Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 92South Africa
T.G v B.J.G (A06/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 92 (23 March 2023)
Headnotes
the first two points in limine and found that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## T.G v B.J.G (A06/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 92 (23 March 2023)
T.G v B.J.G (A06/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 92 (23 March 2023)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:
A06/2023
Hermanus Magistrates’
Court Case No:32608MAI000437
In
the matter between:
T[…]
G[…]
Appellant
and
B[…]
J[…] G[…]
Respondent
(Electronically
delivered on 23 March 2023)
JUDGMENT
- This
is an appeal against the rulings made by the magistrate sitting in
the maintenance court for the district of Hermanus on
06 June 2022.
The parties are in the midst of an application brought by the
respondent to discharge him from his maintenance
obligation. The
court a quo decided to reject the affidavit filed by the appellant
in her answering affidavit, opposing
the respondent’s
application to be discharged from paying maintenance to their adult
dependent child. Accordingly, the
appellant approached this court
for an order in the following terms:
This
is an appeal against the rulings made by the magistrate sitting in
the maintenance court for the district of Hermanus on
06 June 2022.
The parties are in the midst of an application brought by the
respondent to discharge him from his maintenance
obligation. The
court a quo decided to reject the affidavit filed by the appellant
in her answering affidavit, opposing
the respondent’s
application to be discharged from paying maintenance to their adult
dependent child. Accordingly, the
appellant approached this court
for an order in the following terms:
1.1
Condonation for the late filing of the
appeal.
1.2
This court to set aside the ruling made by
the court a quo on 6 June 2022 and 20 January 2023 respectively.
1.3
This court to uphold this appeal with
costs.
2.
The
appellant first seeks condonation for the late noting and filing of
the appeal. The appellant cited administrative delays and
various
mis-happenings as the reasons for the delay. The respondent opposed
the condonation application. Respondent made an issue
and raised a
question whether this court should entertain this appeal at this
stage because the maintenance enquiry in the magistrates’
court
is still pending and these proceedings are sui generis in nature.
It was astonishing to hear counsel for the respondent
arguing that
this appeal must be dismissed and considered to be pre-mature. This
court to order that the appellant must return
to the maintenance
court to seek condonation and then file another appeal. Appellant’s
counsel argued that this court has
inherent jurisdiction and the
authority to hear all three grounds of appeal. He went further to
argue how the appellant has been
frustrated in her endeavour to
defend the application for the discharge of the respondent from his
maintenance obligation. Further,
that this court should consider it
to be in the interest of justice to deal with this appeal.
3.
Having
considered the papers and appreciated the systematic (administrative)
processes that the appellant went through to execute
this appeal
which I am not going to delve into as it appears on record. This
appeal is now before this court and cannot be ignored;
the
respondent’s attitude lacks credence.
I
am satisfied that the appellant has shown good cause for condonation.
Accordingly, the application for condonation is granted.
Background
history
4.
The
appellant and the respondent were married and a girl child, now a
major was born out of that marriage relationship. However,
on 27
October 2004 this court ordered the dissolution of the bonds of the
marriage that existed between the appellant and the respondent.
Included in the divorce order was a settlement agreement that was
made an order of court. Relevant to this case is clause 2 of
the
consent paper whereby the respondent consented to pay R2 350.00 per
month to maintain their daughter. The respondent, further
agreed to
continue with maintaining their daughter until she either turns 21 or
is self-supporting, whichever comes first. The
respondent agreed to
continue supporting their daughter beyond the age of 21 if she is
studying in a tertiary institution/ higher
education.
5.
It is also not in dispute that
sometime in February 2021 the respondent brought an application at
the Hermanus Maintenance Court
seeking a discharge from the
obligations of the maintenance order. The main reason for bringing
such an application by the respondent
is because their daughter
attained the age of majority and that she is allegedly capable of
maintaining herself or at least finding
alternative means to be
self-supporting.
6.
The appellant is opposing the application
by the respondent to discharge himself from maintaining their
daughter. However, before
that application was heard, the respondent
raised the following three points
in
limine
:
6.1
The appellant’s opposing affidavit
does not meet the legal requirements of an affidavit as prescribed in
regulation 3 of the
Justices of the Peace and Commissioners of Oaths
Act 16 of 1963 as amended, in that the affidavit was not signed
before a commissioner
of oaths because the commissioner referred to
the appellant as a “he” whereas it’s a “she”.
6.2
Their child, now a major, should be the one
applying for maintenance or opposing the application for discharge
filed by the respondent.
Therefore, the appellant lacks jurisdiction
to oppose the respondent’s application to discharge him from
paying maintenance.
6.3
The third and the last point
in
limine
is
for this court to set aside the costs order dated 20 January 2023 to
be borne by the appellant. The court ordered that the costs
on an
attorney and own client scale.
7.
The court
a
quo
upheld the first two points
in
limine
and found that:
7.1
The answering affidavit was found to
be defective and therefore was rejected.
7.2
The appellant lacks
locu
standi
to oppose the respondent’s
application to be discharged from his maintenance obligation. The
court
a quo
found that their daughter has attained majority, she should be in a
position to defend the application. The court
a
quo
decided further, that their
daughter should file a fresh maintenance application and execute it
herself.
7.3
The order as to costs was granted by
another court sitting on a different day in the same maintenance
matter.
GROUNDS
FOR APPEAL
8.
The
court
a quo
erred in finding that the appellant’s answering affidavit was
defective. The appellant argues that the results of this finding
by
the court a quo will render inadmissible the evidence contained in
that answering affidavit. The appellant contends that the
refusal by
court of the answering affidavit will deprive her of an opportunity
to defend the respondent’s application to
be discharged from
maintenance. The appellant supports her argument by submitting that
her answering affidavit does refer to her
as “a well-known
female” and “an adult female”. The appellant
contends that it is apparent from the affidavit
itself that when the
appellant argued that the use of a wrong pronoun could only be an
error and not an indication that she was
not before the Commissioner
of Oaths during the commissioning of the answering affidavit.
9.
The
court
a quo
erred in finding that the appellant has no
locu
standi
to oppose the respondent’s
application to be discharged from maintaining their daughter. This,
the appellant argued that
she is cited as a party in the respondent’s
application for discharge. Her exclusion as an interested party from
the application
for discharge will be prejudicial to her. The
appellant’s interest is to be a party in the proceedings.
Appellant submitted
that if she is excluded from the proceedings and
judgment is granted in favour of the respondent, consequently she
will be responsible
for the maintenance of their dependant daughter.
The appellant contends that the court’s ruling is in violation
of section
34 of the Constitution to have her dispute resolved before
the court, applying law in a fair public hearing.
10.
Arguing the appellant’s first point
in limine
,
the respondents submitted that it is pointless, there was no need no
need for the answering affidavit in any event. Counsel for
the
respondent makes the above submission knowing very well that the
respondent’s case was initiated by an affidavit and
the court
accepted same. Respondent argued that the rejection by the court
a
quo
of the appellant’s answering
affidavit will not prejudice the appellant on the basis that the
court a quo will afford her
an opportunity to state her case by
testifying orally under oath in an open court in terms of section 10
(2) of the Act.
11.
The respondent alleges that the court did not make
a finding that the appellant lacks
locu
standi
. Counsel for the respondent
persisted with the argument that these are sui generis proceedings,
appellant can attend court as a
witness. Respondent ‘s counsel
further argued that the court
a quo
did not exclude the appellant, it only advised that their daughter
and not her should be opposing the discharge application and
that
she, (the daughter) should initiate her own maintenance application.
12.
The respondent opposed the third ground of appeal
as being improper before this court. He alleges that the magistrate
who granted
the costs order was not properly served with the notice
to appeal. Respondent alleges, further, that the court has no
jurisdiction
to hear an appeal arising from a decision by a different
magistrate. Counsel for the respondent argued that this court’s
jurisdiction does permit this court to interfere with the costs
order. Arguing in defence of this point in limine, the appellant
submitted that this costs order was wrong, that the order should have
been left for later determination pending the finalisation
of the
appeal application. Appellant argued that it will be in the interest
of justice for this court to deal with the issue of
costs. If this
court dismisses the issue of costs, the appellant will be prejudiced,
she is a single mother who is struggling to
raise her major dependant
daughter and granddaughter. Appellant’s counsel contended that
the appellant served the relevant
magistrate with the notice to
appeal as well as the request for reasons. However, due to
unreasonable lapse of time waiting for
the magistrate’s
reasons, the appellant decided to launch this appeal without the
reasons and/or response from the magistrate.
LAW
AND ANALYSIS
13.
The papers in this matter were unnecessarily
voluminous and covered a range of issues that were not immediately
relevant to the
prosecution of the appeal. In this judgment I set out
only those facts that I consider relevant to the determination of the
appeal
application. Also, for the reasons that will become clear
later on, I do not deal with all the details dealt with by the
appellant.
14.
Regulation 4 (1) provides that: “Below the
deponent’s signature or mark, the commissioner of oaths shall
certify that
the deponent has acknowledged that he knows and
understands the contents of the declaration and he shall state the
manner, place
and date of taking the declaration”. The
commissioner of oaths identified the deponent as a “he”
as opposed to
a “she” as she is female. As a result of
this error, the respondent raised an objection that the affidavit is
defective
and the court a quo agreed with the respondent. The
provisions of regulation 4 (1) are directory and not peremptory. This
means
therefore, that failure to comply with them can be condoned at
the discretion of the court where it is clear from other indications
that an oath was indeed administered. When one looks at the
appellant’s answering affidavit where the deponent states that
“she is a well-known” female and “an adult female”,
it is evident that the deponent is a female. Except
for the erroneous
use of the pronoun “he” instead of “she” by
the commissioner of oaths, there is no other
evidence presented to
suggest that the deponent was not before the commissioner when the
oath was administered. I have looked at
the entire answering
affidavit and considered its substance and the intention or reasons
for the deponent to want it to form part
of record in the court
a
quo (application for discharge)
. I
agree with the appellant when she says that if it is rejected it will
prejudice her and infringe her right to a fair trial or
enquiry as is
the case in this instance. It is form over substance.
15.
I am satisfied that the error does not render the
plaintiff’s affidavit fatally defective in the sense that the
court would
be unable to give effect to the presumption of regularity
for the purposes of assuming that the oath was sworn to and signed by
the deponent in the presence of the commissioner of oaths. Context
and content are very important when considering this issue.
The
appellant is cited as a party to the respondent’s application
for discharge. Until the maintenance court makes a finding
that their
daughter is now a self-supporting major and discharges her from the
initial maintenance proceeding, she remains an interested
party in
the initial maintenance proceedings. The defect is condoned and not
to be raised as an issue in the enquiry.
16.
I now turn to the second point
in
limine
, that the appellant lacks
locu
standi
to prosecute their daughter’s
maintenance cases (original maintenance case and the respondent’s
discharge application).
The respondent denies that the court a quo
upheld this point
in limine.
In his contention, counsel for the respondent equates the appellant’s
attendance during court appearances as being a party
with active
participation. When the matter was postponed, the court a quo did not
indicate the role of the appellant on the next
appearance. The
respondent argued that she would have been a witness, which
submission is an assumption. It is an undisputed fact
that a witness
and a party in the proceedings have a different role and are affected
differently by the consequential results of
the proceedings.
17.
The respondent denies that the appellant has
been excluded from participating as a party in the respondent’s
application in
the court a quo. It bases this argument on the court a
quo’s recording of appearance where the appellant was warned to
appear
again on 20 July 2022. To illustrate this fact, the court
a
quo
went further to say that the mother
can only deal with arrears in the initial maintenance file as if she
does not have substantial
interest in the matter.
18.
On page 113 at 16 of the judgment, the court a quo
held that “Therefore, the points
in-limine
as it has been raised by Mr van Vuuren (respondent’s attorney),
the court does consider such in his favour and this application
will
need to be dealt with by the child who now has since become a major”.
The effect of that finding is to exclude her from
these proceedings
as a party. She needed to participate as a party with substantial
interest.
19.
I accept that the court has a discretion, however,
I do not agree with the court’s exercise of its discretion when
it upheld
this point
in limine
.
The court
a quo
erred in the exercise of it discretion in the following:
19.1
The appellant is a single mother, who lives
with their daughter making her a primary care giver.
19.2
The allegation that their daughter is an
independent adult still needs to be investigated, until then, she is
now a dependant major
who has a child and is unemployed.
20.
Section 6 (1) (b) of the Maintenance Act
provides for the substitution or discharge of an existing order on
the basis that “good
cause exists to do so”
21.
In my view, the court should have held an
enquiry to establish the “good cause” before concluding
that the appellant
does not have
locu
standi
to prosecute the maintenance
application on behalf of her daughter. A fact finding mission by the
court assisted by the maintenance
investigator was necessary under
the circumstances. The fact that she has attained the majority age is
not in itself sufficient
without evidence of self-dependence, the
court needs to give regard to the circumstances. The court a quo
failed to take into account
that the now major child resides with the
appellant. As correctly pointed out by the appellant, if she is not
given an opportunity
to be a party to the maintenance application,
she will be prejudiced: The court a quo failed to recognise that her
non-participation
infringes her Constitutional right to have her
dispute resolved by the application of law decided in a fair public
hearing before
the court. I accept that the child is now a major, but
could this be a justification to deprive the appellant participation
in
the maintenance proceedings when she is cited as a party?
Certainly not. Moreover, at the time of ruling on the point
in
limine
, the court had not established
if the child is not a major that is still dependant on her parents
for support or not. It is trite
law that legal proceedings are
initiated against a party. It is my view that the removal of the
appellant form the application
brought by the respondent rendered the
proceedings invalid because the appellant was the only respondent
cited in the respondent’s
application. Further, their daughter
was not joined as an interested party to the application for
discharge. Having considered
everything, I am convinced that the
appellant has satisfactory established the need to participate as an
interested party in both
maintenance applications.
22.
I disagree with the respondent’s
submission that this court does lacks jurisdiction to hear the third
point
in limine
for the following reason; firstly, we are dealing with a single
mother who is supporting her unemployed, adult dependent child
and a
grandchild; it is apparent from the record that she struggled to
secure a legal representative to assist her with this matter.
She
unsuccessfully applied for Legal-Aid. It was undisputed that only
through her family’s intervention that she was able
to
prosecute this appeal. The above struggles are an indication of
someone who is financial challenged to pursue justice, I therefore,
I
agree with the appellant’s submission that it will not be in
the interest of justice for this court to dismiss this point
in-limine
.
In
Leibowitz and Others v Schwartz and
Others
1974 (2) SA 661
it was held that
“The Court has inherent powers to grant relief where an
instance upon exact compliance with a rule of Court
would result in
substantial injustice to one of the parties” This inherent
authority of the superior courts was later endorsed
by the SCA in
Toubie v S 2012 4 ALSA 290 (SCA)
where it was stated that “The intention is for a Court of
Appeal to dispense justice. An appeal court cannot close its eyes
to
a patent injustice simply because the injustice is not a subject of
appeal”. The refusal to by this court to hear the
issue of
costs will amount to miscarriage of justice.
23.
Accordingly, the respondent’s
argument that this court lacks jurisdiction has no merit and is
untenable. There are no reasons
advanced by the respondent to justify
the granting of this punitive costs order. In my view, the costs
order is flawed, besides
the fact that there are no reasons provided,
the magistrate does not have the jurisdiction to order “attorney
and own client
costs” as it was never sought. The only remedy
to correct this costs order was for the appellant to appeal and I
find it
just for this court to deal with the appeal and correct costs
order which was wrongly granted.
24.
Therefore, I propose the following order:
24.1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
24.2
The court a quo’s order is set aside
with the following:
(i)
The affidavit is proper before court
(ii)
The court a quo’s ruling that the
appellant has no
locu standi
is set aside. She is re-entered into the maintenance proceedings
(original maintenance and the discharge application) to participate
as a party.
(iii)
Punitive costs are set aside and
replaced with “no order as to costs”.
24.3
The matter is remitted back to the court a
quo and directed:
(i)
to investigate the allegations of the major
child’s dependence or independence.
(ii)
to hold an enquiry to establish “good
cause” and determine the respondent’s application for a
discharge from his
maintenance obligation.
NYATI AJ
I agree; it is so
ordered
BAARTMAN J
Counsel
for Appellant:
Adv
T J Nel
Attorneys
for Appellant:
Visser
& Associates, Cape Town
Counsel
for Respondent:
Adv
M Botha
Attorneys
for Respondent:
MacGregor
Stanford Kruger Inc, Cape Town
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