Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 823South Africa
G.J.W v L.W (2023-114308) [2024] ZAGPPHC 823 (8 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 August 2024
Headnotes
in Trust by JJR Attorneys pending conclusion of the main divorce action between the parties.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## G.J.W v L.W (2023-114308) [2024] ZAGPPHC 823 (8 August 2024)
G.J.W v L.W (2023-114308) [2024] ZAGPPHC 823 (8 August 2024)
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sino date 8 August 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Accrual
–
Dispute
regarding balance of restrained funds – Claim to share of
net proceeds of property to secure claim for accrual
–
Whether remedy sought is anti-dissipation or quasi-vindicatory in
nature – Respondent has shown fiscal responsibility
regarding tertiary education of children – Absence of clear
evidence of an intention to dissipate – Respondent
has
sufficient assets available to meet applicant’s claim –
Applicant failed to establish a case for confirmation
of interim
order.
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:
2023-114308
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
SIGNATURE:
DATE
:
8/8/24
In
the application of:
G[…]
J[…]
W[…]
Applicant
and
L[…]
W[…]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1] The applicant and the
respondent are in the throes of a divorce. They are married out of
community of property with inclusion
of the accrual system. Both
declared their assets to have a nil value at commencement of the
marriage. Despite this declaration,
the respondent was the owner of a
property in Mooikloof, Pretoria, which became the matrimonial home.
[2] The applicant left
the matrimonial home on 22 December 2022. In October 2023 the
applicant heard that the property was being
sold. He asked his
attorneys to find out the details, but three letters later, there was
still no response. On 2 November 2023
the applicant launched an
urgent
ex parte
anti-dissipation application seeking that the
net proceeds of the sale of the respondent’s immovable property
at Mooikloof
be held in Trust by JJR Attorneys pending conclusion of
the main divorce action between the parties.
[3] On 7 November 2023
the
ex parte
application was heard and a
rule
nisi
was granted by Kooverjee J, calling upon the respondent to show
cause on 11 March 2024 why the order should not be confirmed and
made
final.
[4] The order of the
court was served on the respondent and the application became
opposed. The
rule
nisi
was extended on 11 March 2024 to
22 July 2024 for the final hearing. This is the judgment on the
return day.
[5] Pursuant to the
rule
nisi
that was granted, the applicant, on 23 February 2024,
caused the net proceeds of the sale of the Mooikloof property to be
transferred
to JJR Attorneys, being an amount of R2 824 777.65.
Since 23 February 2024 the entire proceeds have been held by JJR
Attorneys.
[6] Transfer of the
property had taken place on 2 February 2024 based on an offer to
purchase dated 20 September 2023 for the amount
of R4,2 million.
[7] The parties were
married on 10 July 2004 and two children have been born of the
marriage. The eldest, a daughter, is registered
as a first year
medical student at the University of Pretoria for 2024. Their son is
a Grade 11 scholar at G[…] High School.
[8] The marriage has
irretrievably broken down. Divorce proceedings commenced on 5 July
2023 under case number 65613/2023 and pleadings
have closed in that
action.
[9] On 23 October 2023
the respondent launched a rule 43 application. The applicant answered
to the rule 43 proceedings on 6 November
2023, the day before the
ex
parte
urgent application was heard.The rule 43 application was
argued on 5 June 2024.
[10] In the period after
launching of the urgent application and until 5 June 2024, the
applicant’s stated intention was to
secure part of the net
proceeds of the aforesaid sale for purposes of payment of his claim
against the respondent for an accrual.
The respondent intended
securing the other part of the funds for purposes of the tertiary
education of the minor children. For
this purpose, she intended
setting aside R1,5 million (R750 000.00 for each child) to pay
for their tertiary education. The
balance would be part of the
accrual.
[11] At the hearing of
the rule 43 application on 5 June 2024, the parties agreed that they
would seek the following order when
the matter is argued on the
return date:
“
4.1 R1,5
million (One and a Half Million Rand) of the proceeds held in trust
by JJR Attorneys be paid over to Weavind & Weavind
Attorneys’
Trust account (‘Weavind’) to be administered by the
director Niel Cloete of Weavind:
4.1.1 R750 000.00
(Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand) to be allocated to the major
child in respect of her tertiary educational
needs comprising of:
4.1.1.1 University
fees;
4.1.1.2 Hostel fees;
4.1.1.3 Textbooks,
stationary, scrubs, educational equipment and/or any educational
related need as reasonably required by the tertiary
institution from
time to time;
4.1.2 R750 000.00
(Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand) be allocated to the minor
child’s tertiary education (as defined
in 4.1.1 supra);
4.1.3 Weavind is to
invest the money stipulated in paras 4.1.1 and 4.1.2 supra in
separate interest bearing accounts.”
[12] Due to the aforesaid
agreement R1,5 million of the funds that are subject to the interim
order will be transferred to Weavind
& Weavind to pay for the
tertiary education of the children. The dispute before me therefore
relates to the balance of the
restrained funds, being approximately
R1,3 million. This amount is held by JJR Attorneys pending the
determination of this application.
[13] At the hearing,
counsel for the applicant indicated that he approaches the court on
two bases, namely:
13.1 Anti-dissipation;
and/or
13.2 On the basis of his
claim to a share of the net proceeds of the property to secure his
claim for an accrual, being quasi-vindicatory
in nature.
[14] At the hearing of
the matter, counsel for the respondent contended that counsel for the
applicant’s reliance on the alternative
argument of the
applicant’s claim being quasi-vindicatory in nature was not
foreshadowed and that she sought an opportunity
to provide
supplementary heads of argument. Both parties were offered an
opportunity to file such heads and have done so.
[15] In argument, counsel
for the applicant contended that the causes of action are not true
alternatives. He contended that, if
required to comply with the
anti-dissipation requirements as set out in
Knox D’Arcy (see
below)
, the onus would be higher than if the matter were dealt
with as quasi-vindicatory in nature. The applicant contends the
following:
15.1 That he has a
substantial accrual claim against the respondent in the divorce
action, the accrual in her estate being far more
than in his. He
contends that the respondent was guilty of violent, disingenuous,
erratic and insincere conduct and had a habit
of incurring
significant expenses without prior approval, while requiring the
applicant to cover those costs. He contends that
the respondent’s
failure to respond to three of the applicant’s attorneys’
emails (10 October, 13 October and
25 October 2023) and one telephone
call (18 October 2023), requesting information regarding the status
of the sale of the Mooikloof
property, was to be taken into account.
15.2 He contends that the
respondent’s plea that was filed on 1 November 2023 indicating
a change in tack as far as the net
proceeds were concerned, caused
alarm. In that plea the respondent seeks a forfeiture of the
applicant’s claim to the accrual,
whereas previously she
contended that the funds would be available to meet his claim for an
accrual.
[16] Based on the alarm
caused by the respondent’s conduct, the applicant contends that
he had no other remedy available to
him to secure the net proceeds as
a source for payment of his claim for accrual.
[17] These contentions
are disputed by the respondent. She contends that she was unaware of
the applicant’s fear of dissipation
of the net proceeds at the
time when his attorneys wrote three letters enquiring about the
status of the sale of the Mooikloof
property. She contends that she
fully explained the delay in responding to the letters (12 calendar
days). She contends that the
claim for forfeiture in the plea does
not constitute an intention to dissipate the net proceeds of the sale
and she denies that
there was a change in tack or a mutating case as
contended for by the applicant.
[18] In the rule 43
application the respondent (as applicant in those proceedings)
contends in the founding affidavit that she intends
dealing with the
proceeds of the sale of the property as follows:
18.1 R750 000.00
would be placed in a separate bank account by the respondent for the
benefit of the children’s tertiary
education;
18.2 All expenses related
to the mayor child’s tertiary education shall be paid from the
separate account;
18.3 The respondent shall
provide the applicant with a copy of the bank statements of such
account;
18.4 Should any tertiary
education expenses of the mayor child not exhaust the funds held and
the mayor child reaches the age of
25, then the funds held in the
account should be transferred to the mayor child;
18.5 There was a similar
paragraph pertaining to the minor child for a similar amount. She
then contends that the balance of the
proceeds would form part of the
accrual.
[19] The applicant’s
contention that he has a substantial claim for an accrual is based on
the respondent’s financial
disclosure form, indicating a net
asset value of R12 458 660.28. By contrast, the net asset value of
the applicant’s estate
amounted to R555 583.57. Based on
these figures, the applicant contends that he has a claim for
accrual, being half of the
difference between the aforesaid amounts,
of R5 673 746.57.
[20] The three letters
referred to above are foundational to the applicant’s fear of
dissipation. The applicant’s attorneys
had requested an
undertaking in a letter of 13 October 2023 that the net proceeds of
the property would be held in Trust until
the divorce proceedings
were finalised so as to ensure that the proceeds of the sale are
preserved and are not squandered, thereby
protecting the applicant’s
right in the accrual claim. This first letter met with no response.
