Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 403South Africa
B.R.B.M v R.K.B.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 403; 19279/2019 (5 June 2023)
Headnotes
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”. [21] In light of the above, the parties also take the risk associated with the marriage in community of property in that at the dissolution of that marriage they will part ways with each taking away his or her 50% share from the joint estate regardless of their respective
Judgment
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## B.R.B.M v R.K.B.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 403; 19279/2019 (5 June 2023)
B.R.B.M v R.K.B.M [2023] ZAGPPHC 403; 19279/2019 (5 June 2023)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 19279/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
05/06/2023
In
the matter between:
B.R.B
M[....]1
Plaintiff
and
R.K.B
M[....]2
Defendant
JUDGMENT
PHOOKO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Marriage is an institution that lovers
decide to conclude for various reasons including the starting of a
family and raising children
together. In certain marriage regimes,
what is mine is yours and
vice versa
.
It is open to the parties prior to the conclusion of a civil marriage
to identify a marital regime that will best serve and protect
their
respective interests. Consequently, a marriage could be in community
of property, out of community of property with accrual,
or out of
community of property without accrual.
[2]
This is a divorce matter wherein the
parties concluded a marriage in community of property. By default,
the parties agreed to the
share of profits and/or losses upon
dissolution of the marriage.
[3]
On one hand, the Plaintiff seeks an order
of forfeiture of the patrimonial benefits against the Defendant on
the basis that the
Defendant will unduly benefit if such an order is
not granted. On the other hand, the Defendant opposes this
application and seeks
her share of the joint estate on the grounds
that her 50% share in the joint estate accrued to her because the
marriage was concluded
in community of property.
THE PARTIES
[4]
The Plaintiff is B.R.M an adult male person
residing at […..] in P[….] and he is employed as a
Traffic Officer at
the Tshwane Metro Police.
[5]
The Defendant is R.K.M an adult female
person residing at [….] in P[….] and is in the employ
of the South African
Police Services.
JURISDICTION
[6]
The Plaintiff and the Defendant are domiciled within the jurisdiction
of this
Court. Therefore, this Court has the power and competency to
adjudicate this matter.
THE
ISSUE
[7]
The
issue to be determined by this Court is whether the Defendant should
forfeit her partial or all patrimonial benefits arising
from the
joint estate as per the laws pertaining to marriages concluded in
community of property.
# THE FACTS
THE FACTS
[8]
The Plaintiff and the Defendant entered
into a marriage in community of property on 30 May 2001. The said
marriage still subsists.
[9]
There are three children that were born
from the marriage namely, A, B, and C. Two of the said children (A
and B) have attained
the age of majority. C is a minor and resides
with the Plaintiff.
[10]
In May 2012, the Defendant left the common
home. The Defendant left the Plaintiff with all the children in 2012.
C was two years
old at the time. To date, the Plaintiff and the
Defendant have not been living together.
[11]
The Plaintiff instituted divorce
proceedings on the grounds that the Defendant
inter
alia
had several extra marital
relationships, and this has been a contributing factor to the
irretrievable breakdown of their marriage
relationship. In addition,
the Plaintiff contends that during the period they lived together,
the Defendant did not contribute
to the maintenance and improvement
of the common home, repayments of the mortgage bond, rates, and
taxes, or contributed to the
upbringing of their children.
Consequently, the Plaintiff asks this Court to order that the
Defendant forfeit her matrimonial benefits
arising from the marriage
in community of property.
[12]
The Defendant filed a counterclaim, she
contended that the Plaintiff was inter alia abusive towards her and
had at one stage threatened
to kill her. Consequently, she moved out
of the common house for her safety. According to the Defendant, the
Plaintiff has denied
her access to the property nor is she able to
see the children. The Defendant stood her ground and stated that
household chores
were shared between the parties and that where she
lacked it was because of circumstances beyond her control.
Furthermore, the
Defendant stated that the marriage relationship
irretrievably broke down because of the Plaintiff’s extra
marital affairs
with several women. According to the Defendant, the
joint estate ought to be divided equally as per their marital regime.
COMMON FACTS BETWEEN
THE PARTIES
[13]
The Plaintiff and the Defendant were
married to each other on 30 May 2001 in community of property and the
marriage between them
still subsists.
[14]
The Plaintiff is to retain the primary
residence and care of the minor child subject to the Defendant’s
rights of reasonable
access. Both parties remain co-holders of full
parental rights of the minor child.
[15]
The issue of the maintenance of the minor
child will be determined by the Maintenance Court.
[16]
The marriage relationship between the
parties has broken down irretrievably and there is no reasonable
prospect of restoration of
a normal marriage relationship.
APPLICABLE
LAW
Marriage
in community of property
[17]
It
has long been established in our law that when spouses are married in
community of property, the assets that they acquired before
and
during the subsistence of their marriage are merged and become one
joint estate.
[1]
As a result,
the joint estate belongs to both parties in the marriage in joint
undivided and equal shares.
[2]
They have a co-ownership of the joint estate.
[3]
[18]
The
default position is that the consequences arising from a marriage in
community of property are that upon divorce, the joint
estate will be
divided equally between the parties
[4]
unless a forfeiture order is made either fully or partially against
one of the parties to the marriage.
[5]
[19]
The legal position is therefore clear in
that once the parties have decided to marry each other in community
of property; they both
have joint ownership of the estate in equal
undivided shares. It does not matter who contributed a greater
proportion to the joint
estate, they both own the joint estate.
Author Hahlo eloquently captures the position as follows:
“
Community
of property is a universal economic partnership of the spouses. All
their assets and liabilities are merged in a joint
estate, in which
both spouses, irrespective of the value of their financial
contributions, hold equal shares”.
[6]
[20]
Furthermore,
in
Engelbrecht
v Engelbrecht
[7]
it
was held 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”.
[21]
In
light of the above, the parties also take the risk associated with
the marriage in community of property in that at the dissolution
of
that marriage they will part ways with each taking away his or her
50% share from the joint estate regardless of their respective
contributions to the joint estate. The exception to this only comes
into play when one of the parties to the marriage seeks one
party to
forfeit his/her 50% share of the joint estate.
Forfeiture of
patrimonial benefits
[22]
The Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (Divorce Act)
provides a legal framework for the forfeiture of patrimonial
benefits.
Section 9(1)
of the
Divorce Act provides
that:
“
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.”
(own
emphasis added)
[23]
The
above provision was clearly articulated by Van Coller AJA, as he was
then, in
Wijker
v Wijker
[8]
when
he said:
“
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 benefited. 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 benefited
if a
forfeiture order is not made. Although the second determination is a
value judgment, it is made by the trial court after having
considered
the facts falling within the compass of the three factors mentioned
in the section”.
[24]
Consequently,
I do not have to say much except to endorse the aforesaid
interpretation. The above provision is not peremptory. In
other
words, this Court has a discretion whether to grant or not to grant
the order of forfeiture.
[9]
Further, it has the discretion to grant an order of forfeiture in
respect of the entire benefit or a portion thereof. In exercising
the
said discretion, the court needs to ask itself whether one party
would be unduly benefitted where such an order for forfeiture
is not
granted. In addition, the factors laid down in
section 9(1)
of the
Divorce Act are
the only ones to be considered and nothing else
outside those bounds.
