Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 17South Africa
Moodley v Naidoo and Another (D2271/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 17 (14 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
14 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Moodley v Naidoo and Another (D2271/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 17 (14 April 2023)
Moodley v Naidoo and Another (D2271/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 17 (14 April 2023)
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sino date 14 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D2271/2019
In
the matter between:
SIDHENDRA
MOODLEY Applicant
and
KESARI
NAIDOO
First
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF INANDA DISTRICT TWO Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Nicholson
AJ
[1]
This is an interlocutory application where the Defendant
in the
action, is the Applicant in this application and the First Respondent
in this application is the plaintiff in the action.
For convenience,
I shall refer to the parties in this application by their surnames.
[2]
On 22 February 2023, Mr Moodley brought an urgent application
before
me where he sought interim relief directing the Second Respondent to
hold in trust, all funds that were attached in terms
of a writ of
execution. I duly granted that order together with a rule nisi
wherein Mr Moodley seeks the said monies be returned
to his bank
account within seven days of the confirmation of the rule nisi.
[3]
The parties are before me today for the confirmation
of the rule
nisi
.
[4]
The genesis of this matter is in or about June 2016,
when Mr Moodley
and Ms Naidoo married each other in terms of Hindu rights. In light
of the person conducting the ceremony not being
a recognised marriage
officer in terms of s 3 of the Marriage Act 25 of 1961, the marriage
was not solemnized in terms of s 11(1)
of the Marriage Act. In the
circumstances, the marriage is not a valid marriage for the purposes
of the Marriage Act.
[5]
On or about 15 March 2019, Ms Naidoo instituted divorce
proceedings
against Mr Moodley and on the same day, she filed a Rule 43
application. In that matter a consent order was granted
on 14 August
2019 directing Mr Moodley to pay Ms Naidoo spousal maintenance
pendente lite
in the amount of R40 000 per month. For
reasons stated below, the said order is still in operation three
years and five months
later.
[6]
Due to Mr Moodley and Ms Naidoo’s marriage not
been recognised
in terms of the Marriage Act, in addition to a decree of divorce, Ms
Naidoo also seeks an order that the marriage
be recognised in terms
of the Marriage Act; accordingly, she cites the Minister of Justice
and Constitutional Development, and
Minister of Home Affairs as the
Second and Third Defendants in the action.
[7]
Considering the order sought against the Second and Third
Defendants,
both Second and Third Defendants filed an exception against Ms
Naidoo’s particulars of claim annexed to the divorce
summons.
[8]
That exception which is a
lis
between Ms Naidoo and the Second
and Third Defendants has to date not been prosecuted some three years
later. The inability to prosecute
the divorce has a ripple effect as
follows: the divorce cannot be set down for hearing, which in turn
means that the order in place
in terms of the Rule 43 remains in
place, and Mr Moodley is obliged to continue the payments
pendente
lite
.
[9]
It is convenient to mention that Ms Naidoo has since
withdrawn her
opposition to the notice of exception; accordingly, all that stands
is for the exception to be set down and heard.
[10]
On 7 December 2022, Ms Naidoo caused a writ of execution for an
amount of R
180 000 and legal costs to be issued by attachment
of Mr Moodley’s bank account.
[11]
On 12 January 2023, the writ was executed and an amount of
R114 142.14
was removed from Mr Moodley’s account and
placed in the Sheriff Inanda District Two’s trust account.
[12]
As mentioned hereinabove, Mr Moodley had obtained interim relief
freezing the
said amount in the Sheriff’s trust account.
[13]
Mr Moodley argues that the writ of execution issued in terms of
Uniform rule
45(12)(a) should be set aside because the purpose of
that Rule is directed at satisfying legal costs in terms of a cost
order,
and not payment in terms of Rule 43 orders, where a defaulting
party has failed to make payment. Additionally, Mr Moodley argues
further that even if Rule 45 was competent to satisfy errant Rule 43
orders, in terms of Rule 45(3), the Sheriff failed to first
proceed
to his dwelling house or place of employment or business to demand
satisfaction in terms of the writ before issuing the
writ.
[14]
It is
instructive at this point to have regard to the wording of the notice
in terms of Rule 45(12)(a) and (b)
[1]
issued to Mr Moodley, which reads:
‘
2:
…
WHEREAS
it has been brought to my knowledge that there are debts which are
subject to attachment and owing and/or accruing (now
and in the
future) or will accrue from you to the Respondent/Defendant and
whereas the Applicant/Plaintiff has obtained judgment
in the above
Honourable Court against the Respondent/Defendant on the [blank] for
R180 000.00 plus interest at [blank]% p.a.
from [blank] to date
of payment plus costs.
…
AND
WHEREAS I have been requested by the Plaintiff to attach an amount
equivalent to a R180 000.00 plus costs and my costs
from any
monies comprising of the above debts or becoming due in the future
from your company to the Defendant/Respondent and I
have caused such
amount to be attached.
Now
therefore you are required to make payment of the said debt as may be
sufficient to satisfy the writ and costs for which receipt
will be
given and shall be a discharge pro tanto of the debt so attached in
your hand.…
’
[15]
It is apparent from the notice, that while there is a Court order in
terms
of Uniform rule 43 to pay spousal maintenance in the amount of
R40 000 per month, there is no judgment in the amount of
R180 000.
Accordingly, the notice is plainly wrong. Further, Mr
Moodley denies that he owes Ms Naidoo an amount of R180 000,
which is
an issue for the court, not the Sheriff to decide.
[16]
In the circumstances, the notice of attachment is clearly wrong
because there
is no judgment amount for the Sheriff to act upon.
[17]
Faced with
the averment that the writ of execution was not proper on the basis
laid out by Mr Moodley, Ms Naidoo simply responds
that the writ was
justified in the circumstances.
[2]
Accordingly, neither a basis for the submission above nor the denial
that the writ was not proper has been advanced by Ms Naidoo.
[18]
In his
heads of argument, Mr
Narandas
on behalf of Mr Moodley asserts that the doctrine known as substance
over form
[3]
allows the Court to
ignore the form of a disguised transaction and examine the true
nature of the transaction, and attach adequate
legal implications to
it. Accordingly, the writ of execution issued by Ms Naidoo on 7
December 2022 should be set aside.
[19]
In Ms Naidoo’s heads of argument, which was drafted by Ms
Lushaba but
argued by Mr
Houston
, the issues in the summons
regarding the recognition of the marriage are dealt with but, the
issue of the writ, which is the subject
of this application, is not
dealt with.
[20]
In oral
argument, Mr
Houston
submitted that it is common cause that there is a Rule 43 order that
has been granted where Mr Moodley is directed to pay Ms Naidoo
an
amount of R40 000 per month and that order still stands. Mr
Moodley has failed to make payments which resulted in significant
arrears, and while Ms Naidoo in her answering affidavit, has put up a
schedule which demonstrates that the arrears, after the R114 142.14
has been paid, now stands at R95 857.86,
[4]
Mr Moodley has not put up any evidence that he has been making
payments in terms of the Rule 43 order.
[21]
From the
Bar, Mr
Narandas
conceded that there are arrears, but the arrears are less than the
amount asserted by Ms Naidoo. Further, in the replying affidavit,
Mr
Moodley has put up a schedule of payments from 2 May 2021 until 4
August 2022 of various amounts. The table does not have a
total.
[5]
At pages 96 to 99 are various proofs of payment which appear to
evidence the payments in the table at page 95. On a mere comparison
of the two tables, there does appear to be a significant amount of
payments, which Mr Moodley asserts, but has not found its way
into Ms
Naidoo’s table at page 83 of the papers.
[22]
I pause to mention that the two tables lists the information in
different formats.
For instance, Ms Naidoo lists in her table the
arrears and payments as a result of the attachments while Mr Moodley
simply lists
the payments he has made. Accordingly, the two tables
are irreconcilable without the parties sitting together to explain
these
tables.
[23]
The arrears or lack thereof is not relevant to this matter because
the gravamen
is whether Rule 45(12)(a) is competent to collect the
arrears of a Rule 43 order.
[24]
Considering the wording of the writ of execution, and the notice of
attachment,
together with the wording of Rule 45, and the fact that
Ms Naidoo did not dispute that the writ of execution and notice of
attachment
were procedurally incorrect, the application must succeed.
[25]
I pause to add here that I agree with Mr
Narandas’
contention from the bar, that a contempt of Court application is the
correct remedy, where an errant party fails to obey a court
order.
In that way, Mr Moodley would have been given the opportunity
to dispute the arrears and Ms Naidoo would be given
the opportunity
to prove the arrears.
Order
[26]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
(a)
The rule nisi dated 22 February 2023 is confirmed.
(b)
The first respondent is directed to pay the costs of the application.
Nicholson
AJ
Date
heard:
22 March 2023
Date
handed down:
14 April 2023
Appearances:
For
Applicant:
Adv
N Narandas
Instructed
by: Pat
Naidoo Attorneys
Suite 2A, 2
nd
Floor LBB House
15
Solstice Road
Umhlanga
For
Respondent:
Adv Houston
Instructed
by:
A R Kazi and Co
1
st
Floor, 579
Brickfield Road
Overport, Durban
[1]
Indexed
papers, page 58, annexure “G11” to the founding
affidavit.
[2]
Paragraph
27 at page 79 of the papers.
[3]
Dadoo
Ltd and Others v Krugersdorp Municipal Council
1920 AD 530
at 547;
Bozzone
and Others v Secretary for Inland Revenue
1975
(4) SA 579 (A).
[4]
Indexed
page 83.
[5]
Page
95 of the papers, annexure “B” to the replying
affidavit.
sino noindex
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