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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 1372
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## B.S v M.J.J.D.J and Another (2024/061371)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1372 (26 December 2024)
B.S v M.J.J.D.J and Another (2024/061371)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1372 (26 December 2024)
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sino date 26 December 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2024/061371
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 26 December
2024
In
the matter between:
B[...]
S[...]
Applicant
and
M[...]
J[...] J[...] D[...] J[...]
First Respondent
D[...]
D[...] J[...]
Second Respondent
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
DE VOS AJ
[1]
The
applicant
is
D[...]’s
biological
mother.
D[...]
was
placed
with
the
respondents immediately after his birth and
they have been taking care of him since birth. He is now four years
old.
D[...] has
special medical needs as a result of his exposure to drugs in utero.
This is not disputed. The respondents are currently
addressing
D[...]'s medical needs, guided by Dr Phelps, a paediatrician. The
Children's Court has approved Dr Phelps' position
as D[...]’s
paediatrician.
[2]
The applicant approached the Court seeking
the following core relief:
“
No
medical decisions shall be taken by the respondents in the absence of
written consent of the biological mother, which consent
shall not be
unreasonably withheld, and if after the intervention by the curator,
the respondents may approach the Court for the
required consent.”
[3]
Effectively, the applicant requests the
Court to grant her the final medical decision over young D[...].
The factual basis for seeking this relief
is that the applicant contends the respondents are providing D[...]
with strong medications.
[4]
The Court was not satisfied that the
applicant had made out a case for this relief and dismissed the
application. The applicant
now seeks leave to appeal against the
Court’s order.
The
applicant filed substantive heads of argument on the date of the
hearing of the matter.
The
respondents had not had sight to the submissions prior to the
hearing.
In
fairness to the respondents, the Court granted the respondents an
opportunity to file submissions in response.
[5]
The Court has considered the written and
oral submissions made by the parties. The Court is not of the view
that the application
bears prospects of success for the reasons that
follow.
[6]
The applicant contends that it is in the
best interest of young D[...], for the applicant to have the final
say over his medical
care. The applicant has to provide a factual
basis for this case. The high-watermark of the applicant’s
factual case is that
the medications which D[...] is receiving are
“strong”. The applicant does not contend the medicine is
not necessary.
The applicant does not contend that the respondents
are providing the medicine outside the advice of medical
professionals. The
applicant is not even contending that the
medicines are not needed.
The
core of the applicant’s complaint is that D[...] is receiving
“strong” medication. There is no allegation
that the
medicines are not in D[...]’s best interests. The applicant
concedes she lacks the know- how to even make such an
allegation. The
only facts relied on by the applicant is that the medicines
prescribed by D[...]’s doctors are “strong”.
[7]
The applicant also does not make out a case
that if the medicines are strong – why she should have the
final say. The applicant
has not made out a case why it would be in
young D[...]’s best interests for her to have a final say over
his medical care.
No facts have been presented on which a court can
conclude that it would be in D[...]’s best interests for the
applicant
to have a final say over his medical care.
[8]
The court is not persuaded that, even if
one were to ignore the respondents’ evidence – which is
substantial, the applicant
will convince an appellate court that the
relief being sought is in D[...]’s best interests.
[9]
The respondents’ evidence however is
overwhelming. They have presented a consistent and substantiated case
that the medicines
which D[...] receives are prescribed, needed and
in D[...]’s best interests. The respondents have presented the
Court with
reports from medical doctors, psychologists and
sociologists, all indicating a child in need of interventionist
medical care. These
reports were obtained in the context of the
respondents – over the past four years – seeking to
ensure young D[...]
is developing appropriately. The respondents have
been able to show that the medicines are not only necessary, but
prescribed by
paediatricians to treat a medical condition caused by
D[...] being exposed to drugs – including meth - whilst in
utero.
[10]
In addition, the applicant has met with
D[...]’s paediatrician – who explained the need for the
medicines. The paediatrician’s
notes of this consultation
showed that the applicant indicated a lack of interest in D[...]’s
medical needs – and rather
that her focus was on seeking to
disprove that D[...]’s medical needs were as a result of her
drug use. Despite this visit
and explanation, the applicant persists
in the speculation that there is something untoward in the medical
care which D[...] is
receiving.
[11]
The respondents’ evidence –
which are objective and by medical professionals – clearly show
that D[...] needs
the medicines which he is receiving.
[12]
There are no prospects of success of the
applicant proving to an appellate court that the relief being sought
is in D[...]’s
best interests. Factually, no such case has been
made out and in any event, the respondents have proven clearly that
the medicines
are being prescribed in D[...]’s best interests.
[13]
In addition to the absence of a factual
case being made out, the applicant’s cause of action is
unclear. The applicant’s
representatives presents the case as
benign as one solely involving the appointment of a curator.
[14]
The notice of motion indicates the
contrary. The notice of motion stipulates the relief being sought:
the applicant wishes to have
the final say over the medical care of
young D[...]. The applicant has failed to show the Court what
provision of law it relies
on for this relief – as such relief
certainly falls outside Rule 57 dealing with the appointment of a
curator ad litem. The
applicant has approached the Court seeking
relief which Rule 57 does not contemplate.
[15]
The applicant has not only failed to make
out any factual case at all, but in addition has failed to bring the
relief it seeks within
the four corners of Rule 57. The case lacks
both the facts and the legal basis to sustain the relief being
sought. On this basis
as well, the Court concludes there are no
prospects of the applicant persuading an appellate court to grant the
relief sought.
[16]
Lastly, this Court held that the
legislative framework does not provide the applicant with the right
to have a final say over D[...]’s
medical care. The Court went
further and held that even if this interpretation of section 129 (4)
of the Children’s Act was
wrong, on the facts of this case –
consent for medical treatment could not be unreasonably withheld.
[17]
The Court found – on the facts of
this case that the applicant was unreasonably withholding consent.
In considering whether consent was being
reasonably withheld – the Court had regard to the factual
context of the case.
This
included that the applicant halted D[...]’s occupational
therapy solely because the therapist would not testify in support
of
the applicant at the adoption proceedings.
[18]
D[...] requires this therapy as a result of
being exposed to drugs in utero.
The
respondents are providing this therapy. The applicant refuses this
therapy on the basis that the therapist would not testify
in her
favour at court proceedings. This refusal is unreasonable and not
guided by what is D[...]’s best interests –
but rather by
what favours the applicant at the adoption proceedings.
[19]
In addition, the applicant refusing medical
care by a court appointed practitioner – absent any factual
basis – is also
unreasonable.
Particularly, as the respondents tendered
for the applicant to obtain a second medical opinion.
[20]
There are no prospects of the applicant
being able to persuade an appellate court that the applicant’s
refusal of medical
care is reasonable.
[21]
As to costs,
the
applicant is entitled to approach this Court seeking leave to appeal.
The abusive nature of the urgent application – including
the
absence of a letter of demand and instituting urgent proceedings a
year after the event complained of - does not attach to
the
application for leave to appeal. For this reason, the court does not
grant any costs in the application for leave to appeal.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[22]
The Court orders that:
a) The application is
dismissed.
I de Vos Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered: This judgment
is handed down electronically by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture, it will be
emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
Counsel
for the applicant:
R
Orr
Instructed
by:
Jenkins
Incorporated Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondents:
Telicia
Meintjies
Instructed
by
Heuer
Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
19
November 2024
Date
of respondents written submissions:
10
December 2024
Date
of judgment:
26
December 2024
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