Case Law[2024] ZASCA 92South Africa
VJ v VJ and Another (258/2023) [2024] ZASCA 92; 2024 (6) SA 400 (SCA) (11 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
11 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Divorce – arbitration agreement in the Deed of Settlement made an order of court – interpretation of s 2(a) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 – whether arrear maintenance is arbitrable – s 2(a) wide enough to preclude such a matter.
Judgment
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## VJ v VJ and Another (258/2023) [2024] ZASCA 92; 2024 (6) SA 400 (SCA) (11 June 2024)
VJ v VJ and Another (258/2023) [2024] ZASCA 92; 2024 (6) SA 400 (SCA) (11 June 2024)
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sino date 11 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Arbitration
–
Whether
arrear maintenance is arbitrable – Arbitration agreement in
deed of settlement made order of court – Appellant
approaching maintenance court to enforce maintenance order and
recover arrear maintenance – Respondent contending that
parties excluded jurisdiction of maintenance court in terms of
arbitration clause –
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
and
prohibition of certain matters to arbitration –
Section 2(a)
wide enough to preclude such a matter – Maintenance court
correctly dismissing objection to its jurisdiction.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 358/2023
In the matter between:
E[...] V[...]
J[...]
APPELLANT
and
W[…]
J[…] V[…] J[…]
FIRST RESPONDENT
CAPITEC
BANK HOLDINGS LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
V[...] J[...] v V[...]
J[...] and Another
(258/2023)
[2024]
ZASCA 92
(11 June 2024)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MOKGOHLOA, WEINER and KGOELE JJA, and TOLMAY AJA
Heard:
6 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives via e-mail, publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date
and time for delivery are deemed to be at 11h00 on 11 June
2024.
Summary:
Divorce – arbitration agreement in the Deed of Settlement made
an order of court – interpretation of
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
– whether arrear maintenance is
arbitrable –
s 2(
a
) wide enough to preclude such a
matter.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein
(Mpama AJ, Loubser J sitting as a court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including costs of two counsel where
so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs’
JUDGMENT
Kgoele
JA (Mocumie, Mokgohloa and Weiner JJA and Tolmay AJA concurring)
[1]
The appeal concerns the interpretation of
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 (the
Arbitration Act). Central
to the
appeal is a dispute as to whether arrear maintenance falls within the
purview of
s 2(
a
). The magistrate court for the district of
the Free State held at Bloemfontein (the maintenance court), ruled
that the issue falls
within the purview of
s 2(
a
). This ruling
was set aside on appeal to the Free State Division of the High Court,
Bloemfontein (the high court). It held that
the maintenance court had
no jurisdiction to decide the issue, only an arbitrator could do so.
This appeal is against the decision
of the high court with special
leave of this Court.
[2]
The dispute arose in the following circumstances. The appellant, Mrs
E[…] V[…] J[…]
and the first respondent, Mr W[…]
J[…] V[…] J[…], were married. Their marriage was
dissolved on 4 June
2015. The decree of divorce granted incorporated
a deed of settlement concluded by the parties. Two clauses thereof
are relevant
for the purposes of this appeal. The first one is clause
3.1 which provides the appellant with the entitlement to the payment
of
spousal maintenance. In terms of this clause, the spousal
maintenance would cease if she remarries, cohabits with another man,
or upon her death (the
dum casta
clause). The second is clause
11 which provides that any dispute between the parties regarding
their rights, duties, or liabilities
arising from the deed of
settlement, was to be submitted to arbitration (the arbitration
clause).
[3]
Around 2018, several disputes arose between the parties arising from
the deed of settlement. An arbitrator
was eventually appointed to
resolve those disputes. Meetings between the parties culminated in an
arbitration agreement concluded
in August 2020. At all times the
parties were assisted by their respective legal representatives.
Clause 3 of the arbitration agreement
accorded the arbitrator the
power to determine his or her own jurisdiction.
[4]
The appellant, however, never filed a statement of claim in respect
of those disputes as agreed in the
arbitration agreement. Instead, on
20 August 2020, the appellant’s attorney wrote a letter to the
respondent’s attorney,
raising concerns about the costs of
arbitration. He also urged the respondent’s attorney that they,
together with the parties,
should try and resolve the disputes
outlined in the letter that was previously sent to them dated 9
September 2019. As a result,
the arbitration proceedings did not
materialise. I pause here to indicate that, the appellant’s
counsel submitted before
this Court that at that stage, arrear
maintenance was not included in these disputes. I will return to this
contention later in
the judgment.
[5]
On 1 March 2021, the appellant approached the maintenance court with
an application to enforce the maintenance
order and to recover the
arrear maintenance in terms of s 26 of the Maintenance Act, 99 of
1998 (the
Maintenance Act). The
maintenance court granted the
requested order on an
ex-parte
basis. In addition, the
maintenance court interdicted Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd, the second
respondent, from effecting payment
of any monies from the account of
the first respondent.
[6]
Aggrieved by this, the first respondent anticipated the return date.
In his opposition, the first respondent
also objected to the
jurisdiction of the maintenance court. He contended that the parties
contractually excluded its jurisdiction
from hearing the maintenance
dispute in terms of the arbitration clause.
[7]
The maintenance court dismissed the objection. It ordered the
maintenance enquiry to continue in that
court. The respondent
appealed the maintenance court’s order, and as alluded to
already, the high court upheld his appeal.
The high court concluded
that the question of whether the arrear maintenance is a matter
falling within the purview of
s 2
of the
Arbitration Act or
not
cannot be decided by the maintenance court, but by the arbitrator,
since the parties had agreed to refer their dispute to arbitration.
The high court also concluded that the arbitrator must decide his own
jurisdiction.
[8]
The central question in this appeal is whether a dispute regarding
arrear maintenance is arbitrable.
Key to this dispute is
s 2(
a
)
of the
Arbitration Act which
prohibits the submission to arbitration
of certain matters or subjects. It provides:
‘
A
reference to arbitration shall not be permissible in respect of –
(a)
any matrimonial cause or any matter incidental to any such cause.
(b)
. . .’
[9]
It is trite that an agreement to have a dispute resolved by way of
arbitration is not in itself inherently
contra
bonos
mores.
[1]
In
Telecordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[2]
this Court stressed the need, when courts have to consider the
confirmation or setting aside of arbitral awards, for the adherence
to the principle of party autonomy, which requires a high degree of
deference to arbitral decision and minimises the scope of
intervention by the courts.
[10]
In the same breath, it is well established that arbitration does not
oust the jurisdiction of courts.
[3]
Section 3
of the
Maintenance Act also
stipulates that each
magistrates’ court functions as a maintenance court at the
district level, possessing jurisdiction over
all matters arising from
the
Maintenance Act. A
maintenance order is defined in the
Maintenance Act as
‘any order for the payment, including the
periodical payment, of sums of money . . . issued by any court in the
Republic.
. .’ A ‘court’ in the Republic includes a
high court.
[11]
The appellant’s main submission is that the impugned
arbitration clause is in conflict with
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act because
the arrear maintenance dispute constitutes a
matrimonial cause, or a matter incidental thereto. The appellant
therefore supports
the order of the maintenance court that the
dispute was not capable of being adjudicated upon by way of
arbitration.
[12]
Relying on
Eke
v Parsons (Eke),
[4]
and
Brookstein
v Brookstein (Brookstein),
[5]
the first respondent supports the order of the appeal court. He
contends that the deed of settlement disposed of all the disputes
between the parties; the
lis
between the parties
became
res
judicata
;
the matrimonial cause between the parties ceased to exist when a
decree of divorce was granted; nothing remained that was incidental
to such cause. As far as the characterisation of the dispute between
the parties is concerned, the first respondent submitted that
the
appellant’s cause of action is based on the
dum
casta
clause;
and the parties expressly agreed that all issues arising from the
settlement agreement were to be dealt with by way of arbitration;
their arbitration agreement should be respected by the court.
[13]
As a basis for the argument that the dispute does not fall within the
purview of
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act, the
first respondent
relied on
Brookstein
wherein this Court dealt with the
question of whether a delictual claim based on negligent
misrepresentation of the appellant’s
accrual was a cause that
formed part of the matrimonial cause and thereby not susceptible to
arbitration in terms of the
Arbitration Act. In
this regard, the
Court held as follows:
‘
After
the order was granted, there was no longer any matrimonial cause to
speak of. Neither was there anything incidental to such
cause, as all
of the matrimonial issues were disposed of when the court granted the
order incorporating the settlement agreement.
Consequently, there
cannot be any issue still outstanding relating to the marriage. The
inevitable result is that the marriage
and all its natural
consequences came to an end, and anything relating thereto, such as
proprietary consequences, became res judicata.’
[6]
[14]
In characterising the dispute between the parties, the first
respondent argued that the dispute between the parties
concerns in
particular, a factual determination of whether the
dum casta
clause was triggered or not. If the answer is yes, the first
respondent submitted, a question of whether the appellant is entitled
to the payment of maintenance in terms of the deed of settlement
arises. As such,
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act is
not
applicable and the dispute between the parties is arbitrable. To
amplify this submission, the first respondent contends that
the
dispute dates back to 2018. It relates to the fact that the appellant
was living with another man as husband and wife and therefore
his
obligation to pay maintenance was extinguished. According to the
first respondent, the dispute was properly formulated and
the
appellant elected not to place any evidence of exceptional
circumstances before the maintenance court that would entitle it
to
exercise its discretion not to stay the proceedings and refer the
dispute to arbitration.
[15]
As far as the arbitration clause is concerned, the first respondent
argued that the facts of this case are telling
in that the appellant
is the one who requested that an arbitrator be appointed; an
arbitration agreement was concluded between
the parties; the
appellant is the one who reneged from this agreement by failing to
file a statement of claim in circumstances
where the parties had
agreed that the arbitrator should decide upon his own jurisdiction.
The first respondent contends that
the order of the high court
cannot be faulted.
[16]
The characterisation of the principal issue before this Court is a
fundamental point of departure of the dispute
between the parties.
This is evident because whilst the appellant refers to it as arrear
maintenance, the first respondent, on
the other hand, relates the
dispute to the
dum casta
clause, a duty to maintain. According
to him, this would include a question of whether the maintenance
order has lapsed or been
extinguished.
[17]
The characterisation proffered by the first respondent is
ill-conceived for two reasons. First, the maintenance
dispute stems
from a maintenance order that was made by the high court when the
marriage between the parties was dissolved. It
relates to enforcing
an order of the court and not the underlying settlement agreement.
The appellant sought an order for the attachment
of a debt. The
majority of the claims consist of the short payments that were made
by the first respondent. For example, in July
2017, it reflected a
short payment of R1 627.50. This is so because an amount of R32 550
instead of R34 177.50 was paid. The list
goes on up until the year
2020. Some short payment relates to relatively small amounts of ±
R400. Only three of the 42 months’
transactions relied on by
the appellants relate to a total non-payment.
[18]
The upshot of all of the above is that the first respondent did
comply with the maintenance court order but not
in full. The
statement proffered by the first respondent that he denies that he is
obliged to pay any maintenance to the applicant,
cannot be true as
well. He did make payments but not in accordance with the amount the
maintenance order stipulated.
[19]
Second, even though the first respondent’s contention that the
maintenance dispute dates back to 2018 may
be correct, however, it is
clear that it did not form part of the disputes for which an
arbitrator was sought and appointed. The
letter requesting an
appointment of an arbitrator dated 9 September 2019 which was
attached to the papers that served before the
maintenance court,
enumerated the disputes between the parties. And maintenance was not
among them. Therefore, the arbitration
agreement the first respondent
bemoans does not include arrear maintenance. The arbitration
agreement is therefore irrelevant for
the purposes of the issue
before this Court. The submission that the appellant reneged from the
arbitration agreement cannot be
correct.
[20]
It appears that the high court was not spared by how the first
respondent misconstrued and conflated the issue
that was before the
maintenance court, hence its finding that the arbitrator must decide
his jurisdictional issues. For that reason,
the high court
misdirected itself in this regard. This brings me to the main issue
before this Court, whether arrear maintenance
is a matrimonial cause
or an incidental cause thereto.
[21]
The high court did not make a finding that arrear maintenance is a
matter falling within the purview of
s 2(
a
) or not. It
deferred the decision to the arbitrator. Whether it did so because of
the arbitration clause or because parties signed
an arbitration
agreement does not come out clearly from the judgment. Either way,
the decision of the high court cannot be supported.
[22]
A proper analysis of the arbitration clause itself reveals that it
was couched in a general manner. It did not
specify the enforcement
of maintenance as a dispute that should be referred to arbitration.
What compounds the issue further is
that nowhere in the arbitration
clause or the deed of settlement did the parties refer to the fact
that ‘the arbitrator should
decide its own issues of
jurisdiction’. As indicated above, this phrase is only found in
the arbitration agreement. I have
already pronounced that the
arbitration agreement is irrelevant to the issue in this appeal. It
is therefore apparent that this
phrase cannot be imported to assist
in the interpretation of the arbitration clause. In my view, it
cannot be said that the arbitration
clause gave express intention of
the parties that enforceability of the maintenance order or arrear
maintenance should be submitted
to arbitration. Under the
circumstances, and as already indicated above, the interpretation of
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act becomes
necessary.
[23]
Recently the Constitutional Court in
Amabhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic
of South Africa
[7]
restated the trite approach to the interpretation of statutory
provisions and held:
‘
.
. .one must start with the word, affording them their ordinary
meaning, bearing in mind that statutory provisions should always
be
interpreted purposively, be properly contextualised and must be
construed consistently with the Constitution. This is a unitary
exercise. The context maybe determined by considering other
subsections, sections or the chapter in which the keyword, provision
or expression to be interpreted is located. Context may also be
determined from the statutory instrument as a whole. A sensible
interpretation should be preferred to one that is absurd or leads to
an unbusinesslike outcome.’
[24]
Following the above unitary approach, the point of departure is the
language used in the section, in ‘light
of the ordinary rules
of grammar and syntax.’
[8]
To this end, the phrase ‘incidental to’ in its ordinary
grammatical meaning, and when used as an adjective, denotes
‘something happening in connection with or as a natural result
of something else
.’
[9]
[25]
The language of
s 3
of the
Maintenance Act is
also important as it
gives the magistrates’ court jurisdiction over all matters
arising from the
Maintenance Act. The
purpose of the
Maintenance Act
should
also be taken into consideration. Amongst others, its purpose
is to provide for the easy, cost-effective, and speedy resolution
of
maintenance complaints including recovery of arrear maintenance, or
enforcement of its orders. In addition, the
Maintenance Act
criminalises
failure to pay any particular amount of maintenance in
accordance with a maintenance order in terms of
s 31(1).
The
Maintenance Act therefore
, jealousy created specialised courts, to
wit maintenance courts, to deal with complaints where any person
legally liable to maintain
any other fails to do so, and the
enforcement of the said orders. This Court cannot therefore interpret
s 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act in
a manner that will be at odds
with the purpose of the
Maintenance Act.
[26
]
In terms of s 8(1) of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act),
it
is possible for a maintenance order to be varied, rescinded, or
suspended. This section is equivalent to
s 19
of the
Maintenance Act.
The
arbitrator cannot be clothed with these powers imposed by the two
Acts. The powers are bestowed upon the courts only. Assuming for
a
moment that the first respondent’s contention to the effect
that he was not obliged to pay maintenance as ordered by the
high
court is correct, it means, procedurally, he should have approached
the maintenance court for an application to discharge,
vary, or
suspend it. The arbitrator could not discharge or vary such order.
[27]
It is significant to mention that
s 8(1)
of the
Divorce Act
specifically
provides for the maintenance order or an order regarding
custody, access, or guardianship of a child as orders that can be
varied,
rescinded, or discharged. The section did not include the
proprietary order granted by the courts. Apart from the fact that the
Brookstein
matter heavily relied upon by the first respondent
dealt with a delictual claim, this exception created by
s 8(1)
of the
Divorce Act serves
as the main reason why reliance on this authority
cannot advance his case. Maintenance, like issues relating to
custody, access
including guardianship of children, is and remains a
live issue or dispute depending on the differing circumstances of the
parties.
That is why access to the maintenance court is made
available pre and post-divorce. As already indicated above and with
the risk
of repetition, this is so because any party can approach the
court anytime after such an order has been made to request the
discharge,
variation or setting aside of the maintenance court order.
The argument regarding
res judicata
is therefore misplaced.
[28]
A case that is close to the facts in this appeal is
Ressell
v Ressell.
[10]
In this matter, the court refused to enforce a settlement agreement
that was made an order of court. The settlement agreement also
stipulated that any disputes (post-divorce) between the parties had
to be referred to arbitration. A dispute existed concerning
access to
a child after the divorce. The court held that the provision in
s
2(
a
)
of the
Arbitration Act excluding
‘any matter incidental to such
matrimonial cause’ is adequately wide enough to keep such
matters out of the field of
arbitration. The court further explained
that this applies whether the dispute arose before or after the
divorce.
[29]
From the above analysis, it cannot be contended that the ensuing
arrear maintenance including the enforcement of
the order are not
connected with the matrimonial cause or are matters incidental
thereto.
Section 2(
a
) of the
Arbitration Act is
wide enough to
keep such matters out of the field of arbitration. The appeal court
misdirected itself by deferring the issue to
be dealt with by the
arbitrator. The issue that was before the maintenance court was not a
dispute on the underlying settlement
agreement, but an enforcement of
one of the provisions of the order of the court.
[30]
Lastly, the common law prohibits the ousting of the jurisdiction of
or access to, the courts.
[11]
The appellant, therefore, in the worst-case scenario, could not
have been deprived of the choice of forums in which to pursue
civil
enforcement of the maintenance order and cannot lawfully have waived
her right to approach the maintenance court in terms
of the
Maintenance Act. The
legislation applies
ex-lege
and obtains force by
reason of the will and decision of the Legislature, not because
individuals elect to be subject thereto.
[12]
Consequently, the arbitration agreement cannot in the circumstances
of this matter supersede the jurisdiction of the maintenance
court.
[31]
It would be remiss to conclude without dealing with the submission
made by the first respondent that the issue
of the appellant not
being able to afford arbitration was not properly brought before the
maintenance court and the maintenance
court erred by taking it into
account. The converse is true. A letter dated 20 August 2020
was annexed to the papers that
were submitted by the first respondent
to the maintenance court. The date of this letter predates the date
when the appellant approached
the maintenance court by a period of
about six months. This letter shows that at the time when the parties
were engaged in the
aborted arbitration, a concern had already been
raised by the appellant regarding the costs of arbitration. The
maintenance court
was within its powers to have regard thereto, as by
its nature, the procedure takes the form of an inquiry.
[32]
In the result,the following order is granted
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including costs of two counsel where
so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs’
________________________
A
M KGOELE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
N Snellenburg
SC with H J Van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Symington De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
the respondent:
S Grobler SC with R Van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Hendre Conradie Inc Rossouws Attorneys
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Lufuno
Mphaphili and Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
2009 (4) SA 529
(CC)
para 219-223.
[2]
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[2006]
ZASCA 112
;
2007 (3) SA 266
(SCA);
(2007 (5) BCLR 503
;
[2007] 2 All
SA 243
para 48.
[3]
Crompton
Street Motors CC t/a Wallers Garage Service Station v Bright Ideas
Projects 66 (Pty) Ltd t/a All Fuels
[2021]
ZACC 24
;
2021 (11) BCLR 1203
(CC);
2022 (1) SA 317
(CC) para 26.
[4]
Eke v
Parsons
[2015]
ZACC 30
;
2015 (11) BCLR 1319
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC).
[5]
Brookstein
v Brookstein
[2016]
ZASCA 40; 2016 (5) SA 210 (SCA).
[6]
Ibid fn 5 above para 12.
[7]
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic
of South Africa
[2022]
ZACC 31
;
2023 (2) SA 1
(CC);
2023 (5) BCLR 499
(CC) para 36.
[8]
Natal
Joint Municipality Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] 2 All SA 262
,
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) and
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2014] 1 All SA 517,
2014 (2) SA 494 [2013 ZASCA 176.
[9]
Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary(7
th
Edition) Oxford
University Press, 2005
[10]
Ressell
v Ressell
1976
(1) SA 289
(W) at 291.
[11]
Schierhout
v Minister of Justice
1925
AD 417
at 424 (and applied more recently by this Court in
Bafana
Finance Mabopane v Makwakwa and Another
[2006] ZASCA 46
;
2006
(4) SA 581
(SCA) para 21.
[12]
RMB
Private Bank (A Division of Firstrand Bank Ltd) v Kaydeez Therapies
CC (in liquidation)
2013
(6) SA 308
(GSJ) at 311G.
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