Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 194South Africa
Matshika v Matshika [2023] ZAGPPHC 194; 10856/2021 (20 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Matshika v Matshika [2023] ZAGPPHC 194; 10856/2021 (20 March 2023)
Matshika v Matshika [2023] ZAGPPHC 194; 10856/2021 (20 March 2023)
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sino date 20 March 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 10856/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
YES
20
March 2023
In
the matter between:
LM
MATSHIKA
Plaintiff
and
SS
MATSHIKA
Defendant
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER J:
1]
This is a defended divorce action where
only 2 issues require determination: a)
whether
the plaintiff should be granted an order that the defendant forfeit
certain specified patrimonial benefits of the marriage
in community
of property and b) the costs of the action
[1]
.
BACKGROUND
2]
The
parties were married to each other in community of property on 5
October 1999 and the child born of the marriage has already
attained
the age of majority and although he lives with the plaintiff, he is
self-supporting.
[2]
3]
Although the specific date of the parties’
separation is in dispute, as are the reasons for the breakdown of the
marriage,
it is common cause that by the latter half of 2004 they
were no longer living together. Apart from one occasion where they
discussed
issues pertaining to their (then minor) child, there has
been no communication between them and they have lived apart for the
past
19 years.
4]
On 2 March 2021 the plaintiff issued
summons for divorce and ancillary relief against the defendant. The
reasons why it took her
17 years to do so were the subject of debate
during the trial but nothing much turns on this other than the fact
that, by operation
of law, the marriage endures until this court
grants the decree terminating it. In fact, however, it is a very
different picture
as the marriage (at best on defendant’s
version) lasted less than 5 years and on plaintiff’s version it
lasted less
than 4 years.
COMMON CAUSE
5]
The following is common cause:
a)
the marriage relationship has irretrievably
broken down;
b)
the assets forming the subject matter of
the forfeiture claim and their value are:
(i)the
common home situated at [....] K [....] Street, M [....] G
[....], Extension 2, Gauteng valued at R837 500-00
[3]
;
(ii)the
furniture and household effects valued at R20 370-00;
(iii)
the plaintiff’s pension interest in
the Government Employees Pensions Fund (GEPF) presently valued at
R216 903-00; and
(iv)the
plaintiff’s Mercedes Benz A200 motor vehicle with registration
number [....] purchased in 2021 and is valued
at R170 000-00;
c)
since he left the common home the defendant
has made no contribution to the plaintiff, their child or the
maintenance and upkeep
of the common home and even during their
marriage his contribution was nominal at best.
IN DISPUTE
6]
The plaintiff’s version is that the
defendant never contributed much during the time they lived together
and at best, contributed
“small groceries” of ±
R200-00 once every 3 months. During ± 2003 the defendant went
to work on the mines
in Rustenburg and returned home over weekends
until 2004 when he stopped returning home. The plaintiff’s
version was also
that the defendant was physically aggressive to her
on an occasion and also to her late mother who he knocked to the
ground when
she attempted to intercede in one of their arguments -
the physical aggression was not pleaded by plaintiff and is denied by
defendant.
7]
The defendant’s version is that the
incident that led to the breakdown of the marriage was that in
December 2003 the plaintiff
went out one evening with her cousin and
some friends drinking and returned home after midnight. When he
attempted to chastise
her, she called family members who arrived and
fought with him and attempted to assault him, chased him in the house
and broke
windows (the latter two allegations were never put to
plaintiff in cross-examination, although they are pleaded) and he
fled to
his parental home in fear for his life. He returned to the
common home a few months later but was forced to leave once more when
the same circumstances played out and he fled because he feared they
would kill him - he never returned.
8]
His version is that he did support the
plaintiff and their child during the marriage – he bought
groceries and furniture:
the latter was also never put to the
plaintiff in cross-examination.
9]
His version was also that whilst in
Rustenburg he lived with the plaintiff’s parents the latter was
also never put to plaintiff
in cross-examination.
10]
According to defendant, the parties finally
separated in June 2004 because the plaintiff’s family forced
him to leave the
house in fear for his life – he has never
returned.
11]
Apart
from defendant’s evidence regarding the furniture and
groceries, he conceded that once he left the common home he paid
no
maintenance in regards of their child
[4]
he did not maintain the common home, he did not contribute towards
the bond, the utilities, maintenance or upkeep of the home or
make
any financial contribution at all.
12]
The plaintiff has throughout the marriage
been employed by the Department of Health. She started her career in
1995. Her pension
interest is at present only R216 903-00 as:
a)
she resigned in August 2009 and received
her pension payout of R803 821-78;
b)
she was then employed in the private sector
and was re-employed by the Department of Health in 2011;
c)
in August 2020 she again resigned and took
her pension monies;
d)
in September 2020 she was re-employed by
the Department of Health where she still works.
13]
Her uncontroverted evidence is that each
time her pension payout was used to pay off accumulated debts. As a
result, the immovable
property was finally paid off in 2020.
FORFEITURE
14]
In
her particulars of claim, the plaintiff pleads
[5]
that having regard to the fact that the parties co-habitation was
short-lived, the lack of any meaningful financial contribution
towards the maintenance and upkeep of her, the child or the joint
estate by the defendant and the defendant’s misconduct
as
alleged, he would be unduly benefitted were this court not to order
that he forfeit the benefits of the marriage.
THE
LEGAL POSITION
15]
Section 9 of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979
(the Act) provides 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.”
16]
In
Wijker
v Wijker
[6]
the test was formulated as follows: Section 9(1) of the Act
postulates that the court considers a) whether the defendant will
receive a benefit and b) if so, whether the benefit is undue. In
deciding whether the benefit is undue, 3 factors alone are
considered:
(i) the duration of the marriage, (ii) the circumstances
that gave rise to the breakdown of the marriage, (iii) any
substantial
misconduct on the part of either parties.
17]
In
Wijker
,
the SCA made it clear that the Legislature never intended the 3 above
factors to be considered cumulatively and the approach to
be followed
was the following
[7]
:
“
It
is obvious from the wording of the section that the first step is to
determine whether or not the party against whom the order
is sought
will, in fact, be benefitted. That will be purely a factual issue.
Once that has been established, the trial Court must
determine,
having regard to the factors mentioned in the section, whether or not
that party will in relation to the other be unduly
benefitted if a
forfeiture order is not made. Although the second determination is a
value judgment, it is made by a trial Court
after having considered
the facts falling within the compass of the three factors mentioned
in the section.”
18]
It
is also important to note that, although a court has a wide
discretion when considering whether to grant forfeiture or not,
considerations of fairness and equity are not relevant
[8]
,
nor can it be granted because one spouse’s contribution was
greater than the other’s
[9]
.
19]
Thus the first question is whether
defendant would be benefitted were forfeiture not to be granted. In
my view the answer must be
“yes” as the defendant would
receive 50% of the assets of the joint estate.
20]
The second question is whether the benefit
would be undue, and again I am of the view the answer is “yes”.
Taking into
account the factors set out in section 9 of the Act, the
fact is that irrespective of the fact that the legal duration of the
marriage
is 23 ½ years, the
de
facto
position is that the parties have
been separated since (at the latest) mid-2004. Since then, and on
both versions, they communicated
only once in the past 19 years. The
defendant has also failed to make any contribution at all to the
maintenance of his child by
his own admission. This simply ignores
his legal obligation and flies in the face of the best interest
principle held so dear to
section 28 of the Constitution and section
7 of the Children’s Act, 2005.
21]
The fact is also that the immovable
property was acquired by plaintiff 2 years prior to the marriage and
she paid the bond, the
utilities and the upkeep with no contribution
at all by the defendant either prior to 2004 or subsequently and it
is as a result
of her efforts that the property is now bond-free.
None of this evidence was disputed by the defendant.
22]
The plaintiff’s motor vehicle was
purchased by her in 2021 – 17 years after the parties had
separated and her pension
fund is also ± 2 years old and the
previous pension monies received used to pay off debts accumulated.
23]
In my view, the defendant’s version
that he bought household furniture cannot be accepted as he produced
no evidence whatsoever
to substantiate this and his evidence on this
issue did not ring true especially when seen in the light of the
pleadings themselves
where he fails to plead this at all. Given the
fact that he neither led nor provided any documentary evidence to
demonstrate that
he worked in the 23 ½ years, what work he did
or what his earnings were, I find his version improbable. The
plaintiff version
that defendant’s contribution consisted of
“small groceries” is, on the probabilities, more likely.
24]
Insofar as the reasons the parties parted
ways is concerned, I find that the plaintiff was overall a more
reliable witness as many
important parts of the defendant’s
version were never put to plaintiff in cross-examination eg the
furniture issue, the fact
that he lived with her parents whilst
working in Rustenburg, that plaintiff’s cousins chased him in
the house and broke windows
in 2003.
25]
I therefore accept that the marriage
relationship broke down as a result of the defendant’s conduct.
26]
Thus, given the short
de
facto
duration of the marriage and the
reasons for the breakdown thereof, I find that the defendant will be
unduly benefitted were an
order for forfeiture of the following
assets not to be granted:
a)
the immovable property situated in M [....]
G [....], Extension 2, as well as the furniture and household
effects;
b)
the plaintiff’s A200 Mercedes Benz
with registration number [....];
c)
the plaintiff’s pension interest in
the GEPF Pension Fund.
COSTS
27]
I am also of the view that costs should
follow the result.
ORDER
28]
The order that I grant is the following:
1.
A decree of divorce shall issue.
2.
The defendant is ordered to forfeit the
following benefits of the marriage in community of property in favour
of the plaintiff:
2.1
the immovable property situated at [....]
K [....] Street, M [....] G [....], Extension 2, Gauteng (the
immovable property);
2.2
the furniture and household effects at the
immovable property;
2.3
the plaintiff’s pension interest in
the GEPF pension fund;
2.4
the A200 Mercedes Benz motor vehicle with
registration number [....] registered in plaintiff’s
name.
3.
Save as aforesaid the joint estate shall be
divided.
4.
The defendant is ordered to pay plaintiff’s
costs of suit.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names are reflected and
is handed down electronically by
circulation to the Parties/their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed to
be 20 March 2023.
Appearances:
For
Plaintiff
: Adv
Z Marx du Plessis
Instructed
by
: Shapiro & Ledwaba
Inc
For
Defendant
: Adv S Mchasa
Instructed
by
: T Chiloane Attorneys
Heard
on
: 6 March 2023
[1]
The
defendant abandoned his claim for maintenance at the hearing of the
trial
[2]
This
is according to plaintiff’s uncontested evidence
[3]
Purchased
by plaintiff prior to the parties’ marriage in 1997 for
R106 000-00
[4]
Which
he admits in the plea
[5]
And I paraphrase here
[6]
1993(4)
SA 720 (A)
[7]
At
727 E-F
[8]
Wijker
supra;
Rousalis
v Rouailis
1980 (3) SA 446
(C) at 450 D-E
[9]
Engelbrecht
v Engelbrecht
1989 (1) SA 597
(C) at 601
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