Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1148South Africa
M.J.T v K.T (Reasons) (2023-065213) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1148 (12 September 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.J.T v K.T (Reasons) (2023-065213) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1148 (12 September 2023)
M.J.T v K.T (Reasons) (2023-065213) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1148 (12 September 2023)
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sino date 12 September 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO.:2023-065213
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 12/09/2023
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
M[...]
J[...] T[...]
Applicant
and
K[...]
T[...]
Respondent
CONCISE REASONS FOR
JUDGEMENT
MOGOTSI
AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks to enforce clause 1.2.7 of the deed of settlement
made a
divorce order. The applicant contends that the said clause
entitles him to remove the minor child from the primary care of his
mother, the respondent, to relocate with him to Canada. The
respondent was awarded primary residence of the minor child by the
deed of settlement.
[2]
The crisp issue in this matter is the interpretation of Clause 1.2.7
which reads as follows:
“
To
the extent necessary, The Parties agree that the minor child shall
alternate between the parties when they are in deployment
to overseas
countries as they have always been during the subsistence of the
marriage and neither party shall withhold consent
unreasonably and
shall sign all the necessary documents and shall attend to all
necessary meeting/ attendances, at his own cost,
to enable the minor
child, to travel outside the Republic of South Africa, from time to
time.”
[3]
Clause 1.2.7 regulates the unreasonable withholding of consent by
either party when they
are on deployment to overseas countries in the
event either intends to travel with the minor child. The intention of
the parties
is that consent should not be unreasonably withheld. The
phrase “to enable the minor child, to travel outside the
Republic
of South Africa, from time to time” implies that
clause 1.2.7 regulates the child’s travelling arrangements. The
word
“travel” in clause 1.2.7 indicates that the parties
intended the clause to be employed in the event either unreasonably
withhold consent when the minor child is about to travel outside the
Republic of South Africa and has nothing to do with the primary
resident of the minor child. The parties, in my view, never intended
the primary resident of the child to alternate between them
when
deployed overseas. The contextual interpretation of the deed of
settlement yields the same results.
[4]
The court is the upper guardian of all minor children and I was
persuaded by the following
reasons to exercise my discretion to
dismiss the application. It was not in the interest of the minor
child to have him removed
from school in the middle of the year more
so that there was a complaint about his performance at school. The
schooling systems
in Canada differ from the South African one and
there are no concrete plans of the way forward at the expiration of
the four years
when the minor is to progress to High School. The
applicant will be based in Canada for four years and is silent on his
plans for
the minor child’s schooling thereafter.
[5]
The minor child in casu is currently 12 years of age. In my view, he
is not mature
enough to make an informed contribution relating to his
future.
[6]
The applicant’s approach
to this matter is worth mentioning. The approach to the
issue of
relocating with the minor child was deceiving. He intended to catch
the respondent off guard by not telling her outright
of his
intentions. The respondent had to second guess his intentions as a
result of the WhatsApp messages transmitted between the
two. He
arranged the travelling documents secretly and thereafter informed
the respondent of his intentions when he was ready to
relocate with
the minor child. This trend continued in his founding affidavit by
concealing crucial information. The applicant
struck me as a
dishonest person by attempting to mislead the court. In my view, a
punitive cost order was appropriate in the circumstances.
[7]
In the result, the following order was made:
7.1
The application is dismissed.
7.2
The applicant is ordered to pay the cost of the application on
attorney -client scale.
P J M Mogotsi
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date
of hearing
:11 July 2023
Date
of Reasons for judgment :12
September 2023
Appearances:
For
plaintiff: Adv M R Maphutha appearing with Adv W Sithole
(Instructed by Abrahams Madira Attorneys)
For
defendant: Adv Mari Fabricius (Instructed by Kgaugelo Baloyi Inc.
Attorneys)
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