Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 74South Africa
A.V.W v S.V.W and Others (3118/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 74 (20 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 April 2022
Headnotes
SUMMARY OF THE PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS:
Judgment
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## A.V.W v S.V.W and Others (3118/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 74 (20 April 2022)
A.V.W v S.V.W and Others (3118/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 74 (20 April 2022)
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sino date 20 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case No: 3118/2021
In
the matter between:
AVW
Plaintiff
and
SVW
First
Defendant
ABRAHAM
NICOLAS VAN WYK N.O.
Second
Defendant
SAN-MARIE
VAN WYK N.O
.
Third
Defendant
JULIAN
REID BOSHOFF N.O.
Fourth
Defendant
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fifth
Defendant
Date
of Judgment: This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email
and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for handing down judgment is
deemed to be 10h00 on 20 April 2022
JUDGMENT
DE
WET, AJ
INTRODUCTION
:
[1]
The first defendant filed an application for leave to defend the
divorce
action after she had signed a settlement agreement on 27 July
2021 (“the consent paper”) and after her former attorney
had delivered a notice of withdrawal of defence on 6 August 2021.
[2]
The application was placed before me in the fast lane on 21 October
2021,
it being the date upon which the plaintiff had set down the
divorce action on the unopposed roll. For ease of reference the
parties
are referred to as in the divorce action.
[3]
Whilst the
application in my view did not warrant a hearing in the fast lane, Mr
Pincus SC, on behalf of the plaintiff, relying
heavily on the
principle that it is in the public interest to finalise divorce
matters expeditiously,
[1]
convinced me to hear and determine the application on the papers. Ms
Anderssen, on behalf of the first defendant, had no objection
and the
application proceeded on this basis. The plaintiff did not file an
opposing affidavit and both parties submitted heads
of argument as
directed.
[4]
I granted the first defendant leave to defend on 28 January 2022. A
copy
of the order is attached hereto marked “X” for ease
of reference. These are the reasons for the order.
THE
FACTS
:
[5]
The facts are for all relevant purposes common cause between the
parties
and can be summarised as follows:
5.1.
The plaintiff and the first defendant were married to each other in
Mauritius on 10 April 2004, out of community
of property with the
inclusion of the accrual system.
5.2.
One minor child was born from the marriage, namely DVW (the “minor
child”).
5.3.
The plaintiff instituted divorce proceedings against the first
defendant on 19 February 2021. The trustees
of four trusts, the
Nic-Mari Trust, the NSM Marketing Trust, the Titan Marketing Trust
and the JD Marketing Trust (“the four
trusts”), were
joined as parties to the proceedings as second, third and fourth
defendants.
5.4.
After a notice of bar was served on the first defendant’s
former attorney, a plea and counterclaim
was filed on behalf of the
first respondent on 6 May 2021.
5.5. On
22 July 2021 the plaintiff signed a consent paper recording that the
plaintiff, the first defendant and
the third and fourth defendants
had “
arrived at an agreement in regard to the disputes
between them.
”
5.6. On
27 July 2021 the first defendant signed the consent paper.
5.7.
On 6 August 2021
the first defendant’s former attorney of record served a notice
of withdrawal of defence wherein it was recorded
the first defendant
withdraws her aforesaid defence as a result thereof that a settlement
had been reached between the parties
and a deed of settlement has
been drawn and undersigned between the plaintiff and the first
defendant.
[2]
5.8. On
15 September 2021 the divorce action was set down by the plaintiff’s
attorney for hearing on 21
October 2021 on the unopposed roll in
third division.
5.9. On
15 October 2021 the first defendant’s former attorney of record
withdrew as attorney of record and
on 18 October 2021 the first
defendant’s current attorney of record was appointed.
5.10. The first
defendant’s new attorney addressed correspondence to the
plainitff’s attorney advising that they would
be filing a plea
and counterclaim on the same day and further requested the
plaintiff’s attorney to serve his notice of removal
from the
court roll before midday on 19 October 2021.
5.11. Unsurprisingly the
plaintiff’s attorney refused to do so and notified the first
defendant’s attorney on 19 October
2021 that he would not be
removing the matter from the unopposed roll.
5.12. As a result of this
refusal the first defendant filed a notice of application to uplift
the bar to filing her plea and counterclaim.
The plaintiff opposed
this application and the first defendant’s attorneys obtained a
date on the opposed motion roll for
hearing of this application on 26
January 2022.
5.13. The index prepared
by the plaintiff’s attorney for purposes of the unopposed
divorce action contained the notice of
bar but no plea or
counterclaim. The first defendant’s attorney only became aware
that such pleadings had previously been
filed on 20 October 2021 and
only managed to obtain a copy thereof on 21 October 2021. In her
founding affidavit in this application,
the first defendant stated
that she was under the impression that further steps in the divorce
action were stayed pending settlement
negotiations and that she was
unaware that such pleadings were filed.
5.14. The first
defendant’s attorney consequently withdrew the application for
upliftment of the bar and filed the application
for leave to defend.
SUMMARY
OF THE PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
:
[6]
The grounds advanced by the first defendant as to why a decree of
divorce
incorporating the terms of the consent paper should not be
granted as requested by the plaintiff and why she should be granted
leave to defend the divorce action, despite her admitting to signing
the consent paper whilst represented, are as follows:
6.1.
She is unhappy with the terms of the settlement agreement as:
6.1.1.
it did not make satisfactory provision
for the maintenance needs of
the parties’ minor son (this is with reference to the terms of
clause 3 of the consent paper);
6.1.2.
she believes that the plaintiff
had not disclosed the correct values
of the assets held by various trusts which the parties had agreed
should form part of their
respective estates;
6.1.3.
she believes the proprietary award
was less than what was due to her;
and
6.1.4.
she had waived her claim for personal
maintenance whilst being unable
to support herself and did not know what she was waiving (this is
with reference to clause 4.1
of the consent paper).
6.2.
She anticipates, and it is not disputed by the plaintiff, that her
highest net return on the proceeds she
is to obatin in terms of the
consent paper will amount to R25 000 a month and she will be
unable to support herself and the
parties’ minor child
appropriately on this amount.
6.3.
She has suffered damages as a result of the misrepresentations made
to her by the plaintiff.
6.4.
The consent paper cannot be implemented as:
6.4.1.
the first defendant is not a beneficiary
of the Nic-Mari Trust;
6.4.2.
The beneficiaries of the Nic-Mari
Trust have not agreed to
implementation of clause 5.1.1.2;
6.4.3.
The adult beneficiaries have not
agreed to their removal as
beneficiaries of the four trusts as provided for in clause 6.
[7]
On behalf of the
plaintiff it was argued that ss 7(1) and (2) of the Divorce Act 70 of
1979 (“the Act”) does not afford
the court an overiding
discretion to go behind the terms of a settlement agreement and that
the court has a rather restricted discretion
with reference to the
full bench decision in PL v YL
[3]
and as set out by the Constitutional Court in Eke v Parsons
[4]
.
It was further argued that as a waiver of the right to vary a
maintenance order embodied in a settlement agreement concluded at
divorce has been found not to be contrary to public policy and ousts
the discretion of the court in terms of s 8(1) of the Act,
s 7(1) of
the Act similarly ousts the court’s discretion in respect of an
agreement that had been reached between the parties
at date of
divorce.
GENERAL
PRINCIPLES
:
[8]
It is trite that settlement agreements ought only to be made orders
of
court if: the agreement can be enforeced as an order of court; its
wording is clear and unambigious; the enforcement thereof is
not
dependent on the discretion of a person not bound thereby; and it
must provide closure. Making a settlement an order of court
changes
the nature of the agreement in that it provides the parties with a
method to execute thereon.
[9]
I wish to emphasise that on the limited evidence before court, I am
unable
to determine whether:
9.1.
the first defendant is entitled to increased maintenance in respect
of the parties’ minor child or
whether the amount agreed upon
between the parties is satisfactory and the best that can be effected
in the circumstances;
9.2.
the first defendant is entitled to spousal maintenance; and
9.3.
the first defendant had indeed been misled insofar as asset values
are concerned. These issues can only be
determined by way of evidence
by a trial court should leave be granted.
