Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 130South Africa
K.G v D.G and Others (B957/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 130 (17 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 February 2025
Headnotes
over, pending the divorce action. The first respondent’s attorneys responded on 13 January 2025, refusing to give such an undertaking. [15] This application was launched thereafter on 16 January 2025. [16] The respondent assailed this application on the grounds that it was unjustifiably launched on an urgent basis in circumstances where the said urgency was self-created.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## K.G v D.G and Others (B957/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 130 (17 February 2025)
K.G v D.G and Others (B957/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 130 (17 February 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: B957/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
(4)
Date: 17 February 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
K[...]
G[...]
First
Applicant
And
D[...]
G[...]
First Respondent
VAN
ZYLS ATTORNEYS INC
Second
Respondent
LEOVAS
INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant is seeking on an urgent basis, an
order interdicting the First Respondent from alienating,
transferring, or encumbering
property situated at 5[...] M[...]
Street, Moreletapark, Pretoria, Gauteng, pending finalization of the
divorce action between
the parties.
[2]
The parties are embroiled in an acrimonious
divorce action against one another. It is no surprise that the
husband, who is the respondent
in the application, opposes this
application as well.
B.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The parties attended counselling sessions in an
attempt to save their marriage and concluded a settlement agreement
before the institution
of the divorce action by the first respondent.
[4]
In terms of the settlement agreement the applicant
is entitled to receive transfer of the M[...] property.
[5]
The catalyst for the application was that the
first respondent apparently concluded a sale agreement in respect of
the property,
in order to dispose thereof before the divorce action
is adjudicated upon. This will have the effect of defeating the
applicant’s
claim even before the divorce court makes its
decision, rendering hollow any judgment granted in favour of the
applicant in this
regard.
[6]
Various applications have been brought pending the
divorce, notably a Rule 43 application, contempt of court proceedings
against
the first respondent, and an application to authorize the
issuance of a warrant for incarceration of the first respondent for
contempt
of court.
[7]
The first respondent’s entrenched stance is
that he is unable to afford the obligations imposed upon him by the
Rule 43 Court
Order despite findings to the contrary by the Court
that heard the contempt application.
[8]
In the current application, the first respondent
maintains his plea of poverty and insisted that he must sell the
M[...] property
in order to afford compliance with the Rule 43 order.
[9]
It is worth noting that the first respondent
currently lives and works in the United States of America. His net
monthly salary (after
deductions) amounts to more than R180 000.00
per month.
C.
URGENCY
[10]
The applicant was informed of the sale agreement between the first
and third respondents on 6 December
2024.
[11]
In correspondence through his attorneys, the first respondent
repeatedly assured the applicant that
he would approach the court for
leave to sell the M[...] property.
[12]
It is an undeniable fact that he concluded the sale agreement without
approaching any court.
[13]
On 11 December 2024, the applicant’s attorneys addressed a
letter to the third respondent, informing
it of the applicant's
claim. No response was received. The applicant’s attorneys
closed their office on 12 December 2024
for the December recess.
[14]
When the applicant's attorneys reopened on 8 January 2025, they
addressed a letter to the first respondent's
attorneys, requesting an
undertaking that the transfer of the property to the third respondent
be held over, pending the divorce
action.
The
first respondent’s attorneys responded on 13 January 2025,
refusing to give such an undertaking.
[15]
This application was launched thereafter on 16
January 2025.
[16]
The respondent assailed this application on the
grounds that it was unjustifiably launched on an urgent basis in
circumstances where
the said urgency was self-created.
[17]
The applicant’s contention is that she first
sought compliance with the provisions of the settlement agreement
from the respondents
and only launched this application when
compliance was not forthcoming.
[18]
From
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
,
[1]
it is seen that a party who seeks consensus prior to lodging the
application cannot be accused of being dilatory or that urgency
was
self-created.
[19]
The relief sought in this application is an
anti-dissipation interdict. The purpose of this type of interdict is
to prevent the
disposal of an asset, pending the adjudication of the
applicant’s claim.
[20]
The respondent’s view is that this
application should be dismissed with costs, contending that:
20.1
the
applicant had repudiated the settlement agreement by refusing to
return to mediation when they disagreed;
20.2
she
had turned her back on what was agreed
[2]
;
20.3
furthermore,
there is a dispute of fact as to why the parties entered into the
settlement agreement. According to the respondent,
he did so in an
attempt to salvage the marriage;
20.4
the
applicant has no real right as the respondent is the owner of the
property, at best the applicant has a right only to the accrual
when
it is calculated at the dissolution of the marriage.
[21]
Adv
Coertze submitted on behalf of the applicant that the matter of
Knox
D’Arcy Ltd v Jamieson and Others
[3]
relied upon by the respondent is distinguishable from the current
case. In
Knox
D’Arcy
the applicant sought to preserve the property as security for a claim
she had against her spouse for payment of monies. Here the
applicant
is claiming the property itself consequent to the provisions of the
signed settlement agreement which has been made an
order of Court. In
Knox
D’Arcy
Grosskopf JA specifically held that “…
"I
am not, of course, at the moment dealing with special situations
which might arise, for instance, by
contract
or
under the law of insolvency."
[4]
[emphasis added].
[22]
In
Knox
D’Arcy
,
the court referred to the earlier decision in
Mcitiki
and Another v Maweni
[5]
where Hopley J stated as follows:
"
... (T)hey all proceed upon the wish of the Court that the plaintiff
should not have an injustice done to him by reason of
leaving his
debtor possessed of funds sufficient to satisfy the claim, when
circumstances show that such debtor is wasting or getting
rid of such
funds to defeat his creditors, or is likely to do so."
[23]
In
Webster
v Mitchell
[6]
the
test for an interim interdict, such as the one sought herein, was
laid down as follows:
“
In
an application for a temporary interdict, applicant’s right
need not be shown by a balance of probabilities; it is sufficient
if
such right is prima facie established, though open to some doubt. The
proper manner of approach is to take the facts as set
out by the
applicant together with any facts set out by the respondent which
applicant cannot dispute and to consider whether,
having regard to
the inherent probabilities, the applicant could on those facts obtain
final relief at the trial. The facts set
up in contradiction by the
respondent should then be considered, and if serious doubt is thrown
upon the case of applicant, he
could not succeed. In considering the
harm involved in the grant or refusal of a temporary interdict, where
a clear right to relief
is not shown, the Court acts on the balance
of convenience. If, though there is prejudice to the respondent, that
prejudice is
less than that of the applicant, the interdict will be
granted. Subject, if possible, to conditions which will protect the
respondent.”
Prima
facie
right:
[24]
The applicant must show that she has a
prima facie
right,
though open to some doubt.
[25]
The applicant relies primarily on the settlement agreement concluded
between the parties, in terms
of which the property is awarded to
her, as the basis of the right relied upon.
[26]
This is amplified by the Court Order in the Rule 43 application,
which requires the first respondent
to pay the bond instalments in
respect of the M[...] street property specifically, and the
applicant's right to have her claim
adjudicated upon in terms of
Section 34 of the Constitution, without the judgment being rendered
hollow due to the first respondent's
disposal of the property.
[27]
The first
respondent has given an incoherent explanation of the purpose of the
settlement agreement. One such version
[7]
is that the agreement was to serve as security to the applicant if
the emigration to the USA did not work out. This contradicts
the
preamble of the settlement agreement and clause 15 of the agreement.
These provides that the agreement is for the purposes
of the divorce
and should be incorporated into the final decree of divorce.
Reasonable
apprehension of irreparable harm:
[28]
It is common cause that the first respondent is in the process of
selling the M[...] property contrary
to his undertaking in the
agreement. This sale, regardless of the first respondent's avowed
reason, will clearly render the eventual
incorporation of the
settlement agreement in a final divorce meaningless.
No
suitable alternative remedy:
[29]
The applicant’s only viable remedy is to claim transfer of the
M[...] property. The divorce action
is nowhere near conclusion. The
first respondent’s insistence that the applicant should await
her share of the accrual is
not relevant as a remedy for a blatant
breach of the settlement agreement.
Balance
of convenience:
[30]
The applicant and the minor children will be deprived of their
home if the sale is permitted
to proceed, in addition to the
applicant's claim in the divorce action being rendered hollow.
[31]
On the other hand, the first respondent contends that he must sell
the property in order to meet the
dictates of the Rule 43 court
order, which he has already been found guilty of being in contempt of
by a court on 29 October 2024.
[32]
In its judgment, the court was scathing in its findings regarding the
first respondent’s honesty
regarding his financial position,
his attempts at misleading the court and worse.
[33]
It is trite
that the court in exercising its discretion must balance or weigh the
prejudice which the applicant will suffer if the
interim interdict is
not granted against the prejudice the first respondent will suffer if
it is granted.
[8]
D.
CONCLUSION:
[34]
The first respondent’s pleas of poverty and his contention that
he must sell the M[...] property
for financial reasons ring hollow,
especially having regard to his record in this litigation and cannot
be sustained.
[35]
In so far as costs are concerned, the normal rule as established over
time is that costs follow the
cause. It was submitted on behalf of
the applicant that respondent’s
mala fides
as
foreshadowed in the contempt of court application, are the sole cause
of the applicant having to incur legal costs and that she
should not
be left out of pocket as a result thereof.
[36]
Upon a consideration of all the evidence before me, the following
order is made:
1.
The applicant’s
non-compliance with the rules in respect of filing and service is
hereby condoned and the present application
was heard as an urgent
application in terms of the provisions of Uniform Rule 6(12);
2.
The first respondent is
interdicted and restrained from alienating, transferring or
encumbering the property situated at 5[...]
M[...] Street,
Moreletapark, Pretoria, Gauteng, pending finalization of the divorce
action under the above case number.
3.
The first respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of this application on an attorney and
client scale.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of hearing:
30/01/2025
Date of Judgment:
17 February 2025
On behalf of the
Applicant:
Adv A. Coertze
Duly instructed by:
WF Bouwer
Incorporated; Pretoria
e-mail:
rinette@wfbattorneys.co.za
On behalf of the
Respondent:
Adv Alexia
Vosloo-De Witt
Duly instructed by:
Van Zyl’s
Incorporated; Pretoria
e-mail:
sonja@vzylinc.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
February 2025.
[1]
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE) at 94C-D; See also Kumah v Minister of Home Affairs
2018 (2) SA 510
(GJ) at 511D-E.
[2]
Respondent’s
answering affidavit para 17.6 and 17.7.
[3]
1996
(4) SA 348 (SCA).
[4]
Knox D’Arcy
supra
para
[62].
[5]
1913
CPD 684
at 687.
[6]
1948 (1) SA 1186 (WLD)
[7]
Respondent’s
answering affidavit
[8]
Olympic
Passenger Service (Pty) Ltd v Ramlagan
1957
(2) SA
382 (D) 383 C-D and 383 E-F.
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