Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 141South Africa
N.H.K v A.J.K (2022-053646) [2024] ZAGPPHC 141 (20 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## N.H.K v A.J.K (2022-053646) [2024] ZAGPPHC 141 (20 February 2024)
N.H.K v A.J.K (2022-053646) [2024] ZAGPPHC 141 (20 February 2024)
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sino date 20 February 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
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IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO. 2022-053646
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
Date:
20 February 2024
Signature:
In
the matter between:
N
H K[...]
Applicant
and
A
J K[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an opposed application in terms of
Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules of Court. The applicant seeks an order
pendente lite
in the following terms:
1.1
That
the respondent be ordered to pay maintenance to the applicant in the
amount of R31 350.00 per month, the first payment to be
made
immediately and thereafter on/or before the first day of each
subsequent month;
1.2
That
the respondent be ordered to retain the applicant on the medical aid
at his costs and pay for any shortfall not covered by
the medical
aid;
1.3
That
the respondent be ordered to pay the deposit of R12 000 respect of
the applicant's rental accommodation immediately to applicant
and to
pay the deposit in respect of the electricity connection for the
applicant's rental accommodation immediately to the applicant;
1.4
That
the respondent be ordered to make a contribution of R100 000.00
towards the
applicant's legal costs in instalments of R10 000.00 per month, the
first payment to be made immediately and thereafter
on/or before the
first of each month until the full amount has been paid;
1.5
That
costs of the application be costs in the cause;
[2]
Over and above opposing the application,
the respondent has filed a counterclaim the details of which will be
apparent below.
[3]
At the time of hearing this application,
the applicant was 68 years old, sickly and past retirement age and
unemployable. The parties have been married for 45 years.
[4]
The applicant is the plaintiff in the divorce action, which is
opposed by the respondent who has also filed a counterclaim therein.
The parties are still exchanging documents in the pending divorce.
B.
APPLICANT’S CASE
[5]
The
applicant alleges that the respondent does not want to settle the
divorce amicably, yet he holds the financial keys to do so.
[1]
The parties are still living in the same house but have not shared
the same bed since 2017.
[6]
Throughout the marriage the applicant
was dependent on the respondent, more particularly since 2007 when
the applicant ceased working
at the behest of the respondent.
[7]
In days gone by, the respondent used to
provide the applicant with a credit card which she used to buy the
weekly household cleaning
materials and other necessities. He
recalled the credit card during February 2023 and removed the
applicant as a signatory from
the joint account as had been the case
since about 1980.
[8]
The respondent currently gives the
respondent an allowance of R1500 per week which amounts to R6000 per
month for her food, cleaning
materials and other personal needs.
[9]
The applicant is not earning any income
save for an annuity policy that pays once a year the amount of
approximately R1 900.00.
[10]
The applicant is in possession of a
Mercedes Benz motor vehicle that the respondent bought and paid for
that she uses for transportation.
[11]
Additionally, the respondent also pays the
following expenses:
11.1
Medical
aid
–
R 4 937.00 (Applicant’s portion)
11.2
Cell
Phone
–
R 400.00
11.3
DSTV
–
R 850.00
11.4
Insurance
-
R 2 500.00
11.5
Policies
- R 12 500
11.6
Domestic
worker
- R 1 440.00
11.7
Netflix
– R 1 049.00
11.8
Insurance
– R 2 500.00
11.9
Water
& Electricity
– R 4 500.00
11.10
Groceries
– R 2 500.00
11.11
Applicant’s
guitar lessons – R 1 200.00
Total:
R 34 376.00
[12]
The applicant desires to move out of the
marital home she shares with the respondent. She has already started
a search for potential
alternative accommodation. She alleges that
the cohabitation has become intolerable due to aggressive behaviour,
emotional and
verbal abuse by the respondent towards her.
[13]
She states in her founding affidavit that
ever since the divorce summons was served upon him, the respondent
has become very vindictive,
making life intolerable for her. It is
for these reasons that she needs to have the respondent contribute an
amount of R 12 000.00
for a deposit on the rent.
[14]
The applicant and the respondent do not
speak to each other, she needs to write out handwritten notes to
request for money or to
have certain repairs attended to.
[15]
The applicant’s health is not good.
She had a foot operation back in 2015, a back operation in 2017 and a
hip replacement
operation in 2018. She is under the care of a
psychiatrist and uses prescribed medication for depression. She takes
anti-seizure
tablets, blood pressure tablets, tablets for backpain as
well as sleeping tablets.
[16]
According to the applicant the respondent’s
financial position can be summed up as follows:
16.1
The
respondent is an experienced Land Surveyor who has been in the
business for at least 30 to 40 years.
16.2
He
has trained one of their adult sons, R[...], to do the work of a Land
Surveyor and they have been working together from the common
home.
16.3
The
Respondent and R[...] always operated from the same premises, and
they serve the same clients but under different entities and
names.
The Respondent and R[...] moved both businesses in March 2023.
16.4
Despite
preaching poverty, the Respondent is an experienced businessman.
[17]
The respondent owns a Land Cruiser bakkie
and he upgraded the suspension of the vehicle during November 2022
for approximately R50 000.00.
[18]
The applicant claims that she knows that
the respondent has a contract with one of the big road agencies which
pays him a retainer
of approximately R200 000.00 per month. She
however, suspects that they moved the contract to R[...]’s
business Beluga
Deer Surveyors.
[19]
The applicant attached a bank statement of
the respondent indicating a balance of R 619 516.36 available.
[20]
The applicant disputes the financial
disclosure form submitted by the respondent; she submits that it is
“tailored”
to suit circumstances. She insists that he has
the means to maintain her in the interim.
[21]
According to the applicant,
the
parties were the owners of two immovable properties. One of the
properties is a townhouse which was sold.
She has
not received anything from the proceeds of the sale of the townhouse.
C.
RESPONDENT’S CASE
[22]
Ms. Ellerbeck appeared on behalf of the
respondent. She submitted that the respondent makes a very reasonable
offer to the applicant,
which is being unreasonably refused.
Furthermore, it is respondent’s view that the applicant chooses
not to work. He therefore
offers a cash contribution of R 7 500.00,
medical aid cover and shortfall as well as R 20 000.00
contribution to legal
costs. He then asks the court to dismiss the
application.
[23]
The respondent’s case is premised on
two grounds.
23.1
Firstly,
he alleges that the application is not brought
bona
fide
but is an abuse of the Rule 43 process in that the applicant has
failed to show that she is destitute and that there is a need
for an
interim order pending the divorce.
23.2
Secondly,
on the merits of the application the respondent is arguing that he
simply cannot afford to pay what the applicant is asking.
[24]
The
respondent confirms that he pays all the living expenses listed by
the applicant above.
[2]
The
respondent states that
pending
the finalization of the divorce proceedings, where the applicant's
claim for spousal maintenance will be properly and fully
adjudicated,
or a change in their circumstances occurs, he will continue to do so
as has have done and as far as he is able to
afford it. He submits
that he has not threatened to stop paying these expenses or the R 6
000.00, which he is currently contributing.
[3]
[25]
The
respondent also confirms that he took back the credit card that he
had entrusted with the applicant, but that was because the
latter had
made unexplained withdrawals of R 6 000.00 at the time. He states
however, that with hindsight he assumes that the applicant
could have
paid some of her legal fees from these funds.
[4]
[26]
The respondent admits, alternatively, does not
deny and/or dispute the following:
26.1
That during the subsistence
of their marriage the applicant was a housewife, and the respondent
took responsibility of paying for
their day-to-day living expenses.
26.2
The respondent furthermore
does not deny that since January 2023 he has unilaterally reduced the
applicant access to finances by
revoking her use of a credit card
that was available for her use to cover certain expenses.
26.3
Does not dispute that he has
a duty to pay maintenance towards the applicant, but claims he is
unable to afford to do so.
26.4
The
respondent denies that he is financially able to pay said maintenance
to the applicant and/or to make any contributions towards
the
applicant's legal costs and/or to pay a rental and utilities deposit.
26.5
The
respondent contends that the proceed of the sale of 2 co-owned
properties, being the marital home and a second property that
was
leased for rental income, would be sufficient for the Applicant to
sustain herself for the future.
26.6
The
respondent admits that he is self-employed and is currently earning a
gross salary in the amount of R37 178.75 Net Salary =
R 30 000.00
[See paragraph 28 of the answering affidavit, read with respondent's
Financial Disclosure Form]
26.7
In
exposition of his alleged "inability to pay" the respondent
has attached what he purports to be a financial disclosure
form to
his answering affidavit, but same remains unsupported by any source
documents either for his personal finances or that
of the business he
is the sole member of. Although the respondent admits to paying the
expenses as listed by the respondent, it
remains unclear whether the
respondent still intends to pay for these expenses or not.
[27]
In
reaction to the applicant’s alleg
ations
that the parties have not lived together as husband and wife since
2015, the respondent highlights that it is 8 years later
now that the
applicant alleges that it is intolerable to live in the same house
with the respondents. He denies any form of abuse
on his part.
[5]
D.
ANALYSIS
[28]
It
was held in
Taute
v Taute
1974 (2) SA 675
(E)
that
“relief under rule 43 is intended to be interim and temporary
and cannot be determined with the degree of precision and
exactitude
afforded by detailed evidence.”
[6]
[29]
In
determining interim maintenance in a rule 43 application the court is
guided by 3 considerations,
[7]
namely:
(a) The standard of
living of the parties during the subsistence of the marriage;
(b) The Applicant's
actual and reasonable requirements, and
(c) the income of the
Respondent
[30]
The respondent in this application does not
shirk his responsibility to maintain the applicant and is willing to
continue to meet
the requirements as listed in the applicant’s
application. What seems to get in the way is the applicant’s
desire to
move out of the common house even before it is put up for
sale in the open market.
[31]
The difficulty facing the court is the
paucity of relevant information. Both parties’ Financial
Disclosure Forms provide very
scant information.
[32]
Taute
v Taute
[8]
is
also authority for the proposition that
a
claim supported by reasonable and moderate details carries more
weight than one which includes extravagant or extortionate demands.
Furthermore, greater weight will be attached to the affidavit of a
respondent who evinces a willingness to implement his lawful
obligations than to that of one who is seeking to evade them.
[33]
The applicant states it as a fact that the
respondent and/or his company has a retainer agreement with one of
the big road agencies
which pays him R 200 000.00 per month.
This is not supported by any proof; this deprives the assertion of
the requisite weight.
[34]
What is beyond dispute is
the fact
that the applicant is financially destitute and wholly dependent on
the respondent. It follows that she cannot litigate
on an equal
footing with the respondent. Her attorneys’ bill remains unpaid
while the litigation remains pending.
[35]
In
Dodo v Dodo
1990 (2) SA 77
(WLD) at 96 F
it was
held that: “The husband's duty of support includes the duty to
provide the wife with costs for her litigation with
her husband.”
This is compatible with the provisions of section 9(1) of the
Constitution which states that:
"Everyone
is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and
benefit of the law".
E.
CONCLUSION
[36]
Taking the above into account, it is this
court’s finding that on the facts before it, the respondent has
no difficulty with
the applicant continuing to stay in the common
home as has been the case so far. He continues to be responsible for
all household
and related expenses including medical aid
contributions.
[37]
The issue of the need for the proposed
relocation and the attendant costs seems unsupported by evidence on
the current facts submitted
by the applicant.
[38]
The applicant is however, still entitled to
spousal maintenance given her history and personal circumstances.
This applies to her need for a contribution towards legal costs.
[39]
In the circumstances the following order,
applicable
pendente lite
,
is made:
39.1
The
respondent is ordered to pay spousal maintenance in the amount of R
15 000.00 per
month
with effect from 29 February 2024, and thereafter on or before the
7
th
day of each subsequent month until this order is discharged or the
divorce is finalized.
39.2
The respondent is hereby
ordered to continue retaining the applicant in his medical aid and
covering any shortfalls that may arise.
39.3
The respondent further is
hereby ordered to make a contribution towards the applicant’s
legal costs in the amount of R 100 000.00
in monthly instalments
of R 10 000.00 with effect from 29 February 2024 and thereafter
on or before the 7
th
day of each subsequent month.
39.4
The costs of this
application to be costs in the divorce.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 16 October 2023
Date
of Judgment: 20 February 2024
On
behalf of the Applicant: Adv. J. Swanepoel
Attorneys
for the Applicant: Krynauw Attorneys
Tel:
(012) 667 4155
E-mail:
pierre@krynauwlaw.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondent: Adv. T. Ellerbeck
Attorneys
for the Respondent: De Lange & Van Kaam Incorporated
Tel:
(012) 362 3970
E-mail:
natasha@dlvklaw.co.za
;
Admin1@dlvklaw.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
20
February 2024
.
[1]
Founding
affidavit para 5.3.
[2]
Respondent’s
Answering
Affidavit para 30 and 31.
[3]
Respondent’s
answering affidavit, supra para 33.
[4]
Answering
Affidavit supra at para 35.
[5]
Answering
affidavit para 38
[6]
Taute
v Taute
1974 (2) SA 675
(E) at 676B-C; Herbstein and Van Winsen: The
Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of Appeal of
South Africa
5th Ed 2009 Chapter 47-p1535.
[7]
DD
v FD 2021 JDR 0048G (Case No. 72897/2019) at p4 para 8.
[8]
Taute
v Taute
supra
at 676H.
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