Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 975South Africa
Van Rensburg v Germishuizen (30488/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 975 (12 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 October 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 975
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Van Rensburg v Germishuizen (30488/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 975 (12 October 2022)
Van Rensburg v Germishuizen (30488/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 975 (12 October 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_975.html
sino date 12 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 30488/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
Date:
12 October 2022
In
the matter between:
MICHELLE
JANSE VAN RENSBURG Applicant
and
JODY
WAYNE GERMISHUIZEN Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
The applicant, Michelle Janse van Rensburg (‘the applicant’),
claimed the enforcement
of an agreement of settlement concluded
between her and the respondent, Jody Wayne Germishuizen (‘the
respondent’),
pursuant to action proceedings that arose out of
the termination of a prior intimate relationship between them. The
parties concluded
the written agreement of settlement on 26 September
2018 (‘the settlement agreement’), under case number
6312/18.
[2]
The applicant sought an order that the settlement agreement be
made an order of Court
and costs of the application. The respondent
opposed the matter and issued a counterapplication in which he
claimed an order that
the settlement agreement be declared void,
alternatively voidable and costs.
[3]
The parties’ prior relationship, allegedly a universal
partnership according to the
applicant, commenced in 2000 or
thereabouts. Children were born of the relationship.
[4]
On a conspectus of the papers and arguments made by the parties’
legal representatives
before me, the application did not deal with
universal partnerships but rather with settlement agreements
concluded between parties.
[5]
On 14 February 2018 under case number 6312/18, the applicant
qua
plaintiff, issued the action proceedings referred to afore,
claiming judgment against the respondent for proprietary relief
arising
out of the parties’ relationship.
[6]
The respondent opposed this application (as well as the action
proceedings), on various
bases that I shall deal with hereunder.
Importantly, the respondent did not deny that he signed the
settlement agreement but alleged
that he did so as a result of him
being under duress at the time and acting under a material
misrepresentation, made by the applicant
as to the nature of the
document, the settlement agreement.
[7]
The respondent’s counsel, in argument before me, wisely did not
rely on the alleged
duress or the respondent’s allegation that
the applicant refused to allow him to amend the settlement agreement.
No case
was made out by the respondent on the papers before me in
respect of the alleged duress. The averment that the respondent was
not
permitted by the applicant to make changes to the settlement
agreement was disproved on the papers, by the amendments that the
respondent did in fact make to the settlement agreement.
[8]
The respondent, who described himself as a ‘businessman’
in his answering affidavit,
did not have legal representation at the
time that he signed the settlement agreement. The latter document was
drafted by the applicant’s
attorney at the time, based upon
proposals made by the respondent.
[9]
The applicant explained that the parties concluded the settlement
agreement after the issue
of the summons in the action proceedings,
that the settlement agreement dealt with the applicant’s claims
against the immovable
property, pension interest and company
shareholding made in the action proceedings. The settlement agreement
included provisions
regarding the responsibilities and rights
relating to the children born of the parties’ prior
relationship as well as provisions
for what was termed ‘spousal
maintenance’ but effectively amounted to payment of a monthly
amount to the applicant,
by the respondent.
[10]
The respondent’s counsel argued that because the particulars of
claim in the action proceedings did
not include claims in respect of
the parties’ children or the so-called ‘spousal
maintenance,’ and the application
proceeded under a case number
different from that allocated to the summons in the action
proceedings, I was precluded from making
the settlement agreement an
order of Court. This was because there was no
lis
between
the action and the application proceedings, and because our common
law, at this stage of its development, does not permit
of a claim for
maintenance in respect of a partner to a universal partnership, being
made after the termination of the universal
partnership.
[11]
The respondent’s counsel is correct as regards the development
of the common law, however, parking
to one side for the moment the
issue of the settlement agreement being void, voidable or subject to
a misrepresentation, the parties
concluded a settlement agreement.
The settlement agreement did not contain matter that was unlawful or
illegal or
contra bonis mores
and it was signed by both
parties, apparently free and voluntarily.
[12]
The parties were fully entitled to enter into a settlement agreement,
as they did, arising from the action
proceedings, and to include
therein such matter as they both agreed to include on the agreed
terms, even if that matter was not
raised by the claims made in the
action proceedings. Thus, the fact that the settlement agreement
dealt with issues not claimed
in the action proceedings, being the
issues in respect of the children and the applicant’s personal
maintenance, to mention
only two, is irrelevant to the validity of
the settlement agreement.
[13]
As to the fact that the common law does not allow for maintenance to
be claimed by one party from another
after the termination of the
universal partnership, it matters not because the parties agreed to
the relevant provision. They incorporated
what they considered to be
the appropriate provision for a monthly payment for the applicant
payable by the respondent, in the
settlement agreement.
[14]
Insofar as the respondent alleged that there was no consensus
between the parties in respect of the settlement agreement and that
neither party considered itself bound by it, the respondent referred
to the applicant failing to allow him contact to the
children in
terms of the settlement agreement and that the applicant, subsequent
to the signature by the parties of the settlement
agreement,
approached the Brakpan Maintenance Court. The applicant commenced
proceedings in terms of s 6 of the Maintenance Act,
99 of 1998 (‘the
Maintenance Act’), rather than seeking an order from that Court
based on the provisions of the settlement
agreement. The applicant,
however, explained that she was advised that because the settlement
agreement had not been made an order
of court, she was obliged to
proceed in terms of the Maintenance Act, which she duly did.
[15]
The fact that the applicant invoked the Maintenance Act in
circumstances where the settlement agreement was
not an order of
court, absent anything more in that regard, does not provide a basis
for this Court to find that the applicant
did not consider herself
bound by the provisions of the settlement agreement. Nor does the
alleged contact issue in respect of
the respondent and the children,
or the applicant’s sale of a motor vehicle immediately after
signature of the agreement
in circumstances where the settlement
agreement provided that it be sold subsequent to the settlement
agreement being made an order
of Court.
[16]
Turning to the issue of joinder raised by the respondent; that the
application should be dismissed because
of non-joinder of the bond
holder, SA Home Loans Guarantee (‘the bond holder’) and
the pension fund, the respondent’s
counsel argued that the bond
holder ought to have been joined as it had a material interest in the
matter.
[17]
This arose due to the provision in the settlement agreement that upon
the settlement agreement being made
an order of Court, the immovable
property situated 6 Kirkpatrick Avenue, Brakpan-North (‘the
immovable property’),
“shall become the sole and
exclusive property of the plaintiff at date of the Court order”.
Furthermore, that “the
defendant shall indemnify the plaintiff
against non-payment to the aforesaid institutions. … The
property shall be transferred
into the plaintiff’s name once
the full outstanding bond has been settled with the financial
institution.”
[18]
The
settlement agreement does not serve to bind or place obligations on
third parties who are not parties (and signatories) to the
settlement
agreement.
[1]
The
applicant’s right in respect of the immovable property in terms
of the settlement agreement, does not raise
a legal interest by the
bond holder because transfer is to take place only upon full payment
of the mortgage bond. In the interim,
the respondent remains the
registered owner of the immovable property and the rights of the bond
holder over the immovable property
remain intact and unaffected by
the provisions of the settlement agreement.
[19]
The applicant’s right in respect of the immovable property
under the settlement agreement is, pending
transfer of the immovable
property into her name, a personal right enforceable against the
respondent alone. It is not enforceable
against third parties such as
the bond-holder and third parties are not bound by that personal
right.
[20]
Insofar as the respondent’s counsel contended that the
applicant received more in terms of the settlement
agreement than she
claimed in the summons, that is correct. The applicant stands to
receive more because on the papers before me,
the respondent agreed
that she be given more than she claimed in the action proceedings.
The fact that the applicant stands to
receive more than she claimed
does not render the settlement agreement void or voidable.
[21]
As regards the provision in the settlement agreement dealing with the
respondent’s interest in the
pension fund, the respondent holds
a pension fund interest and is a member of the Baird Financial
Services Pension Fund with policy
number 4407955713, administered by
Sanlam. The respondent alleged that the applicant’s failure to
join the pension fund administrator
to the application proceedings
was fatal. The applicant’s counsel correctly conceded that the
provisions of Section 37D of
the Pension Funds Act, 51 of 1988 (‘the
Pension Funds Act’), apply only as between spouses.
[22]
The respondent’s counsel argued cogently that absent the
joinder of the pension fund, Baird Financial
Services Pension Fund,
consideration ought not to be given to augmenting the applicant’s
rights, if any, in respect of the
respondent’s pension fund
interest by widening the meaning of the word ‘spouse’ in
Section 37D of the Pension
Funds Act. This, potentially, would be new
law, amounting to a change of the prevailing legal position.
[23]
Furthermore, counsel for the respondent contended that the
respondent’s legal representatives invited
the applicant to
amend the application and join the pension fund sometime before the
matter was argued before me.
[24]
The intention of the parties as reflected in the provisions dealing
with the respondent’s pension fund
interest in the settlement
agreement, demonstrate an intention on the parties’ part that
the respondent should permit payment
of a monetary amount equal to
50% of the respondent’s pension fund interest, to be made to
the applicant within 60 court
days from the date of the court order,
being the date upon which the settlement agreement was made an order
of court. That much
is apparent from the contents of the pension fund
provisions in the settlement agreement.
[25]
Whilst the provisions regarding the pension fund interest are not
enforceable in the form in which they appear
in the settlement
agreement, the parties’ intention that the applicant should
receive and benefit from an amount equal to
50% of the respondent’s
pension fund interest, is evident from the content of the relevant
provisions. In the circumstances,
I intend to grant an order that
reflects the parties’ intention that the applicant benefit from
a monetary amount equal to
50% of the defendant/respondent’s
pension fund interest held with Baird Financial Services under the
policy number aforementioned,
as at date hereof.
[26]
Insofar as the respondent alleged that details in the settlement
agreement were inserted after signature
thereof by him, the
subsequent additions to the settlement agreement amounted only to the
number of the respondent’s pension
fund interest.
[27]
As regards the respondent’s life policy, the respondent’s
counsel correctly argued that the relevant
provision in the
settlement agreement should have stated that the applicant and the
children would remain as beneficiaries on the
respondent’s life
policy. Instead, the provision provides that the applicant and three
children will remain on the policy,
the number of which is reflected
in the settlement agreement. Once again, the parties’ intention
regarding the applicant
and the children benefiting from the life
policy is apparent. Accordingly, there is no basis upon which the
provision in respect
of the life policy is not enforceable.
[28]
In respect of the debts referred to in the settlement agreement, that
provision is not drafted in the most
elegant of terms, but it is
comprehensible and provides in effect, that the respondent will make
payment of the arrear school fees,
school fees presently owing, DSTV,
cell phone contract, monthly rental derived from the property
situated at 16 Holding Road,
Benoni Orchards and all contracts
currently concluded and/or in use.
[29]
The parties know what they intended in terms of the provision; namely
that the respondent pay certain debts
listed in the settlement
agreement and certain monthly obligations arising from contracts
concluded in respect of the parties’
cohabitation as it
previously existed.
[30]
Equally, a clause in respect of the respondent paying a 13
th
cheque to the applicant that forms part of the provision in respect
of the so-called ‘spousal maintenance’, whilst
it is not
a provision that is ordinarily encountered in agreements in the
nature of the settlement agreement or an agreement arising
from the
termination of a marriage relationship, it is not unenforceable.
[31]
The respondent is a businessman. He was content to engage with the
applicant in respect of the settlement
agreement and the contents
thereof, without the need to invoke legal assistance. The respondent
is the owner of at least one immovable
property, shares in a company,
a pension fund interest and is well able to and does engage in
business and related activities in
the outside world. The settlement
agreement is headed ‘agreement of settlement’ on the
first page thereof. The preamble
repeats that the document is an
agreement of settlement. Furthermore, the preamble provides
unequivocally that the content of the
settlement agreement relates to
the action proceedings instituted against the respondent in order to
declare their previous relationship
a universal partnership.
[32]
Furthermore, the second paragraph of the preamble states that the
parties consent that their relationship
was a universal partnership
and that the universal partnership had broken down irretrievably.
[33]
It is untenable for the respondent to argue in these circumstances
that he acted under an alleged misrepresentation
as to the nature of
the settlement agreement that he was signing. He either signed or
initialled each page of the document and
signed in full as the
defendant on the last page thereof The document comprising the
settlement agreement consisted of 6 pages.
Each page was signed or
initialled by the respondent.
[34]
In addition, the respondent effected the amendment referred to by me
afore, to the provision in respect of
the monthly rental derived from
the immovable property situated at 16 Holding Road, Benoni,
Orchards. In addition, the settlement
agreement was based on
proposals initially made by the respondent and the respondent, in the
litigation before me, made a counter-proposal
to the applicant, as a
substitute to the settlement agreement.
[35]
In respect of the applicant’s alleged material
misrepresentation relied upon by the respondent, the
respondent’s
counsel argued that there was a dispute of fact in this regard,
justifying the matter being referred to oral
evidence.
[36]
It appears to me that there is no dispute of fact in respect of the
alleged misrepresentation. Rather, this
is a case of the respondent
regretting the terms of the bargain made by him in terms of the
settlement agreement.
[37]
The respondent alleged that the applicant misrepresented to him that
the settlement agreement would be determined
finally by a Judge. That
statement did not amount to a misrepresentation. The settlement
agreement provided that it be subject
to the approval of this Court
and any additions, omissions or changes that the Court may deem
appropriate
[38]
Given that the parties provided in the settlement agreement that it
be made an order of court, the settlement
agreement would be
considered and determined finally by a Judge. The applicant’s
representation did not amount to a misrepresentation
and certainly
not to a material misrepresentation.
[39]
In the
circumstances, I am of the view that the alleged dispute of fact can
be rejected on the papers as they stand in accordance
with
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Archar Head.
[2]
[40]
Accordingly, the contention that the settlement agreement is void
ab
initio
, alternatively voidable, is without merit. The parties’
intention in respect of the various provisions in the settlement
agreement is clearly discernible from the settlement agreement. This
is notwithstanding the settlement agreement not being a model
of
clarity.
[41]
Pacta
sunt servanda
remains
a cornerstone of our law of contract and has been endorsed and upheld
by our highest Courts.
[3]
The fact that a contractual obligation voluntarily undertaken is
onerous, does not result in it not being enforceable or a party
not
being held to it.
[4]
The
respondent signed the settlement agreement. The circumstances of the
matter demonstrate that he did so voluntarily and knowingly.
It is in
keeping with the parties’ rights to dignity that the respondent
should be held to his contractual undertakings and
his obligations.
[42]
The respondent referred to
Mansell v Mansell
as quoted in the
matter of
Eke v Parsons
, that agreements are not to be made
court orders simply for the asking.
Mansell
emanated from that
KwaZulu-Natal Division and is not a decision of this Court. This
Division considers it appropriate to make settlement
agreements
dealing with children, maintenance and issues arising from divorces
and similar litigation, orders of court in the event
that the parties
seek such an order, as the parties did. Furthermore, the applicant
sought an order that the settlement agreement
be made an order of
Court in terms of the application proceedings.
[43]
The fact that the respondent denies that the settlement agreement
should be enforceable against him is a
reason, in itself, to order
that the settlement agreement be made an order of Court.
[44]
The settlement agreement arose from litigation in this Court
notwithstanding that the case numbers in the
trial action and the
application differed. The variance in the case numbers is not a
reason not to order that the settlement agreement
be made an order of
court.
[45]
By reason of the aforementioned, there is no basis upon which to
decline to order that the settlement agreement
be made an order of
Court. Accordingly, I intend to grant such an order excluding the
provisions in respect of the respondent’s
pension fund
interest, in substitution of which I intend to order a monetary
payment. Similarly, the appropriate order in respect
of the
respondent’s counter-application flowing from these
proceedings, is that the counter-application be dismissed with
costs
and I intend to make such an order.
[46]
As regards the costs of this application, there is no reason why the
order in respect of the costs should
not follow the determination of
the merits.
[47]
Accordingly, I grant the following order:
1.
The agreement of settlement concluded between the parties on
26 September
2021 under case number 30488/2019, excluding the
provisions in respect of the pension fund immediately below the
heading ‘pension
fund’ and above the heading ‘life
policy’, is made an order of Court.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant a monetary amount
equivalent
to 50% of the respondent’s pension fund interest
held with Baird Financial Services under policy number 4407955743
administered
by Sanlam, to the applicant within 60 days from the date
of this Court order.
3.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
4.
The respondent’s counter-application is dismissed with costs.
I
hand down the judgment.
A
A CRUTCHFIELD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 12 October 2022.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT: Ms
L L Norman.
INSTRUCTED
BY: Diemieniet
Attorneys.
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT: Ms
A Scott.
INSTRUCTED
BY: Stander
Attorneys.
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 26
April 2022.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 12
October 2022.
[1]
Swatif
(Pty) Ltd v Dykeno
1978 (1) SA 928
(A) at 945 (A).
[2]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd & Archar Head
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA).
[3]
Botha
& Another v Rich NO & Others
2014 (4) SA 121
(CC) (‘Botha’) at para [23].
[4]
Bock
& Others v Duburoro Investments (Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 242
(SCA).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Van Rensburg v Nedbank Ltd (MFC Division) (2020/17846) [2022] ZAGPJHC 107 (2 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 107High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Van Rensburg and Others v Mutongi and Others (004659/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 641 (15 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 641High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Van Den Heever v Road Accident Fund (2019/18810) [2022] ZAGPJHC 965 (16 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 965High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Van Den Bos N.O. and Others v Letsoalo and Others (30565/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 187 (30 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 187High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Van Den Steen N.O. and Another v Khewija Engineering and Construction Proprietary Limited (2021/12760) [2022] ZAGPJHC 780 (10 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 780High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar