Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 306South Africa
B.K v K.M and Another (6027/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 306 (24 November 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## B.K v K.M and Another (6027/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 306 (24 November 2023)
B.K v K.M and Another (6027/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 306 (24 November 2023)
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sino date 24 November 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 6027/2023
Date of hearing: 21
November 2023
In
the matter between:
B[…]
K[…]
Applicant
and
K[…]
M[…]
First
Respondent
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second
Respondent
Judgment handed down
on: 24 November 2023
JUDGMENT
JAMIE, AJ
[1]
This is an application in which the applicant
seeks the following relief:
“
1.
That the co-ownership in the immovable property known as ERF 5[…]
Goodwood, Cape Town, more
commonly known as 7[…] N[…]
Street, Goodwood, Cape Town, Western Cape, should be terminated as
set out hereunder;”
[2]
The remaining relief sought by the applicant in
respect of the manner of disposal of the property is not relevant to
this judgment
and I do not deal therewith, save to record that the
applicant also seeks an order that the first respondent is ordered to
pay
the costs of this application on an attorney-client scale in the
event that she opposes the relief sought.
[3]
The applicant describes himself as a major male
Project Manager currently residing at S[…] L[…] Z[…],
1[…]
J[…] Street, Goodwood, Cape Town, Western Cape.
[4]
The first respondent is K[…] M[…]
,
described as an adult female Senior
Project Administrator in the employ of the City of Cape Town,
currently residing at 7[…]
N[…] Street, Goodwood,
Western Cape.
[5]
The second respondent is the Standard Bank of
South Africa Limited, the holder of a mortgage bond in respect of the
property.
It took no part in these proceedings.
[6]
The application is brought under the
actio
communi dividundo
to terminate the
joint ownership of the property and to have the court order the
method of disposal of same.
[7]
In the founding affidavit, beside the allegations
about the joint ownership of the property, the applicant’s
desire to terminate
such ownership, and the unsuccessful attempts
made to obtain the first respondent’s consent thereto, the only
allegations
made in relation to the relationship between the parties
is the following:
“
9.
The respondent [i.e. the first respondent] and I were married on
21 April 2001 in accordance
with Shariah Islamic Law and on
5 November 2018, we decided to terminate the marriage in
accordance with Shariah Islamic Law.
10.
On 10 April 2007 and during our marriage we jointly purchased the
immovable property and did so with the assistance
of a home loan
granted by Standard Bank Limited.”
[8]
In fairness to the applicant I should point out
that the founding affidavit also contains the following averments in
relation to
a request for the applicant to the first respondent that
she purchase his half share of the property:
“
16.
On 03 November 2021 the first respondent replied to my request and
stated that she does not consent to my request
and further that I
would have to approach a court for an order terminating the joint
ownership. I attach hereto a copy of
the aforementioned
response by the first respondent, marked as Annexure ‘
BK4’.”
[9]
Although the content of annexure BK4 was not
specifically drawn to the court’s attention in the founding
affidavit, a perusal
of same indicates that it is a letter or email
dated 3 November 2021 from the first respondent to the applicant in
which the following
is stated:
“
As
we are co-owners, I will need to consent to the sale of the house,
alternatively a court will need to order that the house be
sold.
I do not give consent to sell the house. My reasons are mostly
not to destabilise the children any further by
having to find new
accommodation, moving them away from their home, their comfort and
safe space and also as a sale will mean accommodation
below what they
are currently accustomed to and mean settling in a completely
different area. This will further destabilise
them.”
[10]
As is apparent from what I have said above,
nowhere in the founding affidavit does the applicant refer to the
fact that he and the
first respondent have children born from their
marriage, or that the children are residing at the property.
[11]
In the answering affidavit these facts are however
placed before the court. In this regard the answering affidavit
states
the following:
“
7.
Pursuant to our divorce, myself and the Applicant concluded a divorce
settlement agreement dated 14 September
2018. In terms of this
divorce agreement, which agreement was endorsed by the offices of the
Family Advocate, the Applicant
agreed to tender a total of
R20 055.00
towards the maintenance and
upkeep of our children. Annexed hereto marked “
KM2”
is the endorsed agreement.
8.
Further, in terms of the agreement, the parties agreed that the
immovable property will remain
equally co-owned. The agreement
goes further to state how the property will be inherited by our
children in the event of
our death.
9.
I submit that this gives credence to the fact that at the time of
agreement, the parties were ad
idem regarding the following factors:
9.1
I would be residing in the property with our 4 children.
9.2
Given that we have 4 children, all of whom were attending school in
the area it was in the best interest of
our children to remain in
their home. At present, three of our children are still attending
schools in the area. One child
has attained majority.
9.3
The parties intended to maintain stability for the children.
9.4
The Applicant was always well aware that I would not be able to
financially afford alternative accommodation,
that is still the case.
9.5
The parties agreed that the status quo in terms of paying the bond
repayment for the bond and loans would
remain in place in order to
ensure that both parties were contributing towards the joint property
and keeping a roof over the heads
our children
(sic).
10.
I submit that the agreement in place is binding on the parties and
still very much remains a contract between
the parties. It is
clear that a termination of the agreement between the parties will
cause severe prejudice to me and to
our children.”
[12]
Annexure KM1 to the answering affidavit is a
Divorce Certificate (No. 10283) issued by the Muslim Judicial Council
of South Africa
and signed by the Head of Department of its Social
Development Department. It is dated 5 November 2018.
[13]
The aforementioned annexure KM2 to the answering
affidavit comprises a covering sheet dated 14 February 2022 from the
Family Advocate
in respect of proceedings between the parties,
initiated by the first respondent, under case number 1591/2022, in
this Court.
Attached thereto is the divorce settlement
agreement between the parties.
[14]
This agreement, in relevant part, states or
records the following:
14.1.
The parties were married according to Muslim Rites
on 21 April 2001 and the marriage was dissolved by order of
the Muslim
Judicial Council on 5 July 2018 and became final on 16
September 2018.
14.2.
It is agreed that custody of the four children,
who it is recorded are the biological children of the parties, will
be granted to
the first respondent “
who
will reside with the children at 7[…] N[…] Street,
Goodwood, 7460 (the Residence)”.
14.3.
Applicant will contribute an amount of R6 000,00
per month toward the bond in respect of the property.
14.4.
First respondent would contribute an amount of
R3 900,00 per month in respect of the bond and a housing loan,
and R3 800,00
per month in respect of utilities due to the City
of Cape Town.
14.5.
The property will remain equally co-owned by the
applicant and the first respondent. Any spouse or offspring
resulting from
a new marriage, cannot inherit any portion of the
property. In the event of either party’s death, the 50%
of the deceased’s
portion will go straight to the children
resulting from the parties’ marriage.
[15]
The agreement was signed by the parties on 14
September 2018.
[16]
When
this matter was called before me on 9 November 2023, I drew the
parties' attention to the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Municipal
Employees’ Pension Fund and Others v Chrisal Investments (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[1]
.
Neither
party had addressed the judgment in their heads of argument and I
directed them to do so. The matter stood down for
this purpose
and came before me again on 21 November 2023 after the parties had
filed additional heads of argument in line with
the Court’s
direction.
[17]
The
Municipal
Employees’
case
concerned a complex series of agreements between one party (Adamax)
and the Municipal Employees’ Pension Fund (MEPF)
in relation to
a shopping centre. The crisp question for determination by the
Court was whether Adamax was entitled, in terms
of the
actio
communi dividundo,
to
demand the sale of the underlying properties that were the subject of
the agreements.
[2]
[18]
It
was in this context that the Court invoked the distinction between
free and bound ownership, a concept that had not until then
received
definitive treatment in our law. With reference to what is
often described as the
locus
classicus
in
relation to the
actio
,
viz
Robson
v Theron,
[3]
the
Court referred to the dictum from that case to the following effect:
“
No
co-owner is
normally
obliged
to remain a co-owner against his will.” (
Emphasis
in
Municipal
Employees’
)
[4]
[19]
The Court then went on to say the following, which
I consider to be the
ratio decidendi
of
the judgment:
“
[45]
Accordingly,
[Robson]
casts no light on
how to determine whether co-ownership is free or bound. The
case is not authority for the general proposition
that no co-owner
may be compelled to remain a co-owner against their will. That
ignores the context and the careful qualification
that this is
‘normally’ the position. Bound co-ownership is
precisely the case where a co-owner is obliged to
remain such against
their will, unless and until the tie that creates the bound
co-ownership has been severed.”
