Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 809South Africa
ZO v JO (14941/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 809 (18 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## ZO v JO (14941/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 809 (18 October 2022)
ZO v JO (14941/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 809 (18 October 2022)
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sino date 18 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
####
Case No. 14941/2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
18 October 2022
In
the matter between:
ZIO
Applicant
and
JSO
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The applicant, Mr. O, is presently divorcing the respondent,
Mrs. O. The divorce action is pending in this court. On 15 June 2021,
Manoim J, then sitting as an Acting Judge, made an interim order
regulating the parties’ rights and obligations regarding
spousal maintenance, residence and contact with the parties’
minor children, and a contribution towards Mrs. O’s legal
costs.
2
The 15 June 2021 order provided that the parties’ three
young children would reside with Mrs. O, subject to daily in-person
contact with Mr. O. That arrangement could only be altered on the
recommendation of either one of two social workers identified
in the
order, and even then only once the order had been varied in terms of
Rule 43 (6) of the Uniform Rules of Court. It was accepted
before me
that no such variation had been sought or granted.
3
The arrangement worked well until Mrs. O expressed a wish to
relocate to Stellenbosch with the children. Mr. O was naturally
opposed
to this, as it would make the implementation of the 15 Jun
2021 order impossible. Mr. O would not be able to exercise daily
in-person
contact with the children if he lived in Johannesburg and
Mrs. O lived with the children in Stellenbosch.
4
Mr. O understandably took the view that Mrs. O could not
relocate to Stellenbosch before seeking a variation in the 15 June
2021
order. However, it soon became clear that Mrs. O did not share
that view, and that she intended to relocate without seeking the
leave of the court.
5
In an effort to prevent this, Mr. O applied urgently to this
court for an order restraining Mrs. O from relocating with the
children.
The matter came before van Nieuwenhuizen AJ. On 10 May
2022, van Nieuwenhuizen AJ granted an order permitting Mrs. O to
relocate
to Stellenbosch with the children, and making various
ancillary orders. These included an order requiring a psychologist,
Megan
Main-Baillie, to investigate whether the relocation was in the
children’s best interests, and imposing a new contact regime
between Mr. O and the children. This included a provision completely
suspending any in-person contact between Mr. O and the children
for
six weeks from the date of the order – although daily virtual
contact was permitted.
6
Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order does not explicitly vary the 15
June 2021 order, and it is not clear from Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s
written judgment whether he had regard to the interaction between the
order he made and the 15 June 2021 order.
7
Aggrieved, Mr. O sought leave to appeal against van
Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order. Van Nieuwenhuizen AJ refused leave to
appeal
on 25 May 2022. Mrs. O relocated to Stellenbosch with the
children on the same day.
8
On 2 June 2022, Mr. O renewed his application for leave to
appeal directly to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The Supreme Court of
Appeal has not yet ruled on the application for leave to appeal
against van Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order.
9
On 15 June 2022, Mr. O applied urgently to this court for an
order declaring that his application for leave to appeal against van
Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order had the effect of suspending it. That
application came before Swanepoel AJ, who found that van
Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order had been suspended, and issued a
further order directing that the children be brought back to
Johannesburg.
That order attracted an application for leave to appeal
from Mrs. O. Swanepoel AJ refused leave to appeal, but Mrs. O has now
renewed
the application before the Supreme Court of Appeal.
10
Mr. O now seeks leave to execute Swanepoel AJ’s order
pending Mrs. O’s appeal. He also seeks an order declaring Mrs.
O to be in contempt of Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order, insofar as it
requires her to allow Ms. Main-Baillie to perform an assessment
of
the children’s best interests. The essence of that contempt is
said to be that Mrs. O is refusing to allow the assessment
to take
place in Johannesburg.
The
interim execution application
11
Section 18
(3) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides
that an order may only be executed pending appeal in exceptional
circumstances, and, even then, only when the applicant
for interim
execution will suffer irreparable harm, and the respondent will not
suffer such harm.
12
In matters of this nature, the
section 18
(3) test takes on a
slightly different character. The inquiry is into the balance of harm
between the parties in their capacities
as parents, not in their
personal capacities. In this case, that inquiry reduces to whether it
would be in the children’s
best interests to be brought back to
Johannesburg pending the exhaustion of the appeal proceedings. The
fact that Mr. O cannot
presently have daily in-person contact with
his children does not in itself mean that it would be in the
children’s best
interests to be temporarily returned to
Johannesburg pending appeal.
13
If I had the jurisdiction to make a final order preventing the
children from being relocated from Johannesburg, I would have had
no
hesitation in doing so. It seems to me that the residence and contact
regime set out in the 15 June 2021 order ought to have
been left in
place unless and until the various reports the order itself provided
for had been submitted and considered by a court.
I can see no
justification on the papers for departing from that arrangement.
14
However, my jurisdiction under
section 18
(3) of the Act is
limited to making an order pending the outcome of an application for
leave to appeal, and any subsequent appeal
that may be allowed to
proceed against the order of van Nieuwenhuizen AJ. This raises
fundamentally different issues.
15
There are a number of conceivable permutations in this
litigation. In the first place, Mr. O’s application for leave
to appeal
against van Nieuwenhuizen AJ’s order might not
succeed. A decision on that application is fairly imminent. If the
application
does not succeed, then the Swanepoel AJ order, and the
prospective appeal against it, falls away. In that event, any
decision I
make will lack much practical consequence.
16
If Mr. O’s application for leave to appeal against the
van Nieuwenhuizen AJ order succeeds, then the question becomes
whether
Mrs. O’s application for leave to appeal against the
Swanepoel AJ order will succeed. If it does, then Swanepoel AJ’s
order would ordinarily be suspended indefinitely, unless I order the
children to be returned to Johannesburg. If I make such an
order, a
further application aimed at keeping the children in Stellenbosch is
likely to follow. Further permutations arise from
how any appeals
that are allowed to proceed are actually disposed of on their merits.
There is also the more remote, though not
negligible, possibility
that either party in either case might attempt to engage the
jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court.
17
All of this raises the spectre of the children being involved
in a damaging tug of war, in which their primary residence changes
from Stellenbosch to Johannesburg and back again as the appellate
litigation proceeds.
18
I cannot see that this could possibly serve the children’s
best interests. However they got there, the children are now
relatively
settled in Stellenbosch. They have lived there for five
months. They are at school, and there is no suggestion that they are
in
danger of any imminent or ongoing harm, other than the harm
arising from the fact that they cannot have daily in-person contact
with Mr. O. But I do not think that harm justifies triggering the
possibility of the frequent changes to the children’s residence
that I have outlined.
19
This is a classic case in which things should remain as they
are until the various appeal processes have been exhausted. That
means
that the children ought to stay in Stellenbosch for the
foreseeable future. In other words, although I am satisfied that
there
are exceptional circumstances in this case, I cannot find that
the children are suffering irreparable harm. Nor can I find that
Mr.
O would suffer irreparable harm if they were not forthwith returned
to Johannesburg. There is no dispute that Mr. O is free
to visit the
children in Stellenbosch. Imperfect as that is in light of the
contact rights afforded Mr. O in the 15 June 2021 order,
it seems to
me to be preferrable to any of the alternatives.
20
I have given some thought to whether I can and should order
that arrangements be made to ensure that Mr. O exercises occasional
in-person contact with the children in Johannesburg pending appeal.
While I was initially attracted by such an interim arrangement,
I do
not think that it would be wise to order it. I do not know enough
about the parties and their circumstances, or about how
the children
would be affected by such an arrangement in general, or by the wide
variety of particular forms such an arrangement
could take.
21
It follows that, despite my sympathy for Mr. O, his
application for interim execution must fail.
The
contempt proceedings
22
The essence of the breach of the Nieuwenhuizen AJ order
alleged in Mr. O’s papers is that Mrs. O has refused to
co-operate
with Ms. Main-Baillie’s assessment of whether it
would be in the children’s best interests to relocate to
Stellenbosch.
That in turn boils down to the proposition that the
children must be returned to Johannesburg so that Ms. Main-Baillie
can assess
them in the context of Mr. O’s home environment.
23
However, the order of Nieuwenhuizen AJ says nothing about how
Ms. Main-Baillie’s assessment is to be performed. In his
judgment
on the application for leave to appeal, Nieuwenhuizen AJ
envisaged that Ms. Main-Baillie would be able to conclude her review
during
the six week period during which he directed that there would
be no in-person contact between Mr. O and the children. That seems
inconsistent with the view that Nieuwenhuizen AJ had a
Johannesburg-based assessment in mind.
24
It does, though, stand to reason that a full assessment of the
merits of the relocation might encompass observing the children in
the context of Mr. O’s Johannesburg home. However, the question
is whether Mrs. O’s refusal to allow that to happen
is a wilful
and
mala fide
breach of the court order. I cannot say that it
is. Even if it were established that the assessment, or some part of
it, must take
place in Johannesburg, I cannot conclude that Mrs. O is
wilful or
mala fide
in resisting this. The order does not
explicitly require it, and Nieuwenhuizen AJ himself clearly thought
that the assessment would
not necessarily entail the children being
brought to Johannesburg.
25
The contempt proceedings must also fail.
Costs
26
There is no warrant to mulct either party in costs in a case
like this. Each party will pay their own costs.
Order
27
For all these reasons, and with some reluctance, I order that
the application is dismissed, with each party paying their own costs.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
13 October 2022
DECIDED
ON:
18 October 2022
For
the Applicant:
A Bester SC
Instructed by HJW
Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
PV Ternent
Instructed by Billy
Gundelfinger Attorneys
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