[21] The applicant’s
attorneys of record then contacted the respondent’s attorneys
of record on 18 October 2023 and
enquired directly with Mr Venter
regarding the status of the sale. Mr Venter indicated that he did not
have the facts and that
he would revert during the course of the next
week. This conversation was placed on record on 19 October 2023. A
further letter
was sent on 25 October 2023, requesting the detail
relating to the status of the immovable property. The respondent’s
attorneys
then advised that they would revert in due course if so
instructed. This was taken as an indication that there may be no
response
unless instructions were received to that effect.
[22] On 1 November 2023
the respondent filed her plea in the divorce action claiming
forfeiture of the applicant’s share in
the accrual. This was
the final event that triggered the launching of the urgent
application. The respondent’s ostensible
about-face caused
alarm. Where the respondent had previously indicated that such net
proceeds would be available as part of the
accrual, she now claimed
forfeiture of his claim to any benefits arising from the accrual. The
applicant contends that this change
in tack, coupled with a history
of alleged violent and erratic behaviour, indicated to the applicant
that the respondent would
squander the proceeds in an attempt to
reduce or eliminate the disparity in their respective accruals.
[23] These facts were
sufficient to persuade Kooverjee J to grant an interim order. The
application was however brought
ex parte
and without the
respondent’s version being before court.
GRANTING
OF
EX PARTE
ANTI-DISSIPATORY RELIEF
[24] The granting of an
ex parte
anti-dissipatory relief
pendente lite
is an
extraordinary remedy that must be justified by facts.
[25] In
Knox D’Arcy
and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(AD) Grosskopf
JA stated the following regarding anti-dissipatory relief:
“
The question
which arises from this approach is whether an applicant need show a
particular state of mind on the part of the respondent,
i.e. that he
is getting rid of the funds, or is likely to do so, with the
intention of defeating the claims of creditors. Having
regard to the
purpose of this type of interdict the answer must be, I consider,
yes, except possibly in exceptional cases. As I
have said, the effect
of the interdict is to prevent the respondent from freely dealing
with his own property to which the applicant
lays no claim. Justice
may require this restriction in cases where the respondent is shown
to be acting
mala
fide
with
the intention of preventing execution in respect of the applicant’s
claim. However, there would not normally be any justification
to
compel a respondent to regulate his
bona
fide
expenditure
so as to retain funds in his patrimony for the payment of claims
(particularly disputed ones) against him. I am not,
of course, at the
moment dealing with special situations which might arise, for
instance, by contract or under the law of insolvency.”
[26] In quasi-vindicatory
claims, the requirement of showing an intention on the part of a
respondent to defeat the claim of creditors
need not be established.
J Cane in an article “Prejudgment Mareva-type Interdicts in
South African Law”, SALJ (1997)
Volume 114, page 77 describes a
quasi-vindicatory or quasi-proprietary claim as one in which the
applicant claims delivery of specific
property under some legal right
to possession. Such a claim would be an exceptional case, in the
context of the quote from
Knox D’Arcy
supra, in which an
applicant does not have to prove a risk that the respondent is likely
to remove or hide assets to ensure that
when judgment is given, there
are no traceable assets against which a judgment can be executed
(page 87).The impact of the distinction
in quasi-vindicatory claims
is that an apprehension of irreparable harm is presumed. It is
however open to a respondent to rebut
this presumption (Cane, page
79).
[27] Cane states at page
79:
“
In cases in
which the applicant has a vindicatory or quasi-vindicatory claim, he
would not be required to prove a well-grounded
apprehension of
irreparable harm, for there is a rebuttable presumption of
irreparable injury if the interdict is not granted.
This does not
mean however, that the question of irreparable harm is completely
irrelevant. First it is ‘open to the respondent
to defeat the
claim for the interdict by rebutting the presumption’.”
[28] Counsel for the
respondent contended that, where there is an identified earmarked
fund to which the respondent establishes
a claim, then those funds
can be restrained by an interdict
pendente lite
to preserve
execution of his claim. In this instance, the claim would be a claim
to share in the difference in accrual between the
estates of the
parties to a divorce.
[29] In
Fey N.O. v Van
der Westhuizen and Others
2005 (2) SA 236
(C) Meer J found, in a
matter in which the trustee of an estate was seeking to secure assets
pending a claim in terms of the Insolvency
Act to such assets,
applied the following dictum in
Hawkins’ Trustees v Corio
Saw & Planing Mills Ltd and Others
1923 WLD 125
(per Tindal
J):
“
The principle
seems to be that if the thing itself which forms the subject matter
of the disposition is in the hands of the creditor,
on a prima facie
case being made out by the trustee that he is entitled to reclaim it
for the estate, the court will attach the
thing until the trustees’
case can be finally decided, even if mala fides or collusion is not
established and the thing itself
is money, and even if the
probability of irreparable loss has not been established.”
(
Fey
(
supra
)
at 251 B – D).
[30] The question is
whether a claim to share in an accrual in divorce proceedings is
quasi-vindicatory. It is in the end a claim
sounding in money.
[31] Money that is in a
bank account become comingled with other money in the bank through
commixtio. One consequence of the principle
of commixtio is that a
creditor cannot interdict the dissipation of an amount of money from
a bank account on the basis of some
vindicatory or ownership right to
it. (
Carsten and Another v Kullmann and Others
(case number
49174/2017) – unreported – per WGH Van der Linde J at
[19].
[32] In
Fedsure Life
Assurance Co Ltd v Worldwide African Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Others
2003 (3) SA 268
(W) the following is stated at par
[29]:
“
Money, like any
species of property, may be interdicted pending a vindicatory or
quasi-vindicatory claim for that money. There is
however a problem in
this regard.”
[33] As Schutz JA said in
First National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA) at 967 H – I:
“
It might seem a
simple thing to recover stolen money from one found in possession of
it. But the matter is complicated by the rule
in our law, and
inevitable rule it seems to me, flowing from physical reality, that
once money is mixed with other money without
the owner’s
consent, ownership in it passes by operation of law.”
[34] However, what a
creditor can do by means of a quasi-vindicatory action is to lay
claim to money in a bank account, if the money
has deliberately been
kept apart from other money, and thus forms part of an identifiable
fund intended for a specific purpose.
The creditor must have an
underlying legal right against a debtor to whose credit the money
stands, to lay claim to the money (
Carsten
(
supra
) at
par [20]).
[35] What a creditor can
also do, is to show that its debtor is threatening to dissipate or
secrete its assets to avoid having to
satisfy its creditor’s
judgment granted some day down the line, is to interdict such
dissipation pending the determination
of liability and the obtaining
of the judgment. The object of such an interdict is to prevent the
creditor being stuck with what
would otherwise be a hollow judgment
(
Carsten
(
supra
) at par [21]).
[36] The respondent
provided an explanation for her failure to timeously respond. She
contends that she was busy finalising her
rule 43 sworn statement
that was dated 23 October 2023. The applicant then served a notice of
bar in respect of her plea to his
counterclaim, and she had to attend
to filing that plea. The children were in the midst of their final
exams and the respondent,
and her children were preparing to move out
of the Mooikloof property.
[37] The applicant
summarises his grounds for the anti-dissipatory relief in paragraph
40 of his founding affidavit, which reads:
“
The fact that
no response is forthcoming from the attorney and that the respondent
now all of a sudden has change of tact
(sic)
and a
mutated case, coupled with the history of the matter and the
respondent’s disingenuous, violent and erratic behaviour
leave
no doubt in my mind that, once registration of transfer occurs, the
respondent will squander the proceeds of the sale in
an attempt to
reduce, alternatively eliminate, the disparity and accrual between my
estate and the respondent’s estate.”
[38] The respondent
denies that the applicant has made out a case for anti-dissipatory
relief on the aforesaid grounds. She contends
that, since 25 October
2023, the applicant has been aware of the respondent’s
intentions in respect of the Mooikloof proceeds
as set out in the
founding affidavit of the rule 43 application.
[39] In Attorney Grove’s
letter of 25 October 2023, the applicant’s attorney raised no
dispute on any aspect of the
respondent’s intentions regarding
the proceeds. On 6 November 2023 the applicant, responding to the
respondent’s rule
43 application, raised no objection regarding
her intentions regarding the proceeds of the Mooikloof property. He
contended as
follows:
“
36.2 I have
taken note of how the applicant wishes to deal with the proceeds of
the said property, however, I do not believe that
the applicant has
my best interests in mind especially with regard to the asset that
forms part of the joint estate and ultimately
the accrual.
36.3 As a result
thereof, the proceeds of the sale of the immovable property should be
placed in a Trust account pending the finalisation
of the divorce.”
[40] This response,
signed a day before the ex parte application was brought, expresses
no concern about dissipation of the net
proceeds of the sale. One
would expect the applicant, having already commenced with the ex
parte application on 2 November 2023,
to have expressed his fear of
dissipation in answer to the rule 43 application. At least, since his
fear of dissipation was the
driving force for the urgent ex parte
application, he should have disclosed that his answering affidavit ,
signed a day before,
does not express his fear of dissipation. And he
should have explained why not. In the rule 43 order granted on 5 June
2024, the
respondent contends that the applicant conceded and agreed
that R1,5 million of the net proceeds be held separately for the
children’s
education. This had been a bone of contention until
then. She however contends that her intentions had been clear since
October
2023.
[41] In the applicant’s
replying affidavit he has contended that the following are irrelevant
for purposes of adjudicating
this application:
41.1 The history of the
sale of Mooikloof;
41.2 Contact with the
children;
41.3 Consultation with
the Family Advocate.
[42] In his founding
affidavit there were three grounds for the fear of dissipation. Only
one remained. The applicant’s case
regarding his fear of
dissipation has therefore shrunk substantially since granting of the
interim order on 7 November 2023.
[43] The applicant’s
reliance on the respondent’s alleged violent, ingenious and
insincere conduct are closely related
to the applicant’s lack
of contact with his children since February 2023.
43.1 The respondent
contends that the children do not wish to have contact with their
father, being angry with him for being in
a relationship with a third
party. The applicant ostensibly attributes damage to his property on
25 September 2023 to the respondent,
where she contends that her son
destroyed the applicant’s property because he was angry with
his father.
43.2 The respondent
apparently damaged a wedding photo of the parties on 25 December
2022. That is two days after the applicant
left the common home. How
this is linked to the risk of dissipation of assets in November 2023
is not fully explained.
43.3 The applicant’s
son is 16 and attends a High School at which the mother of one of the
other scholars is the third party
with whom the applicant has a
relationship. He is angry about this. There is no ostensible basis
for attributing the damage to
the applicant’s property to the
respondent in these circumstances.
[44] The applicant’s
Rule 43 affidavit indicates that the applicant is concerned over the
respondent’s control over
the funds as he does not believe that
she has his best interests at heart.
[45] It is apparent from
the applicant’s version that by 2 November 2023 he had decided
to commence with the
ex parte
application. This was expedited
by the respondent’s plea to the counterclaim in which she
sought forfeiture of his claim to
an accrual. However, when the
applicant answered to the respondent’s rule 43 application, he
made no allegation that the
respondent is dissipating assets,
denuding her estate or in some way defeating his claim. He also makes
no reference to his intention
to launch an urgent application for
failing to respond to the aforesaid three letters with alacrity.
[46] The applicant
contends that the plea of forfeiture of his claim that was delivered
in response to his counterclaim on 6 November
2023 represents a
change of heart on the part of the respondent. He made the conclusion
that she intends squandering the net proceeds
of the sale of the
property.
[47] Counsel for the
respondent however points out that, in the pleadings as at that stage
the applicant in his counterclaim claimed
an accrual amount of
R284 000.00 together with unquantified division of movables.
There was no substantial accrual claim at
that stage.
[48] In her particulars
of claim dated 5 July 2023 the respondent (as plaintiff) pleaded that
each party retain their own assets
and be responsible for their own
debts, and that each party remains sole owner of pension funds,
annuities and policies and that
neither has a claim against the other
in respect thereof. The respondent therefore pleaded that there would
be no sharing of any
accrual by the applicant. She therefore denies
the contention that there was a change in tack in her plea to the
counterclaim dated
1 November 2023. The respondent was consequently
consistent in her particulars of claim and in the plea to the
counterclaim that
there was no sharing of any accrual by the
applicant.
[49] In these
circumstances, the applicant’s inference that the respondent
was about to squander the net proceeds of the immovable
property
because of change in tack as far as forfeiture of the accrual is
concerned, is a leap in logic not justified by the underlying
facts.
A forfeiture claim in divorce proceedings does not equate to an
intention to dissipate assets. Forfeiture is in this case
raised as a
defence to the counterclaim.
[50] Counsel for the
respondent contended that the limited ambit of the applicant’s
accrual claim on the pleadings was not
pointed out to the Judge
hearing the
ex parte
application on 7 November 2023.
Anti-dissipatory relief, based on the principles in
Knox D’Arcy
,
had to be confined to such assets as would be sufficient to satisfy
the applicant’s claim in respect of the accrual and
no more
(see
Knox D’Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
1994
(3) SA 700
(WLD) at 701 H – I).
[51] On the applicant’s
version, the respondent’s net asset worth was R12 458 660.28.
This was more than enough
to meet the limited accrual claim of
R284 000.00 plus unidentified, unquantified movable assets
consisting of vehicles. These
vehicles were in the applicant’s
possession at that time. There was therefore no need to interdict the
Mooikloof proceeds
to satisfy the limited accrual claim.
[52] The applicant (as
plaintiff in the counterclaim) filed a notice of intention to amend
his accrual claim in March 2024. His
right to do so is not at issue
at present. The respondent accepts, as evidenced by the heads of
argument filed by the respondent’s
counsel, that the applicant
prima facie
has established a claim to an accrual, but at the
time of the granting of the order on 7 November 2023, it was minimal
as set out
above. The relief granted was therefore overbroad as the
limited nature of the claim to accrual was not set out in the papers
that
served before the Judge on 7 November 2023. The applicant has
established a
prima facie
accrual claim, forfeiture aside, but
not to the extent covering the net proceeds of the sale in an amount
of approximately R2,8
million.
DISCUSSION
[53] Based on the notice
of amendment that the applicant served in March 2024 providing for an
increased claim for an accrual, the
claim for accrual that serves on
the papers before me is different to that that served before the
court that granted the
ex parte
order.
[54] If the claim to an
accrual is quasi-vindicatory, then, as far as an interim interdict is
concerned, evidence that there is
an earmarked fund in the face of a
competent claim to share in the accrual would be sufficient to
establish a
prima facie
right to the relief. Further,
irreparable harm is presumed. Thirdly, the applicant need not show
that he does not have an alternative
remedy.
[55] Applying the
principles of quasi-vindicatory relief
pendente lite
, counsel
for the applicant contends that the applicant need only show that the
proceeds of the sale of the Mooikloof property is
in an earmarked
fund to which he has a strong claim by virtue of his claim to share
in the accrual. It is then presumed that he
would suffer irreparable
harm. In addition, the applicant need not establish the absence of an
alternative remedy (
Fedsure Life Assurance Co Ltd v Worldwide
African Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2003 (3) SA 268
(W) at par [28]).
[56] The nature of an
accrual claim has been referred to in a number of cases. In
RS v
MS
2014 (2) SA 511
GSJ the Court (per Bester AJ) stated the
following at par [17]:
“
[17] However,
it is trite that even a contingent right to claim half of the accrual
in the Estate of the other spouse could be protectable
by interdict
pendente lite, but then an applicant for such relief must show:
(a)
That the
respondent has assets within the jurisdiction of the court;
(b)
That the
respondent, prima facie, has no bona fide defence against the
applicant’s alleged contingent rights;
(c)
That the
respondent has the intention to defeat the applicant’s claim or
to render it hollow by dissipating or secreting assets.
[18] But, even if
these jurisdictional requirements are present, then an applicant must
still show a well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable loss, should
the interdict pendente lite not be granted. It is perhaps apposite
here to point out that, because
of the draconian nature, invasiveness
and conceivably inequitable consequences of such anti-dissipation
relief, the courts have
been reluctant to grant it, except in the
clearest of cases.”
(See generally:
Knox D’Arcy
Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(A) …
at 372 C;
Mngadi v Beacon Sweets and Chocolates Provident Fund and
Others
2004 (5) SA 388
(D) … at 396 E;
Reeder v
Softline Ltd and Another
2001 (2) SA 844
(W) at 849 to 851.
[57] In
BM v BNG
(unreported case number 2008/25274) (South Gauteng High Court,
Johannesburg – as it them was) Brassey AJ describes a party’s
interest in an accrual in divorce proceedings as “
purely
equitable for, questions of dissipation aside, it becomes exigible
only ‘at the dissolution of the marriage …
by death or
divorce’ in terms of s 4 (1) of the Act.”
[58] The right to share
is not a vested right but a contingent right to participate in the
benefits of the accrual upon dissolution
of the marriage (Cloete J in
Reeder v Softline Ltd and Another
(
supra
)
2001 (2) SA
844
(W) at 848 I to 849 B.
[59] Where there is a
risk of dissipation of assets against which a right to share in an
accrual takes place, then no doubt interim
relief
pendente lite
can be obtained.
[60] In
RS
(
supra
)
the claim to share in an accrual, in an anti dissipation context, was
not dealt with as a quasi-vindicatory claim. It is apparent
from that
case that the applicant still needs to establish the risk of
dissipation with the intention to prejudice the applicant’s
accrual claim. However, that judgment does not expressly deal with
the issue of quasi vindicatory relief. The jury is apparently
still
out on this issue as far as an accrual claim is concerned. The
argument that such a claim is quasi vindicatory is well supported
by
authorities in a different context. As will be apparent from what
follows, I need not make a finding on this topic.
[61] In this instance, I
intend dealing with the matter on both assumptions. Firstly on the
basis that the claim is not quasi-vindicatory
and the applicant has
to comply with the aforesaid
Knox D’Arcy
principles,
including showing a state of mind aimed at undermining execution of a
valid claim to share in the proceeds of the accrual.
Secondly, I will
assume the claim is quasi vindicatory, and deal with it on the basis
that irreparable harm is presumed because
there is an identified
earmarked fund and a strong claim to share in the proceeds in that
fund.
[62] On my assessment of
the facts of the matter, the respondent has been consistent in her
intentions regarding use of the net
proceeds of the sale of the
Mooikloof property. Her primary concern was for that of their
children and their education. The balance
would be available if a
claim to share in the accrual is established on the part of the
applicant. The respondent however has raised
a defence against such
claim based on forfeiture.
[63] As her intentions
have not changed since October 2023, the basis upon which the
applicant approached the court
ex parte
in November 2023 does
not hold good. The fact that the applicant has agreed to the setting
up of an educational fund for their children,
as the respondent has
intended throughout, confirms that the extent of the rule nisi
exceeds the amount required to achieve its
purpose. Whether the
applicant had control of that fund or not, it cannot be said that
setting up a fund for the education of his
children amounts to
dissipation of the respondent’s assets with the intention of
thwarting his accrual claim. The facts placed
before the court by the
respondent cast serious doubt over the subjectively perceived risk of
dissipation of the net proceeds of
the sale. The applicant’s
fear of dissipation turned out to be unfounded. Those facts also cast
serious doubt over the ambit
of the rule nisi. Further, even if the
proceeds of the sale were placed beyond the reach of the applicant,
there were sufficient
assets to meet his claim to the accrual. He
would not be harmed by utlilsation of the net proceeds for the
purpose for which the
respondent wished to use it. This is so
regardless whether one utilises the accrual claim as formulated in
the pleadings in November
2023( the limited accrual) or the accrual
based on the amendment filed in March 2024.
[64] On the basis of
Knox
d’Arcy
, I find that the applicant has not established the
required intention on the part of the respondent of secreting assets
in order
to prejudice the applicant’s accrual claim. As the
respondent has sufficient assets to meet the applicant’s
accrual
claim, forfeiture aside, there was no risk of irreparable
harm in respect of the applicant’s accrual claim. His claim, if
established, would not be rendered hollow. The applicant’s
prima facie right to a contingent claim for accrual , at dissolution
of the marriage, was not placed in jeopardy by the respondent.
Further, even if he could establish a right to interdictory relief
,
pendent lite, it would not be for the full amount of the proceeds of
the sale. His accrual claim was for R284 000 and vehicles
(
which were already in his possession at that time).The order granted
ex parte was for the full proceeds of the sale, which is
in excess of
his accrual claim at that time. Even assuming that the claim will
increase due to the amendment of March 2024, the
execution of a
successful accrual claim was not placed at risk.the respondent has
sufficient assets, even for the increased claim.
[65] The second element
of an interim interdict is whether the applicant has established a
reasonably apprehended risk of injury
or harm to the aforesaid
prima
facie
right. The applicant has agreed to R1,5 million of the net
proceeds being earmarked for the children’s education and being
paid and administered by Weavind & Weavind Attorneys.
[66] The respondent has
shown fiscal responsibility as far as tertiary education of their
children is concerned. The liability to
provide for the education of
the children is not that of the respondent alone, but also of the
applicant. The securing of funds
for their education as agreed has
ostensibly fallen on the respondent alone. Part of the amount of R1,5
million so set aside must
of necessity be made up of the applicant’s
duty of maintenance to his dependent children. This is shared
obligation between
the parties and setting up an educational fund
does not amount to squandering the proceeds of the sale.
[67] I do not have cogent
facts before me indicating that the respondent would recklessly
squander the net proceeds after deduction
of the educational fund,
with the intention of defeating the plaintiff’s claim to share
in the accrual. She has denied such
intention and the facts do not
suggest that she will act differently.
67.1 At the time when the
interim order was granted on 7 November 2023, the applicant’s
claim to an accrual was limited. The
vehicles which he claimed were
already in his possession. The remaining claim amounted to
approximately R284 000.00. The applicant
claimed an accrual
based on the respondent’s assets, only one of which consists of
the balance of the proceeds of the sale
of the Mooikloof property.
67.2 In the absence of
clear evidence of an intention to dissipate, there is no real risk of
the respondent dissipating the balance
of the proceeds of the sale.
If she were to, despite denying any intention to dissipate,
nevertheless proceed and dissipate the
assets, the applicant would be
entitled to appropriate redress in the divorce action. There are many
other assets that add up to
an amount far in excess of the amount
under restraint.
67.3 Depriving the
respondent from utilising the balance of the proceeds to be
economically active would prejudice the respondent.
67.4 Although an order
giving effect to an accrual claim only takes effect upon the decree
of divorce being granted, for decision
the moment with respect to
which the respective values of the estates is to be assessed is not
date of divorce, but date of litis
contestatio.
67.5 In B,M v B, NG case
number 2008/2274(unreported South Gauteng judgment , per Van der
Linde J) the following is stated in respect
of a contingent monetary
claim in based on accrual at par [40]:
“…
[40 On
this matter the established principle is that the operative moment is
litis contestatio ,for that is the moment at which
the dispute
crystallises and can be presented to court …
[41] Since litis
contestatio is the lodestar for the applicable decision, transactions
after this moment are irrelevant and should
be left out of account.
By saying this,I do not mean to suggest, of course, that the
pleadings are fixed in stone; if they erroneously
reflect the true
state of affairs , they can(subject to the normal exceptions) be
corrected so that they accurately state the facts.
What cannot be
done , however, is to make amendments or otherwise tender evidence in
order to bring transactions into account that
occurred only after
close of pleadings.”
When the ex parte order
was granted , litis contestio had been reached as the pleadings had
closed. The transfer of the net proceeds
after transfer in Feb 2024
was therefore a transaction after litis contestatio that was not
relevant in establishing the respective
accruals in the estates of
the parties. It could not diminish the accrual in the respondent’s
estate.The risk of dissipation
could therefor only relate to the
recoverability of the accrual claim asserted by the applicant based
on the respective accruals
as at litis contestatio.The applicant has
not established a reasonably apprehended risk of irreparable harm.
[68] If the matter were
considered in the context of quasi vindicatory relief, pendent lite,
the result is the same. The respondent
has rebutted the presumption
of irreparable harm.
[69] Considering the
balance of convenience, it favours the respondent. As the respondent
has sufficient assets available to meet
the applicant’s claim,
there is no risk that the applicant would suffer more than if the
relief were refused. The respondent
is economically more successful
than the applicant and depriving her of using the balance of the
proceeds of the sale, could jeopardise
her ability to be economically
active. The balance of convenience consequently does not favour the
applicant, but the respondent.
[70] In the premises,
whether the applicant’s claim is found to be quasi-vindicatory
or not, the applicant has not established
a case for confirmation of
the interim order.
[71] As a final
consideration, I regard the non-disclosure by the applicant to the
judge on 7 November 2023 as relevant to the Court’s
overall
discretion to grant or refuse interdictory relief. As ex parte
applicant the applicant had a duty to disclose material
facts that
might have influenced the Court. This relates to the non disclosure
of the limited ambit of his accrual claim at the
time. The order
sought and obtained was for an amount far in excess of his then
accrual claim. His amendment was not filed at that
time and an
increased accrual claim was not being asserted in November 2023. I
would also discharge the rule nisi in the exercise
of my overall
discretion due to the non-disclosure of material facts.
[72] Therefore, it is
ordered that:
1. R1 500 000.00
(one and a half million Rand) of the proceeds held in trust by JJR
Attorneys be paid over to Weavind
& Weavind Attorneys’
Trust account (“Weavind”) to be administered by the
Director Niel Cloete of Weavind
& Weavind Attorneys:
1.1 R750 000.00
(seven hundred and fifty thousand Rand) be allocated to the major
child in respect of her tertiary educational
needs comprising of:
1.1.1 University Fees;
1.1.2 Hostel Fees;
1.1.3 Textbooks,
stationary, scrubs, educational equipment and/or any educational
related needs as reasonably required by the tertiary
institution from
time to time;
1.2 R750 000.00
(seven hundred and fifty thousand Rand) be allocated to the minor
child’s tertiary education (as defined
in paragraph 1.1.1
supra);
1.3 Weavind is to invest
the monies stipulated in paragraph 1.1.1 and 1.1.2 supra in separate
interest-bearing accounts;
1.4 The parties are to
jointly instruct Weavind to pay, or reimburse a party, for the major
and/or minor child’s tertiary
expenses, alternatively, release
monies to either Party to directly pay the tertiary expenses;
1.5 The parties are to
provide Weavind with invoices and proof of payment as and when
received;
1.6 In the event that the
parties disagree on payment of a particular tertiary expense, Weavind
is to mediate the dispute between
the parties and is authorised to
determine, subject to judicial review, whether the said expense
qualifies as a reasonable tertiary
educational expense (as defined in
paragraph 1.1.1 supra) payable form the proceeds held in trust having
due regard to the best
interests of the particular child;
1.7 The applicant shall
be liable for Weavind’s fees and disbursements;
2. The remainder of the
net proceeds of the sale of the Mooikloof property which is held by
JJR Attorneys shall be released by JJR
Attorneys to the applicant .
3. The applicant I
ordered to pay the costs of the application on Scale C, including the
costs of two counsel, one of which is a
senior.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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