Case Law[2024] ZASCA 55South Africa
H.J v P.J (285/2023) [2024] ZASCA 55 (19 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Divorce – spousal maintenance – order compelling furnishing of further particulars not appealable.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## H.J v P.J (285/2023) [2024] ZASCA 55 (19 April 2024)
H.J v P.J (285/2023) [2024] ZASCA 55 (19 April 2024)
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sino date 19 April 2024
SAFLII
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THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 285/2023
In
the matter between:
H[...]
J[...]
APPELLANT
and
P[...]
J[...]
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
H[...] J[...] v P[...] J[...]
(285/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 55
(19 April 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, HUGHES, MEYER and KGOELE JJA and MBHELE AJA
Heard:
8 March 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representatives by email, publication on the
Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on the 19
th
day
of April 2024.
Summary:
Divorce – spousal maintenance – order compelling
furnishing of further particulars not appealable.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein
(Loubser J and Mpama AJ, sitting as a court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2 The order of the high
court is set aside and replaced by the following:
‘
The
appeal is struck off the roll with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Kgoele
JA (Nicholls, Hughes and Meyer JJA and Mbhele AJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, a social worker by profession, and the respondent, an
attorney, were married to each other out of community of property
with the inclusion of the accrual system on 4 November 2000. The
appeal is a sequel of a counterclaim that was instituted by the
appellant in defending the divorce proceedings that were initiated by
the respondent against her in the regional court for the
Regional
Division of the Free State held at Bloemfontein (the regional court).
The appeal is against the order handed down by the
Free State
Division of the High Court (the high court), which on appeal to it by
the respondent, set aside the regional court’s
order compelling
the delivery of further particulars requested by the appellant for
trial. The appeal is with special leave granted
by this Court.
Factual
background
[2]
The divorce proceedings launched by the respondent are still pending
in the regional court. It appears from the pleadings that
the parties
are
ad idem
that the marriage relationship between them has
broken down irretrievably. Both parties delivered notices in terms of
section 7
of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 (the section 7
notice) and were duly replied thereto.
[3]
On 25 June 2021, the appellant delivered a notice requesting further
particulars for the purposes of trial. The paragraphs in her
request
for further particulars which are relevant to this appeal read as
follows:
‘“
5.
Particulars in respect of any company, corporation, firm, business,
venture or syndicate of whatsoever description (“the
entity”)
in which the Plaintiff holds any interest, whether direct or indirect
(through his interest in any trust or any
other entity). Plaintiff is
requested to provide full particulars regarding any income or benefit
received by him from such entity
in each tax year for the past three
financial years, including:
5.1
dividends/profit distributions accrued or received by him;
5.2
trustee’s remuneration accrued or received by him;
5.3
salary and/or commission accrued or received by him;
5.4
director’s fee accrued and/or received by him;
5.5
bonuses received or accrued to him;
5.6
drawings made on loan account by Plaintiff;
5.7
interests accrued on credit loan accounts;
5.8
loans advanced to Plaintiff;
5.9
telephone, traveling and entertainment allowances paid by the entity
on Plaintiff’s behalf or allowance received by Plaintiff
in
cash or in kind;
5.10
credit card payments made by the entity on Plaintiff’s behalf
or use of a corporate credit card;
5.11
medical aid and pension fund contributions paid on Plaintiff’s
behalf;
5.12
contributions paid by entity to short-term insurance premiums and
premiums in respect of investment and life policies in respect
of
Plaintiff’s life.
6.
Plaintiff is requested to furnish full and precise particulars of:
6.1
His gross and net income (after payment of tax) for each month during
the past three financial years to date and the sources thereof;
6.2
His anticipated gross and net income for the next twelve months (from
whatsoever source) and the sources thereof.”’
[4]
The respondent delivered his reply thereto. His response to the
particulars requested by the appellant in paragraphs 5 and 6 above
was to the effect that the particulars therein sought were not
necessary for the purposes of trial and irrelevant to the disputes
between the parties. Dissatisfied with the reply, the appellant
delivered a notice to compel in terms of rule 16(4) of the
Magistrates’
court rules. In the application to compel, the
appellant contended through an affidavit deposed to by her attorney
of record that
‘the answer is inadequate in that the respondent
cannot refuse to make a full financial disclosure in respect of his
existing
and prospective means, his earnings capacity, financial
needs and obligations including his standard of living having regard
to
the pleadings, in particular the defendant’s (appellant),
counterclaim for spousal maintenance’.
[5]
On 22 March 2022, the regional court ordered the respondent to answer
to the paragraphs so requested in the appellant’s request
to
compel. Aggrieved by this order, the respondent appealed to the high
court. The high court set aside the order to compel and
relying on
the decision of
Rall
v Rall
[1]
(
Rall
)
held that a party cannot be required to give particulars in relation
to a bare denial and that the regional court was bound to
follow the
precedent in
Rall
in this
regard. On petition, this Court granted the appellant special leave
against the judgment of the high court.
The
issues
[6]
The first issue to be dealt with is whether the regional court’s
order, ordering the respondent to provide further particulars,
is
appealable. Only if it is found to be appealable does the second
issue arise, namely, whether the decision of the high court
to follow
the judgment in
Rall
was justified. Therein it was held that
parties in matrimonial actions are not entitled to elicit further
particulars to prepare
for trial from the other party in
circumstances where the latter has pleaded a bare denial.
Appealability
of the regional court’s order
[7]
The appellant’s counsel submitted that the high court should
not have entertained the appeal by the respondent because it
was an
appeal against an interlocutory proceeding, and as such the order of
the regional court was not final in nature. He argued
that even
though the appealability issue was not raised before it, the high
court was entitled to raise this point of law
mero motu
. The
high court, like this Court, the argument continued, was entitled and
obliged to consider whether it has or had the necessary
jurisdiction
to entertain the appeal.
[8]
In his brief answer, the respondent’s counsel citing a plethora
of judgments submitted that the interests of justice enjoined
the
high court to hear the appeal because the regional court failed to
observe a foundational value of the Constitution by not
adhering to
the doctrine of precedent (following the decision of
Rall
).
This is the only reason proffered by the respondent as a basis that
the order of the regional court was appealable. This, in
my view,
presupposes that the respondent accepts that, but for this reason,
the regional court’s order compelling discovery
is purely
interlocutory.
[9]
It is trite that an application for a request for further particulars
is purely interlocutory. In advancing ‘the interests
of
justice’ in this appeal as a basis for the high court
proceeding with the merits of this matter, the respondent’s
counsel overlooked this Court’s recent decision in
TWK
v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings
[2]
(
TWK
).
In
TWK
,
this Court interrogated the notion thoroughly after carefully
analysing several decisions of this Court which had been willing
to
part from the
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[3]
(
Zweni
)
judgment and said the following:
‘
Even
if this is so as a matter of principle, as the defendant’s
counsel reminded us, a number of decisions of this Court have
been
willing, with different degrees of separation, to part from
Zweni
,
or subsume
Zweni
under the capacious remit of interests of justice. I do not here
essay a general account of appealability. I do affirm, though,
that
the doctrine of finality must figure as the central principle of
consideration when deciding whether a matter is appealable
to this
Court. Different types of matters arising from the high court may (I
put it no higher normatively) warrant some measure
of appreciation
that goes beyond
Zweni
or may require an exception to its precepts. Any deviation should be
clearly defined and justified to provide ascertainable standards
consistent with the rule of law. Recent decisions of this Court that
may have been tempted into the general orbit of the interests
of
justice should now be approached with the gravitational pull of
Zweni
.’
[4]
[10]
In the same judgment, this Court warned against courts other than the
Constitutional Court in adopting the standard of the interest
of
justice as the foundational basis upon which they decide whether the
matter is appealable or not. It remarked:
[5]
‘
I
recognise that there is thought to be a compelling basis to render
this Court’s approach to appealability consistent with
that of
the Constitutional Court. And hence to recognise the interests of
justice as the ultimate criterion by reference to which
appealability
is decided. I consider this to be a misreading of the Constitution.
Section 167 of the Constitution constituted the
Constitutional Court
as the highest court. Section 167(3) sets out matters that the
Constitutional Court may, and is thus competent,
to decide. …the
Constitutional Court grants leave to appeal on the grounds that the
matter raises an arguable point of law
of general public importance
which ought to be considered by that Court. The Constitution thereby
states a principle of appealability
in respect of the Constitutional
Court. The Constitution does so also to allow a person to bring a
matter directly to the Constitutional
Court or by way of direct
appeal (s 167(6) of the Constitution). National legislation or the
rules of the Constitutional Court
must allow a person to do so in the
interests of justice and with the leave of Constitutional Court.
…
To
adopt the interests of justice as the foundational basis upon which
this Court decides whether to entertain an appeal would put
in place
a regime that is both unpredictable and open-ended. It would
encourage litigants to persuade the high courts to grant
leave, when
they still have work to do, failing which, to invite this Court to
hear an appeal under the guidance of a standard
of commanding
imprecision. That would diminish certainty and enhance dysfunction.
It would also compromise the freedom with which
the Constitutional
Court selects the matters it hears from this Court.’
[6]
[11]
This Court was affirming what Jafta J said in the
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[7]
when he remarked:
‘
The
interests of justice and this standard alone applies to adjudication
of applications for leave to this Court. This is so because
that
standard is prescribed by the Constitution. Section 167(6) of the
Constitution provides:
“
National
legislation or rules of the Constitutional Court must allow a person,
when it is in the interests of justice and with leave
of the
Constitutional Court–
(a)
to bring a matter directly to the Constitutional Court; or
(b)
to appeal directly to the Constitutional Court from any other
court.”’
[12]
The decision in
TWK
,
therefore, circumscribed the approach this Court and other courts,
other than the Constitutional Court, can adopt on the issue
of the
appealability of orders. It concluded that whilst different types of
matters may warrant some measure of appreciation that
goes beyond
Zweni,
‘…the doctrine of finality must figure as the central
principle of consideration when deciding whether a matter is
appealable to this Court’.
[8]
Importantly, this matter does not concern an interim interdict where
exceptional circumstances might dictate its appealability.
[9]
[13]
The next question is whether this Court, despite the fact that the
high court did not entertain the issue of the appealability
of the
order of the regional court, is entitled to entertain this issue.
This question stems from the respondent’s submission
that the
appealability issue is new and cannot be raised without following the
Rules of this Court. First, this Court has the power
vested in it by
section 168(3) of the Constitution to decide whether the matter was
an appeal against a decision and thus appealable
or not. It also has
jurisdiction to determine whether the lower court’s ruling in
the proposed appeal is a ‘decision’
within the meaning of
section 16(1)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Hamilton
[10]
it was further clarified that this Court is not bound by the lower
court’s assessment and is entitled to reach its own conclusion
on the question. Further, the Constitutional Court in
United
Democratic Movement v Lebashe Investment
[11]
held:
‘…
The
Supreme Court of Appeal was not only entitled but obliged to
determine whether the matter was an appeal against a “decision”
and thus an appeal within its jurisdiction ….’
[14]
It is clear from the abovementioned authorities that this Court is
entitled to adjudicate on the issue of the appealability of
the order
of the regional court irrespective of whether the high court dealt
with it or not.
[15]
As far as the other argument that was advanced by the respondent's
counsel to the effect that the high court entertained the merits
because the regional court failed to observe precedent is concerned,
I am constrained by the conclusion that I reached below to
only state
that whether
Rall
is, in fact, good precedent, is itself
questionable. Even though it is trite law that precedent is a
foundational value of the rule
of law, relying on the notion of the
‘interests of justice’ to advance this argument cannot in
my view, salvage the
respondent’s case either. First, the issue
of appealability was not raised and dealt with by either party or the
court during
the proceedings before the high court. Secondly, the
‘interest of justice’ is a fact-based inquiry that cannot
be imputed
to the judgment of the high court or any court.
[16]
The upshot of the above is that the regional court’s order to
compel the respondent to discover is purely interlocutory in
nature.
It has no final effect, is not a definitive proceeding, and does not
have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion of the
relief claimed in the pending divorce action between the parties.
Neither does it affect the rights of the parties
whatsoever. The
parties are still entitled to prosecute their case and are still at
liberty to direct the court to any evidence
and to advance any
argument that they wish. The high court was obliged to entertain the
issue, even if it was not raised, as to
whether the matter before it
was an appeal against a ‘decision’ and thus an appeal
within its jurisdiction
mero motu.
Its failure to do so
amounts to a misdirection which is fatal to the appeal before this
Court. This is so because, the high court
should not have proceeded
with the merits as the regional court’s order was not
appealable. It should have struck the matter
off the roll.
[17]
The order of the high court on the merits cannot therefore stand.
Thus, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced by the
following:
‘
The
appeal is struck off the roll with costs.’
A
M KGOELE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant: H F
Marx
Instructed
by: DDKK
Attorneys Inc., Polokwane
c/o Honey Attorneys
Bloemfontein
For
respondent: N Snellenberg SC
Instructed
by: Symington &
De Kok Attorneys
Bloemfontein
[1]
Rall v
Rall
(2369/09)
[2010] ZAFSHC 165
(9 December 2010).
[2]
TWK
Agricultural Holdings (Pty) v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2023] ZASCA 63; 2023 (5) SA 163 (SCA).
[3]
Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order
of the
Republic of South Africa
[1992] ZASCA 197; [1993] 1 All SA 365 (A).
[4]
TWK
fn 2 above para 30.
[5]
Ibid para 25
[6]
TWK
fn
2 para 27.
[7]
City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
[2016] ZACC 19
;
2016 (9) BCLR 1133
(CC);
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC) para
179.
[8]
TWK
Agricultural Holdings (Pty) v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2023] ZASCA 63
;
2023 (5) SA 163
(SCA) para 30.
[9]
Old
Mutual Limited and Others v Moyo and Another
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 1;
[2020] 4 BLLR 401
(GJ);
[2020] 2 All SA 261
(GJ); (2020)
41 ILJ 1085 (GJ) paras 96-104.
[10]
Minister
of Safety and Security and Another v Hamilton
[2001] ZASCA 27; 2001 (3) SA 50 (SCA).
[11]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022] ZACC 34
;
2022 (12) BCLR 1521
(CC);
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC) para
40.
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