Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 76South Africa
DM v CHP (B6773/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 76 (4 January 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## DM v CHP (B6773/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 76 (4 January 2024)
DM v CHP (B6773/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 76 (4 January 2024)
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SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Children –
Contact
–
Parents
having shared contact rights by agreement – Mother deciding
to relocate without consideration of father’s
views –
Moving child 550 km away and restricting access to supervised
contact from previous 50% contact regime –
Decision
significantly changes and adversely affects father’s
exercise of parental responsibilities – Need for
stability
in children’s lives – Pending family advocate’s
investigation and report, the status quo in respect
of father’s
parental responsibilities and rights to contact is restored –
Children’s Act 38 of 2005, s
31(2).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: B6773/23
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
4 January 2024
In
the matter between:
DM
Applicant
and
CHP
Respondent
JUDGMENT
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
The applicant sought urgent relief seeking to restore his contact
rights with his 5-year-old
daughter. The applicant had been
exercising these rights in terms of an agreement entered into between
the parties. The agreement
provided a 50%/50% sharing of contract
rights. The cause of the urgent application, is that the respondent
informed the applicant
that his contract rights, would now be
whittled down to 4 hours of supervised contact 550 km away from his
home every second week.
[2]
The case, stripped to its core, is a request to restore the status
quo ante and for the
parties to continue to exercise their parental
rights and responsibilities in terms of their agreement, pending a
determination
in the ordinary course of what is in the best interests
of the child – after an investigation by the Family Advocate.
[3]
On 26 December 2023, I granted an order in the following terms –
i)
The Applicant and the Respondent [hereinafter collectively referred
to as “
the parties”
] retain full parental
responsibilities and rights in respect of the minor child, namely
C[...] Z[...] M[...], born on 20 April
2018 [hereinafter referred to
as “
C[...]”
], as provided for and envisaged in
Sections 19(1) and 21(1) of the Children’s Act, No 38 of 2005,
as amended [hereinafter
referred to as “
the Act”
];
ii) The
Family Advocate is requested to conduct an investigation into
C[...]’s best interests, with specific
reference to her primary
care, place of residence, the scope, ambit and extent in terms of
which the Applicant should maintain
contact with her, as provided for
and envisaged in Section 18(2)(a) and (b) of the Act, and to provide
this Court with a report
and recommendation as soon as practical
possible;
iii) Pending
the Family Advocate’s investigation and report, as provided for
and envisaged in paragraph 2
supra
:
(1) the
status
quo
in respect of the Applicant’s parental responsibilities
and rights to maintain contact with C[...] is restored
ante omnia
in accordance with the express agreement entered into and
concluded (reached) between the parties on 24 January 2023 and
(2) to the extent
the removal of C[...] from the Court’s jurisdiction
interferences with the Applicant’s parental
responsibilities
and rights, the Respondent is ordered to return C[...] to this
Court’s area of jurisdiction in order to
ensure compliance with
the express agreement of 24 January 2023.
iv) The costs
of this application are reserved for determination after receipt of
the Family Advocate’s report
and recommendation.
[4]
These are the reasons for the order.
[5]
The applicant and respondent have a five-year-old daughter. They were
never married. When
their relationship ended, they decided together
how they would care for their daughter. They entered into an
agreement on 24 January
2023 which regulated their relationship with
their child. Both parties signed the agreement. The agreement
provided that both parties
have full parental rights and
responsibilities, as provided for and envisaged in Section 19(1) and
21(1) of the Children’s
Act, 38 of 2005. The contact rights
between the parties meant the applicant exercised the following
contact rights:
a) Week
1: Every Wednesday and Thursday, including sleepovers (2 nights); and
b) Week
2: - Every Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday,
including sleepovers (5 nights).
[6]
The parties exercised these shared (50/50) contact rights on the
advice of Mrs Hetzel, the
parties' appointed family mediator. The
agreement further provided that “both parties ae expected to
consider each other’s
voice and opinion in the decision-making
involving major events of the child’s life” and the “goal
is to eventually
have a co-living agreement with the child where she
lives one week with the mother and the next week at the father’s
residence.”
The clear intention of this agreement is that the
child would spend as much time as possible, equally, with both of her
parents.
[7]
The respondent has not disputed the agreement or that the parties
exercised their rights
in terms of this agreement. The agreement
created the status quo.
[8]
This was ruptured on 18 October 2023 when the respondent wrote to the
applicant that she
had moved the child from the court’s
jurisdiction and relocated together with the child to M[...] to be
with her new partner.
The letter further conveyed that the
applicant would only be entitled to restricted and supervised contact
with the child going
forward. The respondent did not believe the
agreement was working anymore and, therefore, decided to terminate
the agreement.
[9]
The impact of the respondent’s letter of 18 October 2023 is
that the applicant has
to travel 550kms to see his child for four
hours on a supervised basis in public and then drive back 550kms,
where, up to now,
the applicant has exercised 50% of contact rights.
[10]
The applicant approached the Court on an urgent basis to essentially
restore the status quo ante. The applicant
argues that he is being
effectively alienated from his child. This he contends, cannot be in
her best interests. The applicant
relied on the impact of this move
and the lack of contact with her one parent as being enough to draw
this Court’s urgent
attention.
[11]
The respondent provides no factual basis for stating that this matter
is not urgent. The respondent provides
no example of substantial
redress in due course, that the applicant can obtain. In fact, the
respondent criticises the applicant
for not having launched the
proceedings in the Polokwane High Court on an urgent basis. Inherent
in this criticism is a dispute
as to the forum, but an acceptance of
the urgency of the matter.
[12]
The urgency arises as the
best interest of the child is being invoked. Not only is a child
being removed to another jurisdiction,
but it is being done in
circumstances where the life she has known to date, seeing both
parents equally, is immediately altered.
A child's contact with one
parent, which was enjoyed untrammelled 50% of the time, will come to
a halt if this relief is not granted.
Relief at a later stage
will not be substantial as the relationship will have been altered at
that stage, and a new status quo
would have been created. The Court
also notes similar matters have been dealt with on an urgent
basis.
[1]
[13]
The issue of urgency is not substantively opposed; the rights of a
5-year-old child are at the centre of
the dispute and the child will
be effectively deprived of the care of one of her parents. In these
circumstances, the Court concluded
that the matter is urgent to the
extent that there is an interference with the rights of the
applicant, which he had exercised
prior to 18 October 2023.
[14]
The applicant, however, sought relief beyond that necessary to return
to the status quo. The applicant
sought relief relating to, for
example, his financial contribution to maintenance. No basis has been
provided as to why this ought
to be decided in the urgent Court.
[15]
The Court, therefore, concludes that the main relief sought –
to restore a status quo ante –
is urgent. However, the
Court can find no basis to conclude that the remainder of the relief
cannot be dealt with in the
ordinary course. Particularly as the
relief the applicant seeks is interim relief pending the outcome of a
Family Advocate’s
investigation.
Change
to contact regime
[16]
The central controversy is whether the respondent can unilaterally
change the contact regime which has been
in place so far. The
answer is no for several reasons.
[17]
The parties have entered into an agreement as to their parental
rights. The respondent has not disputed the
agreement, her signature,
its terms or that it was regulating the relationship prior to the
decision to move to M[...]. In terms
of the agreement, the applicant
is entitled to 50% contact. The move to M[...] deprives the applicant
of rights in terms of the
agreement.
[18]
Aside from the contractual regime at play, there is a statutory
framework which regulates the situation.
The framework within which
this dispute is to be resolved is section 31(2) of the Children’s
Act. The section provides that
before a person holding parental
responsibilities and rights in respect of a child takes any decision
which is likely to change
significantly or have a significant adverse
effect on the co-holder's exercise of parental responsibilities, they
must give consideration
to any views and wishes expressed by any
co-holder of parental responsibilities.
[19]
There can be no debate that to move a child 550 km away and restrict
access to supervised contact for 4 hours
every second weekend in a
public place, from a previous 50% contact regime, is a decision which
significantly changes and adversely
affects the applicant's exercise
of parental responsibilities.
[20]
The respondent, at best,
gave the applicant notice of her intention to relocate through
correspondence of July 2023. The correspondence
was sent to the
mediator, not to the applicant. In any event, the
correspondence only indicates an intention to relocate
at some stage
– possibly.
[2]
The
decision has been presented as a fait accompli. This is the
high-water mark of the respondent’s compliance with
section
31(2) of the Children’s Act. It is no real compliance. The case
law has indicated that a 50% holder of parental rights
has the right
to be consulted before the decision is taken.
[3]
There was no such consultation. There was no consideration of
the applicant's views. The applicant was presented with
a
letter informing him of the decision.
[21]
Not only is the respondent’s intended conduct a breach of the
agreement and section 31(2), but it is
one which introduces
instability and a massive change to the child's life. The Court,
therefore, wishes to enforce the agreement,
not purely for the sake
of pacta sunt servanda, but also because stability and access to both
parents is, in fact, in the best
interest of the child at this stage.
The best interest of the child, the legislative framework and the
enforcement of the contract,
in these circumstances, dovetail.
[22]
Our courts have expressed
itself on the need for stability in children’s lives. Our
case law has recognised the importance
of consistency in children’s
lives – particularly those as young as the parties’
daughter.
[4]
Children's
existing environment should not readily be disturbed, and any
unnecessary moves should be discouraged and avoided
on the grounds of
security and stability.
[5]
A
stable routine is universally determined to be in the interests of
children, especially those of a young age.
[6]
[23] Of
course, the status quo is not hallowed ground, and a Court can
interfere on an urgent basis to change
the status quo on proper
grounds. The Court does not assume, automatically that the
return to the status quo sought by the
applicant is appropriate
purely because it was the status quo. Each case falls to be
decided on its own particular facts.
In the context of
relocation applications, the following penchant remarks are apposite:
‘…
It
would likewise be incorrect to categorically hold that because it is
generally in the best interests of a child to form a physical
bond
with, and experience the love, affection and care of both parents,
that a parent who intends to relocate with the children
to a
different town, or country, is precluded from relocating …’
[7]
[24]
The respondent contends that the status quo, as provided for in the
agreement, no longer works. The reason
is that the respondent alleges
that the applicant is aggressive, even towards the child’s
teachers – to the extent
that there have been express decisions
by the School to bar him from entering the school. These allegations
are alarming. The Court
also spent time on the allegations that the
child is not responding well to her interactions with the applicant.
[25]
These are not issues that will be easily resolved; they, however,
cannot be resolved by avoiding the agreement,
the Children’s
Act or an investigation by an independent person into the child’s
best interest. There needs to
be a proper assessment of what
the child needs in these circumstances. That is what the applicant
asks for – to return to
the status quo pending an investigation
to be done by the Family Advocate.
[26]
The Court has not been provided with any assistance in understanding
whether the change in contact regime
has been considered through the
lens of the child’s best interest. The respondent has not taken
the court into her confidence
and explained if there had been any
previous discussions between the parties as to the proposed change;
whether she understood
what an impact such a huge life decision would
have on the child; or that she had considered, let alone outlined,
the advantages
in general involved in the change. Our jurisprudence
makes it clear that our courts are extremely reluctant to interfere
with the
wishes of a parent who bears the primary responsibility of a
party’s minor child. However, the facts presented to this Court
show that the responsibilities are shared, and the Court has not, at
this stage, been provided with the type of consideration that
would
precede such a change.
The
respondent’s case
[27]
The respondent’s
case was that the situation cannot be that the respondent is not
allowed to move. Of course, this is
correct. The Court cannot
restrict the respondent’s freedom of movement. Satchwell
J held in
LW
v DB
[8]
-
“
Regrettably that
is the nature of divorce or seperation of parenting co-habitation
that does not endure throughout a child’s
life. That is the
fate of a child whose parents do not live together.
“
The solution of
our courts can never be to order that separated parents must live at
close proximity to each other in order that
each parent lives in
close proximity to a child. Our courts have not been appointed the
guardians of adults and parents are not
prisoners of our courts.”
[28]
However, this Court is not seized with a final relocation
application. The Court is being asked, on
an urgent basis, to
consider whether the status quo ante should be restored.
[29]
The respondent’s case is that as the custodial parent,
decisions can be made unilaterally. The respondent’s
counsel
placed reliance on section 30(2) of the Children's Act –
“
30(2) When more
than one person holds the same parental responsibilities and rights
in respect of a child, each of the co- holders
may act without the
consent of the other co-holder or holders when exercising those
responsibilities and rights, except where this
Act, and any other law
or an order of court provides otherwise.”
[30] It
is unclear on what basis reliance on this authority is made. The
respondent concedes that an agreement
regulated the relationship –
and that agreement provided 50/50% contact and made no reference to
primary care. The factual
premise of the assertion is, therefore,
absent.
[31]
Premised on this
assumption the respondent relied on the Full Bench decision in
J
v J
[9]
where a non-custodial parent objected to the custodial parent’s
decision regarding which school their child was to attend.
The
Court held that in these circumstances, there was no need to consider
the non-custodial parent’s views on which school
the child
should attend.
[32]
These are not the facts before this Court. In
J v J
,
the issue at stake was which school the child was to attend, not an
unliteral decision which would deprive one parent of 50% of
contact
rights exercised thus far. In any event, in
J v J
the parties
had entered into a different agreement, one that provided that the
custodial parent could decide which school the child
attended if the
non-custodial parent did not comply with a condition. The
non-custodial parent did not comply with the condition
and,
therefore, in terms of the contract, had forfeited the right to have
a say in which school the child attends.
[33]
The parties’ agreement, in this case, provided for a different
relationship. On this basis alone, the
case is distinguishable.
Aside from the differing agreements, the rights at play are also
vastly different. In
J v J
the issue was which school
the child attended. In this case, the change involves being
deprived of access to one of her parents
on a regular basis.
[34]
The respondent's concern is that she gets anxious when she has to see
the applicant and that depriving the
child of access to her father
would be in her best interest. I have been presented with no
objective facts that permit me to draw
this conclusion. The best
evidence presented by the respondent is a subjective conclusion drawn
from her hearsay records of what
her child has said to her. This is
not without weight. However, before depriving a child of access to
her father and bringing a
large scale change to her life, the Court
requires more. The solution is to get the Family Advocate to
investigate the issue
and report back on what is in the best interest
of the child in these circumstances.
[35] If
the outcome of that independent investigation is that the child
should not be in contact with the applicant
– then the
agreement can be amended, and the respondent can take the necessary
steps. However, the respondent cannot do what
she has done here,
which is to unilaterally decide to alter her child's access to her
father in breach of an agreement and section
31(2) of the Children's
Act.
Dispute
of fact
[36]
There is a dispute of fact on the papers regarding whether the
respondent has, in fact, already moved to
M[...]. The applicant
alleges that the respondent has not moved to M[...]. The respondent's
position is that she has already
moved, and consequently, this Court
has no jurisdiction. Whether that is legally correct is
debatable, but I do not have
to make that legal finding, as the facts
do not support the respondent's assertion.
[37]
The applicant presents objective evidence in the form of photos
showing that the child’s bedding and
all her toys and clothes
are still in the home in Pretoria, that the lease agreement for the
home in Pretoria has been extended,
that all the respondent’s
furniture, pot plants and electric appliances (such as the Defy
fridge, KIC chest freezer, curtains,
cutlery, crockery etc.) and that
the respondent’s car is still in Pretoria. The applicant has
alleged that the respondent
has employed a new domestic assistant
after 18 October 2023 – the date she allegedly left the home.
This allegation is not
denied.
[38]
The respondent has an explanation for the lease – that her
partner's mother may use it; she also has
an explanation for the car
– that she lent the car to a neighbour. There, however,
appears not to be only a thin explanation
as to why the child's
bedding and toys are still in the home in Pretoria. There is no
dispute as to the appointment of a
new housekeeper. And a meek
statement that only some of the appliances have remained in Pretoria.
[39]
The respondent contends that her say-so is sufficient on the
Plascon-Evans rule for the Court to accept her
version. That is not
correct. In matters involving children, the Court is not to
apply the Plascon-Evans rule without nuance.
The Court would, in
different circumstances accept the version of the respondent.
However, as the rights of a child are involved,
the best interests of
the child require the Court to play a different role.
[40]
In a
case such as this, which is not an ordinarily adversarial matter, a
different approach is to be followed.
In
the matter of
RC
v HSC
[10]
the Court held that a court should, where a child's welfare is at
stake, be very slow to determine facts by way of the usual opposed
motion approach.
[11]
As
in
RC
v HSC
,
the relief being sought here is interim.
The
best interests of the child principle is a flexible standard and
should not be approached in a formalistic manner. In fact,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal has cautioned that this type of litigation is
'not of the ordinary civil kind. It is not adversarial.'
[12]
Howie JA in
B
v S
[13]
held :
'In addition it seems to
me to be necessary to lay down that where a parental couple's access
(or custody) entitlement is being
judicially determined for the first
time — in other words where there is no existing Court order in
place — there is
no onus in the sense of an evidentiary burden,
or so-called risk of non-persuasion, on either party. This litigation
is not of
the ordinary civil kind. It is not adversarial. Even where
variation of an existing custody or access order is sought, and where
it may well be appropriate to cast an onus on an applicant, the
litigation really involves a judicial investigation, and the Court
can call evidence mero motu.”
[41]
This is exactly such a case.
[42]
In addition, 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. 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”.
In
AD
and DD v DW and Others (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae;
Department for Social Development as Intervening Party)
[14]
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' 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'.
[43] I
must, therefore, do more than accept the respondent's version on an
application of the Plascon-Evans rule;
as the interest of a child is
at play, I must investigate the issue closer.
[44] I
am not persuaded that the respondent has, in fact, moved to M[...].
Proof of this, in the form of
invoices for the move, photos or toll
money, would have been helpful. There is no objective
contemporaneous proof of the
move – save for the respondent’s
say so. On the other hand, we have the objective elements which
constitute the
respondent’s life in Pretoria – her lease
agreement, home, car and child’s belongings – all still
here.
The affidavit from the caretaker of the building where
they lived indicates that he has received no notice of moving out and
a
new housekeeper has been appointed by the respondent.
[45]
The Court takes an approach to the facts which the applicant has
alleged, which are bolstered by objective
evidence, considers the
absence of objective evidence from the respondent and concludes that
the respondent has, in fact, not moved
to M[...] yet.
[46] It
does appear on the respondent's version that she has, throughout the
year, often taken the child to M[...]
and then brought her back to
respect the agreement. To the extent that this continues to
happen, the Court does not see the
harm in this, as long as the
applicant's rights in the agreement and the status quo are not
interfered with. It is with this
in mind that the Court granted
the limited order in para (iii)(2) of the order.
Costs
[47] As
to the issue of costs, the general rule is that costs must follow the
result. However, in this case, the
parties are starting down a long
path of litigation. In order to avoid adding unnecessary and
additional acrimony to that
path, the Court decided to reserve the
costs of the application.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
applicant:
FW Botes SC
Instructed by:
Schoemans Attorneys
Counsel for the
respondent:
L van der
Westhuizen
Instructed by:
STRYDOM BREDENKAMP
ATTORNEYS
Date
of the hearing:
14 December 2023
Date
of judgment:
4 January 2023
[1]
P.M.N
v N.N (061732/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1044 (29 December 2022)
[2]
The
specific allegation is:
“
Ek
is van plan om moontlik soontoe te verhuis op i stadium en ek wil
C[...] daar in die skool sit, dit is 550km vanaf Pretoria
so sy gaan
nie haar Pa dan kan sien elke 4de dag nie maar wel vakansies”.
[3]
JKS
v DS
2023 JOL 60859
(ML) per Bam AJ
[4]
AS
v CHPS 2022 JDR 0623 (GJ)
[5]
Mekgwe
v Letlatsa 2018 JDR 1959 (FB) p 30
[6]
JO
v AO 2017 JDR 1691 (GJ)
[7]
MK v MC
(15986/2016) [2018] ZAGPJHC 9 (29 January 2018) para 37
[8]
2015
JDR 2617 (GJ) paras 51 and 52
[9]
2008
(6) SA 30 (C)
[10]
2023
(4) SA 231 (GJ)
[11]
Id
at para 37
[12]
Id
at para 38
[13]
B
v S
1995
(3) SA 571
at
584
[14]
2008
(6) SA 38
(CC)
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