Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 551South Africa
H.N.C v S.J.C (2024/003610) [2025] ZAGPJHC 551 (9 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Marriage – divorce – spousal maintenance pendente lite – in Rule 43 applications, the questions to be asked are: (a) What are the applicant's reasonable maintenance requirements pending divorce? (b) Can the respondent reasonably meet those needs? And (c) Is the applicant entitled to the contribution to costs she seeks, in the amount that she seeks it? – Uniform Rules of Court, rule 43 – question (b) decisive in casu – decided against the applicant and resulting in the application not being granted –
Judgment
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## H.N.C v S.J.C (2024/003610) [2025] ZAGPJHC 551 (9 June 2025)
H.N.C v S.J.C (2024/003610) [2025] ZAGPJHC 551 (9 June 2025)
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sino date 9 June 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
2024-003610
DATE
:
9 June
2025
(1)
NOT REPORTABLE
(2)
NOT OF INTREST TO OTHER JUDGES
In the matter between:
H
N
C
Applicant
and
S
J C
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
C v C (2024-003610)
[2025] ZAGPJHC ---
(9
June 2025)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
28 May 2025
Delivered:
9 June 2025 – This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 9 June 2025.
Summary:
Marriage – divorce – spousal
maintenance
pendente lite
– in Rule 43 applications, the questions to be asked are: (a)
What are the applicant's reasonable maintenance requirements
pending
divorce? (b) Can the respondent reasonably meet those needs? And (c)
Is the applicant entitled to the contribution to costs
she seeks, in
the amount that she seeks it? – Uniform Rules of Court, rule 43
– question (b) decisive in casu –
decided against the
applicant and resulting in the application not being granted –
Order granted not in
accordance with what was sought by the applicant.
ORDER
In terms of Uniform Rule
of Court 43, the following order is made
pendente lite
: -
(1)
The respondent shall pay maintenance to the
applicant in the amount of R35 000 per month, the first payment
to be made within
five days from date of the granting of this Order
of Court, and thereafter on or before the first day of each
subsequent month.
(2)
The respondent shall continue to pay the
following direct expenses of the applicant: -
(a)
An amount of R6800 per month to the
applicant’s helper in respect of her monthly salary and travel
costs, as well as an end-of-year
annual bonus.
(b)
The Discovery Health Medical Aid premiums,
gap cover and all medical excesses which are not covered by the
medical aid, to be paid
by the respondent to the applicant within ten
days of receipt of the account or till slip from the applicant, to be
emailed to
the respondent.
(c)
The applicant’s motor vehicle
premiums, car insurance and annual maintenance, including replacement
of car tyres from time
to time; and
(d)
The monthly membership fees in respect of
the applicant’s
Virgin Active
Gym membership.
(3)
The Respondent shall make payment of a
contribution towards the applicant’s legal costs in the sum of
R100 000 within
thirty days from date of the granting of this
order.
(4)
Each party shall bear her/his own costs of
this opposed Rule 43 application.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The applicant (wife) and the respondent
(husband) were married to each other in community of property at
Muldersdrift, Krugersdorp,
on 17 November 2012, which marriage
presently still subsists. During January 2024 the applicant, as the
plaintiff, instituted divorce
proceedings out of this Court against
the respondent, as the defendant. The respondent is defending the
said action, which is presently
pending. He delivered his plea during
July 2024. The applicant is presently 62 years old (to her nearest
birthday) and the respondent
will shortly turn 68 years old.
[2].
In this application before me, the
applicant applies
pendente lite
in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 43, for an order in the following
terms: -
‘
(1)
The respondent shall pay maintenance to the applicant in the amount
of R53 800 per month, the first payment to be
made within five
days of the granting of this order of court, and thereafter on or
before the first day of each subsequent month.
(2)
The monthly maintenance in paragraph 1
shall increase annually from the date of this order by the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) as
published from time to time;
(3)
The respondent shall continue to pay all of
the applicant’s direct expenses, namely:
(3.1) The
domestic helper’s monthly salary, travel costs, currently
R6800, and Christmas bonus;
(3.2) The
Discovery Health medical aid premiums, gap cover and all medical
excesses which are not covered by the medical
aid, within ten days of
receipt of the account or till slip from the applicant, and which
will be emailed to the respondent;
(3.3) The
applicant’s motor vehicle premiums, car insurance and annual
maintenance, including replacement of car
tyres from time to time;
and
(3.4) The
applicant’s Virgin Active Gym membership.
(4)
The respondent shall sign a lease
agreement, on behalf of the applicant, for an apartment or townhouse,
selected by the applicant,
within 10 days of being requested to do so
by the applicant and pay the deposit and monthly rentals in an amount
of at least R18 000,
together with municipal imposts, as
reasonably incurred by her, directly to the lessor of the apartment
on a monthly basis.
(5)
The respondent shall pay a one-off
contribution towards appliances and related household items for the
applicant to furnish her
home in the sum of R193 000 within five
days of the granting of this court order.
(6)
The respondent shall make payment of a
contribution towards the applicant’s legal costs in the sum of
R951 209,27 (VAT inclusive),
such payment to be made to M Speier
Attorneys, (who shall furnish the firm’s trust account details
to attorneys, Alant,
Gell and Martin Inc), within seven days of the
court order.
(7)
The respondent shall pay the costs of this
application on the punitive scale.’
[3]
In sum, the applicant applies for interim
spousal maintenance, as well as for a capital payment in respect of
the costs of household
appliances and other items and a contribution
towards her legal costs. The respondent contends that he does not
have the means
to pay the exorbitant amounts claimed from him by the
applicant, who, according to the respondent, is living beyond her
means.
The applicant, so the respondent contends, is insisting on a
lifestyle, which was sustained by his company, which in recent times
had fallen on hard times, making it necessary for them, as a family,
to tighten the proverbial belt.
[4]
The
issue to be considered in this Rule 43 application is simply whether,
all things considered, the applicant is entitled to the
spousal
maintenance claimed and the other related claims. In that regard, the
questions to be answered are these: (a) What are
the applicant's
reasonable maintenance requirements pending divorce? (b) Can the
respondent reasonably meet those needs? And (c)
Is the applicant
entitled to the contribution to costs she seeks, in the amount that
she seeks it? These issues are assessed in
light of the standard of
living the parties enjoyed during the marriage (see
Taute
v Taute
[1]
).
[5]
These issues are also to be decided against
the factual backdrop as set out in the paragraphs which follow.
[6]
The respondent tenders a cash payment of
R28 700 maintenance per month, to include the applicant’s
Audi A3 instalment
and its maintenance limited to R4000 per month.
The applicant contends that he currently pays R35 000 per month to
the applicant
in addition to the car instalment.
[7]
As regards the applicant’s claim for
direct expenses, the respondent, in respect of the salary, travelling
costs and annual
bonus of the applicant’s domestic helper, Anna
Tshoba, the respondent tenders to pay R7600 per month, with no tender
in respect
of an annual bonus. He furthermore tenders the applicant’s
portion of the premium for the Discovery Health Medical Aid (in
an
amount of R4500) and the applicant's 50% share of the gap cover of
R165 per month. As for the motor vehicle instalments, car
insurance,
maintenance and services for the applicant's Audi Q3 (2022 model),
the respondent tenders an amount limited to R4000
per month, although
he is presently, according to the applicant, paying an amount R8
074.24 per month. A total amount of R1500
per month is tendered by
the respondent in respect of the applicant’s
Virgin
Active
membership fees, which actually,
according to the applicant, amounts to R1700 per month, which is
presently paid by the respondent.
[8]
The respondent declines to pay anything
towards the applicant’s claim in relation to the conclusion of
a lease agreement at
about R18 000 per month rental, which, the
respondent contends, is excessive, bearing in mind that he pays R9000
per month
rental for his own accommodation. The claim by the
applicant for a capital payment of R193 000 for household
accessories,
is also rejected by the respondent. This claim, so the
respondent contends, is not competent as a claim under Rule 43.
[9]
The claim for a contribution towards the
applicant's trial costs is also disputed by the respondent. He does
not make any offer
in respect of such claim for a contribution
towards costs.
[10]
The main difficulty, in my view, with the
quantification of the applicant’s claim for interim maintenance
and other contributions,
relates to the fact that the applicant’s
case is based on calculations which relate to a period predating the
respondent’s
sale of the business of his company, Rotating
Technologies and Services (Pty) Limited (‘RTS’). That
business was sold
during January 2024 for the purchase price of R20
million, from which the said company had to pay historical debts,
which meant
that the proceeds from the sale for the benefit of the
respondent were not anywhere near the R10 million share, which the
applicant
alleges the respondent received from the sale of the
business. What is more is that there is a contingent tax liability by
this
company to SARS for approximately R20 million. This means that
for purposes of assessing the respondent’s means to pay spousal
maintenance, the sale of the business could and should be disregarded
altogether.
[11]
This then takes us back to the allegation
by the respondent, which is in the main not disputed by the
applicant, that he is at present
employed as an Operations Manager by
WEG Africa (Pty) Limited (‘WEG’), earning a nett monthly
salary of approximately
R62 000. To this can and should be added
further income received by the respondent, such as monthly payments
received from
his property holding company, RTS Holdings (Pty)
Limited, and the proceeds of a retirement annuity, which amount in
total to about
another R20 000. This means that, on the evidence
before me, the respondent earns on a monthly basis approximately
R82 000
nett.
[12]
As regards the respondent’s asset
base, the applicant contends that the respondent has assets worth
substantially more than
he would have the court believe. The
applicant submits that RTS Holdings (Pty) Ltd, the respondent’s
property-owning company,
in which he is a 50% shareholder and
director, is valued at about R4 million. The monthly rental earned by
the company amounts
to R128 000, from which bond payments and
other operational expenses are required to be paid. The point about
this property
is that it is not as profitable as the applicant makes
it out to be. Secondly, the respondent’s interest in the
company and
the property owned by it is illiquid and cannot at a whim
be converted into cash. That then means that the applicant, on the
evidence
before me has very little means, if any, to satisfy the
applicant’s claim for substantial capital payments, including
the
claim for about R1 million contribution towards legal costs.
[13]
Sight should also not be lost of the fact
that the respondent is at present 67 years old and he is
self-evidently close to retirement.
He contends that the applicant is
living a lifestyle that he cannot maintain. I find myself in
agreement with these contentions
on behalf of the respondent. As I
have already indicated, the applicant’s case is based on
historical facts and circumstances
and not on the present lived
reality of the respondent, who is now a salary earning employee,
nearing the end of his work life.
I do not accept the applicant’s
contention that the respondent continues to spend money at whim.
There is no evidence to
support such assertions.
[14]
For all of these reasons, I am of the view
that the applicant should not be granted all of the relief sought by
her in this rule
43 application. The simple fact of the matter is
that the respondent does not have the means – neither the
income, nor the
capital base – to meet the claims by the
respondent. In that regard, the applicant’s claim for capital
payments should
be limited to an amount of R100 000 in respect
of a contribution towards her legal costs. Save for this award in
favour of
the applicant, the application for all of the other capital
payments should fail.
[15]
As for costs, I think that there should be
no order as to costs and each party should bear their own costs
relative to this rule
43 application.
Order
[16]
In the result, I make the following order
in terms of Uniform Rule of Court 43
pendente
lite
: -
(1)
The respondent shall pay maintenance to the
applicant in the amount of R35 000 per month, the first payment
to be made within
five days from date of the granting of this Order
of Court, and thereafter on or before the first day of each
subsequent month.
(2)
The respondent shall continue to pay the
following direct expenses of the applicant: -
(a)
An amount of R6800 per month to the
applicant’s helper in respect of her monthly salary and travel
costs, as well as an end-of-year
annual bonus.
(b)
The Discovery Health Medical Aid premiums,
gap cover and all medical excesses which are not covered by the
medical aid, to be paid
by the respondent to the applicant within ten
days of receipt of the account or till slip from the applicant, to be
emailed to
the respondent.
(c)
The applicant’s motor vehicle
premiums, car insurance and annual maintenance, including replacement
of car tyres from time
to time; and
(d)
The monthly membership fees in respect of
the applicant’s
Virgin Active
Gym membership.
(3)
The Respondent shall make payment of a
contribution towards the applicant’s legal costs in the sum of
R100 000 within
thirty days from date of the granting of this
order.
(4)
Each party shall bear her/his own costs of
this opposed Rule 43 application.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
28
May 2025
JUDGMENT DATE:
9 June 2025 –
Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPLICANT:
P Ternent
INSTRUCTED BY:
Martin Speier
Attorneys, Birnam, Johannesburg
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
L
D Isparta
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Alant,
Gel & Martin Incorporated, Faerie Glen, Pretoria
[1]
Taute
v Taute
1974
(2) SA 675
(E) at 676D-H.
sino noindex
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