Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 746South Africa
BHGH v GH (041781/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 746 (16 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 July 2025
Headnotes
s 28(2) extends beyond and creates a right independent of the other rights listed in s 28(1).[2] In Laerskool Middelburg en 'n Ander v Departementshoof, Mpumalanga Departement van Onderwys, en Andere[3] 22 Bertelsmann J stressed that s 28(2) ‘. . . inderdaad die fundamentele reg van elke kind vestig om in die opweging van strydende partye se botsende belange - en dus ook die strydende partye se aansprake op fundamentele regte en die handhawing daarvan - in die eerste gelid te staan.’
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## BHGH v GH (041781/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 746 (16 July 2025)
BHGH v GH (041781/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 746 (16 July 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION:
PRETORIA)
Date: 16 July 2025
Case No: 041781/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE 16 JULY 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the Rule 43(6) application between:-
B
H G
H
Applicant
(Identity
number:
8[...])
and
G
H
Respondent
(Identity
number:
9[...]
)
JUDGMENT
MINNAAR AJ
[1]
On 13 August 2024, this Court (Nyathi J)
granted the following relief,
pendente
lite
in respect of the parental rights
and responsibilities, primary residence and contact of the minor
child (a girl born on 13 October
2022):
a.
That both parties retain their Parental
rights and responsibilities, and guardianship of the minor child as
contemplated in terms
of Section 18 of the Children’s Act, Act
387 of 2005 (‘the Act’), subject thereto:
i.
That the primary care and residence of the
minor child be awarded to the respondent.
ii.
That the applicant have contact, as is
contemplated in terms of section 18(2)(b) of the Act, with the minor
child and that the applicant’s
rights to contact with the minor
child be exercised as follows:
1.
Every Saturday from 07:00 to 17:00, the
minor child to be removed by the applicant and to be returned to the
residence of the respondent;
2.
Every alternate Sunday from 09:00 to 15:00,
the minor child to be removed by the applicant and to be returned to
the residence of
the respondent.
3.
Telephonic contact every second day between
18:00 to 18:30.
[2]
On 30 June 2025, the applicant lodged
urgent proceedings in terms of the provisions of Rule 43(6), as it is
alleged by the applicant
that there was a material change in
circumstances following the order of 13 August 2024.
[3]
The material change of circumstances are:
a.
On 20 June 2025, the respondent obtained an
ex parte
interim protection order, which was served on the applicant on 23
June 2025 (‘the interim protection order’).
b.
The protection order provides that there is
to be no contact between the applicant and the minor child (referred
to in the protection
order as ‘the complainant’) and
that:
‘
The
prohibition of all contact with the complainant will remain in force
until the outcome of the professional assessment by a qualified
specialist psychologist or social worker [illegible] the minor child
until another competent court makes another order.’
c.
Since the issuing of the interim protection
order, the applicant has had no contact with the minor child.
[4]
The applicant lodged this urgent Rule 43(6)
application to reinstate his contact rights, alternatively to obtain
an interim variation
which provides for supervised contact, pending
the outcome of the forensic investigation by Ms. L[...] V[...]
N[...].
[5]
The interim protection order was obtained
on allegations of sexual misconduct towards the minor child. In this
regard, the respondent
mentioned the following incidents in her
affidavit in support of the interim protection order:
a.
On 10 June 2025, 14 June 2025, 15 June
2025, 16 June 2025, and 18 June 2025, the respondent observed various
instances where the
minor child acted inappropriately and appeared to
be emotional and upset. The minor would utter words like “
Tannie
L[...] my koekie speel en my koekie lek”
and “
Pappa H[...] my koekie lek”
.
The minor child further placed a cucumber vertically between her legs
and said: “
Kyk, ek is Oupa”.
She also put a toy dinosaur between her legs, pressing it against her
genital area.
b.
On 19 June 2025, the respondent lodged a
complaint against the applicant for sexual abuse and molestation
against the minor children.
CAS285/6/2025 was registered.
[6]
From the papers before me, it is
evident that ‘L[...]’ is the applicant’s
girlfriend. Save for some reference
in correspondence leading to this
application, no details are provided regarding the specifics of who
‘L[...]’ is,
her role in the household, or her
involvement in caring for the minor child during visits to the
applicant.
[7]
In terms of the interim protection order,
the applicant is allowed to anticipate the return date (the return
date is 12 September
2025). This court finds it strange, in light of
the serious allegations being made against the applicant and L[...]
in the respondent’s
complaint affidavit, that the applicant
elected not to take any steps to anticipate the return date of the
interim order and to
clear his name.
[8]
Instead, the applicant approached this
Court on an urgent basis, under the provisions of Rule 43(6), to
amend the terms of the Rule
43 order. It is the case of the applicant
that the court that issued the interim protection order had no
jurisdiction to intervene
in the applicant’s contact rights
with the minor child.
[9]
It is further the case of the applicant
that it would be in the best interest of the minor child if the
applicant continues to exercise
contact rights with the minor child
pending any investigation.
[10]
The allegations made in the respondent’s
complaint affidavit are serious, and it is paramount in my
consideration as to what
the best interest of the minor child would
be.
[11]
The
interests of the child are paramount in all matters concerning the
child, and these interests take precedence over the interests
of the
parents.
[1]
[12]
Section 9 of the Children’s Act 38 of
2005 echoes s 28(2) of the Constitution and provides as follows:
‘
In
all matters concerning the care, protection and well-being of a child
the standard that the child's best interest is of paramount
importance, must be applied.’
[13]
Section 28(2) of the Constitution
provides:
‘
A
child's best interests are of paramount importance in every matter
concerning the child.’
[14]
The
Constitutional Court has held that s 28(2) extends beyond and creates
a right independent of the other rights listed in s 28(1).
[2]
In
Laerskool
Middelburg en 'n Ander v Departementshoof, Mpumalanga Departement van
Onderwys, en Andere
[3]
22 Bertelsmann J stressed that s 28(2)
‘
.
. . inderdaad die fundamentele reg van elke kind vestig om in die
opweging van strydende partye se botsende belange
- en dus ook die
strydende partye se aansprake op fundamentele regte en die handhawing
daarvan - in die eerste gelid te staan.’
[15]
In
J v J
2008 (6) SA 30
(C) at par 20 it was held:
‘
[20]
As the upper guardian of minors, this court is empowered and under a
duty to consider and evaluate all relevant facts placed
before it
with a view to deciding the issue which is of paramount importance:
the best interests of the child.
[4]
In Terblanche v Terblanche
[5]
it was stated that when a court sits as upper guardian in a custody
matter -
. . . it has extremely
wide powers in establishing what is in the best interests of minor or
dependent children. It is not bound
by procedural
strictures or by the limitations of the evidence presented or
contentions advanced by the respective
parties. It may in fact have
recourse to any source of information, of whatever nature, which may
be able to assist it in resolving
custody and related disputes.
In
P and Another v P and Another
[6]
Hurt J stated that the court does not look at sets of
circumstances in isolation:
I am bound, in
considering what is in the best interests of G, to take everything
into account, which has happened in the past,
even after the close of
pleadings and in fact right up to today. Furthermore, I am bound to
take into account the possibility of
what might happen in the future
if I make any specific order.
In
AD and DD v DW and Others (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae;
Department for Social Development as Intervening Party)
[7]
the Constitutional Court endorsed the view of the minority in the
Supreme Court of Appeal that the interests of minors should not
be
'held to ransom for the sake of legal niceties'
[8]
and held that in the case before it the best interests of the child
'should not be mechanically sacrificed on the altar of
jurisdictional
formalism'.
[9]
[16]
It
is trite that, should any rule 43 order be contrary to the best
interests of a child, this can be immediately rectified. The
High
Court regularly hears, on an urgent basis, applications where it is
alleged that the best interests of the child are under
threat. Such a
matter will be treated with the urgency it deserves, irrespective of
any previous orders made in terms of rule 43.
[10]
[17]
Applicant’s counsel referred to
Van
der Linde v Van der Linde
1996 (3) SA
509
(O). At 516B of this judgment, Hattingh J stated that the Court
was not prepared to substitute certainty with uncertainty and to
sacrifice the daughter as a guinea-pig on the proverbial experimental
altar. I completely agree with this statement.
[18]
The minor child in the application before
me has not yet reached the age of three. Serious allegations of
sexual misconduct were
made. Ms. L[...] V[...] N[...] must conduct a
proper investigation into the impact on the minor child.
[19]
I am mindful that the applicant is
entitled to approach this Court in terms of Rule 43(6) regarding his
allegation that there has
been a change in circumstances. What I
found concerning is that the applicant has not elected to anticipate
the interim order to
dispel the serious allegations made in the
respondent’s complaint affidavit.
[20]
The minor child’s best interest far
outweighs the applicant’s right to have contact with the minor
child. This
Court will not expose the minor child to any
uncertainty, and she will not be placed on the proverbial
experimental altar to protect
the applicant’s right of contact.
[21]
In light hereof, and having regard to the
best interest of the minor child, the applicant’s insistence on
contact in terms
of the Rule 43 order cannot be permitted.
[22]
I am further of the view that it would also
not be in the best interest of the minor child if supervised contact
is awarded to the
applicant. A proper forensic investigation by Ms.
L[...] V[...] N[...] should be conducted as to the allegations made
in respect
of the minor child and the impact thereof on the minor
child. Upon receipt of the report from Ms. V[...] N[...], the
applicant
may then approach this Court again to reconsider his
contact rights.
Costs of the
application:
[23]
The
discretion in granting costs is a trite matter.
[11]
There is no reason to deviate from the established principle that
costs should follow the outcome.
[24]
The
determination as to what scale of costs would be applicable under the
party and party scale regime is dictated by the provisions
of Rule
67A of the Uniform Rules of Court. Rule 67A(3) provides that a court
“shall”, when making a party and party
costs order,
“indicate the scale in terms of rule 69, under which costs have
been granted”. Those scales have been
inserted into rule 69(7)
under the amendment that created rule 67A. They are scales “A”,
“B”, and “C”.
Rule 67A(4) provides for the
right to apply for an order determining which parts of the
proceedings, if any, were urgent, and whether
the costs of more than
one counsel may be recovered. The effect of that subrule is,
notionally, that a different scale could be
assigned to the services
of each counsel whose fees are allowed under the rule.
[12]
[25]
The
complex nature of a matter and how the case was presented to the
court are among the factors to consider when setting a scale
under
the rule.
[13]
[26]
The application involves the best interest
of the minor child and the applicant’s contact rights. It is
appropriate that costs
be awarded on scale B.
Order:
[1]
Consequently, I make the following order:
a.
In terms of Rule 43(6), prayer 1(b), (c),
(d) and the aspect of the applicant’s telephonic contact is
varied to read:
‘
Pending
finalisation of the forensic investigation by Ms. L[...] V[...]
N[...], the applicant’s contact rights with the minor
child is
suspended.’
b.
The applicant is to pay the costs of this
application on Scale B.
Minnaar AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
For
the Applicant: Adv A Koekemoer
Instructed by Geyser &
Coetzee Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv A Vosloo-De Witt
Instructed by Vogel Malan
Incorporated
Date
of hearing: 8 July
2025
Date
of judgment: 16 July 2025
[1]
J
v J
2008 (6) SA 30
(C) at par 36;
Christian
Education South Africa v Minister of Education
[2000] ZACC 11
;
2000 (4) SA 757
(CC) at par 41
[2]
Minister
of Welfare and Population Development v Fitzpatrick
[2000] ZACC 6
;
2000
(3) SA 422
(CC)
(2000 (7) BCLR 713)
para 18 at 428C-D. In
B
v M
2006 (9) BCLR 1034
(W) para 141 at 1067B it is said that the 'best
interests' principle provides 'a framework for addressing the entire
range of
major issues affecting children'.
[3]
2003
(4) SA 160
(T) ([2002]
4 All SA 745)
at 178C-D.
[4]
De
Gree and Another v Webb and Others (Centre for Child Law as Amicus
Curiae)
2007
(5) SA 184 (SCA) para 32 at 200E; see also para 36 at 201B.
[5]
1992
(1) SA 501
(W) at 504C.
[6]
2002
(6) SA 105
(N) at 110C-D.
[7]
[2007] ZACC 27
;
2008
(3) SA 183
(CC)
(2008 (4) BCLR 359)
para 30 at 370A.
[8]
De
Gree and Another v Webb and Others (Centre for Child Law as Amicus
Curiae)
2007
(5) SA 184
(SCA) para 99 at 220I.
[9]
AD
and DD v DW and Others (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae;
Department for Social Development as Intervening Party)
[2007] ZACC 27
;
2008
(3) SA 183
(CC)
(2008 (4) BCLR 359)
para 30 at 370A.
[10]
S
v S and Another
2019
(6) SA 1
(CC) at par 34
[11]
Ferreira
v Levin NO & Others; Vryenhoek & Others v Powell NO and
Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
(CC) at par 3
[12]
Mashava
v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd
(2022/1840) [2024] ZAGPJHC 387 (22 April 2024) at par 7 to 9
[13]
Mashava
at par 14
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