Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 319South Africa
M.P.M v T.R.T and Another (2023/118970) [2025] ZAGPJHC 319 (25 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## M.P.M v T.R.T and Another (2023/118970) [2025] ZAGPJHC 319 (25 March 2025)
M.P.M v T.R.T and Another (2023/118970) [2025] ZAGPJHC 319 (25 March 2025)
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sino date 25 March 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG.
Case
Number:2023-118970
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
SIGNATURE
DATE: 25 March 2025.
In
the matter between:
M[...]
P[...]
M[...]
Applicant
And
T[...]
R[...]
T[...]
First Respondent
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEE PENSION FUND
Second Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
NOKO
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant brought an urgent application for an interim interdict
restraining the second respondent from paying out
50% of the first
respondent’s pension benefit pending the finalisation of the
divorce action between the applicant and first
respondent.
[2]
The respondent is opposing the application and disputes that the
applicant has made out a case for urgency and that the
requirements
for interim interdict were met.
Parties
[3]
The applicant is M[...] P[...] M[...], an adult
female resident at 4[…] M[…] Street, W[…],
Johannesburg.
[4]
The first respondent is T[...] R[...] T[...], an adult male resident
at 4[…] M[…] Street, W[…], Johannesburg.
[5]
The second Respondent is
the Government Employees.
Pension fund (GPEF), a pension fund established in terms of Section 3
of the Government Service Pension
Act 57 of 1973, subject to the
provisions of the Government Employees Pension Law in 1996, with its
head office at 34. Hamilton
Streer, Pretoria.
Background
[6]
The factual background is uncomplicated and is set out as follows.
The applicant and the first respondent were married
to each other in
community of property which marriage still subsists. The first
respondent instituted divorce proceedings on 14
November 2023 which
are pending. There are three minor children born of the marriage
whose details are not relevant for the purposes
of this judgment.
[7]
The applicant was informed that the first respondent was dismissed on
20 February 2025 and was further informed
by her attorneys that
the second respondent may pay the pension benefits anytime.
Urgency
[8]
The applicant submits that the reasons underpinning the approach to
Court on urgent basis is informed by the advice she
received from her
attorneys that since the first respondent has been dismissed there
would be no hurdle that would hinder the second
respondent to process
payment of the pension benefit to the first respondent unless the
court issue an interdict.
[9]
The applicant contended that if the normal process is undertaken
there is a greater chance that the application may be
adjudicated in
2026 and at that time it would be late for her to obtain an equitable
redress. In addition, there is no prejudice
which can visit the first
respondent for the said funds being stayed pending the finalisation
of the divorce.
[10]
The applicant was notified that the financial circumstances of the
first respondent has taken a knock and has reneged
on his previous
undertaking to increase maintenance for the children. Though he has
made another undertaking that he would not
cash on the pension pay
outs it would be foolhardy to take his word just after he reneged on
24 February 2025 from paying extra
for his own children.
[11]
The respondent contends that the urgency in this matter is
self-created as the applicant’s attorneys have since
made it
known to the first respondent’s attorneys in November 2024 that
an urgent application will be instituted. There is
no explanation why
same was not instituted then. There were extremely truncated
dies
prescribed by the applicant which made the first respondent to
prepare the opposition under severely curtailed circumstances which
was not warranted and amount to abuse which the court should not
countenance.
[12]
I had regard to
submissions made by both parties and am persuaded that there was no
evidence that urgency was self-created. The
changed circumstances
were conveyed to the applicant on 24 February 2025 and these
proceedings were launched soon thereafter on
4 March 2025. The date
of November 2024 becomes irrelevant under these circumstances. The
applicant satisfied the principles elucidated
in the
locus
classicus
in
East
Rock Trading
[1]
that a party must set out
succinctly the basis for urgency as the process set out in rule
6(12)(a) of the Uniform Rules of Court
is not just there for asking.
Further that a party should most importantly set out the reasons why
the applicant cannot be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in
due course. I therefor conclude that this matter deserves of
the attention of the urgent
Court.
Interdict
[13]
The applicant asserts
that by virtue of marriage in community of property she has a right
to 50% of the assets of the parties. Further
that since the pension
benefits are part of the assets as set out in section 7(7) of the
Divorce Act
[2]
, she has clear
right to at least 50% thereof.
[14]
The applicant avers that she harbours a reasonable apprehension that
the first respondent may withdraw the pension pay
out since his
dismissal which appears to have been unceremonious. The first
respondent has instructed his attorneys to renege on
the undertaking
he made that maintenance amount would be increased and this was
communicated to the applicant’s attorneys
on 24 February 2024.
[15]
The respondent contends that the averments set out in this paragraph
are unfounded as undertaking requested by the applicant’s
attorneys in November 2024 was given which was to the effect that the
assets of the parties would not be dissipated. The assurance
was also
made again in February 2025 through exchanges from attorneys of both
parties that assets would remain safe. Launching
these proceedings
despite that assurance is an abuse and should be frowned upon by the
Court.
[16]
The applicant further contends that there is no prejudice which will
visit the first respondent as the remainder of the
pension benefits
can be processed in his favour. In addition, the 50% which is the
subject of this application would not be spent
by the applicant and
the first respondent may in the long run benefit therefrom if a
proper case is made. In view hereof the applicant
submit that the
balance of convenience is in her favour for the purposes of obtaining
an interim order.
[17]
There has been a concerted effort by the first respondent, argued the
applicant, to delay the finalisation of the divorce
and if the assets
are not preserved there would be no assets to share at the end of the
divorce which could possibly be in two
years from the date of
launching of the urgent application. The fact that the first
respondent has lost employment weigh in favour
of the applicant that
if she await launching civil action for damages against a party who
is unemployment the order may not be
worth the paper. Worse the
prospects of employment in his situation are weakened by the bleak
record predicating his dismissal.
Issues
[18]
The issue for determination is whether the applicant has made out a
case for an interim interdict.
Legal
principle and analysis
[19]
The principles underlying
application for interdicts both final and interim were laid down many
decades ago. For the final interdict
is
Setlogelo
[3]
and for the interim
interdict requirements are laid out in
Webster
.
[4]
The critical distinction between the two is that in the latter a
litigant need only show a
prima
facie
right
even if it is open to some doubt whereas in the former one has to
prove a clear right. In addition, there is extra requirement
for the
balance of convenience where a litigant seeks an interim interdict.
[20]
The reason underpinning
my decision to highlight the distinction is motivated by the way the
applicant crafted her papers. The notice
of motion states that the
applicant seeks “An order interdicting the Second Respondent
from paying out 50% of the First Respondent’s
pension benefit
in the Second Respondent to him
pending
the finalisation
of
the divorce action between the Applicant and First Respondent”.
[5]
In sync with the notice of motion the applicant in her founding
affidavit at para 4.2 refer to an interim order.
[6]
On the other hand, paragraph 9
[7]
of
the applicant’s founding affidavit refers to final interdict
and listed the three requirements in para 9.2.1. instead of
four
requirements required in interim applications.
[8]
[21]
That notwithstanding, the
applicant made reference to the fourth requirement of the interim
interdict in para 11.2 that “…
it is submitted that the
balance of convenience is in favour of the Applicant for the relief
sought in an event that Court is of
the view that the requirement for
final interdict are not established.”
[9]
It would be absurd for the court to find itself bound by an
interpretation which may end up with injustice or even absurdity on
the basis that the Court should only see issues as labelled or
characterised by the litigants. If a final interdict is granted
it
would be mean that the 50% would never be accessed even after the
divorce except with another court order. This is not what
was
intended by the parties. If the facts and evidence presented before
court justify the conclusion of an interim interdict the
court should
grant same despite the declared but confusing wishes of a litigant.
The Court should be able conclude on the interpretation
of the
correct legal principle without finding itself being paralysed by
having to adhere to the litigant’s incorrect or
mistaken
reading of legal principles.
[22]
The respondent repeated the averments that he would not go back on
his promises that the assets would not be dissipated.
It is difficult
for one to take such undertaking serious since the respondent has
recently withdrawn his undertaking to increase
the maintenance. The
withdrawal make sense as he no longer has an income. The fact that he
had to withdraw an undertaking he made
before is consistent with
someone who is saying he has no other means of survival or to take
care of the children. There is therefore
no reason to believe that
the respondent may not go back on his words. This would not be the
first time.
[23]
The respondent has further failed to demonstrate any prejudice which
will visit him if the said 50% is frozen. In any
event this has the
same consequence with his undertaking but with force. It is
mindboggling where the respondent summoned the energy
and financial
muscle to oppose the application if the essence of the order being
sought is in sync with his undertaking. The fact
that he is able to
provide funding to oppose the urgent application but have no money
for the maintenance should say a lot about
his intentions. This
conduct lend credence to the suspicion that he may want to cash the
pensions and benefit therefrom to the
exclusion of the applicant.
[24]
In the premises the opposition was ill-advised and unsustainable.
Costs
[25]
The question of costs is
within the discretion of the court. It was held in
Bam
[10]
that “
[T]he
general rule relating to the costs is that costs follow the result.
Re-imbursing a successful party of his or her out of pocket
expenses
is a settled principle which brooks no further ventilation.”
The applicant has asked
for costs at punitive scale. Ordinarily such order is warranted
in exceptional circumstances where
conduct of the litigant attract
the wrath of the court. The Constitutional Court held in
Mkhatshwa
[11]
“…
that the
purposes of punitive costs, being an extraordinarily rare award, are
to minimise the extent to which the successful litigant
is out of
pocket and to indicate the court’s extreme opprobrium and
disapproval of a party’s conduct.”
[12]
The opposition by the first respondent was vexatious and frivolous.
The costs at punitive scale is justified.
Order
[26]
In the premises I make the following order:
1. The applicant’s
non-compliance with the Rules is condoned and the matter to be heard
as one of urgency in terms of
Rules 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of
Court.
2. The second
respondent is interdicted from paying out 50% of the First
Respondent’s pension benefit pending the finalisation
of the
divorce action between the applicant and the First Respondent.
3. The first
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application on a scale
between attorney and client.
M
V NOKO
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
DISCLAMER:
This judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Noko and is handed
down electronically by circulation to the Parties
/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Case Lines. The date for hand-down
is deemed to be
25 March 2025
.
Dates:
Hearing:
11 March 2025.
Judgment:
25 March 2025
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
S M Nkabinde
Instructed
by :
Mary Jane Mphahlele Attorneys Inc.
For
the First Respondent:
TJ Loabile-Rantao
Instructed
by:
Thaga Attorneys.
[1]
East
Rock Trading 7 Pty Ltd and Others v Eagle Valley Granite and Others
(11/33767)[2011] ZAGPJHC
196 (23 September 2011).
[2]
Act
70 of 1979.
[3]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 227.
[4]
Webster
v Mitchel
1948
(1) SA 1186 (W)
[5]
See
prayer 2 of the Applicant’s Notice of Motion at CL 25-3.
[6]
See
Applicant’s Founding Affidavit at CL 25-8.
[7]
Id
at CL 25-12.
[8]
Id
at CL 25-13.
[9]
Id
at CL 25-14.
[10]
Bam
v Holtzhausen and Others
(2024/097438)
[2025] ZAGPPHC (21 February 2025).
[11]
Mkhatshwa
and Others v Mkhatshwa and Others
[2021]
ZACC 15.
[12]
Id
at para 21.
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