Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 296South Africa
I.B.F v A.D.K and Another (015928/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 296 (22 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## I.B.F v A.D.K and Another (015928/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 296 (22 March 2024)
I.B.F v A.D.K and Another (015928/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 296 (22 March 2024)
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sino date 22 March 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number:
2023-015928
Date of hearing: 18
March 2024
Date delivered:
22 March 2024
1. Reportable: No
2. Of interest to
other judges: No
3. Revised
22
March 2024
In the matter between:
IBF
Applicant
and
ADK
First Respondent
THE OFFICE OF THE
FAMILY ADVOCATE
Second Respondent
IN ITS CAPACITY AS
CENTRAL
AUTHORITY IN TERMS OF
THE
HAGUE CONVENTION ON
THE CNIL ASPECTS
OF INTERNATIONAL CHILD
ABDUCTION
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL J:
[1]
This judgment relates to three issues:
Firstly, I intend to provide reasons for the costs order that I shall
make in respect of
the first respondent's urgent application of 15
September 2023. Secondly, I shall give reasons for the dismissal of
the first respondent's
postponement application, in which the first
respondent sought to postpone the final determination of the rule
nisi
which
I granted on 31 August 2023. Finally,
I
intend to give reasons for the confirmation
of the rule
nisi.
The history of the matter is fully
canvassed in my judgment
of
31 August 2023, and l will not repeat the contents thereof.
THE COSTS OF 15
SEPTEMBER 2023
[2]
On 30 August 2023 the first respondent's
attorney wrote to the applicant's attorney. He indicated that the
first respondent wished
to take the children on holiday to Spain from
29 September 2023 to 10 October 2023. These dates included two days
of schooling.
On 5 September 2023 the applicant's attorney replied,
seeking details of the envisaged trip, including an itinerary, flight
times
and dates.
[3]
On 6 September 2023 the first respondent's
attorney replied to the applicant in a highly aggressive manner. He
alleged that it was
impossible to provide an itinerary until the
applicant had agreed to allow the children to accompany the first
respondent. This
reasoning is off course spurious, because there was
nothing preventing the first respondent
from providing a provisional itinerary,
subject to confirmation once the applicant had consented, and all air
tickets had been purchased.
On 12 September 2023 the first
respondent's attorney sought the assistance of Adv Maree in
facilitating the holiday arrangements.
When Adv Maree had not
responded by the following day, the first respondent launched the
urgent application giving approximately
48 hours' notice of the
application, and affording the applicant a day to respond.
[4]
When the matter came before me, I was told
that the first respondent considered the application to be moot. I
removed the application
from the roll and undertook to consider the
costs.
[5) In my view the urgent
application was a clear abuse of court processes. The application was
launched on the most urgent of timelines,
some eight days after the
applicant had requested details of the holiday. Urgency was not
specifically dealt with as is required
by the practice directives,
nor do I believe that the application was urgent at all. Furthermore,
the request by the applicant
for an itinerary was reasonable, and had
the first respondent acted in a more conciliatory manner, the
application may not have
been necessary at all. I intend to express
my displeasure with the first respondent's conduct by making a
punitive costs order.
THE
POSTPONEMENT
APPLICATION
[6]
On 11 March 2024 the first respondent
launched an application for the postponement of the main application
and the counter-application.
The first applicant also sought
extensive interim relief, including,
inter
a/ia,
an investigation
by the Office of the Family Advocate,
extensive relief in respect of the care of the minor children, an
order in respect of holiday
contact with the minor children, and the
appointment of a parental coordinator who would be empowered to
appoint a therapist for
the children.
[7]
The basis for the postponement application
was the allegation that the applicant had continued to alienate the
children from the
first respondent.
The
first respondent wished to "prevent the further abuse of my
children...
as
well as to restore my relationship with my children." To this
end the first respondent wanted a different parental coordinator
and
therapist in place.
[8]
In my view the postponement application
should fail for a number of reasons. Firstly, the first respondent
has provided no evidence
of alienation, save for his own conjecture.
He has, furthermore, not demonstrated how the proposed way forward
would benefit the
children. The parental coordinator, Adv Maree, and
the therapist, Ms Linstrom are familiar with the children and their
issues and
have gained their trust. The first respondent's proposed
order seems intended to benefit the first respondent's purposes
alone,
and not the children. I also set out below that
I
believe
that
it
is in the children's
best
interests
that the matter
be settled
once
and
for
all.
For
those
reasons
I
intend
to
dismiss
the postponement application.
CONFIRMATION OF THE
RULE
NISI
[9]
The first respondent referred to a number
of incidents that had occurred during and after he had had holiday
contact with the children
in December 2023. Early on in the holiday M
tried to break open the door to the house in which they resided in
Hartenbos. The first
respondent provided a partial transcript of his
conversation
with
M in which she spoke to him in the most abominable manner. M
expressed her hatred of the first applicant during very distressing
conversation. M's conduct resulted in the first respondent giving her
a hiding. M then ran away, only to be found an hour later.
The
assault (corporal punishment is assault) on
M
was so distressing that a neighbour of
the first respondent called the applicant and told her that the first
respondent
was
busy beating the child to death. The first respondent denies the
assault.
[10) There can be
no doubt that the relationship between M and the first respondent is
broken, and in urgent need of restoration.
First respondent's
relationship with his son J is only marginally better.
[11]
The first applicant also provided a
transcript of his conversation with the applicant. It is quite clear
that the relationship between
them is acrimonious, to say the least.
The first respondent even accuses the applicant of
sabotaging the children's cellular phones,
and of instructing
the children
how
to
sabotage their phones, in order to frustrate his contact with the
children.
[12]
The applicant denies any wrongdoing. She
says that M tried to run away after the first respondent had given
her a hiding. She says
that the children use foul language at times,
which she attributes to the manner in which the applicant and the
first respondent
had spoken to one another previously, whilst they
were still living together. She says that the first respondent has
cursed the
children at times, and, she says, this behaviour that
should be dealt with in therapy.
[13]
The report of Adv Maree is insightful. He
says that after the December holidays more than thirteen tracking
devices were found in
the children's belongings. According to the
children the first respondent had taken their purses and suitcases
and had travelled
into town. Presumably the first respondent then
installed the tracking devices. The first respondent's attempts to
keep track of
the children had resulted in them feeling resentful and
mistrustful towards the first respondent.
[14]
Evidently, the children enjoyed the
December holiday, at least to an extent, although the incident with M
marred their enjoyment,
as
did the presence of the first respondent's girlfriend. However, the
fact that the first respondent has gone to such great lengths
to keep
track of the children is
of
great concern to the children.
[15]
Adv. Maree's sense is that the first
respondent
wishes
to remove him
as
parental
coordinator
because
he
does
not
pander
to
the
first
respondent's
wishes.
He says that he has been privy to some of the first respondent's
telephonic conversations with the first respondent, and
that they are
the normal conversations that one can expect between a parent and a
child. He also says that the first respondent's
contention
that he has no access to the children's
sporting activities is untrue, as he was present when the first
respondent was added to
a sports Whatsapp group. In essence, Adv
Maree believes
that
the
first respondent wants to have his way, immaterial of anyone else's
views.
[16]
In my view the first respondent harbours a
deep-seated resentment, and experiences frustration, at the fact that
the children now
reside in South Africa. He has great antipathy
towards the applicant and also towards the country, which he regards
as excessively
dangerous. His resentment seems to express itself in
his aggressive behaviour towards the applicant, the children
and Adv Maree. On his own version as
expressed to Adv Maree, the first respondent has ''ways and means"
of tracking the applicant's
movements, even in Mauritius, and also
that of the children. He wishes, I believe, both Adv Maree and Ms
Linstrom to be removed
from the case so that he can appoint a team
that is more sympathetic towards his wishes. The first respondent
even went as far
as obtaining the services of a social worker to
assist him with the children without the knowledge of Adv Maree, and
without applicant's
consent.
[17]
There is little doubt that M's behaviour on
holiday caused the first respondent
to
assault her, causing her to run away and only to be found on
the beach
some
while
later.
However,
a parent
must
show
restraint and the first respondent cannot
blame his own uncontrolled conduct on the child.
[18] I am concerned
that the children discuss matters concerning their parents' financial
affairs, matters of which they should
not have any knowledge. I have
previously expressed my concern that the children are obviously being
exposed to discussions regarding
the disputes between their parents,
that they should not be exposed to. Such disclosures can only come
from the applicant or her
parents. However, although that may have a
peripheral effect on the children's views on their father, it seems
to me that the first
respondent is to a large extent the author of
his own misfortune as far as his relationship with the children is
concerned. His
aggressive approach is clearly not in the children's
best interests, and ultimately it impinges on his relationship with
the children.
[19] Overall, the
children seem to be settled in their current home and school, and it
is, in my view, in their best interests
to have certainty as to their
circumstances. For that reason, I intend to confirm the rule
nisi.
However, going forward, there should be an assessment of all the
parties, to establish what interventions may be necessary to assist
the parties and the children to stabilize their relationships.
[20] I have been
asked to confirm the maintenance order handed down in St Maarten, and
to make a costs order in favour of
the applicant relating to certain
travel costs. Those issue have not been fully canvassed in any of the
papers, and I decline to
do so.
COSTS
[21]
It is more often than not the practice not
to make costs orders in family
matters
such
as these.
However, the egregious conduct of the first
•
respondent
merits,
in
my
view, a punitive costs order. The first respondent
has brought two meritless urgent applications. The tone of his
attor_ney's letters
has been unceasingly hostile, contrary to the
intentions of the
Children's Act, 2005
which requires parties to take
a reconciliatory approach to matters involving children.
[22]
The first respondent has had a near
obsessive concern that the children's passports are kept by the
applicant, and he launched a
campaign over a period of time
attempting to gain possession of the passports. He did so by
claiming, untruthfully, that he needed
the passports for the children
to travel by air in South Africa. He has now brought an application
for a postponement at the last
minute, again without merit.
[23]
The first respondent has not made payment
of any of the maintenance ordered by the Courts in St Maarten. He has
refused to pay Adv.
Maree's account, despite my order that he should
pay 50% of those costs. By 12 March 2024 the first respondent had not
paid Ms
Linstrom. I am also told that the first respondent has caused
criminal charges to be brought against the applicant, and that he
has
attached her bank accounts, causing her severe financial distress.
The first respondent has shown no interest in implementing
the rule
nisi
in an
amicable manner that would benefit the best interests of the
children, and he opposes its confirmation.
[24] All of the
aforesaid, added to the first respondent's unacceptable behaviour in
tracking the children and his behaviour
towards M, lead me to believe
that the first respondent has no interest in dealing with the matter
in a conciliatory manner. He
refuses to consider any views other than
his own. In the colloquial, it is his way or the highway.
[25]
In
the
circumstances
I
intend
to
confirm
the rule
nisi,
albeit
in slightly different terms.
[26] I note that I
failed to deal with the first respondent's counter application
in my judgment of 31 August 2023. It
follows that having granted the
applicant's application, the counter-application should have been
formally dismissed. I shall record
as much in this order.
[27]
I
make the following
order:
(27.1) The first
respondent shall pay the costs of the urgent application of 15
September 2023 on the attorney/client scale, including
the costs of
two counsel where so employed.
(27.2) The first
respondent's application for a postponement is dismissed with costs
on an attorney/client scale, including the
costs of two counsel where
so employed.
(27.3) Paragraphs 1, 2,
3, 4, 5, 7, 9, and 10 of the rule
nisi
dated
31
August
2023
is
made
final.
(27.4) When the minor
children are in the first respondent's care, the applicant may
exercise the same telephonic contact as that
enjoyed by the first
respondent in terms of this order.
(27.5) The minor children
shall undergo therapy with Ms.Elsie Lindstrom and the first
respondent shall effect payment of her account
within 5 days of
receipt of an invoice. In the event that the applicant makes payment
of such costs, the first respondent shall
reimburse the applicant
within 5 days of receipt of a demand for payment.
(27.6) The first
respondent shall pay the costs of the parental coordinator, which
costs shall be paid within 5 days of receipt
of an invoice. In the
event that the applicant makes payment of such costs, the first
respondent shall reimburse the applicant
within 5 days of receipt of
a demand for payment.
(27.7) The parental
coordinator shall within 10 days hereof appoint a registered clinical
psychologist who shall assess the parties
and the minor children, and
report back to this Court with a recommendation regarding the
children's best interests relating to
contact between the first
respondent and the minor children, and relating to possible parental
alienation.
(27.8) The parties shall
give their full cooperation to the clinical psychologist during the
assessment process.
(27.9) The first
respondent shall be solely Hable for payment of the costs of the
clinical assessment, which costs shall be paid
within 5 days of
receipt of an invoice. In the event that the applicant makes payment
of such costs, the first respondent shall
reimburse the applicant
within 5 days of receipt of a demand for payment.
(27.10) The first
respondent shall pay the costs of the application subsequent to 31
August 2023 on an attorney/client scale, including
the costs of two
counsel where so employed.
(27.11) The
counter-application dated 27 February 2023 is dismissed.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR
APPLICANT:
Adv
M
Haskins
SC
Adv
B Bergentuin
ATTORNEY
FOR
APPLICANT:
Arthur Channon Attorneys
COUNSEL FOR FIRST
RESPONDENT: Adv. F Botes SC
ATTORNEYS FOR FIRST
RESPONDENT: Hartzenberg Inc
DATE
HEARD:
18 March 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
22 March 2024
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