Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 532South Africa
Potgieter and Another v Welgemoed and Others (A275/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 532 (20 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Potgieter and Another v Welgemoed and Others (A275/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 532 (20 July 2022)
Potgieter and Another v Welgemoed and Others (A275/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 532 (20 July 2022)
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sino date 20 July 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: A275/2020
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
20
July 2022
In
the matter between:
SCHALK
JACOBUS POTGIETER
FIRST APPLICANT
HELEN
ISABEL POTGIETER
SECOND APPLICANT
and
C[....]J[....]
W[....]
FIRST
RESPONDENT
B[....]
W[....]
SECOND
RESPONDENT
LESEGO
VILAKAZI N.O
THIRD RESPONDENT
(in
her capacity as nominee for ABSA Trust
Limited,
duly appointed trustee of Charles
James
W[....] Testamentary Trust)
ABSA
TRUST LIMITED N.O
FOURTH RESPONDENT
(In
its capacity as the appointed executor
in
the estate of the late Charles James W[....],
duly
represented by Mr Boy Visser)
ACA
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
SIXTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MOLEFE
J
[1]
This is an appeal brought by the appellants (the respondents in the
main
application) against the whole judgment and/or order of the
court
a quo
granted on 17 March 2022 by Avvakoumides
AJ. The appeal is with leave to appeal of the Supreme Court of
Appeal (SCA).
[2]
The order which is the subject of this appeal was granted in respect
of
Part A of the urgent interim application brought by the first and
second respondents (the applicants in the main application), seeking
the appointment of a
curator
ad litem
for the minor
children, M[....] W[....] (M[....]) and R[....] W[....] (R[....]),
and pending the investigation by the
curator ad litem
, the
respondents sought contact with the minor children. For
convenience, the parties shall be referred to as in the appeal.
[3]
The court
a quo’s
finding was that the main application
(Part B of the urgent application) could not be ventilated without an
investigation by the
curator ad litem
and granted the
following relief:
“
3.1 Condonation is
hereby granted for any non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of the
above Honourable Court, and specifically
the time limits as
stipulated in Rule 6 (12) thereof.
3.2 Advocate L C Haupt SC
(and if she is unwilling or unable to accept the appointment, then a
suitable Advocate with similar experience,
nominated by Advocate S D
Wagener SC) is hereby appointed as
curator ad litem
for two
minor children M[....] W[....], born on 12 June 2009 and R[....]
W[....], born on 07 May 2015.
3.3 The appointed
curator
ad litem
shall have the following power and duties:
3.3.1 To investigate the
best interest of the minor children concerned, specifically the
parental responsibilities and rights to
be exercised over them by the
parties concerned, and report thereon to the above Honourable Court.
3.3.2 To represent the
minor children in matters of a legal nature including but not limited
to litigation.
3.3.3 The curator shall
be entitled to, in the best interest of the minor children, in the
interim and pending final adjudication
of this matte, issue
directives pertaining to parental responsibilities and rights to be
exercised over the minor children.
3.3.4 To represent the
best interest of the minor children by advancing all arguments for or
on behalf of the minor children relevant
to this matter as well as
related matters.
3.3.5 To enquire and
consult with whatever person necessary in the completion of his/her
mandate.
3.3.6 To refer the
parties or other relative persons to experts, for further and/or
other assessments or therapy where the curator
might find it
necessary.
3.3.7 To bring out a
report that contains all the facts and circumstances and make
recommendations therein regarding the parental
responsibilities and
rights to be exercised over the minor children.
3.3.8 Pending the
investigation, subject to any other directive to be issued in this
regards by the
curator ad litem,
the applicants shall have the
following rights of contact with the children:
3.3.8.1 Contact every
alternative weekend from 17:00 until Saturday at 18:00.
3.3.8.2 Contact one
afternoon every week as arranged between the parties, subject to
school activities of the minor children.
3.3.8.3 Contact for half
of all school holidays
3.3.8.4 Reasonable
telephonic contact.
3.4 Part B of the notice
of motion is to be postponed
sine die
and the applicants and
respondents are given leave to supplement their papers for purposes
of final adjudication of the application.
3.5 The costs of Part A
are reserved for adjudication together with Part B.
3.6 The fees of the
curator to be paid by the third respondent. The
curator ad litem
shall be entitled to make any recommendations in respect of costs
to be the court hearing Part B of the application.”
[4]
The first and second respondents in Part B of the application sought
full
parental responsibility and rights, including guardianship over
the minor children to the exclusion of any other party, and that
the
primary residence be vested with them with reasonable rights of
contact to be exercised by the appellants.
[5]
The appellants submitted that the issues for determination in this
appeal
are (i) whether the extensive contact rights granted to the
first and second respondents are in the best interest of the minor
children; (ii) whether the best interest of the children necessitated
the appointment of a
curator ad litem;
(iii) if so, who was to
be appointed as
curator ad litem
and the powers and/or duties
of the appointed
curator ad litem.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[6]
The appellants are the maternal grandparents to the minor children
M[....],
born on 12 June 2009, and R[....], born on 07 May 2015.
The children’s mother, Christi W[....] was the appellants’
daughter. She passed away on 24 July 2017 from breast cancer when
R[....] was 2 (two) years old. The children’s father,
Charles W[....], was the first respondent’s brother and was a
Financial Planner at Absa Wealth. The minor children
were after
the death of their mother, in the care of their father Charles who
was their sole guardian. On 06 May 2019 Charles
tragically
passed away due to complications after brain surgery.
[7]
Charles left a Will and Testament in which he nominated the
appellants
as the minor children’s guardians, and if they were
unable or unwilling to assume this position, he appointed his
brother,
the first respondent, as the guardian. The appellants
accepted the appointment. The provisions of the Will granted
the appellants the rights of habitation to dwell in Charles’
residential property (the family home) until R[....] reached
the age
of 18 (eighteen). The third respondent, Ms. Lesego Vilakazi, is
the nominated and appointed trustee of the Charles
James W[....]
Testamentary Trust (the trust). The fourth respondent Absa
Trust Limited is the appointed executor in the late
estate of
Charles.
[8]
After Christi’s death, Charles employed the appellants to look
after
the minor children, and the appellants relocated to the family
home. The appellants are in control of the monthly pension
pay
out funds from the fifth respondents, Aca Employee Benefits (Pty)
Ltd, which funds are to be utilised for the benefit and maintenance
of the minor children. In the urgent application, the first and
second respondents argued that it is unclear whether the
trust is
being administered by the third respondent for the benefit of the
minor children or for the benefit of the appellants
and their other
daughter Marna Potgieter (the children’s maternal aunt) who
resides with them at the family home.
[9]
The relationship between the appellants and the first and second
respondents
became strained when they questioned and expressed
concern about the appellants’ management of the trust funds.
The
appellants then frustrated the first and second respondents’
contact with the minor children and prohibited the children from
visiting them. It was argued that the appellants’ refusal
to the minor children having contact with their paternal
family is
not serving the best interests of the children.
[10]
The appellants’ appeal against the interim court order granted
by the court
a quo
in terms of Part A of the application is
essentially on the ground that the matter was not addressed on
merits.
APPEALABILITY
OF THE INTERIM ORDER
[11]
I now turn to the question of whether the interim order granted by
the court
a quo
on 17 March 2022 is appealable. If we
find that the order is not appealable, then it will not be necessary
to deal with the
merits of the appeal.
[12]
As
aforementioned, this appeal is with leave of the SCA. I am
however alive to the fact that this court is under no obligation
to
entertain an appeal against an unappealable order merely because the
SCA granted the appellant leave to appeal. The issue of
the
appealability of the order still stands to be decided by this court.
This principle has been confirmed in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
.
[1]
[13]
The crux of
the matter is firstly, whether the order of the court
a
quo
was
‘final in effect’ and was therefore appealable even if
its stated character was interim. Secondly, whether the interest
of
justice warrants that the appeal against the order in issue should be
determined. Our courts have established that an
interim order
may, if the interests of justice in a particular case so dictate, be
appealable.
[2]
[14]
Counsel for the first and second respondents submitted that the order
granted in terms
of Part A has no final effect as same is not
definitive of the rights of the parties for
inter alia
the
following reasons:
14.1
The issue relating to the award of parental responsibility and rights
as well as guardianship have
yet to be determined.
14.2
The right to exercise interim contact is not definitive and is made
only ‘
pending the investigation’
and is ‘
subject
to any other directive to be issued in this regard by the curator ad
litem and pending final adjudication of this matter.’
14.3
The issue of costs in Part A of the application has yet to be
adjudicated upon.
[15]
In
accordance with the general rules laid down in
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order,
[3]
a ‘decision’ contemplated in section 16(1) of the
Superior Courts Act
[4]
has three attributes:
(i)
It must be final in effect and not susceptible to alteration
by the
court of first instance;
(ii)
It must be definitive of the rights of the parties, i.e. it must
grant definite and distinct relief; and
(iii)
It must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion
of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
[16]
I agree with the submission by the first and second respondents’
counsel that the
appointment of a
curator ad litem
to
investigate is evidence that the matter has not been finally
adjudicated upon, and that the purpose of the
curator ad litem’s
report and recommendations is to provide the court with
assistance in coming to a final determination. The duty of a
curator ad litem
is akin to that of a parental coordinator, an
expert or Family Advocate, and is to assist the court with an
objective investigation
on behalf of the minor children, especially
where adults are in conflict with regards to aspects surrounding
their care.
The
curator ad litem
will still have to
report to the court, and only then would her findings and
recommendations be considered and given final effect
after judicial
consideration.
[17]
The appellants’ argument that the orders so granted ‘…affords
the curator
extremely wide powers which has the potential to usurp
the responsibility of the court…’ is in my view without
merit.
The High Court as upper guardian of all minor children
retains an inherent discretion and jurisdiction in respect of all
matters
pertaining to minor children. The appellants are
incorrect in submitting that the appointment of a
curator ad litem
would give final effect to the court
a quo’s
interim
order as nothing that the
curator ad litem
would do or act
upon in the execution of her duties as per her appointment, would
whatsoever give any final effect to this matter.
[18]
Based on
the general principles found in
Zweni
,
[5]
I am of the view that the interim order granted by the court
a
quo
is
not susceptible to an appeal. The order is interim in nature
and therefore not appealable.
[19]
The next
question is whether the interest of justice warrants that the appeal
against the order in issue should be determined.
The
constitutional standard for appealing an interim order when it best
serves the interest of justice was reiterated by the Constitutional
Court in
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another.
There the Constitutional Court emphasised that ‘[if]
appealability or the grant of leave to appeal would best serve
the
interests of justice, then the appeal should be proceeded with no
matter what the pre-Constitution common law impediments might
suggest.’
[6]
[20]
Whether or
not an interim order is appealable is fact-specific. This was
confirmed in
South
African Informal Traders Forum and Others v City of Johannesburg and
Others; South African National Traders Retail Association
v City of
Johannesburg and others,
[7]
where the Constitutional Court held that, when determining whether it
is in the best interests of justice to appeal an interim
order, the
court must have regard to and carefully weigh all relevant
circumstances. The factors that are relevant or decisive
in a
particular instance will vary from case to case.
[21]
The facts in this case are very tragic to say the least. The
minor children suffered
tremendous loss over the passing of both
their parents in a short space of time. It is common cause that
there is in both
parties’ versions, a dispute of facts
specifically relating to the views, wishes, and the best interests of
the minor children.
The dispute about contact of the minor children,
parental responsibility and rights including guardianship would
remain to prejudice
the minor children who have been through
tremendous trauma in their short lives and there is desperate need
for stability in their
lives. The appointment of a
curator
ad litem
to represent the interest of the minor children would
assist the court in making a final determination, and there is no
evidence
that the interest of justice warrants that the appeal should
be determined.
[22]
Considering the evidence relating to background facts, it is clear
that the court
a quo’s
interim order was not final in
effect, and it is not in the interest of justice to appeal this
interim order. In such an instance,
the appropriate order is
that the appeal be struck from the roll.
ORDER
[23]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The appeal is struck from the roll with costs.
DS
MOLEFE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree
AC
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree
N
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authorised by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electrnically 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 the 20 July 2022
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicants:
ADV. H F GEYER
Instructed
by: VDT
ATTORNEYS INC
Counsel
for the Respondents:
ADV. R
FERREIRA
Instructed
by:
GROHOVAZ
ATTORNEYS
Date
heard:
18
May 2022
Date
of
judgment:
20 July 2022
[1]
United
De
mocratic
Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
2 All SA 90 (SCA).
[2]
Philani-Ma-Afrika
and Others v Mailula and Others
2010
(2) SA 573
(SCA) at para 20.
[3]
Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of South Africa
1993
(1) SA 523 (A).
[4]
10 of 2013.
[5]
Zweni
supra
n
3.
[6]
City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[2016] ZACC 19
; 2016 (9) BCRL 1133 (CC);
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC) at
para 41.
[7]
South
African Informal Traders Forum and Others v City of Johannesburg and
Others; South African National Traders Retail Association
v City of
Johannesburg and Others
[2014] ZACC 8
(CC);
2014 (6) BCLR 726
CC;
2014 (4) SA 371
(CC) at
para 20.
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