Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1299South Africa
S.A.V v H.J.V (Leave to Appeal) (2138/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1299 (29 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 November 2024
Headnotes
that: “The grounds of appeal must be clearly and succinctly set out in clear and unambiguous terms so as to enable the court and the respondent to be fully informed of the case the applicant seeks to make out and which the respondent is to meet in opposing the application for leave to appeal. This subrule is peremptory in this regard.” [3] The Applicant’s voluminous application supported by an affidavit and annexures comprising 392 pages does not adhere to the requirements of Rule 49(1)(b).
Judgment
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## S.A.V v H.J.V (Leave to Appeal) (2138/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1299 (29 November 2024)
S.A.V v H.J.V (Leave to Appeal) (2138/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1299 (29 November 2024)
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sino date 29 November 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER: 2138 / 2021
1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3)
REVISED:
YES
/
NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE: 29 November 2024
In
the matter between :
S[...]
A[...]
V[...]
Applicant
and
H[...]
J[...]
V[...]
Respondent
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and or parties’ representatives by email and by
being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed to be at
10h00 on 29 November 2024.
JUDGMENT – LEAVE
TO APPEAL
M SNYMAN, AJ
[1]
Before me is an application for leave to
appeal. A plethora of issues have been raised as grounds for leave to
appeal.
[2]
In
the matter of
Songono
v Minister of Law and Order
[1]
the court held that:
“
The
grounds of appeal must be clearly and succinctly set out in clear and
unambiguous terms so as to enable the court and the respondent
to be
fully informed of the case the applicant seeks to make out and which
the respondent is to meet in opposing the application
for leave to
appeal.
This subrule is
peremptory in this regard.
”
[3]
The Applicant’s voluminous
application supported by an affidavit and annexures comprising 392
pages does not adhere to the
requirements of Rule 49(1)(b).
[4]
The application for leave to appeal in my
view could be dismissed for an abuse of the process, simply that it
does not comply with
the requirements of being succinct and to the
point.
[5]
The application in itself was drawn in the
form of a notice of motion supported by affidavit. The reasoning
behind this, so counsel
for the applicant contends is the fact that
extraneous factors needed to have been placed before court such as
the transcription
of the argument.
[6]
This, so is was argued was necessary
because the applicant was of the view that I conducted the hearing in
such a manner that inter
alia his right in terms of section 34 of the
constitution guaranteed a fair hearing and he was not afforded such a
hearing. That
is clearly not so. The view of applicant’s legal
representative was that she wanted to address the court on what she
deemed
important
despite
informing
her
that
I
read
the
application
as
well
as
the heads consisting in excess of 150
pages. The view was simply that she should be allowed to address the
court in a way she wanted
to, failing which I would be disregarding
her client’s rights to a fair hearing.
[7]
Despite the aforegoing and the fact that I
would be entitled to dismiss the application for leave to appeal for
not being sucking
and complying with the requirements as set out in
the Superior Courts Act, I find to be only relevant in respect of
costs.
# Test applicable to an
application for leave to appeal
Test applicable to an
application for leave to appeal
[8]
The provisions of section 17(1) of the
Superior Court Act, Act 10 of 2013 (“Superior Court Act “)
provides therefore
that:
“
Leave
to appeal may
only
be given where the judge or judges are of the opinion that
-
(a)
(i)
the
appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some
other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgements on the matter under
consideration; ….”
[ Emphasis added]
[9]
If leave is granted against an order of a
single judge in terms of the provisions of subsection 2(a) or (b),
the judge granting
leave must direct that the appeal be heard by the
full court of that division unless:
“
(i)
the decision to be appealed involves a question
of law of importance …;
(ii)
that the administration of justice requires
consideration by the Supreme Court of Appeal.”
[10]
The
test was reconfirmed in the matter of
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal stated that:
“
Turning
the focus to the relevant provisions of the Superior Courts Act
[*
Section
17(2)(d)
Act 10 of 2013
]
(the
SC Act), leave to appeal may only be granted where the judges
concerned are of the opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of
success
or there are compelling reasons which exist why the appeal should be
heard such as the interests of justice
.[*Nova
Property Holdings Limited v Cobbett & Others
[2016] ZASCA 63:
2016 (4) SA 317
(SCA) para 8] This
Court in Caratco [*Caratco (Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCA 17
;
2020
(5) SA 35
(SCA)]
,
concerning
the provisions of s 17(1)(a)(ii) of the SC Act pointed out that if
the court is unpersuaded that there are prospects
of success, it must
still enquire into whether there is a compelling reason to entertain
the appeal.
Compelling
reason would of course include an important question of law or a
discreet issue of public importance that will have an
effect on
future disputes. However, this Court correctly added that ‘but
here too the
merits
remain vitally important and are often decisive’. [*Ibid, para
2
]
I
am mindful of the decisions at high court level debating whether the
use of the word ‘would’ as opposed to ‘could’
possibly means that the threshold for granting the appeal has been
raised. If a reasonable prospect of success is established,
leave to
appeal should be granted. Similarly, if there are some other
compelling reasons why the appeal should
be
heard, leave to appeal should be granted.
The
test of reasonable prospects of success postulates a dispassionate
decision based on the facts and the law that a court of appeal
could
reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the trial
court. In other words, the appellants in this matter need
to convince
this Court on proper grounds that they
have
prospects of success on appeal. Those prospects of success must not
be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance of
succeeding. A
sound rational basis for the
conclusion
that there are prospects of success must be shown to exist. [*See
Smith v S
[2011] ZASCA 15
;
2012
(1) SACR 567
(SCA); MEC Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[2016] ZASCA
176
para 17]”
[Emphasis
and footnotes added *]
[11]
I am of the view that despite being of the
view that the applicant has no prospects of success, I am of the view
that the decision
in respect of the date of the divorce order needs
be ruled upon by a court of appeal.
[12]
I granted a number of orders on December
2022, essentially dismissing the application of applicant and
granting the counter application.
The orders granted were the
following:
1.
“
The applicant’s
application is dismissed.
2.
It is declared that the date of
divorce for purposes of calculating the 40% share to be transferred
to the respondent is 19 August
2020;
3.
Marthinus Jacobus Bekker of Nicolaas
Bekker Trustees are appointed as receiver and distributor of the
estate of the applicant, subject
to the following powers and duties
as set out in paragraphs 8.1 to 8.16 of the notice of counter
application dated 26 February
2021;
4.
Pending the finalisation and
transfer or payment of 40% of the assets as determined by the
receiver, the rule 43 order of this court
dated 8 May 2015 is
reinstated and shall remain operative except if set aside or amended
by court. The first payment to take place
on or before 31 December
2022 and thereafter monthly on or before the last day of each
succeeding month thereafter until the transfer
of the assets of the
applicant as ordered is finalised;
5.
The receiver and distributor are
granted the specific power and duty to pay the amount ordered in
respect of the rule 43 order or
any substitution or amendment thereof
to the respondent monthly as ordered with the explicit power to
realise any asset/s to fulfill
such obligation as well as any costs
orders granted earlier or herein if unpaid;
6.
The receiver is ordered to in his
distribution also transfer such amount of interest on the 40%
determined calculated at a rate
of 9,75% per annum form 19 August
2020 to date of payment;
7.
Applicant shall pay all costs, fees
and expenses of Mr Bekker, the receiver which shall include the costs
of valuators, if needed;
8.
Applicant shall pay the costs of the
application on a scale as between attorney and client, such costs to
include the costs of senior
counsel and two counsel where so employed
and which shall include the costs of the attorneys appointed for the
attorneys of respondent,
Couzyn Hertzog and Horak, Inc and employment
of senior counsel in that regard;
9.
The costs referred to in paragraph 8
shall further include the costs of the condonation application as
well as the costs of both
applications to strike out parts of the
affidavits and annexures dated 26 February 2021 and 5 May 2021 on a
scale as between attorney
and client;
10.
Apart from the orders above, all
other applications or requests are dismissed, which shall
specifically include the request that
the matter be postponed and
referred to case management, the costs of an application or request
to pay the costs of the application
de bonis propriis against both
the respondent’s attorney and the attorney appointed by him to
protect his interests.”
[13]
It is the second order that I will address
first. The applicant and respondent were married out of community of
property before
1 November 1984. At the time of the divorce
proceedings being instituted the applicant was in a care facility and
respondent residing
in the former common home. The applicant after
having been diagnosed inter alia with anxiety disorder and bipolar
disorder was
medically unfit to work and also suffered two strokes by
the time the opposed divorce was heard in 2017.
[14]
Applicant could not give evidence and his
evidence was presented by affidavit before Petersen, AJ as he then
was. In dispute was
essentially the claim in terms of
section 7(3)
of
the
Divorce Act of 1979
. The parties were ad idem what the marriage
relationship had irretrievably broken down.
[15]
The court granted an order for divorce and
declared that respondent was entitled to 50% of the assets of
respondent.
[16]
Applicant sought and was granted leave to
appeal the whole of the order order including both the decree of
divorce and the claim
in terms of
section 7(3).
[17]
On appeal, which was only heard in 2020 an
order setting aside the whole of the order of Petersen, AJ and
replaced it with an order
for divorce and an order that respondent is
entitled to 40% of the assets of applicant. This order was handed
down on 19 August
2020.
[18]
After having heard the application I
granted the order set out above.
[19]
At the nub of the matter is the date or
divorce. Quite important is the fact that the applicant reached the
age of retirement and
the pension benefits fell due, as I understand
the evidence, in 2019. It will immediately be noted that this date is
after the
initial divorce order, but before the order on appeal.
[20]
The
value of the estate may change when this happens due to the fact that
inter alia retirement annuities and pension interests
are deemed to
form part of the estate of a person. However once a person retires,
the deeming provisions falls away and now fall
in the estate. As such
parts of a pension may be paid out as a lump sum and part will only
fall inside the estate as a contingent
right or claim.
[3]
[21]
The applicant’s view was that the
date of divorce was 2017 and the respondent was that it was 2020. A
number of factors was
considered by me when determining that the date
of divorce was 2020 and not 2017. They were inter alia:
1
The fact that the applicant’s
representatives, despite claiming that the extent of the estate was
determined during the hearing
in 2017, claimed that two assets were
not included during evidence. Those were the value of a car and the
value of the money in
a bank account held at ABSA bank;
2
Secondly I also took into account the fact
that the applicant’s own calculations when approaching the
court in 2021 to determine
the value, inter alia placed before court
the 2020 values of a number of policies;
3
Thirdly the whole of the order was appealed
against and not only the claim in respect of
section 7(3)
of the
Divorce Act;
4
Fourthly, of importance was the fact that
unlike other orders when replaced on appeal, the parties remained
married in the eyes
of the world until the order granted in 2020;
5
The
fact that the order is suspended and later replaced was addressed by
the Appeal Court who concluded that the order is amended
or
substituted on appeal was an order ex tunc and not ex nunc, i.e. the
date of the order was that of the court a quo.
[4]
I found that this is not the case in divorce proceedings, at least
when the order itself is appealed
against.
The
parties
could
not
remarry,
it
affected
the
persons’ status and their dignity could be impaired.
[5]
[22]
I could find no authority on the date of
divorce when the order is suspended by an appeal, except where one of
the parties pass
away, which is clearly not applicable here.
[23]
A decision on the date of appeal is crucial
to determining the 40% to be transferred to the respondent. For that
reason I, despite
the form of the application and non-compliance with
rule 49
will grant leave to appeal at least in this regard.
[24]
One of the issues at the hearing was the
counter application for the reinstatement of the
rule 43
order. In
the judgment I specifically gave the receiver the power to pay that
amount to the respondent monthly until such time
as the division is
completed and ordered the
rule 43
order of 2015 be reinstated from 31
December 2022. I specifically, in the judgment stated that the
applicant is reminded that this
order is not appealable.
[25]
At the hearing of the application for leave
to appeal, nearly 2 years later through no fault of the respondent or
the court, I was
informed that it was regarded by applicant as being
suspended as it was viewed as incompetent. The respondent has no
income of
any nature and has been without any maintenance since 2020
when the order on appeal was granted. As a matter of fact the
applicant
sought to have the maintenance paid in terms of the
rule 43
order between the order a quo in 2017 and the order on appeal in 2020
deducted from the 40%. That is clearly untenable.
[26]
As a result I refuse to give leave against
prayer 4 of the judgment with the effect that the applicant shall be
obliged to pay maintenance
to the respondent in terms of the 2015
order to date of finalisation of the appeal or the finalisation of
the division of the assets
as the case may be.
# Costs
Costs
[27]
As already indicated I am of the view that
the costs of the application for leave to appeal should be borne by
the applicant despite
it not being opposed due to the non-compliance
with the rules and practice applicable to an application for leave to
appeal.
[28]
The following order is therefore issued:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted to the applicant
only in respect of orders, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10;
2.
Leave to appeal is refused in respect of
the order reinstating the
rule 43
order of 2015 and such order shall
remain valid and enforceable until set aside or the terms thereof
complied with;
3.
The applicant shall pay the costs of the
application for leave to appeal, in so far as any was incurred by the
respondent.
BY ORDER
M SNYMAN, AJ
DATE
HEARD:
22
November 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29
November 2024
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
EA Lourens
Applicants’
Attorneys:
Werner
Roos & Immelman Attorneys
[1]
Songono
v Minister of Law and Order
1996
(4) SA 384
(E) at 385I - J
[2]
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021) at para [10]
[3]
McIntosh
v McIntosh en Anders
(3037/2007)
[2011] ZAFSHC 116
(14 July 2011) at [28]
[4]
Holmdene
Brickworks v Robertson Construction
1977
(3) SA 670
(A) at 692F - G
[5]
D
v D
(A3079/15)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 31 (12 February 2016) at [30] “
To
set aside the divorce per se between the parties, and return them to
a state of matrimony pursuant to an automatic consequence
of the
legal process, and, not as a result of a personal choice purposely
made by each of them, would be to undermine, even deny,
their
respective rights of dignity, including their right to privacy.”
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