Case Law[2023] ZASCA 33South Africa
M v M (1305/2021) [2023] ZASCA 33 (31 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Matrimonial law – sections 7 and 9 of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 – division of joint estate – claim for forfeiture of pension interest – substantial misconduct not established – appeal upheld.
Judgment
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## M v M (1305/2021) [2023] ZASCA 33 (31 March 2023)
M v M (1305/2021) [2023] ZASCA 33 (31 March 2023)
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sino date 31 March 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 1305/2021
In
the matter between:
I M
M
APPELLANT
And
A M
M
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
M v M
(1305/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 33
(31 March
2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA AP and MOCUMIE, MBATHA and
MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and NHLANGULELA AJA
Heard:
This appeal was, by consent between the parties,
disposed of without an oral hearing in terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
31 March 2023
Summary:
Matrimonial law –
sections 7
and
9
of the
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
– division of joint estate –
claim for forfeiture of pension interest – substantial
misconduct not established
– appeal upheld.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Mazibuko AJ and Wright J, sitting as court
of appeal):
1
The respondent’s application for
condonation of the late filing of heads of argument is granted.
2 The appeal is
upheld with each party to pay their own costs.
3 The high court’s
order is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with each party to pay their own costs.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana
JA (Dambuza AP and Mocumie and Mbatha JJA and Nhlangulela AJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, Mr I M, and the respondent,
Mrs A M, were married in community of property on 4 December 1995.
The appellant instituted
divorce proceedings on 15 September 2015 in
the Springs Regional Court (the regional court) against the
respondent. As part of
the initial relief, he sought an order of
forfeiture of benefits arising from the marriage in community of
property by the respondent
based on an alleged extramarital affair.
[2]
The respondent denied the allegation in her
plea and filed a counter-claim alleging extramarital affairs between
the appellant and
other women, and physical and verbal abuse by the
appellant on her, among other acts of misconduct. However, the order
she sought
at that stage did not include forfeiture of benefits but
merely division of the joint estate.
[3]
During 2017, the appellant amended his
particulars of claim by asserting entitlement to 50% of the
respondent’s pension interest
in the Government Employees
Pension Fund (GEPF). In her plea to the amended particulars of claim,
the respondent pleaded that her
interest in the GEPF should not form
part of the joint estate. This was because, approximately 12 months
prior to the date of institution
of the divorce proceedings, the
appellant had withdrawn his pension interest from the GEPF in the sum
of R2 429 265.
50 and from that amount utilised R500 000
towards household debts and needs. He however refused to account for
the balance approximating
R2 million.
[4]
The respondent pleaded further that since
the withdrawal of his pension benefits from the GEPF, the appellant
engaged in extramarital
affairs. In addition she would only receive a
projected amount of R1 154 266, on retirement, which was
less than the
amount for which the appellant refused to account. As a
result, the appellant would unduly benefit and she would be
prejudiced,
should the court grant an order entitling him to the
portion of her pension interest in the GEPF. For that reason, she
prayed for
forfeiture of the appellant’s pension interest.
[5]
In the alternative she pleaded that, should
the court find that the appellant was entitled to the pension
interest, he should only
be awarded the difference between the sum he
had refused to account for and the amount due to him as at the date
of dissolution
of marriage.
[6]
Since the appellant had abandoned his
forfeiture prayer, the only issue for determination in the regional
court was whether the
appellant would unduly benefit from the alleged
failure to account and should forfeit his 50% portion of the
respondent’s
pension interest. The regional court ruled that
the respondent bore the onus on this issue and should testify first.
[7]
It is common cause that the appellant was
employed by the Department of Education and Training (the department)
as the head of department
at Hluwasi Secondary School, thereafter at
Etwatwa Secondary School as the school principal. He resigned from
the department, but
the respondent did not know the reason as he did
not discuss anything with her. He told her that he had received R2.4
million from
the pension fund and would use R300 000 to pay the
outstanding mortgage bond for the house. He also promised to pay
their
debts; buy some furniture; and invest the rest.
[8]
He bought the furniture, renovated the
house and paid off his vehicles, which altogether with payment of the
outstanding mortgage
bond, amounted to R500 000. They agreed
that he would pay off her debts and in turn, she would register him
in her medical
aid. He however paid only between R50 000 and
R55 000 of her debts and refused to sign documents for his
inclusion in
her medical aid.
[9]
The respondent testified further that she
was responsible for groceries and gardening maintenance costs. After
the appellant resigned,
she had to include their two major children
in her medical aid. The children were studying at tertiary
institutions and she had
to pay their fees. The appellant only paid
the fees for one child after being forced to do so by a maintenance
order. She confirmed
that the appellant was responsible for paying
the mortgage bond instalments of their common home. She however paid
rent for the
place she resided in with the children (at the time of
the trial). She later heard that the appellant found employment but
she
did not know where that was.
[10]
For his part, the appellant testified that
when he received the pension fund money, he paid R800 000
towards the settlement
of the mortgage bond owed to ABSA in respect
of the house and the loan owed to Nedbank which they had used to
extend the house.
He had been on chronic medication and when he
stopped earning a salary, he struggled financially. He had to take
loans for his
upkeep, including one from the respondent, to pay
rates, taxes, phone costs and medication. He also helped with
groceries. So when
he was eventually paid the pension money in August
2014, he paid back the loan of around R25 000 to the respondent.
He also
had to pay an amount of approximately R45 000 for the
vehicles.
[11]
He testified further that for the
renovations of the house, he paid the electrician R80 000 and
the approximate amounts: for
the roof R25 000, for guttering
R12 000 and for the swimming pool R25 000. He also had
ongoing legal fees involving
a labour dispute he had with his
previous employer, for which he had to pay not less than R40 000
for consultation. He accepted
that these were incurred after he had
filed for the divorce. He also had to pay tuition fees for his son’s
education, as
per the maintenance order. Tuition fees cost about
R80 000 whilst accommodation fees were around R70 000. He
also had
to pay for his son’s flights and subsistence of R1000.
He subsequently moved his son from Cape Town to Pretoria. The tuition
cost increased to about R90 000 and the residence to R65 000
per annum. He did not have documents to prove these expenses.
According to him, the respondent was not interested in what was being
done with the renovations, which is why he went ahead on
his own
without involving her.
[12]
In cross-examination, he testified that he
spent almost all his retirement fund money towards the joint estate.
At the time of the
trial, the South African Council of Educators
employed him on a contract basis, which was renewable annually.
[13]
In rejecting the contention of undue
benefit, the regional court found that:
‘
There
was no evidence of the nature or the extent of the benefit that [the
respondent] sought to have [the appellant] forfeit. The
court is thus
not in a position to make a finding as to the patrimonial benefits
[themselves].
If the court is wrong in
this conclusion that the nature and extent of the benefit was not
proved then it must consider the next
leg of the inquiry.
. . .
The only factor argued
was that the [appellant] misconducted himself by not disclosing the
details of any investment of his pension
payout.
I am not convinced that
this amounts to a misconduct let alone a substantial misconduct.
There are avenues open in the law to obtain
information of the
investments, if any made by the [appellant]. There is no evidence
that if an order for forfeiture of the benefit
is not made [the
appellant] would unduly benefit.’
[14]
As a result, the regional court granted the
decree of divorce, division of the joint estate, an order that 50% of
the pension interest
due or assigned to the respondent be paid to the
appellant, up to the date of divorce and other ancillary orders. It
further ordered
each party to pay their own costs.
[15]
Aggrieved by this order, the respondent
appealed to the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the
high court). In the
appeal, she contended that the regional court
erred in holding that she bore the onus to prove and quantify the
nature and extent
of the benefit, while it was the appellant who
wished to claim 50% of her pension fund interest. She submitted
further that the
regional court failed to consider that withholding
financial information from a spouse amounted to substantial
misconduct as defined
in s 9 of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act).
[16
]
The respondent further argued that the
regional court should not have accepted the appellant’s
testimony regarding estimated
payments and the allegation that all
his funds were utilised for the benefit of the joint estate, which
allegations were never
pleaded. Not only was the respondent taken by
surprise, the court accepted ‘new evidence’ without any
corroboration
or documentary proof of any alleged expenditure.
[17]
Lastly, the respondent contended that the
regional court misdirected itself in finding that avenues existed for
the respondent to
obtain information regarding any investments.
According to the respondent, this could not be sustained in light of
the fact that
the appellant never disclosed the estimated and actual
breakdown of his expenditure ‘as a defence’ in his
pleadings.
The respondent could not guess what the defence would be.
[18]
The high court did not deal with the issue
of undue benefit and forfeiture of pension interest. Its judgment was
brief and dealt
with an issue not contested by the parties. It made
the following findings:
‘
Due
to the fact that [the respondent] gave credible, unchallenged and
uncontested evidence about infidelity and domestic violence
it is
indisputable that [the appellant] has to forfeit benefits. Such
conduct, particularly the domestic violence is wholly unacceptable
and attracts forfeiture.
There was some debate
during the hearing about alleged lack of pleading and insufficient
discovery concerning the patrimonial benefits,
particularly the
pension fund. These issues pale to insignificance when compared to
something as serious as domestic violence.
Adv Mokgawa presented
able oral argument in this appeal. Despite two opportunities during
the appeal hearing to find evidence in
the transcript where [the
appellant] had challenged the evidence of [the respondent] about
infidelity and domestic violence was
understandably unable to do so.’
[19]
That is the sum total of the high court’s
reasoning, which resulted in the alteration of the order granted by
the regional
court. It gave the following substituted order:
‘
1.
A decree of divorce is granted with division of the joint estate
subject to [the appellant] forfeiting all patrimonial
benefits.
2. [The
appellant] is not entitled to any interest in the pension fund of
[the respondent].
3. [The
appellant] is to pay the costs of the action, including those of the
claim and counterclaim.’
[20]
The appeal is before us with the special
leave of this Court. The parties agreed that the appeal should be
determined without oral
argument, in terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. It is pursued on the narrow
ground that the high court misdirected itself: (a) when it
substituted the regional court’s
decision with forfeiture of
all patrimonial benefits on an issue that did not form the basis of
the relief sought by the respondent;
and (b) by making a costs order
against the appellant. The respondent applied for condonation for the
late filing of her heads
of argument, which is not opposed. Having
regard to the good cause shown, there is no reason not to grant
condonation.
[21]
Entitlement to a portion of pension
interest of one party against the other is governed by
sections 7(7)
and
7
(8) of the
Divorce Act, which
prescribe:
‘
7
(a)
In the determination of the patrimonial benefits
to which the parties to any divorce action may be entitled, the
pension interest
of a party shall, subject to paragraphs
(b)
and
(c)
,
be
deemed to be part of his assets
.
(b)
The amount so deemed to be part of a party’s
assets, shall be reduced by any amount of his pension interest which,
by virtue
of paragraph
(a)
,
in a previous divorce
–
(i)
was paid over or awarded to another party; or
(ii)
for the purposes of an agreement contemplated in subsection (1), was
accounted in favour of another party.
.
. .
(8)
Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law or of the rules of
any pension fund –
(a)
the court granting a decree of divorce in respect
of a member of such a fund, may make an order that –
(i)
any part of the pension interest of that member which, by virtue of
subsection (7), is due or assigned
to the other party to the divorce
action concerned, shall be paid by that fund to that other party when
any pension benefits accrue
in respect of that member;
(ii)
the registrar of the court in question forthwith notify the fund
concerned that an endorsement be made in
the records of that fund
that that part of the pension interest concerned is so payable to
that other party and that the administrator
of the pension fund
furnish proof of such endorsement to the registrar, in writing,
within one month of receipt of such notification.’
(My
emphasis.)
[22]
From the above, it is clear that in the
determination of the patrimonial benefits the pension interest is
deemed to form part of
the joint estate. It is therefore, the party
seeking forfeiture thereof that must prove that the other party is
not entitled to
the portion of the pension interest. In this case,
therefore, the respondent did indeed bear the onus to prove that the
appellant
had to forfeit his entitlement to a portion of her pension
interest.
[23]
Section 9
of the
Divorce Act, dealing
with
forfeiture of patrimonial benefits of marriage, provides that:
‘
(1)
When a decree of divorce is granted on the ground of the
irretrievable break-down of a marriage the court may make an order
that the patrimonial benefits of the marriage be forfeited by one
party in favour of the other, either wholly or in part, if the
court,
having regard to the
duration of the
marriage
,
the
circumstances which gave rise to the break-down thereof and any
substantial misconduct on the part of either of the parties
,
is satisfied that, if the order for forfeiture is not made,
the
one party will in relation to the other be unduly benefited
.’
(My emphasis.)
[24]
A
court must therefore consider the claim for forfeiture having regard
to three factors, namely, the duration of marriage, the circumstances
which gave rise to the breakdown thereof and any substantial
misconduct on the part of either of the parties. These factors must
not be considered cumulatively and the presence of any one of them
would entitle a court to grant an order of forfeiture.
[1]
[25]
The parties had been married for over 23
years prior to their divorce, which is a long period. They lived
together until 2015, when
the appellant instituted divorce
proceedings. While the pleadings had contained allegations of
extramarital affairs from both sides,
not much evidence was led on
this issue, apart from the sketchy details given by the respondent.
Furthermore, the appellant did
not persist with forfeiture on this
basis. While the respondent mentioned the extramarital affairs in her
pleadings, she did not
rely on this ground as the basis for
forfeiture. Her complaint was that the appellant was not entitled to
his 50% portion of her
pension interest because of the fact that he
had failed to account for the balance of his pension money that he
withdrew when he
left employment. The high court accordingly erred in
granting an order that was not sought (which is the forfeiture of all
patrimonial
benefits – as opposed to only 50% pension interest
of the respondent’s pension fund) and basing it on evidence
that
was not placed as the basis for forfeiture. On this basis alone,
the high court misdirected itself and its order cannot stand.
[26]
The issue that remains is whether
substantial misconduct was established. The bulk of the evidence was
focused on what the appellant
did with his pension interest of over
R2 million, which he received from GEPF 12 months prior to
instituting the divorce proceedings.
By law the respondent was
entitled to R1.2 million thereof. From that amount would be
deducted half of the common household
expenses paid by the appellant
from his pension payout. According to the respondent, the appellant
only used R500 000 towards the
household, whilst the estimated
figures he gave suggested an amount of at least R1.4 million.
[27]
The regional court was criticised in the
high court for having allowed the appellant to tender evidence on
estimated payments he
allegedly made for the benefit of the joint
estate, when these were not pleaded. In terms of Rule 21(2) of the
Magistrates’
Court Rules:
‘
(2)
No replication or subsequent pleading which would be a mere joinder
of issue or bare denial of allegations
in the previous pleading shall
be necessary, and issue shall be deemed to be joined and pleadings
closed in terms of rule 21A
(b)
.
(3)
(a)
Where
a replication or subsequent pleading is necessary, a party may
therein join issue on the allegations in the previous
pleading.’
[28]
Whether or not replication was necessary in
this case is not an issue that we need to determine because on a
proper reading of the
regional court’s judgment, it decided the
case on the basis that no evidence was led as to the nature or the
extent of the
benefit that the respondent sought to have the
appellant forfeit. In other words, she did not discharge the onus to
prove that
the appellant would unduly benefit if an order of
forfeiture of the pension interest were not made.
[29]
If one has regard to the respondent’s
evidence, her cross-examination revealed that the amount used by the
appellant for the
benefit of the joint estate was over and above the
R500 000 she had pleaded. She testified that the appellant paid
an amount
of approximately up to R55 000 for ‘her debts’.
She could not dispute that he paid R2000 a month for chronic
medication
since he was no longer on medical aid. She also did not
dispute that he had taken a personal loan of approximately R25 000
from
her during the time he was not working while waiting for his
payout. Even this alleged loan was taken for the benefit of the joint
estate. It became common cause that the appellant became responsible
for the tertiary fees of their son, in terms of the maintenance
order. The respondent did not state how much this was, something that
could have been established from the relevant tertiary institution,
if the appellant was not forthcoming with the information. She
conceded that this payment of fees was continuous:
‘
Who
is paying for your son’s education? --- He is. He does. He is
paying for our son’s tuition.
And it is just
tuition.--- Yes.
[Indistinct] he live[s]
at home?---Pardon?
Does your son live at
home with you?--- No, at a res.
He is also paying
for that,
yes.’ (My emphasis.)
[30]
She
further testified that the appellant was responsible for the upkeep
and maintenance of the marital home. All this she did not
plead or
state in her evidence in chief. It does appear, therefore, that the
amount the appellant used towards the joint household,
on her version
alone, was more than R500 000 and was ongoing. More concerning, the
amounts that the respondent volunteered in her
evidence kept
changing. Some of the figures, which she said she was uncertain
about, were not necessarily only in the appellant’s
peculiar
knowledge. They could have been verified from the banks, which she
would have been entitled to as the co-owner of the
joint household.
The difficulty that the trial court had in coming to a conclusion on
the actual patrimonial benefits to be forfeited
was understandable.
[31]
Additionally, apart from the son’s
tertiary fees, which were ongoing and had to be paid on an annual
basis, it is common cause
that the appellant was not employed for a
substantial number of months whilst he had to pay for the maintenance
and upkeep of the
household and for his medication on an ongoing
basis. While the evidence appears to be imprecise as to the balance
after the renovations,
payment of the bond, the loan and vehicles, it
could not be concluded that there was total lack of accounting to the
level of substantial
misconduct. As observed by the regional court,
it appears that ‘a not insignificant portion of the pension
payout the [appellant]
received was put into the house’ in
which the respondent will benefit as part of the division of the
joint estate. Therefore,
even without taking into account the
appellant’s evidence, the respondent failed to meet the
threshold, disentitling the
appellant to 50% of her pension interest.
[32]
The assessment of the facts by the regional
court could not be faulted. The basis upon which an appeal court may
interfere with
the factual findings of the trial court are confined.
This principle is well established. Aside from the fact that the
regional
court committed no misdirection in its assessment of the
facts, its judgment was rooted in the exercise of discretion. That
would
apply to whether any adjustment had to be made to the
patrimonial benefits. There is no basis to interfere with its
discretion
in this regard too.
[33]
Something must be said about the manner in
which this case was conducted on behalf of both parties. Attorneys
and advocates have
the responsibility to do their best in preparing
the pleadings and presenting the necessary evidence before court.
They do so to
render the best legal service to their clients and to
assist the courts to reach the best decision in resolving the
disputes that
serve before them. More could have been done in this
case to present comprehensive evidence of the income and expenditure
by the
parties. By all accounts, theirs is not a complex joint
estate. A more detailed and complete account of expenditure by the
parties’
could have been pleaded and proper evidence tendered
in court.
[34]
It remains to determine the issue of costs.
Section 10
of the
Divorce Act provides
that ‘. . . the court
shall not be bound to make an order for costs in favour of the
successful party, but the court may,
having regard to the means of
the parties, and their conduct in so far as it may be relevant, make
such order as it considers just,
and the court may order that the
costs of the proceedings be apportioned between the parties’.
In my view, having considered
the facts of this case, it is
appropriate to maintain the order granted by the regional court that
each party pays their own costs.
[35]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1 The
respondent’s application for condonation of the late filing of
heads of argument is granted.
2 The
appeal is upheld with each party to pay their own costs.
3 The
high court’s order is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with each party to pay their own costs.’
N
P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Written
Submissions
For
the appellant: M
Manala and M Rasekgala
Instructed
by: Moumakoe
Attorneys, Pretoria
Matsepes Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: S
Pooe
Instructed
by: C
Kgope Attorneys, Benoni
Duba Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Botha
v Botha
[2006] ZASCA 6
;
2006 (4) SA 144
(SCA);
[2006] 2 All SA 221
(SCA) para 6. See also
Wijker
v Wijker
1993 (4) SA 720
(A) at 729E-F.
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