee Fund Board
of Control 1965(2) SA 53 (C) at 55G - 56A.) But whether or not an investment
14
can be said to have been prudent or made with due care and diligence is a question
which can only be decided on the facts of each particular case (Colonial Banking
and Trust Co Ltd v Estate Hughes and Others
1932 AD 1
at 15 - 16); and
circumstances change. An investment considered prudent in earlier times may
rightfully be regarded as quite imprudent in the context of modem conditions. The
ongoing and rapid decline in the value of money brought about by inflation, which
has become a feature of our economy in the course of the past few decades, may
well result in a sharp decline in the value of a monetary security within a relatively
short period of time. In order to preserve the capital of the trust in real terms and
so ensure the continued production of income, particularly in the case of a trust
intended to be of long duration like the present, a trustee in such circumstances is
of necessity obliged to invest in real assets with potential for capital growth. Such
an investment, viz one where the capital is not fixed, necessarily involves some
15
element of risk; but the risk may be unavoidable if the capital of the trust is to be
preserved in real terms. The acceptance of this element of risk as being
unavoidable if the trust is to serve its purpose has inevitably led in more recent
times to a change in investment thinking which involves a movement away from
the more conservative approach developed in an age when inflation was either
non-existent or of little consequence. In principle, therefore, I can see no
justification at this stage for a hard and fast rule which precludes the investment
of trust funds in quoted shares or licensed unit trusts; nor do I understand the ratio
in Sackvelle West v Nourse and Another, supra, as imposing such a limitation on
the investment of trust property. (The same may be said of s 9 of the Trust
Property Control Act 57 of 1988 in terms of which a trustee is required to act
"with the care, diligence and skill which can reasonably be expected of a person
who manages the affairs of another".)
16
This was acknowledged in Ex parte van Hasselt 1965(3) SA 553 (W)
where an order was granted investing a curator bonis with authority to invest and
reinvest the patient's funds in preferent and ordinary shares on the
Johannesburg
Stock Exchange. Similar orders were granted in Ex parte Wagner NO: In Re de
Bie
1988 (1) SA 790
(C) and Ex parte Ewing NO:In Re Sheridan 1995(4) SA 101
(D). In the Van Hasselt case, Hiemstra J, after referring to the Sackville West
case and the effect of the declining value of money on guilt-edged securities,
expressed himself as follows, at 555 H:
"The seventeenth and eighteenth century writers referred to by the
Appellate Division in 1925 expressed no preference for a particular type of
security. They merely insist on prudence on the part of a trustee. To
suggest that investment in a portfolio of shares ipso facto involves so much
'uncertainty and risk' that the whole undertaking automatically betrays lack
of 'due care and diligence' is in my view unrealistic."
I agree. Nonetheless, it must not be overlooked that every investment in shares
(and unit trusts) carries with it the inherent risk of capital loss. A trustee
17
exercising due diligence and care will bear this in mind when purchasing shares
both in regard to their selection and the balance of his share portfolio. He will
accordingly avoid investments which are of a speculative nature. The extent to
which it will be prudent to invest in the share market must necessarily depend on
the circumstances of each case. Generally speaking, however, a trustee will as far
as is practicable seek to spread the investments of the trust over various forms of
undertaking in order to obtain a balance of stability and growth in the capital value
of the trust and the income it produces.
The Court a quo was prepared to authorize the appellants to invest
trust funds in the purchase of quoted shares, and licensed unit trusts, but subject
to the restrictions to which I have previously referred. It is these restrictions which
form the subject matter of the present appeal and to which I now turn.
The basis upon which they were imposed is set forth in the following
18
passage in the judgment of Farlam J:
"In regard to the relief set out in para (d) of the rule nisi, I do not think it
appropriate for the applicants to have the power sought. In my view, it
would be more appropriate to give a power to invest an amount not
exceeding 50% of the value of the trust estate in shares quoted on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange, or licensed unit trusts, subject to the trustees
obtaining advice from an independent stockbroker before buying and
selling shares or unit trusts and such stockbroker approving all such
investments and reinvestments in writing, and subject further to the
rendering of quarterly reports to the Master setting out details of
investments made in shares or unit trusts. This was ordered at least as far
as shares were concerned in Ex parte Ewing NO; In re
Sheridan
1995 (4)
SA 101
(D) and I agree with the approach set out therein. It was argued that
the requirement of the approval of an independent stockbroker is
unnecessary because the Board of Executors has its own highly competent investment analysis and research staff. That may be so, but
it is still
desirable that independent stockbroking advice and approval be obtained."
(259J - 260C)
It is convenient to consider seriatim each respect in which the order granted by the
Court a quo departed from paragraph (d) of the rule nisi which, as I have
indicated, reflected the order sought in the notice of motion.
19
The first is the restriction that no more than 50% of the value of the
trust estate is to be invested in shares or unit trusts. There is nothing in the
evidence to support the imposition of such a limit. On the contrary, Bechet in his
affidavit stressed the need for flexibility in the administration of a trust,
particularly one intended to be of long duration. The need for flexibility would
seem to be self evident. The prudence of an investment and, indeed, of the overall
spread of investments depends upon the circumstances prevailing at any particular
time. Once it is accepted that a trustee may legitimately invest trust funds in shares
and unit trusts I have difficulty in appreciating what justification there can be for the imposition of an arbitrary limit on the
percentage of the value of the trust that
may be so invested. What is prudent in particular circumstances may vary from
well below 50% to well above it. The trust is intended to be of long duration.
It is the trustees who will be best placed to make appropriate ad hoc decisions
20
from time to time as to what investments will best serve the interest of present and
future beneficiaries of the trust. The Court is not in a position to do so in advance.
As counsel for the appellant pointed out, the 50% limit could preclude the
appellants from achieving a spread of investments which they consider prudent in
the circumstances. Other anomalies may also arise. Counsel postulated the case
of the appellants being compelled to dispose of shares at an inappropriate time for
no better reason than that the value of the trust's share portfolio with the passing
of time had increased so as to exceed the 50% limit, or the appellants finding
themselves precluded from purchasing shares which they consider prudent to
acquire or from participating in a favourable rights issue without first disposing
of shares or unit trusts which they would otherwise have wished to retain.
The Court a quo gave no reasons for imposing the 50% limit. It
appears to have done so solely on the basis that a similar order was granted in the
21
Ewing
case. But in that case, as in the Wagner case, this is all that was asked for.
Both were cases in which a curator bonis approached the court for greater powers
than those originally afforded. In neither was the appropriateness or otherwise
of such a limit considered by the Court. In the Van Hasselt case on which the
judgments in Wagner and
Ewing
relied, no limit was imposed. In my view,
therefore, the 50% limit imposed by the Court a quo was unjustified.
The second difference between the order sought and the order granted
is that in the latter the appellants were restricted to purchasing shares quoted on
the Johannesburg Stock Exchange as opposed to "any Licensed Stock Exchange".
No reason was given for this restriction. In the
Ewing
case the curator bonis was
authorised to purchase shares quoted on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange but
once again this is all that was asked for. In the circumstances of the present case
I can see no reason for this restriction, particularly in the light of modem
22
developments. It should also not be overlooked that approximately 50% of the
beneficiaries in the present case will be people living in foreign countries. The
extent of any such off-shore investment would of course be limited by local
legislation.
Next is the requirement that the appellants obtain advice and approval
in writing from an independent stockbroker before investing or reinvesting in
shares or unit trusts. This requirement, too, was contained in the order granted in
the
Ewing
case; but once again was one included in the terms of the relief asked
for. On the facts of the present case the provision in question would seem to me
to be neither necessary nor appropriate. As previously indicated the appellants,
according to the evidence, will enjoy the benefit of advice from a team of
investment experts at the Board which consults with the major stockbroking firms
in
South Africa
as well as the senior management of companies in which
23
investment is being considered. The trustees comprise the Board and a partner in
a well-established firm of attorneys; in other words the Board is not the sole
trustee. It is clear from the terms of the will that the testator had full confidence
in the appellants. I can see no reason why their investment decisions should be subjected to the veto of some unspecified stockbroker;
nor was any reason given
by the Court a quo why they should be, save that it was desirable. To my mind the
requirement is both unnecessary and contrary to the tenor of the will.
Finally, there is the requirement that the appellants render quarterly
reports to the Master setting out details of investments in shares or unit trusts. The
Master in his report did not suggest such a requirement. It has its origin once again
in the order made in the
Ewing
case; but here too the order simply reflected the
relief claimed. In the Van Hasselt case a similar order was sought. The Master
expressed his misgivings about it. At 555H - 556A Hiemstra J said the following:
24
"The Master rightly submits that, if the power should be granted, he does not want to be charged with the duty of approving share
investments. That
was the difficulty in Pratt's case, to which I have referred above. Share dealings were authorised, but subject to the approval of
the Master. The
Master is however not equipped for the discharge of such a duty, which
involves great expertise and minute attention to detail. I do not think he
should be burdened with such a responsibility."
This observation is as true today as it was in 1965.I can think of no good reason
why such an order should have been made in the present case; nor was any reason
advanced by the Court a quo. The Master, in any event, has wide powers in terms
of s 16(1) of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988 to call upon trustees at any
time to account to him for their administration of trust property.
It follows from the aforegoing that the order made by the Court a quo
in substitution of paragraph (d) of the rule nisi is wholly at variance with the order
which this Court would have made sitting as a Court of first instance. Save for the
reference to
Ewing
's case and the view expressed that the substituted order was
25
"more appropriate" or was "desirable", no reasons were given by the Court a quo
for departing from the relief claimed. As pointed out above, the
Ewing
case affords
no support for the substituted order. To the extent, therefore, that the Court a quo
relied on that case to justify its order, in my view, it misdirected itself. In all the
circumstances, this Court is entitled to interfere even if it is accepted that the
discretion exercised by the Court a quo was a discretion in the strict sense and
hence of the kind considered in such cases as Ex parte Neethling and Others
1951
(4) SA 331
(A) at 335 E; Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Da Costa
1985 (3)
SA 768
(A) at 775 F - G, and Ontvanger van Inkomste, Lebowa, en 'n Ander v De
Meyer NO
1993 (4) SA 13
(A) at 28 B - D. (For an example of a "discretion" of
a different nature, see Knox D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996
(4) SA 348
(A) at 360 D - 362 G.)
It follows that in my view the appeal must succeed.
26
The following order is made:
(a)
The appeal is upheld and the judgment of the Court a quo is altered
to the extent that paragraph (d) of the rule nisi dated 7 November
1995 is made final and the paragraph (d) substituted by the Court a qu
o is deleted.
(b)
The costs of the appeal, including those occasioned by the
employment of two counsel, are to be paid out of the trust estate
D G SCOTT
SMALBERGER JA)
HARMS
JA) - Concur
ZULMAN JA)
PLEWMAN JA)