[10]
The practise of incorporating settlement agreements in divorce
actions is in line with
judicial policy that parties should be
encouraged to settle by way of negotiation or mediation all aspects
pertaining to such litigation.
The benefits to the parties and the
administration of justice to do so cannot be overemphasised and finds
support in the provisions
of s 7(1) of the Act which empowers the
court to give effect to agreements between parties in respect of the
division of assets
and spousal maintenance. The same holds true for
arrangements in respect of the care, contact and maintenance
arrangements in respect
of minor or dependent children subject to the
inherent and statutory duty of the court.
[11]
A new concerning trend appears to have emerged where parties settle a
divorce action by
signing a settlement agreement with the assistance
of their legal representatives only to thereafter, and before such
agreement
is made an order of court, decide that they no longer wish
to be bound thereby. It needs to be remembered that regardless of
whether
or not an agreement between parties was made an order of
court, they are usually bound by such agreement.
[12]
In this matter the first defendant, based on the papers before me,
signed the consent paper
whilst being legally represented and had no
issue with the contents of the consent paper for a period of almost
three months. Only
days before the matter was to be finalised on the
unopposed roll the first defendant consulted another attorney and
raised very
technical, and to some extent convoluted reasons, as to
why the matter should not proceed to trial and not be finalised based
on
the consent paper. Whilst I have some doubt as to whether the
first defendant would succeed with her contentions as set out in her
affidavit and proposed amendments to her counter claim, a trial court
would be the appropriate forum to determine these issues.
SECTION
6 OF THE ACT
:
[13]
Section 6(1) of
the Act
[5]
prohibits a court to
grant a decree of divorce until it had satisfied itself that the
maintenance arrangements in respect of a
minor or dependent child is
“satisfactory or the best that can be effected in the
circumstances”. In JG vs CG
[6]
this obligation of a court was confirmed and in SJ v CJ
[7]
Lamont J in this regard held:
“
[13] The
assessment of the ability of each parent to meet the needs of the
defendant daughter requires an investigation into
the asset and
liabilities, income and expenses (existing and prospective) of each
parent. Thereafter the court is required to perform
an intricate
balancing act to determine to what extent the needs of the dependant
daughter can be met by both parents, and the
amount inter se which
each parent is required to contribute towards those needs.
[14] In
the process of considering the assets and liabilities of the parties
the court must have regard to the order
it proposes making, effecting
a redistribution of assets. The court is required to consider the
position of each party as it will
be at the end of the redistribution
it directs. This is logically so as this is the position which will
obtain after the divorce,
which is the period when the maintenance is
to be paid”.
[8]
[14]
The first defendant states under oath that the consent paper does not
provide adequately
for the needs of the parties’ minor child
and should therefore not be incorporated into an order of court.
[15]
In PL v YL
[9]
it was held:
“…
that
in divorce proceedings the parties themselves cannot, by reaching
agreement in respect of [the first category being matters
the
legislature has committed to the court for detemination and the
second category being matters which the parties choose to include
in
their settlement which the court may, in terms of s 7(1) of the Act,
incorporate into an order of court], compromise and dispose
thereof
without the intervention of the court. It is as a result implicit in
any settlement agreement wherein the parties have
reached agreement,
on any of the matters falling in the first category, that it is
subject to the approval of the court. Should
the court sanction the
terms of the settlement and incorporate it into its order, it
represents a decision of the court made on
the evidence placed before
it. The parties accordingly cannot have any expectation that their
agreement to make the terms of the
settlement agreement on these
issues an order of the court, will automatically be acceded to.”
[16]
In
Rowe
v Rowe
[10]
Hefer JA explained
it in the following manner when dealing with the recission, on the
ground of fraud, of a decree of divorce that
incorporated an
agreement of settlement:
“…
the
Court does not act as a mere recorder when the parties to divorce
proceedings in which minor children are involved, settle their
differences; it is duty bound to satisfy itself that their
arrangements will serve the best interests of the children; and this
it can only do on truthful information supplied by the parties”.
