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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2024] ZAWCHC 365
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## L.V.Z v A.V.Z (18151/24)
[2024] ZAWCHC 365 (12 November 2024)
L.V.Z v A.V.Z (18151/24)
[2024] ZAWCHC 365 (12 November 2024)
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sino date 12 November 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 18151/24
In the matter between
L[...]
S[...] V[...]
Z[...]
APPLICANT
AND
A[...]
E[...] V[...]
Z[...]
RESPONDENT
Date of Hearing:
28 October 2024
Date of Judgment:
12 November 2024 (to be delivered via email to the respective
counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
[1] This is an
application for maintenance pending divorce. Some of the claims are
not disputed at all, whilst in some the claims
remain in dispute, but
the respondent made tenders. For the purposes of this judgment, I
will deal only with the disputed claims.
I record my appreciation for
the effort put in by the parties and their legal representatives to
narrow the issues and move closer
to resolution of the disputes. The
applicant’s claim ran 4 pages. The issues that remain are only
four. These are the cash
payable per month. The applicant sought R73
250-00 per month and the respondent offered R27 500-00. The
second is the payment
of expenses in respect of rental at R30 000-00.
The respondent tendered that the applicant continues to reside free
of charge at
the parties’ common home or alternatively at a
house in a security estate or in the family’s holiday home. The
third
is the contribution towards costs at R450 000-00. The
respondent tendered R100 000-00. The third is the costs of the
application.
[2] The standard of
living of the parties was not in dispute. The means of the respondent
was also not an issue. The case only required
an assessment of the
applicant’s needs. The nature and content of the expenses was
also not substantially in dispute, save
for arts and crafts. It is
the scope and extent of the expenses that in the main course was
disputed. The respondent preferred
to pay for water and electricity,
rent, multichoice, internet, cellphone, tv licence, and gym
membership directly to the providers.
For that reason, in his
calculations, the amounts for these expenses should not be added to
the total to assess the applicant’s
need. The respondent did
not dispute the amounts claimed for lunches including with friends,
clothing, clothing including shoes
and accessories and for golf and
gym, entertainment and eating out, presents, books and stationery,
gold membership and games,
ballet, personal care, toiletries and
beauty products. There were also expenses for which the respondent
paid or was prepared to
pay for and did not take issue with the
amounts claimed and these were groceries, cleaning materials,
domestic worker, gardener,
parking, appliances and repairs, pets,
arts and crafts and over the counter purchases. I was able to trace
only two items on general
monthly expenses where the parties are very
far apart. On groceries the applicant claims R15 000, and the
respondent offered R7500.
On fuel the applicant claimed R4500, and
the respondent offered R1500.
[3] During the
subsistence of the marriage the respondent provided the applicant
with an amount of R25 000 monthly maintenance,
and when necessary,
the applicant made additional grocery purchases through Sixty Sixty
which the respondent paid. In addition,
the respondent paid for motor
vehicle insurance, medical expenses, domestic worker and gardener
services including refuse removal,
koi and pond services, rates and
taxes, water and electricity, car related expenses, multichoice,
internet, tv licence, ballet,
gym membership, fuel, parking,
appliance and repairs, golf membership including games. It seems that
in the main these expenses
were paid directly by the respondent to
the service providers, or through a credit card provided to the
applicant. The respondent
also provided accommodation.
[4] The applicant should
be able to maintain an acceptable standard of living to which she was
accustomed to as the marital standard
of living, pending the divorce.
The applicant was accustomed to the respondent making direct payments
to service providers for
some expenses and providing a cash amount
for the other monthly expenses. There is therefore nothing untoward,
on the facts, with
the respondent making the payment for rental
directly to the service providers. In my view, the amounts claimed by
the applicant
for the rent, fuel and groceries are reasonable. There
is nothing wrong with the respondent continuing to pay for the other
expenses
for which he paid and those he also tendered to pay for. It
will be up to the respondent to provide a credit card to the
applicant
as he previously did, or to elect to directly pay these
expenses. What matters is that he pays for the expenses. I am not
inclined
to the view that the applicant’s life, to which she
was accustomed, should be limited or in some respects even come to a
halt simply because a divorce is pending. It is not the moral watch
or economic sense of an individual judge, but the need, means
and
standard of living of the parties that should determine whether a
holiday, including overseas holidays, is manifest luxury
or something
that the parties were accustomed to during their marriage. I am
unable to agree with the views expressed in
S v S
(7392)
[2010] ZAWCHC 162
(24 June 2010) and
AL v LG
(9207/2020)
[2020] ZAWCHC 83
(25 August 2020) to the extent that they sought to
limit provision for holidays as a special item of expenditure as
unwarranted
in rule 43 applications. I don’t think the interim
nature of a rule 43 application warrants such serious inroads into an
applicant’s maintenance claim. Affluence and extravagance are
and should remain distinct including in rule 43 application.
[5] The applicant was 70
years old and had not worked for the past 20 years. Even when she was
earning an income, she was not required
to make any contribution to
the expenses of the household. She had always been financially
dependent on the respondent who took
care of her financially at an
affluent standard of living. She did not have an income and did not
own sufficient assets to utilize
towards her maintenance and costs of
the divorce action. She held a Capitec fixed term savings account
with R32 000-00 and had
R225 764-51 in a savings account which she
was from a small inheritance and pension payouts. The applicant
claimed R450 000-00
for legal costs and the respondent tendered R100
000-00. There was a difference of R350 000-00. Where the respondent
was a person
of means, it was not expected of the applicant to
utilize her meagre assets to fund litigation. The respondent was
expected to
support her fully including in relation to expenses
necessary to put her case before a court [
Glazer v Glazer
1959
(3) SA 928
(W) at 931 G-H]. The respondent’s case was that the
case should be mediated and that there was no need for counsel to be
involved. In his view there was no need for a forensic accountant to
be appointed and there was no need for interlocutory issues
and that
the applicant had inflated her contribution claim. The applicant’s
case was that the respondent did not provide
her with full insight
into his financial affairs. After a subpoena was issued and the
accounts obtained, it appears that the respondent’s
financial
affairs were inextricably linked to that of the Carpe Diem Trust and
various entities owned by the Trust. The applicant
was advised that
it would be necessary to appoint a forensic accountant to conduct a
preliminary investigation into the respondent’s
resources,
access to funds and assets and liabilities. The applicant’s
stance was that mediation was premature. She declined
the
respondent’s invitations to mediation only as a result of not
having sufficient financial information in order to properly
consider
any settlement proposals made by the respondent. The proposals made
thus far had been wholly insufficient to ensure that
the applicant
would be cared for until her death, on a reasonable level. She was
amenable to mediation only once full financial
discovery was made.
The applicant owed her attorneys R112 389-50 for fees and
disbursements. A necessary forensic investigation
came at a cost of
R37 500-00. The costs to be incurred in the action has a total amount
required at R467 979-50.
[6] I am inclined to the
view that in matrimonial matters, the first push should be towards
readiness to an effective mediation
of the dispute. The proper
resolution of the disagreement around the true financial position of
the respondent will be informed
by a forensic investigation. It is
only an expert accountant who may assist the parties resolve the
complexity of the relationship
between the respondent, the Trust and
its related entities. The costs for a forensic accountant are
reasonable. The amount owed
to the attorneys is allowed. The
applicant will still require advise and where needs be counsel in
perusal, consideration of the
facts and the necessarily required
route towards resolution of the divorce. I am persuaded that the
amount of R250 000-00 as a
contribution to costs, at this stage, is
reasonable. For these reasons I make the following order:
1.
Respondent is directed to maintain the Applicant
pendente lite
as follows:
1.1
By paying a cash maintenance amount of R 30 000-00
to the Applicant,
the first such payment to be made within 7 calendar days of this
order and thereafter monthly in advance on or
before the first day of
every month, such payment to be made by way of electronic bank
transfer to reflect in the Applicant’s
bank account as
nominated by her from time to time on the first day of each month,
free of deduction or set-off;
1.2
By continuing to pay the Applicant’s medical
aid premiums and
by paying her reasonable medical costs not covered by the medical
aid, including all of the reasonable medical
expenses incurred in
private healthcare, such costs to include all reasonable medical,
dental, pharmaceuticals (including levies),
surgical, hospital,
orthodontic and ophthalmic (including spectacles and/or contact
lenses), physiotherapeutic, psychotherapeutic,
occupational
therapeutic, homeopathic, chiropractic and further medical expenses
not covered by her medical aid. The Respondent
shall reimburse
the Applicant for all expenses referred to above in respect of which
she has made payment, or shall make payment
directly to the service
providers, as the case may be, within 7 calendar days of the
Applicant providing the Respondent with proof
of payment and/or the
relevant invoice;
1.3
By continuing to provide the Applicant with the
motor vehicle
currently in her possession, free of consideration and further by
paying all reasonable expenses in respect thereof
including its
instalments (if applicable), insurance premiums, its reasonable
services and repairs (in the event of it not being
covered by a motor
plan), its yearly vehicle license fee and the cost of replacement of
tyres when required;
1.4
In the event of the Applicant having to rent a
property
pendente
lite,
by:
1.4.1
paying the monthly rental in respect of a property of the
Applicant’s
choice to the Applicant or to the rental agent or lessor, to a
maximum amount of R 30 000,00 per month;
1.4.2
entering into a lease agreement in respect of such property
in the
event of the Applicant failing to qualify to do so herself;
1.4.3
paying a once off deposit to a maximum of two months rental,
repayable to the Respondent upon cancellation of the lease agreement;
and
1.4.4
paying the applicant’s reasonable relocation costs.
1.5
By providing the Applicant with the use
pendente lite,
of the
items of furniture listed in annexure “
LZ3”
to the
Applicant’s Founding Affidavit.
1.6
By paying the following expenses of the applicant:
1.6.1
water and electricity
1.6.2
fuel to applicant’s vehicle to a maximum of R4500 litres
per
month
1.6.3
multichoice, internet, tv licence, gym membership, reasonable
cellphone costs and golf membership
1.6.4
reasonable top-up to groceries and necessary domestic consumables
reasonably required and purchased from Checkers via Sixty Sixty
delivery service
1.6.5
domestic worker
1.6.6
gardener
2.
Respondent is directed to make an initial contribution to the
Applicant’s costs in the divorce action in an amount of R 250
000,00, which amount shall be paid into the Applicant’s
attorney of record’s trust account, within 7 calendar days of
this order, free of deduction or set-off;
3.
Respondent shall pay the costs of this Rule 43 Application as
taxed
or agreed.
DM THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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