[25]
The
issue of fairness also does not come into play. Therefore, a court
may not simply grant a forfeiture order on the basis that
one party
to the marriage contributed more than the other to the joint
estate.
[10]
[26]
Regarding
the meaning of the phrase “duration of the marriage”, the
court in
Matyila
v Matyila
[11]
stated
that:
“
It
means no more nor less than the period during which the marriage has,
from the legal point of view, subsisted, namely from the
date of
marriage to the date of divorce or, at the very least, to the date of
institution of divorce proceedings. This is in accordance
with the
primary rule of interpretation that words should be understood in
their ordinary meaning.”
[27]
In
A.J.V
v M.V
[12]
the
court
inter
alia
declined
to grant an order for forfeiture where parties had been married for
11 months. In
Moodley
v Moodley
[13]
the
court
granted a forfeiture order where the parties had been married for
more than 20 years due to substantial misconduct on the
part of the
defendant. In
C.M.M
v A.M.S.M
[14]
the
court
granted
a forfeiture order where the parties had been married for more than
13 years due to the substantial misconduct on the part
of the
Plaintiff. In
Wijker,
[15]
the
court
declined
to grant a forfeiture order where the parties had been married for 35
years because there was no evidence to support a
finding of
substantial misconduct on the part of the husband.
[28]
The
above cases are an indication that what constitutes a long or short
marriage will depend on the circumstances of each case.
Further, they
are an indication that substantial misconduct may play a role in
deciding whether to grant an order of forfeiture.
Substantial
misconduct could include anything ranging from infidelity
[16]
to
financial deprivation.
[17]
For
example, in
Molapo
v Molapo
,
[18]
the
defendant
inter
alia
failed
to take care of the family and
the
court found that the defendant’s “
lack
of care for his children and family”
were some of the factors to have constituted substantial
misconduct.
[19]
[29]
The cases referred to herein are a signal
that there are no clear-cut answers or solutions to matters of this
nature. Therefore,
this Court must adopt a holistic approach in line
with the applicable legal principles to dispose of the legal issue.
Burden of Proof
[30]
The
burden of proof rests on the party seeking a forfeiture order.
[20]
Therefore,
the Plaintiff, in this case, needs to show
the
nature and extent of the benefit that the Defendant stands to unduly
benefit when the marriage is dissolved.
[31]
I now turn to consider the circumstances of
this case taking into consideration the submissions of the parties,
the testimony of
the witnesses, and evidence before this Court to
ascertain whether this Court may order the Defendant to forfeit her
patrimonial
benefits (partial or in full) arising from the marriage
in community of property.
EVIDENCE
[32]
The Plaintiff and the Defendant were the
only two witnesses who testified.
Mr.
B.R.M
(Plaintiff)
[33]
The Plaintiff testified that he has been
married to the Defendant since 30 May 2001 to date. There are three
children born out of
the said marriage. Two of these children have
become majors. One child is still a minor and resides with the
Plaintiff.
[34]
The Plaintiff testified that he is employed
as a Traffic Officer at the Tshwane Metro Police. His rank is that of
a sergeant since
July 1999. The Plaintiff testified that the
Defendant is employed as a Police Officer in the South African Police
Service.
[35]
The Plaintiff testified that since April
2012 he and the Defendant are no longer living together. They have
been living apart for
a period of 11 years since the Defendant left
the common household in 2012. According to the Plaintiff, the
Defendant left the
common home, leaving the Plaintiff with a child
who was at the time 2 years old and had not returned to ascertain the
welfare of
the minor child.
[36]
The Plaintiff’s testimony is that
they bought a house in 2004 but he solely paid for the mortgaged
house from the beginning
until the bond was paid up in full around
the year 2020. According to the Plaintiff, he completed paying off
the bond after the
Defendant had left the common household.
[37]
The Plaintiff also stated that he was a
beneficiary under the Defendant’s medical aid but had opted not
to use it as the Defendant
suffered from a chronic illness. According
to him, he wanted to save the benefits for the Defendant. The
Plaintiff testified that
in 2014, he discovered that the Respondent
had removed him as a beneficiary under her medical aid.
[38]
The Plaintiff testified that there was an
arrangement between him and the Defendant as to how the household
expenses were to be
shared. On the one hand, the Plaintiff was to pay
for the bond, one child’s nursery school fee and buy groceries.
On the
other hand, the Defendant was to pay the property rates and
taxes, and one of the children’s school fees. There were only
two children then. The Plaintiff’s testimony is that he kept to
the arrangement. According to the Plaintiff, the Defendant,
despite
the arrangement, did not contribute anything towards property rates
and taxes or the children’s upbringing. The Defendant
only
contributed briefly to one of the children’s school fees but
stopped. The Defendant only bought clothes for one child
towards the
end of a certain January when she had obtained her bonus from work.
[39]
The Plaintiff testified that he avoided
confronting the Defendant and opted to take over all the household
expenses. According to
him, whenever he enquired from the Defendant
about how she spent her money, the Defendant would not provide
answers. The Plaintiff
testified that the Defendant has a passion for
fashion and likes expensive clothes. The Plaintiff’s testimony
is that the
Defendant stopped using Edgar’s family clothing
account and opened a Woolworths account. To this end, she would take
things
on credit and fail to pay them off. The Plaintiff testified
that he would always step in to help her settle her debts.
[40]
The Plaintiff testified that he also
effected improvements towards the property such as the wall around
the yard, paving, and tiles
in the house. He avers that he did these
alone. The Defendant only fitted an incomplete kitchen unit with a
loan of about R25 000.00
that she took. However, the Plaintiff
asserts that at some stage he also had to pay those who were
installing the kitchen, as the
Defendant was no longer able to do so.
[41]
The Plaintiff also testified that overall,
he was responsible for the care of the children because the Defendant
worked excessive
hours. To this end, he was
inter
alia
responsible for bathing the
children, transporting them to and from school, cooking, and doing
laundry at times.
[42]
The Plaintiff testified that in 2005, the
Defendant sought to purchase a vehicle but had no money. The
Plaintiff came to her aid
and paid for the required deposit. However,
the car did not last as the Defendant upgraded it for a newer model.
[43]
The Plaintiff testified that in 2006 whilst
on duty patrolling the area, he saw the Defendant’s car and her
colleague’s
car parked in close proximity, the two were
engaging in an extra-marital affair. According to him, the same car
was used to pick
up the Defendant from their house. According to the
Plaintiff, the Defendant later confessed to the Plaintiff that she
was having
an affair with the said colleague for approximately 4
months. The Plaintiff testified that the Defendant confessed to
conducting
the affair whilst at work and at times would visit the
said colleague at his house.
[44]
To this end, the Plaintiff took various
measures including approaching the Defendant’s workplace to lay
a complaint of misconduct
against the Defendant for having an extra
marital affair in the workplace. The Defendant was eventually
transferred to another
working station. According to the Plaintiff,
this encounter caused tension in their house, and is the root cause
of the failure
of their marriage. The Plaintiff testified that things
were no longer well between the two parties for almost six years to
the
extent that they were not intimate for about 2 years. Post the 2
years, they started being intimate and the Defendant fell pregnant
with their third child.
[45]
Ultimately, the Plaintiff testified that
the Defendant bought a television set and a music system.
Cross-examination
[46]
Under cross-examination, the Plaintiff
stated that he sought an order for the forfeiture of the patrimonial
benefits because his
contributions surpassed the Defendant’s in
the joint estate. When asked whether there was any discussion about
financial
affairs before marriage, the Plaintiff’s response was
that one does not marry because they are wealthy or poor.
[47]
The Plaintiff agreed that the house was
bought during the subsistence of the marriage and stated that the
Defendant was blacklisted.
In addition, the Plaintiff stated that he
agreed to pay the bond because the Defendant was earning less
compared to him.
[48]
When asked as to why the Plaintiff
complained about being removed from Defendant’s medical aid as
he never used it, his response
was that he used his cash.
[49]
It was also put to the Plaintiff that the
clothing accounts opened by the Defendant were family accounts and
that the Defendant
had bought groceries and KFC monthly. The
Plaintiff disputed this and said that Defendant did not buy any
groceries but only KFC
at certain times.
[50]
It was further put to the Plaintiff that
there is no intrinsic value for the things that he wants the
forfeiture. Further, it was
put to the Plaintiff that it was not
possible for both parties to contribute equally because the Defendant
earned less. Additionally,
it was stated that from 2012 onwards, the
Defendant was not paying property rates and taxes because she was not
living in the property
where the Plaintiff resides with the children.
[51]
When questioned whether the affair was the
main thing that caused the breakdown of the marriage, the Plaintiff’s
response
was in the negative. However, he stated that many problems
in the marriage were triggered by this incident.
Re-examination
[52]
The Plaintiff stated that he has a work
firearm but had never threatened the Defendant with it. He further
stated that even though
they had arguments with the Defendant, such
arguments never escalated to life-threatening situations.
[53]
Finally, the Plaintiff reiterated that the Defendant did not
contribute to the household expenses, bond payment, rates and taxes,
and the upbringing of children.
Ms
R.K.M (Defendant)
[54]
The Defendant testified that she is married
in community of property with the Plaintiff. She stated that the
reason for the breakdown
of their marriage was on the basis that the
Plaintiff abused her, underappreciated her, and that the Plaintiff
put her life in
danger as he threatened to kill her on several
occasions. Furthermore, she testified that the Plaintiff accused her
of having extra-marital
affairs including one with her colleague.
According to the Defendant, this caused her embarrassment at work.
[55]
The Defendant testified that she does not
remember whether there were any agreements about the household
finances between her and
the Plaintiff. She further stated that there
was no talk about the sharing of household expenses. The Defendant
stated that she
also contributed to the household in the form of
buying household furniture, such as a TV stand, curtains, cutlery, a
washing machine,
fitting the kitchen unit, bought clothes for
children and groceries. In addition, she testified that she included
everyone in her
medical aid.
[56]
The Defendant also argued that she
contributed to the marriage by bearing three children for the
Plaintiff. According to the Defendant,
by bearing three children, she
risked her life.
[57]
The Defendant stood her ground and stated
that she contributed to the household expenses to a lesser extent
compared to the Plaintiff
because she earned less. She further stated
that she took a loan for R125 000.00 and paid it for over 6 years.
The said loan was
used to build a kitchen unit. According to her,
such a kitchen unit was built and completed.
[58]
The Defendant testified to the effect that
after she had left the house, she continued to buy clothes for her
children. According
to her, she has been employed throughout her
marriage. She testified that the Plaintiff was more involved in the
house because
she worked shifts that were inconsistent. However,
whenever she had the time, she also assisted with children and other
household
chores.
Cross-examination
[59]
Under cross-examination, the Defendant was
asked whether she used the R125 000.00 to build the kitchen unit and
whether the Plaintiff
was informed about such an amount. The
Defendant’s response was that she was not sure because this was
after the year 2006.
[60]
It was put to the Defendant that the
Plaintiff was hearing for the first time about the loan of R125
000.00. The Defendant’s
response was that maybe the Plaintiff
had forgotten.
[61]
The Defendant was further asked whether
there was a discussion or arrangement about how the household
expenses would be split; her
response was that there was no
arrangement. However, the Defendant later stated that there were
discussions about the payment of
the bond and that the Defendant was
prepared to pay half of the entire instalment. These discussions took
place before the finalisation
of the purchase of the house.
[62]
The Defendant testified that she bought
furniture and other things as she liked them but could not remember.
The Defendant was adamant
that she contributed equally to their
marriage in community of property. She further stated that she also
bought clothes for the
Plaintiff, but the Plaintiff refused to wear
them. When asked about how frequently she bought clothes, her
response was that she
couldn’t remember.
[63]
When asked about how come she left a
2-year-old baby with the Plaintiff when her testimony was to the
effect that they took care
of the children on an equal basis with the
Plaintiff, the Defendant’s answer was that the Plaintiff was
the father and that
she felt comfortable leaving the child with him.
Further, she stated that she had asked for the child, but the
Plaintiff refused.
[64]
The Defendant stated that at some stage,
there was a case opened against the Plaintiff but a family meeting
was held to resolve
their disputes. Consequently, the Defendant
withdrew it from the court. The Defendant was unable to explain how
the case was withdrawn.
[65]
When asked about the life-threatening
situation, the Defendant stated that the Plaintiff once wanted to
shoot her in their bedroom,
but this was never reported to law
enforcement officers.
[66]
When asked about having an extra marital
affair with her colleague, the Defendant’s response was that
this was a false accusation.
When prompted further whether the
Plaintiff could even go to the extent of seeking her removed from one
police station to another
for something that did not exist, the
Defendant’s response was that of no comment.
SUBMISSION OF THE
PARTIES
[67]
This section deals with the submissions of
counsels in their attempt to persuade this Court to grant or not to
grant an order for
full or partial forfeiture of parties’
patrimonial benefits.
Plaintiff
[68]
Counsel
for the Plaintiff referred this Court to various cases including the
Wijker
case
[21]
about the approach to be adopted in dealing with the case of
forfeiture of patrimonial benefits. There the court held that:
“
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 benefited. 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 benefited
if a
forfeiture order is not made. Although the second determination is a
value judgment, it is made by the trial court after having
considered
the facts falling within the compass of the three factors mentioned
in the section”.
[22]
[69]
Relying
on
KKT
v MSR,
[23]
counsel
further submitted that the issue of whether the benefit is due or
undue is associated with the duration of the marriage.
Consequently,
counsel argued that the longer the marriage was, the more it was
likely that the benefit will be due and proportionate
and
vice
versa.
Counsel
alerted this Court that the divorce was instituted in 2019. This was
7 years after the parties had separated. To this end,
counsel
submitted that the parties in this matter have been married to each
other (and remain married) for approximately 22 years
(2001 –
2023). However, counsel emphasised that the parties could be said to
have only lived together as husband and wife
for 11 years
(2001-2012). The basis for this was that post the separation, it
could not be said so as they lived separately and
“
not
afforded each other the traditional benefits of the married couples
and having lived apart for a period more than the time they
lived
together…”.
[24]
[70]
According
to counsel, the year 2012 was the time in which the irretrievable
breakdown of the marriage took place. With reference
to
Matyila,
wherein
the court defined the meaning of marriage as a period during which
parties legally remained married until divorce or at
the date of
institution of divorce proceedings, counsel argued that where parties
lived apart for more than the period that they
lived together, it
could not be said that they have lived together as husband and wife.
In addition, counsel contended that during
the said protracted
separation, it could not be said that “
one
party contributed towards the other parties’ progression”
.
[25]
[71]
Counsel further contended that given the
duration that the parties lived together as husband and wife, it was
not for a long period.
As a result, this aspect taken together with
the other factors listed in
section 9
of the
Divorce Act does
not
prevent this Court from granting an order of forfeiture. According to
counsel, the marriage between the parties ended in the
year 2012.
[72]
Furthermore,
counsel argued that precedent does not prevent this Court from
granting the forfeiture order even if the marriage was
for a long
duration. To substantiate his submission, counsel referred this court
to the case of
Swanepoel
v Swanepoel
[26]
where
the
court
inter
alia
held
that the marriage of spouses in community of property which was
entered into on the 15 December 1990 and where the other spouse
left
the common home around the 4 June 1995 could be regarded as having
lasted for a too short period.
[27]
Further counsel relied on
Malatji
v Malatji
[28]
where
the court found that a marriage in community of property that was
concluded in 2002 and where the defendant left the marital
home in
June 2003 was too short and justified a divorce and a forfeiture
order. According to counsel, the courts in both decisions
considered
the date on which the other spouse left the common home and not the
date of divorce or when summons were issued. Consequently,
counsel
argued that the same approach ought to be followed even in instances
of marriage that lasted for a long duration.
[73]
Regarding the factors listed in
section
9(1)
of the
Divorce Act, counsel
further submitted that the question
to be determined by this Court is whether the three factors namely
(a) the duration of the
marriage, (b) the circumstances which gave
rise to the break-down thereof and (3) any substantial misconduct on
the part of either
of the parties had to be all present or considered
holistically. Counsel for the Plaintiff replied in the negative. He
based his
answer on
Wijker
where
he stated that the court there held that “
not
all three factors need to be present for the forfeiture order to be
granted”
. To this end, counsel
submitted that where a marriage is of a long duration, substantial
misconduct becomes a major factor to be
determined unlike where a
marriage is of a short duration.
[74]
Counsel submitted that the Plaintiff had
testified about the misconduct committed by the Defendant during the
subsistence of their
marriage. According to counsel, the Plaintiff’s
evidence went unchallenged under cross-examination. Further, counsel
submitted
that the Defendant merely denied the allegations of
misconduct. Counsel argued that the Defendant was not convincing when
she denied
that she did not commit serious misconduct that led the
Plaintiff to shed tears during his testimony about the events that
occurred
16 years ago.
[75]
Counsel submitted that the Defendant could
not respond to various questions or issues that were put to her
regarding the alleged
misconduct. According to counsel, the
Defendant’s response was mostly made up of no comment or that
she could not remember.
[76]
Counsel further submitted that the
Defendant used her money for her own benefit. According to counsel,
the Defendant admitted to
not paying property rates and taxes, and
electricity as agreed upon between the parties. Counsel highlighted
that, at first, the
Defendant denied having discussed the issue
related to household expenses with the Plaintiff. Counsel submits
that the Plaintiff
later changed her version of the events and stated
that she had a discussion with the Defendant before they purchased
the house.
Based on this, counsel submitted that the Defendant’s
testimony could not be believed as it was given in an evasive manner
and she could not remember pertinent factors. Accordingly, counsel
submitted that her evidence ought to be rejected.
[77]
Concerning the circumstances that gave rise
to the breakdown, counsel submitted that it was the Plaintiff’s
version that the
extra marital affair by the Defendant was a factor
that triggered a dismal mood in the house until the Defendant left
the common
home in 2012.
[78]
Counsel further submitted that the
Defendant testified that she left the common home as a result of
being chased away and threatened
with death by the Plaintiff but
failed to recall how such threats were made save for one instance
where the plaintiff threatened
her with a gun. According to counsel,
the Defendant stated that she did not open a case but where she did,
she later withdrew it.
The Defendant could not recall how it was
withdrawn. Counsel for the Plaintiff expressed his shock over the
fact that the Defendant,
being a police official, could not tell how
the case was withdrawn.
[79]
Concerning misconduct, counsel for the
Plaintiff argued that even though substantial misconduct was not an
essential requirement
for forfeiture, it was found to exist in the
Defendant’s conduct. Counsel submitted that the Defendant’s
substantial
misconduct ranged from failure to contribute to the
household for paying property rates and taxes, and groceries as
agreed to by
the parties, privately taking out a loan of R125 000.00
and only revealing R25 000.00 that was used to pay for an incomplete
kitchen
unit, spending her money on expensive clothes but failed to
contribute towards the development of the household, desertion of a
two-year baby with the Plaintiff, and never supporting the children
or returning to ascertain whether the minor child was taken
care of.
[80]
According to the Plaintiff, the Defendant
conceded that at times she bought a handful of furniture and
curtains. Furthermore, it
was submitted that the Defendant failed to
give any evidence to support that she was a devoted mother in the
household.
[81]
Attention is turned to the undue benefit,
counsel for the Plaintiff argued that the Plaintiff took sole
responsibility for the development
and upkeep of the household when
the Defendant opted to finance her lifestyle with her income. Counsel
submitted that even though
the Defendant was also employed, she only
bought limited items and furniture. The Plaintiff solely paid for the
bond from the start
until it was paid off whilst the Defendant had
the benefit of utilising her salary for her own purposes.
Additionally, it was argued
that the Defendant left the Plaintiff to
look after three children 11 years ago.
[82]
In addition, it was argued that the
Plaintiff developed and renovated the house alone. According to
counsel, this has increased
the value of the property and would
unduly benefit the Defendant if an order to share in the joint estate
were to be ordered.
[83]
With regard to the Defendant’s
contention that there was no evidence of the assets that the Court
was required to grant a
forfeiture order, counsel for the Plaintiff
argued that the parties’ assets are limited to only the
immovable property and
the pension benefits.
[84]
Based on the above factors, counsel
contends that the court cannot order a partial division of the joint
estate under the circumstances
of this case but order a total
forfeiture of benefits against the Defendant in the Plaintiff’s
pension fund and the immovable
property.
Defendant
[85]
Counsel for the Defendant submitted that in
the absence of an antenuptial contract indicating how the parties’
assets would
be divided upon the dissolution of their marriage, the
marital regime created automatically becomes one that is in community
of
property and of profit and loss.
[86]
Counsel submitted that community of
property is a universal partnership wherein the spouses’ assets
and liabilities are put
in a joint estate and both parties hold joint
equal shares. According to counsel, this is regardless of their
financial contribution
to the joint estate.
[87]
In
support of her submissions, counsel relied on a number of cases such
as
Lock
v Keers
[29]
where
it was said that marriage in community of property renders the
property that was initially owned by parties separately to
be owned
by them jointly and in equal shares post the conclusion of the said
marriage. Counsel further relied on
Thom
v Worthmann VO & Another
[30]
where
the court said:
"When two parties
are married in community of property, the marriage creates a
universal partnership between the husband and
wife . . . in all
property, movable and immovable, belonging to either of them before
marriage, until the date of dissolution."
