Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 76South Africa
T.R v S.R (2017/11467) [2024] ZAGPJHC 76 (24 January 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.R v S.R (2017/11467) [2024] ZAGPJHC 76 (24 January 2024)
T.R v S.R (2017/11467) [2024] ZAGPJHC 76 (24 January 2024)
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sino date 24 January 2024
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# IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1. Reportable: No
2. Of interest to
other judges: No
3. Revised: Yes
Date 24
January 2024
In the matter between:
CASE
NO
: 2017/11467
## DATE:
24 January 2024
DATE
:
24 January 2024
T[…]
P[…] R[…]
(Identity
No. […])
Applicant
and
S[…]
R[…]
(Identity
No. […])
Respondent
Coram:
M Van Nieuwenhuizen, AJ
Heard
on
:
20 October 2023
## Delivered:24
January 2024
Delivered:
24
January 2024
JUDGMENT
# M VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN, AJ:
M VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN, AJ:
[1]
In the main application the applicant seeks
an order setting aside a writ of execution that had been issued by
the Registrar of
the High Court and executed upon by the respondent.
[2]
The
applicant seeks an order setting aside the writ of execution with
costs on the attorney client scale and an order dismissing
the
respondent’s counter-application with costs on the attorney
client scale.
The
respondent seeks an order dismissing the main application with costs
on the attorney client scale and granting the relief sought
in the
notice of counter-application
[1]
with
costs on the attorney client scale.
# ISSUES IN DISPUTE
ISSUES IN DISPUTE
[3]
As
appears from the joint practice note
[2]
in the main application, the issues that I am called upon to
determine are:
[3.1] whether
the writ of execution should be set aside and rescinded or not; and
[3.2] if the writ
is set aside whether the applicant should be credited with the R199
578,54 that was paid to SARS in reduction
of his obligations to the
respondent.
[4]
In the counter-application the parties
resolved that there were four issues which I am called upon to
determine namely:
[4.1] whether the
applicant’s alleged oral agreement is valid, binding and
enforceable, notwithstanding the non-variation
clause in the divorce
settlement agreement (hereinafter referred to as “
the DSA”
);
[4.2] whether the
payments made by the applicant directly to Brennan Richter
constitutes a discharge of the applicant’s
maintenance
obligations to the respondent;
[4.3] whether the
respondent is allowed to claim arrear school fees from the applicant
in terms of the DSA;
[4.4] whether it is
permissible for the respondent to claim other arrear school fees,
which the applicant undertook to pay
in the DSA and whether the Court
can give effect to this and force the applicant to pay.
# COMMON CAUSE FACTS OF THE
MATTER
COMMON CAUSE FACTS OF THE
MATTER
[5]
The
parties were previously married to each other and divorced by an
order of this Court on the 30
th
of
October 2018.
[3]
The
parties entered into a DSA, which was made an order of Court on the
same day.
[4]
Three
children were born of the marriage namely J[…] (born 25 March
1996), Tyler (born 22 July 1998) and B[…] (born
26 April
2005).
[6]
The material terms of the DSA are as
follows:
### “7.MAINTENANCE
FOR THE CHILDREN
“
7.
MAINTENANCE
FOR THE CHILDREN
7.1
Subject to 7.2 below and
notwithstanding that T[...] and Jayden are both majors:
7.1.1
the plaintiff shall make payment of
maintenance to the defendant in respect of B[…] in the sum of
R13 000,00 per month, such
payments to commence on or before the
first day of the month following signature of this agreement by both
parties, and payable
thereafter monthly on the first day of each and
every succeeding month into the defendant’s bank account, or at
such other
address as the defendant may direct in writing;
7.1.2
the plaintiff shall make payment of
maintenance to the defendant in respect of T[…] in the sum of
R6 000,00 per month, such
payments to commence on or before the first
day of the month following signature of this agreement by both
parties, and payable
thereafter monthly on the first day of each and
every succeeding month into the defendant’s bank account, or at
such other
address as the defendant may direct in writing;
7.1.3
the
plaintiff shall make payment of maintenance to the defendant in
respect of J[…] in the sum of R3 000,00 per month, such
payment to commence on or before the first day of the month following
signature of this agreement by both parties, and payable
thereafter
monthly on the first day of each and every succeeding month into the
defendant’s bank account, or at such other
address as the
defendant may direct in writing.
7.2
In addition to the maintenance set
out above, the plaintiff undertakes that he shall pay in respect of
the children:
7.2.1
50%
of the costs incurred in respect of the minor children’s
education, inter alia private school fees, school uniforms, school
bus, school books, prescribed stationery, compulsory school tours and
excursions, levies, extra lessons where necessary and remedial
lessons where required;
7.2.2
50% of the costs of the children’s
tertiary education, whether at a technical training college,
university, technikon, computer,
art school or any other like
educational institution, subject to each of the children displaying
an aptitude for the aforesaid
tertiary education and his reasonable
progress therein;
7.2.3
50%
of the reasonable costs of the children’s extramural, sporting,
cultural and academic activities, including, inter alia,
tuition
fees, tournament charges, the reasonable costs of sporting apparel,
other clothing and the equipment relating thereto.
7.3
The defendant shall be entitled,
with effect from the first anniversary of the date of divorce, and at
all reasonable times thereafter,
to seek an increase in maintenance
in respect of the children.
The
parties record in this regard that although J[…] and T[..;]
are majors, they are dependent on the plaintiff and the defendant
for
financial support.
The
parties specifically agree that the defendant may seek a maintenance
increase on behalf of the major children.
7.4
The maintenance amounts referred to
in clause 7.1 or 7.3 above shall be increased annually by a
percentage equivalent to the increase
in the Consumer Price Index, as
issued by the Reserve Bank.
The
first increase is to take effect on the first anniversary of the
grant of a decree of divorce and annually thereafter on the
anniversary of the divorce date.
### 11.PAYMENTS BY THE PLAINTIFF
11.
PAYMENTS BY THE PLAINTIFF
11.1
It is recorded that the plaintiff is
indebted:
11.1.1
To
the defendant in the sum of R183 500,00 in
respect of arrear maintenance ordered by the above Honourable Court
in Rule 43 proceedings
in March 2018 to date of signature of this
agreement
11.1.2
to Yeshiva College of South Africa
(“Yeshiva”) in the sum of R153 172,00 as at 25 October
2018 in respect of arrear
school fees.
11.2
The plaintiff undertakes:
11.2.1
to make payment to the defendant of
the sum in 11.1.1 above as follows:
11.2.2
R9 000,00 within thirty days of date
of divorce;
11.2.3
R87 000,00 on or before 1 November
2019;
11.2.4
R87 000,00 on or before 1
November 2020;
12.
to make arrangements with Yeshiva
for payment of the arrear amounts due and owing.
The plaintiff indemnifies the
defendant against any action instituted by Yeshiva against her
outstanding school fees prior to 1
April 2018;
12.1.1
to make payment of the monthly
instalments due in respect of Jayden’s motor vehicle and to
transfer such vehicle into Jayden’s
name to be retained by him
as his sole and exclusive property, once the vehicle is unincumbered;
12.2
Notwithstanding
11.2 above and in the event that the debit orders for November 2018
in the amount of R12 309,00 are debited from
the plaintiff’s
account, the amount of R12 309,00 shall be deducted from the payment
due by the plaintiff in 11.2.1.3 above.”
[5]
# THE WRIT
THE WRIT
[7]
It
is common cause that the applicant fell in arrears with his
maintenance obligations and pursuant to his arrears the respondent
caused a warrant of execution (“
writ”
)
to be issued against the right, title and interests of the applicant
in and to his Liberty Group Limited: Lifestyle Retirement
Annuity
Fund under contract number 007[…] in the amount of R1 673
637,30 in respect of arrear maintenance and/or any other
pension
interest as defined in the Divorce Act
[6]
including
but not limited to a pension fund and/or provident fund and/or
retirement annuity and/or any other investments
in
the
name
of
the
respondent
in
the
amount
of
R1 673 637,30.
