Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1012South Africa
K.P.S v M.D.S (010556/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1012 (1 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## K.P.S v M.D.S (010556/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1012 (1 October 2024)
K.P.S v M.D.S (010556/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1012 (1 October 2024)
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sino date 1 October 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 010556/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
2024.10.01
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between: -
K[...]
P[...]
S[...]
Plaintiff
VS
M[...]
D[...] S[...]
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MABUSE J
[1]
This matter came before me as a divorce action. By way of the
pretrial minutes signed by
the parties’ legal representatives
on 4 May 2023, the parties herein had agreed on the following issues
which were not in
dispute:
(i)
the jurisdiction of this Court.
(ii)
that they were married to each other by a civil marriage and that the
said marriage still subsists.
(iii)
that the parties’ marriage relationship has irretrievably
broken down. The
court may add that such marriage
cannot be retrieved.
(iv) that
there are three minor children born of the said marriage.
(v) that
the residence of the minor children must be awarded in accordance
with the recommendations
of the Family Advocate.
[2]
By agreement between the parties, this Court was only required to
decide the following issues:
[2.1] forfeiture of the
benefits arising from the marriage in community of property.
[2.2]
it will be noted that while, in his plea, the Defendant prays for a
division the joint estate, in her particulars
of claim (poc) and
testimony the Plaintiff seeks an order of forfeiture of the benefits
arising from marriage in community of property
against the Defendant
[2.3]
the amount that the defendant must pay towards the maintenance of the
three minor children.
THE
PARTIES
[3]
The parties are as follows:
[3.1] the Plaintiff in
this matter, K[...] P[...] S[...](Ms S[...]), is an adult female who
resides at 6[...] I[...]
Avenue, Mountain View, Pretoria, Gauteng
Province. The Plaintiff has, since 2007, been employed at the
Road Accident Fund
as a Bill Reviewer.
[3.2] the Defendant,
M[...] D[...] S[...] (Mr. S[...]), is an adult unemployed male who
also resides at 6[...] I[...]
Avenue, Mountain View, Pretoria,
Gauteng Province.
For purposes of convenience, the
Plaintiff and the Defendant will be jointly referred to as “the
parties”.
[4]
THE BACKGROUND
[4.1] The parties were
married to each other in community of property on 13 August 2009.
The said marriage still
subsists. It is this marriage that the
parties have agreed to terminate.
[4.2] three minor children
have been born of the said marriage:
[4.2.1] M[...] K[...], a boy, born on
6 November 2008.
[4.2.2] K[...] L[...], a boy, born on
23 May 2011; and
[4.2.3] R[...] L[...] A[...], a girl,
born on 30 January 2014.
[4.3] all
these three children stay with the parties and attend different
schools around the area where
they stay. The parties seek an
order of the primary residence of the minor children to be made based
on the recommendations
of the Family Advocate.
[5]
The Plaintiff claims against the Defendant forfeiture of the benefits
arising from marriage in
community of property on the basis that,
among others, the Defendant has committed adultery. The fact
that the Defendant
committed is the straw that broke the camel’s
back. According to the testimony of the Plaintiff, constitutes
the fundamental
reason why she has sued the Defendant for divorce.
The Defendant has admitted that he committed adultery.
[6]
According to the Plaintiff, the marriage relationship between the
parties broke down because of
the infidelity of the Defendant.
The Defendant had an extra-marital affair or affairs from which two
minor children, T[...]
and T[...], were born. These two
children stay in Mpumalanga with their parents. Their relationship
went awry after she learnt
about these two children.
[7]
Various intervention methods were employed, all aimed at saving the
parties’ marriage relationship,
but all in vain. For these
reasons, and various other reasons, she has alleged in the
particulars of claim, the Plaintiff desires
divorce. Those
other reasons are as follows:
[7.1] the parties have not
shared a bedroom for almost two years.
[7.2] the parties are no
longer able to communicate with each other in a meaningful way.
