Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 691South Africa
S.R. v S.T.M. (2022/048303) [2025] ZAGPJHC 691 (15 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 July 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.R. v S.T.M. (2022/048303) [2025] ZAGPJHC 691 (15 July 2025)
S.R. v S.T.M. (2022/048303) [2025] ZAGPJHC 691 (15 July 2025)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO :
2022-048303
(1)
REPORTABLE YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
In the matter between:
S[…]
R[…]
Applicant
and
T[…]
M[…] M[…]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FRANCK
AJ
:
[1]
In this matter, the Applicant issued
summons against the Respondent for a decree of divorce and ancillary
relief relating to two
children born of their marriage. The Applicant
avers that, the parties were married in terms of the Recognition of
the Customary
Marriages Act 120 of 1998 (“
the
Customary Marriages Act
”) on 9
November 2009. As a result, the Applicant avers that the parties are
married in community of property. In his plea
and counterclaim, the
Respondent places the existence of a customary marriage in dispute.
[2]
In September 2024, the Applicant applied in
terms of Uniform Rule 43, for relief relating to spousal maintenance,
maintenance in
respect of the minor children as well as a
contribution towards her legal costs. The Rule 43 application is
opposed by the Respondent.
[3]
In his answering affidavit, the Respondent
states
inter alia
:
“
12.
I must state upfront that I am a man of significant means, and I can
afford the maintenance which the applicant’s
(sic) claims for
herself, the contribution towards her legal expenses and the
maintenance for the children. It is on this basis
that I am advised
that there is no need for me to make a detailed financial disclosure.
13.
What I dispute is there being any legal basis for me to maintain the
applicant or contribute towards
her legal expenses because:
13.1
first, we are not, nor have we ever been married;
13.2
second, the applicant has not made full and frank disclosure to this
Court and has not acted with the utmost
good faith required of her;
13.3
third, the applicant does not require maintenance and is not in
need.”
[4]
The Respondent further claims that there is
no basis to claim maintenance in respect of the minor children, as he
is maintaining
them adequately.
[5]
The Applicant launched an interlocutory
application on 19 November 2024 in which, she seeks the following
relief:
1.
The Respondent be ordered to comply with the provisions of paragraph
29.4.7 read with footnote
18 of the Revised Consolidated Practice
Directive 1 of 2024 dated 12 June 2024 in respect of the pending Rule
43 application under
case number 2022-048303 (“the pending Rule
43 application”) by:
1.1
completing a financial disclosure form (“
FDF
”)
under oath with supporting documentation referred to in the FDF;
1.2
indexing, paginating and uploading the FDF and supporting
documentation in the court data file,
within 5 days of service
of this order by e mail on the Respondent’s attorneys.
2.
In the event of the Respondent failing to comply with the
abovementioned paragraph :
2.1
the Respondent’s answering affidavit in the pending Rule 43
application be
ipso facto
struck out;
2.2
the Applicant be authorised to enrol the pending Rule 43 application
on the unopposed Family Court roll
and seek an order in terms
thereof.
3.
The Respondent be ordered to pay the costs of this application on the
party and party scale
including counsel’s costs on Scale A.
[6]
The Applicant demanded that the Respondent
files an FDF with supporting annexures in correspondence, prior to
launching the interlocutory
application. The Applicant avers that,
she is prejudiced in the preparation for her Rule 43 application by
the Respondent’s
non-compliance with the practice directive. In
the Applicant’s draft order handed up at the conclusion of
argument, the Applicant
did not persist with prayer 2, and prayed for
costs to include the costs of counsel on scale B.
[7]
Paragraph 29.4.7 of the Revised
Consolidated Practice Directive 1 of 2024 (as amended) (“
the
Practice Directive
”) reads as
follows:
“
29.4.
The Family court shall hear the following matters,
opposed and unopposed:
29.4.1.
to 29.4.6 ...
29.4.7.
Enforcement of the Practice Manual and directives bearing on family
law cases, including the exchange of the Financial Disclosure
Form
(FDF).
29.4.8.
and 29.4.9 ...”
[8]
Paragraph 29.4.7 contains footnote 18 which
reads as follows:
“
(1)
An FDF, annexed to this Directive as 5.9A, must be completed by each
party under oath, together with
supporting documentation referred to
in the FDF and must be exchanged in every opposed divorce action and
in every R 43 matter
in which maintenance is in dispute.
(2)
the FDF and supporting documentation must be indexed and paginated
and thereafter uploaded to the court
data file. The FDF must (be) in
a separate section to the bundle of supporting documents.
(3)
In every opposed divorce action, the FDFs must be exchanged no later
than 10 days after the plea is
uploaded.
(4)
In a Rule 43 matter requiring an FDF the FDFs must be exchanged not
later than 5 days after the respondent
has uploaded a reply.
(5)
Where a summons in an opposed divorce action and a rule 43
application are initiated simultaneously,
the exchange must occur in
accordance with (4) above.
(6)
Whenever an FDF is overdue and a compelling order is sought in the
Family Court, such application for
a compelling order shall be
preceded by a demand to comply within 5 days of the delivery of the
demand.”
[9]
In his answering affidavit, in the
interlocutory proceedings, the Respondent relies on the fact that he
is a “
man of financial means”
as a defence to filing an FDF. He states that, he has the means to
satisfy the relief claimed by the Applicant in the Rule 43
application. The Respondent repeats the averments (in the Rule 43),
that he has no duty to support the Applicant, as he has placed
the
existence of a marriage in dispute. He avers that, the Rule 43
application was not necessary as he is already maintaining the
minor
children adequately, and places the quantum of maintenance claimed by
the Applicant in dispute. The Respondent further denies
that he has a
duty to contribute to the Applicant’s legal costs, as the
existence of the marriage has been placed in dispute.
[10]
The Applicant points out in her replying
affidavit, that the Respondent did not take the court into his
confidence and did not disclose
how much money he has spent on his
own legal fees despite having been invited to do so by the Applicant
and without which, the
court will not be in a position to consider if
the parties are litigating on equal playing fields.
[11]
The Applicant also records in her replying
affidavit, that the Rule 43 application was launched as the
Respondent:
[11.1]
unilaterally reduced the maintenance that
he used to pay to the Applicant;
[11.2]
failed to contribute adequately toward
spousal maintenance as well as maintenance of the minor children;
[11.3]
failed to pay fees for the educational
psychologist administering therapy to one of the minor children;
[11.4]
failed to pay the children’s school
fees;
[11.5]
refused to pay any maintenance in September
2024.
[12]
In the Respondent’s supplementary
heads of argument, and at the hearing of the matter, the Respondent
relied on what is already
set out hereinabove and submitted that the
facts upon which he relies are novel and distinguishable from other
Rule 43 matters.
The Respondent argued that, compelling him to make a
detailed financial disclosure would infringe on his right to privacy
of confidential
information.
[13]
It was further argued by the Respondent
that he should not be ordered to make a full and frank financial
disclosure as the issue
whether or not a customary marriage existed
between the Applicant and the Respondent have been separated in terms
of Uniform Rule
33(4) with the remaining issues in the pleadings
having been postponed
sine die
.
The separation order was granted by the Honourable Mr Justice Wepener
on 24 January 2024. The Respondent thus alleged, that the
quantum of
his estate is not currently an issue in dispute.
[14]
The
Respondent relied on the matter of
De
Villiers v De Villiers
[1]
in which, Froneman J, as he then was, refused to grant an order in
respect of documentation which he viewed as being irrelevant
for the
purposes of trial. Such an order was, however, granted within the
realm of a Rule 35(3) application, in circumstances where
the
Respondent in that matter had already made financial disclosure and
provided the Applicant with proof of his assets and annual
income and
in circumstances where the Respondent, in that matter, had admitted
the Applicant’s claim for maintenance. The
De Villiers
judgment, is accordingly not relevant to the current issue in
dispute.
[15]
In light of the Respondent’s
opposition to the Rule 43 application and, especially since he has
placed the expenses of the
Applicant and the minor children in
dispute, it is necessary for the court to have regard to how the
Respondent spends his income,
the standard of living he enjoys, the
quantum of the expenses he previously paid for, what he spends on
luxuries and holidays as
well as legal expenses.
[16]
The standard of living enjoyed by the
parties prior to their separation is a factor that is taken into
account, at the Rule 43 stage.
Full financial disclosure is required
by both parties and, the Respondent must satisfy the court that he
indeed has the financial
reserves that he alleges he does.
[17]
Full financial disclosure is in the best
interests of the minor children, whose interests are of paramount
importance and does not
trump the Respondent’s right to
privacy. The Respondent cannot claim a right to privacy, relating to
his financial affairs
in divorce proceedings which pertain
inter
alia
to the quantum of maintenance as
it relates to minor children, especially in circumstances where the
quantum of such maintenance
and payment of expenses have been placed
in dispute. Financial disclosure is further relevant insofar as it
relates to the Applicant’s
claim for spousal maintenance
pendente lite
.
The relief relating to Rule 43 is available to the Applicant, even in
circumstances where the Respondent has placed the existence
of the
marriage in dispute.
[18]
The operation of Rule 43 and the relief
that it offers litigants, is not suspended pending finalisation of
the separated issue,
at trial. The Applicant is entitled to spousal
maintenance
pendente lite
and she is entitled to an order relating to maintenance in respect of
the minor children as well as a contribution towards her
legal costs,
pending finalisation of the trial.
[19]
The Practice Manual indicates that the FDFs
must be filed after the Respondent’s plea. If regard is had to
the pleadings filed
in this matter, the issue of maintenance is alive
on the pleadings and, the financial disclosure form is thus relevant
not only
to the Rule 43 proceedings but also to the issues in
dispute, to be dealt with at trial. Regardless of the separated
issue, and
even if such issue is decided in favour of the Respondent,
the question relating to quantum in respect of the minor children
will
remain.
[20]
Furthermore,
the Respondent cannot gate-keep information whilst disputing the
Applicant’s expenses are fair and reasonable.
The Applicant is
entitled to level playing fields and an equality of arms in
matrimonial litigation.
[2]
The
concept of equal playing fields, does not only relate to a
contribution towards costs, but also to the duty of disclosure in
matrimonial litigation.
[3]
[21]
When
assessing a spouse’s reasonable litigation needs, a court will
have regard to what is involved in the case, the scale
on which the
parties are litigating or intend to litigate and the parties’
respective means.
[4]
[22]
Providing
for both parties to make discovery, is reconcilable with the
fundamental right to equality before the law. Until such
time as the
separated issue has been determined, i.e. whether or not the parties
are married in terms of customary law, there is
a matrimonial dispute
between the parties that serves as the jurisdictional factor for the
Rule 43 application.
[5]
[23]
From
the wording used in the Practice Directive, the duty to make a
financial disclosure is couched in peremptory terms.
[6]
[24]
Furthermore,
the fact that full, frank and detailed financial disclosures are
indispensible in matrimonial matters, have been confirmed
on many
occasions, with reference to Rule 43 proceedings.
[7]
[25]
I accordingly find in the Applicant’s
favour. There is further no reason why, the costs in this application
should not follow
the result. In this regard, the Applicant prayed
for party and party costs on scale A in its notice of motion and I
was not convinced
that costs on a higher scale should be granted.
An order is accordingly
made in the following terms:
[1]
The Respondent is ordered to, within ten
(10) days of the service of this court order via e mail on the
Respondent’s
attorneys of record, to make financial disclosure
in terms of paragraph 29.4.7 read with footnote 18 of the Revised
Consolidated
Practice Directive 1 of 2004 dated 12 June 2024 by:
[1.1]
completing under oath, a financial
disclosure form and by providing the supporting documents referred to
in the financial disclosure
form;
[1.2]
indexing, paginating and uploading the
financial disclosure form and the supporting documents to the court
data file.
[2]
The Respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of the application including the costs of counsel on Scale A.
FRANCK, A J
Date of
hearing:
4 June 2025
Date of
judgment: 15
July 2025
Legal representation :
For Applicant :
Counsel:
Advocate N Nemukula
Attorneys:
Houghton Harper Inc
For Respondent :
Counsel:
Advocate Ramabulana
Attorneys:
Victor Nkhwashu Attorneys Inc
[1]
[2005]
JOL 15845
(E)
[2]
Glazer
v Glazer
1959
(3) SA 932
G-H at page 932 A-E;
Cary
v
Cary
1999 (3) SA 614
(C) at 621 D-G
[3]
B
v B
(700/2013)
[2014] ZASCA 137
(25 September 2024)
[4]
AF
v MF
2019 (6) SA 422
(WCC) at 29 and
Nicholson
v Nicholson
1998
(1) SA 48
(W) at 50 B
[5]
SJ
v SE
2021
(1) SA 563
(GJ);
AM
v RM
2010
(2) SA 223
(ECP) and
Women’s
Legal Centre Trust v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
2018
(6) SA 598 (WCC)
[6]
MS
v RS
(21620/2019)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1257 (26 October 2023)
[7]
CA
v HA
(5578/2022)
[2024] ZAWCHC 25
;
E
v E; R v R; M v M
(12583/2017, 20739/2018, 5954/2018) [2018] ZAGPJHC;
TS
v TS
(28917/2016) [2018] ZAGPJHC 29 (2 March 2018) and
MD
v MD
(2021/43212) [2023] ZAGPJHC 910;
[2023] 2 All SA 736
(GJ)
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