Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 19South Africa
J.V.H v W.V.H (2021/34787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 19 (12 January 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## J.V.H v W.V.H (2021/34787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 19 (12 January 2024)
J.V.H v W.V.H (2021/34787) [2024] ZAGPJHC 19 (12 January 2024)
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sino date 12 January 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2021/34787
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
DATE:
12-01-2024
In
the matter between:
J[…]
V[…] H[…]
APPLICANT
And
W[…]
V[…] H[…]
RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected herein and is handed down electronically
and by circulation
to the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on Caselines. The date for
handing down is deemed to be 12 January 2024.
JUDGMENT
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
A.J.
INTRODUCTION
1.
The Applicant seeks an order,
inter
alia
, in the following terms
pendente
lite
:
a.
That the applicant and respondent remain
co-holders of parental responsibilities and rights in respect of H[…]
and O[…]
(the Minor Children) as envisaged in section 18(2) of
the Children’s Act (38 of 2005) (the Act). The respondent to be
granted
unsupervised and sleepover contact with the minor children
but that same be phased out.
b.
That the respondent be ordered to pay
maintenance in respect of the applicant in the amount of R 24 600
per month.
c.
That the respondent continues to retain the
applicant on his fully comprehensive medical aid scheme and with
immediate effect on
the granting of this order, re-register the
applicant as a dependent on his medical aid scheme and make payments
of the monthly
subscriptions in respect thereof.
d.
Payment of the amount of R 23 600 in
respect of the maintenance of the minor children.
e.
That the respondent be ordered to pay for
the maintenance and the tyres of the motor vehicle utilized by the
applicant.
f.
That the respondent pays an amount of R
120 000 as an initial contribution towards the applicant’s
legal costs.
g.
That the respondent be ordered to pay costs
of this application on a punitive scale including costs of counsel.
BACKGROUND
2.
The parties were married out of community
of property with accrual system on 30 November 2013. There are two
minor children born
of the marriage between the parties, two daughter
who are presently 7 years of age. The parties are currently involved
in a divorce
action, hence the current Rule 43 application.
MAINTANANCE
OF THE MINOR CHILDREN
3.
The respondent is currently paying an
amount of R20 000.00 per month towards the maintenance of the minor
children. In the Heads
of Arguments, the Applicant’s counsel
argues that R20 000.00 per month is insufficient to cover both
applicant and minor
children’s reasonable needs, more
especially in relation to the lifestyle the parties enjoyed
throughout the marriage. I
did not understand the applicant to argue
that the R20 000.00 is insufficient for the two minor children.
According to the applicant
there is a shortfall of an amount of R
3 800 in respect of the maintenance of the minor children and
therefore seeks an order
that the respondent must pay an amount of R
23 800 towards the maintenance of the two minor children.
SPOUSAL
MAINTANANCE
4.
It is common cause that the respondent was
paying the applicant an interim maintenance in the amount of R24
600.00 per month from
October 2021 until about March 2022. The
applicant argues that the Respondent unilaterally decided to stop
paying the said amount.
However, the respondent contends there was an
agreement that the payment would only be for 6 months. The applicant
contends that
she agreed to the interim measure because she was
desperate, but she later instructed her attorneys to write to the
respondent
to request him not to stop paying the amount for spousal
maintenance.
5.
The respondent argued that he will not pay
anything towards spousal maintenance because the applicant is
employed and thus can be
able to maintain herself. Although the
applicant initially claimed spousal maintenance in the amount of R58
000.00, in their heads
of argument, the applicant contends that an
amount of R24 600.00 per month would be a fair and reasonable amount
for spousal maintenance.
6.
The
respondent contents that he is not offering any amount for spousal
maintenance because the applicant is employed and therefore
is able
to maintain herself. The applicant denies that she is currently
employed by Trump foods. She argues that she is undergoing
training
and therefore is not earning an income. In his answering affidavit
the respondent avers that the motor vehicle that the
applicant uses
is registered in his (respondent’s) name and during February
2022 he logged into the website of Matrix tracking
system and noted
that the Applicant was travelling to 10 Ransworth Crescent, Longlake,
Frankleenwald. He later discovered that
this was the premises of
Trump Food which is the workplace of the applicant. The respondent
confirms that at least when he instituted
the divorce action the
applicant was unemployed
[1]
.
7.
Without proof in the form of bank statement
or pay slips, it will be difficult for me to make a finding that the
applicant is currently
employed. In the absence of sufficient
evidence that the applicant is employed, I am of the view that she is
entitled to spousal
maintenance
pendente
lite
. I am in no way suggesting that
the applicant is unemployed or that she is not earning a salary. That
determination will be made
at a later stage during trial where the
respondent will be afforded an opportunity to prove his averment that
the applicant is
employed. Nor am I deciding that the applicant
is employed. With the evidence presented before me I am not in a
position
to determine whether the applicant is employed or not.
However, as I have already alluded to earlier, by agreeing to pay an
amount
of money towards spousal maintenance, albeit for six months,
the respondent was conceding that the applicant needed maintenance.
8.
In
my view, the applicant has succeeded to make out a case that she
needs to be maintained pending the finalization of the divorce
action. What should be determined is the amount of money for
maintenance that the applicant is entitled to. According to the
Financial
Disclosure from the applicant’s sum total expenses
are amounting to R62 106.08 per month. The Applicant claims to be
spending
an amount of R97 106. 52 per month for both herself and the
children. In my view this is highly improbable because it is not
supported
by any evidence. The applicant has clearly inflated the
amounts and made them so exorbitant and unrealistic.
[2]
9.
However, the applicant is only asking for
R23 800.00 for the children and an amount of R24 600.00 for herself.
It is not clear how
she is going to fill the shortfall. In my view,
as I said earlier, the applicant inflated her monthly expenditure. I
did not understand
the respondent to plead unaffordability, but this
court cannot just order the respondent to pay any amount just because
he can
afford to do so. The court must evaluate the evidence and
order an appropriate amount.
10.
I have already found that the applicant is
entitled to interim spousal maintenance
pendente
lite
and therefore, in my view an
amount of R10 000.00 per month will be appropriate.
MEDICAL
AID COSTS
11.
It is common cause that the respondent
removed the applicant off his medical aid scheme. The respondent
contends that applicant
can afford her own medical expenses. This is
premised on the fact that the respondent argues that applicant is
earning an income.
I have already found that there is no evidence
that the applicant is employed and earning an income and therefore
the respondent
must contribute towards the applicants’ medical
expenses.
MOTOR
VEHICLE MAINTENANCE AND COSTS
12.
The applicant seeks an order that the
respondent be liable for the maintenance and replacement of tyres of
the vehicle utilized
by the Applicant. In my view, these expenses may
be covered by the amount of maintenance the applicant will be
getting. One
must always be mindful of the fact that this is
just an interim order pending the finalization of divorce action.
CONTACT
WITH THE MINOR CHILDREN
13.
The Applicant avers that she has no issue
with the unsupervised and sleepover contact with the minor children
but seeks that same
be phased in. The applicant has not filed a
report by the family advocate, or any expect report to support her
contention. I am
therefore not persuaded that the respondent’s
contact with the minor children should be restricted. I am mindful of
the fact
that divorce proceedings are in their nature acrimonious and
therefore the court must always strike of balance between the two
conflicting parties.
CONTRIBUTION
TOWARDS LEGAL COSTS
14.
The
applicant seeks an order that the Respondent makes a contribution of
an amount of R120 0000.00 towards legal costs. in the founding
affidavit
[3]
the applicant seeks
an order “
that
the respondent pay an initial contribution to the applicant’s
costs in the sum of R 120 000.00 to be paid within
10 days from
the date of the granting of the order.”
A party seeking contribution towards legal costs by another party
must substantiate why they are entitled to the amount they claim.
In
this case the evidence presented by the applicant is not persuasive
enough for the relief sought. In my view, the applicant
was not very
candid regarding where she gets financial assistance, only going as
far as saying she is assisted by her mother. In
my view the applicant
failed to make out a case in this regard.
CONCLUSION
15.
After having considered the facts and
evidence presented as well as arguments by counsel for both parties,
I am satisfied that the
applicant has made out a case for relief
sought in terms of maintenance
pendente
lite
in respect to both her and the two
minor children. However, as I alluded to above, the applicant was not
candid about her earnings
or lack thereof. In my view the applicant
failed to justify the amount she is seeking for her own maintenance.
Consequently, I
will award the applicant an amount of R 10 000.
00. I am also satisfied that the applicant must be retained on the
medical
aid scheme of the respondent
pendente
lite
.
COSTS
16.
The applicant seeks an order that the
respondent pay costs of this application on a punitive scale
including the costs of counsel.
The respondent submitted that the
applicant be ordered to pay the costs of this application,
alternatively that costs be in the
cause.
17.
It
is trite law that the issue of costs is within the discretion of the
court. However, it is an accepted principle that the successful
party
should be awarded costs.
[4]
The
applicant was only partly successful and therefore I exercise my
discretion not to award any of the parties costs at this stage
but to
order that costs be in the cause.
18.
In the result I make the
following order
pendente lite:
(a)
The applicant and the respondent remain
co-holders of parental responsibilities and rights in respect of
Hannah and Olivia (the
minor children) as envisaged in section 18(2)
of the Children’s Act, 38 of 2005 (the Act).
(b)
The primary residence of the minor children
be awarded to the applicant.
(c)
The parental responsibilities and rights as
set out in Section 18(2)(b) and (3) of the Children’s Act and
in particular to
act as joint guardian and to exercise contact with
the minor children be awarded to the respondent, which contact
including reasonable
contact.
(d)
The respondent is ordered to continue to
pay maintenance to the applicant in the amount of R 20 000. 00
per month for the maintenance
of the two minor children, on or before
the last day of each month.
(e)
The respondent is ordered to pay spousal
maintenance to the applicant in the sum of R 10 000. 00 per
month, the first payment
to be made on or before the 31
st
day of January 2024 and thereafter before the last day of each
succeeding month.
(f)
The respondent shall retain the minor
children and bear all the costs of retaining the minor children as
dependent members on his
comprehensive medical aid scheme and by
bearing all the medical expenses incurred in private healthcare in
excess of the cover
provided by the medical aid scheme, such costs to
include all medical, pharmaceutical, surgical, hospital, orthodontic,
ophthalmic,
psychotherapeutic, occupational therapeutic,
chiropractic, and similar medical expenses which are not covered by
the medical aid
scheme. The respondent shall reimburse the applicant
for all expenses so incurred in respect of which she has made
payment, or
shall make payment directly to the service providers, as
the case may be, within 7 (seven) days of the applicant providing the
respondent with proof of payment and/or the relevant invoice.
(g)
The respondent shall make payment of all
reasonable educational costs incurred in respect of the minor
children, which shall include
but not limited to the costs of private
school fees, after care fees, levies, admission/enrollment fees,
books, stationary and
equipment, uniforms and clothing, all sporting
and extra mural activities together with the necessary outfitting and
equipment
in respect thereof, remedial and extra lessons, school
outings, tours and transportation costs. The respondent shall
reimburse
the applicant for all expenses so incurred in respect of
which she has made payment, or shall make payment directly to the
service
providers, as the case may be, within 7 (seven) days of the
applicant providing the respondent with proof of payment and/or the
relevant invoice.
(h)
The respondent shall re-register the
applicant as a dependent member on his comprehensive medical aid
scheme and make payment of
the monthly subscriptions in respect
thereof.
(i)
The applicant is entitled to continue using
the 2018 Toyota Fortuner motor vehicle and the respondent is ordered
to pay for the
insurance in respect of the said vehicle as well as
any reasonable repairs and maintenance to and in respect of the said
vehicle
insofar as such repairs and maintenance is not covered by the
said vehicle’s maintenance plan.
(j)
Costs shall be costs in the cause.
K.F
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
12
JANUARY 2024
RESERVED
ON:
07
SEPTEMBER 2023
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV
R PUTZER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
NICK
XENOPHONTOS ATTORNEYS
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
DR
G EBERSOHN
INSTRUCETED
BY:
GERRIE
EBERSOHN ATTORNEYS
[1]
Answering
Affidavit paragraph 129
[2]
Du
preez v Du Preez (16043/2008)
[2008] ZAGPHC 334
(24 October
2008) para 15
[3]
FA Page 37 paragraph 14
[4]
Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Povwell NO
and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
; 1996(2) SA 621(CC) par 3”
the
supreme court has over the years, developed a flexible approach to
costs which proceeds from two basic principles, the first
being that
the award of costs, unless expressly otherwise enacted, is in the
discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and
the second that
the successful party should, as a general rule, have his or her
costs. Even this second principle is subject
to the first. The
second principle is subject to a large number of exceptions where
the successful party is deprived of his or
her costs. Without
attempting either comprehensiveness or complete analytical accuracy,
depriving the successful parties
of their costs can depend on
circumstances such as, for example, the conduct of parties, the
conduct of their legal representatives,
whether a party achieves
technical success only, the nature of the litigants and the nature
of the proceedings. I mention
these examples to indicate that
the principles which have been developed in relation to the award of
costs are by their nature
sufficiently flexible and adaptable to
meet new needs which may arise in regard to constitutional
litigation.”
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