[7.3] they no longer share
a common interest and have been leading separate lives for almost a
year.
[7.4] they argue
constantly and there is no meaningful communication between them.
[8]
Over and above, there is undisputed evidence by the Plaintiff that
the Defendant:
[8.1] does not pay school
fees and any fees for the minor children, despite any agreement
between the parties.
The Defendant admits that he does not pay
anything towards the children’s’ school fees. He
testified that he
was responsible for the payment of the children’s’
school fees from their tender age until recently when his funds dried
up. He was aware, at the time he testified, that children’s
school fees were outstanding. His defence is that
he has no
money to pay school fees. According to the Plaintiff, the
Defendant runs another business. He runs a business
of selling
petrol. He operates like a tank station from home.
Photographs of such petrol contained in 20-liter containers
were
placed before the Court. The Defendant denies that he operates
a tank station. He told the Court that what was
contained in
those 20-liter containers was oil. He admitted that he did not
tell his attorneys that he did sell petrol.
[8.2]
the Defendant does not pay any municipal accounts as agreed by the
parties. Consequently, the parties owe the
municipality a massive
amount. As at the date the Plaintiff testified in this matter,
the parties owed Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality a sum of
R94,000.00. This amount will be paid by the Plaintiff alone.
Sometimes she pays whatever can afford. At
times she does not even have money to pay. According to her
testimony, the Defendant does not pay for anything in the house.
[8.3] the Plaintiff alone
pays the instalments in respect of the bond. The parties’
house has a mortgage
bond. In terms of the mortgage bond, the
parties are obliged to make monthly payments of the bond. These
monthly payments
are made by the Plaintiff only. When the Plaintiff
tries to talk to the Defendant about the house, particularly the
mortgage bond,
the Defendant’s response is that he has no
money.
[8.4] as it is, the
Defendant does not contribute anything towards the acquisition of the
joint estate.
[8.5] according to the
Plaintiff, the Defendant runs from the parties’ home, an
aluminium products manufacturing
business. She finds it opaque that
despite that business, the Defendant is unable to contribute
meaningfully in the house, in other
words, is unable to pay for
anything in the house. The Defendant cannot even pay for the
electricity that he uses at the
house to run his business. It
is the Plaintiff who pays for the electricity. This she does by
part-payment or her credit
card or by making payment arrangements
with the Municipality. The Defendant has admitted that he runs
an aluminium manufacturing
business at home.
[9]
This Court concludes that even if he is not employed, the Defendant
can generate income from the
two businesses he conducts. He can
devise means to make money. In the circumstances, he should be
able to support his
family with the money he generates. If he
complains that he does not make any money in his two businesses, my
view is that
he must put more effort in his businesses well- knowing
that he is obliged to support his family.
[10]
The Plaintiff informed the Court that she does not know what the
Defendant did with the amount that he was
paid by the Government
Employee Pension Fund (GEPF) when he was discharged. An amount
of R171,621.88 was deposited into the
Defendant’s First
National Bank account
.
The Plaintiff has testified that the
Defendant has not shared the said money with her, nor has he even
accounted to her about the
said amount. Looking around the
house, she could not point out to what the Defendant might have done
with that amount. The
Defendant did not use the money to benefit the
family.
[11]
The Defendant told the Court that with the money he was paid by GEPF,
he renovated the kitchen, bought groceries,
and paid the children’s
school fees. This evidence is disputed by the Plaintiff who
testified that the kitchen is still
incompletely renovated. From the
reports she has received from the schools, the children’s
school fees are still outstanding.
The Defendant has not furnished
any proof form the schools that he has paid any school fees.
Regarding grocery, it is to be expected
that the Plaintiff will not
be able to produce any receipts. The Defendant used to operate two
bank accounts, one at Capitec in
his names and the other at Nedbank
under their company’s name, M[...] C[...] a[...] P[...] (Pty)
Ltd. The Capitec account
number was 1[...] while the Nedbank Account
was 1[...] 3[...]. Copies of the Capitec bank statements that were
placed before court
were from 26 September 2022 to 24 December 2022
and from 1 April 2023 t0 30 May 2023. During those periods, a total
sum of R56937.37
was deposited into his Capitec account. This, in my
view, establishes the Defendant’s ability to generate income.
The amount
of R56937.37 consists of various amounts that were over
the relevant period, deposited by various people into his bank
account.
[12]
The parties own several motor vehicles which are all paid up.
Some of these motor vehicles could be
sold and the proceeds thereof
used to pay the outstanding debts.
[13]
In her testimony, the Plaintiff told the court,
inter alia
,
that the Defendant does not help at home, and furthermore that he is
uncooperative. She told the Court that she wanted an
order in
terms of which the Defendant forfeits the benefits arising from
marriage in community of property. She benefited nothing
from the
Defendant’s pension benefits. She also benefited nothing
from the proceeds of their Shoshanguve house which
they sold, and the
Defendant retained all the proceeds.
[14] It
is of paramount importance to point out that the fact that the
Defendant does not contribute financially
in the family does not
constitute a ground upon which the Plaintiff seeks a divorce. This is
nevertheless a factor that this Court
should consider when it deals
with the substantial misconduct on the party of the spouse.
[15]
In his heads of argument, Mr Marweshe, counsel for the Defendant,
argued that the Plaintiff’s evidence
fell short in various
ways, was inconsistent, contradictory, and did not support her claim
for forfeiture. I disagree with
him. On the contrary, the
evidence of the Plaintiff was clear, unblemished, and consistent.
The Plaintiff did not contradict
herself. She answered all the
questions put to her during cross-examination satisfactorily.
The Court cannot make any adverse
remark about her evidence.
[16] Before
14 May 2024, s 9(1) of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (“the DA”),
which deal with forfeiture
of the benefits arising from marriage in
community of property, provided as follows:
“
9(1)
When a decree of divorce is granted on the ground of
the irretrievable break-down of a marriage the court may make an
order that
the patrimonial benefits of the marriage
be forfeited by one party in favour of the other, either wholly or in
part, if the court, having regard to the duration of the marriage,
the circumstances which gave rise to the break-down thereof
and any
substantial misconduct on the part of either of the parties, is
satisfied that, if the order for forfeiture is not made,
the one
party will in relation to the other be unduly benefited.
”
This section was amended, with effect
from 14 May 2024, by section 5 of Act 1 of 2024 by the inclusion of
“
including a Muslim Marriage”
. Therefore,
section 9(1) as it was unamended before 14 May 2024, is applicable to
this matter.
[17]
Quite clearly, the purpose of the provisions of the said section are
to ensure that a party to a marriage
does not benefit from a marriage
that he or she has destroyed or has actively broken down. See
in this regard
Murison v Murison
1930 AD 157
,
where the
court had the following to say:
“
“
Where a
marriage is dissolved on the ground of adultery committed by one of
the spouses, such spouse forfeits any benefits derived
from the
marriage, and the Court has no discretion to withhold an order for
forfeiture of benefits if such an order be claimed
by the injured
spouse”.
The
guilty spouse will forfeit a benefit if, in relation to the injured
spouse, he or she will unduly benefit if an order of forfeiture
is
not granted against him or her. In
Swil
v Swil
1978 (1) SA 790
(W) at p. 792H-793A,
the court had the following to say:
“
As
Van Den Heever J.A. in Allen v Allen 1951 (3) 320 AD, pointed out,
an order of
forfeiture is an independent remedy which has acquired the
characteristics of equitable relief. Its object and effect
is to
prevent the spouse responsible for the breakup of the marriage from
benefiting financially therefrom.”
[18]
Section 9(1) of the DA mentions three factors that must be considered
by the Court when it deals with an
application for forfeiture of the
benefits. Those factors are:
[18.1] the duration of the
marriage.
[18.2] the reason for the
breakdown of the marriage; and
[18.3] any substantial
misconduct on the part of either spouse.
[19]
In terms of common law, a party who seeks an order of forfeiture of
the benefits must allege and prove any
of the jurisdictional
grounds. Once such a party has proved a jurisdictional ground,
the Court has no space within which
to refuse the order of
forfeiture. It has no discretion but to grant the order of
forfeiture.
[20]
A party that claims forfeiture need not prove all the three factors.
It is enough if he or she proves
any one of the three factors.
See in this regard
Klerck v Klerck
1991 (1) SA 265
(W) at 266
A-B
.
[21]
The fundamental change in the common law, as set out above, was
however introduced by the DA. While
the duty still lies on the
party who claims forfeiture to allege, as the Plaintiff in this
matter has done so in paragraph 6.1.3
and prayer 2 of her particulars
of claim, such a party must still prove a jurisdictional ground.
The decision
whether to grant the forfeiture order, unlike under common law, now
rests on the discretion of the Court.
[21.1]
the duration of the
marriage
:
According to the marriage certificate,
the parties were married on 13 August 2009. A copy of the
combined summons commencing
or instituted the divorce action was
issued on 30 August 2022. This means that as at 13 August 2022
the marriage had endured
for 13 years. During that period of 13
years, the parties have managed:
[21.1.1]
to have three children.
[21.1.2]
to purchase property, movable and immovable.
This is a factor that the court must
consider. The Plaintiff is 44 years of age, while the Defendant
is 42. It is highly
unlikely that with three children she can
remarry, while the Defendant has a chance of remarrying because of
his age. From
the evidence on record, the Plaintiff does not
need any financial assistance from the Defendant. She can survive
without the Defendant.
[21.1.3] It is
not clear though how the duration of the marriage influences the
decision whether to grant forfeiture of the benefits.
Mr Mashaba
referred the court, in his heads of argument to the judgment of
Singh
v Singh
1983 (1) SA 797
(C).
In
this judgment the parties had been married for 22 years. During the
last two years of their marriage, the husband who was the
plaintiff
in the matter, alleged that the wife who was the defendant. had
stayed away from the common home overnight on 73 occasions;
had been
intimate with other men and had committed adultery with one of them.
The husband alleged further that the wife had neglected
her marital
duties. According to the wife, who denied these allegations, she had
left the common home due to the plaintiff’s
ill-treatment of
her and she had committed adultery only later. Nevertheless, on the
evidence, the court found her misconduct to
be ‘substantial’
and that such conduct outweighed the fact that the marriage had
lasted for 20 years. Consequently,
the court granted the husband a
forfeiture.
[21.2] The
lessons that one can learn from the Singh judgment are firstly, that
adultery although a common ground in divorce proceedings,
is still
regard as an essential requirement for the termination of the
marriage. Secondly, it is easy to grant forfeiture when
the parties
were married to each other for long time.
[21.3]
In
Soupionas
v Soupionas
1983 (3) SA 757
(T),
a matter in which the
spouses had each asked for a forfeiture against each other, in a
marriage which had lived together for a period
of 9 years before
their marriage, the Court refused to order a forfeiture. The Judge
had the following to say:
“
if
people, after finding solace and satisfaction in each other's
physical company for a period of years, decide to marry, the legal
consequences of marriage must be an important motivating factor for
that contract of marriage and, consequently, all the material
consequences of that marriage must have been thoroughly contemplated
between the parties and it would be sound public what is it
doing
policy to enforce such contractual views of the parties against each
other.”
[21.4]
any substantial
misconduct on the part of either of the parties
:
To succeed with
a claim for forfeiture of the benefits against the other, a party who
claims that relief must prove that the other
party is guilty of
substantial misconduct. Substantial misconduct includes marital
fault. e.g. adultery, imprisonment, and
malicious desertion. It
also includes assault.
In this case
, the Plaintiff has
proved that the Defendant has committed adultery, and that the
Defendant has admitted it. In defence, the Defendant
testified that
on 26 November 2011, the Plaintiff told her that he was unable to
satisfy her sexually. He was shattered. During
her cross examination,
the Plaintiff was never confronted with this version of the
Defendant. Furthermore, it is not the Defendant’s
case that the
Plaintiff condoned her infidelity and forgave him.
But it must be
recalled that
in Swart v Swart
1980
(4) SA 364
(O)
it was held that
adultery and desertion might in certain instances merely be symptoms
and not causes of a breakdown and that conduct
that cannot be
considered very blameworthy, such as refusal to engage in
conversation, might be a factor leading to the marriage
breakdown.
Still on this question of adultery, in
Kritzinger
v Kritzinger
1989 (1) SA 67
(A)
it
was held that even if the appellant’s adultery was the
immediate cause of the marriage coming to an end, the respondent
was
by no means free from blame. Human experience suggests that where
there is a break down in a marriage, the conduct of both
parties has
contributed to it.
According to
JW
v SW
2011 (1) SA 545
GNP
it
was that
the
mere existence of a substantial misconduct is, on its own,
insufficient to justify an order of forfeiture. But in this
case, it does because the Plaintiff testified that it was primarily,
because of such infidelity, that she sued the Defendant for
divorce.
By his conduct the Defendant ruined the parties’ marriage.
Unlike in Kritzinger above, there is no evidence
by the Defendant
that the Plaintiff was guilty of any misconduct. The only attempt by
the Defendant to attribute his conduct of
infidelity was when she
mentioned how she ended up committing adultery. I have dealt with
this aspect somewhere above.
[22]
Apart from this adulterous relationship, there are several other
ways, as argued by Mr Mashaba in his heads
of argument, which
demonstrate quite convincingly that the Defendant contributed
substantially to the destruction of the parties’
marriage
relationship. For instance:
[22.1] the Plaintiff testified
that the Defendant used to work for the Department of Home Affairs on
a permanent basis.
He was however dismissed after he was found
guilty of:
(a)
for committing an act of gross
negligence in that on or about 20 November 2012 and at or near
Marabastad Refugee Reception Centre,
he irregularly extended and
printed an asylum-seeker permit (section 22) of one, Ms Selma Ummay,
a Bangledashee National, whilst
her refugee status rejection was
confirmed by Standing Committee of Refugee Affairs on 16 May 2012,
and updated in the system on
17 May 2012; and
(b)
for committing an act of gross
negligence in that on or about 20 November 2012 and at or near
Marabastad, Refugee Centre, he irregularly
extended and printed an
asylum-seeker permit (section 22) of Ms Selma Ummay without proof of
payment for overstaying in the country.
[22.2] As a result of his
dismissal, the Defendant was paid the sum of R171,621.88 of his
pension fund. This amount
was deposited into his First National
Bank account. This information is clearly reflected in a letter dated
4 February on page
35 of Annexure ‘B’.
Immovable property in Soshanguve
[23]
The parties had an immovable property in Soshanguve which they were
renting out. The Defendant sold
the said property for
R130,000.00 without informing her. As if that was not enough,
the Defendant went further to spend the
said amount for his own
personal use and not for the benefit of the common estate.
Businesses
[24]
The parties established a business enterprise by the name of “M[...]
C[...] a[...] P[...] (Pty) Ltd”,
which specialized in creating
aluminium window frames and the like. Page 2 of Annexure ‘B’
clearly illustrates
the certificate issued by the Company
Intellectual Property Commission. Page 3 of Annexure ‘B’
illustrates that
the Defendant applied for tax clearance with the
South African Revenue Services on 16 November 2015. Pages 8 to
15 of Annexure
‘B’ clearly indicate photos of aluminium
products which were made by the Defendant at the parties’
house.
[25]
The Defendant has bought his mother a motor vehicle, a Mitsubishi. He
bought this motor vehicle and unbeknown to the Plaintiff
had it
registered in his mother’s names. The Plaintiff saw the motor
vehicle’s documents in their kitchen. She asked
the Defendant
if he had bought his mother the motor vehicle and the Defendant
answered that he did. She asked him why he had registered
the motor
vehicle in his mother’s names, but the respondent did not
respond. Two offshoots come out of the fact that the
Defendant bought
a motor vehicle for her mother. Firstly, it shows that the Plaintiff
does as he pleases in the family. He does
things behind his wife
back. He cares less for the family. While the Plaintiff tries her
best to pay the house debts, he chose
to buy her mother a motor
vehicle. Secondly, buying his mother a motor vehicle is evident
enough that he has money and, even when
he is unemployed, he can
generate income.
[26]
The Plaintiff further alleged that the Defendant was illegally
selling petrol in the house. She even took
photos of containers with
petrol inside to prove her allegations. She submitted Annexures
‘E1-4’ depicting containers
of petrol.
[27]
The Plaintiff has, in my view, successfully established two
jurisdictional factors upon which this Court
may grant her
application for forfeiture of the benefits arising from marriage in
community of property against the Defendant.
But there is a
catch here. The idea of marriage in community of property, this
is the law in our country, is to create community
of property and
profit and loss between the two parties who conclude such marriage.
Grotius would say that a community of
property creates “
communio
bonorum, gemeenskap van goedere”.
This community is created
by the marriage and comes to being as soon as the parties’
marriage is solemnized:
“
Community
of property is a universal economy partnership of the spouses.
All their assets and liabilities are merged into
a joint estate, in
which both spouses, irrespective of the value of their financial
contributions, hold equal shares”.
See the South African Law of Husband
and Wife by HR Halo Fifth Edition, pages 157 to 158. See also
Thom v Worthmann N.O. and Another
1962 (4) SA 83
M at page 88
where the court stated, per Henochsberg J, as follows:
“
When two parties are married
in community of property, the marriage creates a universal
partnership between the husband and wife,
under the sole
administration of the husband (may I pause here to remark that the
law that the estate falls under the sole administration
of the
husband is no longer part of our law in this country since section 14
of the Matrimonial Property Act Nr. 88 of 1994 was
enacted) in all
property, movable and immovable, belonging to either of them before
marriage until the date of their dissolution.”
[28]
According to this principle, ownership of an undivided one-half share
of the assets that the Plaintiff acquired
before her marriage to the
Defendant vested in the Defendant at marriage and
vice versa
.
That portion of the joint estate became hers by virtue of marriage in
community of property, irrespective of whether she
contributed
financially towards the acquisition of the assets and equally, that
portion of the joint estate became his by virtue
of marriage in
community of property, irrespective of whether he contributed
financially towards the acquisition of the assets.
In
De
Wet N.O. v Jurgens
1970 (3) SA 38
at page 46
Rabie AJA had
the following to say:
“
By ‘n huwelik in
gemeenskap van goed is die man en vrou gesamentlik eienaars van die
gemeenskaplike goed (the spouses own
the assets of the joint estate
in equal undivided shares).”
In
keeping with the judgment of
Pillay
and Krishna and Another
1946 AD 946
,
the
Plaintiff must allege and prove the grounds on which she relies, if
she wants forfeiture. In this case, the court stated
that:
“
I
t
consequently becomes necessary at the outset to deal with the basic
rules which govern the incidence of the burden of proof- the
onus
probandi-for upon them the decision of this case must ultimately
rest. And should be noted immediately that this is a matter
of
substantive law and not a question of evidence; Tregea and Another
(1939 AD 16
, at page 32). The first principle in regard to burden of
proof is thus stated in the Corpus Iuris; “semper necessitas
probandi
incumbit illi qui agit” [D. 22.3. 21.). If one person
claims something from another in a Court of Law, then he has to
satisfy
the Court that is entitled it.”
[29]
In order to succeed with her claim for forfeiture of the patrimonial
benefits against the Defendant, the
Defendant need only proof one of
the three factors mentioned in the section. It was never the
intention of the legislature
that those three factors should be
proved cumulatively. But the Plaintiff must first prove
the
“benefit”.
[30]
What the concept of a “
benefit
” is, is best
illustrated or captured by Schreiner J in
Smith v Smith 1937 SA
(WLD) 126 at pages 127 to 128
where the Court stated that:
“
What a defendant
forfeit is not his share of the common property but only the
pecuniary benefits that he would otherwise have derived
from the
marriage. It is not uncommon to refer to division and forfeiture as
alternative remedies upon the plaintiff. On this view
forfeiture
means that each party keeps what he or she brought into the marriage.
An alternative division of an order of forfeiture
is that it is
really an order for division of estate plus an order that the
defendant is not to share in any excess that the plaintiff
may have
contributed over the contributions of the defendant.”
[31] The history of
the principle enunciated in
Smith v Smith
supra can be
traced back to
Celliers v Celliers 1904 (WLD) 926 at 928
where the court stated that:
“
There
can be no question that the usual order which is made in these cases
that the guilty party shall forfeit all the benefits
which may have
accrued to him or her by virtue of community of property, whether
those benefits have accrued by virtue of marriage
in community of
property or anti-nuptial contract or by virtue of gift which may have
been made by one party to another.”
[32] In the same
authority, Curlewis J stated as follows at page 936:
“
I
therefore come to the conclusion that the abundance of authority is
that, whatever may have been Roman Law on the subject, and
however
far that law may have been adopted in earlier times, it has certainly
fallen into disuse; and if we consider the
practice in South
Africa, it is very clear that except for this decision in the case of
Mulder v Mulder, decided by the majority
of the late High Court, the
practice in South Africa has not been to declare forfeiture of a
share of the community but only to
declare forfeiture of any benefits
which the guilty spouse may have derived from the marriage.”
[33] Finally, Mason,
J himself stated the following on this point of forfeiture:
“
It
appears to me it is not only South African law, but it appears also
to have been the practice of the Dutch Courts, but the only
forfeiture which should be decreased is that of the benefits and not
a forfeiture by the guilty spouse of the whole of her property
so
that she should be sent forth into the world as the beggar.”
See page 935.
[34] In his book, A Practical
Guide To Patrimonial Litigation in Divorce Actions, PA Van Niekerk at
page 3-4, observed that:
“
a
misconception exists that an order for
forfeiture where parties are married in community of property means
that the party against
whom such an order is made forfeits the right
to share in the division of joint estate. This is obviously incorrect
and the proper
position that such a party forfeits the right to share
in any “benefits” of the marriage in community of
property.
After referring to a paragraph in
Smith v Smith
1937 WLD 126
, 127-128
, he went about to explain
what a “benefit” constitutes as follows:
“
This
means that ‘benefits” constitutes the access of the one
party’s contribution to the joint estate over and
above the
other party’s contribution. For example, if the Mr Citizen
possesses an estimate of R 1,000,000 and marries Miss
Money- grabber,
who possesses an estimate of R100000 on date of marriage, it would
constitute a joint estate of R1100000. The undivided
half share of
Miss Moneygrabber would therefore constitute an amount of R 550,000,
which means that, the benefit which she realized
from the marriage in
community of property constitutes an amount of R 450000 being that
portion that she would receive on division
of the joint estate if a
forfeiture order were not made, exceeding Miss Moneygrabber's
contribution towards the joint estate.
What constitutes
a “contribution” towards the joint state is a question of
fact and in Gates v Gates
1940 NPD 361
, it was held that the services
of the wife in managing the joint estate and caring for the children
should be taken into account
.”
The scenario set out by Mr. Van
Niekerk supra applies where the Court grants a general order of
forfeiture only.
The learned author, H R Hahlo sets out
the “benefit” as follows in his book,
The South
African Law of Husband and Wife, 4
th
Edition. Page 435:
“
Whereas
an order of division (or no specific order) means equal division,
irrespective of the amounts contributed to the joint estate
by the by
husband and wife, and order for forfeiture of benefits may mean equal
or unequal division, depending on whether the defendant
or the
plaintiff has contributed more to the going fund, for an order of
forfeiture, even if this is not expressly stated, amounts
to an order
for division of the joint estate, coupled with an order for
forfeiture of the benefits which the guilty spouse has
derived from
the marriage. Since the order does not affect benefits which the
innocent spouse has derived from the marriage, the
estate will be
divided in equal shares if the guilty spouse has contributed more to
the joint estate than innocent spouse, there
being nothing on which
the order for forfeiture could operate, but if the contributions of
the innocent spouse exceeded those of
the guilty one, the guilty
spouse will be deprived of the benefits which he has derived from the
marriage.”
[35] It is quite
clear from the aforegoing judgments that s 9 (1) of the DA does not
vest any powers in the Courts
to award the one-half share of the
joint estate that belongs to the guilty party to the party that
claims forfeiture. See in this
regard see
Rousalis v Rousalis
1980
(3) SA 446
(C).
As stated above, by forfeiture, is meant the
benefits of the marriage and not the guilty party’s share of
the community.
It is the extent to which the guilty party is enriched
that is ‘the benefit’ that he or she may be forfeited.
[36] Somewhere
above, I stated that unlike it was the position during the days of
common law, as demonstrated
in the Murison case supra, s 9 of the DA
gives the Court a discretion. Accordingly, the Court may, in its
discretion, declare a
particular asset in the community estate,
forfeited or the court may declare that one-half of the patrimonial
benefits derived
from the community estate by the guilty party
forfeited in favour of the innocent party.
[34] It is
appropriate, in my view, to make an order of forfeiture as the
Plaintiff has prayed for it, in other
words nothing more and nothing
less.
[35]
Accordingly, the following order is
made:
(1) The bond
of matrimony existing between the Plaintiff and the Defendant is
hereby severed.
(2) In accordance with the Family
Advocate’s Report Attached hereto and marked “XYZ”,
(2.1) both
parties shall retain their parental rights and responsibilities
regarding their care and maintenance of the minor children.
(2.2) The primary care of the minor
children is hereby awarded to the Plaintiff.
(2.3) The Defendant shall have
contact with the minor children in the following manner:
(2.3.1)
contact on
alternate weekends from Friday 17h00 to Sunday 17h00, alternate short
school holidays and equally share one-half of the
long school
holidays.
(2.3.2) The
children spend a day with the father on Father's Day and on the
father’s birthday with the mother on Mother's
Day and the
birthday of the mother.
(2.3.3) the
birthday of the children to be shared between the parties.
(3) The
Defendant shall forfeit, in favour of the Plaintiff, the entire
benefits arising from marriage in community of property
in respect
of:
(3.1) the
immovable property of the joint estate known as 6[...] I[...] Avenue,
Mountainview, Pretoria, The Province of Gauteng,
with the result that
the said immovable property shall become the sole and exclusive
property of the Plaintiff, who shall be alone
responsible and liable
to pay the outstanding amount owed to First National Bank in terms of
the mortgage bond.
(3.2) his
claim to 50% of the Plaintiff’s pension interest held with or
by the Road Accident Fund Pension Fund.
(3.3) Ford
Escort 1.0 with registration NO. J[...] 2[...] N[...] G[...].
(4) The
Defendant is hereby ordered to pay a sum of R3000.00 per month
towards the maintenance of the parties’ minor children.
(5) Each
party shall pay its own costs of this action.
PM MABUSE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
:
Counsel for the Plaintiff:
Adv. MG Mashaba SC
Instructed by:
SJ Mashaba Attorneys
On behalf of the Defendant:
Mr. M Marweshe
Instructed by:
Marweshe Attorneys
Date heard:
19 April
2024
Date of Judgment:
1 October
2024
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