Case Law[2022] ZASCA 123South Africa
B v B (820/2021) [2022] ZASCA 123; 2023 (1) SA 381 (SCA) (22 September 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Husband and wife – agreement for lifelong maintenance in event of death of husband or divorce – no variation of existing ante-nuptial contract – no divestation of discretion under s 7(2) of Divorce Act 70 of 1979 – agreement enforceable.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 123
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## B v B (820/2021) [2022] ZASCA 123; 2023 (1) SA 381 (SCA) (22 September 2022)
B v B (820/2021) [2022] ZASCA 123; 2023 (1) SA 381 (SCA) (22 September 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_123.html
sino date 22 September 2022
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
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 820/2021
In
the matter between:
C[....]
S[....] B[....]
(born
C[....]3 previously
C[....]2)
Appellant
and
D[....]
H[....] B[....]
Respondent
Neutral citation:
B[....] v B[....]
(Case no 820/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 123
(22
September 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE and MOLEMELA JJA and KGOELE, SALIE-HLOPHE and MASIPA
AJJA
Heard
:
17 August 2022
Delivered
:
22 September 2022
Summary:
Husband and wife – agreement for lifelong maintenance in
event of death of husband or divorce – no variation of existing
ante-nuptial contract – no divestation of discretion under s
7(2) of
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
– agreement enforceable.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Bam
AJ and Collis J
concurring) sitting as a full court:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria, is set
aside
and replaced with an order in the following terms:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Kgoele
AJA (Van der Merwe and Molemela JJA and Salie-Hlophe and Masipa AJJA
concurring)
[1]
In anticipation of their marriage, the appellant, Mrs C S B[....],
and the respondent,
Mr D H B[....], concluded an ante-nuptial
contract (ANC) which declared their marriage to be out of community
of property with
the exclusion of the accrual system. The ANC was
duly registered in the Deeds Registry, Pretoria on 22 January 2015.
The parties
subsequently married each other on 19 May 2015. On 20
February 2015, however, after the registration of the ANC and before
the
solemnization of their marriage, the parties concluded a written
agreement (the agreement). The central issue in the appeal is the
enforceability of the agreement.
[2]
The marriage eventually broke down and on 8 August 2018, the
respondent instituted
an action for divorce against the appellant in
the regional court, Springs. In defending the action, the appellant
filed a plea
and a counter-claim. In the counter-claim, the appellant
claimed the enforcement of the terms of the agreement. The respondent
also filed a plea to the appellant’s counter-claim, and
admitted to having executed the agreement but denied that the terms
of the agreement were enforceable.
[3]
The matter came before the regional court which was requested by the
parties, in terms
of
rule 29(4)
of the
Magistrates’ Courts Act
32 of 1944
, to separately adjudicate the issue of whether the
agreement was enforceable and should be read together with the
parties’
ANC or not. The separated issue was pleaded as follows
in the plea to the counter-claim:
‘
8.3
After signing the agreement the parties abandoned the terms thereof
by entering into marriage
and having the ante-nuptial contract as
originally agreed upon registered as pleaded by the Plaintiff.
.
. .
9.2
The Plaintiff denies that the terms are enforceable for the reasons
as pleaded supra.’
The
regional court recorded that ‘it was agreed that the issue of
whether the agreement was valid and enforceable
vis-a-vis
the
ANC is what is to be argued.’ The essence of the argument of
the respondent was that the agreement contradicted the ANC
and had
the effect of impermissibly varying it.
[4]
After hearing the argument from both parties, the regional court
rejected the argument
advanced by the respondent. It therefore
declared the agreement enforceable, and that it should be read
together with the ANC.
It also ordered the respondent to pay the
costs of the separated hearing.
[5]
Aggrieved by this outcome, the respondent appealed to the Gauteng
Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (the court a quo). Apart from
the aforesaid argument, the court a quo upheld new arguments on
appeal. These
were that the agreement was not enforceable under s
7(1) of the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 (the
Divorce Act) and
deprived the
divorce trial court of its discretion in terms of
s 7(2)
of the
Divorce Act.
[1
] The court a quo
upheld the appeal with costs, set aside the order of the regional
court, and replaced it with an order that the
agreement is not
enforceable. The appeal is with the special leave of this Court.
[6]
The agreement reads:
‘
Having
said that, on the date of signing hereof, the parties hereby declare
that both are unmarried and intend to enter into marriage
with each
other on the 14
th
of March 2015 which the marriage will be out of community of
property;
and
having said that, the parties have already entered into a Prenuptial
Agreement which will be registered with the Registrar of
Deeds, the
parties request that the following agreement be read together with
the Prenuptial Agreement, and the parties mutually
agree as follows:
At
the dissolution of the intended marriage by the death of D[....]
H[....] B[....];
Or
through
divorce:The said, D[....] H[....] B[....], donates the following
property to S[....] C[....] C[....]2 as her exclusive property:
1.
IMMOVABLE PROPERTY
1.1
A residence to the value of R1 500 000-00 (one million five
hundred thousand rand) which property will be designated
by S[....]
C[....] C[....]2.
1.2
D[....] H[....] B[....] and or the estate of D[....] H[....] B[....]
will oversee the transfer costs of the property in the
name of
S[....] C[....] C[....]2.
2.
VEHICLE
A
vehicle to the value of R250 000-00 (Two hundred and fifty
thousand rand) which vehicle will be designated by S[....] C[....]
C[....]2.
3.
MEDICAL
D[....]
H[....] B[....] and or the estate of D[....] H[....] B[....] will pay
for the premium of S[....] C[....] C[....]2 with regards
to a medical
aid (similar to the plan on which she is with the undersigning of
this) for as long as she lives.
4.
MONTHLY ALLOWANCE
D[....]
H[....] B[....] and or the estate of D[....] H[....] B[....] will,
before the 7
th
day of every month, pay the amount of
R20 000-00 (Twenty thousand rand) to the mentioned S[....]
C[....] C[....]2 into a bank
account nominated by S[....] C[....]
C[....]2 as lifelong maintenance between spouses.
5.
POLICY
D[....]
H[....] B[....] and or the estate of D[....] H[....] B[....] will
oversee the payment of the Momentum Life Policy with number
[....],
for as long as the mentioned S[....] C[....] C[....]2 may live.’
[7]
The appellant’s case is simply this: there is no conflict
between the terms
of the ANC and the agreement; they co-exist and
remain valid and enforceable as two distinct and separate legal
instruments, each
serving a different purpose which do not impinge
upon each other;
ss 7(1)
and
7
(2) of the
Divorce Act are
not
applicable in this matter, the counter-claim is a contractual claim
based on donations in her favour which were made by the
respondent
with the full knowledge of the contents of their ANC; in terms of
Odgers v
De Gersigny
[2]
(
Odgers
),
the donation by the respondent in terms of which he undertook to pay
the appellant lifelong maintenance is neither unusual nor
impermissible and lastly; that the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
is
applicable. For the reasons that follow, the court a quo should have
upheld these contentions.
[8]
It is instructive at the outset to consider first the definition and
the purpose including
the primary objective of these two legal
instruments which form the matrix of this appeal. The primary
objective of the ANC is
not to create obligations, but to determine
the matrimonial property system between spouses by excluding or
varying the normal
patrimonial consequences of marriage. Regarded in
this light, the ANC is by no means a contract.
[3]
Lawsa
[4]
defines a donation as
follows: ‘an agreement which has been induced by pure (or
disinterested) benevolence or sheer liberality
whereby a person under
no legal obligation undertakes to give something (this includes the
gratuitous release or waiver of a right)
to another person, called
“the donee”, with the intention of enriching the donee,
in return for which the doner receives
no consideration nor expects
any future advantage’. It is trite that the prohibition on
donations between spouses has been
abolished.
[5]
It is therefore no longer necessary for such donations to be made in
an ANC.
[6]
[9]
The agreement does not purport to vary the ANC. In my view, the two
legal instruments
can co-exist because an ANC regulates the
matrimonial regime of the parties
stante matrimonio
only,
whereas the agreement has no bearing at all on the nature of their
matrimonial regime and the respective estates of the parties.
Their
estates remain separate. Thus, the provisions of the ANC will remain
intact and will be applicable upon their divorce despite
the
appellant’s entitlement to enforce the terms of the agreement.
The legal effect of this is that a portion of the patrimonial
consequences upon divorce or death will flow from the agreement and
not from the matrimonial regime. Neither party will have any
claim
against the other based either on the provisions of the
Divorce Act
or
the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 (the
Matrimonial Property
Act). The
finding by the court a quo to the effect that the agreement
constitutes an impermissible attempt to vary the ANC or the parties’
matrimonial regime contrary to
s 21
of the
Matrimonial Property Act,
is
therefore fundamentally flawed.
[10]
In addition, the conclusion by the court a quo ignores the clear
intention of the parties as
espoused in the agreement. The preamble
of the agreement is clear and unambiguous. It was carefully crafted
and indicated that
‘it is agreed that the parties will be
married out of community of property’ and that ‘the ANC
will be registered.’
An analysis of the text and the factual
context in which the agreement was concluded including the clear
purpose of the agreement
reveals that the parties never intended that
the agreement should rectify or amend the ANC. The agreement records
no reference
to the changing of the matrimonial regime. It is
important to note that the agreement in this matter was made by the
parties fully
alive to their matrimonial regime. Had there been any
intention on the parties to alter,vary or amend the terms of the ANC
by the
conclusion of this agreement, the parties would have expressed
themselves in clear terms in this regard.
[11]
Section 7(1)
of the
Divorce Act is
not applicable, nor is the matter
of
HM v
AM,
[7]
which was relied upon by the court a quo. The import of
s 7(1)
is to
confer the power upon the divorce court to make a written settlement
concluded by divorcing parties which relate to the payment
of
maintenance an order of court when a decree of divorce is granted.
The appellant does not ask for a settlement agreement to
be made an
order of court under
s 7(1).
A proper scrutiny of the appellant’s
particulars of claim reveals that the appellant’s counter-claim
is clearly a contractual
claim for specific performance. She
specifically prays for the enforcement of the terms of an agreement
as they are couched in
the agreement. The fact that the agreement
refers to a lifelong monthly payment of ‘maintenance’
does not render it
an attempt to settle a pending divorce action.
[12]
The respondent focused on clause 4 of the agreement in terms of which
the respondent undertook
to pay the appellant an amount of R20 000.00
per month as maintenance. It appears that the court a quo was
intrigued by the
words ‘lifelong maintenance’ which led
it to conclude that
‘absent a
settlement agreement envisaged in
s 7(1)
of the
Divorce Act, the
court still retains the statutory power to enquire into the
reasonable needs of the spouse who requires maintenance and therefore
the discretionary power vested in the court in terms of
s 7(2)
of the
Divorce Act has
been ousted by the regional court’s order’.
The court a quo’s finding and reasoning in this regard are
misplaced
if regard is had to the correct legal position in our law.
Unlike the duty of the high court as upper guardian of minor children
to ensure that their best interests are served during divorce
proceedings, it owes no such duty to the parties. The legal position
regulating agreements between parties was set out by this Court in
Odgers
as follows:
‘
As
previously indicated, the agreement in the instant case does not come
within the purview of
s 7(2).
There is no bar to agreeing on the
duration and extent of the payment of maintenance which is to be
made, irrespective of any change
in the parties’ circumstances,
the agreement is valid and purely contractual in nature. It falls to
be governed by the rules
applicable in that sphere.’
[8]
[13]
The correct approach was more than two decades ago succinctly
summarised in
Hodges
v Coubrough
N
O.
[9]
The following remarks quoted with approval in
Odgers
are apposite in this
matter:
‘
The
field of contract is very different from the one where the present
case lies. Everybody may bind his estate, by contract no
less firmly
than by will, to pay maintenance after his death. And he may settle
the maintenance on whomsoever he chooses, on his
current wife, a
former wife, a mistress, an employee or anyone else. Whether in a
given instance that result has been produced,
whether the liability
which was incurred survives the death of the person who assumed it
and passes to his estate, depends of course
on the terms of the
contract, or their true meaning. And that goes too for the kind of
contract in question, an agreement between
spouses which is made an
order of Court on their divorce. So, like the legislation whenever
its meaning is sought, the agreement
must be interpreted. By no means
is the enquiry the same, however, since the objects of the exercise
differ. The intention which
has to be ascertained in the one case is
that of Parliament, legislating in general terms and with general
effect. In the other
it is the intention of private individuals,
minding their own business and dealing solely with that. They have no
occasion to reckon
with the common law. They have no reason to worry
about issues of policy. Nor do they care a fig if the party who is
maintained
under their arrangements turns out to be better off than
somebody else’s widow. Then there is a further consideration, a
rule governing contractual obligations which has no counterpart in
the area of those generated statutorily. . . .’