[88]
Based on the above, counsel argued that
anything that a spouse acquired before the conclusion of a marriage
forms part of the joint
estate post the marriage in community of
property regardless of his or her contribution. In other words, the
equal share in the
joint estate accrues to the parties by virtue of
their marriage in community of property.
[89]
Counsel submitted that where a forfeiture
order is not granted, the joint estate would be divided equally
between the parties upon
divorce. To this end, counsel argued that
where a marriage is dissolved on the grounds of the irretrievable
breakdown, a court
may in terms of
section 9(1)
of the
Divorce Act
grant
an order of forfeiture, wholly or in part, of patrimonial
benefits in favour of either party. In doing so, counsel submitted
that
the court would have to consider the duration of the marriage,
the circumstances which gave rise to the breakdown, and any
substantial
misconduct on the part of either of the parties it is
satisfied that, if an order for forfeiture is not made, the one party
will
in relation to the other be unduly benefitted.
[90]
Counsel
submitted that it was within the discretion of this Court to grant or
not grant a forfeiture. She emphasised that the said
order must be
considered properly considering existing legal authority.
Consequently, counsel relied on
Engelbrecht
[31]
where
the court
inter
alia
declined
to grant an order of forfeiture on the basis that no evidence was
adduced to prove what the house was worth when divorce
proceedings
were instituted, and the extent of undue benefit that would have been
received by the defendant. To emphasise her point,
the counsel relied
on the following paragraph from
Engelbrecht
[32]
:
“
Joint
ownership of another party's property is a right which each of the
spouses acquires on concluding a marriage in community
of property.
Unless the parties (either before or during the marriage) make
precisely equal contributions the one that contributed
less shall on
dissolution of the marriage be benefited above the other if
forfeiture is not ordered. This is the inevitable consequence
of the
parties’ matrimonial regime. The legislature (in
section 9
of
the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
) does not give the greater contributor the
opportunity to complain about this. He can only complain if the
benefit was undue. Unless
it is proved (and the burden of proof rests
on the party who seeks the forfeiture order) what the nature and
extent of the benefit
was, the Court cannot decide if the benefit was
undue or not. Only if the nature and ambit of the benefit is proved
is it necessary
to look to the factors, which may be brought into
consideration in deciding on the inequity thereof. In this
connection, it should
be borne in mind that misconduct and gross
unreasonableness do not always go hand in hand. Although it appears
as if the Legislature
wanted limit the Court's discretion as to the
granting of a forfeiture order and did not intend to authorise the
Court to take
cognisance of the same wide-ranging considerations as
those which
section 7(3)
;(4);(5) and (6) (where parties are married
out of community of property), with reference to the transfer of
assets from one party
to the other, permits the Legislature did not
intend to elevate fault, in the granting of forfeiture order so
prominently above
other considerations. It could lead to the
advantages of a no-fault divorce system being eroded by disputes over
fault on the division
of the estate”.
[91]
Counsel
further relied on
Klerk
v Klerk
[33]
and
submitted that it was not the intention of the legislature that
substantial misconduct or any of the other factors mentioned
in
Section 9(1)
of the
Divorce Act had
to be present before a court
could grant an order for forfeiture. Rather, the question that the
court had to ask itself was whether
one party would be unduly
benefitted if an order of forfeiture was not made. To answer this
question, counsel submitted that the
court should consider the
duration of the marriage, the circumstances which led to the
breakdown, and, if present, substantial
misconduct on the part of one
or both parties.
[92]
Counsel
also relied on
Beaumont
v Beaumont
[34]
where
it was stated that:
“
.
. . In many, probably most cases, both parties will be to blame, in
the sense of having contributed to the breakdown of the marriage.
. .
In such cases, where there is no conspicuous disparity between the
conduct of the one party, and that of the other, our Courts
will not
indulge in an exercise to apportion the fault of the parties, and
thus nullify the advantages of the "no-fault"
system of
divorce”.
[93]
Counsel
submitted that in
Wijeker
,
“
it
was emphasised that sight must not be lost of what the matrimonial
property system which operates in the marriage”
.
Finally, counsel
relied
on
Bezuidenhout
v Bezuidenhout
[35]
which
relied on the Canadian Supreme Court ruling in
Moge
v Moge
[36]
where
the court held:
“
Fair
distribution does not, however, mandate a minute detailed accounting
of time, energy and dollars spent in the day-to-day life
of the
spouses . . . what the Act requires is a fair and equitable
distribution of the resources to alleviate the
economic
consequences of marriage or marriage break-down for both spouses,
regardless of gender. The reality, however, is that in
many if not
most marriage, the wife remains the economically disadvantaged
partner . . . . A division of functions between the
marriage
partners, where the one is a wage-earner and the other remains at
home or always invariably create an economic need in
one spouse
during marriages . . . Woman have tended to suffer economic
disadvantages and hardships from marriage or its break-down
because
of the traditional division of labour within that institution”.
EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE
AND SUBMISSIONS
[94]
The
next step is for this Court is to make a value judgment in light of
the facts falling within the ambit of
section 9(1)
of the
Divorce
Act. It
is not a requirement that all the factors mentioned in the
above provision should be present before a court can grant an order
of forfeiture.
[37]
If one of
the factors is found to be present, it follows that this Court may
grant a partial or entire forfeiture order.
[95]
Regarding the duration of the marriage, it
was never disputed between the parties that legally they remain
married to each other
until their union has been dissolved by a
competent court. However, the Plaintiff contended that since the
parties got married
in 2001 and separated in the year 2012, the year
2012 should be considered as the year in which the parties ceased to
live together
as husband and wife.
[96]
In
other words, the parties lived together as husband and wife for 11
years. The Defendant never challenged this proposition. In
Matyila,
[38]
the
court
inter
alia
stated
that the duration of the marriage refers to the time that it still
subsists from a legal point of view or the date of institution
of
divorce proceedings. I agree with the interpretation found in
Matyila
,
I am of the view that in the context of this case, the duration of
the marriage should be considered within the period in which
the
parties remained married regardless of whether they lived together as
husband and wife. It cannot be said that during the 11
years of the
parties living apart and not supporting each other in any form, they
were not living as husband and wife. A marriage
remains a legal
institution whether or not the parties live together with all legal
consequences sustaining.
[97]
This Court is not persuaded by the
Plaintiff’s submissions that in the context of this case, the
parties lived together as
husband and wife for 11 years and that
their marriage was of short duration. The parties’ marriage
remains valid. They have
been married for 22 years. A period of 22
years is in my view long. Accordingly, this marriage could be safely
classified as one
that lasted for a long duration. T
he
fact that the marriage is for a long time is not solely dispositive
of whether forfeiture should not be granted. This court is
required
to adopt a holistic approach as per the provisions of
section 9(1)
of
the
Divorce Act to
determine whether an order of forfeiture should be
granted or not.
[98]
Regarding
substantial misconduct, there is no one known factor that could be
regarded as substantial misconduct, this will vary
from case to case.
For example, if a spouse withdraws pension funds and utilises them
for his or her benefit without the knowledge
of the other spouse this
may constitute substantial misconduct.
