SU 5: Rights of Creditors and Transfer of rights and Duties
Beneficiary Nominations & Limits of Expectation
In South African life insurance law, naming someone as a beneficiary does not give them
automatic rights. Beneficiaries only hold a spes (a mere expectation) until the insured
person dies. Revocability clauses and marital property rules further limit these
expectations, ensuring that nominations can be changed and that joint estate rules are
respected.
Reynecke stresses that a beneficiary nomination in a life insurance policy is not a
guaranteed right but merely a spes — an expectation that may or may not materialize. Until
the insured person dies, the nominated beneficiary cannot enforce any claim against the
insurer. This principle protects the policyholder’s freedom to revoke or change
nominations. The Matrimonial Property Act complicates matters in marriages in
community of property, but Reynecke clarifies that risk-only policies (with no surrender
value) are not “assets” in the joint estate. Thus, changing a beneficiary is seen as exercising
a contractual power, not alienating property. Case law like Naidoo v Discovery confirms
this distinction.
Establishing the Hypothetical: The Insured, The Spouse, and The Brother
The case study involves Thabo, his wife Lerato, and his brother Sipho. Thabo initially
nominated Lerato as beneficiary but later revoked her nomination and replaced her with
Sipho. Sipho attempted to accept early, but he died before Thabo. This created a dispute
over who should receive the R5 million payout.
The Three-Way Dispute Over the Policy Proceeds
• Lerato argued the change was invalid under the Matrimonial Property Act.
, • Sipho’s executor argued his acceptance created a binding right.
• Thabo’s executor argued both nominations failed, so the proceeds should revert to
Thabo’s estate.
The Legal Anatomy of a Stipulatio Alteri
A stipulatio alteri is a third-party contract. The insurer and policyholder agree to make an
offer to a beneficiary, but the beneficiary only acquires rights if they accept after the
insured’s death. Before that, they have no binding claim.
This Roman-Dutch concept is central to insurance law. Reynecke explains that a stipulatio
alteri is a contract for the benefit of a third party. The insurer (promittens) and policyholder
(stipulans) agree that the beneficiary may accept the benefit later. However, the beneficiary
only acquires rights once they accept after the insured’s death. Before that, they have no
binding claim. This explains why Sipho’s premature acceptance was legally meaningless.
Mutual Life v Hotz illustrates how irrevocable nominations differ, because there the
beneficiary’s rights are stronger and acceptance can bind immediately.
Asset Classification in Marital Regimes (Naidoo v Discovery)
Endowment and retirement policies have value during life and count as assets in the joint
estate. Risk-only policies, however, have no value until death and are not joint estate
assets. Thus, Thabo’s change of beneficiary was valid without Lerato’s consent.
Reynecke carefully distinguishes between different types of policies. Endowment and
retirement policies have surrender value during life, so they are assets in the joint estate.
Risk-only policies, however, have no value until death. They are not assets during the
insured’s lifetime, meaning the policyholder can change beneficiaries without spousal
consent. This distinction is crucial in Thabo and Lerato’s case: Lerato’s claim under s
15(2)(c) of the Matrimonial Property Act fails because Thabo’s policy was risk-only.
Beneficiary Nominations & Limits of Expectation
In South African life insurance law, naming someone as a beneficiary does not give them
automatic rights. Beneficiaries only hold a spes (a mere expectation) until the insured
person dies. Revocability clauses and marital property rules further limit these
expectations, ensuring that nominations can be changed and that joint estate rules are
respected.
Reynecke stresses that a beneficiary nomination in a life insurance policy is not a
guaranteed right but merely a spes — an expectation that may or may not materialize. Until
the insured person dies, the nominated beneficiary cannot enforce any claim against the
insurer. This principle protects the policyholder’s freedom to revoke or change
nominations. The Matrimonial Property Act complicates matters in marriages in
community of property, but Reynecke clarifies that risk-only policies (with no surrender
value) are not “assets” in the joint estate. Thus, changing a beneficiary is seen as exercising
a contractual power, not alienating property. Case law like Naidoo v Discovery confirms
this distinction.
Establishing the Hypothetical: The Insured, The Spouse, and The Brother
The case study involves Thabo, his wife Lerato, and his brother Sipho. Thabo initially
nominated Lerato as beneficiary but later revoked her nomination and replaced her with
Sipho. Sipho attempted to accept early, but he died before Thabo. This created a dispute
over who should receive the R5 million payout.
The Three-Way Dispute Over the Policy Proceeds
• Lerato argued the change was invalid under the Matrimonial Property Act.
, • Sipho’s executor argued his acceptance created a binding right.
• Thabo’s executor argued both nominations failed, so the proceeds should revert to
Thabo’s estate.
The Legal Anatomy of a Stipulatio Alteri
A stipulatio alteri is a third-party contract. The insurer and policyholder agree to make an
offer to a beneficiary, but the beneficiary only acquires rights if they accept after the
insured’s death. Before that, they have no binding claim.
This Roman-Dutch concept is central to insurance law. Reynecke explains that a stipulatio
alteri is a contract for the benefit of a third party. The insurer (promittens) and policyholder
(stipulans) agree that the beneficiary may accept the benefit later. However, the beneficiary
only acquires rights once they accept after the insured’s death. Before that, they have no
binding claim. This explains why Sipho’s premature acceptance was legally meaningless.
Mutual Life v Hotz illustrates how irrevocable nominations differ, because there the
beneficiary’s rights are stronger and acceptance can bind immediately.
Asset Classification in Marital Regimes (Naidoo v Discovery)
Endowment and retirement policies have value during life and count as assets in the joint
estate. Risk-only policies, however, have no value until death and are not joint estate
assets. Thus, Thabo’s change of beneficiary was valid without Lerato’s consent.
Reynecke carefully distinguishes between different types of policies. Endowment and
retirement policies have surrender value during life, so they are assets in the joint estate.
Risk-only policies, however, have no value until death. They are not assets during the
insured’s lifetime, meaning the policyholder can change beneficiaries without spousal
consent. This distinction is crucial in Thabo and Lerato’s case: Lerato’s claim under s
15(2)(c) of the Matrimonial Property Act fails because Thabo’s policy was risk-only.