[46] In
summary therefore, I conclude, in accordance with the authorities
discussed above, that the distinction between
free and bound
co-ownership is that in the former the co-ownership is the sole legal
relationship between the co-owners, while
in the latter there is a
separate and distinct legal relationship between them of which the
co-ownership is but one consequence.
Co-ownership is not the
primary or sole purpose of their relationship, which is governed by
rules imposed by law, including statute,
or determined by the parties
themselves by way of binding agreements. The relationship is
extrinsic to the co-ownership,
but is not required to be
exceptional. In other words it requires no special feature for
the co-ownership consequential upon
the relationship to qualify as
bound co-ownership. Whether it is depends upon the terms upon
which the relationship was constituted.
The mere fact that
co-owners decide to exploit their co-ownership commercially will not
of itself constitute the co-ownership as
bound co-ownership.
That will depend upon the nature and terms of the commercial
agreement between the parties and matters
such as the provision made
for its termination.
[47] There
is no closed list of instances of bound co-ownership. If the
relationship gives rise to bound co-ownership
the co-ownership will
endure for so long as the primary extrinsic relationship endures.
Once it is terminated then, as in
Menzies and Robson v Theron, it
will become free co-ownership and be capable of being terminated
under the action. I consider
the facts of this case in
accordance with those principles.”
[20]
Thereafter, and upon a consideration of the facts
in line with the principles identified, the Supreme Court of Appeal
concluded
that the relationship between the parties did indeed lead
to a situation of bound co-ownership and that the
actio
was accordingly not available.
[21]
The applicant in this matter, who was represented
by Mr Titus, accepted, as he had to, the authority of
Municipal
Employees’
but sought to
distinguish it on the basis that, in the instant case, the primary
extrinsic relationship between the parties had
been severed by the
divorce order.
[22]
I am unable to agree.
[23]
In
Martrade
Shipping and Transport GmbH United Enterprises Corporation and MV
‘Unity’
[5]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal restated the correct approach to the
construction of a court order, emphasising that the process was
the
same as with other documents:
“
[2]
The principles which apply to the interpretation of court orders are
well-established. Trollip JA observed
in Firestone South Africa
(Pty) Ltd v Gentiruco AG that the same principles apply as applied to
construing documents. Thus,
‘
..(T)he
court’s intention is to be ascertained from the language of the
judgment or order as construed according to the usual,
well-known
rules… Thus, as in the case of a document, the judgment or
order and the court’s reasons for giving it
must be read as a
whole to ascertain its intention.’
[3]
The starting point, is was held in Finishing Touch 163 (Pty) Ltd v
BHP Billiton Energy Coal South Africa
Limited and others, is to
determine the manifest purpose of the order. This was endorsed
by the Constitutional Court in Eke
v Parsons. This court, in
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality, described
the process of interpretation
as involving a unitary exercise of
considering language, context and purpose. It is an objective
exercise where, in the face
of ambiguity, a sensible meaning is to be
preferred to one which undermines the purpose of the document or
order.”
(Footnotes omitted)
[24]
I will consider the ‘divorce order’ in
line with the above principles. In so doing, I bear in mind
that the ‘order’
is not one issued by a court of law, but
instead by the Muslim Judicial Council. I am, however, of the
view that this makes
no material difference to the manner in which
one must approach the construction of the document, and its ultimate
interpretation.
[25]
In this regard and with reference to the extracts
from the ‘order’, or agreement, the following emerges:
25.1.
It was agreed between the parties at the time of
the divorce that custody of the children would be granted to the
first respondent,
and that she would reside with the children at the
property.
25.2.
The agreement made provision for each party to
contribute in specified amounts to the payments in respect of the
property.
25.3.
Under the heading ‘PROPERTY’ it is
stated that the property will be distributed as follows:
25.3.1.
The property will remain equally co-owned by the
parties;
25.3.2.
No spouse or offspring resulting from a new
marriage could inherit any portion of the property, and in the event
of either party’s
death, his or her share would be inherited by
the children.
[26]
Taken as whole, I am of the view that the manifest
intention of the parties to be ascertained from the document as a
whole, and
considering its language, context and apparent purpose, is
as follows:
26.1.
The parties would remain as co-owners of the
property.
26.2.
