Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1771South Africa
CVZ v BF (2023/093002) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1771 (4 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 October 2023
Headnotes
– “The absence of contact and the resultant failure to establish a relationship between a young child and one of the parents is not in the best interests of a child. Additionally, the longer a young child is denied such contact the more difficult it becomes to establish a relationship between the relevant parent and the child.”
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## CVZ v BF (2023/093002) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1771 (4 October 2023)
CVZ v BF (2023/093002) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1771 (4 October 2023)
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sino date 4 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
2023/093002
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
3 October 2023
In
the matter between:
CVZ
Applicant
and
BF
Respondent
JUDGMENT
#
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks urgent relief from the Court. The case concerns
the primary care of
two minors, aged 4 and 7. On 11 August 2023, Her
Ladyship Justice Basson ordered that the primary care of the children
rests with
the respondent. The applicant asks this Court to
reconsider the 11 August 2023 order and change the primary care to
vest with the
applicant.
[2]
The applicant before this Court was the respondent before Basson J.
For ease of reading,
the parties will be referred to as they appear
before this Court now.
[3]
The applicant contends that at the time the 11 August 2023 order was
granted, the applicant
and respondent were living together in the
respondent's home. Subsequent to the order, the applicant left the
respondent's home.
The details of the applicant’s departure
need not engage the Court save to say it was not voluntary. The
applicant’s
position is that the “regrettable
consequence” of the court order granted on 11 August 2023 is
that it removes the
minor children from their primary caregiver of
the past three years – being the applicant - and provides no
proper contract
rights to the applicant.
[4]
The crux of the applicant’s case is that if the Court [Basson
J] was “aware
of the applicant’s version, the relief
sought in the respondent’s urgent application would not have
been granted”.
The applicant’s case is that this Court
would not have made the 11 August 2023 order if it was aware that the
parties may
not live together.
[5]
The respondent opposes the relief sought and contends that Basson J
was made fully aware
of the fact that the applicant would leave the
shared home when it granted the 11 August 2023 order. The applicant's
subsequent
departure from the shared home was an issue which served
before the Court when it granted the 11 August 2023 order.
[6]
The central controversy, in this case, is whether the circumstances
have changed subsequent
to the order of Basson J to permit a
reconsideration of the primary care order.
[7]
I have to consider the facts which served before Basson J. The
founding affidavit before
Basson J contains the following allegation
–
“
the [applicant]
undeniably stated that she will move out where she is currently
living [in our house].”
[1]
[8]
The Court was made aware of the applicant's intention to leave the
shared home. The applicant's
request that the order be reconsidered
on the basis of subsequent events should fail, as these events were
foreshadowed and properly
placed before the Court when it granted the
11 August 2023 order. The factual basis for the applicant’s
request for this
Court to intervene with the 11 August 2023 order is
at odds with the pleaded facts.
[9]
It also
weighs with this Court that the respondent (as applicant before
Basson J) highlighted this fact – the certainty that
the
applicant will move out of the shared home - in its practice note.
The respondent’s counsel submitted in the practice
note before
Basson J that it seeks urgent relief to bring consistency to the
children’s lives as the applicant has stated
she will move out
of the home which they all currently share and that this will result
in further “disarray for the children”.
[2]
[10]
The applicant’s departure from the home is not an unexpected
event. It may have occurred subsequent
to the 11 August 2023 order,
but it was expected, anticipated and disclosed to the Court. The
Court was made aware of this fact,
not only in the affidavit which
served before it and then pointed out specifically in the practice
note. This Court cannot conclude
that the order of 11 August 2023
must be interfered with based on subsequent events – as these
did serve before Basson J.
[11]
It also
weighs with this Court that the children have now lived with the
respondent as the primary caregiver for more than six weeks.
The
Court would have to uproot the children again were it to interfere
with the order of Basson J. I have no reports or evidence
of what the
impact of another move will have on the children. They have moved
from New Zealand to South Africa and from Hermanus
to Gauteng. They
have been in three different schools already this year. It is not a
criticism – there appears to be good
reasons for all these
moves – and it appears that these decisions were taken with the
interests of the children in mind.
The Court must, however, consider
that our case law has recognised the importance of consistency in
children’s lives –
particularly those as young as the
parties’ second daughter.
