Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 54South Africa
S.M v N.M (D6667/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 54 (28 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
28 August 2024
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: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAKZDHC 54
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## S.M v N.M (D6667/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 54 (28 August 2024)
S.M v N.M (D6667/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 54 (28 August 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAKZDHC/Data/2024_54.html
sino date 28 August 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Rule 43 application –
Abuse
of process
–
Statement
prolix in the extreme and containing irrelevant allegations –
Scandalous that applicant’s legal advisors
have permitted
such irrelevancies – Essence of rule abused by prolix papers
– Growing trend of applications that
do not comply with
prescripts of rule must be halted – Matter struck off roll –
Applicant’s attorney not
be permitted to charge applicant
any fees for application – Uniform Rule 43.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D6667/2024
In
the matter between:
S[…]
M[…]
APPLICANT
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: […])
and
N[…]
M[…]
RESPONDENT
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: […])
Coram
:
Mossop J
Heard
:
28 August 2024
Delivered
:
28 August 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The matter is struck off the roll.
2.
There shall be no order as to costs.
3.
The applicant’s attorney shall not be
permitted to charge the applicant any fees in respect of this
application.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
[1]
This is an ex tempore judgment.
[2]
The applicant has brought a rule 43 application against
the
respondent, her husband. From the papers before me, it does not
appear that the respondent has delivered a sworn reply to the
applicant’s sworn statement and the indexed papers accordingly
indicate that the matter is unopposed at the moment. The papers
before me thus are comprised solely of documents that the applicant
has presented to the court.
[3]
Uniform rule 43(2)(a) reads as follows:
‘
An
applicant applying for any relief referred to in subrule (1) shall
deliver a sworn statement in the nature of a declaration,
setting out
the relief claimed and the grounds therefor, together with a notice
to the respondent corresponding with Form 17 of
the First Schedule.
[4]
In
E
v E
,
[1]
a full court agreed with what was stated in
Maree
v Maree
,
[2]
namely that:
‘
(t)he
procedure envisaged in rule 43 is not of a normal application
commenced by way of a notice of motion. It is a succinct application,
aimed at providing the applicant interim relief, speedily and
expeditiously.’
I shall return to the
words in the second sentence of this extract later in this brief
judgment.
[5]
This application is contained, and presented, in three separate
volumes. Practice directive 9.4.5 of this division prescribes that
papers in all opposed motions shall be secured in separate,
conveniently sized and clearly identified volumes of approximately
100 pages each. The fact that there are three such volumes in
this
Rule 43 application gives an immediate indication of the length of
the applicant’s papers. From first page to last page,
they
cover some 260 pages.
[6]
Turning to consider those, the relief that the
applicant claims covers five pages of the notice of application.
The
applicant’s sworn statement commences at indexed page 8 of the
papers and terminates at indexed page 57. It is comprised
of some 147
individually numbered paragraphs. The annexures to that sworn
statement commence at indexed page 58 and run to indexed
page 258.
There are thus 200 pages of annexures. The final two pages of the 260
pages that make up the application contains the
notice of set down.
[7]
Those
who compiled this application obviously have paid no heed whatsoever
to the contents of Uniform rule 43 and its specific purpose.
That
rule was crafted to allow, pendente lite, for disputes involving
maintenance and associated relief in matrimonial proceedings
to be,
as was stated in the extract quoted from
E
v E
earlier,
to be ‘
speedily
and expeditiously’ addressed and resolved.
The
whole purpose behind Rule 43 is brevity.
[3]
This is entirely understandable, as the relief that is granted is not
final relief but interim in nature that will, in normal
circumstances, not be in place for very long.
[8]
Thus, where a party, or both parties, deliver
prolix papers, the very essence of the Rule 43 is abused. The
reference in Rule 43
to a sworn statement in the form of a
declaration is a relic of the original rule, but it is a significant
relic. When the rule
was first fashioned, the parties were required
to file an unsworn statement in the nature of a declaration or a
plea. The introduction
of a sworn version of these documents occurred
later, but the references to a declaration and a plea were retained
in the wording
of the rule. There was a reason for that. It was to
emphasise that brevity, as in a declaration or a plea, was still
required.
[9]
Rule
43 applications that are lengthy, but which are much shorter than the
one before me presently, have previously been struck
from the roll
and not considered because of prolixity: in
Patmore
v Patmore
,
[4]
this was the fate of an application that ran to 47 pages; in
Smit
v
Smit
,
[5]
the application was 69 pages in length and in
Du
Preez v Du Preez
,
[6]
the papers comprised 192 pages.
[10]
The applicant’s sworn statement is prolix in
the extreme. It contains irrelevant allegations and has attached to
it literally
dozens of photographs, the precise relevance of which is
not clear. Examples of these photographs are a photograph of a
Michael
Kors handbag allegedly purchased by the respondent, a
photograph of the ‘Respondent’s lipstick and semen
stained T-shirt’
and messages recorded on a cellular telephone
relating to an incident involving Viagra pills. It is, quite frankly,
scandalous
that the applicant’s legal advisors have permitted
such irrelevancies to find a place in this application.
[11]
This
court is entitled to regulate proceedings before it and to prevent
the abuse of its own processes by a litigant.
[7]
This application is such an abuse. The fact that I do not have any
opposing papers from the respondent does not alter the view
that I
take of the matter. The applicant must first present an application
that complies with the prescripts of Rule 43 if she
wants her
application to be considered and adjudicated upon. Until she does so,
and even in the absence of opposition from the
respondent, it will
not be considered.
[12]
In my view, the growing trend of presenting Rule
43 applications that are lengthy and that do not comply with the
prescripts of
Rule 43 must be halted. Judges simply do not have the
time to peruse lengthy affidavits that narrate every misstep and
alleged
wrongdoing of a spouse. Often these allegations are included
simply to colour the court’s mind against a particular party.
One way of potentially halting these abuses is to order costs against
a party that is guilty of prolixity.
[13]
I am,
however, prepared to assume and accept that the applicant personally
had no knowledge of what her application should contain.
Those that
had such knowledge, and who must have known that the application that
was prepared for the applicant offended the provisions
of Rule 43,
were her legal advisors. It may therefore be unfair to punish the
applicant’s pocket with a costs order against
her. Far better
in my view, is the approach that was adopted in
Visser
v Visser
,
[8]
where the court directed that the attorneys acting for both parties
where the papers presented by both sides were prolix should
not be
able to charge their respective clients for work done in respect of
the rule 43 application. That reasoning commends itself
to me and I
shall follow its lead. Hopefully, such an order will cause legal
practitioners to show greater discipline in preparing
these types of
applications.
[14]
I accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The matter is struck off the roll.
2.
There shall be no order as to costs.
3.
The applicant’s attorney shall not be
permitted to charge the applicant any fees in respect of this
application.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Mr
Patel
Instructed
by:
Sasha
Lee and Associates
119
Stella Road
Hillary
Queensburgh
Counsel
for the respondent:
No
appearance
[1]
E
v E
2019
(5) SA 566
(GJ) para 25.
[2]
Maree
v Maree
1972
(1) SA 261
(O) at 264A.
[3]
Colman
v Colman
1967
(1) SA 291
(C) 292A.
[4]
Patmore
v Patmore
1997
(4) SA 785
(W).
[5]
Smit
v Smit
1978
(2) SA 720
(WLD) 722F.
[6]
Du
Preez v Du Preez
[2008]
ZAGPHC 334.
## [7]Smit
v Smitsupra;M
N v A L N[2024]
ZAGPPHC 402 para 15.
[7]
Smit
v Smit
supra;
M
N v A L N
[2024]
ZAGPPHC 402 para 15.
[8]
Visser
v Visser
1992
(4) SA 530
(SECLD) 531.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S.K v M.N (D3532/24) [2024] ZAKZDHC 43 (20 June 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 43High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
M.C.M v B.M (D12093/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 100 (12 November 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 100High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
K.S v N.S (D1137/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 94 (1 December 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 94High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Ntuli v S (AR258/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 42 (26 June 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 42High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
N.S v S (DR42/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 83 (26 October 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 83High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar