Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 213South Africa
LA v EFV (2024-017275) [2024] ZAGPPHC 213 (11 March 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Application in terms of section 18(5) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## LA v EFV (2024-017275) [2024] ZAGPPHC 213 (11 March 2024)
LA v EFV (2024-017275) [2024] ZAGPPHC 213 (11 March 2024)
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sino date 11 March 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Children – Consent to travel –
Mother
seeks consent from father for departure of minor child from
Republic for specific period – Father refuses to
consent –
Court may intervene and order consent of one who unreasonably
refuses consent – Applicant mother demonstrated
that in the
circumstances, consent of all persons is not necessary for
departure of child from Republic given unreasonable
withholding of
consent by father – Children’s Act 38 of 2005, s
18(5).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 2024-017275
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
11/3/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
L
A
Applicant
and
E
F
V
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date
and for
hand-down is deemed to be ___ March 2024.
Summary:
Application in terms of section 18(5) of the Children’s Act 38
of 2005.
The
applicant, as the mother of the minor child, sought consent from the
father of the minor child for the departure of the minor
child from
the Republic for a specific period. The father is authorised by the
law, to refuse to give consent as required by the
law. The applicant
and her husband have arranged to leave with the minor child for the
USA. The departure is to take place on 18
March 2024. Owing to the
refusal to consent and the need to travel in a matter of days or
weeks, the applicant approached this
Court on an urgent basis for an
appropriate relief. The father opposed the application on, amongst
others, the basis that the urgent
relief sought is not urgent. In the
exercise of its discretion, this Court agreed to hear the application
as an urgent one. The
default legal position is that the consent of
all persons that have guardianship of a child is necessary in respect
of matters
legislated in subsection 18(3)(c) of the Children’s
Act. Only a competent Court can order otherwise in relation to the
default
legal position.
There
is no statutory provision requiring the competent Court, when
considering an application in terms of section 18(5) of the
Children’s Act, to do so by taking into account the best
interests of the minor child. The duty of the Court is to alter
the
default position of requiring consent of all persons. Taking into
account all the circumstances, a Court may alter the default
position
or refuse to alter the default position. In the event the default
position is not altered, then the consent of all is
necessary. The
applicant mother has demonstrated that in the circumstances, the
consent of all is not necessary for the departure
of the child from
the Republic given the unreasonable withholding of the consent by the
father. Held: (1) The application is granted
in terms of section
18(5) of the Children’s Act and the draft order uploaded by the
applicant marked X is made an order of
Court. Held: (2) The
respondent to pay the costs of this application.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA,
J
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application brought on an urgent basis by the applicant, L A. L
A is the biological mother of the minor child, E V, a
female born on
14 February 2011. At the time of the present application, she was 13
years of age. The respondent, E F V, is the
biological father of E V.
The present application is brought in terms of the provisions of
section 18(5) of the Children’s
Act (CA).
[1]
The
application is fully opposed by E V. After hearing argument, this
Court retired in order to consider its judgment.
Pertinent background
facts
[2]
For the purposes of this judgment, it must be
recorded that the pertinent facts to the present application are
largely common cause.
The affidavits filed by the respective parties
are replete with criticism of each other’s view point on the
pertinent facts.
Thus, it is obsolete for this judgment to
punctiliously regurgitate all the facts of the present application.
Briefly, the salient
facts are that both L A and E F V were married
to each other. During the subsistence of their marriage, E V was
born. Sadly, when
E V was only 3 years old and working towards
turning 4, L A and E F V ended their marriage on 9 September 2014. L
A and E F V concluded
a settlement agreement, which agreement
accompanied a decree of divorce and was made an order of Court.
[3]
It was agreed in the settlement agreement that E
V’s primary residence be with L A, subject to E F V having
specific contact
rights. Since the divorce, E V has been residing
with L A. On 29 September 2018, L A married one Mr. J A. E V
continued to live
with L A and her husband. Although the relationship
between E F V and L A remains acrimonious, they continued to
co-parent E V.
During December 2023, L A and her husband firmed up an
idea to travel to the United States of America (USA) for a holiday.
Since
they live together with E V, they wished to travel as a family
with E V to the USA from 18 March 2024 until 7 April 2024. Given
the
age and maturity of E V, she was directly involved in the planning of
the trip to the USA. She independently decided to be
part of the trip
even though she will miss about 5 school days, a school netball
tournament and the North Gauteng netball trials.
In addition, she
will miss some extra-mural activities like netball, tennis and
horse-riding lessons whilst away in the USA.
[4]
During December 2023, bookings for the
international flights were made, which bookings included E V. L A did
not anticipate that
E F V will refuse to give consent within the
contemplation of section 18(3) of the CA, hence the inclusion of E V
in the travel
arrangements. In preparation for the travel, L A met
with school officials to make the necessary arrangements. On the week
of 19
January 2024, E V had, as agreed, contact with E F V. L A
prepared a consent form and enclosed it in an envelope so that E V
should
request E F V to sign it. When E V was fetched from E F V’s
residence, it was discovered that the consent form was not signed.
E
F V placed various conditions upon which he may consider giving the
necessary consent. A barrage of correspondence was exchanged
in the
course in an attempt to resolve the impasse over the giving of
consent. It is unnecessary for the purposes of this judgment
to
narrate each of those exchanges. Nevertheless, L A met and discussed
with school officials to deal with what E V would miss
during the
trip to the USA. She obtained assurances from those officials to the
effect that E V shall not be jeopardised. Ultimately,
after a toing
and froing, it became clear that E F V was refusing to give the
necessary consent. Such prompted L A to launch the
present
application.
Analysis
[5]
Before the merits of the present application are
discussed, this Court must briefly deal with the preliminary
objections raised
by E F V in opposition to the present application.
The urgency issue
[6]
L A contended that the application is urgent and
cannot be determined in the normal Court roll owing to the fact that
in a matter
of days, the planned trip is to happen. In resisting the
hearing of the application on an urgent basis, E F V contended that L
A had an alternative option, which included making him part of the
decision making in December 2023, appointing a parent coordinator
to
resolve the impasse, and that L A and her husband could travel alone
without E V as they had previously done. After hearing
oral
submissions and in the exercise of its discretion, this Court
concluded that the present application will be heard as one
of
urgency. This Court was satisfied that an urgent relief is necessary
before 18 March 2024 and that L A had no other substantial
redress in
due course. Accordingly, the preliminary objection of E F V was not
upheld.
The merits of the
present application
[7]
Before this Court can deal with the merits, it is
important to discuss some of the pertinent legal principles that
obtain in applications
of this nature, particularly the issue of the
applicability of the standard of the best interests of the minor
child in considering
the present application.
The notion of the best
interests of the minor child
[8]
It was
vehemently contended by E F V that in refusing to give consent, he is
acting in the best interests of E V. It bears emphasis
that there is
a marked difference between the best interests of the minor child and
the interests of the parents. This concept
of the best interests of
the child, as a guiding principle, was first adopted in custody
decisions and was endorsed for the first
time in
Fletcher
v Fletcher.
[2]
In
Fletcher
,
the Appellate Division, as it then was, confirmed that the most
important factor to be considered in issues such as custody and
access is the best interests of the children and not the rights of
parents. Section 28(2) of the Constitution provides that a child’s
best interests are of paramount importance in every matter concerning
the child. This section was given content and meaning by
the
Constitutional Court in the matter of
Minister
of Welfare and Population Development v Fitzpatrick and Others
(
Fitzpatrick
).
[3]
Goldstone
J, writing for the majority, had the following to say:
[4]
“…
the
“best interests” standard appropriately has never been
given exhaustive content in either South African law or in
comparative international or foreign law. It is necessary that the
standard
should
be flexible as individual circumstances will determine which factors
secure
the best interests of a particular child.” (footnotes omitted)
[9]
What
arises from the above sentiments is that the ‘best interests’
standard is not an inflexible rule, and it must be
applied to the
specific facts relating to the particular child whose best interests
are under consideration. The CA was enacted
to give effect to certain
rights of children as contained in the Constitution.
[5]
Owing
to the flexibility of the standard, as confirmed in
Fitzpatrick
and
emboldened in
B
v M,
[6]
section
7(1) of the CA provides that whenever a provision of the CA requires
the best interests of the child standard to be applied,
certain
listed factors must be taken into account. From the provisions of
section 7(1) of the CA, it is perspicuous that the standard
must be
applied whenever a provision of the Act requires its application.
Section 9 specifically provides that in all matters concerning
the
care, protection and well-being of a child, the standard that the
child’s best interests are of paramount importance,
must be
applied. The question to be asked is, is the present application
concerning the care, protection and well-being of E V?
Since the
present application concerns the exercise of parental
responsibilities and rights, it must follow that it does not concern
the care, protection and well-being of E V. As to what care means,
section 1 of the CA provides an extensive technical definition.
It is
unnecessary for the purposes of this judgment to quote that extensive
definition. A protection must be one involving a harm
to a child.
Grammatically, the word protection means an act of keeping someone or
something safe from injury, damage, or loss,
or the state of being
protected. As to well-being, it must relate to that of E V and not of
the responsibilities and rights of
the parents. Generally, well-being
is the state of being comfortable, healthy, or happy. It is not at
all about the well-being
of the parents of E V.
[10]
The
key section in the present application is section 18(3) of the CA,
which provides that a parent or guardian is obligated to
give or
refuse any consent required by law in respect of the child. For the
purposes of the present application, the giving or
refusal of consent
involves a consent for the child’s departure from the Republic.
It is clear from these provisions that
the obligation to give or
refuse any consent is that of a parent or a guardian. Whilst the
exercise of the responsibility or right
ultimately affects the minor
child, the CA did not find it necessary to prescribe the application
of the standard of the best interests.
Unlike in section 28(4) of the
CA, the Act does not prescribe that when a Court is considering a
section 18(5) application, it
ought to be guided by the best
interests standard. Section 29(1) of the CA lists the statutory
applications which will require
the Court, in considering them, to be
guided by the principles set out in Chapter 2, to the extent that
those principles are applicable.
Conspicuously absent from section
29(1) is the mention of the section 18(5) application. Clearly, it is
not required that before
deciding to refuse or give consent, the
standard of the best interests must be applied. Section 31(1) simply
provides that the
person who decides within the contemplation of
section 18(3)
[7]
is
obligated to give due consideration to any views and wishes expressed
by the child, bearing in mind the child’s age, maturity
and
stage development.
[11]
Accordingly, this Court must take a firm view that
in giving or refusing consent, no best interests of the minor child
is involved.
What is involved is the exercise of parental
responsibilities and rights. A parent may, in an attempt to spite the
other parent,
refuse to give consent for very flimsy reasons and in
advancement of self-interest. The legislature was, in my view,
acutely aware
of such a possibility, hence the enactment of section
18(5) of the CA. The ideal position or default position contemplated
by the
legislature is that the consent of all persons is necessary.
However, if one of the parties refuses to give consent as fortified
to do so by section 18(3), the Court may intervene and order that the
consent of the one who unreasonably refuses is not necessary.
The
Court, in my view, as the upper guardian of all minors, is there to
unlock the legal impediment of consent by all in a situation
where
only one guardian has consented instead of all. The legal impediment
is such that if consent of all is not available, a child
cannot
depart the Republic unless a competent Court orders otherwise. The
otherwise is not that the child is permitted to travel,
but the
otherwise is that the consent of the other guardian is not necessary
for the sake of the departure.
The unlocking
mechanism and the requirements
[12]
Given
the view taken by this Court above, the unlocking mechanism is not
always the application of the best interests standard but,
in my
view, a Court must, taking into account all the circumstances of the
particular case, consider whether the necessary consent
was
unreasonably withheld by the other parent. Thus, the mechanism to be
employed before a Court orders that a consent is no longer
necessary,
is that of reasonableness of the conduct of the other refusing
guardian. All things being equal, if both parents consent,
without
being guided by the best interests standard, a Court’s
intervention is unnecessary. A Court’s intervention
is only
required where the default position does not arise. That being the
case, it must follow that the focal point of a Court
is the need for
the consent of all or no need of consent of the other. Applying the
principle that the High Court is the upper
guardian of all minor
children, a Court should engage in an assessment of the
reasonableness of the withholding of the necessary
consent. It may
well be so that factors to be taken into consideration when applying
the best interests standard finds application
when judging the
reasonableness of the withholding of the consent. For instance, the
child’s age, maturity and stage development
is a factor to be
taken into account when dealing with the standard.
[8]
There
can be no doubt that the refusal to give consent is a major decision
involving a child. Nowhere in his papers does E F V mention
that when
he took the decision to refuse consent, he sourced the views of E V
and gave them any consideration as compelled by section
31(1)(b)(i)
of the CA.
[13]
Both
counsel passionately argued that when faced with an application in
terms of section 18(5) of the CA, the only applicable standard
is
that of the best interests of the child. In other words, for L A’s
case, this Court must be satisfied that her consent
was given in the
best interests of E V and for E F V’s case, this Court must
also be satisfied that the refusal was in the
best interests of E V.
This Court enquired from both counsel as to whether a section 18(5)
application requires a different standard
when it is considered.
Both, particularly counsel for E F V, were emphatic that the only
standard to apply is that of the best
interests of the child. With
the limited time at its disposal, this Court was unable to find any
direct authority as to what standard
to apply specifically in a
section 18(5) application, nor did both counsel provide this Court
with any authority in support of
their argument. A view was expressed
by the authors C J Davel and A M Skelton in
Commentary
on the Children’s Act
,
[9]
that section 18(3)(c) of the CA contains a non-exhaustive list of
juristic acts. Thus juristic acts are those acts prescribed by
the
law. When the law, authorises a guardian to refuse to consent to a
juristic act, in my view, it sought to protect the rights
of such a
guardian. In other words, when a guardian refuses to give consent,
such a guardian is not acting unlawfully. He or she
is simply
exercising available rights. Importantly, when a guardian exercises
the available rights, he or she is not obligated
to consider the best
interests of the minor child. The legislature deemed it fit to
consider the exercise of juristic acts to be
major decisions, which,
given the age, maturity and stage development of the child, only
requires sourcing of views. In
LW
v DB,
[10]
the
learned Satchwell J stated the following:
“
The
‘best interest’ principle is used to provide a framework
for addressing the entire range of major issues affecting
children.
The
principle may be invoked in relation to and in the context of the
separation of the child from the family setting, adoption
and
comparable practices, parental responsibility for the upbringing and
development of the child, the child’s involvement
with the
police and the justice system, the provision of housing and social
services, access to schooling and so on.”
(footnotes
omitted)
[14]
The
learned Satchwell J continued and stated the following:
[11]
“
A
child’s best interest is the pre-eminent consideration amongst
all other considerations.
However,
the Legislature did not intend the “best interest” of a
child to be the sole or exclusive aspect to be considered
because it
did not prescribe that the child’s “best interests”
are the only factors to be considered or the sole
determinant of the
exercise of the court’s discretion. The ‘best interests’
is the paramount consideration within
the hierarchy or concatenation
of factors but it is not always the only factor receiving
consideration in matters concerning children.”
(footnotes
omitted)
[15]
There
is no doubt in my mind that when a Court considers an application in
terms of section 18(5) of the CA, it is required to exercise
discretion, in relation to whether a consent of the other person must
be dispensed with or not. It must be pointed out that such
an
application is not designed to compel the refusing party to consent.
Once the refusing party exercised that right,
[12]
such a
right, although not ideal, is to be respected. Thus, the exercise of
discretion is one dimensional – the consent of
all is no longer
a legal requirement. Regarding the exercise of discretion, Satchwell
J aptly stated the position thus:
[13]
“
This
Court sits as the upper guardian of minors.
The
discretion which we exercise is not circumscribed in the narrow or
strict sense of the word. It requires no onus. In the conventional
sense, to be satisfied when we determine whether or not a child can
accompany a parent who leaves the jurisdiction of this Court.”
[16]
This Court, must, when considering an application
in terms of section 18(5), bear in mind that in terms of section
18(4) of the
CA, each one of the guardians is competent to exercise,
independently and without the consent of the other, any right or
responsibility
arising from such guardianship. It is common cause
that L A independently gave her consent for E V’s departure.
She had that
competency and did not necessarily require to consider
the best interests of E V before she could do so. Equally, E F V has
the
competency to independently refuse to give consent. Unlike L A,
there is no evidence that E F V exercised the refusal after having
taken into account the views of E V. To my mind, such evinces
unreasonable withholding of a consent. On the other hand, it remains
undisputed that L A sourced and obtained the views of E V before
giving her own consent.
[17]
E F V only broadcasted to the Court his own
beliefs. He testified that he reasonably believes that E V does not
want to miss the
Menlo Netball Tournament. At the very least, that
belief is not predicated on any of E V’s views, however menial
they may
be considered to be. That, notwithstanding, E F V admitted
in the papers the stage development, maturity and the age of E V.
Undoubtedly,
in this day and age, a 113-year-oldcan independently
express his or her views on a matter that interests him or her.
Generally,
children enjoy travelling to places they have never been,
and if the places are overseas, the enjoyment is accelerated.
Accordingly,
applying the reasonableness mechanism as suggested by
this Court, it must be concluded that the decision to withhold the
consent
is not an informed one and it is an unreasonable one. The
conclusion to reach is that the consent of E F V is not necessary in
relation to the departure of E V from the Republic.
Conclusions
[18]
In light of all the above, the conclusion to reach
is that E F V withheld the necessary consent unreasonably, and as a
result, there
exists a sufficient legal basis for this Court to
direct that his consent is not necessary for the departure of E V to
the USA.
The remaining issue is that of costs. Inasmuch as Courts are
loath to make cost orders in matters involving children, this Court
takes a fervent view that E F V, having unreasonably withheld his
necessary consent, unreasonably opposed this application. His
opposition was not successful, thus, there is no reason why the costs
must not follow the results in this instance.
[19]
For all the above reasons, the following order is
made:
Order
1.
The draft order uploaded by the applicant and
marked X is hereby made an order of this Court.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Ms S
Kroep
Instructed
by:
Erasmus
Scheepers Attorneys Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
Ms
Y Van Der Laarse
Instructed
by:
VFV
Attorneys, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
05
March 2024
Date
of judgment:
11
March 2024
[1]
Act 38 of 2005 as
amended.
[2]
[1948]
1 All SA 218 (A);
1948
(1) SA 130 (A).
[3]
[2000] ZACC 6; 2000 (7)
BCLR 713; 2000 (3) SA 422 (CC).
[4]
Id at
para 18.
[5]
The Preamble of the CA.
[6]
2006 (9) BCLR 1034 (W).
[7]
Section 31(1)(b)(i) of
the CA.
[8]
See section 7(1)(g) of
the CA.
[9]
Davel,
CJ and Skelton, A (eds)
Commentary on
the Children’s Act
(Loose-leaf,
2007) at 3-6.
[10]
2020
(1) SA 169
(GJ) at para 13.
[11]
Id at
para 61.
[12]
The right is guaranteed
in section 18(3) of the CA.
[13]
LW
v DB
above
n 10 at para 5.
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