Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 212South Africa
M.J.S v C.T.S (A101/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 212 (14 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 May 2016
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.J.S v C.T.S (A101/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 212 (14 February 2022)
M.J.S v C.T.S (A101/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 212 (14 February 2022)
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sino date 14 February 2022
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HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
14/02/2022
Case no: A101/2020
In the matter between:
M[....] J[....]
S[....]
Appellant
and
C[....] T[….]
S[....]
Respondent
DATE OF JUDGMENT: This Judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email. The date
and
time of hand-down is deemed to be 14 February 2022.
JUDGMENT
N V KHUMALO J (with
MANOIM J and NCONGWANE AJ concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The Appellant, Mr M J S[....] is appealing against the judgment and
order of Van Niekerk AJ which was
delivered on 30 May 2016, and the
reasons on request furnished on 19 February 2019, in a divorce action
instituted at the suit of
the Respondent.
[2]
The Appeal is with leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal granted on 16
March 2020. The Appellant is appealing
only against paragraphs 2, 3,
4, 5 and 6 of the Order which concerns the division of the
Appellant’s estate in terms of s 7 of
the Divorce Act 1979 (Act 70
of 1979) (“the Act”), maintenance and costs. The Appellant was in
respect thereof ordered:
“
2. to contribute towards the
maintenance of the Respondent by paying her an amount of R30 000
per month
from the first day of the month, following the grant of the
final order of divorce between the parties and thereafter on or
before
the first day of each and every successive month;
2.2. to retain the Respondent as a
dependant on his medical aid scheme to which she belongs and pay all
reasonable
medical, dental, ophthalmic pharmaceutical medical
expenses not so covered;
3. to transfer to the
Respondent the property known as Plot [….], Gauteng (“the
property”) within
ninety (90) days from date of this order
unencumbered;
4. to sign any and all
documents to give effect to the order in paragraph 3 supra, failing
which the
sheriff for the district of Benoni authorised to sign on
behalf of the Appellant;
5. to pay to the
Respondent an amount of R2 000 000.00 (Two Million Rand)
within 90 days”
6. to pay the costs.
[3]
It is the Appellant ‘s contention that in granting the order in
respect of Paragraphs
3, 4 and 5,
the court a quo erred:
[3.1]
by granting relief not sought in the summons;
[3.2] by basing its decision on inadmissible
settlement discussions;
[3.3] by ignoring the peremptory provisions of s 7
(5) of the Act to the effect that the court should consider both
assets and
liabilities of both parties. There was no evidence
whatsoever regarding the Appellant’s liabilities, and no finding
could therefore
have been made regarding the net asset value of the
Appellant’s estate. There was also no evidence at all regarding the
Respondents
assets and liabilities. The evidence of both parties’
assets and liabilities being crucial in determining what percentage
of assets,
if any should be transferred to the Respondent.
[3.4] by finding that the trust was the alter ego
of the Appellant, upon which the Court came to a legal conclusion
which has
not been alleged in the particulars of claim and made a
finding which the Respondent had not even contended for, and for
which there
was no evidence whatsoever.
[3.5] In making the order that the Appellant
should effect payment of R2 000 000.00 (Two Million Rand)
within ninety
(90) days of the date of the order, ignoring the
evidence that payment thereof had allegedly been suggested premised
on the sale
of the business property at some future time. The court
had no evidence whatsoever before it that the Applicant was
financially able
to give effect to the order.
[4]
The relief granted by the court a quo in paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of the
order was, according to the Appellant,
in a nutshell never sought by
the Respondent in the summons, the basis for granting the relief bad
in law, and thirdly, granted with
no evidence to support the granting
thereof even within the context of granting relief not sought in the
particulars of claim but
under the claim for further and alternative
relief.
[5]
In respect of maintenance, the Appellant contends that:
[5.1] the court a quo did not consider all the
factors in s 7 (2) of the Act. In making an order in the absence of a
complete
picture of the financial affairs of the parties, the court
could not exercise its discretion properly, and determine whether
Respondent
was entitled to maintenance and if so what amount was
appropriate;
[5.2] The court specifically made an order in
respect of the quantum of maintenance it knew was not based on the
evidence before
it.
[6]
As a result the Appellant prays that the mentioned orders as per
paragraph 2 to 6 of the Order be
set aside and the determination
thereof be referred back to trial for proper determination.
Factual
background
[7]
The Appellant and the Respondent were married on 9 August 1980,
before the
commencement of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
, with the
conclusion of an ante-nuptial contract in terms of which community of
property, profit and loss and accrual sharing were
excluded.
[8]
The
Respondent
instituted
the divorce
on 10 April 2016 after 36 years of
marriage. At that time the Respondent was 56 years old and their only
child had long attained the
age of majority. They both still resided
at Plot 1/110 Queensberry Road, Benoni, (“the immovable property”)
which was their common
home. The property is registered in the
name of the Appellant.
[9]
The Respondent was for 29 years employed by Fluid Pumps CC (‘Fluid
Pumps”), a family business, as
a financial manager. She and
the Appellant, who is a businessman and the sole member of Fluid
Pumps, have been running the
business of Fluid Pumps since after the
birth of their child.
[10]
The Appellant on being served with the summons did not enter an
appearance to defend. He instead initiated without
prejudice
settlement negotiations with the Respondent. At the time the matter
was to be heard the parties were yet to finalise the
negotiations. No
agreement was concluded and the Respondent still did not file a
notice to oppose. The Respondent proceeded to set
the matter down for
trial on 30 May 2016 as an uncontested divorce.
[11]
The Respondent in her particulars of claim, besides the decree of
divorce prayed for the following order:
[11.1] that the Appellant pay spousal maintenance in the
sum of R30 000 per month and retain her on his medical aid and
pay all
reasonable medical, dental, ophthalmic, pharmaceutical and
related medical expenses not covered.
[11.2] transfer of 50% of the Appellant’s net assets
or such portion as the above honourable court may deem just and
equitable,
alternatively pay to the Respondent an amount equal to one
half of the nett value of Appellant’s estate or such amount the
honourable
court may deem just and equitable, regard being had to the
provisions of
s 7
(3) of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
.
[11.3] be granted costs and such further and or
alternative relief as the above honourable court may deem just and
equitable.
[12]
By virtue of their marriage being prior to 1984, it is common cause
that the provisions of
s 7
of the
Divorce Act as
intended to be
enforced by the Respondent is applicable.
Legal
framework
[13]
Section 7
of the
Divorce Act regulates
the process of division of the assets and the
payment of maintenance. The relevant parts read:
7.
Division of assets and maintenance of parties
(1) A court granting a decree
of divorce may in accordance with a written agreement between the
parties make
an order with regard to the division of the assets of
the parties or the payment of maintenance by the one party to the
other.
(2) In the absence of an
order made in terms of subsection (1) with regard to the payment of
maintenance by
the one party to the other, the court may, having
regard to the existing or prospective means of each of the parties,
their respective
earning capacities, financial needs and obligations,
the age of each of the parties, the duration of the marriage, the
standard of
living of the parties prior to the divorce, their conduct
in so far as it may be relevant to the break-down of the marriage, an
order
in terms of subsection (3) and any other factor which in the
opinion of the court should be taken into account, make an order
which
the court finds just in respect of the payment of maintenance
by the one party to the other for any period until the death or
remarriage
of the party in whose favour the order is given, whichever
event may first occur.
[subsection (2) substituted by
section 36(a)
of
Act
88 of 1984
]
(3) A court granting a decree
of divorce in respect of a marriage out of community of property
entered into
before the commencement of the
Matrimonial Property Act,
1984
, in terms of an antenuptial contract by which community of
property, community of profit and loss and accrual sharing in any
form
are excluded, may, subject to the provisions of subsection (4),
(5) and (6), on application by one of the parties to that marriage,
in the absence of any agreement between them regarding the division
of their assets, order that such assets, or such part of the
assets,
of the other party as the court may deem just be transferred to the
first-mentioned party.
[subsection (3) added by
section 36(b)
of
Act
88 of 1984
(4) An order under subsection
(3) shall not be granted unless the court is satisfied that it is
equitable
and just by reason of the fact that the party in whose
favour the order is granted, contributed directly or indirectly to
the maintenance
or increase of the estate of the other party during
the subsistence of the marriage, either by the rendering of services,
or the
saving of expenses which would otherwise have been incurred,
or in any other manner.
[subsection (4) added by
section 36(b)
of
Act
88 of 1984
]
(5) In the determination of
the assets or part of the assets to be transferred as contemplated in
subsection
(3) the court shall, apart from any direct or indirect
contribution made by the party concerned to the maintenance or
increase of
the estate of the other party as contemplated in
subsection (4), also take into account-
(a) the existing means and
obligations of the parties;
(b) any donation made by one
party to the other during the
subsistence
of the marriage, or which is owing and enforceable in terms of the
antenuptial contract concerned;
(c) any order which the court
grants under
section
9
of this Act or under any
other law which affects the patrimonial position of the parties;
and(d)any other factor which should in the
opinion of the court be
taken into account.
