Blom v Brown

In Blom and Another v Brown and Others, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) dismissed an appeal by Nadine Blom (born Brown) and her sister Elmari Brown, the children of Alfred Samuel Brown (the deceased), against a judgment of the North Gauteng High Court, where Ismail AJ had held that the first respondent, Cecilia Brown, whom the deceased had married after his divorce from the mother of the appellants, was entitled to receive the benefits reserved to her by the will of the deceased.

Facts

Prior to travelling on a work-related assignment, the deceased asked to see his first will, in terms of which he had left to the first respondent his entire estate. As this will could not be located, he decided to dictate a second will, in the presence of witnesses, which the first respondent wrote out in her own handwriting. He read through the will, which revoked all his previous wills, and signed it.

While away on that assignment the deceased met his death. When the second, handwritten will was lodged with the Master, the first respondent was informed that, in terms of section 4A of the Wills Act,[1] she was disqualified from benefitting under the will. Section 4A(1) disqualifies, inter alia, a person who writes out the will of another in his or her own handwriting from receiving any benefit under the will.

The first respondent applied, without notice to the appellants, to the Johannesburg High Court for an order that she was entitled to benefit from the will. In the high court, Pretorius AJ agreed and granted her the relief that she had sought.

Once the appellants came to learn of that order, they applied for its rescission. Ismail AJ, who heard the rescission application, dismissed it with costs, essentially because he was satisfied that Pretorius AJ was correct.

Argument

According to the SCA, the general principle encapsulated in section 4A(1) is subject to the qualification and exceptions set out in section 4A(2)(a), which empowers a court to declare any such person competent to receive a benefit under the will if it is satisfied that such a person did not defraud or unduly influence the testator.

On behalf of the appellants it was argued that the qualification and exception in s 4A(2)(a) did not apply to persons who are family members of the testator. Rather, so the argument went, section 4A(2)(b), which makes provision for a person who, in terms of the law relating to intestate succession, would have been entitled to benefit from the testator if that testator had died intestate, applied. As subsection 2(b) restricted the benefit of such a beneficiary to the value of the share such a person would have received, in terms of the law relating to intestate succession, it was contended that being the spouse of the deceased the first respondent’s benefit should not exceed a child's share, being what she would have been entitled to inherit had the deceased died intestate.

Judgment

The SCA held that on the plain language of the section there was nothing to suggest that the application of section 4A(2)(a) was dependent on the inapplicability of section 4A(2)(b). If it had been the intention of the legislature that family members should be excluded from the ambit of subsection 2(a), one would have expected the relevant section to contain clear wording to that effect. The court thus rejected this argument.

The court held that, as was the position under the common law, s 4A(2)(a) seeks to permit a beneficiary who would otherwise be disqualified from inheriting, to satisfy the court that he or she did not defraud or unduly influence the testator in the execution of the will. The court held that as the first respondent had not, by way of the second will, gained any advantage over anyone, nor had her bona fides been questioned, she should receive the benefits reserved to her by the will. The SCA consequently dismissed the appeal with costs.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ↑ Act 7 of 1953.
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