Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 253South Africa
S.P v S.B (2025/054457) [2025] ZAWCHC 253 (19 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S.P v S.B (2025/054457) [2025] ZAWCHC 253 (19 June 2025)
S.P v S.B (2025/054457) [2025] ZAWCHC 253 (19 June 2025)
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sino date 19 June 2025
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amended version: 18 August 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Maintenance –
Subpoena
duces tecum
–
Procedural
irregularity – Invoked incorrect rule – Exceptional
circumstances – Documents sought to refute
claim of
financial hardship – Critical to determining maintenance
dispute – Best interests of minor children
– Technical
procedural defects should not undermine substantive justice –
Subpoena served a legitimate purpose
in ensuring children’s
maintenance needs were met – Setting aside will have
deleterious effects on respondent
and children – Application
dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case No:
2025-054457
In
the matter between:
S[…]
P[…]
Applicant
and
S[…]
B[…]
First Respondent
CONSUMER
GOOD COUNCIL OF SA
Second Respondent
Heard: 22 April 2025
Delivered Electronically
on: 19 June 2025
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application in which the applicant seeks an order setting
aside a subpoena
duces tecum
issued by the Registrar of this
court on 26 March 2026 under case numbers 2025-038948 and 6700/18. In
the subpoena, the first respondent
required the Consumer Goods
Council of South Africa, (the applicant's employer) to provide the
first respondent with the applicant's
salary advice dated from
January 2020 up to March 2025. The first respondent also required the
applicant's employer to provide
the applicant's IRP5 certificates
from 2020 to 2025.
[3]
The applicant asserted that the matter under case number 6700/18 has
been finalised in 2023 with a written judgment issued
by Mantame J.
The matter under case number 2005-038948 is still pending. However,
both matters are motion proceedings. As such,
the applicant contends
that a subpoena
duces tecum
does not apply to motion
proceedings. The applicant sought an order to have the subpoena set
aside. The first respondent opposed
the application and filed the
necessary answering affidavit. The second respondent (Consumer Goods
Council of South Africa) did
not oppose the application. Instead, it
filed a notice to abide.
Background
facts
[4]
The applicant and the first respondent were married and have two
children aged 15 and 19 respectively. The children are
staying with
the first respondent. The applicant and the first respondent were
divorced by this court on 20 August 2010, and their
decree of divorce
incorporated a maintenance order for the maintenance of their two
children. The applicant and the first respondent
were recently
involved in a trial over a maintenance dispute of their children in
the Cape Town Magistrates Court under case number
301/23/368. In that
case, the applicant launched a substitution application in respect of
the maintenance payable for the minor
children. The first respondent
opposed the application.
[5]
The maintenance proceedings endured several days, culminating in an
order granted on 14 February 2025. In addition to
medical aid and
other related costs, the maintenance court ordered the applicant to
pay a cash component of maintenance to the
first respondent in the
sum of R172 188.63 towards the tuition cost of their major child from
26 March 2025 into the first respondent's
bank account. The court
also ordered the applicant to pay R20 906.14 towards the yearly
school fees of their minor child. The total
amount that the applicant
had to pay as maintenance for his two children as of 26 March 2025
was a total sum of R222 197.22.
[6]
After the maintenance order was granted, the applicant brought an
urgent application in this court to suspend the implementation
of the
court order granted by the maintenance court. The applicant averred
that the order granted by the maintenance court was
almost double his
net salary and that he could not afford to pay same. The applicant
sought an order to have the maintenance order
suspended pending the
outcome of an appeal against that order. The applicant also prayed
for an interim maintenance order to be
granted to provide for the
children's interim maintenance.
[7]
The first respondent did not oppose or file opposing papers regarding
that urgent application. After considering the matter,
on 24 March
2025, the urgent court granted an interim order suspending the
maintenance order issued by the maintenance court and
called upon the
first respondent to show cause on 12 June 2025 why the interim order
suspending the maintenance order issued by
the maintenance court
should not be made final pending the outcome of the appeal hearing.
[8]
Pursuant to that order, the first respondent issued a subpoena
duces
tecum
and served it upon the applicant and the second respondent,
the applicant's employer. According to the first respondent, the
basis
for issuing the subpoena was that the applicant misled the
court in his application to suspend the maintenance order granted by
the maintenance court. The first respondent asserted that the
maintenance order granted by the maintenance court on 17 March 2025
was in line with what was provided by the applicant in terms of his
monthly salary as well as his annual bonus that he receives,
which
amounts to over R1,000,000 a year.
[9]
The first respondent asserted that the applicant did not provide
proof to support his claim that he cannot afford to pay
maintenance
as ordered or any evidence to support that his financial standpoint
has taken a turn for the worse ever since the order
was made. To the
contrary, the first respondent asserted that the applicant's IRP5,
together with his March 2025 salary advice,
will prove indisputably
that the applicant can afford to pay the maintenance as ordered by
the maintenance court and still have
sufficient surplus left to
manage his expenses for the month of March 2025.
[10]
For this reason, the first respondent issued the subpoena
duces
tecum
to prove that the applicant lied in his affidavit when
he stated in his application for the suspension of the maintenance
order
that he could not afford the amount ordered by the maintenance
court as his IRP5 will show that he had received more than a million
rand in the month of March 2025 when he was supposed to pay in terms
of the maintenance order. The first respondent requested this
information to counter the applicant's claims of being unable to
afford the maintenance order granted by the maintenance court.
Furthermore, with this information, the first respondent seeks to
have the interim order suspending the operation of the maintenance
order discharged.
[11]
On
the other hand, the first respondent sought an order that the
subpoena
duces
tecum
be
set aside. The applicant posits that the documents the first
respondent seeks are irrelevant. Furthermore, the applicant avers
that should the second respondent provide the applicant's financial
documents to the first respondent, there will be irreparable
harm
because there is no way the disclosure can be reversed. In the
applicant's view, the documents sought by the first respondent
relate
to the actual maintenance matter that the maintenance court
finalised. Mr Abduroaf, the applicant's counsel, implored the
court
to set aside the subpoena
duces
tecum
and
that the first respondent be ordered to pay the costs of this
application, including the costs of counsel on scale C.
Discussion
[12]
As foreshadowed above, the applicant seeks an order for the subpoena
duces
tecum
to be set aside. The subpoena was issued
under cases 6700/18 and 2025-038948. Case 2025-038948 is still
pending in this court.
The first respondent requested information
from the applicant's employer to counter the applicant's claims of
being unable to afford
maintenance for their minor children under
case number 2025-038948. An interim order suspending the maintenance
order was granted.
The first respondent stated that the applicant
received payments exceeding R1,000,000 annually in March. When the
maintenance court
ordered him to start paying R172 188.63 in March
2025, it based its decision on this fact.
[13]
In my opinion, the diligent efforts of the first respondent, an
unrepresented litigant who has earnestly strived to secure
the
well-being and maintenance of her children, should not be
characterised as an abuse of the court process. Her commitment to
navigating the complexities of the legal system in person underscores
her genuine intent to vindicate her children's needs, particularly
maintenance. I am mindful that the current dispute between the
applicant and the first respondent under case number 2025-038948
is
an application or motion proceedings. I am also cognisant of the fact
that there is no action or trial proceeding pending between
the first
respondent and the applicant. However, in my opinion, this matter
stands on a different footing.
[14]
It is well established in our law that in action or trial
proceedings, the Registrar of the court may issue a subpoena
duces
tecum
as provided for in Rule 38 of the rules of this court. Rule
38(1)(a)(iii) and (c) of the Uniform Rules make provision for various
procedures to procure evidence for a trial. In addition, Rule 38
makes provision for the manner in which evidence will be adduced
at a
trial. It does not ordinarily deal with motion proceedings.
[15]
In the case at bar, it is very clear that the
first
respondent
seeks
the discovery of documents from the applicant to dispel the notion
that the applicant cannot afford to pay the R172 188.63
maintenance
ordered by the maintenance court. Unfortunately, she invoked Rule 38
instead of Rule 35(13). In my view, this incongruity
is not the end
of the matter, especially in a case such as this, which involves a
minor and a dependent child who is at Stellenbosch
University. A
final order suspending the maintenance order issued by the
maintenance court pending the finalisation of appeal proceedings
will
undoubtedly have serious consequences for the maintenance of the
parties' two children. It must be stressed that in terms
of
section
25(3)
of the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998
, an appeal does not suspend
the payment of maintenance in accordance with the payment of the
maintenance order in question. Evidently,
a final suspension of the
maintenance court in this matter will have a deleterious effect on
the minor children.
[16]
The first respondent appeared in person. She issued the subpoena
duces tecum
with the assistance of the Registrar. The first
respondent is the ex-wife of the applicant. The first respondent
stated that at
the maintenance court, the applicant confirmed during
cross-examination that he had received bonuses since he was employed
by the
second respondent in 2016, and that he received a bonus every
year.
[17]
The first respondent averred that her request in terms of the
subpoena
duces
tecum
is to showcase that the applicant
lied in his affidavit when he said that he could not afford to pay
the R172 188.63. This amount,
according to the first respondent, was
granted by the maintenance court based on the evidence that was
placed before the court.
The first respondent asserted that when the
interim order was granted suspending the maintenance order, this
information was not
placed before court. She averred further that she
required this information to be incorporated in her answering
affidavit, intended
to oppose the final confirmation of suspending
the maintenance order.
