Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 913South Africa
K.J.G v J.T.G (A85/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 913 (6 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 September 2024
Headnotes
– Domestic Violence Act 116 of 1998.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## K.J.G v J.T.G (A85/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 913 (6 September 2024)
K.J.G v J.T.G (A85/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 913 (6 September 2024)
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sino date 6 September 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Domestic violence –
Protection order –
Final order granted against
husband after interim order – Recordings showing wife to be
abusive towards husband –
This should have been considered
regarding credibility of wife – She was aggressor during
incident in which alleged
assault took place – In
circumstances such as this case, final order was not appropriate –
Appeal upheld –
Domestic Violence Act 116 of 1998
.
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: A 85/2024
Date of hearing: 15
August 2024
Date delivered: 6
September 2024
1. Reportable : No
2. Of Interest of Other
Judges : No
3. Revised
6/9/2024
In the appeal of:
G[…],
K[…] J[…]
Appellant
and
G[…],
J[…]
T[…]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
(Mooki
J concurring)
[1] This is an
appeal against an order granted against the appellant in terms of the
Domestic Violence Act, 116 of 1998 ("the
Act") in the
Madibeng District Court on 27 November 2023. The appellant was
interdicted from physically abusing, intimidating,
stalking or
contacting the respondent. The final order was granted pursuant to a
similar interim order granted against the appellant
on 11 June 2020.
[2] The preamble to
the Act recognizes the undisputed fact that domestic violence is a
widespread evil in our society. It
is also unarguable that the vast
majority of victims of domestic abuse are women. The Act therefore
has the laudable purpose of
affording victims of domestic abuse the
maximum protection from domestic abuse that the law can provide. In
order to attain its
purpose, the Act has created a process whereby
victims may approach a court for interim relief on an ex parte basis.
[3]
Section 5 (2) of the Act provides as follows:
"(2) If the
court is satisfied that there is prima facie evidence that-
(a)
the respondent is committing, or has committed an
act of domestic violence; and
(b) undue hardship
may be suffered by the complainant as a result of such domestic
violence if a protection order is not issued
immediately,the court
must, notwithstanding the fact that the respondent has not been given
notice of the proceedings contemplated
in subsection (1), issue an
interim protection order against the respondent, in the prescribed
manner."
[4]
The aforesaid provision has the effect of
relieving the applicant in such an application of the obligation to
show that the purpose
of the application would be thwarted if the
respondent were to be given notice of the application.
[5] Once an interim
order has been granted, it is served on the respondent, and the
respondent is called upon to appear on
a return date to show cause
why the order should not be made final. If the respondent does appear
on the return date, the provisions
of section 6 (2) of the Act apply:
"(2) If the
respondent appears on the return date in order to oppose the issuing
of a protection order, the court must
proceed to hear the matter and-
(a)
consider any evidence previously received in
terms of section 5 (1); and
(b)
consider
such
further
affidavits
or
oral
evidence
as
it
may
direct, which shall form
part of the record of proceedings."
[6]
The
court must, after a hearing as contemplated in subsection 6 (2),
issue a protection order in the prescribed form if it finds,
on a
balance of probabilities,
that
the
respondent
has
committed
or
is
committing
an
act of domestic violence. Simultaneously, the court must issue a
warrant for the respondent's arrest and suspend the operation
of the
warrant.
[1]
The warrant is then
handed to the applicant who may hand it to the police, together with
an affidavit wherein it is stated that
the respondent has contravened
the order, in order to secure the respondent's arrest. The police may
then, if they believe that
the applicant might suffer imminent harm
unless the respondent is arrested, forthwith effect an arrest.
[7]
There can be no dispute that if a final order is
made, a powerful tool is placed in the appellant's hands. Laudable as
the purposes
of the Act are, it cannot be denied that a malicious
applicant can cause serious harm to the respondent if he/she abuses
the procedure
by making false allegations. It is therefore necessary
that a court must carefully consider the entirety of the facts before
issuing
a final order.
[8]
The history of the relationship between these
parties is sad. They have been
married
since
November
2016.
The
respondent
(an
accountant) says that the appellant (a businessman) has been abusive,
controlling and manipulative for most of their married
life. The
appellant says much the same about the respondent. The fact is that
their relationship has been one of strife and conflict.
[9]
On
the
evening
of
8
June
2020,
in
the
midst
of
the
Covid-19 pandemic, the parties had an argument.
The respondent thought that the appellant had not been sufficiently
forthcoming
about his financial affairs. She had apparently been made
certain promises regarding the appellant's businesses that he had not
fulfilled. When the appellant did not respond as the respondent
wished him to, she threatened to go on a hunger strike until he
provided her with the information that she had requested.
[10] On the
following morning the appellant went to make tea for the respondent.
He brought the tea to the bathroom where
he told the respondent that
he was going to stop taking his medication until she started eating
again. When the appellant left
the bathroom, the respondent followed
him and they continued to argue. The appellant sat down and ignored
the respondent. That
must have frustrated and angered the respondent
because she threw the cup of tea to the ground, allegedly to get the
appellant's
attention.
[11]
The respondent says that the appellant then
grabbed her by the shoulders and pushed her backwards against a
painting. He allegedly
shook her around. She shouted that he was an
abuser, and after what she says was a couple of minutes, the
appellant released her,
turned around and picked up his laptop. The
respondent then grabbed the laptop and shouted that it was her
property.
She would not let go of the
laptop, a tussle ensued, and in this process the respondent
was thrown onto the dining room table. All the
while the respondent was shouting at the appellant to let go of her.
The appellant
was concerned that the neighbours might hear the
altercation and think that he was hurting her.The
appellant
then
took
his
diary,
some
cash,
his
phone
and
left
the house.
[12]
That
afternoon
the
respondent
was
examined
by
Dr
Pierre
van
Staden. the only visible injuries were two bruises on her left leg.
[13]
That evening the appellant returned and asked to
speak to the respondent. He wanted to speak to her privately, but she
insisted
on a security guard being present. They spoke for
approximately an hour. There is no allegation that there was anything
untoward
about their conversation or that the respondent felt
threatened thereby. The appellant had arranged to stay over in a
guest house.
He took some belongings and also the laptop, apparently
without any objection by the respondent. Later than night the
respondent
laid a charge of common assault against the appellant.
Thereafter the appellant made no attempt to return to their
residence.
[14]
The above is the respondent's version of events.
The respondent later testified that this was the only incident in
which there had
been a physical altercation between them. Based on
this version, an interim order was granted interdicting the appellant
from physically
abusing the respondent and from entering the
respondent's residence.
[15]
On 24 September 2020 the respondent sought a
variation of the interim order. She said that since the interim order
was granted the
appellant had intimidated, threatened, harassed,
stalked her, and had enlisted the assistance of third parties to
intimidate her.
Her first complaint was that the appellant had rented
a property in the Pecanwood Estate where her house was situated,
despite
the fact that he had been ordered to vacate the premises.
This complaint ignored the fact that the appellant had been ordered
not
to enter the residence, and nothing prevented him from renting
property in the estate.
[16]
The second complaint was that the appellant had
been trying to communicate with her. Initially she regarded the
messages as innocuous,
but later, she says, they seemed to have a
threatening and intimidating tone. The one message that the
respondent believed to be
threatening was sent on 19 August 2020 in
which the appellant said:
"You are refusing to
talk to me, but it is absolutely critical that you do, as there are
things about to happen, which will
change the course of your life
forever."
[17]
That message was sent in the context of an
impending divorce action, and when seen in context with the other sms
messages, clearly
reflect the appellant's wish to speak to the
respondent to attempt a reconciliation. The sms messages generally
express the appellant's
love for the respondent, his belief that she
required mental care, and his wish to reconcile. None of the messages
can be regarded
as being abusive or threatening.
[18]
The complaint that the appellant was enlisting
other persons to intimidate the respondent arose apparently because
one of the appellant's
friends sent her a message asking her to read
the appellant's messages. That cannot possibly constitute
intimidation. The appellant's
domestic helper also apparently called
the respondent to tell her that the appellant was crying all the
time. There is no indication
that the appellant had asked her to call
the respondent, but nevertheless, the respondent complained about the
call.
[19]
The respondent also complained about the appellant
stalking her. On 3 September 2020 the respondent says she entered a
shop and
saw the appellant outside watching her. The respondent asked
the owner of the shop to wait in a back office. When the appellant
left, so did she. On 19 September 2020 the appellant played golf on
the seventh tee of the course, which adjoins
the
house, and he asked the gardener
to call
the respondent.
Later
that
day
she
saw
the
appellant
at
the
nearby
Spar supermarket.
She
panicked and went to hide at the optometrist's office.
[20]
On the above facts the respondent sought the
following variation:
[20.1] That the appellant
was not to enlist the help of another person to commit acts of
domestic violence against her;
[20.2] The appellant was
not to intimidate the respondent;
[20.3] The appellant was
not to contact the respondent by any means;
[20.4] The appellant was
not to stalk the respondent, nor to come within 5 meters of the
respondent or her home.
[21]
The appellant delivered an answering affidavit in
which he set out a concerning history of erratic behaviour by the
respondent.
The appellant said that the respondent has had
long-standing mental health issues. He believes that she suffers from
a multiple
personality disorder. During the course of her treatment
her doctor suggested that the appellant should record concerning
incidents
so that the respondent could later be confronted with those
events. The appellant attached to the papers the transcripts of
recordings
of two such incidents that occurred late on the evenings
of 28 August 2017 and 27 January 2018 respectively. The appellant
alleges
that the respondent has had long-standing mental health
issues, that she believes that she has alter egos, and that she has
flights
of fancy.
[22]
The transcripts are troubling. They clearly reveal
a different side to the respondent's personality as to what she tried
to put
forth in court. She is heard to abuse the appellant for long
periods of time, despite the appellant's attempts to calm her down.
The respondent's response to the recordings is to deny having any
knowledge of the incidents, and to suggest that the appellant
had
drugged her.
[23]
As far as the incident of 9 June 2020 is
concerned, the appellant admits that he threatened to stop taking his
medication. He says
that he wanted the respondent to understand that
her hunger strike was futile. He says that the respondent had become
violent and
had smashed the tea cup, causing shards of the glass to
cut his face. However, it was when he picked up the laptop that the
respondent
lunged at him in an attempt to wrest it away, and a
struggle then ensued. He says that given the respondent's escalation
of the
incident, he was concerned that she would damage the laptop
which is why he tried to remove it.
[24] As far as the
alleged stalking is concerned. The appellant says that there is a
small shopping center nearby Pecanwood
where he waited on one
occasion for a puncture to be repaired. He noticed that the
respondent had arrived, but he had not known
in advance of her
impending arrival, nor had he orchestrated them being there at the
same time. He says that the Pecanwood area
is sparsely populated and
has few retail centers. He says that inevitably, at some stage, they
would run into one another.
[25] The respondent
provided a complete version of the events as he saw them. The parties
then agreed to lead evidence to
attempt to resolve the many factual
disputes. Ultimately, the respondent was the sole witness to give
oral evidence. She testified
and was cross-examined at length. After
her evidence was completed, the appellant took the view that the
respondent had not discharged
the onus of proving that the order
should be made final, and he closed his case.
[26]
The appellant did not apply for absolution from
the instance as one would do in terms of the magistrate's rules of
court in civil
proceedings, and as the court a quo apparently
believed. In such an application the party
seeking
absolution
does
not
close
its
case,
it
seeks
an
order
for
absolution, and if that is refused, then that party continues with
its case. In this instance, the appellant simply closed his
case,
taking the position that the evidence for an interdict was
insufficient.
[27]
In
the
judgment
the
learned
magistrate
confusingly
said
the following:
'The respondent's
attorney made an application for absolution from the instance. This
appears to be absolution at end of the domestic
violence hearing as
there were no indication that the respondent would give oral evidence
in the matter The respondent elected
to close his case and did not
give evidence on his counter-application.
The respondent did no
request ruling on absolution of the instance at the end of leading of
evidence at the Domestic violence hearing,
but the respondent made an
application for absolution of instance at the end of the applicant's
case" (sic)
[28]
Confusing as this passage may be, it seems that
the court a quo believed that absolution was not possible in a
domestic violence
application. In any event, the appellant never
brought an application for absolution. It is therefore not necessary
to decide whether
the magistrate's court civil rules relating to
absolution apply to these type of applications.
[29]
The court a quo then went on to say that there
were two irreconcilable versions before the court. This is not really
so, as there
are many commonalities between the two versions, more
especially as far as the events of 9 June 2020 are concerned. The
magistrate
then went on to say:
“
The
onus is on the applicant to convince the court on a balance of
probabilities that she is entitled to be granted a final protection
order and she is in dire need of it.
The respondent has not
shown that the final order should not be granted and has elected not
place his version before court and close
his case.” (sic)
[30]
It is incorrect to say that the appellant did not
put his version before court. The appellant delivered a comprehensive
affidavit
in which he set out his version. Section 6 (2) of the Act
requires the court a quo to consider all of the evidence, whether
contained
in affidavits or in oral evidence. I accept that a version
tested under cross-examination might well carry more weight than a
version
put forth in an affidavit, but that does not mean that the
affidavit is to be ignored. In ignoring the appellant's version on
affidavit,
the court a quo clearly erred.
[31]
The court a quo also misconceived
where
the onus lay. Although the judgment says that the onus was on the
respondent, at the same time the court a quo suggested that
the
appellant had an onus to show that the order should not be granted.
This is incorrect. The onus is on the applicant throughout.
[32]
The court a quo listed a number of factors that
have to be considered when one assesses the credibility of a witness.
There is,
however, no indication whatsoever that the court a quo
actually tested the respondent's version against these factors. In
the absence
of the court a quo carefully considering the respondent's
credibility, it is open to us to do so with regard to the transcript.
[33]
I have concerns regarding the reliability of the
respondent's testimony. For instance, in many passages in her
evidence the respondent
was not a forthright witness. She failed to
answer questions, she obfuscated, and she was generally
argumentative. In my view the
respondent was not an impressive
witness. The court a quo should have considered the quality of the
respondent's evidence before
merely accepting her evidence.
[34]
Should
the
final
order
have
been
granted?
In my
view
not.
It
is common cause that the respondent had been upset
since the previous evening because of her perceived exclusion from
the appellant's
financial affairs. It is also common cause that when
the argument erupted in the bathroom on the morning of 9 June, the
respondent
followed the appellant from the bathroom because she
thought that he was ignoring her. She threw a cup of tea in order to
get the
appellant's attention. When he tried to take the laptop and
remove himself from the altercation, she grabbed the laptop and tried
to wrest it from him.
[35]
None of the above facts are in dispute. It seems
more likely to me that it was the respondent
who
was the aggressor in this incident. She was also the party who felt
aggrieved by having been left in the dark with regard to
the
appellant's finances. Having read the transcripts of the recorded
incidents, I believe that the respondent was abusive towards
the
appellant during these conversations, despite his best attempts at
calming her, she was lucid and her speech did not seem to
be
affected. I find the respondent's version, that she had been drugged,
difficult to believe. The respondent's version, that the
appellant
was constantly abusive and that she was the submissive quiet wife is,
in my view, not so.
[36]
It should have been factored into the process of
considering credibility that the respondent had on previous occasions
been extremely
abusive towards the appellant. If considered with the
fact that the respondent was clearly the aggressor on the morning of
9 June
2020 when the one single physical assault allegedly occurred,
that should have given the court a quo pause for thought.
[37]
Finally, the court a quo took into consideration
that the appellant apparently had a "violent outburst in court".
The
nature of that outburst is not recorded in the record, and it is
uncertain what deduction the court a quo sought to make from the
so-called outburst. I can only say that if a trial court observes
behaviour from which it seeks to make a deduction on
the
merits
of
the
matter,
it
must
record
the
exact
nature
of
the
behaviour so that a court on appeal may consider whether the
deduction is warranted or not.
[38]
A domestic violence order is not simply there for
the taking. As I have pointed out above, it can have devastating
consequences
for a respondent who is, firstly, denied the right to
engage with the matter before an interim order is granted, and,
secondly,
is the subject of a warrant of arrest that can be wielded
at a whim by an applicant. In circumstances
such
as in this case, a final order was not appropriate.
# [39]Consequently,Ipropose the following order:
[39]
Consequently,
I
propose the following order:
[39.1] The appeal is
upheld.
# [39.2] The order of the
court a quo is amended to read as follows:
[39.2] The order of the
court a quo is amended to read as follows:
"The application is
dismissed."
[39.3] The respondent
shall pay the costs of the appeal on
# Scale B.
Scale B.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION PRETORIA
I agree:
MOOKI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
AND
IT IS SO ORDERED:
Counsel
for
the
appellant:
Adv.
J Smit
Instructed
by:
Christo
Rheeders Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv.
I Ossin
Instructed
by:
Warrener
De Agrella and Associates Inc
Date
heard:
15
August
2024
Date
of judgment:
6
September 2024
[1]
Section
8 (1) of the Act
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