Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 210South Africa
I.N.P v N.P (9117/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 210 (28 July 2023)
Headnotes
jointly by the parties or in the applicant’s name, to accounts under her control. 3. The applicant further sought an interdict prohibiting both parties
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAWCHC 210
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## I.N.P v N.P (9117/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 210 (28 July 2023)
I.N.P v N.P (9117/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 210 (28 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2023_210.html
sino date 28 July 2023
#
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Jurisdiction
–
Wife now residing in Portugal and
a peregrinus – Divorce proceedings instituted by her in the
High Court – Husband
seeking an interdict aimed at overseas
bank accounts – Court having jurisdiction to grant a decree
of divorce will
not, in terms of that jurisdiction alone,
necessarily be competent to deal with other claims between the
parties –
Court not having jurisdiction to grant the relief
sought by the applicant –
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
s
21(1)
–
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
section 2(1).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 9117/2023
In
the matter between:
I[…]
N[…]
P[…]
Applicant
and
N[…]
P[…] (born
O[…])
Defendant
REASONS DELIVERED ON 28
JULY 2023
(delivered electronically
via email)
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This application was brought on an urgent basis. After
hearing
argument, I dismissed the application on the ground that the Court
lacked the jurisdiction to determine the matter.
These are the
decisions the decision.
The
relief sought
2.
The applicant sought a rule
nisi
, to operate as an interim
interdict pending the return day, directing the respondent to return
certain fund to overseas bank accounts.
The funds, so the
applicant stated, were transferred by the respondent from bank
accounts either held jointly by the parties or
in the applicant’s
name, to accounts under her control.
3.
The applicant further sought an interdict prohibiting both parties
from accessing the funds in the joint bank accounts without the other
party’s prior written consent or a court order.
Finally,
he sought an interdict prohibiting the respondent from incurring any
expenses in respect of the development of a property
situated in
Portugal, which property is registered in both parties’ names,
without the applicant’s prior written consent.
4.
At the
outset of argument the applicant’s counsel submitted that what
was, in fact, sought in relation to the return of the
funds was a
mandament
van spolie
.
This was the approach that had been taken in the replying affidavit.
Although this is not entirely clear from the
founding papers it makes
little difference, as the parties were agreed that what was sought
amounted to final interdictory relief
on motion,
[1]
and that
Plascon
Evans
[2]
was applicable. Insofar as there as disputes of fact on the
papers, such dispute is therefore to be determined on the
respondent’s
version except if such version is needlessly bald
or sketchy, far-fetched or palpably false.
5.
The respondent opposed the application on the merits, but also
raised
the point that the Court lacked the jurisdiction to hear the
application because she is not resident in South Africa, and
the
funds were moved from overseas accounts to be held in other overseas
accounts.
6.
The applicant argued that the respondent had acknowledged in
particulars of claim in a divorce action instituted by her in South
Africa that she owned properties in Portugal and South Africa.
Furthermore, the issue regarding the funds was raised by the
applicant in his counterclaim in the divorce action. For these
reasons, the Court had jurisdiction to determine the application.
Relevant
background
7.
The parties were married in the Republic of Fiji in 1997.
On 19
April 2023 the respondent instituted divorce proceedings in this
Court under case number 6354/2023, in which she principally
seeks a
decree of divorce, maintenance for her and the parties’ son, an
order directing the applicant to transfer to her
an amount or such
assets as the Court may determine having a value equal to half of the
difference between the value of the assets
owned by them.
8.
The parties moved to South Africa in 2004. They purchased
a
plot in Portugal in 2018 with the aim of developing it and building a
house. According to the respondent, their intention
was that
they would eventually take up permanent residence in Portugal at
their property there.
9.
The respondent went to Portugal in 2022 to oversee the building
work. She has resided there ever since. The parties’
son has taken a temporary job as a labourer with the contractor
in
Portugal, and resides with the respondent and her parents (the latter
also residing in Portugal). He had previously been
studying in
the United Kingdom.
10.
The respondent says that she is permanently resident in Portugal, and
that she has
been so resident since March 2022. She has no
reason or intention ever to reside in South Africa again, especially
as her
marriage relationship with the applicant has broken down.
She has only been back to South Africa once for a period of 2 to
3
weeks to attend a wedding. She regards Portugal as her
permanent place of residence. This was communicated to the
applicant’s attorney in correspondence exchanged prior to the
launch of this application.
11.
The applicant contends that the respondent’s stay in Portugal
is only temporary.
Her actions, on his own version, belie
this: he mentions that she had instructed a removals firm to
ship a container of their
household goods and furniture, including
the applicant’s personal belongings and files, to Portugal.
The applicant
did not agree with such course of action and stopped
the shipment, but it does indicate the respondent’s state of
mind as
regards her intentions of remaining in Portugal on a
permanent basis, and supports her evidence in this respect.
12.
A further indication of her state of mind is the fact that she has
instituted divorce
proceedings. She does not intend again
taking up life with the applicant, who is at present living in South
Africa.
There is no reason to believe that she is contemplating
returning to South Africa.
13.
In these circumstances, and upon the respondent’s version, I am
satisfied that
the respondent intends to remain in Portugal
indefinitely and that she is a foreign
peregrinus
. Her
domicile is there and she resides there.
Does
this Court have the necessary jurisdiction to grant the relief
sought?
14.
Section 21(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
, provides, insofar as
relevant, that a division of the High Court “
has
jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in, and in relation
to all causes arising and all offences triable within, its
area of
jurisdiction and all other matters of which it may according to law
take cognisance…”
15.
Effectiveness,
in other words, the principle that a Court will not pronounce of a
dispute unless it has the power to give effect
to the judgment), is
the basis of the concept of jurisdiction. In
Ex
parte
Hay
Management Consultants (Pty) Ltd
[3]
the Court held that it would not have jurisdiction to entertain an
application for an interdict against a foreign
peregrinus
because a South African court has no control over the defendant, nor
over the cessation of the acts in question, and cannot entertain
an
application for an interdict against it.
16.
Pollack
on Jurisdiction
[4]
states the issue as follows in relation to both mandatory and
prohibitory interdicts: “
If
the respondent is a peregrinus not only of the court but of the
Republic of South Africa and the act which is the subject of
the
interdict to be performed or prohibited in a foreign country the
court has no control over the respondent nor over the execution
or
cessation of the act in question and manifestly it cannot entertain
an application for an interdict against such a respondent
”.
17.
There was
no dispute between the parties that credit balances in bank accounts
are regarded as incorporeal movables. The
situs
of these assets is the
forum
domicilii
or
the
forum
rei sitae –
both
refer to the place where the debtor in respect of the incorporeal
right resides.
[5]
18.
It is common cause that the funds in the present matter are being
kept in bank accounts
at financial institutions in foreign
jurisdictions, and will – should an order be granted in the
applicant’s favour
– have to be transferred by the
respondent from Portugal to other overseas accounts.
19.
The applicant emphasized that Nina instituted the divorce proceedings
in South Africa,
and stated in the particulars of claim that she is
the co-owner of the parties’ South African property – the
conclusion
to be drawn is thus that she is ordinarily resident here.
She has in any event consented to the jurisdiction of this Court.
Moreover, the Court hearing the divorce action will have the required
jurisdiction to deal with all issues arising out of such
action, and
the whereabouts of the funds – including the respondent’s
alleged unlawful transfer of them – has
now been raised in the
applicant’s plea and counterclaim.
20.
As regards
the alleged consent to jurisdiction,
even if the respondent did consent to the jurisdiction of the Court
for the purposes of the divorce action, her submission would
not
extend to prior proceedings for an interdict to restrain her from
committing delicts in an application instituted separately
from the
divorce action,
[6]
and before
the question of interdictory relief was raised in the subsequent
pleadings in the divorce action. The jurisdiction
of the Court
for the purposes of the divorce action is in any event specifically
based on the requirements of
section 2(1)
of the
Divorce Act, 1979
,
namely either domicile or residency on the part of either the
plaintiff or the defendant, or both of them. The applicant
contends that the respondent is resident within the jurisdiction of
this Court.
21.
The fact
that a court has jurisdiction in respect of certain legal proceedings
does not confer jurisdiction in respect of other
legal
proceedings:
[7]
“
[7]
In Gulf Oil Corporation v Rembrandt Fabrikante en
Handelaars (Edms) Bpk
1963
(2) SA 10 (T)
at
17D - H Trollip J stated that
'cause'
means an action or legal proceeding (not a cause of action) and that
'a cause arising within its area of jurisdiction' means
'an
action or legal proceeding which, according to the law, has duly
originated within the Court's area of jurisdiction'.
Further support for this interpretation is to be found in the
Afrikaans text of
s 19(1)(a)
and (b) where the words
'gedinge wat . . . ontstaan' and 'geding met betrekking waartoe' are
used as the Afrikaans
equivalent for 'causes arising' and 'cause in
relation to which'. Trollip J concluded:
'The
result is that the Court's jurisdiction under
s 19(1)
is simply
determined, as hitherto, by reference to the common law and/or any
relevant statute.'
…
[8]
…
The fact that a court
has jurisdiction in respect of certain legal proceedings does not
confer jurisdiction on such a court
in respect of other legal
proceedings. The onus of proving submission was on the
respondents.
They failed to
make out any case whatsoever that either the appellant or the
insurance companies submitted to the jurisdiction
of the Court of
first instance...”
[Emphasis
supplied.]
22.
This application was instituted on 6 June 2023. It is common
cause that the
respondent resided in Portugal at the time, and still
resides there. The applicant delivered his plea and
counterclaim in
the divorce action only thereafter (in the papers, he
indicates that he planned to deliver it by 12 June 2023, but in the
course
of argument it was mentioned that those pleadings were
delivered two weeks after the institution of the application).
23.
The Court’s
jurisdiction is determined at the time of service on the respondent
of the application papers.
[8]
Where an applicant claims jurisdiction based on the respondent’s
residence, as in the present case, the respondent
must be residing
with the jurisdiction of the Court as at the time of the commencement
of proceedings.
[9]
24.
The
question whether a person resides at a particular place at any given
time depends on all the circumstances of the matter.
Although a
person may have more than one residence, for the purpose of
determining jurisdiction a person can only be residing at
one place
at any given time – notably, the commencement of the
proceedings upon service of the papers.
[10]
Further to this:
[11]
“
[5]
Amongst the more appropriate and apt definitions of residence (in the
sense of 'residing') are those in Hogsett v Buys
1913
CPD 200
at 205 … namely there must be 'some good reason for
regarding it as his place of ordinary habitation at the date of
service' and Beedle & Co v Bowley
(1895) 12
SC 401
at 403 to the effect that
'(w)hen
it is said of an individual that he resides at a place it is
obviously meant that it is his home, his place of abode, the
place
where he generally sleeps after the work of the day is done'.”
25.
I have already found, on the facts as they appear from the papers,
that the respondent
is permanently resident in Portugal.
26.
A court
having jurisdiction to grant a decree of divorce will not, in terms
of that jurisdiction alone, necessarily be competent
to deal with
other claims between the parties. In
Rousalis
v Rousalis
[12]
the plaintiff instituted divorce proceedings and sought payment of an
amount of money held in a joint account pursuant to an alleged
oral
agreement concluded between the parties. The Court held that it
had no jurisdiction to deal with a contractual claim
between the
spouses where the spouse against whom the relief was sought was
resident in Greece:
“
It
is clear that on these allegations we are dealing not with an action
for divorce plus ancillary relief, but with two causes of
action
brought in one suit.
The
primary one is that relating to the status of the plaintiff, in
regard to which this Court had jurisdiction by virtue of
s
2(1)(b)(iii)
of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
. The allegations in para 8
of the particulars of claim in so far as they relate to the money
plaintiff claims in her own right
and not as sole guardian of her son
- should sole guardianship be awarded her - are based on contract,
not the marriage. …
…
Our
Courts cannot assume jurisdiction over foreign nationals in foreign
countries and pronounce judgments sounding in money whether
in
contract or in delict merely because we have assumed
jurisdiction under this statute to pronounce upon the status of a
limited class of reasonably permanent residents in our own
territory….. And a divorce action is defined as an action by
which a decree of divorce "or other relief in connection
therewith is applied for", including an application for
maintenance pendente
lite or for a contribution towards
costs. Technically, therefore, it appears that this Court has
jurisdiction to order
maintenance and costs as relief in connection
with a decree of divorce.
But
I know of no principle or provision which would entitle me to settle
a partnership dispute where defendant is domiciled and
resident in
Greece and without property in this country which has been attached
to found jurisdiction
.”
[Emphasis supplied.]
27.
Although
Rousalis
was decided before the amendment of
section 2(2)
of the
Divorce Act
in
1992 to the effect that a “
court
which has jurisdiction in terms of subsection (1) shall also have
jurisdiction in respect of a claim in reconvention or a
counter-application in the divorce action concerned
”,
I am of the view that the principle underlying the decision remains
apposite. The application for interdictory relief
was
instituted as a proceeding separate from the divorce action, and
before the relief set out in the application was reformulated
to be
incorporated in a counterclaim for appropriate relief in the context
of divorce proceedings. I have already referred
to the meaning
of “causes arising” as contemplated in
section 21(1)
of
the
Superior Courts Act.
>
Conclusion
28.
In all of the circumstances, I am of the view that this Court does
not have the jurisdiction
required to grant the relief sought by the
applicant. For that reason, the application was dismissed.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the applicant
:
J. Anderssen, instructed by Mandy Simpson Attorneys
For
the respondent
:
G. Cooper, instructed by Catto Neethling Wiid Inc.
[1]
The
mandament
being an interdict in respect of which special rules or practices
have developed: Joubert
et
al
(eds)
The
Law of South Africa
(2ed) Volume 2 at para 409.
[2]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634-635.
[3]
2000
(3) SA 501
(W) at 507H; and see
South
Atlantic Islands Development Corporation v Buchan
1971 (1) SA 234
(C) at 240D-H.
[4]
Pistorius
Pollack
on Jurisdiction
(2ed, Juta) at page 119.
[5]
See
Broboff
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2021 (2) SACR 53
(SCA) at para ]10]; and see
Gallo
Africa Ltd v Sting Music (Pty) Ltd
2010
(6) SA 329
(SCA) at para [14].
[6]
Ex
parte Hay Management supra
at 507J.
[7]
See
Leibowitz
t/a Lee Finance v Mhlana and others
2006 (6) SA 180
(SCA) at paras [7]-[8].
[8]
Terblanche
NO v Damji
2003
(5) SA 489
(C) at 498E-F. See also
Gallo
Africa v Sting Music
supra at paras [10] and [13]-[14].
[9]
See
the discussion in
Mills
v Starwell Finance (Pty) Ltd
1981 (3) SA 84 (N).
[10]
Mayne
v Main
2001 (2) SA 1239
(SCA) at paras [3]-[4].
[11]
Mayne
v Main supra
at para [5].
[12]
1980
(3) SA 446
(C) at 449G-450A.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
I.P v N.P (16768/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 287 (20 November 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 287High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
N.N.M v N.P.N and Others (20872/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 210 (28 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 210High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
P.N v A.E (20081/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 266 (16 September 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 266High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
P.N v D.N (10481/2018) [2025] ZAWCHC 335 (6 August 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 335High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
S.P.R v N.V (2025/119985) [2025] ZAWCHC 346 (13 August 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 346High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar