Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 346South Africa
F.H v S.F.H (126003/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 346 (8 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## F.H v S.F.H (126003/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 346 (8 April 2024)
F.H v S.F.H (126003/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 346 (8 April 2024)
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sino date 8 April 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number:
126003/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
08 April 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
F[...]
H[...]
APPLICANT
And
S[...]
F[...] H[...]
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT-LEAVE
TO APPEAL
LESO
AJ,
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application in terms of Rule
49(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of the High Court for leave to appeal
to the Supreme Court
of Appeal alternatively the Full Court of the
High Court against Orders 1,2 and 6 granted by the court on 20
December 2023 and
the whole judgment dated 16 February 2024 including
order for costs.
BACKGROUND
2.
The
Orders made by the Court on 20 December 2023 read as follows:
1.
The application is not urgent;
2.
The application is dismissed;
3.
Adv Chris Maree is appointed to
conduct an investigation into the best interest of the two minor
children (the twins) with specific
reference to their relocation to
Franschhoek Western Cape Province, their primary place of residence
and the scope and ambit of
the applicant right and entitlement to
maintain contact with them;
4.
The primary residence of the two
minor children (the twins) remains with the respondent and the
applicant is entitled to maintain
contact with them as provided for
in the settlement agreement which was made an order of this court on
06 October 2022;
5.
The applicant and the respondent
are entitled to set this application down for hearing after receipt
of Adv Chris Maree report and
recommendation on conditions that the
parties comply with the provisions of this court practice directive;
6.
The applicant is ordered to pay
the costs of this application on the scale between attorney and
client scale.
3.
The above order was made pursuant to the
ex tempore judgment which was later transcribed to be reduced to a
written judgment on
16 February 2024. I will not reprise the reasons
for my judgment save to state that the court stands by the reasons in
the
ex tempore
judgment.
The
Orders as per
ex tempore
judgment of 16 February 2024
1.
that the applicant (F[...])shall
exercise reasonable contact rights with the minor children as named
in the papers, for physical
visitation during every alternate
weekends, reasonable telephone calls and videos, contact or as she
deems necessary, with the
physical contact to be exercised within
this Court's area
of jurisdiction and under the
supervision of the suitable person as agreed to by the parties.
2.
Christiaan Johannes Maree the
duly independent suitably qualified person will conduct the
investigation relating to the interest
of the minor children
including the relocation of the minor children and any other issues
concerning the well-being and interest
of the minor children and
compile a report.
3.
that the parties may approach
this Court on the same papers duly supplemented if necessary, after
having received the report of
Christiaan Johannes Maree or the duly
independent suitably qualified person.
4.
The primary residence of the
minor children will remain with the respondent (S[...]).
5.
The applicant(F[...]) is to pay
the cost on an attorney and client scale.
4.
At first glance the latter Order there
is no order for dismissal of the urgent application when Orders 1 and
3 are amplified to
read differently from the initial order.
Grounds
for leave to appeal (Court Orders 1,2 and 6)
5.
The applicant filed leave to appeal and
the supplementary leave to appeal after receiving a written ex
tempore judgment of 16 February
2024 that the court erred in the
following:
5.1
in finding that the application is not
urgent after making the ruling during the argument as follows: ‘
I
am going to grant condonation. I am satisfied that a case has been
made out and the matter is urgent’
;
5.2
in dismissing the application
notwithstanding the relief granted in paragraphs 3,4 and 5 of the
order
;
5.3
In making an order in terms of which
the parties may approach this Court on the same papers duly
supplemented if necessary, after
having received the report of
Christiaan Johannes Maree notwithstanding that the application was
dismissed
;
5.4
In granting an order in terms of
which the applicant should pay the costs of the application on the
scale as between attorney and
client, premised on the fact that the
merits of the application have not been canvassed or dealt with
.
Supplementary
grounds for leave to appeal are as follows:
6.
The applicant raised 10 grounds I will
only make reference to the first two grounds from the 10 grounds
raised by the applicant
in the supplementary leave to appeal, the
rest I will deal with under discussion later. The applicant's
additional grounds are
as follows:
6.1
Leso
AJ is functus officio and has no right to recall the order made on 20
December 2023;
6.2
Leso
AJ to make the following additional order on Friday, February 2024;
1.
The applicant (F[...]) shall exercise
reasonable contact rights with the minor children as named in the
papers for physical visitation
during every alternative or alternate
weekend, reasonable telephone calls and videos, contact or as she
deems necessary, with the
physical contact to be exercised within
this Court's area of jurisdiction and under the supervision of the
suitable person as agreed
to by the parties
.
SUBMISSIONS
ON LEAVE TO APPEAL
7.
In the application the applicant avers
firstly, that the court should have found that the application is
urgent hence the order
provided for on No. 3, 4 and 5 of the Court
Order and in the event that the application was not urgent, the judge
should have struck
the application from the roll with appropriate
costs. The applicant avers secondly, that the dismissal of the
application presupposes
that the court dealt with the merits of the
application which brings the end to the application. Lastly, the
applicant avers that
the Order made by the court is ambiguous,
strange confusing and bad in law. The applicant's counsel went on to
submit that once
the application is dismissed the court cannot
entertain the application in the future or reconsider the merits of
the application
in the future because the court is
functus
officio
.
8.
The applicants argued that the court
erred in the orders contained in the
ex
tempore
judgment, to be specific,
Order 1 which orders the applicant to exercise his rights under the
supervision and Order 3 which granted
parties leave to approach the
court on the same papers duly supplemented if necessary after having
received the report of Christiaan
Johannes Maree or the duly
independent suitably qualified person
.
The applicants and the Respondent counsel submitted that Order was an
error because the applicant's rights to contact were not
subject to
supervision. The respondent's counsel further submitted that the
respondent, S[...] is aware of the error and does not
intend to
enforce Order No.1.
ANALYSIS
9.
This application rests mainly on the
dismissal of the urgent application as contained in Orders 1 and 2 of
the order granted on
20 December 2023 and the cost order contained in
No. It is clear from the record which the applicant is in possession
of that orders
1 and 2 were a mistake as it is
recorded that the court had in fact made
a ruling that the matter was urgent. The applicant was aware that the
application was not
dismissed because the first Order was a draft
prepared by the counsel in agreement with the respondent's counsel.
In that Draft
Order there was no order for dismissal. The applicant
is outright correct that the subsequent orders could not be made by
the court
if the court found that the application was urgent but this
is not the case in this matter. he fact that the applicant insisted
that the court ruled that the matter was not urgent and yet he refers
to the finding of the court which indicates that the matter
was not
dismissed has no logic. The mistake on the Order was clarified and
corrected in the written judgment and the applicant's
counsel takes
no issue with such correction, consequently the amended order stands.
10.
I
now proceed with the applicant's submissions on the
ex
tempore
judgment dated 16 February 2024. The applicant took issue with the
date on which the court found that the minor children had relocated
as 21 August 2023 instead of 5 December 2023. The applicant is
correct that the court erred on the date because the evidence was
that the intention to relocate was in August suffice to state this
reason on the judgment does not change the form or content of
the
Order which is the operative part of the judgment. The is no basis
for appeal on this ground as it was held
in
SA
Eagle Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk v Harford
[1]
that ‘
an
order is what a losing party appeals against because it is an the
operative part of the judgmen
t’.
On the same theme this court in
Administrator,
Cape, and Another v Ntshwaqela and Others
[2]
declared
that ‘
there
can be an appeal only against a substantive order made by a court,
not against the reasons for judgment’
.
This ground cannot stand because the finding does not change the
order nor does it deserve to be before another court for hearing.
11.
the applicant's rights of contact with
the minor in order 1 is amplified with the applicant exercising his
rights under the supervision
and in order 3 the parties are granted
leave to approach the court ‘
on
the same papers duly supplemented if necessary after having received
the report of Christiaan Johannes Maree or the duly independent
suitably qualified person’.
It
is on the basis of the above the applicant tiled a supplementary
leave to appeal. It came out during the submission by counsels
that
there was an error in Order No.1 where the applicants are to exercise
‘
physical contact with the
minor children within this Court's area
of jurisdiction
and under the supervision of the suitable person as agreed to by the
parties’.
When one compares the Order
of 20 December 2023 and the current judgment there was no order of
supervision of the applicant's physical
visitation in the previous
order. Counsel for the applicant conceded that when one compares the
two Orders it shows that the Order
No. 1 on 16 February 2024 was a
patent error because the issue of supervision was not before this
court. I was shocked when the
counsel proceeded to incorrectly submit
that the court amended or varied the court of 20 December 2023
without the party's consent.
The applicant avers that they erred by
not complying with Rule 42(1) and (3) of the Uniform Rules of the
High Court by amending
or varying or altering it made on 20 December
2024 without the parties' consent and made an order which neither the
applicant nor
the respondent applied for and the courts acted
irregular and ultra vires constitutes prospect of success.
12.
I
note The counsel's submission follows the legal principle that the
court
has become
functus
officio
and its
jurisdiction in the case having fully and finally exercised its
authority over the subject matter ceases. This general
principle
of the common law applicable to the variation of orders of court were
summarised
in
Firestone
South African (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro A.G.
[3]
In Para 11 the court with reference to
Estate
Garlick v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1934
AD 499
at
502
held that t
he
general, well-established principle is that ‘
once
the court has duly pronounced a final judgment or order, it has
itself no authority to set aside or to correct, alter or supplement
it…In this case there are however
certain
exceptions to general principle’
.
In
Daniel
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another
2013
(11) BCLR 1241
(CC), the Constitutional Court stated that ‘rule
42 of the Uniform Rules creates exceptions to this principle.’
13.
I
will deal later with the variation or alteration of Order No.1 of 16
February 2024 but first deal with exception(s) as found in
the
applicant submission that the judgment of 16 February 2024
pre-supposes that the investigations are not finalised because the
judgment reads that ‘
the
applicant and the respondent may approach this Court on the same
papers duly supplemented if necessary, after having received
the
report of Christiaan Johannes Maree or the duly independent suitably
qualified person to ascertain the best interest of the
minor children
concerned for the appropriate relief’
..
Firstly, the submission by the counsel that the order is
incorrect because the report on the relocation of the minor children
is
pending and any party can approach the court should any party wish
to challenge such report.
Secondly, the
respondent counsel was correct when she submitted that there is a
pending litigation which the court was made aware
of in the urgent
application. In the main application, the applicant contradicts
himself that the report is finalized while during
oral submission the
order that counsel flaunted in court that he came up with the draft
contained the provision of the report on
relocation in any event, in
the judgment the court indicated that it was aware of the pending
litigation between the parties and
the parties were merely given
leave to pursue this matter should they wish to do.
14.
In
Carter v Haworth
[4]
[2009]
ZASCA 19
,
the
court dealt with the appealability and non-appealable order where t
he
proceedings in the trial court were not finally concluded. In para
10, with reference to
Zweni
v
Minister
of Law and Order
;
Ndlovu
v Santam Ltd
[1992]
ZASCA 197
; the court
found
that
a
n
appealable ‘judgment or order’ as intended by s 20(1) of
the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 has three attributes, first,
it must
be final in effect and not susceptible to alteration by the court of
first instance. Second, it must be definitive of the
rights of the
parties in the sense that the person seeking relief has, for example,
been granted definite and distinct relief.
Third, the ‘judgment
or order’ must have the effect of disposing of at least a
substantial portion of the relief claimed
.
15.
I am
conscious of the fact that the conflicting order above is prejudicial
to the applicant because it affects the applicant's rights
of
visitation and contact with the minor children as inscribed in
the
report of Adv Maree who recommended that the ‘
contact
enjoyed and specified in the divorce settlement between the parties
be reinstated…and that serious consideration
be given to
create more opportunities for the applicant to share quality time
with the minor.
.’
the order is not appeallable because
I
am of the view that the court has not finally disposed of the matter
because no
definite
and distinct relief
as
sought by the applicant was granted unless the parties settle or
agree otherwise after the investigation.
16.
The question of whether the court can
vary, correct or alter the Orders of December 2023 and February 2024
where it is found to
have erred or made a mistake. I am of the view
that this court has not finalized and therefore is entitled to
correct with ambiguities,
errors and omissions found in the
ex
tempore
judgment. Rule 42 of the
Uniform Rules provides for the court to reconsider its decision
because the court is not faultless or
infallible. The court is simply
correcting its mistakes without extending its powers or acting ultra
vires as the applicant suggested.
It
is in the interest of the proper administration of justice that the
court exercises its powers to correct the Order.
17.
The
appeal would not have a reasonable prospect of success despite the
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration as
envisaged
in section 17(1)(a)(ii).
The
applicant has no automatic right to appeal, he faces a legal
challenge in terms of
Section 17(1)(a)(i)
or (ii) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
where
leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge concerned is of the
opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of
success,
or there is some other compelling reason why it should be heard
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.
18.
Unfortunately, in this application, the
law has changed and the bar has been raised for the application to
succeed. The test is
not as simple as it used to be, the law on
appeal seek assurance than just a probability of a reasonable
success. The applicant
prospects cannot be found wanting.
CONCLUSION
19.
The purpose of the judgment on 16
February 2024 was to merely reduce the ex tempore judgment to a word
document without any alterations
or amendments.
The
appeal would not have a reasonable prospect of success
because the court is within its rights
and power to correct Order 1 of 16 February 2024 by error by removing
the supervision of
the applicant’s rights to read as follows:
Order
No. 1 in the ex tempore judgment is amended to read:
‘
The
applicant (F[...]) shall exercise reasonable contact rights with the
minor children as named in the papers for physical visitation
during
every alternative or alternate weekend, reasonable telephone calls
and videos, contact or as she deems necessary, with the
physical
contact to be exercised within this Court's area of jurisdiction’.
20.
The amended Court Order of 20 December
2023 is the appropriate Order granted by the court save for Orders
No. 1 and 2.
COSTS
21.
The applicant contends that the costs
should have been reserved because the merits are still to be
determined. The question that
arises from the above facts is why the
applicant filed this application despite him being aware that merits
were dealt with. I
do not doubt that this application was motivated
by costs that the applicant envisaged he would recover in the appeal
should he
succeed because during the oral submissions by the
applicant's counsel, the court voiced the view on this issue to which
the applicant's
counsel responded ‘…
yes
but the cost is not the only reason
…’
If one pays attention to this ground, there is no doubt that the
applicant seeks an order to strike off the application
with the view
that the costs order would have been reserved. This finding is
on the basis that the applicant proposes that
the costs of the
application should be reserved for the final determination after the
finalization of the investigation and recommendation
by Adv Chris
Maree. It is not clear what the applicant meant by an appropriate
cost order upon dismissal of the matter.
22.
Despite the parties agreeing that the
order has a patent error, the animosity between the counsels was such
that they could agree
to on anything that could have simplified the
process. I could not find a sound and rational basis why the
applicant would insist
on the appeal while he could simply make the
court aware of the error for the court to correct it. The court did
not shy away from
expressing its views on what the court believed was
the reason the application was brought, the costs order which the
applicant
thinks he will recover should he succeed in the appeal.
because more suspicious when the applicant insisted on the SCA
hearing
the appeal. There are various less costly ways to correct the
judgment and the stance taken by the applicant does not advance the
noble cause of justice. The shouting of the name of the Judge whose
name is already on the Order and the conduct of the senior
counsel
during both applications was too loud to ignore.
23.
It
is clear as a daylight that this part in inserted by mistake, there
was no need for the senior counsel theatrical about it. I
was not
surprised when there was a confrontation in court between two
counsels because the senior counsel refused to withdraw the
defamatory statement against the junior counsel and continued to mock
her accent. In
Mkete
v Mkutschu
[5]
the
court held that ‘
a
successful appellant may be deprived of the costs of appeal or be
ordered to pay the costs of appeal if the appellant's conduct
has
been mala fide or malicious’
and in
Maharaj
v Balesar
[6]
the
court found that ‘
the
appellant may be refused the costs of appeal or even be ordered to
pay such costs if the appellant succeeds in obtaining only
a minor
variation in the form of correction of a patent error or a very small
reduction or a purely technical alteration but fails
on merits’
.
24.
I was surprised that the applicant
started arguments about the interpretation of sections 31 and 32 of
the Children Act on whether
consent is only necessary for the
relocation outside the Republic of South Africa and strongly argued
that this appeal should be
referred to the SCA for this issue to be
resolved as it had been problematic. The issue here was that
the respondent did
not comply with section 31(2) of the Children Act
No. 38 of 2005 because the respondent had no right or entitlement to
remove the
minor children from the court's area of jurisdiction. In
the application, the SCA has been his court of choice. The counsel
who
represented the applicant is Senior counsel who during the
submission made it a point that remind the court that when he sits on
the bench as the court he does things differently, in this case, his
actions were embarrassing for a person who sat on the bench
never
mind a senior counsel.
I
NOW MAKE THE FOLLOWING ORDER:
ORDER
1.
The application for
leave to appeal is dismissed;
2.
Applicant to pay the
costs of the application.
Leso
J (Acting Judge of the
High
Court Pretoria)
Date
of hearing
04 March 2024
Date
of judgment
08 April 2024
For
the Applicant
Attorney:
Van
Der Merwe Attorneys Inc
Contacts:
087 700
3219/072 079 3614
reception@vdmlegal.com
Counsel:
F
W Botes SC
For
the Respondent
Attorney:
Strydom
& Bredenkamp Inc
Contact:
012 460
1930
henk@lawsb.co.za
Counsel:
Adv
L Van Der Westhuisen
082 636
9121
This
judgment is deposed of electronically in terms of the Directives of
the Judge President of this Division by transmission of
s copy to the
parties legal representatives and by uploading same on
Caseline.
[1]
See
SA
Eagle Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
.
v
Harford
[1992] ZASCA 42.
[2]
See
Administrator
,
Cape
,
&
Another
v
.
Ntshwaqela
&
Others
,
1990(1) SA 705.
[3]
See
Firestone
South Africa
(
Pty
)
Ltd
v Genticuro A.G. 1977
(
4
)
SA
.
298
.
[4]
Carter
v Haworth
[2009]
ZASCA 19.
[5]
See
Mkete
v Mkutschu
1915 EDL 170.
[6]
See
Maharaj
v Balesar1931 NPD 370.
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