Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 398South Africa
C.O (Born P) v E.O (4828/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 398 (20 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 April 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## C.O (Born P) v E.O (4828/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 398 (20 April 2022)
C.O (Born P) v E.O (4828/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 398 (20 April 2022)
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sino date 20 April 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 4828/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
REVISED:
YES / NO
20/04/22
In
the matter between:
C[....]
O[....] (Born
P[....])
APPLICANT
AND
E[....]
O[....]
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on April 2022.
BAQWA
J:
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant herein seeks an order regarding the primary residence
and contact rights with regards to the children of the marriage,
medical aid, spousal maintenance for the children as well as a
contribution towards legal costs pending the finalisation of the
divorce action between them.
[2]
The Respondent opposes the application and seeks condonation for the
late filing of the respondents answering affidavit.
[3]
The issue of primary residence for the children is common cause
between the parties in that they agree to both parties retaining
full
parental rights and responsibilities and the applicant being awarded
primary care and residency.
B.
BACKGROUND
[4]
The parties were married to each other in community of property on 22
November 2019 and two children were born now aged about
3 years and
10 months and 1 year and 6 months respectively.
[5]
At the time of the institution of the Rule 43 proceedings the
children were and presently remain in the primary care of the
applicant. The nature and extent of the respondent’s rights to
contact remains in dispute.
[6]
The applicant states that at
the commencent of the
Rule 43 proceedings she was employed as part-time real estate agent
with
Keller Williams Edge
(“KW Edge”). Subsequent to deposing to her affidavit her
employment was terminated resulting in her current status
as an
unemployed person who earns no regular income or alternatively earns
a very limited income on an ad hoc basis.
[7]
During the subsistence of the marriage and prior to the institution
of divorce proceedings the applicant was reliant on the
respondent
for her personal as well as the minor children’s monthly
maintenance needs. The applicant is currently 26 years
old.
[8]
In December 2021 the respondent informed the applicant that she and
the minor children should vacate the matrimonial home at
the end of
January 2022 because the respondent and in particular his mother had
cancelled the lease agreement. Consequently, the
applicant and the
children were left destitute and had to rely on good Samaritans like
Melandri Grobler (“Melandri”)
and her mother, Mrs Soreta
Grobler who provided them with temporary accommodation.
[9]
During this period the respondent did not provide any maintenance to
the applicant.
[10]
He has however tendered a maintenance contribution as follows:
10.1 R2000 per month per
child which amount shall be subject to an annual escalation according
to the consumer price index;
10.2 The respondent shall
retain the minor children as dependents on his medical aid subject to
timely payment of the monthly premium;
10.3 The respondent
proposes that each party be responsible for their medical needs and
requirements.
10.4 He tenders to pay
for their children’s school fees.
10.5 He however proposes
that each party be equally responsible for all reasonable scholastic
expenses including school uniforms,
books and extra mural activities.
[11]
The tender by the respondent has not been accepted by the applicant
on the basis that it does not accord with the needs of
the children
nor is it properly aligned with the respondent’s financial
means or lack thereof.
[12]
The applicant has set out her monthly expenses in her founding
affidavit and in light of the fact that she no longer earns
any
income, her shortfall is equal to her total monthly expenses.
C.
CONDONATION APPLICATION
[13]
Before considering the rest of the application it is necessary to
deal with the respondent’s application for condonation
of his
late filing of his answering affidavit contrary to the provisions of
Rule 43(3) which require a respondent response within
ten days
failing which he shall be barred.
[14]
The respondent failed to file his response within the prescribed
period and after being given a further indulgence of five
days he
still failed to comply.
[15]
Some of the factors that a court has to consider is whether there
will be prejudice caused by a failure to submit his answering
affidavit timeously. The court has to consider also the period of
delay in delivery the required document.
[16]
I have considered the matter and I hold the view is that the delay
period was not religious and that it has no significant
moreover,
refusing its admission will result in the applicant and the court not
knowing the respondent’s defence if any.
[17]
In these circumstances where the court would only hear one side of
warring parties, I consider it to be in the interests of
justice to
admit the respondent’s answering affidavit and condone the late
filing.
D.
