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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2025] ZAGPPHC 292
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## Keele v Jansen Van Rensburg and Others (042870/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 292 (17 March 2025)
Keele v Jansen Van Rensburg and Others (042870/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 292 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 042870/2022
(1)
Reportable: NO
(2)
Of interest to other Judges: NO
(3)
Revised: YES
Signature:
17.3.25
In
the matter between:
DR
MOTHOBI GODFREY KEELE
Applicant
and
MAGISTRATE
MRS JANINE JANSEN VAN RENSBURG
First
Respondent
DR
MBALI ZAMATHIYANE KEELE
Second Respondent
COMMISSION
FOR GENDER EQUALITY
Third
Respondent
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected hereon. This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties
by email and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
Case Lines. The date of judgment is deemed
to be the date upon which
it is uploaded onto Case Lines.
JUDGMENT
GEACH,
AJ
[1]
Applicant, who appeared in person, seeks interlocutory orders "that
in relation to ('iro')
the Report [entitled:
"When Relations
Disentangle, assessing factors prohibiting unmarried, divorced, or
separated biological fathers from exercising
their parental rights,
including contact with their children"
, produced by the
third respondent], CGE [the third respondent] is joined as the Third
Respondent in the applicant's application
under Case No 2022-42870"
and: "In line with section 187(2) of the Constitution the CGE to
assist (i.e. 'report' and/or
'advise') this Honourable Court iro its
'research' ". Under that Case No 2022-42870, in the
main application,
the applicant seeks primarily an order reviewing
and correcting a ruling by first respondent dated the 12th of August
2022 pertaining
to an ongoing marital and custodial dispute between
the applicant and the second respondent; applicant's principal
complaint in
that application being the denial of access to his minor
children. As articulated by applicant: "this joinder application
arises from a review application in respect of a pending
divorce action and frustration of contact between me and my minor
children for more than one thousand days in which unfounded and
unsupported allegations of abuse were used including in an affidavit
as a reason for such frustration; the allegations have since been
dropped".
[2]
In addition, applicant asserts violation of his Constitutional right
to dignity in the proceedings.
The right to dignity is guaranteed in
section 10 of the Constitution. Not only is dignity one of the
foundational values of our
democratic state, it is also an entrenched
fundamental right. It is entwined with the right to equality.
[3]
The present interlocutory application is opposed by the third
respondent. There is no appearance
on behalf of either the first or
the second respondents.
[4]
Rule 10(3) empowers the joinder of several defendants in one action
whenever the question arising
between them or any of them and the
plaintiff or any of the plaintiffs depends upon the determination of
substantially the same
question of law or fact which, if such
defendants were sued separately, would arise in each separate action.
The provisions of
Rule 10(3) apply to applications by virtue of Rule
6(14).
[5]
The legal principles regarding applications for a joinder were
enunciated by Nkabinde J (dissenting)
in
National Union of Metal
Workers of South Africa v lntervalve (Pty) Ltd and others (2015) 36
ILJ 363 (CC) at par 186
as follows:
"The test at
common law is governed by the following principles: (a) there must be
a legal interest in the proceedings and
not merely a financial
interest. (b) a party has a right to ask that someone be joined as a
party 'if such a person has a joint
propriety interest with one or
either of the existing parties to the proceedings or has a direct and
substantial interest in the
court's order' and 'to avoid a
multiplicity of actions and a waste of costs'.".
[6]
The applicant refers to section 187 of the Constitution, highlighting
that the third respondent
"must
promote respect for
gender equality and the
protection,
development and attainment
of gender equality".
[7]
It is contended by the applicant that the joinder of third respondent
is required as a matter
of necessity, equating third respondent's
Constitutional obligation to a substantial interest in the review
application. However,
notwithstanding the Constitutional imperative
of the third respondent as stipulated in section 187 of the
Constitution, it cannot
be held that the third respondent has any
"direct and substantial interest", i.e. a legal interest,
in the subject matter
of the pending review (see
Old Mutual Life
Assurance Co SS Ltd v Swemmer
2004 (5) SA 373
(SCA) at 381; Transvaal
Agricultural Union v Minister of Agricultural and Land Affairs
2005
(4) SA 212
(SCA) at 226-7; Gordon v Department of Health
Kwazulu-Natal
[2008] ZASCA 99
;
2008 (6) SA 522
(SCA) par [9] at 529 and par [11] at
530);
nor, for that matter, in the litigation in the lower court
between the applicant and the second respondent.
"A person
has a direct and substantial interest in an order that is sought in
proceedings if the order would directly affect
such a person's rights
or interest"
(Snyders and Others v De Jager (Joinder)
(CCT186/15)
[2016] ZACC 54
;
2017 (5) BCLR 604
(CC) (21 December 2016)
par [9]).
As the substantial test is: whether the party that is
alleged to be a necessary party for purposes of joinder does have a
legal
interest in the subject-matter of the litigation, which may be
affected prejudicially by the judgment of the Court in the
proceedings
concerned
(Bowring NO v Vrededorp Properties CC and
another
2007 (5) SA 391
(SCA) par [21] at 398; Judicial Service
Commission and another v Cape Bar Council and another
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA) par [12] at
176; ABSA Bank Limited v Naude N.O (20264/2014)
{2015] ZASCA 97 (1 June 2015) par [10]; South African History Archive
Trust v South
African Reserve Bank and another
2020 (6) SA 127
(SCA)
par [30] at 138),
the joinder herein of third respondent has
consequently not been shown by the applicant to be a matter of
necessity.
[8]
As was stated in
J.C.S v J.J.S and others (82452/2015)
[2021]
ZAGPPHC 647 (16 September 2021) par [27]:
"Apart from a
joinder out of necessity a court can join a party under the common
law on grounds of convenience, equity, the
saving of costs and the
avoidance of multiplicity of actions. The court has the inherent
power to order the joinder of further
parties in an action which has
already begun in order to ensure that that person's interest in the
subject matter of the dispute
and whose rights may be affected by the
judgment are before court."
[9]
No right of the third respondent can conceivably be affected
prejudicially by the judgment of
the court in the pending review
application (
Ploughman NO v Pauw 2006 (SA) 334 (C) at 341
) and
any order of that court can certainly be sustained or carried into
effect without prejudicing the third respondent in any
way (See
Amalgamated Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 659).
There is no question of any multiplicity of actions.
The applicant has failed to persuade this court that there exist
considerations
of equity, savings of costs or convenience sufficient
to justify the joinder of third respondent in the pending review
application.
[10]
As is succinctly stated in
De Beers Consolidated Mines (Pty) Ltd v
Regional Manager Limpopo: The Department of Mineral Resources &
Energy and others 2023
JDR 3383 (GP) par [110]:
"Joinder is a
procedure by which multiple parties or multiple causes of action are
joined together in a single action. There
are two forms of joinder of
parties: joinder of convenience and joinder of necessity. In order
for the applicant to succeed with
an application to join the
respondent in necessity it should prove that the respondent has a
direct and substantial interest in
the subject matter of the pending
litigation [Ronnie Dennison Agencies (Pty) Ltd t/a Water Africa SA v
SABS Commercial Soc Ltd
(10136/14)
[2014] ZAGPPHC 998 (19 December
2014)). A party is joined of convenience because there is a legal tie
between the party
to be joined and the applicant, which on the ground
of equity, the saving of costs, or the avoidance of multiplicity of
actions,
the Court will deem it in the interest of justice that the
matters should be heard together [Rabinovich and others NNO v Med:
Equity
Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (3) SA 415
(W) at 419 E]'.
The
applicant has failed to make out a proper case for the joinder herein
of third respondent on either of these bases. Possible
concerns about
the applicant's undoubted Constitutional right to dignity cannot
per
se
sway this court to grant the unjustified relief sought.
Counsel for the third respondent, at the suggestion of this court,
graciously
indicated that he would request third respondent to
consider possibly being of assistance as an
amicus curiae
in
the main application going forward. Of course the decision whether or
not to do so, rests exclusively with the third respondent.
[11]
In the premises, applicant's application for the joinder of the third
respondent is dismissed.
[12]
Even the rule that costs follow the event is subject to the
discretion of this court regarding costs, provided such discretion
is
exercised judicially. Although the applicant has been unsuccessful
and this is certainly not Constitutional litigation even
though
applicant professes to be asserting his fundamental right to dignity,
it seems nevertheless inequitable that he should be
mulcted in costs.
According to its own website, the third respondent is a
constitutional entity, relied upon to strengthen constitutional
democracy. There can be no doubt that applicant was acting in good
faith and is
bona fide
in his belief that the third respondent
could and should be required to assist in his endeavour to assert his
dignity. It is plain
for all to see that the applicant who feels he
was hard done by, is motivated by a heartfelt need for contact with
his children;
and has a genuine desire to seek justice. Having regard
to the circumstances of this interlocutory application, it is held to
be
just and equitable that there should be no order as to costs.
[13]
Consequently: the applicant's interlocutory application for the
joinder of the third respondent is hereby dismissed with
no order as
to costs.
BP
GEACH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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