Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 48South Africa
T.C v B.C (21300/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 48 (25 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 January 2024
Headnotes
the view that the matter cannot be mediated. Counsel for the respondent submitted he did not know how much the respondent has spent on his fees to date and that the respondent was under no obligation to set this out. Mr Zwane submitted that the respondent uses funds that belong to the joint estate to fund his own litigation. The applicant will require legal representation to effectively protect her half of the joint estate as the counterclaim is for a forfeiture of the benefits of the marriage. It is alleged that the respondent attempted to sell their home without her knowledge.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.C v B.C (21300/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 48 (25 January 2024)
T.C v B.C (21300/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 48 (25 January 2024)
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Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
No: 21300/2022
In
the matter between:
T[…]
F[…] C[…]
Applicant
And
B[…]
J[…]
C[…]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED
AJ
This
is an application for interim maintenance and a contribution toward
legal costs in terms of R43 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
The
parties were married in community of property in 2010 and
two minor children are born of their marriage.
The children
live with their father, the respondent, in the marital home and the
applicant resides with her partner. The
evidence is that both
parties have moved on with their lives since they separated in
February 2023.
# The
evidence
The
evidence
1.
The
applicant alleged that she was forced out of her marital home, and
now lives with her partner in KwaZulu Natal. She agrees that
the
children are better off living with their father, as he controls the
family business and all finances, he can attend to their
needs. She
requires access to the children and a family advocate has made
recommendations in that regard.
[1]
2.
The
applicant claims R25 000 per month in respect of interim
maintenance and R300 000 as a contribution toward legal
costs.
[2]
She contended that
during their marriage she was responsible for their home, and she
took care of the children. She was financially
dependent on the
respondent, through the years, although the respondent alleged that
he had always wanted her to support herself.
He annexed
registration documents of companies which he alleged he registered to
assist her to earn an income, however none
of the businesses
were successful. He accepted that she was not sufficiently
skilled for the job market. There is no evidence
before me regarding
the performance of the companies that were registered nor the income
the applicant received from any of those
companies. There is no
evidence before me that when she left the marital home, she was
employed or earning an income.
The respondent alleged that she
owned two companies with her partner, however not much else is before
the court in that regard,
except documents which reflect that each of
the entities is being deregistered.
3.
The party’s relationship became strained
when they accused the
other of engaging in extra marital relationships. The
respondent has secured a protection order
against her whilst she was
away to attend her father’s funeral. She is ordered not
to assault, intimidate, or harass
the respondent, she could not
return to the marital home as she feared for her safety. She
has two criminal matters pending,
for failure to attend court, common
assault, and conspiracy to commit murder. She has not seen her
children in the past year
and does not have the finances to visit
them nor to have them over as she resides with her partner in KwaZulu
Natal. The
respondent has taken away her car which he had
bought for her, the events in this regard are disputed.
4.
The
respondent is CEO of Boa Technologies CC, both parties are trustees
and beneficiaries in the Family Trust, under Trust Deed
1650/2017.
[3]
She was a
director in the family business which is managed by the respondent,
and she used to earn an income from Boa Technologies.
The
amounts she received varied, she received her last payment of R13 000
on 30 January 2023, a month before she left their
home.
[4]
The evidence is that through the years , the respondent paid various
amounts into her bank account, although this is disputed
as counsel
argued that the applicant received monies as an employee,
notwithstanding that she received monies after she allegedly
resigned
from the company. The applicant claims she was wholly reliant
on the respondent for her expenses. It is not
disputed that he
paid for all their household expenses, and they spent an average of
R45 000 per month as they enjoyed a comfortable
lifestyle together.
Their older child is at a boarding school, he spends his holidays
with his father. Their daughter
lives at home with the
respondent. The evidence is that the applicant is unable to
afford to pay for them to visit her, nor
can she afford their
expenses if they joined her over the holidays.
5.
The
respondent denied he paid her an income on a regular basis and
submitted that she was an employee and she resigned from the
company
in June 2021. He denied knowledge of the payslips from Boa
Technologies after 2021 and amounts reflected in her bank
statements.
She received her last payment in January 2023. Mr Zwane
proffered that the respondent is misleading the court
regarding
payments made to her and reiterated that she relied on him for
expenses. In her financial disclosure form
[5]
the property situated in Limpopo is valued at R4 million, which is
her only asset and she records liabilities at R78 305,
being her
legal costs to date.
6.
It was
proffered that the respondent can afford to pay her the interim
maintenance and that he draws R120 000 per month from
the
business. The applicant furthermore alleged that the respondent
owns several luxury motor vehicles and has various investments
to the value of R100 million.
[6]
It is noteworthy that the respondent’s reply was a bear
denial, with the applicant to prove the allegation and the
extent of
their joint estate.
7.
The
applicant submitted that she was unable to pay her attorney fees, he
withdrew from her matter, whereupon he obtained a judgement
for
R28 000 for legal fees.
[7]
She managed to persuade him to continue to represent her, whilst the
respondent litigates at a much higher level, he has
instructed two
law firms to represent him, has been obstructive in his litigation of
the divorce, as he amended his plea, filed
a counterclaim for a
forfeiture of benefits and filed a R30 notice. It is
alleged that he merely increases legal costs,
and she is forced
to respond to each of issues raised. Mr Zwane referred the
court to correspondence in which he suggested
that the dispute be
mediated however the respondent held the view that the matter cannot
be mediated. Counsel for the respondent
submitted he did not
know how much the respondent has spent on his fees to date and that
the respondent was under no obligation
to set this out. Mr
Zwane submitted that the respondent uses funds that belong to the
joint estate to fund his own litigation.
The applicant will
require legal representation to effectively protect her half of the
joint estate as the counterclaim is for
a forfeiture of the benefits
of the marriage. It is alleged that the respondent attempted to
sell their home without her
knowledge.
8.
The applicant will require expert services
to track assets and
determine the value of the various businesses and other assets that
form part of their joint estate.
9.
The
respondents argue that the applicant has failed to demonstrate a need
and that her expenses amount to R25 000. The
legal costs
as depicted do not pertain to the expenses in relation to the
divorce, they pertain to legal costs for various interdicts
and
domestic violence matters and are not costs directly related to the
divorce, as contemplated in the Rule. He argued that
his net
income is only R71 300,
[8]
and he cannot afford to pay her any monies she claims, he relies on
credit to meet his monthly expenses.
[9]
Mr Ndamase for the respondent reminded the court that the respondent
pays for all the expenses relating to the minor children
and he has
never requested the applicant for any contributions.
10.
Counsel contended that the applicant together with her
partner,
operated two businesses and that she failed to annex any bank
statements in relation to those businesses. A table
setting out
her needs cannot be sufficient for purposes of this application.
The respondent is heavily indebted to
banks as he relies on his
credit card to meet his monthly expenses. He cannot afford to
support two homes; the applicant
and her partner have developed a
lifestyle together and they must pay bear their costs.
11.
Counsel argued that the applicant alleged that the respondent
has
various sources of income but failed to substantiate the allegation
and the onus is on her to prove them. It was
submitted
that there is no proper application before this court due to a
serious lack of details to prove a need and accordingly,
the
application stands to be dismissed.
12.
Counsel proffered that if the respondent is ordered to
pay
maintenance, he would be forced to remove his eldest child from
boarding school, and that his finances are in such a dire state
that
it would be impossible to comply if he is ordered to pay her
maintenance.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
13.
In H v
H,
[10]
Victor J stated, “
it
is without doubt clear that the dispute about the care of children,
the interim maintenance, and the contribution of legal costs
must be
viewed through the prism of the Constitution and of course in
relation to the Children’s Act.”
14.
There
appears no dispute regarding the maintenance of the minor children,
and a Family Advocate has recommended rights of access
to the
applicant, their mother.
[11]
Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules of Court provides for interim access,
maintenance, and a contribution toward legal costs, until
a divorce
is finalised.
15.
The parties
are in an acrimonious divorce, where there have been various
allegations of assaults, verbal abuse, and malicious damage
to
property, by each of the parties. The divorce is pending,
however, amendments to pleadings, counterclaims and procedural
points
taken delay the finalisation of this divorce. I noted that the
applicant’s request for a mediation of the dispute
failed as
the respondent held the view that the matter could not be resolved by
mediation.
[12]
The issue
between the parties is only of a patrimonial nature.
16.
In my view where the facts are ascertained a mediated solution
is
a sensible one, particularly when parties both claim they cannot
afford legal costs. Mediation presents a cost effective
and
efficient procedure to dispute resolution and in family disputes,
they have the potential to preserve important relations between
parties who continue to be parents to their children, well after the
divorce. A litigant cannot plead poverty, financial
pressure,
and yet discount the value of this very cost effective and efficient
method of dispute resolution. Rule 41A is
available to parties
and must in these difficult financial circumstances be litigants
first port of call.
17.
In casu, the respondent contends he is too heavily indebted
and
therefore he cannot pay her interim maintenance nor can he contribute
to her legal costs, however he chooses to proceed by
trial, incurring
costs when he amended pleadings, raised a counterclaim for
forfeiture, on facts that were already before him when
he filed his
plea, raised a R30 point, when he could have called the applicant’s
attorney to resolve the issue. He
can “indulge” in
litigation because he can afford to do so. The applicant is
obliged to respond each time and
she does not have the finances to do
so. However, he does appear to have access to funds to pay for
his litigation, although
no figures are before this court to assess
the level at which he litigates. He must bear the risk when he
fails to fully
substantiate his financial position.
18.
Mr Ndamase is correct the applicant must demonstrate a need,
before a
court can grant the applicant an order, on an interim basis. I
am of the view that she has done so, she had no home
to return when
she returned from her father’s funeral, and she has a judgment
debt for legal costs because she could not
afford to pay for those
services. There is no evidence before me that at the time the
parties separated, she was earning
an income to be able to support
herself and her children. The evidence is that she stayed over
with friends and family, until
she was forced to leave Johannesburg
and join her partner in KwaZulu Natal. She was forced to leave
her children behind and
sacrifice her contact with them. She is
also embroiled in certain criminal matters that may well cost her
more in expenses.
19.
There is no evidence before me, since her alleged resignation
from
their company in 2021, that the applicant had the means to look after
herself. I noted the allegations that she pursued
two
businesses with her partner, but evidence before me demonstrated that
the entities had never operated, and no bank account
was ever opened
for the entities.
20.
It is
noteworthy that the respondent continues to live in the matrimonial
home, his life was never disrupted, and the evidence is
that his
partner now resides with him in the home. The applicant’s right
to a home is linked to her right to dignity.
[13]
Counsel’s submission that the applicant paid nothing toward the
home and therefore cannot claim support to set
up her home is
nonsensical and cannot be countenanced. She has a right to her
home qua marriage, and in terms of her marital
regime.
21.
The writers
Heaton and Kruger
[14]
state:
“
From
its beginning until its termination, a civil marriage imposes a
reciprocal common law duty of support on the spouses, provided
that
the spouse who claims maintenance needs it and the spouse from whom
it is claimed, is able to provide it. Maintenance includes
the
provision of accommodation, clothing food, medical services, and
other necessaries. The scope of the duty of support
is
determined inter alia by the social status of the parties and their
means of income and the cost of living.”
22.
In casu the parties are married in community of property, a
joint
estate is established, and the applicant continues to maintain a
lawful interest in their home. It cannot be correct
that she
relies on others for her accommodation. Her dignity must
be preserved and protected particularly in the eyes
of her children,
whom she has nurtured over the years, she remains their mother.
23.
Both parties’ financial disclosure documents have been
wanting
in detail on their assets and expenses, the respondent has not
complied with the practise directive, he has not annexed
bank
statements over 6 months and failed to set out details of debts
incurred in respect of the credit facilities. The parties
bear
the risk in that regard, the court must then rely on the objective
evidence before it.
24.
It is not disputed that the respondent was responsible for
all
expenses and that their household expenses were R45 000 per
month. They enjoyed a comfortable lifestyle. The applicant’s
claim of R6 000 for accommodation is reasonable when one
compares the respondent’s costs of accommodation even including
costs of their second child. The respondent’s living expenses
for one person, appears to be high, he spends over R10 000
per
month on food, R15 000 per month to service debt, there are no
details before this court as to how the debt is incurred.
beyond
basic household costs. Counsel’s submissions that
his client is “drowning in debt” cannot
be a defence,
spousal maintenance is a legal duty and must be prioritised. Of
concern is that the debt he incurs are debts
of the joint estate and
applicant must be supported to protect her interests in that estate.
25.
I considered the applicant’s table of expenses, and I
am of the
view that items for clothing, municipal rates, and sundries and
recreation can be dispensed with. Pendente lite,
R18 000
per month for living expenses is reasonable in the circumstances.
# CONTRIBUTION TO LEGAL
COSTS
CONTRIBUTION TO LEGAL
COSTS
26.
The
legal writer J Heaton
[15]
,
stated
“
It
is the financially dependent spouse who applies for a contribution
toward costs frequently in circumstances where the other spouse
controls the family resources pending orders in respect of division
of assets on divorce. The fact that the applicant spouse
had no
access to resources is yielded like a strategic weapon to bullying an
equitable settlement from an under resourced spouse,
who faces the
other spouse’s legal arsenal with the funds for his or her
legal team.”
27.
Section
9(1) of the Constitution,
[16]
provides,
“
Everyone
is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and
benefit of the law.”
28.
The rationale behind the duty to contribute toward legal costs
is to
ensure that there is an equality of arms in the litigation of the
divorce and that neither party is prejudiced.
29.
In Charmani
v Charmani,
[17]
the court
referred to a contribution toward costs is sui generis, it is an
incident of the duty of support which spouses owe each
other.
30.
In H v H, supra, the court stated, “
the disadvantaged party
is placed in a position to defend their case. So fundamentally,
the application of the Rule 43 necessarily
involves, the right to
equality and Judges should, when exercising discretion, interpret and
apply R43 in the light of the constitutional
right to equality.”
31.
On the facts extensive legal costs have been incurred, in various
applications and orders sought. More critically, the applicant
must defend a counterclaim for forfeiture. It is reasonable
to
estimate that she will require legal and expert assistance to
exercise her rights to equal protection before the law.
The
court notes that she has a judgement against her for the legal
services rendered to date, it is clear she cannot afford to
pay for
those services. The respondent has refused to mediate a
settlement on a proprietary issue, the details of which could
have
been easily ascertained if the financial statements before this court
can be relied on.
32.
I noted from the financial information furnished in the
“supplementary
answering” papers, the respondent
has access to capital, as he services credit cards and overdraft
facilities, and
he pays a surplus into his bond account.
Furthermore, I noted that his business has performed better in the
past financial
year, and that he can afford to contribute to
her legal costs, pendente lite, in the sum of R300 000.
Any amount
that is not used after taxation, must be returned.
33.
In VR v
VR,
[18]
van der Linde J,
stated:
“
perhaps
the issue can be turned around, whether the respondent should
contribute to the applicant’s legal costs is not the
respondents gift to give, he has an obligation to do so.”
The applicant would not enjoy equal protection unless she
is equally
empowered with the “sinews of war.”
34.
Counsel for the respondent argued the applicant’s costs
must be
the direct costs of the divorce and although our courts have held
different views in that regard, I agree that the contribution
must be
in respect of costs related to the divorce.
Accordingly,
I make the following order pendente lite:
1.
The recommendations by the Family Advocate,
in its report on
applicant’s access to the children is made an order of court.
2.
The respondent shall pay R18 000 per month
to the applicant for her
maintenance, on the 1
st
day of the month.
3.
The respondent shall contribute R300 000
to the applicant’s
attorneys for legal costs of the action, within 2 weeks of this
order, any surplus is to be returned
within a week of final taxation.
4.
The costs of this application shall be in
the cause.
________________________
MAHOMED
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or 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 25 January 2024.
Date
of hearing : 29 November 2023
Date
of judgment : 25 January 2024
Appearances
For
the Applicant: Advocate MP Zwane
Email:
patrick@mpzwane.co.za
For
Respondent: Advocate Y Ndamase
Instructed
by:
Ningiza Horner Attorneys Inc
Email;
lwanda.jongilanaga@ningizahorner.co.za
[1]
Caselines 000-18 at par 46
[2]
Caselines 021-133
[3]
Caselines 021-148 at par 7.5
[4]
Caselines 021-166 to 169.
[5]
Caselines 021-268
[6]
Caselines 021-148 par 7
[7]
Caselines 021- 154-157
[8]
Caselines 021-76
[9]
Caselines 021-265
[10]
Case No. 44450/22 , 30 September 2022, at par 3
[11]
Caselines 000.
[12]
Caselines 021-358
[13]
S10 Constitution Act 108 of 1996
[14]
South African Family Law, 4
th
ed, 2017 p44 at 5.4.1
[15]
The Law of Divorce and Dissolution of Life Partnerships in South
Africa (Juta 2015) at p544
[16]
Act 108 of 1996
[17]
1979 (4)S 8043 (W) at 806 F-H , also Van Rippen 1949 (4) SA 634 (C)
[18]
June 2019 par 17
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