[14]
The Constitutional Court confirmed this legal position in
AM
v HM.
[10]
In dismissing the application for leave to appeal the SCA decision of
HM v AM,
which has been heavily
relied upon by the respondent in this matter, the Constitutional
Court remarked:
‘
In
my view, the applicant’s attack on the judgment of the Supreme
Court of Appeal is misplaced. A proper interpretation and
analysis of
the judgment reveal that the Supreme Court of Appeal did not
prescribe a bar on all agreements between spouses out
of the
community of property. The finding only relates to this agreement,
whose terms appeared to have the effect of changing the
parties’
matrimonial regime without being sanctioned by a court order. It did
not affect the parties’ capacity to contract
in respect of
other agreements.’
[11]
[15]
Likewise, the agreement in this matter does not fall within the ambit
of the provisions of
s 7(2).
The discretion under
s 7(2)
only arises
when a claim is made under that section. There are a variety of
reasons why such a claim may not be made in a particular
matter,
including that as a result of substantive donations there is no need
for maintenance. The appellant does not claim maintenance
under
s
7(2)
but simply requests the divorce court to enforce the terms of
the agreement. As gathered from the authorities quoted above, the
agreement is neither unusual nor impermissible. The invocation of the
discretionary power conferred by
s 7(2)
by the court a quo was
therefore uncalled for. Therefore, the agreement does not take away a
discretion under
s 7(2).
[16]
For these reasons, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria, is set
aside
and replaced with an order in the following terms:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.’
A
M KGOELE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
the appellant:
H P West
Instructed
by:
Kruger & Okes
Inc, Johannesburg
Hendre
Conradie Inc, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: R Ferreira with A
Koekemoer
Instructed
by:
Chris Liebenberg
Attorneys, Johannesburg
Bokwa
Incorporated, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
relevant sub-sections reads:
‘
7(1)
A Court granting a decree of divorce may in accordance with a
written agreement between the
parties make an order with regard to
the division of the assets of the parties or the payment of
maintenance by the one party
to the other.
7(2)
In the absence of an order made in terms of subsection (1) with
regard to the payment
of maintenance by the one to the other, the
Court may, having regard to the existing or prospective means of
each of the parties,
their respective earning capacities, financial
needs and obligations, the age of each of the parties, the duration
of the marriage,
the standard of living of the parties prior to the
divorce, their conduct insofar as it may be relevant to the
break-down of
the marriage, an order in terms of subsection (3) and
any other factor which in the opinion of the Court should be taken
into
account, make an order which the Court finds just in respect of
the payment of maintenance by the one party to the other for any
period until the death or remarriage of the party in whose favour
the order is given, whichever event may first occur.’
[2]
Odgers
v De Gersigny
[2006]
ZASCA 125; 2007 (2) SA 305 (SCA).
[3]
Cronje and Heaton
South
African Family Law
(1999)
at 107-108.
[4]
8
Lawsa
3 ed para 268.
[5]
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
,
s 22.
[6]
Ibid fn 4 at 115.
[7]
HM v AM
[2019] ZASCA 12.
[8]
Footnote 2 para 8.
[9]
Hodges
v Coubrough NO
1991
(3) SA 58
(D) at 66D; Hahlo
The
South African Law of Husband and Wife
5
ed at 553.
[10]
AM
v HM
[2020]
ZACC 9; 2020 (8) BCLR 903.
[11]
Ibid
para 32.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Manyaka v S (434/2020) [2022] ZASCA 21; 2022 (1) SACR 447 (SCA) (23 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 21Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
Makhala & Another v S (438/20) [2022] ZASCA 19; 2022 (1) SACR 485 (SCA); [2022] 2 All SA 367 (SCA) (18 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 19Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
T[....] v T[....] (287/2021) [2022] ZASCA 109; 2022 (2) SACR 233 (SCA); 2022 (6) SA 93 (SCA) (15 July 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 109Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Z v Z (556/2021) [2022] ZASCA 113; 2022 (5) SA 451 (SCA) (21 July 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 113Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Ntshongwana v S (1304/2021) [2023] ZASCA 156; [2024] 1 All SA 345 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 443 (SCA) (21 November 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 156Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar