Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1044South Africa
P.M.N v N.N (061732/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1044 (29 December 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: An urgent application by the biological father of a minor child who seeks to interdict the Respondent, the minor child’s biological mother from relocating with the minor child from Johannesburg to Cape Town.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## P.M.N v N.N (061732/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1044 (29 December 2022)
P.M.N v N.N (061732/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1044 (29 December 2022)
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sino date 29 December 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 061732/2022
Not
reportable
Not
of interest to other judges
In
the matter between:
P
M N
Applicant
and
N
N
Respondent
Coram:
FISHER
J
Heard
: 28
December 2022
Delivered
:
29
December 2022
Summary:
An
urgent application by the biological father of a minor child who
seeks to interdict the Respondent, the minor child’s biological
mother from relocating with the minor child from Johannesburg to Cape
Town.
## ORDER
ORDER
I
make an order which reads as follows:
1.
The
matter is dealt with as one of urgency.
2.
The
respondent is interdicted from removing the child, S N to CT for the
purpose of him residing there, pending any further court
order in
relation to such removal.
3.
The
respondent is to pay the costs of this application.
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Fisher
J
### Introduction:
Introduction:
[1]
This application comes before me in the
urgent court. It is brought by the father of a minor child who seeks
to interdict the respondent,
the child’s mother from
implementing her the unilateral decision to relocate the parties’
minor son (S) from Johannesburg
to Cape Town.
[2]
The relocation is to take place in a
matter of days.
[3]
The applicant was given notice of this
intended move by way of a letter dated 08 December 2022, sent to the
applicant’s attorney.
The applicant alleges that this letter
only came to his attention on 13 December 2022.
[4]
The decision has been presented as a
fait accompli.
[5]
This urgent court is called on by the
respondent to endorse this unilateral decision.
This is asked for against a factual
backdrop which is complex to say the very least.
[6]
I turn to set out such facts.
### Material
facts:
Material
facts:
[7]
The parties are married to each other
but have been living apart since June 2018.They had been married for
22 years prior to them
parting. The applicant accuses the respondent
of having conducted an extra-marital affair. She denies this.
[8]
The parties have two children, a
daughter K who is 20 years old and S who is 14 years old.
[9]
K and S have lived with their mother
since the departure of their father from the matrimonial home in June
2018.
[10]
The departure was precipitated by
catastrophic events which led to the applicant’s
hospitalization and the obtaining of a
protection order against the
applicant by the respondent.
[11]
The events which are described in this
application and the domestic violence application are distressing.
The applicant was overwhelmed
by emotion and punched a hole through a
plate glass window at the family home. This resulted in the severing
of an artery in his
arm which, in turn, resulted in a significant
loss of blood. Regrettably, these events took place in the presence
of the children.
[12]
From June 2018 to July 2022 S exercised
weekend visits with his father every weekend. There was also daily
telephonic contact between
S and his father.
[13]
The relationship between the applicant
and both of his children is strained.
[14]
On 17 July 2022 the applicant and S had
a disagreement. This resulted in S stating that he no longer wanted
to have contact with
his father. The relationship between K and her
father broke down some time before that. K and the applicant have not
had contact
with each other for some years.
[15]
The applicant presents as distressed by
this breakdown in his relationship with his family and particularly
S. He says that he will
do everything in his power to restore their
relationship.
[16]
The respondent alleges that the
applicant has behaved in a manner which is combative, controlling and
unreasonable in relation to
the children and her. She says that it is
this behaviour which has led to the breakdown in the applicant’s
relationship with
his children. The applicant alleges that the
breakdown is due to the respondent’s efforts to alienate the
children from him.
[17]
After the contact between S and the
applicant was terminated and on 25 August 2022 the applicant
approached the Children’s
Court in Roodepoort for an order that
he be allowed contact with S.
[18]
The first Children’s Court
appearance took place on 27 October 2022. The matter was stood down
until 01 November 2022.
[19]
At this second appearance it was ordered
by the Children’s Court that S and the applicant undergo
bonding therapy and that
a social worker be appointed to assist in
the preparation of a parenting plan.
[20]
Thus this was the legal status quo at
the time of the handing down of the order.
[21]
As I will explain later, it appears that
the respondent had as at this date already decided to leave
Johannesburg with S and was
making plans to facilitate this move.
[22]
The respondent makes the following
points in relation to the family position should she not be allowed
to embark with S on this
relocation:
‘
The
prejudice that we will suffer if the interdict is granted is immense,
and profound, including but not limited to:
9.1.
K will be forced to choose between
pursuing her dreams of studying her chosen career path at UCT versus
remaining in Johannesburg
to be present as a support framework for S;
9.2.
S will be faced with one of two
scenarios:
9.2.1.
Losing the support of K on a daily
basis, since she will be in Cape Town, if she decides to leave; or
9.2.2.
Feelings of guilt about K not being able
to pursue her studies, if she decides to stay.
I
will:
9.3.1.
be prevented from furthering my career
to enable me to earn more money to better cater for the financial
needs of both children
under circumstances where Applicant makes no
contribution to maintenance save for S's school fees up to 2022.
9.3.2
Forfeit the amount of R 73 000.00 already paid in respect of
accommodation, moving costs, and school registration for S at
C[....], notwithstanding uniform and textbook costs.’
[23]
The respondent furthermore gives the
following undertaking which she suggests should serve to assuage any
prejudice to the applicant
and the process which has been ordered by
the Children’s Court as to the bonding therapy which is to
ensue per its order:
‘
25
I unequivocally undertake to:
25.1.
In respect of the Children's Court
Application pending in the CC:
25.1.1.
Consent to the jurisdiction of the
Roodepoort Magistrate' Court to obviate the transfer of the matter;
25.1.2.
Ensure, at my own cost, that I am
present for all Court appearances, and to ensure, at my own costs,
that S is present for all Court
Appearances if required by the Court,
including an interactional recommended by Malatjie, if same is
ordered by the CC " 25.1.3.
Make myself and S available for any
interviews, investigations, or other interventions which may be
ordered by the Children's Court;
25.1.4.
At my own costs ensure that S commences with therapy as soon as
possible, but no later than 30 days from the date of our
arrival in
Cape Town.
25.2.
In respect of Contact, insofar as S is
willing to permit such contact:
25.2.1.
I tender to pay for return air tickets
from Cape Town to Johannesburg three times per year, to coincide with
half of each long holiday,
and every alternate short holiday;
25.2.2.
I tender to ensure that S has a cell
phone with data and airtime to ensure telephonic / video contact
between S and Applicant;
25.2.3.
I tender to do all things reasonably
necessary to encourage contact between S and Applicant.’
[24]
The respondent attaches to her answering
affidavit, evidence in the form of an acceptance of application by
C[....]2 school in CT
of an application for S to begin grade [….]
at the school during February 2023. The acceptance letter is dated 08
November
2022.
[25]
The respondent furthermore attaches an
account statement relating to a lease which she has concluded as to
accommodation in CT.
The statement discloses that payments were made
to the landlord at the beginning of December.
[26]
The respondent does not attach any
documentation relating to her alleged employment opportunity in Cape
Town and neither does she
provide any details as to such employment.
### Discussion:
Discussion:
[27]
The respondent does not disclose when
she took the decision to relocate with S and K to Cape Town. This
omission is, in itself,
a problem. It shows a reluctance on the part
of the respondent to take this court into her confidence.
[28]
What this court has been able to discern
from the patchy and insubstantial version provided by the respondent
is that the plans
were afoot in October already. This
notwithstanding, the respondent did not place these plans before the
Children’s Court
and seek guidance on the way forward from that
court.
[29]
This seems subversive as does the fact
that the intention to relocate was only brought to the attention of
the applicant long after
these plans were laid. He was literally the
last person to be informed that his child was being removed from the
jurisdiction of
the court proceedings which are underway and the
jurisdiction of this court.
[30]
The behaviour of the respondent is not
inconsistent with the applicant’s allegations of parental
alienation. Such alienation,
were it occurring, would be
characterised as abusive.
[31]
The central dispute which arises in
relation to this family is whether the relationship between S and his
father has been subject
to manipulation by the applicant. This is a
complex question. It will not be easily resolved. The Children’s
Court has wisely
pronounced that part of this process should be
facilitated by bonding therapy.
[32]
I agree with Mr Vally for the applicant
that this prescribed process will be impossible of implementation if
S is removed to Cape
Town.
[33]
It would be an unusual state of affairs
for a child to relocated by one parent to another province without a
proper engagement with
the other parent.
[34]
The litigation between the parties which
is taking place in the Children’s Court is a consideration
which makes such engagement
even more crucial.
[35]
There needs to be a proper assessment of
the implications of the order by the Children’s Court. This
assessment cannot take
place because of the timetable which the
respondent has sought to impose on the applicant as to the removal of
the child from Johannesburg.
[36]
To my mind, this is a classic case of
orchestration of urgency. The respondent has through stealth, created
a situation where the
removal of S from the Children’s Court
jurisdiction and that of this Court will not allow for proper
investigation and processes
to follow.
[37]
The case raised by her at this stage
fails to address the considerations relating to relationship between
father and son. It as
if she has completely discounted any
involvement of the applicant in S’s life.
[38]
I agree that the undertakings given by
the applicant do not serve to alleviate this position.
[39]
This Court cannot be held hostage to the
respondents ill-considered and irresponsible conduct. To my mind, the
interests of S are
not served by such an approach.
### Conclusion
Conclusion
[40]
The respondent has created the urgency
in this matter. In doing so she has sought to circumvent a process
which is already underway
in this jurisdiction.
[41]
This is an untenable approach and cannot
be countenanced by this Court in the interests of the minor child and
justice.
[42]
The child cannot simply be removed from
the Jurisdiction of this
Court
and that of the Children’s Court without an order of court or
the consent of the applicant.
[43]
The remedy of the respondent is to seek
such an order or such consent.
### Costs
Costs
[44]
There is no reason why the costs of this
matter should not follow the result.
### Order
Order
I
make an order which reads as follows:
1.
The matter is dealt with as one of
urgency.
2.
The respondent is interdicted from
removing the child, S N to Cape Town for the purpose of him residing
there pending any further
court order in relation to such removal.
3.
The respondent is to pay the costs of
this application.
### APPEARANCES
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Mr.
Muhammed Valley
Instructed
by
:
Farhana
Ismail Attorneys.
For
the respondents:
Adv.
S.P Stone
Instructed
by
:
Vermuelen
Attorneys
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