Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 170South Africa
S.P.E v B.N (015692/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 170 (20 February 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S.P.E v B.N (015692/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 170 (20 February 2025)
S.P.E v B.N (015692/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 170 (20 February 2025)
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sino date 20 February 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 015692/2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
20/02/2025
In
the matter between:
S[...]
P[...]
E[...]
APPLICANT
and
B[...]
N[...]
RESPONDENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by way of email and
shall be
uploaded on caselines. The date for the hand down is deemed to be on
20 February 2025.
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK PA, AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1] The
Applicant approaches this Court and seeks relief framed in the Notice
of Motion as follows:
“
1.
Condoning the Applicant’s non-compliance with Rule 6 pertaining
to forms and service and directing that the application
be heard of
one of urgency in terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court;
2.
Suspending the execution of the order of the Children’s Court
granted on 14 November 2024 until the finalisation
of the Children’s
Court proceedings;
3.
Alternatively, to two above, that the court grant the Applicant
contact rights with the minor child, M[...] L[...]
N[...], until the
finalisation of the matter in the Children’s court as follows:
3.1
Every alternative weekend from Friday after school until Monday
morning where the Applicant will
drop the minor child off at school;
3.2
Every Wednesday after school until the next morning where the
Applicant will drop the minor child
off at school;
3.3
Telephonic contact at all reasonable times;
4. Costs
in the event of opposition;
5.
Further and/or alternative relief.
”
[2] The
application was initially served on the Respondent by the Applicant’s
attorney of record on 14 February
2025 and served on the Respondent
by the Sheriff. The Respondent did not oppose the application.
[3] The
background to the application can be summarised as follows:
[3.1]
The Applicant and the Respondent are the natural parents of a child,
a boy born on 18 December
2014. The Applicant and the Respondent were
never married to each other;
[3.2]
During 2021 the Applicant married her present husband who has
children from a previous marriage.
The Applicant, her child referred
to
supra
and the children of her husband from a previous
marriage resided together since 2021;
[3.3]
During April 2024 the Respondent launched proceedings in the
Children’s Court, Pretoria,
to have primary care and residence
of the child born of the relationship between the Applicant and the
Respondent be awarded to
him. The proceedings in the Children’s
Court were initiated after the Respondent made allegations of child
neglect
and abuse based on an incident where, as the Applicant
states, her present husband disciplined the child;
[3.4]
The Children’s Court proceedings were postponed on various
occasions, and during these
proceedings expert reports consisting of
a report from a Social Worker as well as a Psychologist were
obtained;
[3.5]
Based on a socio-emotional assessment report compiled by a Social
Worker on 11 November 2024
the Children’s Court made an interim
order on 14 November 2024 that the primary residence and care of the
child be awarded
to the Respondent with inception from 28 December
2024. There were no provisions made in that order that the Applicant
be entitled
to exercise any contact with the child. The
Children’s Court proceedings are not finalised and were
postponed again
to the 27
th
of February 2025.
According to the Applicant, she did not see the child since December
2024.
[4] The
purpose of the application is clearly to either suspend the order of
the Children’s Court which
would result in the minor child
having to return to the Applicant or
in the alternative
awarding the Applicant certain rights of contact as a result of the
fact that the Children’s Court did not award such rights
of
contact. In support of such relief, the Applicant states in the
Founding Affidavit the following:
[4.1]
There is a “
injustice
”, and that “
substantial
justice
” require that the relief be granted;
[4.2]
Various averments are made which relates to the merits of the
Applicant’s claim that the
temporary order made by the
Children’s Court should be suspended or
in the alternative
that the Applicant should be awarded rights of contact in the
interim. These averments relate to the alleged inaccuracy of
expert reports, the factual background to the manner in which the
Applicant took care of the minor child before the interim Children’s
Court order was made on 14 November 2024, and criticism levelled
against the Respondent in relation to his previous responsibilities
towards the minor child.
[5] The
Children’s Court is established in terms of Chapter 4 of the
Children’s Act no. 38 of 2005
(“the Act”) and in
terms of Section 43 of the Act, a Children’s Court is a court
of record and has a similar
status to that of a Magistrates Court at
district level. The matters which a Children’s Court may
adjudicate are regulated
in terms of Section 45 of the Act, which
includes an order for the temporary safe care of a child, care of, or
contact with a child;
and in terms of Section 46 of the Children’s
Act, a Children’s Court may make orders including an order that
a child
be placed in temporary safe care. The nature and extent
of orders which the Children’s Court may make in terms of
Section
46 of the Act clearly includes the orders which were made by
the Children’s Court
in casu
.
[6] In
terms of Section 46(2), a Children’s Court may withdraw,
suspend or amend an order made in terms
of sub-section 1 of Section
46 of the Act. It is therefore clear that the Children’s
Court may revisit any order made
under the provisions of Section
46(1) and withdraw, suspend or amend such order.
[7]
Additional powers are awarded to the Children’s Court under
Section 48 of the Act, which includes the
power to extend, withdraw,
suspend, vary or monitor any of its orders.
[8] The
order made by a Children’s Court is subject to appeal in terms
of Section 51 of the Act which reads:
“
51.
Appeals
(1)
Any party involved in a matter
before a children’s court may appeal against any order made or
any refusal to make an order,
or against the variation, suspension or
rescission of such order of the court to the High Court having
jurisdiction;
(2)
An appeal in terms of sub-section
(1) must be noted and prosecuted as if it were an appeal against a
civil judgment of a Magistrates
Court, subject to section 45(2)©.”
[9] The
application before this Court is neither an appeal nor a review.
The application before this Court
seeks to achieve what Section 46(2)
and/or Section 48 of the Act empowers the Children’s Court to
do. Apart from the
overriding consideration of “
the
interest of justice
”, the Applicant provides no grounds why
this Court should seize itself with the jurisdiction to suspend or
vary an order
made by the Children’s Court. The Children’s
Court issued the impugned order after considering evidence in the
form
of reports from a Psychologist and Social Workers. This Court is
not empowered, absent a duly prosecuted appeal or review proceedings,
to suspend or amend the Children’s Court order.
[10] Whereas this
Court may have inherent jurisdiction in matters involving the best
interest of minor children, in my view
that does not imply that this
Court may suspend or vary orders of a Children’s Court without
due process in a form of an
appeal or a review having been
followed. That would erode the authority of the
Children’s Court, a statutory
court with specific powers
designed to protect the best interest of children, when a party
dissatisfied with an order of the Children’s
Court may simply
aver that it is “
in the interest of justice
” that
such order then be amended by the High Court.
[11] The remedy of
appeal or review provides a litigant with a remedy where a dispute
may be ventilated in a structured manner,
with the application of
clear legal principles, which is a procedure far more advantageous to
the protection of the interest of
minor children than the application
of a vague reference to “
the interest of justice
”.
[12] In the
premises, the application was dismissed.
P A VAN NIEKERK
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Counsel
for the Applicant:
A.
Koekemoer
amber@advchambers.co.za
Instructed
by:
R.
S. Ramsamy Naidoo & Associates
reshay@rsnlaw.co.za
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