[17]
It was argued on behalf of the plaintiff that I should accept,
despite the statements to
the contrary by the first defendant, that
the best interest of the minor child is served by the terms of the
consent paper as the
Family Advocate had considered and endorsed the
parenting plan and the consent paper. This argument is without merit.
The Family
Advocate simply endorsed the consent paper which deals
with maintenance in respect of the minor child on the basis that the
parties
had reached an agreement. No investigation took place and the
Family Advocate would not know whether such agreement is the best
that can be effected in the circumstances. The court is in any event
not bound by the recommendations of the Family Advocate.
[18]
As indicated earlier there is no evidence before the court at this
stage, save for the
statements made by the first defendant, in order
to determine whether the agreement pertaining to maintenance will
serve the best
interest of the minor child or not. On this basis
alone leave to defend had to be granted.
THE
WAIVER AND SECTIONS 7(1) AND (2) OF THE ACT
:
[19]
The first defendant states that she is not bound by the waiver as
contained in clause 4.1
of the consent paper. Whilst it is extremely
difficult for me to contemplate what she allegedly did not understand
at the time
of signing the waiver, this is an issue that can only be
determined by a trial court by means of evidence. The same applies to
the dispute as to whether the waiver clause is severable from the
other terms contained in the consent paper.
[20]
Regardless of the enforceability of the written waiver, it was argued
on behalf of the
first defendant and so indicated in her notice of
intention to amend her counter claim, that she is entitled to request
the divorce
court in terms of s 7(2) of the Act, to make an award of
spousal maintenance in her favour.
[21]
Sections 7(1) and
(2)
[11]
of the Act, provides
the legislative framework within which a court may enforce agreements
pertaining to the division of assets
and maintenance.
[22]
In PL v YL
supra
the court
a quo
, after hearing
evidence, refused to make a settlement agreement entered into between
the parties an order of court and instead
granted a decree of
divorce, together with certain orders in terms of the particulars of
claim. The findings of the full bench
were specifically limited to
settlement agreements in the context of divorce proceedings and it
was decided on the premis that
both parties, at the time the divorce
was heard, requested the court to make the settlement agreement an
order of court in a manner
similar to the situation where parties
request the count to grant a consent judgment. The principles
highligted in the full bench
judgment are:
22.1. the court must bear
in mind that it obtains its mandate to deal with the matter on an
unopposed basis from the agreement itself;
22.2. if the court is of
the view that the settlement agreement should not be made an order of
court, it must inform the parties
of the reasons for this view and
give the parties an opportunity to address its concerns;
22.3. the court must bear
in mind that the settlement agreement may be a “package deal”;
22.4. the court must bear
in mind that the agreement may not be capable of meaningful
separation, without destroying the consensual
basis on which the
agreement as a whole is founded; and
22.5.
the court cannot
and will not make an order that amounts to it unilaterally altering
the terms of the settlment agreement as it
may not draft a
replacement settlement agreement for the parties.
[12]
[23]
The facts in PL v YL
supra
are clearly distinguisable from the
facts in this matter. The first defendant herein objects to the
agreement being made an order
of court and expressly states under
oath reasons why the court should exercise its discretion and not
make the written agreement
an order of court.
[24]
In Eke v Parsons
supra
the Constitutional Court confirmed the
principle that a compromise is powerfully supported by the law and
that the settlement of
lawsuits is not only in the best interest of
parties but may also serve the interests of the admininstation of
justice. The Constitutional
Court further warned that a mechanical
approach should not be adopted when considering whether to make a
settlement agreement an
order of court and provided guidelines to
courts when considering such request which includes that: the
settlement agreement must
relate to the
lis
between the
parties; it must not be objectionable in law in any way and accord
with the Constitution and the law; is must not be
at odds with public
policy; and hold some practical and legitimate advantage to the
parties.
[25]
In Maswanganyi v
Road Accident Fund
[13]
it was
argued that a decision to settle a case was entirely a matter for the
parties in which the presiding judge had no role to
play as, once the
parties had concluded a settlement, there was no longer a
lis
between them.
This, it was argued, had the effect to deprive the court of
jurisdiction to adjudicate the non-existent
lis
and that therefore
a court’s jurisdiction extend only to making the order as
requested. The applicant relied upon PL v YL
supra
in support of this
argument. Weiner AJA, in the majority judgment, disagreed and held
that –
“
[13] The
choice of language in the two paragraphs quoted above from the
judgment in PL v YL was unfortunate and gives an incorrect
picture of
the legal position that arises when parties concluded a settlement
agreement. Litigants do not mandate courts to decide
disputes, and
the language of agency or mandate is inappropriate to describe the
judicial function. Nor should the jurisdiction
of courts be conflated
with the concept of determination of civil disputes that arise in the
ordinary course of events. Their jurisdiction
to do so is founded in
ch 8 of the Constitution and defined in various statutes and the
common law. In the case of the High Court,
the relevant statute is
the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013.
”
[26]
The learned judge
further held that the jurisdiction of the court to resolve pleaded
issues does not terminate when the parties
arrive at a settlement of
those issues as such construction would necessarily imply that the
court does not have the power to grant
an order in terms of the
settlement agreement
[14]
.
[27]
The position to adopt when a party requests a court to make a
settlement agreement an order
of court was set out as follows:
“
[16] The
correct position is that the grant of an order making a settlement
agreement an order of court necessarily involves
an exercise of the
court’s jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the issues in the
litigation. Its primary purpose is to make a
final judicial
determination of the issues litigated between the parties. Its order
is res judicata between the parties and the
issues raised by the
parties may not be relitigated. The fact that the court’s
jurisdiction remains intact when the parties
settle a case is
illustrated by PL v YL itself and the countless cases that come
before our courts where parties to a matrimonial
dispute settle their
differences and the case proceeds on an unopposed basis.
Notwithstanding the settlement, the court must have
retained
jurisdiction for the simple reason that otherwise the parties would
not be divorced, as only a divorce order can bring
about the
termination of a legal marriage. The basic premise on which the
appellant’s argument was based was therefore incorrect.
”
[28]
The majority also disagreed that it was only in circumstances where
the agreement contains
terms which are unconscionable, illegal or
immoral that a court can refuse to make a settlement agreement an
order of court with
reference to the matter of Eke v Parson
supra
.
[29]
In ST v CT
[15]
the SCA dealt with
the enforceability of a waiver of maintenance in an antenuptial
contract. In his minority judgment, Rogers AJA
expressed the view
that it was unnecessary to find whether such a waiver is against
public policy and held that:
“
[186]…
Section 7(1) provides that a court ‘may’, not ‘must’,
make an order in accordance with a written
agreement of the kind
contemplated. If a court considers that there is good reason not to
give effect to the written agreement
regarding maintenance, it may
refrain from doing so and can then proceed to make an order in terms
of s 7(2).
[187] Read together,
ss 7(1) and (2) do not prohibit an agreement by which a spouse waives
her right to maintenance in return for
gifts but they do explicitly
accord to the court a discretion either to give effect to the
agreement in terms of s 7(1) or to award
maintenance in terms of s
7(2). The very circumstance that the court has a statutory power to
override the agreement shows that
an agreement cannot override the
statutory power. This flows inevitably from a proper interpretation
of the statutory provisions,
though it is supported by considerations
of policy.”
[30]
For purposes of
the maintenance dispute, the trial court, as stated by Rogers AJA, in
terms of s 7(1), should first consider the
prevailing circumstances
when the agreement was negotiated in order to determine whether there
are any reasons to discount it as
a result of a power imbalance,
oppression, other conduct falling short of unconscionability, the
duration of negotiations, the
presence or absence of professional
advice and the extent to which the agreement at the time of its
conclusion was in substantial
compliance with the Act
[16]
.
In this regard it was held that:
“
Section 7(1)
and (2) of our Act lend themselves admirably to an interpretation
allowing us to follow the nuanced and enlightened
approach prevailing
in England, Cananda and elsewhere – to operate with the
saturory scalpel rather than the common-law cutlass.
A South African
court, considering a claim for maintenance in the face of a
prenuptial or postnuptial agreement containing a maintenance
waiver
(or other maintenance provisions inconsistent with a claim advanced
by a spouse at the divorce hearing), should consider
a range of
factiors in deciding whether to award maintenance or … to hold
the parties to the contract, The sorts of factors
to be takien into
account are likely to inculde most of those mentioned in the leading
English and Canadial decisions. This interpretation
not only accords
with the plain language of the sections but seems to me to give
better effect to constitutional vlaues –
it eschwes
paternalistic thinging and promotes party autonomy while at the same
time giving the court a generous jurisdiction to
prevent unfair
outcomes
”
[17]
.
[31]
I do not agree with the argument that this approach would result in
parties being discouraged
to settle matrimonial actions by way of
negotiation or mediation. Contrary to English law, our courts cannot
grant any award pertaining
to spousal maintenance after a decree of
divorce has been granted and consequently there is a serious and
statutory framed obligation
on our courts to make the necessary
inquiries and to exercise its discretion, even in matters where the
parties have reached agreement,
to satisfy itself that such agreement
does not result in an unfair outcome. Any procedural difficulties
this may cause cannot outway
the statutory safeguards provided by the
Act.
[32]
A court’s restricted discretion when dealing with applications
in terms of s 8 (1)
of the Act, is in no way comparable to the
exercise envisaged by s 7 (1) of the Act. When an application in
terms of s 8 (1) is
made, an agreement
inter partes
had
already been made an order of court and it should therefore be
accepted that a court, in the exercise of its discretion when
it
granted a divorce order, had already satisfied itself in terms of s
7(1) that such agreement should be made an order of court.
The test
in applications in terms of s 8 (1) would and should therefore be
more onerous.
[33]
Whether the first defendant did or did not understand what right she
had waived when signing
the consent paper and whether she should or
should not be bound by such agreement, need therefore not be decided
in this application.
For the reasons set out above I respectfully
agree with Rogers AJA that a court has the statutory power and
discretion to override
any agreement, including a waiver, in respect
of a maintenance claim. It need not be contrary to public policy.
ENFORCIBILITY
:
[34]
It was further submitted on behalf of the first defendant that the
consent paper should
not be made an order of court as clause 5.1.1.2
is problematic.
[35]
This clause purports to be an irrevocable resolution by the trustees
to sell trust property
and to pay the net proceeds thereof to the
first defendant who is not, at present, a beneficiary to this trust.
[36]
In clause 6.2 of the consent paper the parties purport to provide for
this in that,
inter alia
, the existing beneficiaries, which
include the plaintiff’s and the first defendant’s minor
child, would be removed
as beneficiaries and be replaced by the first
defendant.
[37]
Whether the existing beneficiaries have accepted any benefits under
the trust deed or whether
the trust has vested or not does not appear
from the papers.
[38]
Although clause 18.1 of the trust deed of the trusts relied upon by
the plaintiff provides
that the founder and the trustees may by
agreement during the lifetime of the plaintiff amend the trust deed,
it is in dispute
on the papers whether or not the relied upon trust
deeds are in fact the correct trust deeds. Further and even accepting
that the
plaintiff and the trustees would have the power to amend the
trust deed, the consent paper does not, in my view, constitute such
an agreement to amend as the plaintiff, as founder, is not a party to
the consent paper and there is no evidence that the other
trustees in
fact signed the consent paper, page 15 thereof not being part of the
record.
[39]
As I have already found that the court has the jurisdiction to
enquire in regard to the
waiver and in any event has a discretion in
regard to whether a consent paper should or should not be made an
order of court, I
need not herein, make a finding in regard to the
enforceability of the provisions of clauses 5.1 and 6.2 of the
consent paper.
CONCLUSION
[40]
Settlement agreements in divorce matters are clearly distinguishable
from settlements in
other types of litigation as they are primariliy
regulated by statute and concern issues of status, maintenance issues
which can
only be determined at divorce and the best interests of
minor and dependent children.
[41]
To make such settlement agreement an order of court represents a
decision of the court
based on evidence placed before it. In the
circumstances of this application a refusal to grant leave would have
amounted to the
court prohibiting the first defendant from having
access to the court and to place relevant evidence before it in order
for the
court to determine the manner in which its discretion should
be exercised.
A
De Wet
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Coram:
De
Wet AJ
Date
of Order:
28
January 2022
Counsel
for the First Defendant/Applicant:
Adv
J Anderssen
Attorney
for the First Defendant/Applicant:
Mandy
Simpson Attorneys
Em:
mandy@simpsonattorneys.co.za
Counsel
for the Plaintiff/Respondent:
Adv.
BK Pincus SC with Adv. A Thiart
Attorneys
for the Plaintiff/Respondent:
Maurice
Phillips Wisenberg
Em:
bertus@mpw.co.za
[1]
In S v S and Another
2019 (6) SA 1
(CC) it was held that there is a
duty on the courts “to prevent the delayed finalisation of
divorce matters”
[2]
The notice reads: “
1ste
Verweerder haar bogemelde verdediging terugtrek, na aanleiding
daarvan dat daar ‘n skikking tussen die partye bereik
is en ‘n
skikkingsakte opgestel en onderteken is tussen die Eiser en 1st
Verweerder
.”
[3]
2013(6) SA 29 (ECG)
[4]
2016 (3) SA 37 (CC)
[5]
6. Safeguarding of interests of dependent and minor children –
(1) A decree of divorce
shall not be granted until the court –
(a) Is satisfied
that the provison s made or contemplated with regard to the welfare
of any minor or depednent child of
the marriage are satisfactory or
are the best that can be effected in the circumstdances; and
(2) For the purposes of
subsection (1) the court may cause any investigation which it may
deem necessary to be carried out and
may order any person to appear
before it and may order the parties or any one of them to pay the
costs of the investigation and
appearance.
(3) The court granting a
decree of divorce may, in regard to the maintenance of a dependent
child of a marriage or the custody
or guardianship of, or access to,
a minor child of the marriage, make any order which it may deem fit.
[6]
2012 (3) SA (GSJ)
[7]
2013(4) SA 350 (GJS) at 352 B-D
[8]
Also see BR and Another v T: In re: LR [2015] 4 All SA 280 (GJ)
[9]
2013(6) SA 29 (ECG), paragraph [13] at 35C-D of PL v YL
[10]
[1997] ZASCA 54
;
1997 (4) SA 160
(SCA) at 167 B-C
[11]
7. Division of assets and maintenance of parties –
(1) A court granting a
decree of divorce may in accordance with a written agreement between
the parties make an order with regard
to the division of the assets
of the parties or the payment of maintenance by the one party to the
other.
(2) In the absence of an
order made in terms of subsection (1) with regard to the payment of
maintenance by the one party to the
other, the court may, having
regard to the existing or prospective means of each of the parties,
their respective earning capacities,
financial needs and
obligations, the age of each of the parties, the duration of the
marriage, the standard of living of the
parties prior to the
divorce, their conduct insofar as it may be relevant to the
breakdown of the marriage, an order in terms
of subsection (3) and
any other factor which in the opinion of the court should be taken
into account, make an order which the
court finds just in respect of
the payment of maintenance by the one party to the other for any
period until the death or marriage
of the party in whose favour the
order is given, whichever event may first occur.
[12]
In
this regard and in the matter of Georghiades v Janse van Rensburg
2007 (3) 18 (C) Griessel J stated: “it constitutes
a
composite, a final agreement entered into by the parties,
purportedly to regulate all their rights and obligations inter se
upon divorce” and “for the court now to interfere in
that arrangement by varying one component of the agreement,
while
leaving the balance of the agreement intact, would fly in the fact
of the time-hallowed principle that ‘(t)he court
cannot make
new contracts of parties; it must hold them to bargains into which
they have deliberately entered”. I was also
referred to the
matter of Claassens v Claassens 1981(1) SA 360 (N) which dealt with
agreements governing maintenance which should,
as held by Didcott J,
not lightly be interfered with on the grounds of public interest.
[13]
2019
(5) SA 407 (SCA)
[14]
See
paragraph 15 of the Judgment
[15]
2018 (5) SA 479
(SCA)
[16]
See
par 193
[17]
See
par 197
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