[39]
In this case, I deal with two aspects namely, financial deprivation
and extra marital affair.
[98.1]
Regarding the financial deprivation, the
Plaintiff testified at length about their financial arrangements
after they had bought
a house. This included that the Plaintiff would
pay for the bond and the Defendant would pay for the property rates
and taxes,
and pre-school fees for the children. The Plaintiff
adhered to his undertaking. However, the Defendant failed to do so.
When the
Plaintiff asked the Defendant about what she was doing with
her money, she would become aggressive. In fear of the lights being
switched off by the local municipality, the Plaintiff took on extra
responsibilities to run the household affairs including paying
the
property rates and taxes, and children’s school fees. The
Defendant was described as someone who had good taste for fashion
and
spent her money on designer clothes. She would fall into arrears and
the Plaintiff would rescue her.
[98.2]
Furthermore, the Defendant was labelled as
someone who liked cars and
would change
from one car to another within a short space of time, yet she earned
less. The Plaintiff had once assisted her with
a deposit to buy one
of the vehicles. At times, she changed the vehicles without the
knowledge of the Plaintiff.
[98.3]
The Defendant did not dispute the said
testimony save to indicate that she also contributed financially to
the household affairs.
To this end, she mentioned that she used to
buy groceries as well as KFC, and had bought curtains including a
television stand.
Additionally, she stated that she contributed to
the marriage by giving birth to three children. Initially, the
Defendant denied
that there was any arrangement about splitting
financial responsibilities. However, under cross-examination, she
admitted that
there was such a discussion about finances. When asked
about other contributions, the Defendant’s answers were that
she could
not remember and/or that she had forgotten. At no stage did
the Defendant mention payment of property rates and taxes or
children’s
school fees.
[98.4]
Although the Defendant tried to paint a
picture of being a responsible mother, when asked about how she could
leave the Plaintiff
with a two-and-a-half-old child and never try to
ascertain whether such child was being well taken care of in the 11
years since
her departure, her answer was that the Plaintiff was also
a father. Again, the Defendant did not try to challenge the testimony
that since she left the common house 11 years ago, she has not
contributed anything including taking care of the children save
for
one occasion where she bought shoes for one child. Indeed, the
Plaintiff is the father of the children and is duty-bound to
take
care of them.
[98.5]
I
find the case of
Molapo
v Molapo
[40]
,
relevant and applicable in the present matter. There, the court there
found that the defendant’s “
lack
of care for his [her] children and family”
were some of the factors found to have constituted substantial
misconduct.
[41]
Consequently,
I am of the view that the Defendant in this matter financially
deprived the Plaintiff and their children of support
during their 11
years of staying together in the common household. The same financial
deprivation continued for another 11 years
after the Defendant had
left the common household as she continued to spend her money for her
sole benefit and lifestyle. This
in my view, in the context of this
case, constitutes substantial misconduct.
[98.6]
Regarding the extra marital
affair,
another substantial misconduct alleged by the Plaintiff is that he
caught the Defendant red-handed with her colleague in
an extra
marital affair. After this encounter, the Defendant confessed that
she has been seeing her colleague for approximately
4 months. In her
testimony, the Defendant brushed this off and claimed that it was not
true. However, when pressed under cross-examination
as to whether it
was possible for the Plaintiff to merely approach her employer and up
to the office of the Public Protector to
report her affair in the
workplace with a colleague and ask her to be transferred to another
station for no reasons, her response
was that of no comment. The no
comment in allegations such as these was in my view not adequate.
Even though the Defendant in her
pleadings has also accused the
Plaintiff of extra marital affairs, nothing was said about these
claims in her testimony. The credibility
of the Plaintiff weighs more
weight compared to that of the Defendant. In my view, the Defendant
further committed a substantial
misconduct in the form of an extra
marital affair.
[99]
Concerning
the circumstances that led to the breakdown, the Plaintiff testified
that their marriage challenges started from the
time he discovered
that the Defendant had engaged in an extra marital affair, and
thereafter things were never the same. Under
cross-examination, the
Plaintiff was asked whether he regarded this as the main factor that
contributed to the breakdown of the
marriage, his response was no.
However, the Plaintiff was adamant that this was the root cause of
their marital problems. I am
persuaded in this case that just like in
C.M.C
v A.M.S.M
,
[42]
infidelity
by the Defendant triggered the breakdown of the marriage.
[100]
The
fact that I have found that the Defendant has committed substantial
misconduct in the form of financial deprivation and having
an extra
marital affair does not on its own end this matter. The question that
remains to be answered is whether there will be
an
undue
benefit for the Defendant if an order of forfeiture is not
granted.
[43]
I have already
indicated that that a forfeiture order may not be granted for the
purposes of balancing the fact that one of the
spouses made a greater
contribution than the other to the joint estate. In addition, the
issue of fairness does not come into play
when
deciding
whether to grant an order of forfeiture. The factors to be considered
remain only those that are set forth in
section 9(1)
of the
Divorce
Act.
[101
]
Undue
benefit is broad and does not have a precise meaning. There are many
factors that one needs to consider to arrive at a conclusion
of
whether a benefit is undue.
For
example, cashing out pension benefits individually and misusing them
without the knowledge of the other spouse, or secretly
selling assets
from a joint estate,
[44]
and
at the same time expecting to receive a 50% share upon the
dissolution of the marriage would in my view constitute an undue
benefit.
[102]
In
dealing with an undue benefit, it is necessary for this Court to
consider the contributions made by the parties in the joint
estate.
During their stay together for the first 11 years, I have already
found that Defendant used her money towards her own lifestyle
whereas
the Plaintiff contributed to the joint estate such as upgrading and
renovating the house including single-headedly raising
the children.
The only contribution that she apparently made was a kitchen unit
that she had built with a loan amounting to approximately
R25 000.00.
The Plaintiff refuted the state of completion of the said kitchen
unit. However, during her testimony, it transpired
that the Defendant
had in fact taken out a loan of R125 000.00 the expenditure of which
she could not adequately account for.
[103]
The
Defendant’s contributions to the common household during the 11
years since leaving the common household were non-existent.
In
C.M.M
v A.M.S.M
[45]
,
Makhoba J found that:
“
The
plaintiff in this matter cannot forfeit any assets because she did
not bring any tangible asset into the marriage. She did not
even
contribute to the upbringing of the two daughters until they
completed their studies. She can only benefit from the dissolution
of
the marriage. The question is therefore will she benefit unduly if
she is given 50% (fifty percent) of the assets accumulated
during the
subsistence of the marriage”.
[104]
Largely, the facts of the above case are
similar to the present one as far as they relate to the contribution
of the parties and
the upbringing of the children during the
subsistence of the marriage. The building of a kitchen unit is in my
view insignificant
compared to financially supporting and raising
three children alone for a 22-year-long marriage. I am mindful that
the Defendant
has been residing with one of the major children since
the year 2020. The minor child was left with the Plaintiff at the age
of
two years. The Plaintiff paid the mortgage bond payments from the
start-up to completion, property rates, and taxes. The Plaintiff
in
this case fully supported his wife, and children although they were
both employed. He cooked, bathed the children, took them
to school,
and washed all their clothes despite them both having jobs outside of
the home. He was the primary financial provider
in the home and the
primary caregiver to the children for a majority of their stay
together. Even when the Defendant left him with
the children, he
continued to fulfil his parental obligations to the extent that he is
still in arrears with school fees for two
the children.
