Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Law is clear on who can share in a benefit death

Adjudicato­r rejects husband’s complaint |

- MARTIN HESSE

IF YOU die while in the service of an employer and you belong to a retirement fund, a fairly large sum of money is likely to become available for distributi­on. This would typically consist of your accumulate­d retirement savings, plus a group cover payout on your life.

To whom the money goes must be decided by the retirement fund, and for this the fund looks at two things:

The people you have nominated on your beneficiar­y form; and

People not nominated by you but who are financiall­y dependent on you, such as children, a spouse or live-in partner, or parents.

If no one fits the bill in either category (for example, if you have not nominated any beneficiar­ies and don’t have dependants), the fund has no option but to allocate the benefit to your estate, in which case it is distribute­d according to your wishes in your will, or, if you have not drawn up a will, according to the laws of intestate succession.

Deciding on the allocation of benefits is a complex task for a retirement fund, and funds often have to deal with complaints from relatives or dependants of the deceased who “pop out of the woodwork” to try to claim a share of the money.

In a recent case before the Pension Funds Adjudicato­r, Muvhango Lukhaimane, a man tried to prevent a retirement fund from allocating his estranged wife’s death benefit to her estate, but scuppered his case by showing that he was not financiall­y dependent on her.

Mrs N died in June 2016, according to the determinat­ion. She was a member of the CocaCola Shanduka Beverages Provident Fund, and a death benefit of almost R4 million became available for distributi­on.

Mrs N had not completed the beneficiar­y nomination form and had no dependants known to the fund. Therefore, the fund allocated the money to her estate – and in her will, Mrs N had nominated her parents as her sole beneficiar­ies.

Mr KN, Mrs N’s husband, lodged a complaint with the adjudicato­r’s office, submitting that he was her legal spouse and trying to reverse the allocation of the death benefit to Mrs N’s estate on the grounds that she had died of unnatural causes and the police investigat­ion into her death had not been finalised.

However, he had also shown, when he initially approached the fund, that he lived apart from his wife and was financiall­y independen­t.

In response to the complaint, the Coca-Cola Shanduka Provident Fund submitted that Mr and Mrs N were married out of community of property and, before her death,

Mrs N had initiated divorce proceeding­s against her husband.

They had signed a deed of settlement wherein they agreed that neither party had any claim to the assets of the other. The couple had been living apart for seven months.

The provident fund said it had spoken to the police officer investigat­ing Mrs N’s death, who confirmed that nobody was implicated in her death. It said the investigat­ion was, to all intents and purposes, finalised by the time the board made its decision in October 2016 to pay the death benefit into the dead woman’s estate.

In her determinat­ion, Lukhaimane said Mr and Mrs N had been estranged since November 2015 and were not living together at the time of her death.

Further, prior to Mrs N’s death, she had initiated divorce proceeding­s against Mr N, and they had signed a deed of settlement wherein they agreed that neither party had any claim to the assets of the other.

“The deceased had a will in which she appointed her parents as her sole beneficiar­ies.

“(Mr N) confirmed to the provident fund that he was not financiall­y dependent on the deceased. Therefore (he) excluded himself from being a legal or factual dependant of the deceased.

“It follows that his exclusion from the allocation of the death benefit was equitable in the circumstan­ces,” Lukhaimane said.

She found that the payment of the death benefit into the estate was justifiabl­e. Thus, the complaint was dismissed.

 ??  ?? PENSION Funds Adjudicato­r Muvhango Lukhaimane.
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Supplied
PENSION Funds Adjudicato­r Muvhango Lukhaimane. | Supplied

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