[8]
On the 28th
of
November 2022 the respondent deposed to a writ affidavit and
subsequently
the
writ
was
issued
wherein
she
claimed
arrear maintenance as set out below.
## Overview of amounts owing
Overview of amounts owing
Item
Category
of expense
Annexure
No
Amount
owing
1.
Arrear maintenance
inclusive of CPI increases inclusive of interest
“
SR1”
R1 063 204,92
2.
Outstanding
maintenance as per clause 11.1.1 of the DSA inclusive of interest
“
SR2”
R139 335,62
3.
Outstanding
maintenance as per clause 11.1.2 of the DSA
“
SR3”
R153 172,00
4.
J[…] university
fees
“
SR4”
R43 824,89
5.
T[..] university fees
“
SR5”
R22 513,87
6.
B[…] school
fees
“
SR6”
R251 586,00
Total
R1
673 637,30
[7]
[9]
The applicant launched an application to
set aside the writ for various reasons.
The
application was served on the 31st
of
March 2023 on the respondent’s legal representatives.
The writ was served on the applicant on the
13th
of January
2023.
Liberty
Life paid the Sheriff of the Court the amount of R550 000,00 and the
Sheriff paid the respondent’s legal representatives
Greenstein
Attorneys, the amount of R548 382,53 on the 31st
of March 2023.
POINT
IN LIMINE
[10]
It
is the respondent’s contention that the relief which the
applicant seeks, namely, to set aside the writ (Annexure “
TR6”
),
is moot.
The
respondent states that on the applicant’s version the writ was
served on his attorneys (on his instruction as per the
Sheriff’s
return of service) on the 12th
of
January 2023.
Liberty
Life to whom the writ was addressed made payment to the Sheriff on
the 27th of March 2023.
[8]
The
respondent states that the application was only e-mailed to his
attorney on the 31st of March 2023.
The
respondent alleges that the proverbial horse has bolted.
[11]
The
respondent furthermore argued that it is not an insignificant feature
that the applicant does not seek repayment of this amount
and having
regard to the contents of paragraph 13.3
[9]
of
the applicant’s founding affidavit, he concedes that there is
maintenance owing, even taking into account the amount that
Liberty
has paid.
[12]
The
respondent argues that although the applicant brings the application
to set aside the writ, he confirms that the amount received
from the
proceeds of the Liberty Life policy does not have to be repaid by the
respondent but rather offset against the applicant’s
indebtedness.
[10]
[13]
The respondent contends that the
determination that the writ be set aside is accordingly moot.
The respondent in this regard contends that
the applicant admits an indebtedness.
It
is common cause that Liberty Life paid prior to the launch of the
application.
The
respondent further alleges that
it
is
common
cause
that
the
applicant
concedes
that
the
funds
received from Liberty Life be set off
against his indebtedness.
[14]
The
respondent argues that the applicant in his replying affidavit at
paragraph 16.2
[11]
contends
that the arrear maintenance is R48 757,75 as per Table 1 of Annexure
“
TPR2”
.
The
respondent argues that it is noteworthy that in Annexure “
TPR2”
the
applicant deducts from the amount owing by him the amount received by
the Sheriff of R548 382,43 in arriving at the figure of
R48
757,75.
[12]
[15]
I do not agree with the respondent’s
contention that the application for the writ to be set aside has
become moot.
Either
the writ had been validly/competently issued or the writ had not been
validly/competently issued.
I
am ultimately called upon to determine whether the writ had been
validly/competently issued.
The
fact that Liberty Life had paid an amount to the respondent’s
attorneys subsequent to the respondent having caused the
attachment
of the applicant’s Liberty Life policy and that the applicant
has conceded that the funds received from Liberty
Life be set off
against his indebtedness. are irrelevant to the question whether or
not the writ had been validly/competently issued.
[16]
Accordingly, the respondent’s point
in limine
is
dismissed.
