Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 424South Africa
S.B.H v Mncube NO and Another (2025/038564) [2025] ZAGPJHC 424 (29 April 2025)
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## S.B.H v Mncube NO and Another (2025/038564) [2025] ZAGPJHC 424 (29 April 2025)
S.B.H v Mncube NO and Another (2025/038564) [2025] ZAGPJHC 424 (29 April 2025)
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sino date 29 April 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2025-038564
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
H[...],
S[…]
B[…]
Applicant
and
THE
HONOURABLE MAGISTRATE MNCUBE N.O.
First respondent
H[…],
S[…]
A[…]
Second respondent
JUDGEMENT ON
POST-JUDGEMENT APPLICATIONS
HA VAN DER MERWE, AJ:
Introduction
[1]
After my judgment dated 8 April 2025
was handed down (the first judgment), Mr H[…] brought an
application for leave
to appeal against that judgment. That prompted
Ms H[…] to bring an application in terms of
section 18(3)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. In the latter application, Mr
H[…] brought an application for the rescission of the first
judgment as a counter-application.
Mr H[…] also brought an
application that, in form, was cast as an application to lead further
evidence on appeal. In substance
however, the last-mentioned
application served as a ground on which he sought leave to appeal
against the first judgment.
[2]
For the sake of convenience, I shall refer
to the parties as they were in the initial urgent application in
which I handed down
the first judgment, i.e. Ms H[…] will be
referred to as “the applicant” and Mr H[…] as “the
second
respondent”. The three applications now before me will
be referred as follows: the application for leave to appeal against
the first judgment as the “the application for leave to
appeal”; the application in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act as
“the
section 18(3)
application”
and the application for the rescission of the first judgment as “the
rescission application”.
[3]
The facts as recorded in the first judgment
are relevant for the application for leave to appeal, the
section
18(3)
application and the rescission application. Those facts are not
repeated in this judgment.
[4]
All three application were heard together,
but as Ms Bezuidenhout for the applicant correctly argued, the three
applications are
discrete and each demand the application of discrete
principles.
The new evidence
[5]
Before I turn to the three applications, it
is appropriate to set out at the outset the facts that emerged after
the judgment dated
8 April 2025 was handed down. These
facts bear on the three applications now before me in one way or
another.
[6]
For the sake of making out a case that it
serves the best interests of the 11-year old minor girl born of the
marriage between the
applicant and the second respondent (the minor),
the applicant in her founding affidavit in the initial urgent
application set
out in some detail the provisions that had had been
made for the living conditions of the minor in Durban, were the
applicant to
be permitted to relocate to Durban (paragraph [26] of
the judgment dated 8 April 2025). I found those to be
adequate
(paragraph [50]).
[7]
It now turns out that the home in Durban is
not habitable and will not become habitable for at least a matter of
weeks. From the
photographs taken on 19 April 2025, annexed
to the second respondent’s answering affidavit in the
section
18(3)
application, it appears that the Durban home is undergoing
extensive renovations. The Durban home is surrounded by a high brick
wall, so that for the most part is home itself is not visible. What
is visible is scaffolding. When the photographs were taken,
the home
did not even have a roof. What appears to be a garage is filled with
building rubble.
[8]
The applicant does not deny the
photographs. In her replying affidavit in the
section 18(3)
application, she states that the renovations began in December 2024.
Her version is that she expected the renovations to have been
completed sooner, but due to extraordinary rainfall the renovations
were delayed. According to a note from the builder dated
22 April 2025
(not confirmed in an affidavit), the
construction works is approximately 75% complete and is estimated to
be completed by the end
of May 2025, barring further unforeseen
delays. In the meantime, if allowed to relocate with the minor to
Durban, the applicant
will reside with her husband and her new-born
child in a two-bedroom cottage on a property of a member of her
husband’s family.
As two-bedroom cottages go, it is of the
larger kind and there is nothing about it that suggests that it is
not adequate.
[9]
The founding affidavit in the initial
urgent application was deposed to by the applicant on 19 March 2025.
At that time
the renovations were already underway. The founding
affidavit however is completely silent about the renovations. On any
reasonable
reading of the founding affidavit, it conveys that the
Durban home is ready for occupation and that if the order as sought
is granted,
the minor will take up occupation in the Durban home. The
relevant allegations in the founding affidavit read as follows:
“
The property to
which we intend to relocate is a freestanding home situated at […].
The home is close to shopping centres,
[the minor’s] Kumon
centre, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Both [the
applicant’s husband] and I purchased
the home together. It is
mortgaged and transfer took place in September 2024. A copy of the
deed of transfer is attached …
The home has a large
garden for [the minor] to play and keep her pets. She currently has 2
rabbits, 2 birds, 2 cats and a hamster
which will come with us to
Durban. [The minor] has been asking for a dog for a long time however
our home in Johannesburg doesn't
have enough space for a dog. She
will be getting her dog in Durban. [The minor] enjoys swimming and
playing in the garden. The
home has a pool for [the minor] to enjoy
all year round due to Durban’s lovely weather.
She will also have her
own room where she will be very comfortable. She is looking forward
to having her cousins over for sleepovers
and play dates as they live
down the road from our home.
The house is currently
vacant …”
[10]
The allegation that the “house is
currently vacant”, is not true. It was not vacant at the time.
Although it was not
occupied for residential purposes, it was in the
possession of the builder. The other allegations may not be untrue in
the same
way – it has a garden and so forth, irrespective of
the fact that it is a building site. The use of the future tense in
the
paragraphs quoted above, also means that, strictly speaking,
those allegations are not untrue, but only if read out of context.
Affidavits, like any other document is read and is meant to be read
in context. In context, the use of the future tense indicates
not
that the home uninhabitable at the time, but that once the order
sought is granted, then the minor will have her own room,
etc. In
context therefore, those allegations are also untrue. The applicant
must have realised that the allegations made in the
founding
affidavit create the impression that the home is ready for
occupation. To this extent it is at least misleading.
The rescission
application
[11]
The
current state of the Durban home are the foundational facts for the
application for the rescission of the first judgment. At
common law,
a judgment may be rescinded if it was obtained by fraud, that is to
say if the first judgment was granted in the basis
of deliberately
false evidence. However, one of the requirements for the rescission
of a judgment on the basis of fraud, is that
the to be impugned
judgment would have gone the other way, had the false evidence not
been placed before the court.
[1]
[12]
For purposes of the rescission application,
the enquiry is an objective assessment of how the initial application
would have been
decided had the applicant’s founding affidavit
reflected the truth from the outset. It is not an assessment of how
the initial
application would have been decided, if it was known that
the applicant’s founding affidavit contained the false
evidence,
but which was corrected before the first judgment was
handed down. For purposes of the rescission application therefore,
the fact
that the founding affidavit contained untruths is not
relevant as such. For the rescission application, what should be
postulated
is how the initial application would have been decided if
the applicant was truthful from the outset.
[13]
Had the applicant stated the truth in her
founding affidavit in the initial application, it does not seem to me
that it would have
affected the outcome of the first judgment. I take
it for granted that this is an objective assessment, i.e. the
question is not
how I would have decided the initial application had
the false evidence been substituted for the truth. The question is
whether,
objectively assessed, it would have made a difference. Had
the applicant stated that the Durban home was, at the time, a
building
site, but that within a month or so, it should be completed,
and that in the meantime, the applicant will live in the cottage with
her husband, her new-born child and the minor, then it would not have
made a difference to the outcome of the first judgment. The
best
interest of the minor has little to do with particular attributes of
the home in which she will live if the applicant is allowed
to
relocate with her. So long as it can be described as adequate, it is
good enough. What is far more important is the people with
whom she
will share the home she is to live in and whether its location is
such that it will not impact on the involvement of her
larger support
structure (the other members of her larger family), her schooling,
and other activities.
[14]
For these reasons, although the founding
affidavit in the initial application contained false evidence, the
rescission application
should be dismissed.
The application for leave
to appeal
[15]
Even though the rescission application
should be dismissed, it does not mean that the false evidence in the
founding affidavit in
the initial application is without consequence.
For purposes of the application for leave to appeal, it seems to me
that it matters
a great deal. Insofar as it concerns the application
for leave to appeal, it is permissible for the second respondent to
rely on
his intended application to lead further evidence on appeal,
as a ground on which he may seek leave to appeal. To be clear, the
application to lead further evidence on appeal is not before me. In
terms of
section 19
of the
Superior Courts Act, it
for the court of
appeal to consider and rule on an application to lead further
evidence on appeal. What is before me is the second
respondent’s
contention that I should grant him leave to appeal, so that he may,
on appeal, seek an order to lead further
evidence. If I am convinced
that: (a) the second respondent has reasonable prospects on appeal to
succeed with his intended application
for leave to lead further
evidence; and (b) that the further evidence would mean that he has
reasonable prospects of success on
appeal; then he is entitled to an
order granting him leave to appeal.
[16]
I
am satisfied that the second respondent has reasonable prospects on
both (a) and (b) above. The learned authors of
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
,
state as follows on
section 19(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act:
[2
]
While
holding that it is undesirable to lay down definite rules as to when
the court ought to accede to the application of a litigant
desirous
of leading further evidence upon appeal, the Appellate Division (as
well as the Supreme Court of Appeal and the Constitutional
Court) has
in a series of decisions laid down certain basic requirements.
They have not always been formulated in the same
words, but their
tenor throughout has been to emphasize the court’s reluctance
to reopen a trial. They may be summarized
as follows:
(a)
There
should be some reasonably sufficient explanation, based on
allegations which may be true, why the
evidence which it is sought to
lead was not led at the trial.
(b)
There
should be a prima facie likelihood of the truth of the evidence.
(c)
The
evidence should be materially relevant to the outcome of the trial.
…
Non-fulfilment of any one
of the stated requirements would ordinarily be fatal to the
application, but every case must be decided
on its particular merits,
and there may be rare instances where, for some special reasons, the
court will be more disposed to grant
relief.” (footnotes
omitted)
[17]
The further evidence only became available
to the second respondent after the first judgment was handed down. If
I take the applicant
at her word that the renovations began in
December 2024, then, had the second respondent undertaken the
investigations that led
him to the state of the Durban home, then
that evidence could have been led when he deposed to his answering
affidavit in the initial
application. However, the initial
application was brought on an urgent basis and allowance should be
made for the circumstances
in which he was required to prepare that
affidavit. The truth of the further evidence is beyond doubt,
inasmuch as the applicant
concedes that Durban home is presently a
building site.
[18]
Requirement (c) quoted above (i.e. that the
evidence should be materially relevant to the outcome of the
application) seems to me
answer two questions at once. If the further
evidence is materially relevant, then it means in the first instance
that the second
respondent has reasonable prospects of success on
appeal to have the further evidence admitted. It must also mean, in
the second
instance, that he has reasonable prospects of success on
appeal.
[19]
Much
of the first judgment is concerned with whether there ought to have
been a referral to oral evidence. Had it been known that
the
applicant is capable of untruths in her founding affidavit, it seems
to me that there are reasonable prospects that a court
of appeal may
be swayed to order oral evidence, given that in cases involving minor
children, the ordinary rules pertaining to
the resolution of factual
disputes do not apply in same way as it would in ordinary strictly
adversarial matters.
[3]
In this
context, the enquiry is different to the enquiry that the rescission
application calls for. As I found above, for the rescission
application, the fact that the applicant was untruthful in her
founding affidavit in the initial application is irrelevant, because
that enquiry is concerned with the outcome of the initial
application, had the applicant been truthful. For present purposes,
the fact that the applicant was untruthful is very much relevant,
because it has a bearing on whether oral evidence should have
been
ordered.
[20]
An appeal court may be able to decide the
issues on those facts that do not depend on the veracity of the
applicant’s version,
so that her credibility does not enter the
picture. For instance, Dr Duchen’s “voice of the child”
report may
be sufficient to establish that the applicant is the
appropriate parent for purposes of primary residence, especially if
coupled
with the fact that the second respondent is content for the
minor to remain in the applicant’s primary residence, so long
as she is in Johannesburg. However, that is not for me to decide. All
I should consider is whether the second respondent has reasonable
prospects of success on appeal. For the reasons set out above, in my
view the second respondent has shown that he has.
[21]
Ms Bezuidenhout argued that the current
condition of the Durban home will be irrelevant on appeal, because by
then the renovations
will be complete and the minor will live in the
conditions precisely as (falsely) described in the founding affidavit
in the initial
application. So far as it goes, Ms Bezuidenhout’s
argument is well made, but that argument is no answer to the real
implications
of the applicant’s false evidence. Having shown
herself to have little regard for the oath in one respect, it lends
support
for an order referring the disputes on the best interests of
the minor to oral evidence.
[22]
The application for leave to appeal should
therefore be granted.
[23]
The
second respondent relies on various other grounds on which he seeks
leave to appeal. Among those grounds is the contention that
it was
not permissible to have found that the order of the first respondent
is a nullity, because the applicant did not make that
contention in
her affidavits. Ms Segal is quite correct that the applicant did not
contend in any of her affidavits that the order
of the first
respondent was a nullity. However, the applicant did seek an order
for the review and setting aside of the first respondent’s
order. If the order is a nullity, it cannot be reviewed, because then
there is nothing to review (see paragraph [38] of the first
judgment). Moreover, this Court’s function as upper guardian of
the minor is, in my view, sufficiently wide that an enquiry
into
whether the first respondent’s order is a nullity or not, is
permissible even though it was not raised by the applicant.
[4]
In terms of section 28(2) of the Constitution, “[a] child's
best interests are of paramount importance in every matter concerning
the child.” If the best interest of the minor indicates that an
enquiry into whether the order of the first respondent is
a nullity
or not is warranted, then it does not seem to me that it is off
limits, whether the applicant raised it or not. On this
ground
therefore, in my view, the second respondent does not have reasonable
prospects of success on appeal.
[24]
The same goes for the grounds on which the
second respondent seeks leave to appeal that are concerned with
lis
pendens
and the fact that the first
respondent’s order was an interim one. The court’s
function as upper guardian of the minor,
coupled with section 28(2)
of the Constitution, mean that so long as the best interests of the
minor indicate that the relocation
application should be granted,
then neither ground could stand in the way.
[25]
The second respondent also contends that he
has reasonable prospects of success on appeal to show that the order
of the first respondent
was severable, in that the finding that the
order so far as it concerns Living Links, is severable from the order
that in the interim
and pending the final determination of the
proceedings before the Children’s Court, the recommendations of
the family advocate
should stand. It does not seem to me that the
second respondent has reasonable prospects of success on this ground.
The recommendation
of the family advocate was made pending the
referral to Living Links. Ms Segal argued that the interim operation
of the recommendation
of the family advocate should be understood to
have been made pending the final determination of the proceedings
before the Children’s
Court in a manner that is not so closely
tied to the order concerning Living Links that the one cannot exist
without the other.
In other words, Ms Segal, as I understood her,
argued that the second respondent has reasonable prospects of success
on appeal
to convince an appeal court, that despite the setting aside
of the order so far as it concerns Living Links, to nonetheless
maintain
the interim operation of the family advocate’s
recommendation and to leave it to the Children’s’ Court
to decide
the issues that were before that court. This argument does
not take account of my finding that it is in the best interests of
the
minor to be allowed to relocate to Durban with the applicant. So
long as that finding stands, then it does not seem to me that there
any room to argue that the status quo (i.e. the minor remaining in
Johannesburg) should be maintained, in light of the court’s
role as upper guardian and section 28(2) of the Constitution.
However, having found that the second respondent has reasonable
prospects of success on appeal on a referral to oral evidence, this
contention seems to me to fall by the wayside. If a court of
appeal
makes an order referring the very question at stake, i.e. the best
interests of the minor to oral evidence, then the appeal
court will
decide the issue, as upper guardian of the minor. In that event there
would be no sense in any further proceedings in
the Children’s
Court.
[26]
Ms Segal argued that the first judgment
non-suited the second respondent in his application before the
Children’s Court that
primary residence of the minor should be
awarded to him. It seems to me that Ms Segal’s argument is
sound. In the first judgment,
I ordered that the applicant may
relocate to Durban, with the minor, as her primary resident parent.
In effect therefore, the first
judgment disposes of the second
respondent’s application for primary residence, because in
terms of the first judgment, the
primary residence of the minor is to
remain with the applicant, in Durban. My finding that the minor
should relocate to Durban
with the applicant, therefore by necessary
implication also determined the second respondent’s claim for
primary residence
and thereby put an end to his application in the
Children’s Court. That however does not mean that the second
respondent
has reasonable prospects of success on appeal, unless he
has grounds on which to attack my finding on the relocation
application.
It is therefore not a standalone ground on which an
application for leave to appeal may be founded. That said, once the
second
respondent is granted leave to appeal so far as a referral to
oral evidence is concerned, it catches within its ambit the second
respondent’s case for primary residence. It will be for the
appeal court to determine precisely on which issues oral evidence
may
be led, if the second respondent is successful on appeal. It will
then be for the appeal court to determine whether the oral
evidence
should cover the second respondent’s application for primary
residence.
[27]
It does not seem to me that there is any
cogent reason for leave to appeal to be granted to the Supreme Court
of Appeal. Leave to
appeal should therefore be granted to the Full
Court of this Division.
The section 18(3)
application
[28]
That then brings me to the application in
terms of section 18(3). Section 18 reads as follows in relevant part:
“
(1) Subject to
subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and
execution of a
decision which is the subject of an application for leave to appeal
or of an appeal, is suspended pending the decision
of the application
or appeal.
…
(3) A court may only
order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the
party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves
on a balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable
harm if the court does not so order and
that the other party will not
suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4)
(a)
If a
court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1) —
(i) the court
must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
…”
[29]
Ms Bezuidenhout and Ms Segal made common
cause with the proposition that section 18(3) does not trump the best
interest of the minor,
in the sense that an order in terms of section
18(3) should not be made if it would against the best interest of the
minor. Section
28(2) of Constitution does not permit such an outcome.
That does not however mean that section 18(3) can be ignored without
more.
In terms of section 39(2) of the Constitution:
“
When
interpreting any legislation, and when developing the common law or
customary law, every court, tribunal or forum must promote
the
spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights.”
[30]
The caselaw on section 18(3) show that it
requires an assessment of the effect that the suspension of a
judgment appealed against
has on the rights of the litigating
parties, if the suspension is allowed to operate and if the
suspension is not operational.
Leaving aside the question of
exceptional circumstances for the moment, two questions are relevant:
(a) if the judgment appealed
against is suspended and the appeal is
dismissed, will the respondent on appeal suffer irreparable harm; and
(b) if the judgment
appealed against is carried into effect and the
appeal is successful, will the appellant suffer irreparable harm? The
same questions
are relevant when there is only an application for
leave to appeal, but then of course, the parties are to be referred
to not as
respondent on appeal or appellant, but as respondent in an
application for leave to appeal and applicant in an application for
leave to appeal.
[31]
Sutherland
J’s judgment in
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
[5]
(
Incubeta
)
is instructive. In
Incubeta
the issue was whether an application in terms of section 18(3) should
be granted in respect of a judgment in which it was found
that an
agreement in restraint of trade should be enforced. Sutherland J
dealt with the issue at hand as follows in paras [24]
to [25]:
“
[24] …
The proper meaning of that subsection is that if
the loser, who seeks leave to appeal, will suffer irreparable harm,
the order must
remain stayed, even if the stay will cause the victor
irreparable harm too. In addition, if the loser will not suffer
irreparable
harm, the victor must nevertheless show irreparable harm
to itself. A hierarchy of entitlement has been created, absent from
the
South Cape
test.
Two distinct findings of fact must now be made, rather than a
weighing-up to discern a 'preponderance of equities'.
The discretion
is indeed absent, in the sense articulated in
South
Cape.
What remains intriguing,
however, is the extent to which even a finding of fact as to
irreparable harm is a qualitative decision
admitting of some scope
for reasonable people to disagree about the presence of the so-called
'fact' of 'irreparability'.
[25]
Turning to the circumstances of these litigants, what is relevant, in
my view, is the following:
•
If the order
is not put into operation, the relief will, regardless of the outcome
of the application for leave to appeal, be forfeited
by Incubeta
because the short duration of the restraint will expire before
exhaustion of the appeal processes.
•
The only
value in the relief is to stop the breach and protect legitimate
interests during the precise period of the next four and
a half
months. Unrebutted evidence in the affidavits alleges a breach is
taking place at this very time.
•
Damages are
not an appropriate alternative remedy precisely because the very
relief obtained is posited on the absence of such a
remedy being
available. This places a restraint interdict in a different position
to other forms of relief, such as money claims,
where the aspect of
irreparable harm is a factor extraneous to the substantive relief
procured.
•
Ellis will,
on the probabilities, be without work for four and a half months and
without pay. This will be financially detrimental.
•
Significantly,
no allegation is made that Ellis or his family will endure true
hardship during this short period.
•
If the
appeal is won, Ellis' loss of earnings can be sued for, and the
quantum is feasible to compute, including the loss of interest
or
lost- opportunity cost of being out of funds, and any such interest
expended on borrowing for living expenses, if necessary.
•
Moreover,
security under rule 48(12) is available.”
[32]
Incubeta
shows
that what is required is an assessment of the effect of the
suspension of a judgment appeal against on the rights asserted
by the
parties, namely the right asserted by Incubeta that Ellis should be
restrained versus the right asserted by Ellis that he
should be
allowed to work for an employer of his choosing. That assessment is
done in two postulated outcomes of an appeal: the
effect on Incubeta
if the judgment is suspended and the appeal is dismissed and, so far
as Ellis is concerned, the effect on his
rights if the judgment is
carried into effect and the appeal is successful.
[6]
The converse postulate does not arise. It is not relevant to consider
the effect of the suspension of the judgment if the appeal
is
successful and it is not relevant to consider the effect of giving
effect to the judgment and the appeal is dismissed. If the
judgment
is overturned on appeal, then there is no divergence from justice if
the judgment is suspended in the meantime, because
then should not
have been a judgment in the first place. There is only a potential
divergence from justice if a judgment that should
not have been
granted, is carried into effect while an appeal is pending. There is
also only a potential divergence from justice
if an appeal is
dismissed and the judgment is suspended in the meantime. Section
18(3) is concerned with the aberration that results
either from
giving effect to a judgment that is overturned on appeal, or not
giving effect to a judgment that is upheld on appeal.
[33]
It
is therefore essential to in the first instance identify the rights
asserted by the applicant and the second respondent. In
B
v S
[7]
Howie JA found:
“
The
dicta
in
these cases are clear and persuasive. They show that no parental
right, privilege or claim as regards access will have
substance or
meaning if access will be inimical to the child's welfare. Only if
access is in the child's best interests can access
be granted. The
child's welfare is thus the central, constant factor in every
instance. On that, access is wholly dependent. It
is thus the child's
right to have access, or to be spared access, that determines whether
contact with the non-custodian parent
will be granted. Essentially,
therefore, if one is to speak of an inherent entitlement at all, it
is that of the child, not the
parent.”
[34]
The Children’s Act 38 of 2005 speaks
of parental responsibilities and rights (sections 18 to 21) but that
does not change
the fundamental nature of the rights of the minor as
described in
B v S
.
In substance, the applicant and the second respondent therefore do
not assert their own rights. They are asserting what they perceive
to
be the rights of the minor. This means that section 18(3) must be
applied to the rights of the minor, not the rights of either
the
applicant or the second respondent. For section 18(3), the question
is whether a suspension of the first judgment will result
in
irreparable harm for the minor if: (a) the first judgment is
suspended and the second respondent’s appeal is dismissed;
and
(b) the first judgment is carried into effect and the second
respondent’s appeal is successful.
[35]
For purposes of the section 18(3)
application, the evidence on the current state of the Durban home and
that, until the renovations
to it are complete, the applicant will
stay with the minor in the cottage, is squarely before me. As I found
above, the cottage,
while certainly the lesser home compared to the
Durban home (once the renovations are complete), is nonetheless
adequate. However,
the applicant has not provided the address of the
cottage. Its precise location is however not relevant. The only
extent to the
which the location of the cottage could be relevant, is
if it could compromise the minor’s school attendance and so
forth.
I intend to deal with this aspect in the order that I will
make.
[36]
If the first judgment is suspended, then
the minor will remain in Johannesburg until the appeal is decided.
The applicant made it
clear that she will not move to Durban if that
means that she cannot make the move without the minor. What these
consequences will
be for the minor were considered in the first
judgment and are therefore not repeated here. The question I am not
concerned with
is whether those consequences will amount to
irreparable harm if the second respondent’s appeal is
dismissed. In my view,
if that were to happen, it will, on a balance
of probabilities, amount to irreparable harm to the minor.
[37]
If on the other hand, first judgment is
carried into effect, the minor moves to Durban with the applicant and
it is ultimately found
that she should have stayed in Johannesburg
with the applicant, then what falls to be assessed is the
consequences for the minor.
So far as the minor is concerned, if the
first judgment is carried into effect, she will still enjoy contact
with her father, however
it will then require either him or her
traveling between Johannesburg and Durban. The second respondent’s
contact with the
minor will be affected, about that there can be
little doubt. However, the extent to which it will be affected, in my
view, although
not insignificant, is a quantitative difference, not a
qualitative one.
[38]
It therefore comes down to this: if the
minor were to remain in Johannesburg with the applicant, and it is
ultimately found that
she should have moved to Durban, it will have
severe consequences for her, that will, on a balance of probabilities
result in irreparable
harm to her. If she were to move to Durban and
it is ultimately found that she should have stayed in Johannesburg,
then the consequences
for her, while not insignificant, will not, on
a balance of probabilities, result in irreparable harm to her.
[39]
That
leaves the requirement that exceptional circumstances must be
present. To my mind, it will amount to exceptional circumstances
of
the minor is exposed to the kind of harm that will result if she is
to remain in Johannesburg pending the outcome of an appeal
against
the first judgment. If the first judgment is suspended, it will be
against the best interests of the minor, for the reasons
set out
above. As the interests of the minor are paramount, in terms of
section 28(2) of the Constitution, any order that I may
make that is
against the minor’s best interests must, categorically, be
exceptional.
[8]
Here the second
respondent’s prospects of success on appeal is a relevant
factor.
[9]
Having found that
leave to appeal should be granted, it counts in the second
respondent’s favour, but not enough to disturb
my conclusion
that the section 18(3) application should succeed.
Costs
[40]
Had
it not been for the applicant’s false evidence in her founding
affidavit in the initial application, I would have been
minded to
make no order as to costs. However, whenever a deponent in an
affidavit makes a false statement, knowing it to be false,
it has
implications for the effective administration of justice. Motion
proceedings serve a useful function, but its functionality
will be
eroded if judges cannot take it for granted that deponents to
affidavits take the oath seriously. That implies, to my mind,
that
the applicant’s false evidence should have consequences, to not
only discourage her from making the same mistake again
but to also
send an appropriate signal to other litigants. It is therefore
appropriate that the applicant should be liable for
the costs of all
three applications dealt with in this judgment.
[10]
[41]
In the result I make the following orders:
(a)
The application for the rescission of the
judgment dated 8 April 2025 is dismissed;
(b)
Mr H[…] is granted leave to appeal
against the judgment dated 8 April 2025 to the Full Court
of this Division;
(c)
Pending the outcome of the appeal, the
operation and execution of the judgment dated 8 April 2025
shall not be suspended;
(d)
Pending the outcome of the appeal, Ms H[…]
is to ensure that the minor child attends school and attends her
reasonable extra-mural
activities, so long as the minor child is fit
to do so;
(e)
Ms H[…] is liable for the costs of
the application for the rescission of the judgment dated
8 April 2025, the application
for leave to appeal against
the judgment dated 8 April 2025 and the application in
terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
including the cost of two counsel, with the costs of senior counsel
on scale C, as between party and party.
H A VAN DER MERWE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Heard on: 23 and
25 April 2025
Delivered on:
29 April 2025
For the applicant in the
applications for leave to appeal and rescission of judgment and for
the second respondent in the application
in terms of
section 18(3)
of
the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013: L Segal SC and Adv GT Kyriazis
instructed by Farhan Cassim Attorneys
For the applicant in the
application in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
and the respondent in the applications for leave to appeal
and rescission of judgment: Advv F Bezuidenhout and S Mabaso
instructed
by Joselowitz & Andrews Attorneys
[1]
Rowe
v Rowe
[1997] ZASCA 54
;
1997 (4) SA 160
(SCA) at 166I
[2]
3
rd
ed: (vol 1), revision service 4, at p. D-141 to D142
[3]
B
v S
1995
(3) SA 571 (SCA) at 584J – 585E
[4]
Kotze
v Kotze
2003 (3) SA 628
(T) at 630G;
Mpofu
v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
(Centre for Child Law as amicus curiae)
2013 (9) BCLR 1072
(CC) at para [21];
Terblanche
v Terblanche
1992 (1) SA 501
(W) at 504C
[5]
2014
(3) SA 189 (GJ)
[6]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
2018
(3) SA 428
(SCA)
at
paras [10]–[11]
;
Knoop NO v Gupta (Execution
)
2021
(3) SA 135 (SCA)
at
para [48]
[7]
1995
(3) SA 571
(A) at 581J – 582A
[8]
LB
v MSB
Unreported GDP case number: 2023-046143 (31 July 2023) at para [17]
[9]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
2018
(3) SA 428
(SCA)
at paras [14] and [15]
[10]
Kernick
v Fitzpatrick
1907
TS 389
;
Hulscher
v Voorschotkas voor Zuid-Afrika
1918
TS 542
;
Heilig
v African Export
1928
WLD 44
;
Naylor
v Wheeler
1947
(2) SA 681
(D);
Essop
v Mustapha and Essop NNO
1988
(4) SA 213
(D)
at
224;
Michael
v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd
2001
(3) SA 1188
(SCA)
at
1201J–1202B, 1204A
–
1207E
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