Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 84South Africa
A.M v S.W (7813/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 84 (16 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
16 May 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## A.M v S.W (7813/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 84 (16 May 2022)
A.M v S.W (7813/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 84 (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
Number: 7813/2022
In
the matter between:
AM
Applicant
And
SW
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED THIS 16
TH
DAY OF MAY 2022
LEKHULENI,
J
[1]
This matter came before this court on an urgent basis in terms of
rule 6 (12) of the
Uniform Rules of Court. In this matter, the
applicant sought an order for the appointment of an expert forensic
psychologist, Dr
Leigh Pettigrew for the purposes of conducting the
care and contact assessment in respect of the parties’ minor
child. The
applicant also sought an order that the draft order made
by this court on 04 July 2018 regulating care and contact of the
parties’
minor child be amended to replace all sections of the
draft order where it reads “unsupervised contact” with
the words
supervised contact with a social worker or a person that
both parties agree upon. The respondent opposed the application and
also
instituted a conditional application on an urgent basis in terms
of which he sought an order that, Dr Matilda Smit be appointed
as an
expert to conduct a care and contact assessment pertaining to the
minor child for the purposes of reporting to the Regional
Court in
Bellville under case number RCC: BELL655/2018.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[2]
The applicant and the respondent are still married to each other and
their divorce
is pending at the Bellville Regional Court. The parties
have a minor child who was born on 10 February 2016. The minor child
is
currently in the care of the maternal grandmother. The applicant
avers that during September 2018, the minor child began advising
her
that the respondent had been touching and hurting her. The child
informed her that the respondent hurt her head and vagina.
On 09
November 2018, the minor child reported to her in the presence of the
grandmother that she did not want to return home as
the respondent
would hurt her vagina. On 01 December 2018, the applicant’s
mother caught the minor child attempting to take
photos of her
private parts with a cell phone.
[3]
On 14 January 2019, the applicant enquired from the minor child as to
who was hurting
her vagina and after much persistency, the child
informed her that the respondent puts his fingers into her vagina and
thereafter
attempts to imitate the movement. In light of the serious
allegations made by the child, she then attended at Brackenfell
Police
Station on numerous occasions and deposed to numerous
affidavits highlighting what the minor child informed her relating to
the
respondent. She implored the court to appoint, Dr Leigh Pettigrew
to conduct the care and contact assessment in respect of the minor
child and more specifically to investigate the allegations of sexual
abuse levelled against the respondent by the minor child.
In light of
these allegations against the respondent, the applicant applied that
the respondent be afforded supervised access to
the child. The
applicant conceded that she delayed in bringing this application as
she was ill-advised by her previous attorneys
of record.
[4]
Meanwhile, the respondent disputed the allegations levelled against
him and also launched
an urgent conditional application for the
appointment of Dr Matilda Smit to conduct a care and contact
assessment report pertaining
to the minor child. The respondent
averred that to the knowledge of the applicant there is absolutely no
truth in any of the allegations
of sexual or other abuse of their
daughter. The respondent further averred that the allegations of
sexual abuse were thoroughly
investigated and no evidence could be
found to support their accusations. He enjoyed unrestricted access to
their minor child since
this court’s order of the 04 July 2018.
The respondent contends that the applicant is merely raising her old
false allegations
of sexual abuse of the minor child in an
ill-conceived attempt to persuade the court to appoint Dr Leigh
Pettigrew as an expert.
[5]
The respondent further contends that the applicant has not made out a
case in her
founding affidavit for any form of urgency and yet she
abuses the court process by placing this matter before the urgent
court
on 25 March 2022 after serving the issued papers on his
attorneys of record on 23 March 2022 at 15h57. In the respondent’s
view, this court does not have jurisdiction to appoint an expert to
conduct a care and contact assessment seeing that it is not
sitting
as the divorce court and that the respective parental rights and
responsibilities are already one of the issues pending
before the
Regional Court in Bellville. In the event that the court does not
agree with her in this regard, the respondent requested
the court to
appoint, Dr Matilda Smit, a social worker to conduct the care and
contact assessment. The respondent states that the
applicant obtained
an interim protection order against him on 11 April 2018. The
protection order was dismissed on 18 April 2019
after oral evidence
was heard. In February 2019, the applicant instituted Children’s
Court proceedings against the respondent
based on the same
allegations of sexual abuse. The allegations of sexual abuse were
investigated by Sergeant Goodwin of the dedicated
unit called FCS of
the South African Police Services
(“SAPS”)
,
Kraaifontein and she could not find any evidence to support the
applicant’s allegations. The minor child was further subjected
to a medico-legal examination and it too reported no evidence of
sexual assault on the minor child. The respondent further contends
that the minor child was further subjected to a forensic assessment
by Captain McKinnon, a specialist social worker in the employee
of
SAPS and she also could not find any evidence or support of the
alleged sexual abuse.
[6]
The matter was further investigated and assessed by Ms Lynn Andrews,
a registered
social worker in the employee of Badisa Trio for the
purposes of the Children’s Court proceedings. Ms Andrews found
that
despite all the allegations the applicant made against the
respondent, ever since the respondent announced that he wanted a
divorce,
every allegation has been investigated and was seemingly
unfounded as no evidence was found to support these allegations and
the
child concerned has not disclosed the alleged abused to any
person other than the applicant. Ms Andrews also recommended that the
matter be referred to the office of the Family Advocate to resolve
the existing issues around care and contact.
ISSUES
[7]
This case in my view raises two critical questions, namely whether
this application
is urgent as envisaged in rule 6 (12) of the Uniform
Rules and if so, whether Dr Pettigrew or Dr Smit should be appointed
in this
regard to conduct the care and contact assessment report for
the parties.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND ANALYSIS
Is
this matter urgent?
[8]
This application was brought on an urgent basis. This court was asked
to dispense
with all forms of service provided for in the rules of
court and to treat this application in terms of rule 6 (12) of the
Uniform
Rules of this court. In my view, before the court can
consider the matter on the merits, the court must determine whether
the requirements
of urgency have been satisfied. Rule 6 (12) provides
inter alia
that a court may dispose of urgent applications at
such time and place and in such manner and in accordance with such
procedure
it deems fit. The circumstances that an applicant avers
renders a matter urgent and the reasons why he claims that he would
not
be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course must
in terms of rule 6(12)(b) be set forth explicitly in the founding
affidavit.
[9]
The approach to adopt in determining urgency was set out in
In
re: Several Matters on the Urgent Court Roll
2013 (1) SA 549
,
where the court referred with approval to the views of Notshe AJ in
East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012] JOL 28244
(GSJ) at paras 6-7 where
the court stated:
“
[6]
The import thereof is that the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not
there for taking. An applicant has to set forth explicitly
the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent. More
importantly, the Applicant must state the reasons why he claims
that
he cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
The question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent
to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the
issue of absence of substantial redress in an application
in due
course. The rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a
litigant because if the latter were to wait for the normal
course
laid down by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress.
[7]
It is important to note that the rules require absence of substantial
redress. This is not equivalent to the irreparable harm
that is
required before the granting of an interim relief. It is something
less. He may still obtain redress in an application
in due course but
it may not be substantial. Whether an applicant will not be able to
obtain substantial redress in an application
in due course will be
determined by the facts of each case. An applicant must make out his
case in that regard."
[10]
In this matter, the applicant frankly conceded that there was a delay
in bringing this application.
Her reasons for bringing this
application late is that she was unfortunately ill-advised by her
previous attorney of record and
that on /or about 22 January 2022 she
terminated her mandate of her erstwhile attorneys and instructed her
current attorneys of
record. Her current attorneys of record perused
the relevant affidavit and after consultation with her, advised her
to bring this
application.
[11]
This case, in my view is not urgent, the issues raised by the
applicant in the founding affidavit
have been dealt with by various
professionals and institutions. Various legal representatives as well
represented the applicant
before her present attorneys of record came
on record. I find it difficult to accept that all these legal
representatives ill-advised
the applicant not to launch this
application in time. Furthermore, the issues raised by the applicant
in the papers are not new
issues. From the correspondences filed in
the conditional application, it is evident that the parties engaged
for several weeks
regarding the appointment of an appropriate expert
to conduct a care and contact assessment report. Notwithstanding, the
applicant
still chose to bring this application on an extremely
urgent basis.
[12]
Most importantly, the allegations against the respondent have been
dealt with by various professionals
including the Police and the
Children’s Court in the past. A medico-legal report was also
prepared pursuant to these allegations.
In other words, these
complaints are not new and have been investigated in the past. They
date back to the year 2019. The respondent
has been enjoying
unsupervised access since July 2018. Ms Andrews in her report alludes
to the fact that the minor child is not
in need of care and
protection and that unsupervised access with the respondent can only
benefit the minor child’s development.
[13]
Furthermore, the
applicant does not indicate in
her papers what harm or prejudice the child will suffer if the
application seeking to appoint Dr
Pettigrew was filed in the normal
course. Notably, a
t the Children’s Court, after
considering all the complaints of sexual abuse raised by the
applicant, Ms Andrews recommended
that the issues relating to care
and contact of the minor child be referred to the Family Advocate for
investigation. The parties
never considered this option. Of great
importance is that the child was subjected to a lot of assessment by
various professionals.
The observations of Ms Andrews in my view are
opposite. She states that owing to the multitude of allegations made
over a short
period and the amount of assessments that the child
concerned underwent since the start of the investigation, she is of
the opinion
that it would not serve the best interest of the child
concerned to undergo another assessment.
[14]
I am aware that this case involves the interest of the minor child.
The Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa Act 108 of 1996
unequivocally articulates the principle in Section 28(2) thereof that
a child's best interests
are of paramount importance in every matter
concerning a child. Our common law also prescribes that the child’s
best interests
must determine the outcome when a court has to make an
order regarding a child. In other words, in all matters concerning
the care,
protection, maintenance and well-being of a child, the
standard that the child’s best interest is of paramount
importance,
must be applied (see section 9 of the Children’s
Act 38 of 2005. In addition, section 6(2)(a) of the Children’s
Act
provides that all proceedings, actions or decisions in a matter
concerning a child must respect, protect, promote, and fulfil the
child’s rights as set out in the Bill of Rights and must
respect the child’s inherent dignity.
[15]
In light of the above discussion, I am of the view that the applicant
has failed to make out
a case for urgency and for that reason her
application stands to fail. However, I am of the view that in keeping
with the best
interest of child, the office of the Family Advocate
must be instructed to conduct a thorough investigation in this matter
with
the assistance of a family counsellor envisaged in section 3(1)
of Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act 24 of 1987 in order
to
compile a report on care and contact of the minor child.
ORDER
[16]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
16.1
The office of the Family Advocate Cape Town is hereby ordered to
urgently investigate the issue relating to care and contact
of the
minor child and to make that report available to the Regional Court
sitting in Bellville Regional Court.
16.2
The application is hereby removed from the roll for lack of urgency
with no order as to costs.
LEKHULENI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv A Heunis
Attorney
for the Applicant: RP Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 25 March 2022
Date
of judgment: 16 May 2022
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