Case Law[2022] ZASCA 122South Africa
N S v J N (506/2021) [2022] ZASCA 122 (19 September 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 - s 16(2)(a)(i) – parental rights and responsibilities in respect of a minor child - decision sought would have no practical effect or result.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## N S v J N (506/2021) [2022] ZASCA 122 (19 September 2022)
N S v J N (506/2021) [2022] ZASCA 122 (19 September 2022)
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sino date 19 September 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 506/2021
In
the matter between:
N
S
APPELLANT
and
J
N
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
N
S v J N
(506/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 122
(19 September 2022)
Coram
Ponnan,
Hughes and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Musi and
Goosen
AJJA
Heard:
18
August 2022
Delivered:
19
September 2022
Summary:
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
-
s 16(2)
(a)
(i)
– parental rights and responsibilities in respect of a minor
child - decision sought would have no practical effect or
result.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Lamprecht AJ sitting
as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel to
be paid on the attorney and client scale.
JUDGMENT
Musi
AJA (Ponnan, Hughes and Mabindla-Boquana JJA and Goosen AJA
concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against a judgment of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria
(per Lamprecht AJ), arising from one of many
applications brought by both parties against each other concerning
their minor child.
[2]
The facts are the following. The appellant (the father) and the
respondent (the mother)
are the unmarried biological parents of their
minor child, D, born on 4 May 2018. The respondent, is a South
African citizen and
permanent resident of Malaysia. Since his birth
the child resided with the respondent in Malaysia. The parents had
functional arrangements
relating to parental rights and
responsibilities in respect of the child until the imposition of
lockdown travelling restrictions
in March 2020 by both South Africa
and Malaysia. Prior to this, by arrangement, the appellant visited
the child in Malaysia and,
on occasion, brought him to South Africa
to visit his extended family and thereafter returned him to Malaysia.
[3]
During March 2020 the respondent, who was then in South Africa,
travelled to Cape
Town with the child. On 7 March 2020, a day before
she returned to Malaysia, the appellant fetched the child with the
understanding
that he would return the child to Malaysia on 21 March
2020. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, Malaysia went into
lockdown
thus prohibiting commercial air travel from 18 March 2020.
South Africa followed suit on 26 March 2020. When the air travel
restrictions
were lifted, the appellant refused to take the child
back to Malaysia. This necessitated the respondent having to travel
to South
Africa to fetch the child. The once functional relationship
between the parties, took a turn and quickly became acrimonious.
[4]
The appellant urgently approached the Pretoria High Court, on 17
September 2020, for
an order in Part A that: (a) the Office of the
Family Advocate as well as a social worker or psychologist conduct an
urgent investigation
into the best interests of the child with
specific reference to parental rights and responsibilities; (b) the
respondent
be ordered not to remove the child from his care or
South Africa pending the adjudication of Part B; (c) the
primary residence
of the child remain with him until the finalisation
of Part B and (d) Part B be postponed sine die pending the
investigation by
the Office of the Family Advocate.
[1]
In Part B he sought orders relating to him being awarded full
parental rights and responsibilities in respect of the child and
that
the recommendations of the Family Advocate regarding primary
residence and contact be implemented, alternatively that those
be
determined by the court.
[5]
The respondent launched a counter application for the return of the
child and that
it be declared that child’s primary residence is
in Malaysia. The applications were heard by Mosopa J who issued an
order
on 1 October 2020,
inter alia,
ordering the appellant:
(a) to restore the care and primary residence of the child to the
respondent; (b) permitting the respondent
to return to Malaysia with
the child; (c) to handover to the respondent the child’s
passport, birth certificate, immunisation
card and baby book
containing the child’s medical records and (d) to exercise
contact with the child in Malaysia by way of
telephone calls and Face
Time. (e) Part B was postponed
sine die
and the parties were
granted permission to supplement their papers if so advised.
[6]
On 3 October 2020, the appellant launched an urgent application that
was heard by
Sardiwalla J, who ordered the respondent not to remove
the child from Gauteng Province or South Africa. Contrary to Mosopa
J’s
order, he ordered that the appellant retain the child’s
passport and birth certificate. He postponed the case to 6 October
2020. In the meantime, on 2 October 2020, the appellant filed an
application for leave to appeal against Mosopa J’s order.
[7]
On 7 October 2020, Sardiwalla J, issued the following order:
‘
1.
The status quo to remain the same that Judge Mosopa[’s] order
remains in effect.
2.
The matter to be investigated by the Family Advocate and that the
issue of the minor child
and all the issues around the minor child
[and] the parental rights be discussed and that the applicant
(father) and the respondent
(mother) make themselves available to the
Family Advocate and the Family Advocate is directed to deliver a
report on its recommendation
and findings based on the papers before
Court.
3.
Costs reserved.’
[8]
On 12 October 2020, the respondent launched an urgent application
wherein she sought
an order that: (a) the orders of Sardiwalla J be
declared
pro non scripto
and of no legal force and effect; (b)
the appellant and others, including his attorneys, be held in
contempt of court for refusing
to hand over the child’s
documents as per Mosopa J’s order; and (c) costs. The appellant
launched a counter application
wherein he sought an order: (a) for
the confirmation of his paternity of the child; (b) declaring that he
is the holder of full
parental rights and responsibilities in respect
of the child; (c) directing that pending the urgent investigation by
the Family
Advocate, as ordered by Sardiwalla J, he be allowed to
exercise contact with the child including removing the child every
alternative
weekend when the child is in South Africa and removing
the child for agreed upon periods when the child is in Malaysia; (d)
directing
the respondent to cooperate in rectifying the child’s
birth certificate and passport to indicate that he is the child’s
father; and (e) costs on a punitive scale.
[9]
The last application and counter application, the subject of the
present appeal, came
before Lamprecht AJ. On 11 November 2020,
Lamprecht AJ issued an order: (a) declaring all the orders issued by
Sardiwalla J to
be of no force and effect and consequently set them
aside; (b) declaring that the application for leave to appeal against
Mosopa
J’s order did not suspend that order (c) postponing the
contempt of court application (d) dismissing the appellant’s
application with regard to contact in South Africa and in Malaysia;
(e) postponing the rest of the relief sought sine die to be
determined with the relief sought in Part B of the main application;
(f) directing the appellant to pay the costs of the
12 October
2020 application on the attorney and client scale; and (g) reserving
the costs of the counter application for
determination during
the hearing of Part B of the main application.
[10]
Aggrieved by Lamprecht AJ’s order, the appellant unsuccessfully
applied for leave to appeal.
He thereafter successfully petitioned
this Court for leave to appeal.
[11]
Before the hearing, the Registrar of this Court was requested by the
Presiding Judge to transmit
the following note to the parties:
‘
1.
Inasmuch as an appeal
lies against the substantive order of a court and not its reasoning,
on what basis is it contended that paragraphs
2 and 3 of the order of
Lamprecht AJ are:
(1.1)
dispositive of any of the real issues between the parties;
(1.2)
determinative of the rights of the parties;
(1.3)
final in effect
and
thus appealable?
2.
Given the various other applications between the parties that are yet
to be finalised, will
entertaining an appeal at this stage not give
rise to a proliferation of piecemeal appeals and hearings?
3.
Given the recordal in the judgment on the application for leave to
appeal (record page 291
para 2) that ‘the respondent and the
minor child have in the interim left the country and are now back in
Malaysia’,
has the appeal not been rendered academic?
. .
. .’
[12]
The parties were invited to file supplementary heads of argument, if
so advised. Both filed supplementary
heads of argument.
[13]
Section 16(2)
(a)
(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act
[2
]
provides:
‘
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.’
Courts
are loath to grant orders that have no practical effect or result. It
is self-evident that futile orders lead to a waste
of overstretched
judicial resources. In
SA
Metal Group v The International Trade Administration Commission
[3]
this Court stated that:
‘
After
all, courts of appeal often have to deal with congested rolls. And,
as Innes CJ observed in
Geldenhuys
& Neethling v Beuthin
,
they exist for the settlement of concrete controversies and actual
infringements of rights, not to pronounce upon abstract questions,
or
to advise upon differing contentions, however important. . . .’
[4]
[14]
This principle was underscored by the Constitutional Court in
Normandien
Farms v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum Exportation
and Exploitation
[5]
when it pronounced that:
‘
Mootness
is when a matter “no longer presents an existing or live
controversy”. The doctrine is based on the notion
that judicial
resources ought to be utilised efficiently and should not be
dedicated to advisory opinions or abstract propositions
of law, and
that courts should avoid deciding matters that are “abstract,
academic or hypothetical.’
[6]
[15]
Courts may, however, entertain appeals even when there are no live
controversies to settle, if
it is in the interests of justice to do
so. The factors to consider in order to determine whether it is in
the interests of justice
to hear a moot matter, include:
‘
(a)
whether any order which it may make will have some practical effect
either on the parties or on others;
(b)
the nature and extent of the practical effect that any possible order
might have;
(c)
the importance of the issues;
(d)
the complexity of the issues;
(e)
the fullness or otherwise of the arguments advanced; and
(f)
resolving the disputes between different courts.’
[7]
[16]
Lamprecht AJ’s order was issued on 11 November 2020. The
application for leave to appeal
was filed on 30 November 2020. During
the hearing of the application for leave to appeal, Lamprecht AJ was
informed that by that
stage the respondent and the child had already
returned to Malaysia.
[17]
We were informed from the Bar, in this Court, that the respondent and
the child were currently
in Singapore, where they now reside together
with the respondent’s husband and another child born of that
marriage. The appellant,
however, contended that notwithstanding
their absence the appeal ought to be determined because Part B was
still pending. He argued
that it would be impossible to enrol Part B
without the Family Advocate’s report relating to parental
rights, responsibilities,
primary residency, contact and paternity.
[18]
The appellant was constrained to concede that Part B can be
re-enrolled at any time. He also
conceded that the fact that he can
still apply for an order that the Family Advocate investigate the
matter and report thereon
was and still is an option. Additionally,
he conceded that he could have sought an order for a referral of the
matter to the Office
of the Family Advocate via a case management
Judge, in terms of the practice in the Gauteng Division of the High
Court. What
counsel for the appellant had some difficulty with,
however, is how the Family Advocate could be expected to investigate
and report
to the Court whilst the respondent and minor child are
outside the borders of this country. This clearly demonstrates the
futility
of this exercise.
[19]
Thus, even if the appeal were to succeed and Sardiwalla J’s
order that the respondent should
not leave Gauteng or South Africa
with the child revived, it will have no practical effect because they
have left already. The
outcome of this appeal will also not have any
effect on the relief that was postponed for determination together
with Part B of
the main application. The appellant correctly did not
submit that, notwithstanding its mootness, it would otherwise be in
the interests
of justice to determine the appeal. It
follows that the appeal ought to be dismissed in terms of
s
16(2)
(a)
(i) of the
Superior Courts Act.
[20
]
Turning to costs: Lamprecht AJ made a punitive costs order against
the appellant because he was
of the view that the appellant wilfully
disobeyed Mosopa J’s order and abused the court process. There
was sufficient time
after receipt of the note from the Presiding
Judge for reflection and reconsideration. Undeterred, the appellant
persisted with
the appeal. Aside from this appeal, the appellant
launched multiple applications, putting the respondent to
considerable expense.
The respondent accordingly sought
punitive costs. The appellant implored us not to make a punitive
costs order because
he endeavoured to do what is in the best
interests of the child. The litigation he embarked upon indicates
that he lost sight of
the best interest of the child and focused on
his own interest.
[21]
In re:
Alluvial
Creek Ltd
[8]
it was said that:
‘
.
. .There are people who enter into litigation with the most upright
of purpose and a most firm belief in the justice of their
cause, and
yet [t]hose proceedings may be regarded as vexatious when they put
the other side to unnecessary trouble and expense
which the other
side ought not to bear. . .’
[9]
These
proceedings were vexatious in the sense set out above and must
attract a punitive costs order.
[22]
I accordingly make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel to
be paid on the attorney and client scale.
C
MUSI
Acting
Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellant: D
B Du Preez SC (with him E de Lange)
Instructed
by: Muthray
& Associates Inc., Pretoria
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
Respondent:
ML
Haskins SC (with L Segal SC)
Instructed
by: Tanya
Brenner Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
On
the same day the respondent launched an application in the High
Court Johannesburg, inter alia, for the return of the child.
On 22
September 2020, the application was dismissed with costs. The
respondent immediately thereafter launched a counter application
in
the Pretoria High Court, on 22 September 2020. The counter
application was struck from the roll and the costs reserved for
determination in the main application.
[2]
Superior
Courts
Act
10 of 2013
.
[3]
SA
Metal Group (Proprietary) Limited v The International Trade
Administration Commission
(267/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 14
(17 March 2017).
[4]
Ibid para 20. Footnote omitted.
[5]
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Limited v South African Agency for Promotion of
Petroleum Exportation and Exploitation SOC Limited and
Others
[2020] ZACC 5; 2020 (6) BCLR 748 (CC); 2020 (4) SA 409 (CC).
[6]
Ibid para 47.
[7]
Ibid para 50.
[8]
In
re:
Alluvial
Creek Ltd
1929 CPD 532.
[9]
Ibid
at 535.
sino noindex
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