Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 341South Africa
T.K v N.M.P (81131/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 341 (5 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## T.K v N.M.P (81131/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 341 (5 April 2024)
T.K v N.M.P (81131/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 341 (5 April 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Before
His Lordship Mr Justice Labuschagne AJ on 5 April 2024
Case
No: 81131/2018
In
the matter between:
T[...]
K[...]
Applicant
and
N[...]
M[...] P[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an opposed motion that proceeded by default in the unopposed
motion
court on 2 April 2024.Full papers were exchanged and the
applicant had filed heads as well.
[2]
The applicant and the respondent were married in community of
property
on 4 June 2004. In 2008 divorce proceedings commenced
and the parties were divorced on 20 October 2008. The court
order
dated 20 October 2008 provides firstly for the dissolution of
the marriage. Secondly, specific assets in the common estate
were awarded to the applicant. These include the movables in
her possession, a television set which the respondent had to
deliver
to the applicant, a motor vehicle, all policies in the name of the
applicant and an amount of R410 000.00 which the
applicant had
already received from the respondent’s pension.
[3]
The applicant and the respondent are the co-owners of
immovable
property which was not expressly referred to in the divorce order.
The applicant applies in terms of Rule 42(1)(b)
for an order in the
following terms:
“
1.
That the court order granted by the above Honourable Court under case
number 41023/2008 be varied and
add
(sic)
the following terms:
1.1
That the immovable property described as Erf 2[...], D[...]
Ext. 7, Pretoria, Gauteng Province be sold and the proceeds be shared
equally between the parties;
1.2
That both parties should endeavour to sign documents for the
sale of the immovable property.
2.
That should the respondent fail within 7 (seven) days of granting
this order to take the necessary
steps, the sheriff be authorised to
take such steps on the respondent’s behalf.
3.
That the respondent be ordered to pay occupational rent in the amount
of R517 500.00 (Five
hundred and Seventeenth Thousand Five
Hundred Rand).
4.
Costs of suit.
5.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[4]
In 2018 the parties tried to negotiate a contract in
terms of which
the applicant would sell her interest in the immovable property to
the respondent, but this came to naught.
[5]
The respondent has remained in the property from the
date of
divorce. The applicant feels aggrieved and is seeking
“
occupational rent”
.
[6]
Although this application was launched in 2018, there
is no
explanation in the papers as to why this matter comes to court only
in 2024. There is no explanation for the delay
between 2008 up
to 2018 as to why the parties did not resolve their dispute regarding
the commonly owned immovable property.
[7]
It is a requirement for relief under Rule 42 that an
application to
correct or supplement a court order should be brought within a
reasonable time. (
See:Mostert v Nedbank
2014 JDR 0760
(KZP) at par [4]).
[8]
Rule 42 is an exception to the general rule that a court
is
functus
officio
after it has pronounced on a matter by means of a
judgment.
[9]
Rule 42(1)(b) provides that a court may rescind or vary
any order or
judgment in which there is an ambiguity, or a patent error or
omission, but only to the extent of such ambiguity,
error or
omission. In
T v B
[2018] ZAFSHC 133
the Free State High
Court stated the following at [26]:
“
[26]
Notwithstanding the general rule, our highest courts have also
recognised a number of exceptions
to the general rule which are not
all inclusive and may be extended to meet the constraints of the
particular case. These
courts weighed up the principle of
finality of judgments against what is just, equitable and sound in
law. These exceptions
include:
(a)
Supplementing of judgment: the principal judgment or
order may be supplemented in respect of accessory or consequential
matters,
for example costs or interest on the judgment debt, which
the court overlooked or inadvertently omitted to grant;
(b)
Clarification of judgment: the court may clarify its
judgment or order if, on a proper interpretation, the meaning thereof
remains obscure, ambiguous or otherwise uncertain, so as to give
effect to its true intention, provided it does not thereby alter
the
‘sense and substance’ of the judgment or order.”
[10]
It is further impermissible to utilise Rule 42 for purposes of
changing
the import and substance of the order granted.
[11]
In this instance, the relief sought by the applicant does not flow
from
the particulars of claim that gave rise to the order. At
best an order directing the division of the joint estate could be
argued, but the parties had already recorded those aspects of such
division in the court order that was granted upon dissolution
of the
marriage. The applicant did not seek occupational rent in the
divorce. That claim arises from time that has passed
subsequent
to the court order. Subsequent conduct cannot form the basis of an
application to supplement or amend a court order
retrospectively.
The court was simply unaware of facts yet to occur. To add
relief not claimed would amount to the
granting of relief in an
un-pleaded case. That is impermissible. It suffices to
state that the relief sought is not
competent in terms of Rule
42(1)(b) as the additions are not true additions. They change
the import of the order granted.
And they are based on
subsequent facts.
[12]
The Rule 42 application was therefore not brought within a reasonable
time and substantively it fails to establish a basis for the relief
sought. This does not mean that the applicant is without
a
remedy.
[13]
When a marriage in community of property is dissolved by divorce,
that
puts an end to the joint estate. A plaintiff may claim for
a division of the joint estate or may claim for a forfeiture of
the
benefits arising from the marriage in community of property. In
this instance, neither of the aforesaid took place.
However,
the division of the joint estate flows as a matter of law from the
decree of divorce, whether an order is granted directing
the division
or not. (
See: Keyser v Keyser
1979(4) SA 12 (T) at
p 15 H).
[14]
Regardless of whether an order is granted directing that the joint
estate
be divided upon divorce or not, the estate is then divided
into equal shares between the parties after all the debts of the
joint
estate have been paid. (Ibid).
[15]
The applicant’s contention that she is entitled to occupational
rent is a claim related to an accounting between co-owners when there
has been a delay in effecting the division of the joint estate.
The respondent contends that he alone has, since 2008, been paying
all the expenses including the bond payments, maintenance and
municipal and utility costs related to the property. This makes
it apparent that the parties will require an accounting process
which
neither party has claimed in these proceedings.
[16]
The applicant tried to motivate alternative relief for a declarator
that
the joint estate be divided. As already pointed out, such
a division must occur as a matter of law upon the decree of the
divorce, whether there is a specific order to that effect or not. The
relief is therefore unnecessary.
[17]
The applicant and the respondent have all the rights and
obligations
that flow from joint ownership.
[18]
Counsel for the applicant prepared helpful supplementary heads of
argument.
The applicant readily concedes that the dispute about
the sale of the immovable property is one that can be resolved by
employing
the
actio communi dividundo
. The applicant
however contends that, where she has multiple causes of action, it is
her choice which one to exercise. The
proposition is correct, but the
remedy chosen is not available to the applicant insofar as she has
not established an entitlement
to relief under Rule 42.
[19]
The court order granted is not in need of clarification as it is not
obscure, ambiguous or otherwise uncertain. In order to supplement an
order, the applicant must establish an oversight or omission
by the
court. There was none as far as the intended additions are concerned.
They arose because the parties could not agree on
the fate of the
property after the court order was made.
[20]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
No order as to costs.
LABUSCHAGNE,
AJ
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