[subsection (5) added by section 36(b) of
Act
88 of 1984
]
Analysis
[14]
The evidence led by the Respondent during the trial in support of her
claims for maintenance and the application
of the provisions of s 7
(3) (a) of the Act (transfer of assets) to their separate estate, was
briefly that: Shortly before the birth
of their son, she, together
with the Appellant started a business that was later deregistered and
thereafter they started Fluid Pumps.
She, for the entire period of
their marriage was employed in the business and contributed her
income to the maintenance of the family
and the common home. She
single- handedly looked after the family, running the home and caring
for their child. She supervised the
child’s educational, extra
mural and social activities, whilst also taking care of Respondent’s
needs, even purchasing his toiletries.
She attended to the financial
needs of the family whilst the Appellant did not.
[15]
The Respondent was the financial manager at Fluid Pumps for the whole
period of her employment whilst also carrying
the responsibility of
taking the child to school and collecting him from the grandparents
in the afternoon. She put money in the
business in the amount of
R365 000.00 without the prospects of repayment. The amount was
reflected in the statement of accounts.
A further amount of
R15 000.00 was paid into the business from her personal account.
She also sometimes did not draw any salary
when there was not enough
turnover to pay employees’ salaries.
[16]
In respect of her s 7 (3) (a) claim, the Respondent further testified
that she no longer sought a transfer of 50
% of the Appellant’s
nett assets as prayed for in her particulars but a transfer of the
immovable property, that is their common
home, and a payment of a
specific amount from the proceeds of a sale of a certain asset which
she alleged was in accordance with
the agreement they reached during
the without prejudice settlement negotiations.
[17]
The Respondent pointed out that the Appellant’s business premises
are registered in the name of Fluid Investment
Property Trust of
which the Appellant and herself were the Trustees which was evaluated
to be worth between R7.9 Million and R8.1
Million Rand.
[18]
Moreover she mentioned that during their negotiations the Appellant
made certain calculations which he reduced to
writing. The Appellant
had added together the value of the immovable property, the business
and the business premises, which was
R4 Million and R8 Million Rand
respectively, and divided the total amount by 2 which came to a total
of R6 Million Rand. The Respondent
alleged that, that would have been
her share in the estate and the Appellant would then have paid her a
cash amount of R2 Million
Rand from the proceeds of the sale of the
business and also transferred their common home to her. The other
proposal by the Appellant
was to sell the assets and then divide the
proceeds. The Appellant confirmed that proposal by writing on the
note “sell the lot
and split the difference.’
[19]
The trial court, following on the Respondent’s evidence, granted
the order for payment of the amount sought by
the Respondent for
maintenance and of a cash amount of R2 Million Rands including
an order for transfer of the immovable property,
having taken into
account the following factors and found as mentioned in its judgment,
inter alia
, that:
[19.1]
The Respondent had shown that she has made a contribution to the
growth of
the Appellant’s estate by working in the business. She
has also sacrificed by allowing the business to be conducted from
their
common home for a period.
[19.2]
The Appellant’s estate consisted of the immovable property (common
home), his membership in Floyd Pumps including the business and
premises from which the business was being operated that is
supposedly
owned and registered in the name of the Trust. The basis
for his conclusion was that the Appellant managed and controlled the
Trust
business as if it is his own and its assets as if they belong
to him, finding that the trust was consequently the Appellant’s
alter
ego and should be taken into account when calculating
Appellant’s assets and considering the redistribution of assets.
[20]
Markedly, no such evidence on the Trust was led
or
facts alleged and proven by the Respondent. As a result, there was no
basis for such a finding. The conclusion was
evidently
unjustifiable, for i
t
is trite that it is impermissible for
judicial
officers to rely for their decisions on matters not put before them
by litigants either in evidence or in oral or written
submissions;
see in this regard
Kauesa
v Minister of Home Affairs & others
1996
(4) SA 965
(NmS)
at 973J-974A;
Welkom
Municipality v Masureik & Herman t/a Lotus Corporation &
another
[1997]
ZASCA 14
;
1997
(3) SA 363
(SCA)
at 371G-H.)
[21]
The declaration that the Trust is to be treated as an alter ego of
the Appellant and its property declared to belong
to the Appellant
was not sought in the particulars of claim either, as well as the
transfer of immovable property and the payment
of the cash amount of
R2 000 000.00. Any deviation and or amendment by the
Respondent to its cause as stated in its particulars
of claim or
prayers sought was to be on notice to the Appellant even if the
matter was unopposed, as the Respondent was now proceeding
to seek an
additional and or different order from the one that the Appellant was
notified about with the resultant prejudice to the
Appellant.
[22]
The test for meeting the problem of inadequate pleading, more so in
an unopposed action, is that of potential prejudice
in dealing with
the point on a factual or legal level; see
Phillips
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2005]
ZACC 15
;
2006 (1) SA 505
(CC);
2006 (2) BCLR 274
(CC) at para 39;
Prince v President, Cape Law Society
[2000]
ZACC 28
;
2001 (2) SA 388
(CC);
2001 (2) BCLR 133
(CC) at para 22. The
injustice that would be brought to bear upon the Appellant by the
order issued under such circumstances is indefensible
and therefore
not to be condoned.
[23]
Jafta J opined in
South African Transport & Allied Workers
Union v Garvas
[2012] ZACC 13
;
2013 (1) SA 83
(CC);
2012 (8) BCLR
840
(CC) (Garvas) at para 113 that:
‘
Holding parties to pleadings is not pedantry. It is
an integral part of the principle of legal certainty which is an
element of the
rule of law, one of the values on which our
Constitution is founded.’
[24]
A party contemplating a certain relief should therefore know the
requirements it needs to satisfy and every other
party likely to be
affected by the relief to be sought must know precisely the case it
is expected to meet. Even in the context of
further and alternative
relief, a point sufficiently elucidated by the Appellant in its heads
of argument by pointing what was stated
in
Port Nolloth
Municipality v Xhalisa; Luwalala v Port Nolloth Municipality
1991
(3) SA 98
(C) that:
“
Relief under this prayer cannot be granted which is
substantially different to that specifically claimed, unless the
basis therefore
has been fully canvassed vis the party against whom
such relief is to be granted has been fully apprised that relief in
this particular
form is being sought and has had the fullest
opportunity of dealing with the claim for relief being pressed under
the head of “further
or alternative relief.”
[25]
Furthermore, and fatal to the proceedings, as correctly pointed out
by the Appellant, is the fact that neither was
the Trust cited nor
was it served with papers even though it was to be adversely affected
by such a decision. The potential prejudice
to be suffered was
supposedly glaringly obvious to the trial court; see
Golden
Dividend v Absa Bank
(569/2015)
[2016] ZASCA
78
(30 May 2016) at [10].
The test whether there
has been non-joinder is whether a party has a direct and substantial
interest in the subject matter of the
litigation, which may be
prejudicially affected by the judgment or order; see
Tlouamma
and others vs. Mbethe, Speaker of the National Assembly of the
Parliament of the Republic of South Africa and another
2016
(1) SA 534
(WCC).
[26]
In
Gordon v Department of Health, Kwazulu-Natal
[2008] ZASCA
99
;
2008 (6) SA 522
(SCA) it was held that if an order or judgment
cannot be sustained without necessarily prejudicing the interest of
third parties
that had not been joined, then those third parties have
a legal interest in the matter and must be joined. It is clearly
stated in
Gordon at par 9 of the judgement that:
“
I
n
the
Amalgamated
Engineering Union
case
(supra) it was found that ‘the question of joinder should. . .
not depend on the nature of the subject matter . .
. but . . . on the
manner in which, and the extent to which, the court’s order may
affect the interests of third parties’.
5
The
court formulated the approach as, first, to consider whether the
third party would have
locus
standi
to
claim relief concerning the same subject-matter, and then to examine
whether a situation could arise in which, because the third
party had
not been joined, any order the court might make would not be
res
judicata
against
him, entitling him to approach the courts again concerning the same
subject-matter and possibly obtain an order irreconcilable
with the
order made in the first instance.
6
This
has been found to mean that if the order or ‘judgment sought cannot
be sustained and carried into effect without necessarily
prejudicing
the interests’ of a party or parties not joined in the proceedings,
then that party or parties have a legal interest
in the matter and
must be joined.”
It
is inevitable in this matter that the Trust might also have to take
its own action in order to assert any of its rights that it
might
wish to affirm in the litigation between the parties.
[27]
The trial court further noted the Respondent’s evidence on the
settlement negotiations, and pronounced that, although
they took
place, no settlement agreement was reached, and therefore, no weight
was to be put on that evidence. The court however
proceeded to take
into consideration the note that Appellant allegedly wrote setting
out his without prejudice proposal and also
what was allegedly
discussed during the without prejudice settlement negotiations
regarding the transfer of their common home, as
well as the alleged
fact of Appellant having at that time pledged in his own words that
‘he will not, on divorce, send the Respondent
to the world without
a cent.” On that finding, the trial court granted the Respondent
the order for the transfer of their common
home.
[28]
It is common place that discussions that form part of genuine
negotiations towards the settlement of a matter are privileged
and
inadmissible in court; see
Millward v Glazer
1950 (3) SA 547
(W);
Gcabashe v Nene
1975 (3) SA 617
(A). They are therefore
to be excluded from the evidence in the current or subsequent
proceedings between the parties to the dispute.
The trial court
failed to indicate its reasons why in this instance it would ignore
such a fundamental principle.
[29]
Finally on the maintenance, the Respondent was granted an order for
the amount of R30 000. I am mindful that
a claim for maintenance
post-divorce in terms of s 7 (2) and a claim for redistribution of
assets in terms of Sections 7 (3) to (5)
of the Act are discretionary
awards which the High Court can only interfere with the exercise
thereof if done capriciously; see;
Ex parte Neethling & Others
1954 (1) SA 331
(A) at 335.
[30]
Section s 7 (2) is instructive on the factors that are to be
considered prior to making a decision on maintenance.
The court must
conclude that in the light of all the relevant factors (i.e. those
specified in the subsection as well as any other
which, in the
opinion of the court, should be taken into account) it is just for
the order/s to be made; see
Buttner v Buttner
2006 (3) SA 23
(SCA) para 36.
[31]
In
casu
, not much of
the required facts were put before the court. The evidence upon which
the assessment was made to determine the amount
to be payable was the
fact that the Respondent earns a salary of R20 000 to R25 000
per month, 56 years of age and has
been married for 36 years.
Notwithstanding the court confirming that if the Respondent continues
working she will need an amount
between R5 000 – R10 000
per month to make up for the shortfall on her salary, the Appellant
was ordered to pay her an
amount of R30 000.00, which is three
times the amount that was recognised might meet with her needs whilst
she was to continue
earning the amount of approximately R25 000.
Furthermore, the court failed to establish the nature and extent of
the Respondent’s
prospective needs and means in relation to her
assets and liabilities, and the Appellant’s affordability in
relation to his prospective
needs and obligations when the
maintenance order was made.
[32]
The trial court also ignored that where a wife is able
to maintain herself because she is in fact working or has assets from
which
she can support herself or where a notional earning capacity is
attributed to her, depending on the circumstances of each case, it
may not be expected of the husband to maintain her after divorce; see
Pommerel v Pommerel
1990
(1) SA 998
(E) at 1002A – C.
Invariably
that will affect the decision on the
amount that is to be paid if it is found that the need for
maintenance under those circumstances
still exist.
[33]
It is evident that the trial court erred when it failed to take into
consideration the applicable principles and
the law in deciding on
the relief that was sought by the Respondent in the matter, resulting
in the improper exercise of his discretion.
It would therefore be
appropriate for the matter, as has been advocated by both parties, to
be sent back to the trial court for proper
adjudication.
It
is therefore ordered, that:
1.
The appeal is
upheld.
2.
The orders as
per paragraph 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of Van Niekerk AJ ‘s Order dated 30
May 2016 is set aside and substituted with the
following:
2.1.
The matter is referred back to the Trial Court to
determine the proprietary interests of the Applicant and the
Respondent from their
dissolved marriage;
2.2. The relief sought by Respondent
in paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of her particulars of claim are
postponed sine
die;
2.3.
The Appellant may enter an appearance to defend the
aforesaid relief within ten (10) days of this order where after the
normal periods
in respect of pleadings will apply;
2.4.
Nothing in this order will bar any party from amending
their pleadings in relation to the determination of their proprietary
interests
arising from the marriage prior the date of the divorce
order;
2.5. The matter to be heard before
another Judge, other than the Judge who sat in the court a quo;
2.6
. Costs of
this appeal and the costs reserved in the Supreme Court of Appeal be
costs in the cause in the action
which is to determine the
outstanding issues (the proprietary interests) arising from the
marriage.”
N V KHUMALO J
JUDGE OF
THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION; PRETORIA
I
agree
N
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION: PRETORIA
I agree
T.
NCONGWANE
ACTING
JUDGE
OF
THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION; PRETORIA
For Appellant:
J J C Swanepoel
Instructed by:
Alice Swanepoel Attorneys
alice@aliceattorneys.co.za
For Respondent:
M L Haskins SC
Instructed by:
Shapiro & Ledwaba Inc
Attorneys
aubrey@shapiro-ledwaba.co.za
Heard: 25 August
2021
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