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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## W.A.S.B v J.M.K (046725/23)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 44 (17 January 2025)
W.A.S.B v J.M.K (046725/23)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 44 (17 January 2025)
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sino date 17 January 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 046725/23
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date: 17 January 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
W[...]
A[...] S[...] B[...]
Applicant
(Identity
Number: 7[...])
And
J[...]
M[...] K[...]
Respondent
(Identity
Number: 8[...])
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
Introduction
[1]
This is an
application in terms of Rule 43
of the Uniform Rules of Court, for the granting of an order,
pendente
lite
, towards the applicant’s reasonable, spousal
maintenance needs, as well as for an initial contribution towards his
legal
costs.
[2]
The
applicant and respondent (“the parties”) were married to
each other on 7 September 2019 out of community of property,
with the
inclusion of the Accrual System.
[1]
[3]
No children were born from the marriage.
[4]
The applicant claims monthly maintenance of
R65 000.00 per month and R100 000.00 payable in monthly
instalments of R10 000.00.
B.
BACKGROUND
[5]
The applicant submitted that during the parties’ romantic
relationship,
and subsequent marriage, he made contributions in cash
and in kind towards the establishment, growth and development of
various
business enterprises conducted by the respondent, such as
C[...] P[...] P[...] D[...] and Dr [...] D[...] H[...].
[6]
Before the parties separated, their joint household and living
expenses were
funded at the instance and request of the respondent,
by the entity known as C[...] P[...] P[...] D[...], until
approximately April
2022, whereafter the entity known as Dr [...]
D[...] H[...], catered for all their joint maintenance needs, by
mutual decision
between the parties.
[7]
The
respondent had employed the applicant in her business and remunerated
him as an employee.
[2]
Applicant then alleges that the respondent decided that she no longer
wished to remain married to him, she unfairly, and without
due reason
or proper process, terminated his employment, thereby effectively
"ousting"
him from the business that they had built together. This resulted in
the applicant being completely cut off financially.
[8]
As a result of the termination of his employment, the applicant
is without
any income. The respondent fails to make any meaningful
contribution towards the applicant’s reasonable and actual
needs.
From the applicant’s Financial Disclosure Form (“FDF”)
it is reflected that he has liabilities totalling R782 473.71.
There are, however, no bank statements attached.
[9]
The
applicant has sketched out a monthly expenditure requirement of
R65 300.00.
[3]
[10]
The respondent has in the meantime sold the luxurious matrimonial
home which she had purchased in Silverlakes
Road, Pretoria for nearly
R4 million. The respondent makes no contribution towards the
applicant’s accommodation costs.
[11]
The applicant has tried to find new employment but without any
success.
[12]
The respondent has removed the applicant from her medical aid scheme.
[13]
In the face of the applicant’s application, the respondent
makes no tender at all but pleads
poverty.
The
respondent’s version
[14]
The
respondent contends that it was not the applicant who was employed by
Cosmo Farm but a corporate entity. The Commission for
Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration (“CCMA”) ruled that the
applicant has successfully established the existence
of an employment
relationship between himself and the respondent.
[4]
[15]
The
respondent alleges that on or about 21 December 2022, the applicant
transferred from her personal credit card account an amount
of
R65 000.00 into his own bank account, without her knowledge or
authorization.
[5]
[16]
The
respondent details malicious, abusive, aggressive, threatening and
unbecoming conduct on the part of the applicant, which eventuated
in
her obtaining a Protection Order at the Magistrates’ Court.
[6]
The prohibitions in force from the order are far-reaching, I deem it
not necessary to repeat them herein.
[17]
According to the respondent, the applicant continued to occupy the
matrimonial house even after the
official transfer was done,
therefore she had to initiate legal proceedings to evict him.
[18]
The respondent submits that she is hopelessly insolvent, with debts
in the region of R1,4 million rand.
The respondent lists her
indebtedness in her Financial Disclosure Form (“FDF”)
broken down as follows:
18.1
Nedbank Covid Loan –
R50 334.58
18.2
Nedbank Credit Card –
R52 962.95
18.3
Standard Bank Credit Card –
R168 078.60
18.4
Standard Bank Revolving
Credit Account – R277 616.90
18.5
Nedbank Current Account –
R5 674.32
18.6
Cosmo Pharm – Loan
Account – R852 213.00
[19]
Respondent lists her total income from her consultancy business as
R690 000.00 per annum. Her
monthly expenses are R62 740.00
per month.
[20]
The respondent acknowledges that the applicant did advance
R300 000.00 to Cosmo Pharm at its inception.
The loan was repaid
in full by way of three payments: R150 000.00 on 1 April 2022,
R100 000.00 on 4 April 2022 and R50 000.00
during January
2023.
[21]
The applicant, on his version, has not earned an income since January
2023. He waited nearly 14 months
before launching this application.
[22]
The respondent has sought a forfeiture order in the divorce action.
Common
cause facts
[23]
The respondent instituted divorce action in May 2023. The applicant
filed his plea and counterclaim,
to which respondent has pleaded.
Pleadings have closed. What remains is application for and allocation
of a trial date.
C.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
[24]
The applicant has not taken the court into his confidence by
providing his bank statements and other
documents to support his
predicament. He has not set out in his founding affidavit any efforts
on his part to secure employment
since his alleged dismissal. He has
not explained, as the respondent did, how he has managed to get by
for the 14 months before
he initiated this application.
[25]
The applicant’s non-disclosure of his bank financial statements
and other supporting documents
as well as the means of securing
employment in the previous 14 months is substantial, as this
information is material for Rule
43 Applications and such information
would draw a clear picture of the applicant’s financial
situation.
[26]
In
Du
Preez
v
Du
Preez
[7]
Murphy J states that “
A
mistreatment of one aspects of relevant information invariably will
colour other aspects with the possible (or
likely)
result that fairness will not be done. Consequentlly I would assume
there is a duty on applicants in rule 43 applications
seeking
equitable redress to act with the utmost good faith (uberrimae fidei)
and to disclose fully all material information regarding
their
financial affairs. Any false disclosure or material non-disclosure
would mean that he or she is not before court with ‘clean
hands’ and, on that ground alone, the court will be justified
in refusing relief.”
[27]
The applicant, in support of his claim for contributions towards his
legal costs, attached a bill of
costs marked “annexure I”
totalling some R145 725.40. Items 58 and 59 thereof simply read
as follows: “Letters
written (58pg)” and “Letters
received (75pg)” and are billed at R11 926.54 and
R7 809.75 respectively.
These amounts are food for thought
as to their reasonableness for what they purport to represent.
[28]
In
Nilsson v Nilsson
1984 (2) SA 294
(C) at 295F, VAN DEN
HEEVER J held that a rule 43 order is not meant to provide an interim
meal ticket to a person who quite clearly
at the trial would not be
able to establish a right to maintenance. The court further
determined that “
The shorter the duration of the marriage,
the more important the conduct of the parties within the relationship
– their respective
'guilt' or 'innocence' – would
ordinarily be in relation to the question whether maintenance should
be paid at all.”
This is so, mindful of the fact that the
trial court will be best placed to make a final determination on the
issue of maintenance.
[29]
It is trite
that it was held that a claim supported by reasonable and moderate
details carries more weight than one which includes
extravagant or
extortionate demands.
[8]
Similarly, more weight will be attached to the affidavit of a
respondent who evinces a willingness to implement his lawful
obligations
than to that of one who is seeking to evade them.
[30]
In
Taute
v Taute
[9]
,
reference
was made to
Levin
v Levin
1962 (3) SA 330
(W) at p331D, where LUDORF J said the following:
“
To
decide the issues I am compelled to draw inferences and to look to
the probabilities as they emerge from the papers. Obviously
my
findings are in no
way binding on
the trial Court and indeed after hearing the evidence it may emerge
that some or all of the inferences I have drawn
are wrong. On this
basis I now turn to the issues as they emerge from the papers.”
[31]
This is one such instance where I am compelled to look to the
probabilities as appears from the papers
and draw inferences
therefrom. I have referred to the parties’ marriage on 7
September 2019. The respondent commenced divorce
proceedings in May
2023. The respondent has detailed the circumstances leading to the
breakdown of the marriage and the applicant’s
conduct resulting
in the prayer for forfeiture in the particulars of claim.
[32]
All these allegations will be dealt with by the trial court in due
course. The allegations cannot be
disregarded in the rule 43
proceedings. The respondent’s prospects of success in due
course will have a bearing on whether
the applicant prevails in the
interim application for maintenance and contribution to legal costs.
[33]
On a holistic consideration of the papers, I am not persuaded that
the applicant is wholly incapable
of supporting himself. The
respondent is not a big shot businesswoman as the applicant makes her
out to be.
[34]
The normal rule regarding costs in litigation is that the costs
follow the outcome, unless a case is
made out for a different order
as to costs.
In the result, the
following order is made:
The application is
dismissed with costs.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 28/10/2024
Date
of Judgment: 17 January 2025
On behalf of the
Applicant:
Ms. M. Fabricius
Duly instructed by:
Shapiro &
Haasbroek Inc.; Pretoria
e-mail:
leon@shinc.co.za
/
geraldine@shinc.co.za
On behalf of the
Respondent:
Ms. S. Liebenberg
Duly instructed by:
ALAN JOSe Inc. c/o
Griesel van Zanten Attorneys, Pretoria.
e-mail:
alanj@alanjoseatt.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 17
January 2025.
[1]
Chapter
1 of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
.
[2]
Applicant
submits that he was paid a salary of R50 000.00 per month.
[3]
FDF
para 3.
[4]
Para
45 of the CCMA Jurisdictional Ruling dated 04 September 2023 filed
with the
Rule 43
application.
[5]
Respondent’s
answering affidavit para 11.
[6]
Ibid
para
12 – 19.
[7]
2009
(6) SA 33
para 16.
[8]
Taute
v Taute
1974
(2) SA 675 (E).
[9]
1974
(2) SA 675
(E).
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