dc.description.abstract | This article argues that the general approach to documentary
interpretation articulated in Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni Municipality 2012 4 SA 593 (SCA) (Endumeni) applies
also to the interpretation of wills, subject to adaptation for
context. It is argued that interpretation of wills and the application
of an interpretation to a particular factual setting are coequal
tasks. Each case must be decided on its own facts. The cardinal
rule is the ascertainment of a testator's intention and giving effect
thereto, provided that this will not bring about a violation of the
law. It is argued that a court must put itself in the armchair of the
testator and, after determining where the probabilities lie, it must
infer or presume what the testator had in mind at the time that
the will was created. Although intention is subjective, the
interpretive process to determine a testator's intention is
objective in form. It is argued that a court must, in every instance,
understand the purpose for which it seeks to determine a
testator's intention. This is so that it can undertake the correct
enquiry. If the aim is to determine the meaning of a testamentary
provision, then a testator's intention must be ascertained as
memorialised in the written text of the will read as a whole, taking
into account also the purpose of the text and its context. If, on
the other hand, the aim is to determine whether a document is a
testator's intended last will and testament, as is the case when
section 2(3) of the Wills Act 7 of 1953 is invoked, then a testator's
intention must be ascertained with reference to the document's
purpose, taking also into account all legally relevant and
admissible internal and external contextual factors. It is argued
that all this is, as confirmed in Endumeni, consistent with the
modern trend favouring an objective, purposive, contextual cum
teleological mode of documentary interpretation. | en_US |