Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 154South Africa
R.S v J.S (A25/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 154; 2024 (6) SA 609 (WCC) (3 June 2024)
Headnotes
in Kuilsriver, in which the court dismissed the appellant’s claim for maintenance of her foster care child, LX. The magistrate found that the first respondent did not adopt LX, and as such, there was no legal duty upon the first respondent to maintain LX. Consequently,
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## R.S v J.S (A25/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 154; 2024 (6) SA 609 (WCC) (3 June 2024)
R.S v J.S (A25/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 154; 2024 (6) SA 609 (WCC) (3 June 2024)
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sino date 3 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Maintenance –
Foster
child
–
Legal
duty to maintain – Child’s best interests paramount –
Incomplete adoption proceedings does not absolve
respondent’s
obligation towards minor child – Child formed a strong bond
with both parties – Faithfully
performed functions and
discharged duties even after parties divorced – Respondent
de facto adopted child – Legal
duty established –
Court a quo erred in absolving respondent of his legal duty –
Appeal upheld.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A25/2024
In the matter
between:
R S
Appellant
And
J P S
First Respondent
ACTING MAGISTRATE, T
NOVEMBER
Second
Respondent
THE MAINTENANCE
OFFICER
Third Respondent
Heard: 10 May 2024
Delivered: Electronically
on 03 June 2024
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI J (Bishop AJ
Concurring)
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Children are the cornerstone of society; when we neglect them, we
neglect our society's
future. Every child deserves proper parental
care and support for the well-being of society. This is an
appeal against the
whole judgment and order delivered on 18 November
2023 by the magistrate for the district of Cape Town, held in
Kuilsriver, in
which the court dismissed the appellant’s claim
for maintenance of her foster care child, LX. The magistrate found
that the
first respondent did not adopt LX, and as such, there was no
legal duty upon the first respondent to maintain LX. Consequently,
the magistrate dismissed the appellant’s claim against the
first respondent for the maintenance of LX. It is this order that
the
appellant seeks to assail in this court.
[2]
At the hearing of this appeal, despite proper service of the record
and the notice
of set down upon the first respondent and his
attorneys of record, the first respondent and his legal
representative did not file
any opposing papers to the appeal. They
also did not appear at the hearing of this appeal. The matter was
initially enrolled for
hearing on 03 May 2024. However, to allow the
first respondent and his legal representative to attend the appeal
proceedings, especially
considering the issues raised in the appeal,
the hearing was rescheduled for 10 May 2024.
[3]
The first respondent and his legal representative were informed of
the postponement.
However, they did not attend the appeal proceedings
on the subsequent date. However, we had the benefit of comprehensive
heads
of argument that the first respondent’s legal
representative submitted to the court a
quo
on behalf of the
first respondent when the matter was heard on that basis on 10 May
2024.
THE
BACKGROUND FACTS
[4]
To fully understand the key issues in this appeal and the view I take
in this matter,
it is necessary to briefly outline the background
facts underpinning my conclusion. The material facts in this matter
are simple
and can be summarised briefly as follows. The appellant
and the first respondent were married to each other in community of
property
on 02 February 1991. Their marriage was dissolved by the
Bellville Regional Court on 17 May 2019 after it was found that the
marriage
had broken down irretrievably with no prospects of
reconciliation towards a normal marriage relationship.
[5]
During their marriage, particularly in 2014, the appellant and the
first respondent
lived in Bloemfontein. During this period, the
appellant volunteered at the Heidedal Child and Youth Care Centre,
where she met
an abandoned child, LX, who was born on 10 March 2012.
LX is orphaned, and her biological parents are deceased. At the time
the
appellant met LX, the minor child was 18 months old and still a
baby. The appellant and the first respondent decided to adopt LX.
LX
formed a bond with the appellant and the first respondent as her
parents.
[6]
Subsequent thereto, the appellant and the first respondent commenced
the process of
adopting LX at the Bloemfontein Children’s
Court. The appellant asserted that they were told by the Children’s
Court
that they first needed to foster LX to monitor if they were
suitable parents before the adoption could be finalised. Pursuant
thereto,
the Bloemfontein Children's Court issued an initial foster
care order on 07 November 2014 under case number 14/1/4-223/2012.
[7]
Whilst the adoption process was pending, the parties took in the
minor child as foster
parents with the intention of continuing the
adoption process until it was completed. The child came to live with
the appellant
and the first respondent and became part of their
family. The parties undertook parental rights and responsibilities in
respect
of the minor child. They cared for, supported, and provided
for all the needs of the child. The appellant and the first
respondent
agreed to adopt LX and raise her as their own daughter. To
this end, they completed the necessary form 60 in terms of Regulation
99 (application for and consent to the adoption of children) read
with section 231 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005
(‘the
Children’s Act’)
. The application form was signed by
both the appellant and the first respondent on 29 February 2016.
[8]
Unfortunately, before the adoption process could be completed, the
marriage relationship
between the appellant and the first respondent
broke down. On 02 February 2019, the first respondent instituted
divorce proceedings
against the appellant at the Bellville Regional
Court. In the summons, the first respondent explicitly acknowledged
that a minor
child is involved in the marriage with the appellant
through the adoption process. In the particulars of claim, the first
respondent
sought an order obliging him to pay maintenance of R5 000
for LX until she reached 18, or became self-supporting. The
maintenance
was to be paid into the appellant’s bank account
and subject to an increase of 5% per annum. The first respondent also
sought
an order that he would be responsible for LX’s
educational and medical costs. In addition, the first respondent
completed
the necessary Annexure A provided for in Regulation 2 of
the Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Regulations, in which he
acknowledged
that the child resides with the appellant and that both
parties support the child. The first respondent also stated that
visitation
rights have been arranged through mutual agreement.
[9]
On 23 May 2018, the first respondent signed a commitment letter
wherein he stated
as follows:
“
To
whom it may concern.
I
JPS, ID number… state that I will be paying child support for
LXS on a monthly basis on or before the 30th of every month.
The
amount of R5000 (five thousand Rand only). This letter is to serve as
my commitment to the child support until its (sic) final
agreement is
in place. For any further information, I can be contacted at the
following number 082…”
[10]
Further, in contemplation of their divorce, on 2 and 3 August 2018,
the appellant and the respondent
signed a settlement agreement,
respectively. The settlement agreement addressed the division of
assets, the maintenance of the
minor child, and spousal maintenance
for the appellant. The agreement for LX’s maintenance largely
reflected what the first
respondent had sought in his particulars of
claim. In paragraph A1.3 of the settlement agreement, the first
respondent agreed to
pay maintenance for LX in the sum of R5000 per
month, payable in advance on or before the 28th day of each month
directly into
the appellant's bank account. The parties also agreed
that the first respondent’s maintenance obligations towards the
minor
child will terminate once the child becomes a major or
self-supporting, whichever occasion may occur first. The first
respondent
also agreed to pay spousal maintenance for the appellant
in the sum of R500 per month.
[11]
Insofar as medical expenses are concerned, the parties also agreed
that the appellant and LX
would remain dependants of the first
respondent until the divorce was finalised. The parties also agreed
that the first respondent
would be liable for the payment of all
reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred by the appellant
on behalf of the minor
child and medical expenses incurred for the
appellant. The parties also agreed that after the divorce, the first
respondent would
contribute R800 towards the monthly medical aid
premium for the appellant and for LX. It was further agreed that the
applicant
would furnish the first respondent with proof of any
surcharge or levy not paid by the medical aid fund, whereafter the
first respondent
would attend to reimburse the appellant the amount
within seven days thereof.
[12]
As far as educational expenses are concerned, the parties agreed that
the first respondent will
pay half of the reasonable and necessary
educational expenses incurred on behalf of the minor child. The
parties also agreed that
the first respondent would be liable for
half of the school uniform, schoolbooks, stationery, outings, and
extramural activities
costs incurred by the appellant with respect to
the minor child. This would be paid at least twice per annum. The
appellant was
to provide the first respondent with proof of such
expenses, whereafter the first respondent undertook to settle the
same within
seven days thereafter. The parties agreed that the
settlement agreement would be incorporated into the final divorce
order.
[13]
As the parties had settled the patrimonial consequences and the
maintenance issue, the appellant
did not attend court on 17 May 2019,
when the divorce was heard and finalised. The first respondent
attended court in the absence
of the appellant and the Bellville
Regional Court granted a decree of divorce. For reasons that do not
appear from the record before
us, the decree did not incorporate the
settlement agreement signed by the parties. Even though there was no
court order requiring
the first respondent to pay maintenance, he
continued to make child support payments for the minor child after
the divorce was
finalised. However, he reduced the payments to a
monthly amount of R4000.
[14]
The appellant asserted that due to the traumatic experience leading
up to the divorce, she left
all the administrative work in the hands
of her then-attorney, who represented her. Due to the depression and
anxiety after the
divorce, she never checked the prayers granted in
the divorce order. The appellant asserted that she gave specific
instructions
that the agreement regarding the maintenance of their
minor child should be included in the court order. After she
discovered that
the prayer for maintenance was not included in the
divorce order, she attempted to have this rectified at the Bellville
Regional
Court but was not assisted. Meanwhile, in January 2023, the
first respondent stopped paying maintenance for their foster care
daughter.
[15]
Subsequent thereto, the appellant approached the Kuilsriver
Maintenance Court for a maintenance
claim against the first
respondent. The first respondent was subpoenaed to appear in court on
10 July 2023 for a financial inquiry
in terms of section 10 of the
Maintenace Act 99 of 1998
(‘the Maintenance Act’)
.
Upon receiving the subpoena, the legal representative of the first
respondent sent a letter to the Kuilsriver Magistrates Court.
In the
letter, it was stated that the minor child is not the biological
child of their client, and she was not legally adopted
by him.
Therefore, the first respondent's legal representatives asserted that
the first respondent was not obligated under common
law or the
Maintenance Act to financially support the minor child. The first
respondent's legal representative also impugned the
extension of the
foster care order, which I will deal with later in this judgment.
[16]
The matter was eventually placed before the second respondent to
argue whether the first respondent
had a legal duty to maintain LX.
On 18 November 2023, the matter was argued in court by the first
respondent’s legal representative
and the third respondent (the
maintenance officer). After hearing arguments, the magistrate gave an
extempore judgment and found
that there was no legal duty on the
first respondent to maintain the minor child.
[17]
On 30 November 2023, the magistrate provided his additional reasons
and found that the respondent’s
commitment to serve the best
interests of this minor child was routed in affection, emotional
attachment, fondness, and the apparent
sense of care that the
respondent had towards the minor child concerned. The magistrate also
noted that, in his view, the human
kindness the respondent showed
towards the minor child does not, without more, translate into a
legal duty to maintain. He reaffirmed
his previous conclusion that
the first respondent had no legal obligation to support LX. As
mentioned before, the appellant is
seeking a reversal of this
decision in this court.
THE
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
[18]
The Appellant assails the judgment granted by the magistrate in
favour of the first respondent
on several grounds. The grounds of
appeal as discernible from the notice of appeal may, in a nutshell,
be summarised as follows:
1.
That the court a
quo
erred in finding that because the adoption process
had not been concluded at the time the parties separated, therefore
the first
respondent was not legally liable to maintain the minor
child.
2.
That the magistrate erred in concluding that the
respondent was absolved from maintaining the minor child even though
after the
divorce proceedings had been concluded, the first
respondent continued to maintain the child.
3.
That the magistrate acknowledged that adoptive
parents have a legal duty to maintain their adopted child but
overlooked the intention
of the first respondent at the time he
signed the adoption papers that he made a commitment to take
responsibility for taking care
of the minor child.
4.
That the court a
quo
overlooked the well-known principle that it is the
upper guardian of all minor children and must protect the rights of
children
and the interest of the child as provided for in section 28
of the Constitution.
5.
That the magistrate erred in concluding that, at
the time, the first respondent made an undertaking to contribute
towards the expenses
for the minor child, that this was intended to
be temporary until the divorce proceedings were finalised.
ISSUES TO BE DECIDED
[19]
This court is enjoined to consider whether the first respondent has a
legal duty to maintain
LX.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
The
best interest of child principle
[20]
Children have a right to proper parental care. As reflected in the
preamble to the Maintenance
Act, South Africa has committed itself to
giving high priority to the constitutional rights of children. South
Africa has provided
the legal infrastructure through the Maintenance
Act, thereby giving effect to the imperative contained in section 28
of the Constitution.
It is universally recognised in the context of
family law that the child's best interests are paramount.
Bannatyne
v Bannatyne
[2002] ZACC 31
;
2003 (2) SA 363
(CC) at para 24.
[21]
Both international law and the domestic law of many countries have
affirmed the paramount importance
of the best interests of the child.
M
any countries have subsequently
incorporated it into their constitutions or child and family
legislation.
Examples
of African countries that incorporated children's clauses in their
constitutions include Namibia (Art 15 of the Constitution
of the
Republic of Namibia) and Uganda (s 34 of the Constitution of the
Republic of Uganda). See
Du Toit
and Another v Minister for Welfare and Population Development and
Others
2002 (10) BCLR 1006
(CC) at n
29.
[22]
Meanwhile, the Bill of Rights in the South African Constitution is
renowned for its extensive
commitment to the protection of the rights
of children in section 28, more particularly section 28(2). Section
28(2) of the Constitution
emphatically underscores the paramountcy of
the child’s best interests. It enjoins a court to give
paramountcy to the child's
best interests in every matter concerning
the child. These pronouncements are echoed in several statutes. For
instance, section
9 of the Children’s Act provides 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. Section 8 of the Children’s Act
provides
that the rights that a child has in terms of the Act
supplement the rights that a child has in terms of the Bill of
Rights. However,
in
S
v M (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007
(2) SACR 539
(CC) para 25D-F, the Constitutional Court observed that
t
he
paramountcy principle must be applied in a meaningful way without
unduly obliterating other valuable and constitutionally protected
interests.
[23]
It is, therefore, evident that the child’s best interest is the
guiding criterion that
underpins all decisions in respect of any
dispute involving minor children. Against this backdrop, I turn to
consider the disputed
issues in this appeal. However, before I do so,
it is important to consider the legal effect of both
de jure
adoption and
de facto
adoption, as these have a critical
bearing on the resolution of the disputed issues in this case
Formal
(de jure)
Adoptions
[24]
Chapter 15 of the Children’s Act regulates the adoption process
in South Africa. Adoption
is the legal process through which the
rights and obligations between a child and its natural parent or
parents are terminated,
and a new parental relationship enjoying full
legal recognition is created between the child and its adoptive
parent or parents.
(see
Naude v Fraser
[1998] ZASCA 56
;
1998 (4) SA 539
(SCA)
at 548J - 549A). In terms of section 230 of the Children’s Act,
any child may be adopted if the adoption is in the
best interest of
the child. Only a minor child can be adopted, and the minor must be
adoptable. Among others, a child is adoptable
if the child is an
orphan and has no guardian or caregiver who is willing to adopt the
child, or the whereabouts of the child’s
parents or guardian
cannot be established, or the child is in need of a permanent
alternative placement. An application for adoption
must be
accompanied by a report of an adoption social worker containing
information on whether a child is adoptable, as contemplated
in
section 230(3).
[25]
Section 233 provides that a child may be adopted only if consent for
the adoption has been given
by each parent of the child, regardless
of whether the parents are married or not: provided that, if the
parent is a child, that
parent is assisted by his or her guardian. In
terms of section 236 of the Children's Act, such consent may be
dispensed with
in an application for adoption, inter alia, where a
child had been deserted or abandoned by a parent or guardian or where
the parent
or guardian has consistently failed to fulfil his or her
parental rights and responsibilities towards the child during the
last
12 months. Section 233(8) of the Children’s Act provides
that a parent or guardian who has consented to the adoption of the
child may withdraw the consent within 60 days after having signed the
consent, after which the consent is final.
[26]
Section 239 of the Act regulates the application for adoption. An
application for the adoption
of a child must be made to the
Children’s Court in the prescribed manner and must be
accompanied by the relevant social worker’s
report in the
prescribed format. The report must, in terms of s 239(1)(
d
) of
the Act, be accompanied by a letter from the provincial head of
social development recommending the adoption of the child.
The
requirement of the section 239(1)
(d)
letter is
peremptory. It reaffirms and recognises the role to be played by
governmental institutions in the protection and
well-being of
children within our borders and those leaving them. (see
In Re XN
2013 (6) 153 (GSJ) at para 14). Section 240 governs the
consideration of the adoption application. The court that considers
the
adoption application must take all relevant factors into account,
including the religious and cultural background of the child,
the
child’s parents, and the prospective adoptive parents.
[27]
A Children’s Court considering an application for adoption may
make an order for the adoption
of a child only if the adoption is in
the best interest of the child and the adoptive parents are fit and
proper to be entrusted
with full parental rights and responsibilities
in respect to the child. The court must also consider whether consent
to adoption
has not been withdrawn in terms of section 233(8) of the
Act. The effect of an adoption order in terms of section 242
terminates
any previous order made with respect to the placement of
the child. It also terminates all parental responsibilities and
rights
any person had in respect of the child immediately after the
adoption, as well as all rights and responsibilities the child had
against that person and that person’s family members. Expressed
differently, upon adoption, the reciprocal duty of support
between
the adopted child and his or her natural parents ceases to exist. An
adoption order
confers full parental
responsibilities and rights in respect of the adopted child upon the
adoptive parent.
Adoptive
parents have a legal duty to support their adopted children.
[28]
However, in terms of section 242(2)(e), the adoption order does not
automatically terminate all
parental responsibilities and rights of
the parent of a child, when an adoption order is granted in favour of
the spouse or permanent
domestic life-partner of that parent.
Informal (
de facto
)
Adoptions
[29]
The informal adoptions, for the purposes of this judgment, refer to
those putative or ostensible
adoptions that have not been formalised
in terms of the Children’s Act or in terms of any legislation.
However, even though
they are not officially recognised by law, they
exist, nonetheless. Informal adoption involves children who were not
legally adopted but are factually adopted and
are nurtured by their putative parents.
Ordinarily, there is
no duty of support between a putative parent and an informally
adopted child. The Children’s Act recognises
the formal
adoptions discussed above and does not recognise informal adoptions.
[30]
However, in recent years, our courts have consistently recognised
de
facto
adoptions, particularly in
recognition of a duty of support between the child and a putative
parent.
Maneli v Manali
2010
(7) SA 703
(GSJ);
Metiso v
Padongelukfonds
2001 (3) SA 1142
(T).
In other words, the courts have recognised a duty
of support notwithstanding the fact that the adoption has not been
formalised
in terms of the relevant legislation or in compliance with
specific requirements set out in the statute. Louw points out that
‘despite
the seemingly bright-line distinction between adopted
and non-adopted children, the South African courts have in recent
times shown
an increased willingness to grant
de
facto
adopted children some if not all,
the rights reserved for formally adopted children. (see Louw A “De
Facto Adoption Doctrine
in South Africa”
Obiter
(2017) at 459).
[31]
The courts correctly justified, in my view, the recognition of
informal adoption based on the
child’s constitutional rights to
parental care and the best interests of the child encapsulated in
section 28 of the Constitution.
Undoubtedly, the recognition of
de
facto
adoptions for the purposes of care, maintenance and proper
parental care ensures that the protection of children for whom the
adoption
statute was intended is not eroded.
EVALUATION
[32]
In the present matter, it is common cause that the first respondent
supported LX. The first respondent
committed himself to supporting
the minor child in 2014 when the child was still 18 months old. Mr
Skibi, who appeared for the
appellant, submitted at the hearing of
this appeal that the first respondent had a very strong bond with the
minor child during
his marriage with the appellant and even after the
divorce decree was granted. Counsel submitted that in his divorce
summons, the
first respondent committed himself to support the minor
child until she reaches the age of majority or becomes
self-supporting.
In the settlement agreement, which was concluded in
contemplation of their divorce, the first respondent committed
himself to support
the minor child and to pay all her school fees and
medical expenses. Mr Skibi further submitted that, for all intents
and purposes,
the parties intended to adopt the minor child.
[33]
In my view, the submissions of Counsel are to the point and cannot be
faulted. The fact that
the adoption proceedings were not concluded,
in my view, does not absolve the first respondent of his obligation
towards the minor
child. Significantly, the child was in the foster
care of the appellant and the respondent. The child formed a strong
bond with
both appellant and the first respondent. The attached
photographs in the appeal record beautifully capture the loving
father-and-daughter
relationship between the first respondent and LX.
Additionally, these images unmistakably depict the parent-child bond
between
LX, the first respondent and the appellant.
[34]
In addition to the above, the first respondent
faithfully
performed the functions and discharged the duties of a father in his
dealings with the minor child. Even after the parties
were divorced,
the first respondent continued to pay maintenance for the minor
child. The commitment he made in the settlement
agreement and in the
divorce summons attests to the relationship between the daughter and
father. The first respondent regarded
the minor child as his own. The
minor child regarded the first respondent and the appellant as her
parents. Notwithstanding that
the adoption had not been completed,
the first respondent referred to LX by his own surname.
[35]
On the evidence that has been presented to this court, I firmly
believe that the first respondent
de facto
adopted the minor
child and considered her as her own. He supported and nurtured the
child during the marriage and even after the
marriage was dissolved.
He maintained a father-daughter relationship during the marriage and
even after the marriage was dissolved.
He committed to retaining his
parental rights and responsibilities towards the minor child. In the
settlement agreement, he agreed
that the minor child would primarily
reside with the appellant and that he would have reasonable contact
rights with the child,
including, but not limited to, every alternate
weekend and alternate school holiday. The parties also agreed that
the December
/ January school holidays will be divided, counting as
two separate holidays, thus ensuring that the minor child spends
alternative
Christmases with the first respondent. Crucially, the
first respondent and the appellant agreed in the settlement agreement
to
finalise the adoption process as soon as possible.
[36]
In my view, the child's best interest is paramount and must prevail
in this matter. The first
respondent's decision to stop providing for
the minor child, after previously committing to care for her since
she was a baby and
supporting her for the past ten offends against
the best interest of the child principle and goes against the
hallowed principle
of
ubuntu
as well as
considerations of propriety and morality.
As
was correctly noted in
NB
v MB
2010
(3) SA 220
(GSJ),
while
these considerations do not determine the law, they certainly inform
it.
[37]
As previously stated, the first respondent and the appellant raised
the child since she was 18
months old. The child is now 12 years old.
The minor child regarded the first respondent and the appellant as
her parents. The
first respondent represented to the appellant that
they would finalise the adoption process as soon as possible. He also
represented
to the child that he would look after her. He pledged to
provide food and clothing for the child. He stayed with the child in
the
same house for many years and fostered her. He held himself to
his community and the world at large that he was the father to LX
and
took responsibility as such.
The
community accepted the first respondent and his wife as adoptive
parents of LX, and they did not regard the informal adoption
as
opprobrious. The appellant and the minor child relied on the first
respondent’s representation.
[38]
I am of the view that it is unconscionable for the first respondent
to renege from his representation
to the child and the appellant. The
best interest of the child is the most important consideration and
must take precedence in
this case. The first respondent must be held
to his promise. His promise and
commitment
had given the appellant a reasonable expectation that he would
maintain LX until she reached the age of majority or became
self-supporting.
To
my mind, the first respondent has a legal duty to maintain LX. The
court a
quo
erred in
absolving the first respondent of his legal duty to maintain LX.
[39]
I am mindful that the adoption of LX was commenced but not completed.
The appellant and the first
respondent signed the necessary adoption
form 60 in contemplation of adopting LX. Unfortunately, their
marriage broke down before
the adoption process could be completed. I
am also mindful that a child is adopted if the child has been placed
in the permanent
care of a person in terms of a court order that has
the effects of terminating all parental responsibilities and rights
any person,
including a parent, had in respect of the child in
question immediately before the adoption order is granted. I am also
mindful
that the duty of support arises for adoptive parents to
maintain their adopted children and that the legal consequences that
flow
from a
de jure
adoption do not ordinarily find
application in
de facto
adoption. This judgment does not hold
that, merely by commencing the adoption process, parents
automatically assume all the rights
and responsibilities of the
child’s parents.
[40]
It is the particular facts of this case that stands it on a different
footing. The intention
to adopt the minor child and the concomitant
commitment to maintain her until she reaches the age of majority or
self-supporting
cannot be discounted or ignored. The appellant and
the respondent factually adopted the child. In my opinion, from the
totality
of the evidence, it is in the best interest of the minor
child that the duty of support that applies to
de jure
adoption be extended to the minor child in this case. In my view,
this finding is fortified by several decisions discussed below
in
which our courts, including the Constitutional Court, extended the
duty of support and/or spousal benefits to
de facto
marriage
relationships. Those cases
endorsed the concept
of a duty worthy of protection and were addressed in the context of
persons not married and unable under the
law of the day to marry, who
voluntarily assumed an obligation to support their partners, and
which, in turn, gave rise to a contractual
obligation to do so.
[41]
For instance, although partners in a same-sex relationship (
de
facto
marriage relationship) were by no means placed on the same
footing as spouses in a civil marriage, the Constitutional Court was
prepared to extend spousal benefits to same-sex partners in several
cases decided before the coming into operation of the
Civil Union Act
17 of 2006
on an
ad hoc
basis. The Constitutional Court
justified its findings on section 9(3) of the Constitution, which
forbids unfair discrimination,
and section 10 of the Constitution,
which guarantees the right to human dignity (see
Du Plessis v Road
Accident Fund
2004 (1) SA 359
(SCA);
Gory v Kolver
2007 4
SA 97
(CC)).
[42]
By parity of reasoning and considering the child's best interest,
there is no reason,
in my view, for excluding a
de
facto
adopted
child from the benefits of the duty of support conferred upon other
children in terms of adoption contemplated in Chapter
15 of the
Children’s Act. Equity in this context is justified by the
child’s constitutional rights to proper parental
care and the
child's best interests, as
encapsulated
in section 28 of the Constitution.
[43]
I accept that the common law does not recognise the duty of support
between children and adoptive
parents and that this duty has been
introduced into our law in terms of statute. However, I am of the
view that the best interest
of the child is paramount and must
prevail. It demands and cries loudly for the protection of informally
adopted children in circumstances
like this case. Simply put,
the
duty of support that applies to formally adopted children, in my
view, can apply with equal force in informal adoption where
the duty
of support has – like here – been established by the
parents’ conduct in that case.
[44]
I am emboldened in my finding by the decision of
Paixao and
Another v RAF
2012 (6) SA 377
(SCA)
,
where the
Supreme Court of Appeal developed the common law to deal with the
duty of support between unmarried heterosexual
couples and held
that a dependant's action existed where a contractual duty of support
had been established. The circumstances,
in that case, were that the
appellant and her daughters sued the Road Accident Fund, under
section 17(1)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
, for loss of
maintenance and support arising from the death of her life partner,
Gomes who died in a motor vehicle collision on
2 January 2008. The
appellant had formed a relationship with Gomes, and they lived
together. Gomes supported the plaintiff and
her children. He paid for
the wedding of the plaintiff’s daughter. He had made a will in
favour of the appellant. He was
already married, and an intended
marriage between Gomes and the appellant was deferred until he was
divorced. Gomes eventually
divorced his wife, who was based in
Portugal.
[45]
Before he could marry the appellant, he was killed in a collision. It
was accepted as a fact
that he had contractually bound himself to
maintain the plaintiff and her family indefinitely. The critical
issue was whether that
contractual right was enforceable against
third parties such as the Road Accident Fund. The high court
concluded that Gomes had
merely promised to take care of the
appellant but had not undertaken a legally enforceable obligation to
do so. The Supreme Court
of Appeal disagreed with this conclusion and
found that the evidence indicating that the deceased and the
appellant’s family
had, at least tacitly, undertaken a
reciprocal duty of support was compelling. According to the court,
there was clearly a
tacit agreement that Gomes would assume the
obligation to support the family before the marriage. According to
the court, the marriage
would change nothing except for the
relationship being formally recognised.
[46]
Drawing inspiration from this authority, the formal adoption of LX by
the appellant and the first
respondent would have changed nothing
except that the adoption process would have been completed and the
adoption would have been
formally recognised. Notably,
notwithstanding the fact that the parties were not officially married
in terms of the relevant legislation
in
Paixao
and Another v RAF
, the court recognised the duty of
support between Gomes and the appellants. The court rejected the High
Court’s finding that
Gomes
had supported
the appellants out of 'gratitude', 'sympathy' and 'kindness’.
[47]
In the same way, in the present
case,
the evidence
indicating that the first respondent has expressly undertaken a
duty of supporting his informally adopted daughter
is compelling. It
was not mere charity – his voluntary inclusion of a maintenance
obligation in his divorce action, in his
letter preceding the
divorce, and in the settlement agreement, all point ineluctably to
the undertaking of a
legal
obligation
to maintain.
It
would be invidious and repugnant to the legal convictions of the
community for the first respondent to be absolved from supporting
his
daughter when he had voluntarily assumed that obligation.
In my view, the best interests of LX cannot be
sacrificed at the altar of formalism.
[48]
I also find the decision of the court in
MB v NB (supra)
apposite
in this matter. The facts were briefly as follows: a widow with a
teenage son married a man who developed a particularly
close bond
with her son. In the early years of the relationship, the commitment
between them was so strong that the husband agreed
to adopt the boy.
However, the adoption was never pursued, perhaps because the parties
considered that a change of name would suffice.
The boy did, however,
formally take his stepfather’s surname. The stepfather agreed
with the boy’s mother that he should
enrol in a private school,
and they completed and signed, as father and mother, the application
forms for the boy’s admission
to the school as a boarder at St
Andrews College in Grahamstown. The application was successful. The
marital relationship between
the parties subsequently came to an end
because of the husband’s infidelity.
[49]
During the divorce proceedings that followed, the wife sought to hold
the husband liable for
the boy’s school fees for so long as he
remained at St Andrew's College. The wife placed reliance on the
agreement to pay
maintenance and contended that the agreement to pay
school fees constituted a contract that bound the husband until the
child left
St Andrew’s College. As the boy's stepfather, the
husband denied liability for the boy's support, including a
contribution
towards the school fees to which he had agreed. The
court rejected the alleged contractual basis of the claim. However,
the court
held that by agreeing to give the boy his name, the husband
impliedly represented to the boy himself, to the plaintiff and the
world at large that he proposed to stand in relation to the boy as a
father to a son.
[50]
The court argued that during the marriage, the defendant faithfully
performed the functions and
discharged the duties of a father in his
dealings with the boy – willing to place himself, literally,
in
loco parentis
when the family was still
intact. In the court’s view, renouncing his obligations
now that he had fallen out with his
wife was unconscionable. The
court noted that consideration of propriety and morality would be
offended if he did.
With reference to
a child’s right to parental care in terms of section 28(1) of
the Constitution, the court intimated that
the boy, having become an
ostensible son of the defendant, had the right to expect him to
provide the family and parental care
that the section contemplates.
Crucially, and for present purpose, the court stated as follows in
para 21 of the judgment:
To
find that, in such circumstances, the defendant bears the obligation
to contribute towards S’s private school tuition gives
due
recognition to the constitutional rights and protections to which
children are entitled in terms of the clause in the Bill
of Rights I
have cited above.
The defendant had in effect promised to do this,
and the law would be blind if it could not hold him to his promise.
”
(my emphasis)
[51]
Similarly, in
JT v Road Accident Fund
2015 (1) SA 609
(GJ), a
child was adopted by her grandmother when she was 7 years old, but
her biological father continued to contribute to her
maintenance
after her adoption. When the father died in a motor vehicle accident,
t
he plaintiff sued the Road Accident Fund (the
Fund) for damages for the loss of support to her teenage
granddaughter following
the death of her natural father in the
accident. The Fund admitted that it was liable for damages suffered
by any person resulting
from his death but contended that the
deceased's legal obligation to support his child had been
extinguished when the adoption
had taken place; consequently, there
was no liability on the Fund to compensate such loss. The issue,
therefore, was whether the
Road Accident Fund could be held liable
for the
loss of support the child had suffered because of the
death of her biological father.
[52]
The court answered the question in the affirmative, finding that the
father’s undertaking
to support his child after the adoption
created an enforceable right. After reviewing several cases wherein
the courts recognised
the duty of support in
de facto
relationships, Sutherland J stated:
“
[26]
It seems to me that these cases demonstrate that the common law has
been developed to recognise that a duty of support can
arise, in
a given case, from the fact-specific circumstances of a proven
relationship from which it is shown that a binding
duty of support
was assumed by one person in favour of another. Moreover, a
culturally embedded notion of 'family', constituted
as being a
network of relationships of reciprocal nurture and support, informs
the common law's appetite to embrace, as worthy
of protection,
the assumption of duties of support and the reciprocal right to claim
support, by persons who are in relationships
akin to that of a
family.”
[53]
It is evident from the cases discussed above that our courts have
developed the common law to
recognise that a duty of support can
arise from specific circumstances of a proven relationship from which
it is shown that a binding
duty of support was assumed by one person
in favour of another. The current facts align with the above
proposition in all aspects.
Furthermore, the first respondent
undertook support for LX. As the court noted in
NB
v MB (supra),
the
law would be blind if it could not hold him to his promise.
Conclusion
[54]
As I have found herein above, the legal duty for the first respondent
to maintain his child has
been established. The first respondent
voluntarily assumed this responsibility. From the totality of the
evidence, I am of the
view that the first respondent has a legal duty
to support LX. I am further of the view that the court a
quo
erred in finding that the first respondent’s commitment to
serving the minor child's best interest was only rooted in affection,
emotional attachment, fondness, and care that the first respondent
had towards the minor child concerned. The first respondent's
legal
duty to support LX was not based on his affection and fondness
towards the child but on a freely assumed legal obligation
to do so.
[55]
Lastly, the minor child is currently in the foster care of the
appellant. On 23 October 2018,
the Kuilsriver Children’s Court,
acting in terms of section 159 of the Children’s Act, extended
the foster care from
7 November 2018 to 10 March 2030. In other
words, the foster care order was extended for 12 years. According to
the letter addressed
to the maintenance officer by the first
respondent’s legal representatives dated 5 September 2023, the
first respondent was
not made aware of the foster care extension
request and the subsequent order, nor did he consent to the same. In
my view, the order
granted by the Children’s Court was legally
incompetent and did not meet the requirement of section 159.
[56]
An order made by a Children’s Court in terms of section 156 of
the Act lapses on expiry
of two years from the date the order was
made. When deciding on an extension of the period of a court order
made in terms of section
156, the court must take cognisance of the
views of the Child, the parent and any other person who has parental
responsibilities
and rights in respect of the child or any
alternative caregiver of the child. In the present matter, this
involves the first respondent.
The first respondent’s view must
be considered. However, the validity of the foster care order was not
before us, and we
therefore do not have the power to set it aside. I
note this as it is vital that the appellant and the first respondent
take the
necessary steps to regularise the foster care arrangement in
the best interests of LX.
[57]
Finally, there is the question of maintenance pending the outcome of
the maintenance enquiry.
The first respondent has not paid
maintenance since January 2023. In my view, there is no reason why he
should not immediately
be ordered to pay maintenance at the amount he
agreed to pay, pending the outcome of that enquiry. I note that the
first respondent
never suggested that he was unable to pay – he
simply asserted that he was not obliged to do so. There is nothing on
the
papers before us to indicate that he is unable to meet his
commitment. If that has changed, he can raise it in the maintenance
enquiry. Until then, he must pay what he has agreed to pay.
[58]
Given all these considerations, I am of the view that the appeal must
succeed with no order as
to costs.
ORDER
[59]
In the result, the following order is granted.
59.1
The appeal is hereby upheld with no order as to costs.
59.2
The decision of the court a
quo
that the first respondent has
no legal duty to support the minor child is hereby set aside and
replaced with the following: The
first respondent is legally liable
to support the minor child – LX.
59.3
The matter is referred to the Maintenance court for a maintenance
enquiry in terms of section 10 of the Maintenance
Act.
59.4
Pending the outcome of the maintenance enquiry, the first respondent
shall, as an interim measure, pay R5 000
per month for the
maintenance of LX, by depositing it into the appellant’s
nominated bank account on or before the first
day of each month as
from 30 of June 2024. This amount shall be free from any deduction of
whatsoever nature.
___________________________
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree:
____________________________
BISHOP
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant: Mr Skibi
Instructed
by: Legal Aid South Africa
Strategic
Litigation Unit
Bloemfontein
For
the Respondents: None
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