Such co-ownership would subsist, at least, until
the parties no longer had a legal obligation to provide accommodation
for the children,
or the last of them to require such accommodation.
[27]
In my view, a construction of the agreement, such
as that contended for by Mr Titus, that, notwithstanding its terms,
the applicant
was entitled to invoke the
actio
here in order to sell the property, on the basis
that he no longer wished to, or could afford to, remain a co-owner,
would be destructive
of the very purpose of the agreement, which was
to provide a safe and stable environment for the children.
[28]
I need to deal with two contentions by Mr Titus.
[29]
The first is that my construction would force the
applicant to remain a co-owner in perpetuity, which he submitted
would be unlawful.
He did so on the authority of
Robson.
[30]
I disagree that my construction requires the
parties to remain co-owners in perpetuity. As I have indicated
above, a reasonable
construction of the agreement is that the parties
are required to remain co-owners while the children are in need of,
and legally
entitled to, accommodation being provided by their
parents. While the termination date of such need, and hence
obligation,
may be lengthy and uncertain (as to when it will come to
an end), it is not perpetual.
[31]
Mr Titus’ second and principal contention
was that, while the parties' co-ownership of the property might have
been a bound
one, the principal extrinsic relationship between them,
viz
the
marriage, came to an end in 2018, whereupon the co-ownership became a
free one, entitling the applicant to invoke the
actio.
I disagree.
[32]
In my view, the principal extrinsic relationship
between the parties, as evidenced by the agreement, was not their
marital relationship,
but commenced at the end thereof, with the
conclusion of the divorce agreement. That brought into existence a
new relationship
between them, no longer regulated by Shariah law,
but now regulated by the agreement which they had freely entered into
and which
was to regulate, not their marriage, but the consequences
thereof, post-divorce.
[33]
As I have already found, the primary purpose of
the divorce agreement, insofar as the property was concerned, was
clearly aimed
at providing a safe and stable environment for the
children. The parties, to their credit, recognised this and
thus included
the terms that I have discussed above in their divorce
agreement.
[34]
The parties clearly intended their relationship
post the divorce to be regulated by the divorce agreement. The
fact that such
was intended to be a long-term arrangement is
evidenced by the provisions relating to the distribution of the
property, in particular
upon the death of one or the other of the
parties.
[35]
Accordingly, in my view, while the co-ownership of
the property prior to the divorce was also a bound one, in accordance
with the
Shariah rules of the marriage between them, it remains so
after the divorce, but is now regulated not by the rules of Shariah
but
by the terms of the agreement. This conclusion is, in my
view, on all fours with the principles, and the application thereof,
in the
Municipal Employees’
case.
[36]
For the aforesaid reasons, I find that the
co-ownership between the parties of the property post the divorce is
one of bound ownership
and the
actio
is
accordingly not available to the applicant while the parties’
primary extrinsic relationship subsists, as regulated by
the divorce
agreement.
[37]
One final argument by Mr Titus was that my
construction of the agreement left the applicant with no remedy to
put an end to the
agreement. I disagree. If the applicant
felt that the agreement stood to be interpreted on the basis
contended for
by him, it was open to him to seek a declaratory order
from the court in that regard. He could also, in my view, have
brought
an application, akin to that in the case of a divorce order
granted by a court, to vary same on the basis of changed
circumstances.
He is thus not left without a remedy.
Conclusion
[38]
For all of the aforesaid reasons, the application
must fail. As regards costs, the applicant initially sought
costs against
the first respondent on an attorney-client basis.
He wisely did not persist with such claim. Ms Essa, who
appeared
for the first respondent, did not ask for a punitive costs
order. In my view, costs should follow the event.
[39]
I accordingly make the following order:
[1]
The application is dismissed.
[2]
The applicant is ordered to pay the first
respondent’s costs.
I JAMIE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
For
the Applicant:
Adv
A Titus
Instructed
by:
Mr
M Adams
Mujahid
Adams Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv
N Essa
Instructed
by:
Mr
N Parkar
Parkar
Attorneys Inc.
[1]
2022
(1) SA 137 (SCA)
[2]
At
para 2
[3]
1978
(1) SA 841 (A)
[4]
At
para 43 quoting Robson at 856 H to 857 A
[5]
[2020]
ZASCA 120
(2 October 2020)
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