begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 214
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## O.A.J v K.J (67591/2013)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 214 (6 March 2024)
O.A.J v K.J (67591/2013)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 214 (6 March 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_214.html
sino date 6 March 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: 67591/2013
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
06/03/2024
SIGNATURE:
PRETORIA
26 JANUARY 2024
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE MISTER JUSTICE SWART
In
the matter between:
O
A J[...]
PLAINTIFF
and
K
J[...]
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
B
H SWART
[1]
The
applicant and the respondent were married out of community of
property with the inclusion of the accrual system on 4 November
2004.
On 10 October 2013 the applicant issued summons for divorce. On 15
May 2015 Kollapen J granted an order in terms of Rule
43.
[1]
In the current application the applicant applies in terms of Rule
43(6) for the rescission of the 2015 order, alternatively for
a
variation thereof. The respondent counter applies for an increase in
the maintenance granted in terms of the 2015 order and for
a
contribution towards her future legal costs, coupled with an order
for outstanding legal disbursements.
[2]
Rule 43
contemplates an inexpensive and expeditious application to deal with
matters falling within its ambit
pendente
lite
.
It is trite that lengthy affidavits may frustrate this object
and may amount to an abuse of the process of the Court.
[2]
This notwithstanding, the parties filed voluminous affidavits. The
respondent filed a supplementary affidavit which she seeks to
be
admitted in terms of Rule 43(5), to which the applicant responded.
The applicant, under the guise of an answering affidavit
to the
respondent’s counter-application, in effect, filed a replying
affidavit thereto. Notwithstanding these indications
of an abuse of
the process of the Court, I have decided to accept all the affidavits
and to entertain the application, as striking
it from the roll will
further delay the finalisation of the trial of the outstanding issues
between the parties.
[3]
It is necessary, for context, to refer to the 2015 order, and certain
facts that transpired thereafter.
[4]
The 2015 order provided as follows:
“
1.
Pendente lite the Respondent is ordered to pay an amount of
R20 000-00 (Twenty Thousand Rand) per month commencing on 28 May
2015 and thereafter on or before the 28
th
Day of each following month directly into a Bank Account nominated by
the Applicant.
2.
Pendente lite
the Respondent is ordered to pay the medical aid
monthly subscriptions and Gap cover Directly to the service provider
and all excess
medical expenses not paid by the medical aid.
3.
Pendente lite
the Respondent shall be liable to pay that
portion of asset retainer’s CC’s over draft facility
which relates to the
common home presently occupied by the applicant.
4.
Pendente lite
the Respondent shall pay directly R9 500-00
(Nine and a Half Thousand Rand) to the municipality of Tshwane per
month with
regard to rates and taxes, water and electricity.
5.
Pendente lite
payment shall made by the Respondent to the
Applicant in the amount of R2 500-00 (Two and a Half Thousand
Rand) as a petrol
allowance per month payable simultaneously with the
amount in paragraph 1 above.
6.
Pendente lite
the Respondent is ordered to pay the monthly
instalments for the applicant’s BMW motor vehicle in the amount
of R9 258-07
(nine Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Eight Rand and
Seven Cents).
7.
Pendente lite
the Respondent is ordered to pay the monthly
premiums to insure the BMW motor vehicle referred to above and on a
comprehensive basis.
8.
Pendente lite
the Respondent is to pay the following expenses
directly to the service provider:
8.1
MWEB
8.2
ADT
8.3
ADSL AND TELKOM
9.
Pendente lite
the restrictions stated in Rule 43(7) and Rule
43(8) are waived.
10.
Pendente lite
respondent is ordered to ensure that suitable
arrangement are made or a payment plan is put into place to pay the
arrears that
have built up in respect of the utilizes [
sic
]
bill with the Tshwane Municipality so that no interruption under any
circumstances occurs in respect of the continual supply of
electricity to the matrimonial home.”
[5]
Pursuant to an application for the separation of issues, Ranchod J
granted
a final decree of divorce on 17 March 2016, resulting in the
calculation of the respondent’s accrual and the her claim for
maintenance for remaining as the only issues. The trial for
these issues were set down on 16 October 2017 and 22 May 2018
but was
each time postponed. On 9 March 2018, Mavundla J dismissed a second
Rule 43 application. 2018 – 2020 was spent on
litigation caused
by the applicant having ceased to comply with the provisions of 2015
order, according to him, on the advice of
his former legal attorney.
2021 and 2022 were devoted to proceedings launched by the respondent
for further and better discovery.
The current application was
launched on 7 June 2022. It was argued before me on 26 January 2014
and clearly resulted in the parties,
since the launching of the
application, not taking any serious steps to advance the issues
remaining to trial.
[6]
The legal bases underpinning the applicant’s application are
recorded
in his founding affidavit as Rule 43(6), as well as the
inherent jurisdiction of the Court in terms of section 173 of the
Constitution.
[7]
The
applicant’s reliance on section 173 of the Constitution is
based on the judgment of Rogers J in
CT
v MT
.
[3]
[8]
To understand why the applicant’s reliance on section 173 of
the
Constitution is misguided, regard must be had to paragraph 34 of
the judgment of Rogers J which records the following:
“
[34]
Nevertheless, where an order [in terms of Rule 43] is
from
the outset manifestly unjust and erroneous
,
a court may exercise its inherent power in terms of s 173 of the
Constitution to remedy the wrong…. Moreover, where an
injustice
is
compounded by an undue protraction of the divorce proceedings, the
delay may itself constitute a material change of circumstance
as
contemplated in Rule 43(6).”
[4]
[9]
It appears from the judgment that the section 173 powers vested in a
Court
will be activated where an order in terms of Rule 43 is from
the outset manifestly unjust and erroneous. The applicant does not
suggest in its application that the 2015 order was from the outset
manifestly unjust and/or erroneous. His reliance on section
173 of
the Constitution accordingly has no factual basis.
[10]
It follows that the only legal basis for the applicant’s
application is Rule
43(6) which provides for a variation of an
existing order in terms of Rule 43
in the event of a material
change occurring in the circumstances of either party……,
or the contribution towards costs
proving inadequate
.
[11]
Counsel for the applicant submitted that an inordinate delay, in
itself, constitutes a
material change in circumstances as
contemplated in Rule 43(6). The judgment in
CT v MT
provides
support for this proposition. Rogers J held the following in respect
of an order in terms of Rule 43 not specifying a
terminal date:
“
[36]
Be that as it may, if specifying a terminal date in the order were
thought desirable, there is nothing at
common law or in Rule 43 which
prevents its imposition. And even in the absence of such a term, the
fact that the main case had
been delayed significantly longer than
could reasonably have been expected when the interim order was made
would probably be a
basis to ask for a fresh assessment in terms of
Rule 43(6).”
[12]
Counsel for the respondent correctly pointed out that the aforesaid
remarks of Rogers J
appears to have been made obiter. This
notwithstanding, to me, they make perfect sense. Implicit in
any Rule 43 order is
an assumption that the trial to which it
pertains would be adjudicated expeditiously. It makes sense to assess
the matter afresh,
should this assumption fail. This does not mean
that an inordinate delay will automatically result in amended relief.
Whether this
will happen will depend on the evidence adduced in the
papers. Furthermore, in assessing the evidence, a Court will guard
against
sitting as a Court of Appeal in respect of the original
order.
[13]
The facts relied on by the applicant for the relief sought in his
notice in terms of Rule
43(6) are summarised as follows in his
founding affidavit:
[13.1] The
respondent has made no real attempt to secure employment for herself
or to vacate the common home, despite
acknowledging her obligation to
do so in her first Rule 43 application.
[13.2] The
common home has been sold and registration of transfer is expected
imminently, which would render substantial
portions of the 2015 order
moot and/or inappropriate.
[13.3] Having
received spousal maintenance for seven years, the respondent has no
further entitlement to maintenance.
[13.4] The
respondent utilises her maintenance for purposes other than spousal
maintenance.
[14]
During argument I was informed by the applicant’s counsel that
the transaction for
the sale of the common home has fell through and
that the property will not be sold before the outstanding issues in
the divorce
action had been finalised.
[15]
As a fact, the respondent is still unemployed. I am not on the
evidence before me in a
position to conclude that the respondent has
deliberately elected not to secure employment. The granting of the
relief sought in
the notice in terms of Rule 43(6) will terminate her
income stream under circumstances where there exist material factual
disputes
in respect of the reasons/s for her unemployment.
[16]
The applicant went to great lengths to demonstrate that the
respondent will not succeed
with a claim for maintenance at the
trial. In my view, I am not called upon to pre-empt the outcome of
her maintenance claim. It
is trite that maintenance
pendente lite
is intended to be interim and temporary and cannot be determined with
the same degree of precision as would be possible in a trial
where
detailed evidence is adduced. Kollapen J has already found in 2015
that the respondent is entitled to maintenance
pendente lite
.
The inordinate delay in the finalisation of the matter does not
detract from this.
[17]
With reference to an analysis of the respondent’s bank
statements, as well as those
of her mother, the applicant concludes
that, between the period October 2020 to October 2021, 57% of the
maintenance paid by him
to the respondent was paid to her mother, and
13% to Avis Car Rental.
[18]
This evidence is dealt with tersely, and possibly unconvincingly, as
follows in the respondent’s
answering affidavit:
“
24.4
Every month a pay a substantial amount of my maintenance into my
mother’s account since she manages my limited
funds on my
behalf. She assists me with budgeting and the purchasing of
day-to-day expenses.
24.5
The amounts spent relates to my normal living expenses as I am
entitled to in terms of the R43 application
which ranges from
groceries, personal items, appliances needed at home, things and
transport. The fact that my mom purchases some
items for me and on my
behalf does not take the matter further.
24.6 I
have to resort to car rental as my car has been repossessed.”
and:
“
25.2
All the amounts I or my mother have spent in respect of normal
maintenance needs. She assists me in managing the
budget. The trauma
of the protracted litigation has had such a negative impact on my
health that I am unable to do simple things.
My mother, as such,
assists me with these simply [
sic
] tasks.”
[19]
The applicant’s assertions in this regard, coupled with the
respondent’s unsatisfactory
response thereto, do not provide a
basis for a rescission of the 2015 order sought in prayer 1 of the
notice in terms of Rule 43(6),
or the alternative prayer 2 for a
terminal date of three months.
[20]
For the reasons aforesaid I am not inclined to grant the applicant
the relief sought in
prayers 1 or 2 of his notice in terms of Rule
43(6).
[21]
A large portion of the respondent’s allegations in her
affidavit in support of her
claim for increased maintenance is
devoted to the sale of the property where she is currently residing,
and the applicant’s
erratic payment of his maintenance
obligations. The undertaking furnished by the applicant in respect of
the property results in
the sale of the property no longer
constituting a basis for increased maintenance. Erratic payment of
the applicant’s maintenance
obligations does not constitute a
reason for the increase of the maintenance.
[22]
As already pointed out, the respondent has not properly dealt with
the assertions in the
applicant’s affidavit to the effect that
she partially utilises the maintenance payments for reasons other
than her own maintenance.
[23]
For this reason I am not inclined to grant an increase in the
respondent’s maintenance
pendente lite
.
[24]
Having regard to the facts that transpired since the granting of the
2015 order, I have
no doubt that the respondent requires a further
contribution towards her legal costs in respect of the pending
action. In her counter-application
the respondent claims the amount
of R1 million in respect of outstanding legal disbursements for
accounts already rendered, and
a further contribution towards her
future legal costs in the amount of R1,500,000.00.
[25]
In her affidavit, the respondent seeks to substantiate this claim,
with reference to a
pro forma bill of costs attached as annexure
‘A16’ thereto. This evidence is in several respects
problematic:
[25.1] The
calculation appears to commence from the first consultation between
the respondent and her attorneys at the
inception of the matter and
spans to the conclusion of an eight day trial, contrary to the
established principle that a contribution
to costs can only be
claimed up to the first day of the trial, whereafter the matter can
be revisited.
[25.2] The
calculation appears not to take cost orders already granted in favour
of the respondent in respect of interlocutory
applications into
consideration.
[26]
Non-suiting the respondent in respect of her cost contribution claim
will aggravate the
inordinate delay in finalising the matter. For
this reason I am inclined to order a contribution, which is to a
certain extent
arbitrary, but which in my view constitute less than
the amount to which the respondent would be entitled, should she
substantiate
her claim properly. This will enable the parties to move
forward in respect of the pending trial, and will allow the
respondent
to apply for a further contribution, if required.
[27]
It appears from the evidence that there has been no serious effort to
advance this matter
to finality and that the acrimonious divorce
proceedings have led to irrational decision making. Having regard to
the applicant’s
conduct in respect of the 2015 order, the
submission that he is attempting to litigate the respondent into
submission appears to
have merit. There is furthermore much to be
said for the applicant’s submission that the respondent, being
in possession
of a Rule 43 order that favours her, has no serious
intention of advancing the matter to trial. It appears from the
papers that
she blames lack of funds for her inability to file a
replying affidavit in respect of a pending Rule 35(7) application,
which prevents
the parties from obtaining a trial date. Yet she has
managed to file a voluminous answer to the applicant’s Rule
43(6) application,
and to obtain the services of senior and junior
counsel to argue the matter on her behalf. In my view the conduct of
both parties
have contributed to the inordinate delay in getting the
outstanding issues to trial. To assist with the finalisation of the
matter
I intend ordering the parties to approach the Deputy Judge
President for case management of the matter.
[28]
In
CT v MT
, Rogers J held the following:
“
[35]
The potential abuse of indeterminate interim orders could be avoided
by including in the order a provision
to the effect that it will
lapse after a specific period of time, whereupon the spouse in whose
favour it was made would need to
review his or her application. In
many cases it ought to be possible to assess how long the divorce
should take to come to trial
if diligently conducted. Specifying a
fixed period might encourage the benefitted spouse to pursue the main
case diligently. On
the other hand, proceedings can be delayed for
many unforeseen circumstances having nothing to do with abuse by the
benefitted
spouse. Whether it is desirable to insist on the expense
and inconvenience of a further application is debatable. Furthermore,
if the interim order were regarded as unduly parsimonious rather than
unduly generous, there may be an incentive on the part of
the
obligated spouse, rather than the benefitted spouse, to drag out the
main case.”
[29]
Having regard to the facts that transpired since the granting of the
2015 order and adopting
the approach suggested in paragraph 36 of
CT
v MT
, I am of the view that the specification of a terminal date
in this matter is called for. In my view this, coupled with an order
for a further contribution of legal costs will assist in getting the
matter to trial, which should have happened years ago.
[30]
The order that I intend granting in effect nonsuits the applicant in
respect of his application.
He must bear the costs thereof. The
respondent’s counter-application is partially successful in
respect of a further contribution
for costs. She is therefore
entitled to the costs of her counter-application.
[31]
I make the following order:
[1]
The application is dismissed with costs.
[2]
The respondent is ordered to contribute to the respondent’s
legal
costs in the amount of R600,000.00, payable in three equal
monthly instalments with effect 31 March 2024.
[3]
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs pertaining to the
respondent’s
counter-application.
[4]
The parties are directed to approach the Deputy Judge President for
the
appointment of a Case Manager.
[5]
The Rule 43 order granted by Kollapen J in 2015, as varied and/or
supplemented
by this order, shall lapse within eighteen (18) months
of the date of the granting of this order, should the matter not have
proceeded
to trial by then. In this event, any of the parties are
entitled to approach the Court for relief in terms of Rule 43, if so
advised.
B
H SWART
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISIOIN, PRETORIA.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant
Adv
H. Loots SC
Instructed
by
Potgieter
+ Associates
Unit
16, Cana Edge 4
Fountain
Road
BELLVILLE
Counsel
for Respondent
L C
Haupt SC
With
Adv S
M Stadler
Instructed
by
Adams
& Adams
Lynnwood
Bridge Office Park
4
Daventry Road
PRETORIA
THIS
JUDGMENT WAS ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES ON 06 MARCH
2024.
[1]
The
‘
2015
order’
.
[2]
See the
authorities referred to in fn 10 of Erasmus – Superior Court
Practice (2
nd
ed) at D1-583.
[3]
2020 (3) SA
409.
[4]
Own italics.
sino noindex
make_database footer start