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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 536
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## K.T and Others v J.N.T and Another (056992/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 536 (13 June 2024)
K.T and Others v J.N.T and Another (056992/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 536 (13 June 2024)
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sino date 13 June 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
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
056992/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
13/6/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
K[...]
T[...]
First Applicant
H[...]
T[...]
Second
Applicant
C[...]
T[...]
Third Applicant
and
J[...]
N[...] T[...]
First
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
Second
Respondent
In
re
:
The
appointment of a curator
ad litem
for the minor
A[...]
T[...]
The minor
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 13 JUNE 2024
CP
WESLEY AJ
1.
It is
trite
law that this court, in its inherent jurisdiction, is the upper
guardian of all minor children with authority to determine
what is in
their best interest. Section 28(2) of the Constitution, 108 of 1996
(“Constitution”) provides that “
[a]
child’s best interests are of paramount importance in every
matter concerning the child.”
The Constitution accordingly makes it clear that in matters
concerning a child the court must adopt a child-centred approach.
This urgent application concerns a minor child by the name of A[...]
T[...] (“A[...]”). In determining the outcome of
the
application, this court is guided, first and foremost, by what is in
A[...]’s best interests.
2.
The applicants are A[...]’s three elder siblings. The first
respondent is their mother. The applicants seek an order that
Advocate DA de Kock, a member of the Pretoria Society of Advocates,
be appointed as curator
ad litem
for
A[...], in order to assist her in arbitration proceedings that the
applicants ared instituting against the first respondent,
as well as
in other litigation that may follow.
3.
The first respondent opposes the application. The first respondent
does so on the bases, first, that the application is not urgent and,
second, that the applicants have not made out a case on the
merits
for the grant of the relief that they seek. The second respondent has
not opposed the application and has played no part
in the proceedings
before this court.
4.
The applicants have outlined the circumstances that render the matter
urgent. A pre-arbitration meeting in the arbitration was already held
on 5 May 2023, obviously without A[...] being represented,
and the
arbitration is set to proceed. Presently the arbitration will proceed
without A[...] being represented thereat. Considering
the subject
matters of the arbitration, which is discussed herein below, it
cannot be allowed to be held over for the time that
it would take for
the present application to be heard on the normal opposed roll, which
could be in six months’ time. One
of the issues that was
discussed at the pre-arbitration meeting was A[...]’s position,
but no agreement could be reached
between the parties on the issue,
whether at the pre-arbitration meeting or in the weeks thereafter.
A[...] has an interest in
the subject matter of the arbitration and
she should be represented thereat at the earliest time. It is not in
A[...]’s best
interests that the arbitration should proceed
without the input of her representative. This court is in agreement
with the foresaid.
5.
The first respondent argues that the applicants have impermissibly
delayed the launching of this application, thus creating their own
urgency, and that they allowed the first respondent an impermissibly
short period of time to consider the application, give notice of
opposition and then prepare and deliver an answering affidavit.
The
applicants can be critiqued for not bringing the application sooner.
They can also be critiqued for not affording the first
respondent
more time to oppose same. In the end, however, these shortcomings are
not sufficient to render the application not urgent.
The
administration of justice has not
been brought into disrepute by the applicants, and the first
respondent has been able to adequately
present her case in the time
available.
6.
Ultimately, it is also in A[...]’s best interests that the
application is heard on an urgent basis.
7.
This court is accordingly of the view that the circumstances render
the matter urgent and that substantial redress will not be afforded
at a hearing in due course. The matter thus stands to be heard
on an
urgent basis.
8.
The arbitration concerns the administration of the T[...] Family
Trust (“the Trust”). The Trust was established in 1998,
with
Mr. P[...] T[...] and the first
respondent being the trustees. Mr. T[...] was the erstwhile husband
of the first respondent, and
is the father of the applicants and
A[...]. The beneficiaries of the Trust are the applicants, A[...] and
the first respondent.
Mr. T[...] passed away in 2021. After Mr.
T[...]’s demise, the first respondent appointed Mr. Petri de
Clerq as a trustee
of the Trust. Mr. De Clerq’s appointment as
a trustee of the Trust is being challenged by the applicants in the
arbitration.
9.
On 14
of
February 2024 the first respondent and Mr. De Clerq, acting as
trustees of the Trust, passed two resolutions. They resolved,
first,
that the immovable property that was owned by the Trust was to be
sold and, second, that the proceeds of the sale were to
be paid into
the Trust’s nominated bank account and thereafter were to be
distributed to the first respondent. These resolutions
are also
being challenged by the applicants in the
arbitration.
