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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 133
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## A.M v J.S.M (063415/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 133 (21 February 2024)
A.M v J.S.M (063415/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 133 (21 February 2024)
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sino date 21 February 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this
document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case No:
063415/2023
(1)������ REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)������ OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)������ REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE: 21
February 2024
�
SIGNATURE
In the
matter between:
A[...] M[...]
����������������������������������������������
������������������������������������������������� Plaintiff
and
J[...]
S[...] M[...] ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������� Defendant
JUDGMENT
Mazibuko AJ
1
.��������
In
a divorce action, the plaintiff sought an order for a decree of divorce, forfeiture
of the defendant�s matrimonial
benefits
in terms of the marriage being in community of property in favour of her, with specific
reference to the defendant�s 50%
share in the immovable property situated in Saulsville
Pretoria. Further, the division of the joint estate, including the division
of
the defendant�s pension funds held at Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF)
and that the plaintiff be entitled to 50% thereof.
The defendant is to pay
spousal maintenance towards the plaintiff in the amount of R8000 per month,
which is to escalate annually
on the date the divorce order was granted in
accordance with the consumer price index until her death or remarriage.
2.
��������
The
issue for determination is whether, if the order for forfeiture is
not made, the defendant will be unduly benefited in relation to
the plaintiff. Also,
whether the plaintiff is entitled to spousal maintenance until her death or
remarriage.
3.��������
The onus is on the party seeking
forfeiture to demonstrate that in the event an order of forfeiture is not
granted, the party against
whom the order is sought will, in relation to the
other, be unduly benefited. �
4.�������� T
he parties were married in community of
property on 8 April 2002.
Two
sons were born of the marriage. They are both majors in that one is above 25
years of age. The younger one has reached the age
of 18 years. However, he is
still at school and resides with the plaintiff. For the past five years, the
defendant has been making
R8000 payments towards spousal maintenance, which the
plaintiff uses to care for the household�s financial needs. The defendant
is
employed and paid the immovable property until it was paid up. The plaintiff
also works piece jobs.
5.��������
The plaintiff averred that the parties
lost their mutual love and respect for one another. There is no communication
between them,
and the defendant had an extra-marital affair.
6.�������� She testified that
the defendant had
extramarital affairs. In November 2009, she found the defendant with another
woman in their matrimonial home.
The defendant left the matrimonial home on
that day.
7.�������� It was argued on
behalf of the plaintiff that the defendant needed to forfeit the matrimonial
benefits to the immovable
property due to the circumstances leading to
the marriage breakdown and
his misconduct towards the plaintiff.
8.
��������
Section 9(1) of the Divorce Act
[1]
, (the Divorce
Act) provides:
"When a decree
of divorce is granted on the ground of the irretrievable breakdown of a
marriage, the court may make an order
that the patrimonial benefits of the
marriage be forfeited by one party in favour of the other, either wholly or in
part, if the
court, having regard to the duration of the marriage, the
circumstances which gave rise to the break-down thereof, and any substantial
misconduct on the part of either of the parties, it is satisfied that, if the
order for forfeiture is not made, the one party will
in relation to the other
be unduly benefitted."
9.��������
The parties lived together
as husband and wife from April 2002 until November 2009. Since then, the
defendant has left the matrimonial
home. The plaintiff only issued the divorce
summons in June 2023.
10.������ In Matjila v
Matyila
[2]
,
the court stated:
�The meaning of the words �duration of the marriage� as
appearing in s9(1) aforesaid is clear. It means no more nor less than the
period during which the marriage has, from the legal point of view, subsisted,
namely from the date of marriage to the date of
divorce or, at the very least,
to the date of the institution of divorce proceedings. This is in accordance
with the primary rule
of interpretation that words should be understood in
their ordinary meaning.
�
11.������ The court
considers the parties� marriage relationship to have
lasted for about seven and a half years before their separation in November
2009. The period they have not been living as husband and wife is relatively double
the time they lived together. Considering that
the defendant solely paid for
the immovable property until it was paid up. For the past five years, he has been
paying R8000 towards
the spousal maintenance, which the plaintiff uses to take
care of the household's financial needs as she resides with their dependent
child, who is still at school. The duration of the marriage does not support
the forfeiture claim lodged by the plaintiff.
12.������
T
he plaintiff averred in her particulars
of claim that the marriage
relationship
existing between the parties has irretrievably broken down and that no
reasonable prospect exists for the continuation
of a normal marriage
relationship between the parties. She listed
the grounds leading to the
irretrievable breakdown of the marriage as loss of their mutual love and
respect for one another, no
communication between them, and the defendant
having
an extra-marital
affair.
13.������ When considering
whether
proof of substantial misconduct was an essential requirement for a
forfeiture order, the court in Wijker v Wijker
[3]
held:
�It is obvious from
the wording of
the section that the first step is to determine whether or not the party
against whom the order is sought will, in
fact, be benefited. That will be
purely be a factual issue. Once that has been established, the trial court must
determine, having
regard to the factors mentioned in the section, whether or
not that party will, in relation to the other,
be unduly benefited if a
forfeiture order is not made. Although the second determination is a value judgement,
it is made by that
court after having considered the facts for falling within the
campus of the three factors mentioned in the section.�
14.������
I have considered the duration of the
marriage. The circumstances that led to the breakdown of the marriage, the
defendant�s misconduct
of having an extra-marital affair, and the contribution
of the parties towards the joint estate. Also, the monthly spousal maintenance
in
the amount of R8000 paid by the defendant, as well as the 50% of the
defendant�s pension funds claim made by the plaintiff,
correctly so, in my
view.
15.������ The court views the
defendant's misconduct relied upon by the plaintiff as not substantial
misconduct for the forfeiture
of patrimonial benefits. However, a conduct that
led to the breakdown of their marriage relationship. The plaintiff testified
that
the defendant left the matrimonial home on the day the plaintiff found him
and the other woman in the marital home. �She only issued
the divorce summons
in June 2023, fourteen years later. I am not satisfied that if the forfeiture
order is not made, the defendant
will unduly be benefitted in relation to the
plaintiff. In fact, the opposite is correct.
16.������ The plaintiff also seeks an
order that the defendant pays her spousal maintenance until she dies or
remarries.
17.������ Section 7(2) of the Divorce
Act provides:
�In the absence of an order made in terms of subsection (1)
with regard to the payment of maintenance by the one party to the other,
the
court may, having regard to the existing or prospective means of each of the
parties, their respective earning capacities,
financial needs and obligations,
the age of each of the parties, the duration of the marriage, the standard of
living of the parties
prior to the divorce, their conduct in so far as it may
be relevant to the break-down of the marriage, an order in terms of subsection
(3) and any other factor which in the opinion of the court should be taken into
account, make an order which the court finds just
in respect of the payment of
maintenance by the one party to the other for any period until the death or remarriage
of the party
in whose favour the order is given, whichever event may first
occur.�
18.������ The plaintiff was born in
1977. She works piece jobs. On paper, the parties have been married for over
twenty-one years,
seven years living together as husband and wife, and about
fourteen years not living as such. The defendant had an extramarital
affair. No
other factors were presented to the court, including the parties� existing and
prospective means, their financial needs
or obligations, and their standard of
living before the divorce action. I find no justification for granting an order
to pay the
plaintiff�s spousal maintenance until her death or until she
remarries.
19.������ Regarding the child�s
maintenance, no mention is made about the maintenance of the dependent child.
There is no prayer
explicitly dealing with his maintenance, though he can approach
the maintenance court by himself if he elects to do so. The plaintiff
testified
that she uses the money paid to her for household needs, which is how the
dependent child is maintained. In my respectful
view, there is a need for an
order explicitly dealing with the child�s maintenance since he is still at
school and living with
the plaintiff.
20. ���� For these
reasons, the following order is made;
Order:
1.
The marriage relationship between the
parties is dissolved.
2.
The decree of divorce is granted.
3.�������� The claim
for forfeiture of the defendant�s benefits with specific reference to the
defendant�s interest in the property
situated at 88 Matamela Street,
Saulsville, Pretoria, is refused.
4.�������� The
division of the joint estate is granted.
5.�������� The
defendant will pay R4000 per month towards the dependent school-going child, J[...]
M[...] M[...], born on 12 May
2003, until he is self-supporting.����������
6.�������� The
plaintiff is to provide the defendant with the banking details of the dependent
child.
7.��������
The defendant will pay R4000 per month
towards the plaintiff's spousal maintenance for 12 (twelve) months until the
end of January
2025.
8.�������� The
plaintiff will be entitled to 50% of the defendant�s pension funds held at the Government
employees� pension fund
(GEPF) number 9[...].
9.�������� No
order as to costs.
N. Mazibuko
Acting Judge of the High Court, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
This judgment is digitally submitted by
emailing it to the parties.
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: ��������������� ����������� Mr H. Hansen
Instructed
by ����������������������������������������������� Hansen Inc. Attorneys
Counsel
for Respondents: ����������� ����������� No appearance
Instructed
by: ���������������������������������� �����������
Date of hearing:������������������������������ ����������� 19
February 2024
Judgment delivered on������������������ ����������� 21
February 2024
[1]
70
of 1979
[2]
1987(3)SA 230(W) at 236 B-C
[3]
1993(4) SA 720(A) at 727 D-F
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