APPLICATION TO FILE A REPLY
[18]
Ordinarily I would not accept further evidence from an applicant who
has to make her case in her founding affidavit. In the
present case I
am persuaded that the events which applicant seeks to address occured
after she had filed her papers. I am referring
to her loss of
employment and the allegations by the respondent that she is being
maintained as a “housewife” by Melandri’.
[19]
In the result the new evidence by the applicant is admitted
E.
MAINTENANCE
[20]
Interim maintenance was discussed in
Taute v Taute
[1]
as follows: “…
The
applicant spouse (who is normally the wife) is entitled to reasonable
maintenance pendente lite dependent upon the marital standard
of
living of the parties, her actual and reasonable requirements and the
capacity of her husband to meet such requirements which
are normally
met from income although in some circumstances inroads on capital may
be justified. I have found nothing however in
the decisions to which
I have been referred which justify in such maintenance the inclusion
of extraordinary or luxurious expenditure
even in the case, for
example, of Glazer V. Glazer
[2]
where the husband is described by WILLIAMSON, J. (as he then was), as
being “very wealthy” or “very rich”.
The
quantum of maintenance payable must in the final result depend upon a
reasonable interpretation of the summarised facts contained
in the
founding and answering affidavits as indeed is contemplated and
intended by Rule 43. It is also in my view helpful to take
cognizance
of the approach made in the affidavits by the applicant and the
respondent respectively, bearing in mind that normally
it is not the
practice in these matters (although permissible) to test the evidence
viva voce. A claim supported by reasonable
and moderate details
carries more weight than one which includes extravagant or
extortionate demands— similarly more weight
will be attached to
the affidavit of a respondent who evinces a willingness to implement
his lawful obligations than to one who
is obviously, albeit on paper,
seeking to evade them…”
[21]
Bearing in mind the
dictum
in the
Taute
decision, the
respondent cannot evade his responsibility by hiding behind people
who, whilst seemingly supporting the applicant,
have no legal
obligation to do so.
F.
CONTRIBUTION TOWARD COSTS
[22]
The contribution toward costs which the applicant seeks is part of
the duty of support which spouses owe each other and it
was discussed
in r Cary v Cary
[3]
“
The claim for a
contribution towards costs in a matrimonial suit is sui generis. It
has its origin in Roman Dutch procedure and
has been sanctioned
through many decades in our own practice (see, inter alia, Van Rippin
v Van Rippin
1949 (4) SA 634
(C)). The basis of the claim is the duty
of support the spouses owe each other (see Chamani v Chamani
1979 (4)
SA 804
(W) at 806FH). The manner of assessment of quantum of the
contribution was dealt with in the case of Van Rippin (supra) at page
639: "The quantum which an applicant for a contribution towards
costs should be given is something which is to be determined
in the
discretion of the Court. In the exercise of that discretion the Court
should, I think, have the dominant object in view
that having regard
to the circumstances of the case the financial position of the
parties
, and the particulars issues involved in the pending
litigation, the wife must be enable to present her case’
adequately before
the court”.
G.
THE
APPROACH OF THE COURT
[23]
Whilst the applicant may be entitled to a legal contribution as
stated above it is incumbent on her to enable the court to
reasonably
assess what amount to award in that regard by providing a pro forma
account or legal bill of costs as part of her evidence.
In the
absence of such an account I am not satisfied that the applicant has
made out a case regarding a contribution to costs.
[24]
I am however satisfied that the applicant has made out a case for
spousal maintenance, maintenance for the children and related
expenses. The children’s primary residence will remain with
that applicant subject to a reasonable right to access which
will be
more accurately defied in the following order.
[25]
I have also considered the evidence of the respondent with regard to
his income. In that regard I am not satisfied that he
has been candid
with the court especially regarding the companies that he runs or
manage together with his mother. Some items which
appear as company
expenses would actually seem to be personal expenses.
[26]
I have come to the conclusion that he can afford more than he has
tendered to pay.
[27]
In light of the above I make the following order:
1.
Both parties shall retain full parental
responsibilities and rights in regards to the care of the minor
children born between the
parties, as contemplated in Section 18(2)
of the Children’s Act, Act 38 of 2005;
2.