[18]
The record of this matter reveals that the first respondent battled
to coerce the applicant to honour his maintenance
obligations. The
first respondent has been looking after the children alone without
the applicant's assistance. She is primarily
left to nurture their
children and shoulders the financial burden alone. Concernedly, in an
application for variation of the maintenance
order between the
applicant and the first respondent that served before this court on 7
June 2023, Mantame J, stated as follows
on the conduct of the
applicant:
‘
In
fact, it is quite shocking that a father and a parent would celebrate
(by taking a legal point) on a patent error that has been
made
unintentionally, on the fact that he would not be required to pay
maintenance.
This
has been a trend he adopted since he parted ways with the applicant
which resulted in him being estranged from his own children.
The
respondent has always maintained an upper hand towards providing
maintenance of his minor children.
He
contributed financially as and when it pleased him.
This
attitude is insensitive, vindictive and spiteful to say the least. In
fact, the report of the family advocate portrays a picture
of an
absent father where there is no relationship between the minor
children and himself. They consider their own father a total
stranger
in their lives.’ (emphasis added)
[19]
I am mindful that parties and their legal advisors should not be
encouraged to become slack in the observance of the
court Rules,
which are an important element in the machinery for the
administration of justice. However, on the other hand, technical
objections to less-than-perfect procedural steps should not be
permitted in the absence of prejudice to interfere with the
expeditious
and, if possible, the inexpensive decision of cases on
their real merits.
[1]
If the
subpoena is set aside, the respondent will surely issue the
Rule
35(13)
notice, which would serve the same purpose as the current
subpoena the applicant issued. This, in my view, will delay the
finalisation
of the matter to the prejudice of the minor and the
dependent child.
[20]
Most importantly, this matter centres around the maintenance of a
minor child and a dependent child who is at a tertiary
institution.
As the upper guardian of minors, this court is empowered and under a
duty to consider and evaluate all relevant facts
placed before it
with a view to deciding the issue which is of paramount importance:
the best interests of the child. This case,
in my view, cannot be
divorced from the well-established principle that in all matters
concerning the care, protection and well-being
of a child, the
standard that the child's best interest is of paramount importance
must be applied.
[2]
The interest
of the minor child should not be held at ransom for the sake of legal
niceties and formalism.
[3]
The
interest of the children must be considered within the wider context
of an objective regard of all relevant factors.
[4]
Simply put, the centrality of the child’s best interest in a
case such as this must guide the court in decision making.
[21]
The applicant pleaded financial hardship, leading to an interim
suspension of the maintenance order issued against him
by the
maintenance court. The first respondent refutes the applicant's
allegation of indigence and seeks to place facts to dispel
the
applicant's allegations. The applicant's counsel argued that the
procedure the first respondent invoked was irregular in that
a wrong
Rule was invoked. To the extent that the first respondent should have
ordinarily invoked
Rule 35(13)
to secure the relevant information, I
agree with counsel; however, to set aside the subpoena
duces
tecum
in
these circumstances, in my view, will be putting form over substance.
Moreover, to do so would, to my mind, amount to paying
lip service to
the protection of minor and dependent children as envisaged in
section 28(2) of the Constitution and
section 6
of the
Divorce Act 70
of 1979
.
[5]
It must be stressed
that Rules of court are made for the court and not vice versa. The
rules are not an end in themselves to be
observed for their own sake.
[22]
In
Federated
Trust Ltd v Botha,
[6]
the court stated:
‘
The court does not
encourage formalism in the application of the rules. The rules are
not an end in themselves to be observed for
their own sake. They are
provided to secure the inexpensive and expeditious completion of
litigation before the courts…where
one or other of the parties
has failed to comply with the requirements of the rules what an order
made in terms thereof and prejudices
thereby being caused to the
opponent, it should be the cause endeavour to remedy such prejudice
in a manner appropriate to the
circumstances, always bearing in mind
the objects for which the rules were designed.’
[23]
In the present matter, the circumstances are certainly exceptional. I
am mindful that the first respondent is vulnerable
and unrepresented.
As I see it, there is no prejudice that the applicant will suffer if
the subpoena is not set aside. While on
the other hand, setting aside
the subpoena will have deleterious effects on the first respondent
and the children.
Order
[24]
Consequently, given all these considerations, the following order is
granted:
24.1
The applicant’s application is hereby dismissed.
24.2
Each party is ordered to pay his or her own costs.
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
For
the Applicant: Adv Abduroaf
Instructed
by: Nicole Lawrence Inc
For
the First Respondent: In Person
[1]
JA in
Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1956
(2) SA 273
(A) at 278F-G.
[2]
See
s 9
of the Children’s Act of 2005 and s 28(2) of the
Constitution.
[3]
De Gree
and Another v Webb and Others (Centres for child law as Amicus
Curiae)
2007
(5) SA 184
(SCA) para 99.
[4]
Segal v
Segal
1971
(4) SA 317
at 323B.
[5]
J.A.L v
J.L and Another
(19441/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 118
(10 June 2022) at para 38.
[6]
1978 (3) SA 645
(A) at 654C-F
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