Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 903South Africa
M.G.M and Another v N.B and Others (2023/079353) [2025] ZAGPPHC 903 (21 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 August 2025
Headnotes
a roundtable meeting on or about 25 June 2025. Following an exchange of correspondence dated 2 and 10 July 2025, respectively, it became apparent that the parties were in agreement in relation to the following:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.G.M and Another v N.B and Others (2023/079353) [2025] ZAGPPHC 903 (21 August 2025)
M.G.M and Another v N.B and Others (2023/079353) [2025] ZAGPPHC 903 (21 August 2025)
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sino date 21 August 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 2023-079353
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
3.
REVISED: YES/
NO
DATE:
21 August 2025
In
the matter between:
M[...]
G[...] M[...]
FIRST
APPLICANT
M[...]
C[...] M[...]
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
N[...]
B[...]
FIRST
RESPONDENT
M[...]
C[...] M[...] JNR
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
OFFICE OF THE FAMILY
ADVOCATE,
PRETORIA
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MARX
DU PLESSIS, AJ
Introduction
1.
This matter came before me as an urgent counterapplication in which,
inter alia
, the variation of a court order granted by Davis J
on 22 August 2023 is sought. That order was granted pursuant to an
urgent application
launched by Mr and Mrs M[...] during August 2023
(“
the main application
”). For ease of
reference, and to avoid confusion, I will continue to refer to them
herein as they were in the main application,
namely, the applicants.
2.
At the centre of both the main application and the present
counterapplication
is a five-year-old girl, L[...] (‘
L
’).
3.
The order sought to be varied assigned certain parental
responsibilities and
rights to the applicants, appointed experts to
investigate the parties’ respective parental responsibilities
and rights,
and regulates how such responsibilities and rights in
relation to L’s care and contact are to be exercised pending
the finalisation
of Part B of the main application.
Background
4.
L was born on 10 July 2020 and is the biological daughter of the
first respondent
in the main application, Ms B[...] (‘
first
respondent’
). It is the first respondent who has
launched the counterapplication presently before me.
5.
Several days after L’s birth, the first respondent and her then
partner,
Mr M.C. M[...], the son of the applicants, moved into the
home of the applicants. The applicants and their son were led to
believe
that L was their biological daughter and granddaughter. This
later proved not to be the case.
6.
Initially, L was cared for by the applicants, their son, and the
first respondent.
At some point during 2020, the first respondent,
the applicants’ son, and L moved into the home of the
applicants’
daughters.
7.
They resided there until mid-January 2021, when the first respondent
and the
applicants’ son terminated their relationship. At that
time, the first respondent and the applicants’ son agreed to
a
shared residency arrangement in respect of L, agreeing that L’s
care would alternate between them on a two-weekly basis.
8.
The first respondent did not always adhere to the shared residency
schedule;
with the result that L remained in the care of the
applicants’ son. During these periods, the applicants assisted
extensively
with L’s care.
9.
During or about July 2022, the parties agreed that L would remain
primarily in
the applicants’ care, and that the first
respondent and the applicants’ son would exercise contact with
L over weekends,
alternating between them. The first respondent,
however, did not adhere to this arrangement and often missed her
contact sessions
with L.
10.
The applicants willingly assumed the role of L’s primary
caregivers, and the first
respondent appears, at that stage, to have
relinquished that responsibility to them of her own accord.
11.
In May 2023, the applicants and their son were informed that L was
not, in fact, the biological
daughter of the applicants’ son.
The first respondent nevertheless assured the applicants that they
would always remain L’s
grandparents.
12.
Notwithstanding this revelation about L’s paternity, L
continued to reside primarily
in the applicants’ care.
13.
Over the weekend of L’s third birthday, she exercised contact
with the first respondent,
who, at the conclusion of the weekend,
refused to return L to the applicants’ care.
14.
The applicants and the first respondent engaged one another through
their respective legal
representatives but were unable to reach
agreement regarding L’s care and their respective parental
responsibilities and
rights in relation to L. During this time, and
for a period of approximately seven weeks, L had no contact with the
applicants.
15.
In an effort to reinstate contact with L, the applicants launched the
main application,
during August 2023, which was opposed by the first
respondent.
16.
Pursuant to the hearing of the main application, an order was granted
in terms of which,
inter alia
:
16.1
The applicants were assigned care, contact and guardianship in
respect of L.
16.2
The Office of the Family Advocate was directed to conduct an urgent
investigation into L’s best interests,
particularly in relation
to the parties’ respective parental responsibilities and rights
and L’s primary place of residence,
and to report thereon.
16.3
Contact with L was to alternate on a weekly basis between the
applicants and the first respondent.
16.4
Part B of the main application was postponed
sine die
.
17.
During October 2023, following consultations with the parties, the
Office of the Family
Advocate issued an interim report in which it
requested that certain information be provided before it could
finalise and publish
its report.
18.
The final report of the Office of the Family Advocate, dated 14 May
2024, was made available
to the parties shortly after its completion.
19.
In addition to the report of the Office of the Family Advocate, the
parties procured a report
from a social worker, Ms Eunice Uys. The
report, dated 2 June 2025, was made available to the parties shortly
after its completion.
20.
In her report, Ms Uys recommended a multi-phased approach to the
phasing out of L’s
primary care and residence with the
applicants. Effectively, upon completion of the recommended
multi-phased process, L would reside
primarily with the first
respondent, while maintaining contact with the applicants on
alternate weekends from Thursday afternoon
to Monday morning, during
school holidays, as well as through regular midweek contact.
21.
After receipt of Ms Uys’s report, the parties engaged one
another and held a roundtable
meeting on or about 25 June 2025.
Following an exchange of correspondence dated 2 and 10 July 2025,
respectively, it became apparent
that the parties were in agreement
in relation to the following:
21.1
The phasing out of L[...]’s primary care and residence with the
applicants, such that upon completion
of the phasing out process, L’s
primary care and residence would vest with the first respondent.
21.2 The
need for L[...] to commence therapy immediately.
21.3 That
the costs associated with L[...]’s therapy are to be shared
equally between the applicants and the
first respondent.
21.4 That
Phases 1 to 3 of the multi-phased process recommended by Ms Uys be
implemented as set out in her report.
22.
In her letter of 2 July 2025, the first respondent effectively
proposes that the applicants’
extended weekend contact with L
be phased out entirely over the period September 2025 to September
2026, and that their holiday
contact with L be reduced and phased out
over the period 1 July 2025 to 30 June 2026.
23.
The first respondent’s proposal culminates in the applicants
being entitled only to
one lunch or outing with L per month, which
would not include any sleepover contact. In addition, the applicants
would no longer
be entitled to any holiday contact with L, unless
agreed to by the first respondent, in writing.
24.
In their letter of 10 July 2025, the applicants expressed their
dissatisfaction with the
first respondent’s proposal, noting
that the proposed contact structure, and the substantial reduction in
contact between
them and L, would not serve L’s best interests,
particularly in light of, and having regard to, Ms Uys’s
report, findings,
and recommendations. The applicants proceeded to
advance a comprehensive, multi-phased counterproposal, which accords
more or less
with the recommendations of Ms Uys.
25.
On 16 July 2025, the first respondent’s attorney addressed
further correspondence
to the applicants’ attorney, noting that
no response had yet been received to their letters of 10 and 11 July
2025, and insisting
that the phasing out of L’s primary care
and residence with the applicants commence on 28 July 2025.
26.
In response, the applicants’ attorney, in a letter dated 24
July 2025, indicated that
the phasing out of L’s primary care
and residence could not commence on 28 July 2025, as the parties had
not yet reached
agreement on the end result to be achieved,
particularly regarding their contact with L, nor on the phasing-out
schedule. The applicants’
attorney further called for a
response to their proposal, as set out in their letter of 10 July
2025, within seven days, failing
which the applicants would
supplement their papers and enrol Part B of the main application for
argument.
27.
Instead of responding to the applicants’ proposal, the first
respondent launched the
urgent counterapplication now before me on 29
July 2025.
28.
When asked why the first respondent had elected not to provide a
response to the applicants’
letter of 10 July 2025, counsel for
the first respondent submitted that the first respondent’s
letter of 2 July 2025 already
constituted a counterproposal to the
recommendations made by Ms Uys, and that the applicants’ letter
of 10 July 2025 merely
reflected their unwillingness to engage
further. I do not agree as the first respondent was expressly invited
to respond to the
applicants’ counterproposal.
29.
The counterapplication was launched on 29 July 2025 and was set down
for hearing on Wednesday,
13 August 2025. This enrolment was not in
accordance with the prevailing practice directives and appears to
have been arranged
for the benefit and convenience of the first
respondent’s counsel, who was otherwise engaged on Tuesday, 12
August 2025.
30.
After service of the urgent counterapplication, a notice of set down
for 12 August 2025
was served on the applicants. According to the
argument before me, this was done for the purpose of enrolling the
matter. However,
it created confusion for the applicants, who were
uncertain whether the matter had been set down for 13 August 2025, as
reflected
in the notice of counterapplication, or for 12 August 2025,
as reflected in the notice of set down.
31.
I allocated the application for hearing on 13 August 2025, being the
date selected by the
first respondent in her notice of
counterapplication.
Urgency
32.
The well-established rule and practice in this Division is that
urgent matters must be enrolled
for hearing on a Tuesday, with all
papers to be filed before noon on the preceding Thursday. This
established rule and procedure
was disregarded by the first
respondent.
33.
Counsel for the first respondent candidly indicated that a notice of
set down, reflecting
12 August 2025 as hearing date, was delivered
solely for the purpose of securing enrolment. The registrar’s
refusal to enrol
the matter for Wednesday, 13 August 2025, and
insistence that a notice of set down be filed for Tuesday, 12 August
2025, is a further
reinforcement and confirmation of the
well-established rule and practice regarding the enrolment of urgent
applications in this
Division.
34.
Notwithstanding this, the application was ultimately set down for
hearing on Wednesday,
13 August 2025 in accordance with the notice of
motion, at the instance of the first respondent, and plainly for the
convenience
of her counsel, as is evident from the replying affidavit
and a note uploaded to the CaseLines file.
35.
A matter may be enrolled on the urgent roll on a day other than the
Tuesday only where justifiable,
and in truly exceptional
circumstances. No such circumstances were advanced, nor do any exist
on the papers.
36.
Not only did the first respondent fail to comply with the practice
directives regarding
the enrolment of the counterapplication, but the
timelines between obtaining the reports of the Office of the Family
Advocate and
Ms Uys, and the time taken for their investigations and
reports to be completed, do not establish or support the urgency
alleged
and relied on by the first respondent.
37.
Ms Uys indicates in her report that L’s history of abandonment,
disrupted caregiving,
and inconsistent emotional attunement has
heightened her vulnerability in respect of relational security.
38.
It is therefore developmentally critical that L’s caregiving
environment continues
to provide a stable and reliable secure base.
The applicants have consistently provided such care and demonstrated
a sustained
emotional commitment to her wellbeing.
39.
The first respondent elected to launch this urgent
counterapplication, ostensibly in L’s
best interests, rather
than first attempting to meaningfully engage with the applicants with
a view to ensuring that they all continue
to provide L with a stable
and reliable secure base.
40.
The first respondent has not demonstrated that the existing care and
residence arrangements
pose any real or perceived threat to L’s
security or wellbeing that justify the launching of the
counterapplication on an
urgent basis, in the manner she did.
41.
This arrangement has been in place since August 2023, and its
continuation for a further
month or two after receipt of Ms Uys’s
report, whether while the parties endeavour to reach agreement
regarding L’s
future care or await a hearing date in the normal
course, will not in any way endanger L. Significantly, the first
respondent has
not advanced any credible or substantive contention to
the contrary.
42.
A further ground advanced for urgency was the alleged difficulty
experienced by the first
respondent in enrolling L as a Grade R
learner without a birth certificate which, she contends, the
applicants have refused to
hand over to her. The applicants, however,
state that they are not in possession of L’s birth certificate.
43.
The first respondent argues that in the absence of the birth
certificate and in the absence
of the applicant consent, she is
unable to enrol L as a learner in time for the coming school year. On
this basis she seeks, as
a matter of urgency, an order with the
effect of divesting the applicants of their guardianship rights in
respect of L.
44.
The first respondent has, however, made no attempt to request the
applicants’ consent,
nor has she invited them to accompany her
to the Department of Home Affairs to apply for a replacement birth
certificate.
45.
The alleged urgency of this counterapplication is therefore not borne
out by the facts.
Mediation
46.
In order to ensure that L’s caregiving environment continues to
provide her with a
stable and reliable secure base, it is imperative
that the parties are able to co-parent successfully. This much is
confirmed by
Ms Uys.
47.
This cannot be achieved where the parties’ acrimony is fuelled
and exacerbated by
litigation, particularly litigation which could
and should have been avoided had the parties engaged one another
actively, in good
faith, and in a constructive and facilitated
manner.
48.
The papers demonstrate that the parties were able to reach agreement
on serious and fundamental
aspects regarding L’s care. There is
no reason why, if correctly guided, they should not also be able to
reach agreement
on the remaining aspects, such as the applicants’
contact with L.
49.
L’s history of disrupted care and her potential experiences of
loss or abandonment
may cause her to perceive her environment as
fragile and uncertain. It is therefore critical that her current and
future caregiving
environment is one that is emotionally available,
attuned to her developmental needs, and capable of accommodating her
full range
of feelings.
50.
Therapeutic support is essential for L, particularly to assist her in
navigating competing
loyalties and emotional expectations that may
arise from her secure attachment to multiple caregivers and the
special bond she
shares with each of them.
51.
The multi-phased process recommended by Ms Uys was designed to
optimise the continuity of
L’s secure attachments with her
multiple caregivers, while simultaneously ensuring clear emotional
boundaries and positive
long-term outcomes. The parties must not lose
sight of this.
52.
Each of the parties has played a significant role in L’s
upbringing. To remove, or
limit her access and contact with any one
of them, is likely to have a profoundly negative impact on her. The
parties, who profess
to act in L’s best interests, are urged to
consider not only their own positions, but also what each of them
means to L and
the unique contributions each has made to her life.
53.
Collaboration between the parties is essential to L’s emotional
wellbeing, particularly
given her past experiences of relational
disruption. Encouragingly, the parties have demonstrated that they
are able to reach agreement
on issues of significance to L’s
welfare, including her primary care and residence, her need for
therapeutic intervention,
and the phasing-out of her primary
residence with the applicants.
54.
In light of L’s needs as highlighted by Ms Uys and given that
the parties have reached
agreement on fundamental aspects of her
care, I am of the view that, with appropriate effort, the remaining
disputes between them
are capable of resolution through mediation.
55.
These disputes include, in particular, the process of phasing-out L’s
primary residence
with the applicants, and the manner in which she is
to enjoy continued and regular contact with them, as recommended by
both Ms
Uys and the Office of the Family Advocate.
56.
As stated, the fact that the parties have demonstrated an ability to
settle certain issues
leads me to conclude that the remaining
disputes are also capable of being mediated.
57.
It is for this reason that I have determined to stay the
counterapplication and direct the
parties to consider the referral of
the outstanding disputes to mediation. I intend directing that the
parties will not be permitted
to re-enrol this counterapplication,
including Part B of the main application, until they have placed
before the Court cogent evidence
that they have meaningfully,
properly and in good faith engaged one another in mediation, and a
full explanation as to why mediation
would be fruitless.
Therapeutic
intervention
58.
While engaging in mediation, the parties are ad idem that L should
commence with and undergo
therapeutic intervention as recommended by
Ms Uys. They are, however, unable to agree upon a suitably qualified
expert to undertake
this process.
59.
The applicants contend, in my view correctly, that Ms Ilana Karam,
assisted by Ms Michelle
de Bruyn, should be appointed for this
purpose, as recommended by Ms Uys. Given that Ms Uys conducted a
comprehensive assessment
of L and all role-players, she is best
placed to recommend suitably qualified professionals capable of
providing the necessary
therapeutic support to L.
60.
The first respondent opposes the appointment of the experts
recommended by Ms Uys, contending
that it would be inconvenient for
her to travel with L between Centurion and Pretoria East. She instead
proposes the appointment
of Ms Sonja Bouwer. However, no evidence of
Ms Bouwer’s training or qualifications was placed before Court
until after argument
on 13 August 2025. The certificates subsequently
uploaded are presented without context or adequate explanation.
61.
I see no reason why the experts recommended by Ms Uys, namely Ms
Ilana Karam, assisted by
Ms Michelle de Bruyn, should not undertake
the required therapeutic process with L.
Costs
62.
Courts are generally reluctant to discourage parents or persons
holding parental rights
and responsibilities from acting in what they
believe to be in the best interests of the children concerned.
63.
The matter of
Bethell
v Bland and Others
[1]
provides useful guidance regarding the approach to costs in matters
concerning children. In that matter, the Court held that a
successful
litigant is ordinarily entitled to their costs and that no matter how
bona fide and concerned a party may be, it is
unfair for a person who
has been unnecessarily drawn into litigation, and who successfully
resists it, to be burdened with the
costs of doing so.
64.
In this matter, the first respondent’s counterapplication is
premised on the report
of Ms Uys. However, the relief sought by
her only partially accords with the recommendations made by Ms Uys.
The relief claimed
by the first respondent appears to seek the
exclusion of the applicants from L’s life almost entirely,
notwithstanding that
Ms Uys discouraged and expressly advised against
such an approach. I have not, however, considered the merits of the
counterapplication,
as this was not argued before me, and I
accordingly make no finding thereon.
65.
The counterapplication was also brought as one of urgency. The first
respondent, however,
elected not to comply with the practice
directives, nor has she demonstrated why she would not be afforded
substantial redress
in due course. This is particularly so given that
applications in the Family Court, whether opposed or unopposed, are
dealt with
expeditiously, and hearing dates are allocated within a
relatively brief period.
66.
A further ground advanced for urgency was the applicants’
alleged refusal to provide
the first respondent with L’s birth
certificate, which she claimed was required for L’s enrolment
in Grade R in 2026.
However, it transpired both in the papers and
during argument that the birth certificate is not in the applicants’
possession.
Significantly, the first respondent has not even
attempted to request the applicants’ assistance or their
presence at the
Department of Home Affairs to apply for the reissue
thereof.
67.
It is plain that this counterapplication could have been avoided had
the first respondent
engaged the applicants directly and meaningfully
on the matters canvassed in this judgment.
68.
While my initial inclination, based on the above grounds, was to
grant a costs order against
the first respondent, I am convinced,
having considered the effect such an order would have at this stage,
that the granting of
such an order would be counterproductive to the
mediation process which the parties are directed to consider. It may
impede a process
which, in my view, holds real potential to resolve
the remaining disputes.
69.
For these reasons, I deem it appropriate to reserve the costs of the
counterapplication,
as well as the wasted costs occasioned by its
enrolment in the urgent Family Court on 13 August 2025. Should
mediation prove unsuccessful,
either party will be entitled not only
to re-enrol the counterapplication and Part B of the main application
for hearing, but also
to argue the question of the reserved costs.
Order
In
the result, I make the following order:
1.
The counterapplication is stayed, and the parties are directed to
consider the
referral of the outstanding disputes between them
concerning L[...]’s current and future care, in particular the
applicants’
continued contact with L[...], to mediation.
2.
The parties shall not be entitled to re-enrol the counterapplication
until such
time as they have placed before the Court cogent evidence
that they have meaningfully, properly and in good faith considered
and
engaged one another regarding mediation, together with a full and
sufficient explanation as to why a referral to mediation would
be
fruitless.
3.
Ms Ilana Karam, assisted by Ms Michelle de Bruyn, is appointed to
undertake the
recommended therapeutic process with L[...], in
accordance with the report and recommendations of Ms Uys. The parties
shall be
jointly and equally liable for the fees associated with this
therapeutic process.
4.
The costs of the counterapplication, as well as the wasted costs
occasioned by
its enrolment in the urgent Family Court on 13 August
2025, are reserved for later determination.
Z
MARX DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
13
August 2025
Date
of order:
21 August 2025
APPEARANCES
On
behalf of the applicants:
Adv B Bester
On
behalf of the first respondent:
Adv S van Dyk
[1]
1996(4) SA 472 (WLD) at 475E-I
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