The care and primary residency of the minor
children be awarded to the Applicant;
3.
Specific parental responsibilities and
rights with regards to contact with the minor children as
contemplated in Section 18(2)(b)
of the Children’s Act, Act 38
of 2005, be awarded to the Respondent, more specifically:
3.1
From now until an investigation by the
Family Advocate has been concluded and a report regarding
recommendations pertaining to the
Respondent’s contact rights
have been received: -
3.1.1
The Respondent will be entitled to have
contact with the minor children every alternative Saturday and Sunday
from 09h00 to 15h00;
3.1.2
During school holidays the contact will
remain the same as stipulated during the school terms.
3.1.3
The Respondent will be entitled to have
telephonic contact with the minor children, which will include video
calls, face time, and
skype etc., every Monday, Wednesday and Friday
from 18h00 until 18h30.
3.1.4
The Respondent will be entitled to remove
the minor children from 09h00 to 15h00 on their respective birthdays.
3.1.5
The Respondent will be entitled to remove
the minor children from 09h00 to 15h00 on Father’s Day and on
the Respondent’s
birthday.
3.1.6
All contact with the minor children shall
be exercised in such a manner as to not unreasonably interfere with
the minor children’s
scholastic, religious and cultural
activities.
3.1.7
The parties shall jointly make decision
regarding the minor children’s education, medical, social,
scholastic, extramural
activities, religious and sporting activities.
3.1.8
Neither party shall remove the minor
children from the Republic of South Africa and/or Gauteng Province
without the other party’s
consent, provided that such consent
shall not be unreasonably withheld. Should the minor children be
removed out of the Republic
of South Africa with both parties’
consent, the necessary and proper medical precautions for the
relevant country should
be discussed well in advance (not being less
than one month, unless otherwise agreed between the parties) and be
taken prior to
travelling. The medical costs associated therewith
will be paid by the party who is responsible for taking the minor
children out
of the Republic of South Africa.
3.2
The right to contact will be adjusted
according to the recommendations made by the Office of the Family
Advocate, Pretoria after
an enquiry in terms of Section 4 of the
Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act, 24 of 1987 have been
completed and the report
has been issued.
4.
The Respondent is ordered to
reinstate the Applicant within 14 (fourteen) days on the same,
alternatively another medical aid which
offers the same benefits as
what the Applicant had enjoyed prior to the parties becoming
separated. The Respondent is also ordered
to retain the two (2) minor
children as beneficiaries on his medical aid and make such further
contributions towards those reasonable
medical costs not specifically
covered by a medical aid, within 14 (fourteen) days of the demand
thereto.
5.
The Respondent be ordered to pay
maintenance towards the Applicant in the amount of
R4
000.00
per month.
The
first installment must be paid on the 1
st
day of the month following the granting of this order and shall
continue on the 1
st
day of each and every consecutive month.
6.
The Respondent is ordered to pay
maintenance towards the minor children in the amount of
R3 500.00
per month per child.
The first installment
must be paid on the 1
st
day of the month following the granting of this order and shall
continue on the 1
st
day of each and every consecutive month.
7.
In addition to the aforementioned
maintenance amount, the Respondent has tendered payment of the minor
children’s school fees
for pre-school, primary school and
tertiary school subject thereto that the children are enrolled in
public school. Consent of
both parties is required to enroll the
minor children in private schools. Reasonable scholastic expenses
including school uniforms,
books and extramural activities to be
shared between the parties equally within fourteen (14) days of
receipt of an invoice by
the respective party.
8.
Costs of the application, shall
be costs in the main divorce proceedings.
SELBY
BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 28 March 2022
Date
of judgment: April 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicants
Adv JA Wyk
Instructed
by
Tsihlas Incorporated
Tel: 072 223 5803
Email:
advjavanwyk@gmail.com
On
behalf of the Respondents
Adv JW Wyk
Instructed
by
Vogel Incorporated
Tel: 083 299 8811
Email:
wejvanwyk@me.com
[1]
1974
(2) SA 675
(E)
at
page 314.
[2]
1959
(3) S.A. 928 (W).
[3]
[1999]
2 All SA 71
(C);
1999 (3) SA 615
(C) at 619H-620H.
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