Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 61South Africa
MB v LC and Another (21586/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 61; 2024 (6) SA 546 (WCC) (29 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
29 February 2024
Headnotes
return to their country of habitual residence, Australia, in terms of article 12; and (c) ancillary relief.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAWCHC 61
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## MB v LC and Another (21586/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 61; 2024 (6) SA 546 (WCC) (29 February 2024)
MB v LC and Another (21586/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 61; 2024 (6) SA 546 (WCC) (29 February 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2024_61.html
sino date 29 February 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Children – Abduction –
Parents
resided in Australia with their two minor children – Planned
extended holiday and relationship problems emerging
in South
Africa – Father contending that mother unlawfully retaining
children in South Africa and seeking their return
to Australia –
Father consented, alternatively acquiesced, to the children
remaining in South Africa while the parties
tried to resolve their
issues – Children happy in South Africa and mother not
impeding their relationship with father
– Application
dismissed – Hague Convention, art 13.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 21586/2023
In
the matter between:
MB
Applicant
And
LC
First
Respondent
THE
FAMILY ADVOCATE, WESTERN CAPE
Second
Respondent
(acting
as delegate of the Chief Family Advocate
appointed
as the South African Central Authority)
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
1 and 6 February 2024
Delivered
electronically: 29 February 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (father) and first respondent (mother)
are the married
parents of two minor children, A and H, both boys who are currently 8
and 6 years old respectively. The second
respondent (Central
Authority, South Africa) did not provide any report or play an active
role at the hearing. The children were
represented by Ms Bernstein,
an advocate in private practice, in terms of an agreed order of
14 December 2023. She filed
a report dated 30 January 2024
and made submissions during argument, providing valuable assistance.
[2]
On 29 November 2023 the
father launched an urgent application against the mother in terms of
the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects
of International Child
Abduction (“Convention”)
[1]
in this court in two parts. In Part A he sought a further conduct
order as well as specified interim contact and a prohibition
on the
mother removing the children from the Western Cape pending the
determination of Part B. That resulted in the 14 December
2023 order
(which dealt with the further conduct of the matter). In Part B,
which came before me, he seeks the following: (a) an
order
declaring that the children are being unlawfully retained in South
Africa in breach of his rights of custody (as defined
in article 3 of
the Convention); (b) the children’s summary return to
their country of habitual residence, Australia,
in terms of article
12; and (c) ancillary relief.
[3]
It is common cause that for purposes of the Convention,
if it is
found to apply: (a) the father has rights of custody in respect
of the children together with the mother; (b) the
children’s
place of habitual residence is Western Australia; (c) this court
has jurisdiction since the mother and children
currently reside in
Cape Town; and (d) the children have allegedly been wrongfully
retained for a period of less than one
year prior to date of
commencement of the proceedings in this court.
The
parties’ respective cases
[4]
In his founding affidavit the father unequivocally alleged,
right at
the outset, that he never agreed to the mother bringing the children
to South Africa to live here. All that was agreed
was that the family
would visit South Africa for a temporary period between 4 October
2022 and 1 January 2023. Moreover any
‘
semblance of possible
consent’
which the father gave to the mother to remain in
South Africa with the children (seemingly after their arrival here)
terminated
on 1 January 2023, and since then the mother has
refused to return the children to Australia. This is important since
it was
the case the mother was called upon to meet.
[5]
The mother opposes the relief sought on the basis that
she has not
“retained” the children in South Africa, as envisaged in
the Convention (or at all) and that the Convention
is accordingly not
of application. Alternatively, and in the event that it is found she
has so “retained” them here
she alleges the father had
agreed, when he travelled to Western Australia on 1 January
2023, that she and the children would
remain in South Africa while
the parties sought to reach agreement regarding their long term plans
in respect of residency, the
children and their financial affairs.
Further, to the extent the father alleges that she “retained”
the children in
South Africa after 17 January 2023 she maintains
that he acquiesced thereto. The reference to 17 January 2023,
although
not the basis of the father’s case as I have
illustrated above, was the date of the father’s request to the
mother
to book return tickets to Australia.
[6]
It is against this broad factual background that it is
appropriate to
first set out the applicable legal principles and thereafter the
factual matrix.
Legal
framework
[7]
Article 3 provides that:
‘
The removal or
the retention of a child is to be considered wrongful where--
(a)
it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person,
an institution or any other body, either
jointly or alone,
under the law of the State in which the child was habitually resident
immediately before the removal or retention;
and
(b)
At
the time of removal or retention those rights were actually
exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised
but for the removal or retention. The rights of custody mentioned in
sub-paragraph (a) above, may arise in particular by operation
of law
or by reason of a judicial or administrative decision, or by reason
of an agreement having legal effect under the law of
that State.’