10.
It is beyond doubt that A[...], as a beneficiary of the Trust, has an
interest
in the subject matter of the arbitration. It is also beyond
doubt that A[...]’s interest in the subject matter of the
arbitration
is in conflict with the interest that the first
respondent has therein.
This conflict is present in circumstances where A[...], as a minor,
would ordinarily be represented in the arbitration by the first
respondent, who is her mother and natural guardian. This conflict
accordingly means that the first respondent cannot represent
A[...]
at the arbitration.
11.
In
Legal
Aid Board
in
re
Four
Children
[2011] JOL 27159
(SCA), the Supreme Court of Appeal addressed the
legal considerations concerning the appointment of a curator
ad
litem
in the following terms (references excluded):
“
[11]
The immediate hurdle to be overcome was that a minor is not generally
competent to engage in
litigation without the assistance of his or
her guardian. In this case their guardians were obviously
disqualified from doing so
because they would have had a conflict of
interest.
[12]
The law in this country has always been conscious of such a
difficulty and it provides
a ready and simple mechanism to overcome
it. It confers upon the courts a wide discretion to appoint a person
to substitute the
guardian – commonly known as a curator
ad
litem
, meaning, if the Latin term is intimidating, no more than a
person to conduct litigation in the name and in the interests of the
minor. As early as 1902 the subject was dealt with comprehensively by
the author of
The Judicial Practice of South Africa
:
‘
Such
curator is appointed by the court upon the petition of the minor, or,
if he is too young to understand it, of some relative
or friend or
some one who can shew a reasonable interest in him, setting forth
that he has no guardian, and is about to institute,
or defend, an
action at law, and stating also briefly the nature of the case, and
praying the court to appoint a
curator ad litem
to represent
him.
...
A minor may have
a
curator ad litem
appointed for him even against his will, or
without his knowledge, if it can be shewn to the court that the
application will be
for his benefit and to his interest.
...
As a general
rule a near relative is appointed
curator ad litem
, but this
is discretionary with the court, and frequently the advocate or
attorney employed for the minor has been appointed as
such.
From the time of
the appointment of the
curator ad litem
, the action is to be
conducted in the name of the minor, duly assisted by his curator ...
.
The duty of a
curator ad litem
is to represent the minor in the particular
case then pending, and to watch and protect his interest in the case
as a good and
prudent father would have done. ...’
[13]
The discretion that a court has is as broad as is required to meet
every exigency
and, if necessary, the court is capable of
supplementing or altering the ordinary authority of a curator so far
as the occasion
requires. Its sole guide in exercising its discretion
is the best interests of the minor.”
12.
Taking all of the facts and circumstances of the matter into account,
it is
this court’s view that a curator
ad
litem
must be appointed for A[...],
to represent her in the arbitration
as
well as in other litigation that may follow. It brooks no argument
that this is in the best interests of A[...].
13.
The first respondent has not challenged the powers that are sought to
be granted
to the
curator
ad
litem
, nor the competence or
appropriateness of Advocate de Kock to act as curator
ad
litem
for A[...].
14.
Regarding costs, both sets of parties
seek punitive cost orders against the other. This court is of the
view that costs should follow
the cause and the applicants are thus
entitled to a cost order against the first respondent. This cost
order will, however, be
on the party and party scale. In the court’s
view, although the first respondent’s opposition to the
application has
not succeeded, her opposition to the application
cannot be typified as being of the kind that would otherwise attract
a punitive
cost order.
15.
In the circumstances of this matter, the party and party cost award
to the applicants
stands to awarded on Scale C in terms of Rule 69A
16.
In the result I make the following order:
16.1
Prayers 2, 3 (3.1 to 3.3) and 4 of the notice of motion dated 23 May
2024 are granted.
16.2 The
first respondent is to pay the applicants’ costs in the
application, on the party and
party scale, and on Scale C in terms of
Rule 69A.
CP
WESLEY
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
For
applicants:
Adv
G Jacobs
instructed
by B Verster Attorneys Incorporated
For
the respondent:
Adv
DH Hinrichsen
instructed
by
Couzyn, Hertzog & Horak
Attorneys
Date heard:
05 June 2024
Date
of Judgment:
13
June 2024
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