Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 431South Africa
S.M v M.M and Another (038386/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 431 (4 April 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.M v M.M and Another (038386/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 431 (4 April 2025)
S.M v M.M and Another (038386/2025) [2025] ZAGPJHC 431 (4 April 2025)
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sino date 4 April 2025
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IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 038386/2025
DATE
:
04-04-2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
4 April 2025
In
the matter between
S[…]
M[…]
Applicant
And
M[…]
M[…]
First Respondent
PALESA
MOATLHUDI
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
,
J
:
The
applicant, S[…] E[…] M[…], brings proceedings
urgently for interdictory relief and ancillary claims thereto.
The
first respondent, M[…] D[…] M[…], the
applicant’s estranged husband, opposes the application. The
second respondent, Palesa Moatlhudi, did not oppose nor participate
in the application.
The
first respondent and the second respondent allegedly, are also
married to each other and in the process of divorce proceedings.
The
applicant seeks relief interdicting the respondents from having their
written settlement agreement, signed in finalisation of
their marital
disputes, (“the agreement”), made an order of court
insofar as the agreement relates to assets comprising
part of the
matrimonial estate between the respondents. The applicant seeks
relief pending final determination by a court of the
rightful
ownership of those assets.
Furthermore,
the applicant claims an interdict preventing the respondents from
executing or enforcing the terms of the agreement
pending a court
determining ownership of the assets and that the divorce proceedings
between the applicant and the first respondent
be consolidated with
those between the respondents.
The
applicant alleges that she married the first respondent validly by
customary law on 30 November 2019, and that the marriage
is one in
community of property. The applicant and first respondent allegedly
registered their marriage and procured a marriage
certificate. The
registration of the marriage on 20 March 2023 resulted in a marriage
certificate that states that the marriage
is a civil marriage.
The
applicant instituted divorce proceedings to which the first
respondent pleaded that the marriage was not valid as he was married
to another woman, being the second respondent.
The
applicant subsequently discovered that the second respondent also
instituted divorce proceedings against the first respondent,
to which
the first respondent pleaded a denial of the marriage between himself
and the second respondent because he was married
to an unnamed woman.
Subsequently,
the respondents settled their marital disputes in terms of the
agreement between them as aforementioned.
The
applicant alleges that various of the assets that are allocated
between the respondents in terms of the agreement, formed part
of the
joint estate between the applicant and first respondent. Furthermore,
the applicant contends that she stands to suffer irreparable
prejudice if the agreement between the respondents is made an order
of court and the respondents execute the provisions of that
agreement
in respect of those assets. The first respondent argues that the
application is moot as the respondents have signed the
agreement,
that is binding upon them, in finalisation of their disputes
including the division of their joint estate. The respondents’
divorce is set down for hearing on the unopposed roll on 6 June 2025.
The
first respondent contends that the marriage between him and the
applicant is null and void
ab initio
.
Alternatively, the first respondent submits that if there is a valid
customary marriage between him and the applicant then
the
marriage is a civil marriage as reflected on the parties’
marriage certificate and that it is out of community of property.
Thus, the first respondent seeks the striking off of the application
with costs for the absence of urgency alternatively, the dismissal
of
the application with costs.
As to
the urgency of the application, notwithstanding the applicant having
requested a copy of the agreement from the first respondent’s
attorney, the agreement was not forthcoming. The agreement was only
uploaded onto the digital caselines platform whilst the parties
were
waiting to be heard by me in the urgent court. The applicant alleges
that the first respondent in terms of the agreement,
is disposing of
assets that he alleges belong only to him, to the prejudice of the
applicant. Accordingly, up until the uploading
of the agreement on
the digital CaseLines platform, the applicant did not know what
assets would be divided between the respondents
and the potential
effect thereof upon her.
Furthermore,
the applicant acted in bringing the application urgently, under the
impression that the respondents’ divorce
was set down
provisionally for hearing on 20 March 2025. The applicant discovered
subsequently that the divorce would be heard
on 6 June 2025.
Notwithstanding, the applicant stands to suffer prejudice potentially
if the respondents proceed to finalise their
divorce proceedings on 6
June 2025 and thereafter execute the provisions of the agreement in
respect of the asset allocation between
the respondents.
The
applicant cannot enjoy substantial recourse in due course because
absent the order being granted in terms of the notice of motion
before me, the respondents’ divorce will be finalised before
the applicant obtains a date for this application on the opposed
motion roll and before the applicant’s divorce action is
determined on the trial roll.
In the
circumstances, I am of the view that the application is urgent and
stands to be determined accordingly.
The
applicant alleges that it is in the interests of justice that one
court hears all of the relevant evidence and determines if
the two
marriages respectively are valid and, if so, which matrimonial
proprietary regime applies in respect of each marriage and
which
assets fall to be divided within the confines of each marriage and
each divorce, assuming the respective marriages to be
valid.
I note
the first respondent’s contention that the applicant cannot
proffer a version that disputes that of the respondents,
and that the
order sought by the applicant, if granted, will cause prejudice to
the second respondent, who has signed the agreement
in respect of her
alleged divorce with the first respondent. These submissions are
meritorious.
However,
if the respondents’ agreement serves to dispose of assets that
rightfully accrue within the alleged marriage of the
applicant and
first respondent, then it is just that the consequences thereof be
considered and determined by a court.
Furthermore,
the first respondent relied on
Molokane
v Williams and Others
,
[1]
which relied on the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Ramuhovhi
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others,
[2]
to the effect that if it is accepted that a customary marriage exists
between the applicant and the first respondent, then there
is no
joint estate and that marriage is one out of community of property.
Thus, the agreement between the respondents does not
serve to
prejudice the applicant.
[3]
However,
the case law relied upon by the first respondent
[4]
and the alleged consequences thereof, apply only in the event that
the respondents’ marriage was validly concluded in terms
of
customary law. The second respondent, importantly, did not deliver a
confirmatory affidavit in support of the first respondent’s
allegations concerning their marriage.
I am
certainly not in a position to determine that the respondents were
married, validly so, in terms of customary law.
That
question, as well as the consequences of that determination upon the
applicant’s alleged marriage to the first respondent,
must be
decided by a court after hearing all the evidence in respect of both
respective marriages, as well as the consequences
thereof, including
the division of the assets in terms of the respective divorce
proceedings.
The
applicant is entitled to question the respondents and challenge the
first respondent’s conclusion that a valid customary
marriage
was concluded between the respondents.
The
prejudice that will be suffered potentially by the applicant in the
event that I do not grant the relief claimed by her far
outweighs the
prejudice to be suffered by the second respondent in the event that I
do grant the relief sought by the applicant.
The prejudice to the
second respondent amounts to a delay in finalising her divorce
proceedings from the first respondent, which
in itself is
significantly prejudicial to the second respondent. Notwithstanding,
the applicant, in the event that I do not grant
the relief sought by
her, stands to lose assets that potentially may accrue rightfully
within the applicant’s marriage to
the first respondent.
In the
circumstances, it is in the interests of justice that one court
determines the issues raised in this matter after hearing
the
relevant evidence. Accordingly, I intend to grant the order sought by
the applicant.
The
costs of the application before me, will be costs in the cause of the
consolidated action.
By
reason of the aforementioned, I grant the following order:
ORDER
1. The actions in this
court under case number 2025-000037 and case number 2023-011264 are
consolidated into one action under case
number 2025-000037.
2. Pending the outcome of
the consolidated action under case number 2025-000037:
(a) The first and
second respondents are interdicted and restrained from seeking an
order in any court that any settlement
agreement concluded between
them relating to any of the first respondent’s assets, be made
an order of court.
(b) The first and
second respondents are interdicted and restrained from executing and
enforcing any terms of any settlement
agreement concluded between
them that relates to any of the assets of the first respondent.
3. The costs of this
application are costs in the cause of the consolidated action under
case number 2025-000037.
I hand
down the judgment.
CRUTCHFIELD, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 4
April 2025.
DATE OF HEARING: 1
April 2025.
[1]
Molokane
v Williams and Others
(2015/12381)
[2023] ZAGPJHC
1210.
[2]
Ramuhovhi
and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
[2017]
ZACC 41
(13 November 2017).
[3]
Ngwenyama
v Mayelane
2012
(4) SA 527
(SCA),
Netshituka
v Netshituka
[2011] ZASCA 120
and
Monyepao
v Ledwaba
[2020] ZASCA 54.
[4]
Id.
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