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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 402
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## M.N v A.L.N (094387/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 402 (22 April 2024)
M.N v A.L.N (094387/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 402 (22 April 2024)
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sino date 22 April 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
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Rule 43 application –
Abuse of
process
– Lengthy affidavits with annexures –
Applicant seeking maintenance and arrear maintenance –
Applicant
in much stronger financial position and respondent has
been paying maintenance for child – Maintenance sought
excessive
and not commensurate with parties’ means –
Abuse of process and contrary to ethos of Rule 43 to place parties
on equal footing – Primary care and residence of child not
in dispute – Undesirable to bring application simply
to
confirm status quo – Application dismissed with costs to be
taxed on Scale A – Uniform Rule 43.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case no: 094387/23
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE: 22 April 2024
SIGNATURE
M[...]
N[...]
Applicant
And
A[...]
L[...]
N[...]
Respondent
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
[1]
This rule 43 application was launched by the applicant on 27 November
2023. The founding
affidavit is 58 pages long and, together with its
annexures, is 144 pages. The confirmatory affidavits, of which there
are 4, are
unsigned and signed copies were then filed separately
bringing the entirety of the founding papers to 160 pages. To this,
the respondent
then had to answer. As a result, his answer is 76
pages long. In addition, both parties filed further affidavits in
terms of rule
43(5): the respondent’s rule 43(5) is 17 pages
whilst the applicant’s is 90 pages. The applicant then also
filed an
amended notice of motion.
[2]
The parties then each filed heads of argument – those total
another 133 pages.
And then, lest it be forgotten, each party filed
their respective Financial Disclosure Forms (FDF) – these total
another
265 pages.
[3]
Rule 43 is a
sui
generis
type
of application. The rule itself makes provision for the filing of
affidavits and the time periods within which a party must
do so. It
also makes provision for the manner in which a matter is to be set
down for hearing. This being so, and the rule being
specific and
self-contained, rule 6 does not apply to rule 43 applications, and a
party does not have a choice as to which rule
of court to follow when
launching rule 43 proceedings.
[1]
[4]
This also applies to the filing of any supplementary affidavit as
rule 43(5) provides:
“
The
court may hear such evidence as it considers necessary and may
dismiss the application or make such order as it deems fit to
ensure
a just and expeditious decision.”
[5]
Rules 43(2) and 43(3) regulate the affidavits to be filed:
a)
rule 43(2)(a) provides that the applicant “
shall deliver a
sworn statement in the nature of a declaration setting out the relief
claimed and the grounds therefor…”
b)
rule 43(3)(a) provides that the opposing affidavit shall be “
in
the nature of a plea.”
[6]
One cannot lose sight of the fact that pleadings consist of a summary
of the facts
upon which a party will rely in order to either bring
its suit or defend a suit. A pleading does not, and should not,
contain evidence.
But – in general - the eventual trial will
conclude, and be decided, based on the evidence
inter
alia
,
presented by various witnesses. Motion proceedings brought in terms
of rule 6 are very different – affidavits must contain
evidence
upon which a party relies to found or oppose an application. A rule
43 application is no different save in one material
respect: rule 6
does not provide at all for the length of the affidavits that may be
filed and allows for 3 sets of affidavits
to be filed; rule 43 is
markedly different as it provides for the affidavits to be filed “
in
the nature of”
a
declaration and a plea and also provides that only 2 sets of
affidavits may be filed unless the court permits further evidence
under rule 43(5). In
CT
v MT and Others
[2]
,
this was explained as follows:
“…
the
rule-maker is saying, I think, that in the quest for brevity the
claim and defence should be more like a declaration and a plea
than
like a founding affidavit and opposing affidavit.”
[3]
[7]
The reason for this is clearly contained in rule 43(5): it is “
to
ensure a just and expeditious decision”
and a
court cannot “
amend
a Rule of Court by simply following its own head.”