# THE MAIN APPLICATION
THE MAIN APPLICATION
[17]
The
applicant avers that prior to the attachment of the annuity funds his
attorney addressed a letter
[13]
to
the respondent’s attorney wherein which the applicant’s
attorney
inter
alia
indicated
that:
[17.1]
the amounts claimed by the respondent are in
dispute;
[17.2] the amounts
claimed on behalf of Yeshiva College (“
Yeshiva”
)
were unsubstantiated and the only computation of the amount claimed
was the respondent’s own computation and in the absence
of
supporting evidence the amount is unquantified;
[17.3] the amount
claimed by the respondent, in respect of Yeshiva, is not due
to
her
.
[18]
The
applicant furthermore contends that the respondent had received
payments that were not included in the computation of the writ
amount. This the respondent concedes.
The
total amount by her not included in the arrear maintenance amounts to
R279 246,00.
[14]
In
paragraph 7.1 of her answering affidavit she states the following:
“
I
made a bona fide error in not including R279 246,00 in payments which
the applicant has made to me.
This
amount therefore falls to be deducted from the writ amount.”
[19]
There are other amounts that are also in
dispute between the parties.
The
applicable CPI increase and the arrear interest rate applied and the
calculation thereof are also in dispute between the parties.
## Applicable legal
principles
Applicable legal
principles
[20]
In
AR
v CR and Another
[15]
Modiba
J
inter
alia
held:
“
[4]
The
applicant
seeks
the
writ
set
aside
(sic)
on
the
following grounds:
[4.1]
it
is not accompanied by an affidavit quantifying the amount
specified in the writ;
[4.2]
it
does not specify the provisions in the settlement agreement on
which the respondent relies;
[4.3]
no
supporting documents for the relevant expenses are attached.
[6]
The applicant disputes that he is
indebted to her for some of the relevant amounts for several reasons:
[6.1] the school
fees claimed are not in respect of a Jewish School as required in
terms of the settlement agreements;
[6.2]
their quantification is uncertain in relation to whether one of the
minor children has become self- supporting
and whether the respondent
included the maintenance portion of this child in the quantification
of the writ amount.
[7]
The writ is liable to be set aside
for two reasons:
[7.1] it is not
apparent from the writ that it was issued in conformity with the
settlement agreement;
[7.2] the
basis for the amount to be executed under the writ is unquantifiable
and in dispute between the parties.
[8]
The basis on which the first
respondent contends in these proceedings, that the writ was correctly
issued does not assist her, as
the writ has to comply with the above
requirements when it is issued. It is an instruction to the sheriff
to give effect to the
orders upon which it is based. Given the
grounds upon which the applicant relies in this application, the writ
is materially defective.
It is rather belated for the first
respondent to explain the basis and the quantification of the
judgment debt in the answering
affidavit. Further, the quantification
remains in dispute. Therefore the writ may not be good solely on the
first respondent’s
version.”
[21]
In
JA
v RA
[16]
Matshaya,
AJ
inter
alia
held:
“
[11]
Uniform Rule 45(1)
provides
that:
“
A
judgment creditor may, at his or her own risk, sue out of the office
of the registrar one or more writs for execution thereof
….”
[12]
A writ may be set aside on, inter
alia, the following grounds:
“
(a)
(b)
(c)
Where the amount payable under the judgment can
be
ascertained
only
after
deciding
a
further
legal problem.”
[13]
It
is trite that there must be certainty as to what the creditor is
entitled to under the judgment, and a writ may be set aside
if the
judgment in respect of which it had been issued is not definite and
certain, or if it is no longer supported by its causa.”
[17]
[22]
In
Strydom
NO v Kruger and Another
[18]
the
Court held:
“
[8]
The
general
principle
is
that
a
court
will
set
aside
a
Writ
of Execution if:
(i)
the
writ
does
not
conform
with
the
judgement
which warrants its issue;
(ii)
the judgement is not definite and
certain;
(iii)
the causa for the judgement has
fallen away.
[20]
Essentially following Butchart (supra), the requirements to issue a
writ for these types of expenses are:
20.1
is
the
amount
claimed
by
the
judgment
creditor
an ‘expense contained in
a maintenance order;
20.2
is the amount easily ascertainable;
20.3
is
the
amount
ascertained
in
an
affidavit
filed
to
obtain the writ.”
[19]
“
[24]
…
the principle enunciated there
[Butchart]
is
that the judgment creditor may issue a writ
to
recover amounts expended by her or him from the judgment debtor in
terms of an ‘expenses clause’ contained in a maintenance
order provided the amount is easily ascertainable
.”
[20]
(Own
emphasis)
[23]
In
Butchart
v Butchart
[21]
Wepener AJ (as he then was) who delivered the judgment for the Full
Bench
inter
alia
with
reference to
Block
v Block
[22]
held
the following:
“
The
Court below (as in the case of the unreported judgment of Stegmann J
in Block v Block (supra)) held that the amount owing under
such
orders which can be quantified without difficulty, may be proved
before the Registrar by an affidavit of the judgment creditor.
In
Block v Block Stegmann J at 46--7 stated:
'The problem arises in
regard to execution for any sum said to have been incurred as a
reasonable medical expense. A writ of execution
cannot validly be
issued for an arbitrary sum. Some proper means must be established
for determining the money
sum for which a writ
may validly be issued for the judgment creditor's reasonable medical
expenses. How is the judgment to be supplemented
in this respect?
Must the judgment creditor approach the Court from time to time for
an order quantifying the medical expenses
reasonably incurred before
a valid writ can be issued? Having regard to the fact that the
judgment debtor's liability for medical
expenses reasonably incurred
has already been established in principle by the judgment of the
Court, that suggestion is impractical,
not least on grounds of
unnecessary expense. By analogy with the abovementioned cases (in
which the proper method of issuing a
valid writ on the basis of a
judgment for a money sum even though such money sum is subject to a
variation on the fulfilment of
a suspensive or resolutive condition,
has been determined) it seems to me that the proper method of fixing
the sum for which a
valid writ may be issued on the basis of a
judgment which obliges the judgment debtor to pay ''reasonable
medical expenses'' is
clear enough. The judgment creditor must file
with the Registrar an affidavit proving the medical expenses
reasonably incurred;
the writ may then validly include the amount so
proved by the judgment creditor; and the affidavit of the judgment
creditor must
be served on the judgment debtor together with the
writ. This procedure will ensure (a) the required certainty of the
amount due
under the judgment for purposes of the writ; and (b) that
the judgment debtor has a fair opportunity to consider whether the
amount
included in the writ in respect of medical expenses was indeed
within the terms of the judgment, and, if he considers that it was
not, to approach the Court for appropriate relief.'”
[24]
Wepener AJ after quoting Stegmann J in
Block v Block
with
regards to the certainty of the amount claimed in the writ further
held:
“
In
the present matter the respondent attained substantially the same
result by annexing all the medical invoices from which all
the
particulars can be gleaned. …”
[23]
[25]
A
writ of execution will on application be set aside as incompetent if
the judgment was not definite and certain, as where the amount
payable under the judgment can be ascertained only after deciding a
further legal problem.
[24]
# THE APPLICANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
THE APPLICANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[26]
The applicant’s main submissions in
seeking an order setting aside the writ are as follows:
[26.1] The respondent’s
affidavit in support of the writ lacked the necessary detail and
supporting documents, therefore the
amounts were not easily
ascertainable;
[26.2] The respondent’s
conduct in using the writ to attach the applicant’s retirement
annuity funds whilst knowing
the amount claimed was incorrect, was
mala fide
;
[26.3]
The
amounts claimed in the writ do not conform with the judgment (DSA)
because they are due to third parties and the respondent
has no claim
for reimbursement, nor has she received any demand from the relevant
third parties, nor has she herself complied with
her obligations to
the third parties as per the DSA.
[25]
## Amount not being easily
ascertained
Amount not being easily
ascertained
[27]
The amount in the respondent’s
affidavit in the application for a warrant of execution is not easily
ascertained.
[28]
Annexure “
SR1”
to the affidavit in support of the
writ, which constitutes the respondent’s calculation of what
she claims due to her in terms
of arrear maintenance has a large
portioned greyed out / redacted, which makes the calculation
unascertainable:
The
columns that are titled “
maintenance”
,
“
amount received”
and
“
amount due”
are
greyed out / redacted from October 2019 to November 2022.
[29]
The remaining columns on the calculation
for the abovementioned period are still visible and the respondent
also calculates the
interest due for the period that is greyed out /
redacted.
[30]
The
respondent, however, manages to calculate what she claims to be the
total maintenance, the total amount received and the total
amount due
inclusive of interest.
[26]
[31]
The
respondent concedes that the amount claimed for in the writ is
incorrect in her answering affidavit, however, she avers that
the
inclusion of these amounts in the writ were
bona
fide
errors.
[27]
[32]
The
affidavit in support of the writ does not have the substantiating
documents attached to it that are required to quantify the
amounts
due to Yeshiva College in respect of school fees for B[…] R[…]
and the university fees for T[…] R[…].
These
two claims total the sum of
R274
099,87.
[28]
The
applicant however annexed the university statement for fees due in
respect of J[…] R[…].
The
applicant alleges that the respondent was well aware that supporting
documents were required when making an application to issue
the writ.
No
substantiation for the amount she claims for the university fees for
T[…] R[…] or the school fees for Brennan Richter
are
attached to her writ affidavit.
[33]
The
respondent has without any explanation as to why the substantiating
documents were omitted, proffered substantiating documents
to these
claims in her founding affidavit in her counter-application, which
cannot have retrospective effect at the time of the
writ.
[29]
[34]
The
respondent furthermore concedes that the amount claimed for in the
writ is incorrect by her admission in her answering affidavit,
however, the respondent avers that the exclusion of those amounts
were
bona
fide
errors.
[30]
The
respondent omitted to exclude from her calculation payments she
received for maintenance from 2018 to 2020 which on her own
account
totals R279 246,00 which is made up of nineteen payments across the
aforementioned period.
[31]
The
applicant furthermore alleges that there are other amounts that
should be taken into account which is disputed between the parties,
which are dealt with in the applicant’s submissions regarding
the respondent’s counter-application.
[35]
The
respondent tenders a very vague and implausible explanation on how
these errors occurred.
[32]
In
a schedule in her answering affidavit
[33]
the respondent seeks to calculate the amounts to be credited to the
applicant. The applicant correctly avers that these are payments
of a
large amount that were made over a period of approximately two years,
which the respondent actually received.
The
applicant disputes the
bona
fides
of
the respondent’s errors.
Be
that as it may the quantification remains in dispute.
Therefore
the writ may not be good solely on the respondent’s
version.
[34]
[36]
In summary the fact that:
[36.1] the respondent
having not attached supporting documentation to her affidavit in
support of her application to obtain a writ
as referred to
hereinabove; and
[36.2]
subsequently
conceding that the total amount in respect of
arrear
maintenance was incorrectly calculated, constitutes
a
clear
indication
that
the
total
amount
and/or
amounts
contained within the writ of execution is/are not easily
ascertainable
[35]
and neither
could the Registrar have objectively ascertained that the amounts
claimed in the writ were indeed correct and true,
due to the lack of
supporting evidence proving the correct amounts.
[36]
The
respondent has conceded that the arrear maintenance amount had not
been correctly calculated and it is furthermore apparent
that certain
amounts in Annexure “
SR1”
attached
to her application for a writ had been redacted.
[37]
The
amount payable under the judgment can be ascertained only after
deciding further legal problems.
[37]
Certain
of the amounts payable under the writ can be ascertained only after
deciding various further legal issues as conceded by
the parties in
their joint practice note as set out above:
[37.1] Whether the
oral agreement between the parties relating to the Investec bond
payments have varied the DSA;
[37.2] Whether the
applicant can be credited with the payments he made directly to
Brennan Richter;
[37.3] Whether the
respondent can claim for amounts due to third parties in terms of the
DSA, when she herself has not discharged
her obligations in terms
thereof or expended monies on behalf of the applicant to third
parties;
[37.4] Whether the
respondent can seek relief from the Court on behalf of third parties
for amounts prescribed but she is
indemnified against.
## Finding
Finding
[38]
I find that the writ is materially
defective and that it is rather belated for the respondent to explain
the basis and the quantification
of the judgment debt in her
answering affidavit as further amplified by the respondent in her
founding affidavit in the counter-application.
In the result I find that the writ of
execution had been incompetently issued and the application must
therefore succeed.
THE
COUNTER-APPLICATION
[39]
In essence the respondent seeks in her
counter-application to rectify her omissions and errors contained in
her affidavit in support
of her application for a writ after having
considered the applicant’s founding affidavit in the main
application.
[40]
What the respondent is in essence seeking
from this Court is an order to amend a materially defective writ in
material respects
and to recalculate the amounts contained in the
materially defective writ – which is further indicative thereof
that the
writ is incompetent. I find that it is incompetent for the
respondent to have brought the counter-application.
This Court is not inclined to amend and/or
recalculate the amounts contained in the writ.
[41]
In view of my finding that the
counter-application is incompetent it is not necessary for me to deal
with the merits of the counter-application.
[42]
Accordingly, the counter-application is
dismissed.
COSTS
[43]
The norm is that costs follow the event.
As costs are in my discretion I am,
however, not inclined to grant a costs order in the applicant’s
favour either in the main
application or in the counter-application.
The applicant has admitted to being in
arrears in a substantial amount in respect of his maintenance
obligations.
The
applicant has in fact made a with prejudice tender in his papers,
which the respondent has rejected as she was well entitled
to have
done.
# ORDER
ORDER
[44]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
[44.1] The writ
issued by the Registrar on the 13th of December 2022 under case
number 11467/2017 is hereby rescinded and
set aside.
[44.2]
The respondent’s counter-application is
dismissed.
M VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
Delivered
:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
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 hand- down is deemed to be on 24 January
2024.
HEARD
ON:
20
October 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
24
January 2024
FOR
APPLICANT:
McCormick
Londt Inc.
Ref:
Mr D Londt
(Attorney
duly authorised hereto in terms of section 4(2) of the Right of
Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995)
E-mail:
office@mccla.co.za
Tel: (010)
612-6451
FOR
RESPONDENT:
Greenstein
Attorneys Ref: Mr G Greenstein
(Attorney
duly authorised hereto in terms of section 4(2) of the Right of
Appearance in Courts Act 62 of 1995)
E-mail:
greensteins1@greensteins.co.za
graeme@greensteins.co.za
Tel:
(011) 447-6007
[1]
In
the counter-application the respondent seeks various declaratory
orders in relation to amounts to be paid by the applicant
in respect
of arrear maintenance, school fees and tertiary education expenses
[2]
Filed
and uploaded by the parties on the 11th of October 2023, CaseLines
022.1
[3]
Annexure
“
TR1”
,
FA, CaseLines 002-23
[4]
Annexure
“
TR2”
,
FA, CaseLines 002-24
[5]
Paras
7 and 11 of DSA, CaseLines, 002-29 to 002-30 and CaseLines, 002-32
[6]
Act
70 of 1979 (as amended)
[7]
Writ
Affidavit – Annexure “
TR6”
,
FA, CaseLines 002-44 to 002-50 at para 6, CaseLines 002-49
[8]
Para
6.21, FA, CaseLines, 002-10
[9]
CaseLines,
002-20
[10]
Annexure
“
TPR2”
,
RA, CaseLines 008-30
[11]
Para
16.2, RA, CaseLines 008-08
[12]
Annexure
“
TPR2”
,
RA, CaseLines, 008-30
[13]
Dated
the 8th of March 2022, FA, CaseLines, 002-36
[14]
Respondent’s
AA, para 7.1, CaseLines 004-25
[15]
Unreported
matter of the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg (1791/2009)
[2020] ZAGPHC 20
(30 January 2020) at paras 4-8;
Also
see the matter of
De
Crespigney v De Crespigney
1959
(1) SA 149
(N) referred to therein
[16]
(3348/2019)
[2022] ZAFSHC 31
(28 February 2022)
[17]
Also
see
De
Crespigney v De Crespigney
(
supra
);
Ras
v Sand River Citrus Estates (Pty) Ltd
1972
(4) SA 504
(T) at 510E;
Le
Roux v Yskor Landgoed (Edms) Bpk
1984
(4) SA 252
(T) at 257G and
Van
Dyk v Du Toit
1993 (2) SA 781
(O) at 783D;
Ras v Sand
River Citrus Estates (Pty) Ltd
(
supra
) at 510A-E and
Van Dyk v Du Toit
(
supra
) at 783C
[18]
(872/2005)
[2022] ZANCHC 3
(21 January 2022)
[19]
Ibid
at
para 20
[20]
Ibid
at
para 24
[21]
1997
(4) SA 108
(W) at 108
[22]
Unreported
Judgment of Stegmann J delivered in this division on the 11th of
October 1994
[23]
Page
115 of the
Butchart
judgment
(
supra
)
[24]
De
Crespigney v De Crespigney
(
supra
)
at 152A-B;
Le
Roux v
Yskor
Landgoed
(Edms)
Bpk
(
supra
)
at 257F-G;
Van
Dyk v Du Toit
(
supra
)
at 783D.
In
De
Crespigney
(
supra
)
it was held to be unnecessary to decide what degree of factual
uncertainty in a judgment renders execution incompetent.
Also
see
Du
Preez v Du Preez
1977
(2) SA 400
(C) at 403:
Even
under the wide language of Rule 45(1) there can be a degree of
uncertainty in a judgment which makes it incompetent for a
writ to
issue under it
[25]
Joint
Practice Note, CaseLines 022-420 to 022-425
[26]
Annexure
“
SR1”
to
Annexure “
TR6”
,
CaseLines, 002-63
[27]
Para
7.1, CaseLines, 004-25
[28]
The
applicant disputes that these amounts are due to the respondent.
This
was brought to the attention of the respondent prior to the annuity
fund being attached in a letter dated the 8th
of
March 2022
[29]
Annexure
“
SRC8”
,
para 2.2, CaseLines 005-16;
AR
v CR and Another
(
supra
),
para 8:
“…
It
is rather belated for the first respondent to explain the basis and
the quantification of the judgment debt in the answering
affidavit.
…”
[30]
Para
7, CaseLines, 004-20 to 004-25
[31]
It
is the applicant’s contention that there are other amounts
that should also be taken into account however this is disputed
between the parties
[32]
32
Para
6.9.2, CaseLines 004-23, AA
“
I
requested from the Standard Bank of South Africa Limited bank
statements in order to ascertain the payments which the applicant
has made for the period.
The
statements which I received were voluminous in nature and as such I
must have missed certain of the payments which I set out
below.
It was sincerely a bona fide error
and I humbly request the Court to consider the below payments as
payments which have been made
by the applicant in reduction of the
writ amount”
.
Para 6.9.3
“
I
set out below a list of the applicant’s payments which have
not been accounted for on “SR1” and the reasons
therefor.
Lest
it not be forgotten the applicant in Annexure “
DRA8”
listed
every
payment
made
to
me
and
sought
a
reduction
from
the
writ
amount
of R422 243,83.”
[33]
Respondent’s
AA, CaseLines,004-24 to 004-25
[34]
AR
v CR and Another
(
supra
),
para 8
[35]
The
amount is not ascertained in an affidavit filed to obtain the writ.
Strydom
NO v Kruger and Another
(
supra
)
at para 20
[36]
Block
v Block
(
supra
);
Butchart
v Butchart
(
supra
);
Strydom
NO v Kruger and Another
(
supra
)
[37]
De
Crespigney v De Crespigney
(
supra
)
at 152A-B;
Le
Roux v
Yskor
Landgoed
(Edms)
Bpk
(
supra
)
at 257F-G;
Van
Dyk v Du Toit
(
supra
)
at 783D.
sino noindex
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