He
was left alone to build their common assets including his pension
fund and raising their three children.
The Defendant did not challenge this.
[105]
Even
if this Court were to find that the Defendant made some contributions
during the first 11 years of living in the common household,
such as
buying groceries and clothes for everyone, the other 11 years of her
absence and leaving three children with the Plaintiff,
payment of a
bond up to completion, and the day-to-day upbringing of children
weigh against her. All these above factors taken
together lead me to
one conclusion, the Defendant made no tangible contribution to her
marriage.
[106]
The
Defendant in my view cannot forfeit any assets because she did not
bring any tangible assets into the joint estate.
[46]
She did not contribute to the upbringing and education of the three
children. Her benefit stands to come only from the dissolution
of the
marriage. Counsel for the Defendant argued that the Plaintiff did not
prove the nature and extent (value of the house and
pension) of any
patrimonial benefit capable of being forfeited and therefore his
claim had to fail. I disagree. In
C.M.M
v A.M.S.M
it
was held that:
“
It
is not a requirement that the defendant must prove the correct
financial value of the house or property including the pension
fund
for which to succeed in his claim”.
[47]
[107]
To
this end, the Plaintiff has described the house that he seeks an
order of forfeiture as [….] where he stays with their
two
children. Furthermore, the Plaintiff has indicated no desire to tap
into the Defendant’s pension, as he has never benefitted
from
her money during their stay together and post their living together.
Therefore, the Defendant will unduly benefit if an order
of
forfeiture is not granted against her as she would walk away with 50%
of the joint assets (immovable property and pension) accumulated
during the subsistence of the marriage that she did not contribute
any tangible thing to it.
[108]
This Court is alive to the fact that
Defendant worked long hours and earned less. However, even if one
earns less, they could still
contribute in whatever form within their
means. The testimony of the Defendant to the effect that she
constantly upgraded vehicles
was never contested. I find the evidence
of the Defendant in claiming that she contributed less because of her
salary insincere
for the reasons that I have already stated.
[109]
Furthermore,
this Court is not persuaded that the Defendant left the common
household because she feared for her life. The Defendant
is a police
officer and could have in my view reported the incidents of domestic
violence to the relevant authorities. According
to the Defendant’s
testimony, she reported the domestic violence and opened a case
against the Plaintiff but later withdrew
it upon the intervention of
their two families. However, when asked about how the case was
withdrawn under cross-examination, she
struggled to provide an
answer. I am sensitive to the complex factors that result in the high
attrition rate in cases relating
to domestic violence in our country,
including secondary victimisation from family members.
[48]
Nonetheless, in these proceedings, the Defendant did not take the
court into her confidence to demonstrate how these, or other
relevant
factors hindered her from seeking protection from the courts when she
could have done so.
[110]
In addition, I find the Defendant’s
testimony that she was refused access to her child unsustainable. The
Defendant could
have explored legal avenues to have access to her
child. In fact, in her counterclaim, she had initially sought custody
of the
minor child. She could have taken this route 11 years ago when
she left the minor child in the hands of the Plaintiff.
[111]
In
light of the above exposition,
the Plaintiff
impressed me as a candid witness whose evidence was clear, credible,
and reliable in all respects.
There
is no basis for this Court not to accept his testimony as the truth.
However,
I cannot say the same for the
Defendant. She was not a reliable witness and contradicted herself on
one or more aspects under cross-examination.
The Defendant was
evasive in her answers and mostly could not remember the things that
she contributed to their house.
The
Defendant’s testimony is unreliable and riddled with
improbabilities.
Accordingly, her evidence
falls to be rejected.
[112]
The
reliance by the Defendant on
Bezuidenhout
[49]
,
which cited
Moge
,
[50]
is
misplaced. Counsel for the Defendant is cheery-picking paragraphs
that are sympathetic to the Defendant but exclude context.
Moge
is
distinguishable from the current matter in many respects. In
Moge
,
the wife was not employed for 16 years after the parties’
separation. In this case, the Defendant has a full-time job as
a
police officer. In
Moge
case
,
the mother
cared for the house and their three children. At no stage did she
neglect them. She was responsible for the day-to-day affairs
of the
house. This was not the case with the Defendant. The Defendant left
the children including a 2-year-old child with the Plaintiff
for 11
years during which she contributed nothing towards the minor’s
care. She also did not contribute anything tangible
during her 11
years on staying together in the common household.
[113]
Furthermore, in
Moge
,
after the parties’ separation, the wife was awarded custody of
the children and received financial support from the husband.
In this
case, the Defendant left the Plaintiff with the children and did not
seek custody of the minor child. It was only on one
occasion during
her 11 years of absence that she bought shoes for one child. Overall,
in no way was the Defendant economically
disadvantaged. To the
contrary, the Plaintiff testified that he is in arrears in respect of
school fees for two children because
he had to cover other household
necessities. The Defendant has not tendered any responsibilities
relating to her minor child or
the household where the child resides
and at no stage did she testify that she was experiencing financial
difficulties. I need
not say more about
Moge
save to indicate that the reliance on it by the Defendant is
self-defeating.
[114]
The Defendant’s submission to the
effect that the court in
Wijeker
“…
emphasised that sight
must not be lost of what the matrimonial property system which
operates in the marriage”
is
correct. However, it must be pointed out that there was no misconduct
that was found against the appellant to justify an order
for
forfeiture. The trial court based its forfeiture order through
reliance on the principle of fairness. These two factors distinguish
Wijeker
from
the current matter, and do not assist the Defendant in any way.
[115]
Finally, the reliance by counsel for the
Defendant on
Beaumont
is
also misplaced because counsel applied selective reading. Counsel
quoted the paragraph where it was stated:
“
.
. . In many, probably most cases, both parties will be to blame, in
the sense of having contributed to the breakdown of the marriage.
. .
In such cases, where there is no conspicuous disparity between the
conduct of the one party, and that of the other, our Courts
will not
indulge in an exercise to apportion the fault of the parties, and
thus nullify the advantages of the "no-fault"
system of
divorce”.
[51]
[116]
Interestingly, counsel omitted a further
sentence from the aforesaid paragraph which reads “
but
in the present case the misconduct was found to have existed on the
part of the appellant only…”.
The
Beaumont case
too,
is in my view distinct from the present one as substantial misconduct
(financial deprivation and extra marital affair) have
been found to
exist only on the part of the Defendant.
[117]
Ultimately,
this Court as the upper guardian of all minor children
[52]
is alive to the fact that the Defendant has played no role at all in
so far as the minor child is concerned since she left him
with the
Plaintiff at his infancy stage 11 years ago. However, this Court is
of the view that the Defendant should be afforded
an opportunity to
be part of her minor child’s upbringing by participating in the
day-to-day parental decisions and responsibilities.
The report of the
Family Advocate also highlights that the Defendant is now part of the
minor child’s life. This Court is
prepared to give her the
benefit of the doubt that she is now willing to be part of her
children’s lives and make up for
the time that she has been an
absent mother. It is in the best interests of the minor child that
the Plaintiff and the Defendant
work together in this co-parenting
journey. I, therefore, do not agree with the Plaintiff’s
proposition that the day-to-day
parental decisions and
responsibilities be those of the Plaintiff in the upbringing of the
minor child to the exclusion of the
Defendant.
COSTS
[118]
The
general rule is that the costs should follow the results.
[53]
However,
in
a divorce action the court is not bound to make an order for costs in
favour of the successful party.
[54]
It will consider the conduct of the parties and their financial means
amongst other factors.
[119]
I do not find any untoward conduct between
any of the parties as they sought to claim or defend what they both
considered their
legal entitlement in terms of their marriage regime.
ORDER
[120]
I, therefore, make
the following
order:
(a)
A
decree of divorce is granted dissolving the bonds of marriage between
the Plaintiff and the Defendant.
(b)
The
report of the family advocate is endorsed about the parental
responsibilities, rights, and guardianship in respect of the minor
child born of their marriage.
(c)
The
Defendant’s counterclaim is dismissed.
(d)
The
Defendant is ordered to forfeit her 50% benefits in the immovable
property situated at No. [….], and the said property
to become
the sole and absolute property of the Plaintiff.
(e)
The
Defendant is ordered to forfeit her 50% pension fund benefits held in
the Plaintiff’s pension fund in the Government Employees
Pension Fund.
(f)
Each
party is to pay its own costs.
PHOOKO
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
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 05 June 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: Adv
R Masipa
Instructed
by:
Rammutla-At-Law
INC
Counsel
for the Defendant: Adv M
Fabricius
Instructed
by: Shapiro
& Ledwaba INC
Date
of Hearing: 13
April 2023
Date
of Judgment: 05
June 2023
[1]
Ex
Parte Menzies et Uxor
1993
(3) SA 799
(C)
808.
[2]
D
v D
(15402/2010) [2013] ZAGPJHC 194 at para 14. See also H R Hahlo,
The
South African Law of Husband and Wife
(5th
ed, 1976) at pages 157-8;
Lock
v Keers
1945 TPD 113
at 116.
[3]
Corporate
Liquidators (Pty) Ltd and Another v Wiggill and Others
2007
(2) SA 520
(T)
at 526D-F
.
## [4]Supra
n 2.
[4]
Supra
n 2.
## [5]See
section 9(1) of theDivorce
Act 70 of 1979.
[5]
See
section 9(1) of the
Divorce
Act 70 of 1979.
[6]
Hahlo,
Supra n 2 at pages 157-8.
[7]
1989
(1) SA 597
(C)
at I.
[8]
[1993]
4 All SA 857
(AD) at para 19.
[9]
Old
Mutual Life Assurance Co (SA) Ltd v Swemmer
2004 5 SA 373
(SCA) at para 23.
[10]
Supra
fn
10,
at 601.
[11]
1987
3 SA 230
(WLD)
at
236B-C
.
[12]
(3389/2017) [2020] ZAGPPHC 154.
[13]
[2008]
JOL 22279.
[14]
(13966/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 713 (21 September 2022).
[15]
Supra n 8.
## [16]C.M.M
v A.M.S.Mat
para 30.
[16]
C.M.M
v A.M.S.M
at
para 30.
## [17]Molapo
v Molapo(4411/10)
[2013] ZAFSHC 29.
[17]
Molapo
v Molapo
(4411/10)
[2013] ZAFSHC 29.
[18]
Ibid.
[19]
Ibid at para 24.4.
[20]
See
Engelbrecht
at
601 I-J;
Wijker
at
727E-728C.
## [21][1993]
4 All SA 857 (AD).
[21]
[1993]
4 All SA 857 (AD).
[22]
Ibid at para 19.
[23]
2017 (1) SA.
[24]
Plaintiff’s heads at para 4.11.
[25]
Ibid at para 4.13.
[26]
Swanepoel
v Swanepoel
All SA 1996 (3).
[27]
Ibid
.
[28]
[2005]
ZAGPHC 142.
[29]
1945
TPD 113
at 116.
[30]
1962
(4) SA 83
(N) at page 88.
[31]
Supra
at
fn 7.
[32]
Ibid
at 601F-G.
[33]
1991
(1) SA 265 (W).
[34]
1987
(1) SA 967
(A) at 994(i).
[35]
2005
(2) SA 187
SCA.
[36]
1992
(3) SCR 813.
[37]
Binda
v Binda
1993
(2) SA 123
(W)
at 127C – D).
Klerck case
at 268B – 269G.
[38]
Supra
at fn 11, at 236B-C
## [39]M
v M(14861/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 48 para 32.
[39]
M
v M
(14861/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 48 para 32.
[40]
[2013]
ZAFSHC 29
[41]
Ibid at para 24.4.
## [42](13966/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 713 at para 29.
[42]
(13966/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 713 at para 29.
## [43]Klerck
v Klerck1991
1 SA 265 (W) para 268 c-g. For a detailed discussion on the concept
of “undue” benefit, see inter aliaTF
PhajaneSubstantial
misconduct as a factor in the determination of forfeiture of
patrimonial benefits at divorce in South Africa (LLM
thesis NWU,
2002) at 39-47; CMMarumogae
"The regime of forfeiture of patrimonial benefits in South
Africa and a critical analysis of the concept of unduly
benefited"
(2014)De
Jureat
95-99.
[43]
Klerck
v Klerck
1991
1 SA 265 (W) para 268 c-g. For a detailed discussion on the concept
of “undue” benefit, see inter alia
TF
Phajane
Substantial
misconduct as a factor in the determination of forfeiture of
patrimonial benefits at divorce in South Africa (LLM
thesis NWU,
2002) at 39-47; CM
Marumogae
"The regime of forfeiture of patrimonial benefits in South
Africa and a critical analysis of the concept of unduly
benefited"
(2014)
De
Jure
at
95-99.
## [44]SeeM
v M(14861/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 48 at para 7.
[44]
See
M
v M
(14861/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 48 at para 7.
[45]
[2022] ZAGPPHC 713.
[46]
See
also
M[…]
v M[…]
(022/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 75
(26 May 2023) at paras 39-40.
[47]
Supra
a
t
para 27.
[48]
South African Human Rights Commission ‘Unpacking the gaps and
challenges in addressing gender- based violence in South
Africa’
(2018) at 13-4
https://www.sahrc.org.za/home/21/files/SAHRC%20GBV%20Research%20Brief%20Publication.pdf
(accessed 26 May 2023).
[49]
Supra
at fn 35.
[50]
[1992]
3 SCR 813.
[51]
President
of the Republic of South Africa & Others v Gauteng Lions Rugby
Union & Another
2002
(2) SA 64
(CC) at para 15.
## [52]L.K.M
and Another v N.F.M and Others(16859/22)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 269 at para 10.
[52]
L.K.M
and Another v N.F.M and Others
(16859/22)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 269 at para 10.
## [53]Van
Zyl v Steyn(83856/15)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 302 at para 2.
[53]
Van
Zyl v Steyn
(83856/15)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 302 at para 2.
[54]
Section 10
of the
Divorce Act.
sino noindex
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