[8]
Article 3 thus sets out the jurisdictional
prerequisites which an applicant is required to establish
before a
court may consider whether the removal or retention of a child is to
be considered wrongful. These are that: (a) the child
was habitually
resident in the other State; (b) the removal or retention constitutes
a breach of custody rights; and (c) the applicant
was actually
exercising such rights (either jointly or alone) at the time of
removal or retention, or would have exercised such
rights but for the
removal or retention.
[9]
Article 12 provides inter alia that where a child has been wrongfully
removed or retained in terms
of article 3 and, at the date of
commencement of the proceedings for the child’s return, a
period of less than one year has
elapsed from the date of the
wrongful removal or retention, the judicial or administrative
authority of the contracting State concerned
shall
order the return of the child forthwith.
[10]
The question of onus and what needs to be established
for purposes of article 3 in Hague Convention cases
was
summarised by Scott JA in Smith v Smith
[2]
as follows:
‘
It
is apparent from the aforegoing that a party seeking the return of a
child under the Convention is obliged to establish that
the child was
habitually resident in the country from which it
was
removed
immediately before the removal or retention
and
that the removal or retention
was
otherwise
wrongful
in
terms of Article
3
.
Once
this has been established the onus is on the party resisting the
order to establish one or other of the defences referred to
in
Article 13(a) and (b) or that the circumstances are such that a
refusal would be justified having regard to the provisions of
Article
20.’
[3]
[emphasis
supplied]
[11]
Article 13 provides inter alia that notwithstanding the
provisions of article 12 the judicial or administrative
authority of
the requested State is not bound to order the return of the child if
the person, institution or other body which opposes
its return
establishes that: (a) the applicant was not actually exercising
custody rights at the time of removal or retention,
or had consented
to or subsequently acquiesced in the removal or retention; or (b)
there is a grave risk that his or her return
would expose the child
to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an
intolerable situation. Both articles
13(b) and 20 are not relevant in
the present matter since they have not been raised as defences by the
mother.
[12]
In evaluating whether an applicant and respondent have
each discharged the onus resting upon them as outlined
in Smith
supra, the well-established Plascon-Evans rule (or test)
[4]
applies. Accordingly, in motion proceedings where a court is
confronted by disputes of fact, a final order may only be granted
if
those facts averred in the applicant’s affidavits that have
been admitted by the respondent, together with the facts alleged
by
the respondent, justify such an order.
[13]
A respondent’s version in motion proceedings can
only be rejected where the allegations made:
...fail
to raise a real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact...[
or]
are so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that the Court is justified in
rejecting them merely on the papers...
Practice
in this regard has become considerably more robust, and rightly so.
If it were otherwise, most of the busy motion courts
in the country
might cease functioning. But the limits remain, and however robust a
court may be inclined to be, a respondent’s
version can be
rejected in motion proceedings only if it is
“
fictitious
”
or
so far-fetched
and
clearly untenable that it can confidently be said, on the papers
alone, that it is
demonstrably
and clearly unworthy of credence.’
[5]
[emphasis
supplied]
[14]
In
Pennello
v Pennello (Chief Family Advocate as Amicus Curiae)
[6]
Van
Heerden AJA (as she then was) held as follows:
‘
[40]
I am in agreement with the argument of
counsel for the appellant that the Full Court erred in
departing from
the well-known Plascon-Evans rule as applied in the Ngqumba case with
regard to disputes of fact in proceedings
on affidavit. As indicated
above, the Convention is framed around proceedings brought as a
matter of urgency, to be decided on
affidavit in the vast majority of
cases, with a very restricted use of oral evidence in exceptional
circumstances. Indeed, there
is direct support in the wording of the
Convention itself for return applications to be decided on the basis
of affidavit evidence
alone, and courts in other jurisdictions have,
in the main, been very reluctant to admit oral testimony in
proceedings under the
Convention. In incorporating the Convention
into South African law by means of Act 72 of 1996 [i.e. the old Act],
no provision
was
made
in the Act or in the regulations promulgated in terms of section 5
thereof indicating that South African courts should not
adopt the
same approach to proceedings under the Convention as that followed by
other Contracting States. In accordance with this
approach, the Hague
proceedings are peremptory and “must not be allowed to be
anything more than a precursor to a substantive
hearing in the State
of the child’s habitual residence, or if one of the exceptions
is satisfied, in the State of refuge
itself”.
[41]
As
counsel
for the appellant pointed out (correctly, in my view), there is no
reason in law or logic to depart, in Convention proceedings,
from the
usual approach to the meaning and discharge of an onus in civil law
and from the application of the Plascon-Evans rule
to disputes of
fact arising from the affidavits filed in such proceedings.’
[15]
The crux of the present dispute is whether there has
been a wrongful retention in breach of the father’s
rights of
custody. That in turn involves a consideration of whether, applying
the legal principles to which I have referred, the
mother is in
breach of article 3. If that is established but the mother is
successful in establishing a defence in terms of article
13 this
may
result in an order that the children will not be returned.
[16]
In RE: A and Another (minors) (abduction:
acquiescence)
[7]
Lord
Donaldson reaffirmed the purpose of the Convention and the test to be
applied:
All
this demonstrates the agreed international response to a wrongful
removal. The child must go back, the status quo ante must
be restored
without further ado. That said, the Convention does itself enter a
caveat which is contained in Article 13. Before
I consider whether it
applies in this case, it is I think important to emphasise what is
the consequence if it does apply. It is
not that the court will
refuse to order the return of the child to its country or
jurisdiction of habitual residence. It is not
that the court will
assume wardship or similar jurisdiction over the child and consider
what order should be made as if the child
had never been wrongfully
removed or retained. The consequence is only that the court is no
longer bound
to
order the return of the child, but has a judicial discretion whether
or not to do so, that discretion being exercised in the
context of
the approach of the Convention.
’
[17]
This approach was confirmed by Scott JA in Smith
supra
[8]
as follows:
‘
if
the requirements of article 13(a) or (b) are satisfied, the judicial
or administrative authority may still in the exercise of
its
discretion order the return of the child.’
[18]
The approach to establishing the article 13(a) defence
of consent or acquiescence was set out by Van Heerden JA
in KG v
CB
[9]
as follows:
‘
[
37]
The appellant also raised the defence of consent or
acquiescence under art 13(1 )(a) of the Convention, in
terms of which
the court is not bound to order the return of the child (in other
words, it has a discretion in this regard) if
the person (or
institution or other body) who opposes the return establishes that -
“
(a)
the
person . . . having the care of the person of the child . . . had
consented to or. . . acquiesced in the removal or retention.
”
[38]
The burden of proof is on the abducting parent and
he or she must prove the elements of the defence on a
preponderance
of probabilities. The consent or acquiescence referred to in art
13(1)(a)
involves
an informed consent to or acquiescence in the breach of the wronged
party’s rights
.
That does not mean that either consent or acquiescence “requires
full knowledge of the precise nature of those rights and
every detail
of the guilty party’s conduct.. .
What
he or she should know is at least that the removal or retention of
the child is unlawful under the Convention and that he or
she is
afforded
a
remedy
against such unlawful conduct
.
”
[39]
As was
pointed
out by Hale J in
Re K (Abduction:
Consent), “
the
issue of consent is a very important matter [that] . . . ‘needs
to be proved on the balance of probabilities, but the
evidence in
support of it needs to be clear and cogent [because]
.
. . (i)f the court is left uncertain, then the “defence”
under art
13(a)
fails’
[and] it is [furthermore] obvious that consent must be real. . .
positive and . . . unequivocal’.
”
In that
case, Hale J expressly approved the following view expressed by
Holman J in
Re C (Abduction:
Consent):
“
If
it is clear, viewing a parent’s words and actions as a whole
and his state of knowledge of what is planned by the other
parent,
that he does consent to
what
is planned, then in my judgement that is sufficient to satisfy the
requirements
of Art 13. It is not necessary that there is an express statement
that
I
consent’.
In my judgment it is possible to infer consent from conduct.
”
[40]
As
regards
acquiescence, this court, in
Smith v Smith,
agreed
with the approach followed by the House of Lords in the case of
Re H (Abduction: Acquiescence).
In
that case, Lord Brown-Wilkinson held that:
“
Acquiescence
is
a
question
of the
actual
subjective intention of the wronged parent
,
not of the outside world’s perception of his intentions ...
In
the process of this fact-finding operation, the judge, as a matter of
ordinary judicial common sense, is likely to attach more
weight to
the express words or conduct of the wronged parent than to his
subsequent evidence as to his state of mind. In reaching
conclusions
of fact, judges always, and rightly, pay more attention to outward
conduct than to possibly self-serving evidence of
undisclosed
intentions
.
But in so doing
the
judge is finding the actual facts
.
He can infer the actual subjective intention from the outward and
visible acts of the wronged parent. That is quite a different
matter
from imputing to the wronged parent an intention which he did not, in
fact, possess. ”
’
[emphasis
supplied]
[19]
In
Central
Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v LC
[10]
Opperman J applied the test for acquiescence to the facts of that
matter as follows:
‘
[77]
In my view the evidence in support of a finding that the second
applicant acquiesced in the children’s retention
in South
Africa is overwhelming. All his outward manifestations of his
professed subjective intents are at odds with a contrary
finding. I
therefore conclude that, even if I am wrong in respect of my finding
that the second applicant had on 3 December
2019 consented to
the removal of the children to South Africa on a permanent basis, the
second applicant acquiesced to the children’s
retention by the
respondent in South Africa.’
[20]
One of the factors that a court may take into account is whether, by
delaying in instituting Convention proceedings,
an applicant can be
taken to have acquiesced:
Family
Advocate, Cape Town v EM
[11]
.
In
my view, deliberately concealing steps taken to obtain a return from
the party against whom such a return is sought should similarly
be
regarded as an outward manifestation contrary to a later professed
subjective intention. I say this because of the father’s
conduct on this score which I deal with later.
[21]
It must also be borne in mind that on the facts before me, this case
is
not
about whether the father consented or acquiesced to the
children remaining in South Africa
permanently
, but rather
whether he consented or acquiesced to the children
not being
summarily returned
to Australia. Only if he meets this threshold
does article 12 come into play. Put differently, if the father cannot
show, applying
the Plascon-Evans test and on a balance of
probabilities, that he never consented or acquiesced to the children
remaining in South
Africa beyond 1 January 2023 for any period
at all (which is his case in the founding papers) then there can be
no wrongful
retention, and the Convention cannot apply. This does not
mean that the mother somehow acquires rights which exclude or limit
those
of his, but only that the court which will have jurisdiction to
determine the arrangements for the children will be a South African,
and not an Australian, court. Of course this may ultimately involve a
permanent return order to Australia.
Relevant
factual background and discussion
[22]
The parties previously resided with the children in Perth, Australia.
In September 2021 they began discussing
an extended holiday abroad in
at least Europe and South Africa. On 22 May 2022 they purchased
one-way tickets to Rome for the four
of them, and on 25 June 2022
one-way tickets from Cape Town to Perth with a scheduled departure
date of 1 January 2023. This
was predominantly because they
wanted to be in South Africa in early October 2022 for A’s
birthday and, in order for the
father and children to enter South
Africa and obtain 90-day visitors visas (since they are not South
African citizens), proof of
an onward journey (or return flight)
within that 90-day period is required.
[23]
After selling their home the family left Australia on 16 July 2022,
arriving in Rome the following day. They
travelled a few days later
to Cassara where they had the use of the house of the mother’s
godmother. This was their base
while they travelled through Europe,
including to Sweden, Greece and Croatia. On 1 August 2022 the
father disclosed to the
mother he had been having an extramarital
affair since at least October 2021. According to the mother he also
told her that he
was experiencing mental health and alcohol addiction
issues. The father admits to disclosing the extramarital affair but
denies
having told the mother he had issues of any sort. He also did
not disclose any of this in his founding papers.
[24]
Although the father also initially alleged that the mother brought
the children to South Africa from Italy
in breach of his rights of
custody this was demonstrated to be palpably false, a fact he was
forced to concede in reply after the
mother produced a string of
WhatsApp messages showing that he knew exactly where she and the
children were when they travelled
on 27 September 2022 from
Venice to Cape Town. Previously on 3 September 2022 and while still
in Italy the father told the
mother he had ended his extramarital
affair; they agreed he would travel back to Perth on 8 September 2022
and join them in South
Africa for A’s birthday in mid-October
2022; and the mother and children would travel to South Africa
earlier than anticipated
(since the mother did not wish to stay in
Italy after her father’s return from there to South Africa on
26 September 2022).
The father returned to Perth as agreed and
subsequently travelled to South Africa on 11 October 2022.
[25]
After his arrival in South Africa the relationship between the
parties was very strained. The mother established
the father had
resumed his extramarital affair while in Perth. She also states she
established that he had not obtained help, as
promised, for his
mental health and alcohol issues. He again denies having any such
issues. The family travelled around South Africa
and on their return
to Cape Town the father lived with the mother and children at her
father’s home for approximately the
last week of October 2022.
In the first week of November 2022 the father told her he wanted a
separation and moved out.
Consent
as at 1 January 2023
[26]
On 10 November 2022 they started marriage counselling. According to
the mother they agreed, with the counsellor,
that they would remain
in South Africa until they had worked out their long term plans. The
father admits having “met with”
a marriage counsellor
‘…
who had to assist L and me to decide whether we try
to save our marriage or separate and, if we were to separate, how we
might do
so in an amicable way. We saw the counsellor for the first
time on 10 November 2022. It was not a beneficial process.’
[27]
He denies it was agreed they would remain in South Africa until their
long term plans had been resolved.
He withdrew from the counselling
process on 18 December 2022. According to the mother, on 13 December
2022 the father told
the counsellor he wanted to attend
rehabilitation. There were discussions regarding where and when this
should take place (i.e.
South Africa or Australia). However before
this could be agreed the father withdrew from the process. According
to the father the
mother set an ultimatum that he must attend
rehabilitation, otherwise she would not return to Perth with the
children. This was
one of the reasons he withdrew from counselling.
[28]
On 20 December 2022 the father informed the mother by WhatsApp that
he would be leaving South Africa after
Christmas, using his flight
booked for 1 January 2023. On a reading of his founding
affidavit his next WhatsApp communication
to her was on 24 December
2022 when he repeated this and also wrote that ‘
(a)s for you
and the boys, I would like you to come back to Perth but I understand
you don’t feel you can, so stay here, I
think some space for
now would help. Once I have somewhere to live and we have a better
plan then we can make better decisions…’
. According
to him the only reason why he wrote this was in an attempt to calm
their heated exchanges whenever he sought to raise
the subject of the
children’s return to Australia.
[29]
What he did not disclose to the court was that on 21 December 2022 he
informed the mother in another WhatsApp
that ‘…
I need
to go home and work on me. And you need to do your own work whatever
and wherever you think that is best for you. I hope
you will bring
the boys back to their home but again I am waiting on you to decide
that…’.
What he also did not disclose is his
admission in his WhatsApp communication of 24 December 2022 of his
alcohol and other issues
and his plan to address them. The latter is
noted not to cast the father in a bad light, but to demonstrate his
selective disclosure
of relevant information and pattern of
falsehoods, not only to the mother but also this court.
[30]
What the father also relied upon in an apparent effort to show that
the mother wrongfully retained the children
in South Africa on 1
January 2023 was another WhatsApp he sent to her on 29 December 2022
when – contrary to what he had
conveyed on two separate
occasions in the preceding 8 days, he wrote ‘
[w]e have a
ticket to go back to Perth on the 1
st
of Jan
which in my eye is a contract, a commitment to do something which you
are going back on. How long am I supposed to wait till
you decide
what to do?’.
To the extent that this could ever be
construed as a withdrawal of previous consent (which in my view it
simply cannot), yet again
the father was selective in his disclosure
to this court. As with his WhatsApp of 21 December 2022, the mother
also referred in
her answering affidavit to another WhatsApp exchange
on 29 December 2022 when the father agreed with her proposal to tell
the children
‘
Dad is going to Perth now and you will be
staying here with Mom… Mom and Dad will make decisions
together about where we
will live next once we are able to’.
[31]
When confronted with all of this the father’s response was
telling. He changed tack, claiming that
he never agreed the children
could remain in South Africa indefinitely (which the mother has never
suggested) and that ‘
[w]hen I left South Africa, I had
accepted that L was refusing to fly back to Australia with the
children on 1 January 2023.
This was not a consent to her
retaining the children in South Africa’.
To my mind this is
a contrived attempt by the father to provide an explanation,
ex
post facto
, for his very own suggestion to the mother to stay on
in South Africa with the children after 1 January 2023, at least
while they
tried to resolve matters between them one way or the
other. It matters not, in this context, whether the father allegedly
made
this suggestion on more than one occasion out of pure
frustration, since there is not an iota of evidence to indicate that
even
his subjective intention (i.e. consent for the children to
remain here on the basis agreed) was anything different.
[32]
It was submitted on the father’s behalf that at the time he
made these suggestions he had not yet obtained
legal advice and was
accordingly unable to give “informed consent” to an
“unlawful retention” in line with
KG
v CB.
[12]
But in my view this submission, on the facts of this particular case,
does not withstand scrutiny. This is because the evidence
established
that as at 1 January 2023 there was no indication of any
wrongful retention of which the father could have been
aware. On the
contrary the mother has shown that there was an agreement in place
for her and the children to remain here albeit
not permanently. It
follows that the father has failed to establish a wrongful retention
at the date upon which he relied in his
founding affidavit,
i.e. 1 January 2023.
Acquiescence
[33]
In
his founding affidavit the father stated that as a result of the
mother’s ‘
wrongful
actions’
he
made application to the Australian Central Authority on 27 February
2023 for the children’s return. He set out in
some detail
subsequent interactions between his Australian attorney and that
Authority and thereafter his South African attorney
and the South
African Central Authority spanning the period 28 February 2023 to 10
November 2023. He annexed a copy of his “Australian”
application and seemingly expected the mother (and this court) to
deal with its contents without identifying the portions thereof
upon
which reliance was placed and an indication of the case sought to be
made out on the strength thereof. This is impermissible,
as is
established in our law.
[13]
[34]
In her answering affidavit the mother alleged that the father
continued his
extramarital relationship upon his return to Australia
on 1 January 2023. She showed that he gave his Australian attorney
instructions
on 13 January 2023 in respect of divorce proceedings.
She thus stated that he clearly had no intention, as earlier
indicated by
him in one of his numerous communications to her, of
finding a suitable home in Australia in the “hope” that
she and
the children would join him there. On 17 January 2023
the father (as he alleged in his founding affidavit) sent her an
email
asking her to book airline tickets to Perth ‘
as
soon as possible’.
What he did
not disclose in that affidavit is that this email followed his first
consultation with his Australian attorney on 13
January 2023.
[35]
The father also alleged that on 26 January 2023 the mother informed
him by
email that she did not intend to return to Australia. However
in the very email he relies upon, and from which he himself quoted
a
portion, the mother wrote ‘
I
don’t believe it is in their best interests to uproot them at
this time into a temporary situation in Perth. I think it
is best for
us to stay here while you and I work together to figure out our long
term plans’.
This cannot
reasonably be construed as communicating an intention not to return
at all.
[36]
The mother also demonstrated another material non-disclosure by the
father.
In an email to her on 26 January 2023 he wrote that he would
not be proceeding ‘
with legal
action’
and that although he
loved and missed the children dearly ‘…
I
will leave it to you to let me know what you decide to do’.
The mother is thus correct in her assertion that the father at that
date accepted she and the children would not be returning to
Australia while they tried to resolve their issues. She states that
she relied on this communication as having been made in good
faith.
[37]
However the father clandestinely intended to proceed with his
“Australian”
Hague application, having already included
this in his instruction to his Australian attorney on 25 January
2023, i.e. the
day before he told her he would not be proceeding with
legal action. The parties attended (online) mediation from February
2023
until 14 March 2023 when the father again withdrew from
that process.
[38]
As far as can be gleaned from the papers (given that the content of
mediation
sessions is privileged) the mother had no idea at the time
that the father had launched his Hague application in Australia on
27 February
2023. Moreover this was at a time when the parties
were also communicating directly with each other for purposes of
preparing their
discussion with the children pertaining to their
separation, living arrangements and the father’s contact. The
email trail
over the period 23 to 25 February 2023, annexed
by the mother to her answering affidavit, reflects just that,
including
arrangements for some of the children’s items to be
sent to South Africa. Not a murmur was made by the father in those
email
exchanges about either an intention to proceed with a Hague
application or for the children’s summary return.
[39]
The mother also demonstrated with reference to further emails that
although
the father terminated the mediation process, the parties
continued communicating with each other thereafter in relation to
money
(there is a separate dispute pertaining to the proceeds of the
sale of the former common home pending in an Australian court),
maintenance, contact, transporting of items to South Africa and the
like. During late March or early April 2023 the father accused
the
mother of stalling their settlement discussions. In an email to him
dated 5 April 2023 she reminded him that ‘…
you
have decided not to mediate and in one of your emails stated you
wanted a lawyer to prepare a settlement proposal for us to
reach an
amicable outcome’.
On 5 May
2023 the mother’s attorney sent the father a letter containing
a composite settlement proposal pertaining
inter
alia
to care and contact
arrangements for the children.
[40]
The father responded to her attorney on the same date stating that he
was taking
advice in respect of that letter. On 19 May 2023 in a
further email the father stated that he was ‘
in
the process of instructing a lawyer to assist me’
and would be in touch shortly. Of course the father had already
instructed an attorney but had not informed the mother of this.
Eventually on 23 June 2023, the mother’s attorney received
a letter from the father’s attorney. In that letter
no response
was provided to the settlement proposal. Instead return of the
children to Australia was requested, although no date
for their
return was stipulated. The relevant portion of that letter (which did
not form part of the papers before me but was handed
in by agreement)
reads as follows:
‘
Our
client does not agree to your client’s wrongful retention of
the children in South Africa. He seeks their
immediate
return
to Western Australia…
Your
client has failed to properly confer with our client to reach a joint
decision with respect to the children’s schooling
and any
proposed relocation from Western Australia. In the event that the
parties were unable to reach agreement on these matters,
the correct
approach was for your client to bring an application in the Family
Court of Western Australia seeking such orders.
In
the circumstances,
and because of her refusal to return the
children to Western Australia our client is taking steps to have the
children returned
.
We
invite your client
at this early stage
to voluntarily return
the children to Western Australia. Our client is prepared to pay any
costs associated with their travel and
can make himself available to
accompany them if required.’
[emphasis
supplied]
[41]
The contents of this letter are a blatant misrepresentation of the
true facts.
The evidence shows that at no prior stage had the mother
refused to return the children
at
all
, and the ‘
early
stage’
was already four months
after the father launched his Hague application in Australia. Equally
importantly no mention whatsoever
was made of that application
already having been launched. Moreover the father was fully aware of
all the steps taken by the mother
in relation to the children’s
schooling, as is evidenced by a number of other emails annexed to her
answering affidavit,
and he was included in decision-making every
step of the way, despite an allegation elsewhere in his papers that
he did not even
know which school they were attending. Put simply,
the quoted portion of this letter smacks of the father’s bad
faith.
[42]
Accordingly, even if I am wrong in respect of my finding that the
father had
already on 1 January 2023 consented to the children
remaining in South Africa while the parties sought to resolve their
long term
plans, he subsequently acquiesced to the children’s
retention in South Africa by the mother on that basis. It cannot be
that
a deliberately concealed so-called subjective intention can
override a consistent pattern of outward manifestation to the
contrary.
Discretion
[43]
Having found that the father consented, alternatively acquiesced, to
the children
remaining in South Africa while the parties tried to
resolve their issues and long term plans, it follows that he did so
on the
basis that the children would not be
summarily
returned
to Australia. However it is
nonetheless necessary to deal with the discretion conferred under
article 13 since I may be wrong in
my conclusion that in the
particular circumstances of this matter the Convention does not
apply. Accordingly what follows is based
on an assumption that the
Convention does apply but that the mother has established the
defences of consent, alternatively acquiescence,
under article 13(a).
[44]
The evidence shows that the children presently have no home to return
to in
Australia and there is not even clarity on whether, if their
return was nonetheless ordered, they would even reside in Perth,
since
it is common cause that when they left Australia in July 2022
the parties were considering other options in Australia and even
possibly elsewhere (although the latter is in dispute) to set up
their new home. The father has put up no evidence about where the
mother (who will not remain here without them) and the children
should live or how their living and other costs will be funded,
at
least pending finalisation of all the other disputes, including those
pertaining to maintenance and the proprietary aspects.
[45]
The evidence also shows that the father has not visited the children
in South
Africa despite the mother’s request. She invited him
to spend Christmas 2023 with the children in South Africa but he told
them he would not do so. The children asked him to come here for
their respective birthdays in April and October 2023 but were
met
with a similar response. The mother has nonetheless ensured the
father has regular video contact with the children (on average
three
times per week); in May 2023 and of her own accord, she arranged for
gifts and cards to be sent to the father from the children
for his
birthday to be opened during one of these video calls; and she
regularly keeps him updated about their progress at school,
their
sporting and other activities and sends him photographs of them. The
children too engage with their father on these aspects
during their
video contact.
[46]
The evidence also shows that although the children miss their father
dearly,
and are confused, in particular why he has not visited them,
they are adjusting to their current situation. In this regard I can
do no better than quote from the report of their legal
representative, Ms Bernstein:
‘
A
and H are delightful and I enjoyed meeting them. They are confident,
friendly, well-mannered and articulate boys. They were able
to follow
my questions and communicated very well. If they did not understand a
question or a word that I used they asked me to
clarify and they were
happy to engage with me. They are mature for their ages but still
young.
I
commenced… by explaining that I had been appointed as their
legal representative and the role that I played.
[14]
The
first question I asked them was whether they knew why they were
meeting with me. They had very limited information other than
to say
that it is about their father and mother breaking up. They did not
know any more details and did not know that I wanted
to establish
whether they objected to returning to Australia…
Both
boys were clearly very happy in South Africa. They expressed to me
that they enjoyed staying in South Africa and were happy
in school. I
interrogated them on this and asked them to compare their life in
South Africa to Australia. I tried to establish
exactly why they were
happy here and asked them to list what they liked about South Africa.
A conveyed to me that Australia was
“a lot more strict”.
When I asked him if he was referring to his parents he said “no
the people in Australia
and school”. He told me that he did not
really like going to school in Australia. In contrast he liked
schooling in South
Africa, the workload was easier and he described
it as “a lot more free”. He said that schools in
Australia did not
offer sport like in South Africa, he described the
sport in South Africa as “proper”. He told me that he
preferred
home schooling to Australian schooling but that his
schooling in South Arica was best. He told me that he enjoyed being
around
his grandfather, uncle, aunt and cousin.
H
told me that he was bullied in school in Australia and that is why he
did not like going to school there. He was happy in his
school in
South Africa and, like his brother, told me that school in South
Africa was better than Australian schooling and home
schooling. He
spent quite some time telling me about the bully who belonged to a
gang. He told me that he had retaliated against
the bully and that as
a result he was sent to the deputy headmaster. Other than that, he
did not really list the reasons why South
Africa was better than
Australia.
I
then asked A whether he preferred staying in Australia or South
Africa. Without hesitation he answered South Africa. When I asked
him
why he told me that “we have more support here with my mom’s
family”. When I asked him why he needed support
he told me
“because we are going through a hard time”. He told me
his view would not change if he was not going through
a hard time nor
did it change if his father was not able to stay in South Africa. He
told me that he would go and visit his father
during the holidays. It
is not clear to me that he fully understood the concept of “support”
and he could not distinguish
between why his family in South Africa
could lend better support than his family in Australia (a grandmother
and uncle and aunt).
This may be an adult concept which he has heard
or that has been conveyed to him. Although he did not fully
understand the meaning
of the concept it did not appear to me that he
had been influenced to convey this to me. H told me that he too
preferred to stay
in South Africa but was unable to tell me what
support he received from family in South Africa. A tried to help him
come up with
an explanation and he reminded H that he received help
dressing and getting ready for school and that their grandfather did
the
school lifting.
Next,
I asked the question slightly differently and asked them both how
they would feel about leaving South Africa and moving back
to
Australia with their mother (albeit they would not live together as a
family with their father and mother). H once again told
me that he
would tell his mother he would want to stay in South Africa. A
initially felt the same way. When I tried to gain insight
into why
they would still want to stay in South Africa, A seemed a little less
certain about his answer and said that he would
go back with his
mother, but that he still prefers South Africa. He also said that he
may need more time to think about it. He
said he misses his father,
Australian family and friends but did not think he would want to
remain in Australia “forever”…
I
think it is important for me to mention that I got the sense that A
and H are confused about why their father has not visited
them. They
seemed hurt by it and did not understand why he had not done so. A
told me that his father had told him that he could
not visit and that
“it was complicated”. They both expressed the view that
he may not want to visit them. I think this
needs to be addressed
soon before it affects their relationship with their father. I did
not get the impression that it had been
suggested to them that their
father did not want to visit but rather that they were battling to
understand why he had not visited
them…
In
conclusion it was clear to me that neither boy expressed a firm
objection to returning to Australia but both undoubtedly had
expressed a preference to remain in South Africa. This preference has
to however be seen in the context of them both being relatively
young…’
[47]
I have quoted the above to convey that the children appear to be
coping and
adjusting fairly well despite how much they miss their
father and are confused why he has not visited them. During her
address
to the court Ms Bernstein confirmed that both children
communicate very effectively; are adamant that they love South Africa
and
the schooling here; and it was very clear to her that the mother
is not impeding their relationship with the father. Taking all
of the
above factors into account I am of the view that even if I am wrong
in my other findings, in the exercise of my discretion
it would not
be appropriate to nonetheless order the children’s summary
return to Australia.
Costs
[48]
In the ordinary course, the court, in a matter such as this, would
order each
party to pay their own costs. However I agree with counsel
for the mother that the father’s conduct in this litigation has
been particularly egregious. Time and again he has been caught out on
material non-disclosures and falsehoods, thus demonstrating
his
ability to be economical with the truth when it suits him. The mother
has incurred substantial costs (including a court hearing
over two
days).
[49]
There is thus considerable merit in the submission made by counsel
for the
mother that the father should be mulcted with a punitive
costs order. However I do not wish to be perceived as setting the
stage
for all of the other litigation which is pending and possibly
more that will follow this judgment. In particular, I am mindful that
the Family Court of Western Australia has suspended proceedings there
on the issue of its jurisdiction in light of concurrent Hague
proceedings in South Africa and Australia. In the circumstances it is
my view that the father must pay the mother’s costs
but on the
party and party scale.
[50]
The following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant shall pay the first
respondent’s costs on the scale as between party and party as
taxed or agreed, including
any reserved costs orders and the costs of
one senior counsel.
J
I CLOETE
For
applicant
: Adv J
Anderssen
Instructed
by
: Mandy Simpson Attorneys (Ms A M Simpson)
For
1
st
respondent
: Adv J
McCurdie
SC
Instructed
by
: Catto Neethling Wiid (Mr A Neethling)
For
2
nd
respondent
: Adv M
Edwards
For
the children
: Adv J
Bernstein
[1]
Incorporated as schedule 2 to the Children’s Act
38 of 2005 by virtue of Chapter 17 thereof.
[2]
2001
(3) SA 845
(SCA) at para [11].
[3]
Article 20 provides that a return under article 12 may
be refused if this would not be permitted by the fundamental
principles of the requested State relating to the protection of
human rights and fundamental freedoms.
[4]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
[5]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA) at paras [55] to [56].
[6]
2004
(3) SA 117
(SCA) at paras [40] to [41].
[7]
[1992]
1 All ER 929
, at 941 b – d.
[8]
A
t
para [11].
[9]
2012
(4) SA 136
(SCA) at paras [37] to [40].
[10]
2021 (2) SA 471
(GJ) at para [77].
[11]
2009 (5) SA 420
(CPD) at para [41].
[12]
fn 9 above at para [38].
[13]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v
Government
of the Republic of South Africa
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 324F-G, since followed consistently in a long line
of cases.
[14]
In terms of s 275 read with s 279 of the Children’s
Act; see also
Central
Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v B
2012 (2) SA 296
(GSJ).
The judicial or administrative authority might refuse to order the
return of the child if it finds that the child objects
to be
returned and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it
is appropriate to take account of its views:
Ad
hoc Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v
H N K NO and Another
[2021]
JOL 49972
(WCC).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
C.H v A.C and Others (13612/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 245 (4 September 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 245High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
R.B and Another v S (Bail Appeal) (A74/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 216 (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 216High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
E.L.B v A.V.M (7521/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 132 (14 May 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 132High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
L.C v J.C and Others (17335/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 247 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 247High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
L.B and Another v Kennedy N.O. and Others (22013/2015) [2023] ZAWCHC 275 (10 November 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 275High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar