Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 59South Africa
B.R v D.R (14189/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 59 (17 March 2023)
Headnotes
her in a chokehold as a result for which she obtained a protection order against him. His last assault occurred on 6 March 2022 when he head-butted her in the face which forced her to flee their home in the middle of the night. According to the particulars of claim, in reliance of the forfeiture order, the Defendant damaged the property by breaking objects, throwing bricks through glass doors, and cutting the security gate with a grinder to gain access to her. She says that she has used the money that she inherited to fund the legal costs in the divorce action, the domestic violence proceedings and now these
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## B.R v D.R (14189/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 59 (17 March 2023)
B.R v D.R (14189/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 59 (17 March 2023)
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sino date 17 March 2023
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Certain
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FLYNOTES:
RULE 43 AND INTERIM MAINTENANCE
FAMILY
– Divorce – Interim maintenance – Not meant to
provide an interim meal ticket to a person who quite
clearly at
the trial will not be able to establish a right to maintenance –
Defendant not volunteering information
as to steps taken to
supplement his income – Application seeking interim
maintenance and contribution to legal costs
dismissed –
Uniform Rule 43.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
CASE
NUMBER: 14189/2022
In
the matter between:
B[...] A[...]
R[...]
APPLICANT
And
D[...]
G[...] R[...]
RESPONDENT
RULE
43 JUDGMENT 17 MARCH 2023
KUSEVITSKY, J:
[1]
This is an opposed Rule 43 application. The Applicant in these
proceedings is the
Defendant in the divorce action. I will for sake
of convenience, refer to the parties as cited in the pending divorce
action.
[2]
The Defendant seeks interim maintenance relief from the Plaintiff in
the amount of
R 21,000.00. He also seeks an initial contribution to
his legal costs in the amount of R 200 000.00.
A
general observation
[3]
It is common cause the Rule 43 proceedings are interim in nature
pending the resolution
of the main divorce action. It is also common
cause that the genesis of the rule emanated from the position that a
claimant, usually
the woman, found themselves him – sometimes
destitute - when litigating against their spouse, who were often in a
stronger,
financial position than themselves in divorce proceedings.
In recent times, and if the court roll is anything to go by,
applications
for interim maintenance have morphed into unrealistic,
super-inflated claims by applicants, using the rule as a measure or
yardstick
to gain advantage in the main action. In certain instances,
substantial interim maintenance has been awarded to applicants which
has had, in some instances, the un-intended consequence of claimant’s
not being inclined to finalise the main divorce action.
In my view,
the basic tenets of the rule have been forgotten and is more often
than not, abused.
[4]
In
Taute
v Taute
1974
(2) SA 675
(E), the court stated that there is no general principle
upon which an application under Rule 43 can or must be based. Each
case
must depend on its own particular facts.
Taute
also reiterated that a claimant for maintenance
pendente
lite
was not entitled, as of right, and without more, to maintenance
sufficient to keep him or her in the same lifestyle as that enjoyed
during the marriage. Hart AJ stated thus
[1]
:
‘
The
applicant spouse (who is normally the wife) is entitled to reasonable
maintenance pendente lite dependent upon the marital standard
of
living of the parties, her actual and reasonable requirements and the
capacity of her husband to meet such requirements which
are normally
met from income although in some circumstances inroads on capital may
be justified’
.
[5]
Taute
also referred to LUDORF, J. in the case of
Levin v
Levin and Another
1962 (3) SA 330
(W) at p 331D, who said the
following:
“
To
decide the issues I am compelled to draw inferences and to look to
the probabilities as they emerge from the papers. Obviously
my
findings are in no way binding on the trial Court and indeed after
hearing the evidence it may emerge that some or all of the
inferences
I have drawn are wrong. On this basis I now turn to the issues as
they emerge from the papers.”
[2]
[6]
In my view, this case is one of the matters where I am compelled to
draw inferences
based on the papers: The parties were married to each
other on 3 August 2018. No children were born of the marriage. The
Plaintiff
filed for divorce during April 2021. During the hearing of
the matter, it was submitted by counsel for the Defendant that this
court does not have to take into account the averments made in
Plaintiff’s summons regarding the reasons for the breakdown
of
the marriage. Counsel for Plaintiff however argued that regard ought
to be had thereto since the Plaintiff is claiming a forfeiture
order
based on the conduct of the Defendant.
[7]
Bearing in mind that these are merely interim proceedings and that
these allegations
would ultimately be ventilated in the normal course
during the trial, I am mindful of the
dicta
in
Levin
supra
and am of the view that the allegations raised by the
Plaintiff cannot simply be ignored in these proceedings. I am also of
the
view that a potential forfeiture claim by a party against whom
interim maintenance is being sought is a factor that could militate
against, or at the very least mitigate, the granting of an interim
maintenance order.
[8]
In
casu
, in the application, the Defendant states that he is
an adult handyman and lives in a ‘
wendy house’
on
a farm in O[...], Rooi Els, Western Cape. He states that he is unable
to support himself. The Plaintiff however is able to support
him
since she is the owner of a guesthouse and can support him from the
income that she receives by virtue of the income that she
generates
from the guesthouse. He says that Plaintiff resides in a four-bedroom
double-story guest house which is fully paid for.
He lived there too
until he was ejected from the matrimonial home. He says that he has
not generated a fixed income and has earned
R 6 983.37 per month over
the last 14 months. According to his affidavit, the couple enjoyed
holidays and week-ends away together,
all of which was paid for by
Plaintiff. Other expenses paid for by the Plaintiff was dining at
restaurants, day-spas and upgrades
to the former common home. The
Defendant states that he has always been employed in the informal
sector as a handyman and has no
assets of value.
[9]
The Plaintiff in opposition to this application states that the use
of the word ‘
wendy house’
is misleading. The
dwelling in which Defendant currently occupies is a fully equipped
and furnished wooden eco-cabin outside of
Betty Bay, known as the
H[...] Cottage. They both lived there from November 2021 until 6
March 2022, when she fled the common home
in fear of her life. She
states that the Defendant is not ‘
only’
a
handyman. When she met him, he operated a business which provided
inter alia
various services such as garden maintenance, pool
cleaning, painting, general renovation and motor repairs. She also
states that
before their separation, he was employed to work as an
estate agent. She argues that nothing prevents him from continuing to
earn
an income and providing for his own maintenance and payment of
his own legal fees from these various sources.
[10]
She further states that she is 52 years old with no means to support
herself other than the rental
income which she receives from the
two-bedroom self-catering unit on the top floor of her home. She also
lives off an investment
she inherited from her late husband. Other
than that, she has no other funds or assets with which to liquidate
to support herself,
let alone the Defendant.
[11]
In her opposing affidavit, she further states that the Defendant was
not unlawfully ejected from
the common home. She explains that
less than three months after the couple married, the Defendant
assaulted her for the first
time, dislocating her right-hand middle
finger by bending it over backwards. Two months later, he violently
smashed his fist through
a window after she locked herself in the
home after he had allegedly returned home drunk and abusive. Four
months later he violently
threw her against a door and held her in a
chokehold as a result for which she obtained a protection order
against him. His last
assault occurred on 6 March 2022 when he
head-butted her in the face which forced her to flee their home in
the middle of the night.
According to the particulars of claim, in
reliance of the forfeiture order, the Defendant damaged the property
by breaking objects,
throwing bricks through glass doors, and cutting
the security gate with a grinder to gain access to her. She says that
she has
used the money that she inherited to fund the legal costs in
the divorce action, the domestic violence proceedings and now these
rule 43 proceedings. She is of the view that by the time these
proceedings are finalised, all of that money would have been
depleted.
She is of the view that the Defendant has a substantial
customer base in the area; he is a strong and healthy 32 year-old man
able
to generate his own income; his parents are wealthy individuals
and they too can assist him with his legal fees.
[12]
In the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim, she claims further
that the Defendant stopped
working and refused to commence his career
as a full-time handyman. When she met him, he conducted his business
with a Bantum
bakkie
worth R 30 000.00. Now, he contends that
she has to maintain the Ford Ranger
bakkie
that she bought
him.
[13]
The main tenor of the Defendant’s application is that the
Plaintiff has more assets than
him; she has the capacity to earn more
income than him; she paid for everything and still enjoys a lifestyle
such as massages and
dining out. He says that she owes him a
contribution in line with the expenses which they incurred as a
family. In
Strauss
v Strauss
1974 (3) AD, the court held that it was not enough to merely state
that a claimant is entitled to more maintenance just because
their
spouse is able to afford same.
[3]
A claimant is also not entitled, as of right, to enjoy in the same
standard of living and lifestyle as their spouse. (
at
83D
).
In
casu
,
the Defendant has failed to say how he managed to maintain himself
for ten months since the parties’ separation. The Defendant
has
also failed to take this court into his confidence and volunteer
information as to what steps he has taken to supplement his
own
income. On Plaintiff’s version, he intentionally omitted to
state that he was working at an estate agency. As in
Strauss
(at 83D-E), the Defendant has failed to provide a cogent explanation
as to why his maintenance cannot be supplemented by his own
income.
On a conspectus of this application, I can find no grounds which
would entitle the Defendant to maintenance
pendente
lite
.
Furthermore, there is nothing before me on the papers which would
persuade me that the Defendant is utterly incapable of supporting
himself.
[14]
With regard to the Defendant’s claim of R 200 000 for a
contribution to costs, the Defendant
submits that the paramount
consideration is that a claimant must be placed in a financial
position adequately to place his case
before the court, taking into
account the circumstances of the case, the financial position of the
parties and the particular issues
involved in the pending
litigation.
[4]
The Defendant submits that the court in rule 43 proceedings may
direct payment of legal costs that a party has already
incurred. In my view, such an approach would be manifestly unjust,
given the particular allegations raised on the papers of serious
domestic violence abuse, and where it is the Plaintiff that has had
to incur legal expenses in order to protect her life and her
rights.
The Defendant also claims that he has a fair and reasonable prospect
of success with his claim, and that this justifies
his entitlement to
interim maintenance and costs. I am not persuaded by this argument.
In my view, a fair and reasonable prospect
of success as a general
contention and as factor entitling a party, as of right, to interim
maintenance is misguided. In my view,
the probabilities lay more in
favour of the Defendant having a reasonable prospect of success in
her forfeiture claim, which is
a factor that I am taking into
consideration to refuse a contribution of costs in this instance.
Even if my approach is strong
on this score, for the reasons advanced
above, I am of the view that the Defendant has not persuaded me that
a contribution to
costs is justified in this instance. As stated in
Nilsson
v
Nilsson
1984 (2) SA 294
(C) at 295F, a rule 43 order is not meant to provide
an interim meal ticket to a person who quite clearly at the trial
will not
be able to establish a right to maintenance. It would also
be manifestly unfair to expect the Plaintiff to fund the Defendant’s
legal fees from the investment that she receives from her late
husband’s inheritance.
[15]
For all of the reasons, I make the following order:
ORDER
- The
application is dismissed with costs.
The
application is dismissed with costs.
D.S. KUSEVITSKY
JUDGE
OF THE WESTERN CAPE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCE
FOR APPLICANT
ADV. HERNA BEVISS-CHALINOR
APPEARANCE
FOR RESPONDENT
ADV. THELMA-ANN
PRATT
[1]
Taute
at 676D-E;
C
v N
,
Case No. 16742/2021 (WCC) 9 November 2021 at para 14
[2]
at
676C-D
[3]
Strauss
at 83C
[4]
Van
Rippen v Van Rippen
1949 (4) SA 634
(C) at 639-640.
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