[4]
[8]
In a host of authorities as far back as 1961,
[5]
until 2019,
[6]
our courts
roundly discouraged the type of abuse of process evident in this
case, by either striking the matter from the roll or
dismissing it or
making no order on the papers. In
Smit
v Smit
[7]
the
application was 69 pages long and the court remarked:
“
To
frustrate and/or defeat the purpose or object of a Rule of the Court
is an abuse of the process of this Court. When the Rule
was first
promulgated, the parties had to file an unsworn statement in the
nature of a declaration or a plea. The rulemaker then
saw fit to
change the Rule so that a sworn statement in the nature of a
declaration or a plea had to be filed. Initially the unsworn
statements were in the nature of declarations or pleas. After the
Rule was changed so that the sworn statements had to be filed,
these
statements became more and more detailed. I am advised by the
Registrar of this Court that it has now become almost a common
practice to file lengthy affidavits and annexures, which would not
properly form part of a pleading, in Rule 43 proceedings,
nothwithstanding
the judgment in this and other Divisions to the
contrary.
In
my view, the affidavits filed in this matter amount to an abuse of
the process of this Court…”
[8]
[9]
In
Andrade
v Andrade
[9]
,
Erasmus J again emphasized that “
(t)he
object of the Rule generally accepted by the Courts is that
applications of this kind
[10]
should
be dealt with as inexpensively and expeditiously as possible”
,
and that an application to strike out impermissible unnecessary
paragraphs and/or annexures is not a proper procedure under rule
43
as “
(t)he
procedures under Rule 43 have been specifically devised by the
Rulemaker in order to save time and costs.”
[11]
[10]
In
Du
Preez v Du Preez
[12]
,
the court chastised the attorneys for filing an application of 192
pages and stated:
“
[3]
Rule 43, it is well known, is a special procedure aimed at the
expeditious resolution of
maintenance issues pendente lite…
[5]
Prolixity in a rule 43 proceeding is an abuse of process because it
defeats the purpose
of the rule…”
[11]
In 2020, Rogers J reiterated the position that
“
[22]
In regard to procedure, the applicant has not complained about the
requirement in rule 43 that the claim
should be made by a sworn
statement ‘in the nature of a declaration’ (rule 43(2))
and that the defence should be made
by a sworn reply ‘in the
nature of a plea’. Precisely what the quoted phrases mean is
open to debate. Clearly the rule-maker
intended that the sworn
statements should not be prolix. Rule 43 was intended to provide
inexpensive and expeditious interim relief
(S v S and Another
2019
(6) SA 1
(CC) para 43).”
[13]
[12]
Whilst this has, in general, been the position held by courts across
South Africa, of course
there will be circumstances where a court
will allow a deviation from the rules in circumstances where the
issues may be somewhat
complex or difficult.
[14]
It cannot be over-empahasized that a “one size fits all”
approach cannot be implemented in rule 43 applications: each
set of
circumstances and family dynamics are unique and a court must always
bear in mind that, where the interests of minor children
are
involved, the Constitution provides that in every matter concerning a
child, that child’s best interests are of paramount
importance.
[15]
This
constitutional imperative is repeated in s9 of the Children’s
Act 38 of 2005.
[16]
[13]
On 29 September 2017, Rules 43(7) and 43(8) were deleted. These two
rules stipulated the fees
payable to practitioners. These set fees
could not be deviated from without the permission of the court.
[17]
Whilst lengthy applications were, prior to this, the exception,
subsequently it seems that they have become the proverbial rule.
The
decisions of
TS
v TS
[18]
and
E
v E
[19]
it appears, have done little to ameliorate the position and, in fact,
are being used liberally to exacerbate it. But I do not interpret
these two decisions as allowing the kind of abuse of the rule that
parties these days seem to advocate.
[14]
In
TS v TS
, Splig J lamented that the Constitutional
imperatives particular to adjudicating the ‘best interests of
the child’
principle, particularly in matters regarding the
interim maintenance of minor children, are obfuscated by the succinct
affidavits
required by rules 43(2) and 43(3). However, his solution
to the issue was twofold: firstly, that the parties must file a
proper
FDF which would be available not just for the divorce action,
but also to the judge in the rule 43 application, and secondly the
provisions of rule 43(5) which would allow for further evidence to be
made available to the court at its behest.
[15]
In
E
v E
the
Full Court reiterated that “
(t)he
procedure envisaged in rule 43 is not of a normal application
commenced by way of a notice of motion. It is a succinct application,
aimed at providing the applicant interim relief, speedily and
expeditiously.”
[20]
Whilst
the Full Court ruled that prolixity may no longer be used by the
courts as a reason to strike a matter from the roll,
[21]
it could not – and certainly did not – remove a court’s
discretion to prevent an abuse of its process by a litigant.
I also
do not interpret
E
v E
as
allowing parties to file applications which are – as in this
matter – hundreds of pages long, without proper justification.
[16]
The Rules Board is established in terms of s2 of the Rules Board for
Courts of Law Act no 107
of 1955. In terms of s6(1):
“
(1)
The Board may, with a view to the efficient, expeditious and uniform
administration of justice in the Supreme Court of Appeal,
the High
Courts and the lower courts, from time to time on a regular basis
review existing rules of court and, subject to the approval
of the
Minister, make, amend or repeal rules for the Supreme Court of
Appeal, the High Courts and the lower courts regulating-
(a) the practice and
procedure in connection with litigation, including the time
within
which and the manner in which appeal shall be noted;”
[17]
Thus, it falls within the sole purview of the Rules Board to amend
the rules of court –
this would include rules 43(2) and 43(3).
A court’s Practice Directives achieve a very different
objective: in my view they
streamline the conduct of business within
a division to ensure the efficient running of the court so that
justice may be seen to
be done and all litigants – whether in
person or represented - have proper access to justice. That can only
be achieved if
everyone is subjected to the same processes. I say
this because parties have, on several occasions, argued that
E
v E
has
effectively done away with the requirement that the affidavits must
be brief – this can never be the interpretation and
(as far as
I am aware) no directive has been issued by any court in which this
is stated. In any event, even if that was the intention
of the Full
Court, it cannot be sustained because only the Rules Board has the
authority to amend the rule.
[22]
[18]
As I have already explained, the lengthy affidavits filed in this
application were not filed
at the behest of the court in order to
adjudicate the best interests of the two-year old minor child –
they were filed at
the inception of the matter and in order to oppose
it. As I have also set out, this is not the proper procedure to be
adopted.
Given the manner in which the applicant has litigated this
application, I find that the application constitutes little more than
an abuse of process. It is impossible to strike out allegations in
the affidavit as it is all interwoven and would leave the application
without any foundation. Accordingly, the application will be
dismissed with costs.
[19]
Even were I persuaded that the applicant is entitled, as of right, to
file a lengthy application
and Rule 43(5) affidavit, I am in any
event of the view that her application is an abuse of the rule 43
process.
[20]
In this matter, the minor child was born on 7 January 2022 and is now
2 years and 3 months old.
The minutiae of the parties’
relationship, the allegations levelled by the applicant against the
respondent to justify the
curtailed contact arrangements she seeks,
took some 95 paragraphs to set out and hark back to events in 2015 –
i.e. 7 years
prior to the minor child’s birth. Primary care and
residence of the minor child is not in issue in this application;
what
is in issue is the extent of the respondent’s contact to
the minor child.
[21]
The applicant then not only claims maintenance, but also arrear
maintenance for the minor child.
Her maintenance claim (as argued) is
R35 629,42 per month
[23]
and
the arrear maintenance is approximately R234 784.
[24]
But context here is everything: lest one may think that the
respondent has shirked his financial responsibilities to the minor
child, he has not. He has paid maintenance for him of approximately
R28 500 per month (including a cash contribution of R13 500
per
month) since 2023.
[22]
And then one must also take into account the parties respective
earning capacities: the respondent
earns R81 000 per month net and
receives a quarterly bonus. This puts his net salary in the region of
about R91 000 per month.
He has two sons from a previous marriage for
whom he pays a total of R25 000 per month and then he still pays the
applicant another
R28 500 per month for their two-year old child.
Thus, before he pays any of his own expenses, more than half his
salary is utilized
towards the maintenance of his three children. He
has no notable assets of value and no notable savings.
[23]
In contrast, the applicant earns R64 309 per month and receives a
gross bonus of
R624 000 annually.
She also receives a net rental income from a property of R2 700 per
month. This puts her net monthly income
at approximately R105 000.
Added to this is the fact that she has other assets, including
savings of R400 000.
[24]
The respondent is presently paying more maintenance for his two-year
old son than for both of
his older children. This is in circumstances
where his financial position cannot be equated to that of the
applicant and where
she is clearly in a much stronger financial
position than he. I find her prayer for more maintenance for the
minor child excessive
and not commensurate with the parties’
means. It is an abuse of process and it is also contrary to the
entire ethos of rule
43 which is,
inter alia
, to place parties
on as equal a footing as possible vis-à-vis maintenance and
litigation.
[25]
In sum, this application is an abuse as:
(a)
primary care and residence of the minor child is not in dispute and
no order is required
to settle that issue at this stage. It is
undesirable and unnecessary to bring an application simply to confirm
a
status quo
;
(b)
the respondent’s disputed terms of contact require an
investigation by the Office
of the Family Advocate – both
parties seek this relief in their respective orders. There is no
reason at all for this court
to be burdened with making only such an
order as the parties have had since November 2023 to complete and
serve an Annexure B and
they can still do so;
[25]
(c)
the respondent is paying maintenance and has done so since 2023.
There is therefore
no need demonstrated on these papers for the court
to interfere or to protect the minor child’s interests by
making such
an order – again, the court cannot be required to
simply confirm a status quo;
(d)
the applicant has failed to prove that she has made out a case
pendente lite
for arrear maintenance;
(e)
the applicant abandoned her request for a contribution to her legal
costs – correctly
so in my view.
[26]
Therefore, I am of the view that no matter how one views this matter,
the application is an abuse of
process.
ORDER
[27]
The application is dismissed with costs to be taxed on Scale A.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
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 email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 22 April 2024.
Appearances:
For
appellant :
Adv
LM Nigrini
Instructed
by:
Ulrich
Roux and Associates
For
respondent:
Adv
C van Schalkwyk
Instructed
by:
Bronwyn
May Attorneys Inc
Date
of hearing:
15
April 2024
Da
te of judgment:
22
April 2024
[1]
Leppan
v Leppan
1988 (4) SA 455
(W) at 57E-G
[2]
2020
(3) SA 409 (WCC)
[3]
At
para 23
[4]
Leppam
v Leppan (supra)
[5]
Colman
v Colman
1967 (1) SA 291
(C) at 292H: “
the
whole spirit of Rule 43 seems to me to demand that there should be
only a very brief statement by the applicant of the
reasons
why he or she is asking for the relied claimed and an equally
succinct reply by the respondent and that the Court is
then to do
its best to arrive expeditiously at a decision as to what order
should be made pendente lite.”
[6]
E
v E
2019 (5) SA 566
(GJ)
[7]
1978
(2) SA720 (W)
[8]
At
722G-H
[9]
1982
(4) SA 854
(O) at 855F
[10]
Whether
under rule 43(1) or rule 43(6)
[11]
At
856A
[12]
2009
(6) SA 28 (T)
[13]
CT
v MT and Others supra
[14]
Dodo
v Dodo
1990 (2) SA 77
(W) at 79C-F
[15]
S28(2)
[16]
“
In
all matters concerning the care, protection and well-being of a
child the standard that the child’s best interest is
of
paramount importance, must be applied.”
[17]
Varkel
v Varkel
1967 (4) SA 129
(C) at 131H; Micklem v Micklem 1988 (#) SA
259(C) at 265E-F
[18]
2018
(3) SA 572 (GJ)
[19]
2019
(5) SA 566 (GJ)
[20]
At
para 25
[21]
Its
view was that the unnecessary or irrelevant material should be
struck out
[22]
And
in any event, the Directive of this Division have not been so
amended
[23]
Plus
50% of two extra-mural activities on a quarterly basis and 50% of
the minor child’s speech therapy sessions
[24]
Per
the Rule 43(5) amendment
[25]
In
terms of the Mediation of Certain Divorce Matters Act 24 of 1987
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