[3]
Children's existing environment should not readily be disturbed, and
any unnecessary moves should be discouraged and avoided on
the
grounds of security and stability.
[4]
A stable routine is universally determined to be in the interests of
children, especially those of a young age.
[5]
Were I to grant the relief sought by the applicant, they would be
uprooted, again, in dissonance with our caw law. This is particularly
concerning as I have not been told what the impact of such a move
would be on the children. I hesitate to do so without knowing
what
the impact on the children would be.
[12] I
also spent some thought on the temporary nature of the 11 August 2023
order. The order was granted on an
interim basis pending the outcome
of Part B, which would be a final resolution of the issue. The order
also operates pending an
investigation by the Family Advocate, which
has been ordered to be provided on an urgent basis. The current
situation is, therefore,
interim and will be resolved with the report
from the family advocate when Part B is considered. The parties can
seek case management
or agree to an expedited hearing in one of this
Division's specialist courts. I asked the parties whether they would
agree to a
case management order with the hope of expediting the
issue, but no such agreement could be reached. Regardless, there are
avenues
available to see relief on a more immediate basis, but also
with all relevant facts from the Family Advocate before the Court.
[13]
The Court
also considers that it is being asked, essentially, to suspend the
operation of the order of 11 August 2023. The applicant
has not
expressly relied on Rule 45A, but the impact of the relief being
sought is that provided for in Rule 45A. The Court must
exercise the
powers in Rule 45A sparingly.
[6]
The applicant's premise for seeking such interference is for reasons
set out above, not borne out by the evidence. The applicant
leaving
the shared house is a fact that Basson J was made aware of on the
papers and in argument. The Court cannot conclude it
is in the
interest of justice to interfere with an order in circumstances where
the basis of the interference alleged by the applicant
is not
supported by the evidence.
[14]
There is a history of protracted litigation between the parties,
which spans back to December 2021, when
the respondent launched an
urgent application and sought investigations into the well-being of
the children and the question of
primary care. These legal
proceedings in the Western Cape were never finalised, despite reports
being filed by the Family Advocate.
These proceedings provide another
basis for the Court to be slow to interfere with the existing order.
[15]
The Court also gains comfort from the fact that there is nothing on
the papers before me, which indicates
that the respondent lacks a
caregiver. On the contrary, the Court has reports indicating both
parents are suitable to be primary
caregivers.
[16]
For all these reasons, the Court is not persuaded that the applicant
has made a case for the relief sought.
[17]
The Court's duty to the children, however, does not end there. The
reality is that I am confronted with two
girls who have lived with
the applicant most of their lives and permanently for the past four
years and now see them for limited
periods – sometimes as
little as a couple of minutes before school. I must immediately state
the respondent has offered a
contact regime – a matter to which
I will return. However, practically, the children’s contact
with their mother is
a matter of concern to the Court.
[18]
The Court’s
concern with contact emanates not just from the facts of this case
but the case law concerning the best interests
of the children. In
ND
v PT
[7]
this Court held –
“
The absence of
contact and the resultant failure to establish a relationship between
a young child and one of the parents is not
in the best interests of
a child. Additionally, the longer a young child is denied such
contact the more difficult it becomes to
establish a relationship
between the relevant parent and the child.”
[19] At
present, the children see their mother for limited periods –
when before, they lived with her full
time. The change was concerning
to the Court, and it turned to the parties for assistance. The Court
is grateful for the full submissions
it received from the parties’
representatives during the Court hearing as well as their endeavours
to approach the Court
with solutions to this concern: being the issue
of contact pending the outcome of Part B. The parties were helpful
and offered
to engage each other to see what they could achieve
through negotiation. At the end of an urgent week and the best
endeavours by
both parties, they remained far apart.
[20]
The positions were, essentially, that the applicant sought shared
residency, and the respondent tendered
contact on Wednesdays and
alternate weekends (including sleepovers).
[21]
The applicant’s position (if not primary care, then a shared
residency) places the Court in the difficult
position that it has no
facts on which it can consider this relief. The Court has no
information on what the impact on the children
will be if they move
homes between the applicant and the respondent. I have been provided
with no basis to conclude a shared residency
will be in the best
interest of the children. In these circumstances, the Court is
hesitant to interfere with the children's residence.
To be clear, the
Court does not conclude that shared residency is inappropriate, but
only that at this stage, it does not have
facts on which to make this
finding.
[22]
The respondent's tender of contact will, however, immediately improve
the amount of contact between the applicant
and the children. I have
been informed that the parties have been unable to agree to a contact
order pending the outcome of Part
B of the urgent application, which
was served before Basson J. As this contact has been tendered by the
respondent, I see no harm
in making this an interim order of the
Court to ensure the children have contact with the applicant.
[23]
The
respondent’s counsel has referred to a judgment of this
Division by Van der Schyff J, who confronted with a request to
intervene with an existing order made an interim contact order. In
LKM and
Another v NFM and Others
[8]
where the Court held –
“
This is, however
not the end of the matter before me. The practical reality is even if
the applicants are compelled to issue an
application in the
children's Court for the suspension of the order granted on 25 April
2022, the immediate question is whether
the order as it relates to
the first respondent's contact with her child for 29 and 30 April
2022 should proceed as ordered by
the children's Court. Although the
applicants' did not make out a case that the first respondent poses
any threat to the minor,
I have to consider that, be it because of
the first respondent's voluntary absence or the applicants denying
her contact, the last
contact that the first respondent had with her
child was during November 2021. It would, however, be in the minor
child’s
best interest to resume having contact with her
biological mother as soon as possible. This being said, it would be
in the best
interest of the child to ensure that the first contact is
not overwhelming but gradually phased in.”
[24] I
am persuaded, based on the tender offered by the respondent, the case
law’s recognition of the importance
of contact with parents and
the reasoning of Van der Schyff J set out above, that an interim
contact order be granted. This type
of order is appropriate in the
circumstances as neither party says the other is unfit or that the
girls are not loved and well
looked after by the other. The order
will, of course operate on an interim basis, solely to increase the
applicant's current contact
until part B of the application launched
under case number 078774/2023 has been resolved.
Order
[25] As
a result, the following order is granted:
a) The
application is heard as one of urgency in terms of Rule 6(12) of the
Uniform Rules of Court any non-compliance
with form, service and time
periods in terms of the Uniform Rules of Court is condoned;
b)
Pending the outcome of Part B of case number 078774/2023 the Court
provides for contact by supplementing
11 of the court order
dated 11 August 2023 under case number 078774/2023 as follows:
i)
The applicant will have contact with the minor children every
alternative weekend from after-school returning
them to the
respondent’s residence on a Sunday afternoon at 17:00. Where
there is a public holiday attached to a weekend,
such public holiday
will attach to the applicant’s weekend;
ii) The
applicant will exercise contact with the children every Wednesday
from after school until 18:00, whereafter
the applicant will return
the children to the respondent’s home. This contact will be
subject to extra classes, school and
sporting activities.
iii) The
applicant must disclose the residence where the children will be
housed.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
applicant:
A RAYMOND
Instructed by:
Schindlers
Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent:
L KEIJSER
Instructed by:
AH Stander and
Achenbach Inc
Date of the
hearing:
27 September and 28
September 2023
Date of judgment:
4 October 2023
[1]
FA
13-48 para I (urgent application under case number 078774/2023)
[2]
CL
13-217
[3]
AS v
CHPS 2022 JDR 0623 (GJ)
).
[4]
Mekgwe v Letlatsa 2018 JDR 1959 (FB) at page 30
[5]
JO v AO 2017 JDR 1691 (GJ)
[6]
The power to suspend execution will not be exercised as a matter of
course and should be used sparingly to come to the assistance
of an
applicant outside of the provisions of the rules of the Court when
the Court is satisfied that the interests of justice
require it to
do so, and that justice cannot be properly done unless relief is
granted to the applicant. (
Moulded
Components and Rotomoulding South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Coucourakis and
Another
1979 (2) SA 457
(W)
at
462H – 463B; and
Whitfield
v Van Aarde
1993 (1) SA 332
(E)
at
337E – G).
[7]
25792/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 13 (18 January 2022)
[8]
(16859/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 269 (29 April 2022) para 13
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