Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 193South Africa
M.M v M.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 193; 50524/2017 (22 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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## M.M v M.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 193; 50524/2017 (22 March 2023)
M.M v M.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 193; 50524/2017 (22 March 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 50524/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
22 MARCH 2023
E
van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
M[...]
M[...]
PLAINTIFF
and
M[...]
M[...]
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
In this opposed divorce action, the only issue to be determined as
indicated
in the pleadings, is whether the defendant is entitled to a
half share of the plaintiff’s pension fund’s proceeds. As
a result, only the facts relevant to answering this question are set
out.
The
facts
[2]
The plaintiff and the defendant were married on 7 August 2007. Their
chosen
matrimonial property regime is one of community of property.
Their marriage relationship was turbulent. The defendant at times
abused his wife, and he was in at least one extra-marital
relationship. He did not deny that the plaintiff contracted HIV
through
him after they were married. The plaintiff left the
matrimonial home during 2014, but returned in 2015 after the
defendant’s
uncle intervened. Their relationship, however,
remained strained and acrimonious. Since 2015 the defendant has
failed to contribute
to the parties’ son’s maintenance,
and that responsibility fell solely on the plaintiff’s
shoulders. He is, however,
currently paying maintenance and gradually
catching up on the arrears. The parties have not lived together since
2017 when the
plaintiff left the matrimonial home permanently.
[3]
In 2016, whilst the plaintiff still resided in the matrimonial home,
she
resigned from her employment. She received a pension fund benefit
that amounted to R800 000,00 after taxes. She did not inform the
defendant that she received the money as they were ‘fighting at
the time’. She used the money, amongst others, to provide
for
herself and her children, to pay household expenses. She paid for
herself and her daughter, of whom the defendant is not the
biological
father but who was also accepted into the defendant’s family as
per the lobola agreement, to attend a ‘property
course’
to improve their qualifications and enhance their business skills.
She also paid her daughter’s tertiary education
costs at UNISA
and the University of the Western Cape. She assisted her daughter in
setting up a business. She explained that she
also used the money to
pay for her HIV medication. Although the defendant testified that the
plaintiff is still a beneficiary on
his medical aid, her evidence in
this regard was not disputed. She also used the money to pay for the
rental of a flat for a period.
The plaintiff testified that the
amount she received as a pension benefit has since been depleted.
The
plaintiff’s claim pertaining to the joint estate
[4]
In the particulars of claim, the plaintiff claims the division of the
joint estate subject thereto that the defendant forfeits patrimonial
benefits of the marriage in community of property. During the
trial,
the plaintiff, however, abandoned the forfeiture claim. She only
seeks a division of the joint estate, inclusive of the
defendant’s
pension interest.
The
defendant’s plea and counterclaim
[5]
The defendant filed a ‘bare denial’ regarding the
plaintiff’s
forfeiture claim save for specifically denying that
he abused the plaintiff, a fact he conceded when under oath, and
pleading that
the A[...] property was sold without any undue
influence or force, and that there were no proceeds earned.’
The defendant
also pleaded that the plaintiff ‘has her proceeds
of pension fund benefits which the Defendant is entitled to the 50%
share’
(
sic
.).
[6]
In his counterclaim, the defendant stated that:
‘
Plaintiff was a
member of the Pension Fund Scheme and she realised her pension
proceeds in 2016 without sharing with the Defendant.
The Defendant was/is
entitled to half share of the Plaintiff pension funds proceeds.’
[7]
The defendant subsequently seeks a division of the joint estate
‘including
the Plaintiff’s Pension Interest’. The
plaintiff did not file a replication or a plea to the defendant’s
plea
in reconvention.
Pre-trial
minute
[8]
In the pre-trial minute signed by both parties’ legal
representatives, it was agreed that the issues in dispute relate to
the plaintiff’s claim that a half share of the defendant’s
pension is to be awarded to her and the disputed fact that
the
plaintiff has no pension. The most pressing issue was identified as
the division of the defendant’s pension interest.
The issue of
the plaintiff forfeiting any claim to the defendant’s pension
interest is, however, not raised in the pleadings.
Discussion
[9]
When the trial commenced, the parties’ legal representatives
were
at loggerheads regarding the defendant’s counterclaim.
Plaintiff’s counsel submitted that the defendant’s claim
in reconvention did not contain the necessary averments to establish
a claim for forfeiture of patrimonial benefits of the marriage
in
community of property. Defendant’s counsel contended that it is
clear from the particulars of claim that the relief the
defendant
seeks is forfeiture of patrimonial benefits in that half of the value
of the pension benefit the plaintiff must be allocated
to the
defendant before the remainder of the joint estate is divided –
and this effectively amounts to forfeiture. Counsel
for the defendant
further contended that the plaintiff’s failure to file a
replication and a plea in reconvention caused
the averments relating
to the defendant’s interest to the 50% share of the plaintiff’s
pension interest raised in the
plea and counterclaim to stand
uncontested.
i.
Plaintiff’s failure to replicate or file a plea to the
counterclaim
[10]
The parties
are married in community of property. Upon marriage, the spouses’
separate estates automatically merged into one
estate for the
duration of the marriage, and the spouses became tied co-owners in
undivided and indivisible half-shares of all
the assets and
liabilities they had at the time of the marriage as well as the
assets and liabilities they acquired during the
marriage.
[1]
[11]
It is trite
that anything that has monetary value for the person who holds a
right, title or interest in it, is an asset.
[2]
Examples of assets are membership interests in close corporations and
‘pension benefits that have already accrued to one
of the
spouses.’
[3]
Where pension
benefits have not yet accrued to the spouse s 7(7) and (8) of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act) applies
if the marriage is
terminated by divorce. As a result, a party’s pension interest
shall, subject to s (7)(b) and (c), be
deemed to be part of the
party’s assets.
[12]
One of the legal consequences of this matrimonial property regime for
the parties before
this court, is that when the plaintiff’s
pension benefit was paid out in 2016, the money that was paid out
immediately and
automatically accumulated to the joint estate. It did
not vest in a separate estate. This legal consequence of the parties’
chosen matrimonial property regime renders the plaintiff’s
failure to file a replication or plea to the counterclaim nugatory.
Cognisance must also be had to rule 25(2) of the Uniform Rules of
Court where it is provided that no replication which would be
a bare
denial of allegations in the previous pleading shall be necessary.
Although the defendant might be of the view that he has
not
benefitted from the plaintiff’s pension interest because he did
not factually receive any money in his hands, the joint
estate
received the benefit. As a result, I agree with the plaintiff’s
submission that the fact that the plaintiff did not
replicate to the
plea, or filed a plea in reconvention to the counterclaim, is of no
consequence due to the factual context of
the dispute and the
prevailing principles of law.
ii.
Did the defendant make out a case for forfeiture on the pleadings?
[13]
As for the defendant’s counsel’s submission that the
counterclaim contains
the essential averments to establish a claim
for forfeiture, I disagree.
Section 9
of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
,
provides for the forfeiture of patrimonial benefits of marriage.
Section 9(1)
provides as follows:
‘
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.’
[14]
Two important aspects are brought to the fore in
s 9(1).
The first is
that
s 9(1)
provides for the forfeiture of a ‘patrimonial
benefit’. A patrimonial benefit, is a benefit that accrues to a
party
because of the marriage. That which a party contributed to the
joint estate is not a benefit received by that party, and as a
result,
it cannot be forfeited. Since the defendant did not make out
a case on the pleadings that the plaintiff must forfeit her interest
in his pension interest, the defendant’s counterclaim fails on
this ground alone.
[15]
The second
significant aspect that flows from
s 9(1)
is that the question as to
whether a court will grant forfeiture, depends solely on whether one
party will, as against the other,
be unduly benefitted if the
forfeiture is not granted. In
Engelbrecht
v Engelbrecht,
[4]
a full court of the Cape Provincial Division explained that joint
ownership of the other spouse’s assets is a right that
accrues
to spouses married in community of property when the marriage is
concluded. Unless the parties made precise equal contributions
to the
joint estate, the party who contributed the least during the
existence of the marriage will benefit above the other when
the
marriage is dissolved. This is an inevitable consequence of the
parties’ matrimonial property regime. The legislature
did not
through
s 9
of the
Divorce Act provide
an opportunity to the greater
contributor to complain about this. Unless it is proved (and the
burden of proof rests on the spouse
seeking a forfeiture order) what
the nature and extent of the benefit is that the other spouse stands
to receive when the marriage
is dissolved, the court cannot determine
whether the benefit that will accrue to the other party is undue. It
only becomes necessary
to consider the factors set out in
s 9
(1)
when the nature and extent of the benefit is established.
[16]
In casu
, the nature and extent of the benefits that the
plaintiff stands to receive when the marriage is dissolved were not
canvassed in
the pleadings or the evidence. As a result, it cannot be
determined whether any benefit that will accrue to her is undue. The
defendant
did not make out a case that the plaintiff is to forfeit
any benefit of the marriage in community of property.
iii.
The divorce
[17]
As for the divorce, the parties agree that their marriage has
irretrievably broken down,
and that the issue of the minor child’s
maintenance be referred to mediation or the maintenance court. The
existing order
regarding child maintenance remains in place. The
plaintiff did not persist with her claim for rehabilitative spousal
maintenance
and confirmed that she is now aware of the fact that if
she does not claim maintenance during the divorce proceedings, she
will
not be able to claim maintenance from the defendant.
[18]
Although the plaintiff is the successful party in the narrow issue
before the court, the
plaintiff initially sought an order that the
defendant forfeits the patrimonial benefits of the marriage in
community of property.
The defendant retaliated with his own
forfeiture claim. It is not evident at what time the plaintiff
decided to desist from continuing
with her forfeiture claim and
merely sought the division of the joint estate, inclusive of the
defendant’s pension interest,
which interest is statutorily
deemed to form part of the defendant’s assets and consequently
the joint estate. As far as
costs are concerned, I am of the view
that it is fair and just in these circumstances that the parties are
liable for their own
costs.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1. A
decree of divorce is granted;
2. The
joint estate is divided in equal shares;
3. The
plaintiff is entitled to 50% of the defendant’s pension
interest from date of marriage to date of
divorce;
4. Full
parental rights and responsibilities in respect of the minor child as
set out in
section 18(2)
of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005, are
granted to the plaintiff and the defendant, subject thereto that the
plaintiff is awarded
the right to provide primary care and place of
residence to the minor child.
5.
Specific parental rights and responsibilities as set out in
section
18(2)(b)
and (3) of the Children’s Act, and in particular to
act as joint guardian and to exercise contact to the minor child is
awarded
to the defendant, which contact includes, but is not limited
to the following:
5.1. Every alternative
weekend from 17:00 on Friday to 17:00 on Sunday, or as arranged
between the parties;
5.2. Reasonable
telephonic contact on weekdays between 18:00 and 18h30;
5.3. Every alternative
short school holiday and every alternative long school holiday,
Christmas to rotate between the parties,
unless otherwise agreed to
between the parties;
5.4. Every birthday of
the defendant and on Father’s day;
6. The
defendant is to continue to make payment towards the maintenance of
the minor child in accordance with
the existing court order in the
amount of R2500.00 per month with an annual escalation of 10% from
the date of this order, and
an amount of R1000.00 per month for
arrear maintenance. Either party may approach the maintenance court
for a variation of the
existing order;
7. The
defendant is to retain the minor child on his medical aid until the
minor child attains the age of majority
or self-independence,
whichever is last;
8. The
parties are liable in equal shares for the education of the minor
child;
9. Each
party is to pay its own costs incurred in the divorce action.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For the plaintiff:
A Kissoon
Instructed by:
Alan Kissoon
Attorneys
For the defendant:
Adv. T Kgomo
Instructed by:
Dube N. Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
1 March 2023
Date of judgment:
22 March 2023
[1]
This
trite principle is succinctly explained by Heaton J and Kruger H in
South
African Family Law
4
th
ed Lexis Nexis 62. See, amongst others,
Estate
Sayle v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1945 AD 388
,
De
Wet v Jurgens
1970 (3) SA 38
(A),
Du
Plessis v Pienaar
2003 (1) SA 671
(SCA). The exceptions that exist do not find
application in the current factual setting.
[2]
Heaton
and Kruger, supra, 63.
[3]
Ibid.
[4]
1989
(1) SA 597
(C).
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