Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 104South Africa
L.E v L.A (1884/2018) [2024] ZAGPJHC 104; 2024 (5) SA 539 (GJ) (9 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 February 2024
Headnotes
SUMMARY: Application in terms of section 20 of the Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984 for the immediate division of a joint estate in a foreign marriage.
Judgment
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## L.E v L.A (1884/2018) [2024] ZAGPJHC 104; 2024 (5) SA 539 (GJ) (9 February 2024)
L.E v L.A (1884/2018) [2024] ZAGPJHC 104; 2024 (5) SA 539 (GJ) (9 February 2024)
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sino date 9 February 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
1884/2018
In the matter between: -
L.
E.
Applicant
and
L.A.
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e mail and publication
on CaseLines. The
date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 13h00 on 9 February 2024.
SUMMARY:
Application
in terms of
section 20
of the
Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984
for the immediate division of a joint estate in a foreign marriage.
-
Held that the
Matrimonial
Property Act, 88 of 1984
applies to the enforcement of rights and
obligations flowing from marriages governed by South African law.
-
Held that the applicant
could not succeed with her application because the parties had
entered into a foreign marriage by virtue
of the husband’s
lex
domicilii matrimonii
in
which event
the proprietary
consequences of a foreign marriage must be determined in accordance
with the law of the matrimonial domicile.
-
Restated the principle that a party is not
entitled to make out a case in reply unless under exceptional
circumstances.
-
Restated the importance of complying with the
provisions of
Rule 36(9)
when relying on expert evidence.
F.
BEZUIDENHOUT AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This court was called upon to
determine three interlocutory applications, namely an application for
immediate division, an application
for leave to amend and an
application brought in terms of
Rule 30.
[2]
The sequence within which papers
were filed and proceedings were brought can only be described as a
Gordian knot. It demanded serious
unravelling as will be
demonstrated.
SEQUENCE OF
PROCEEDINGS AND PAPERS
[3]
The applicant is the plaintiff in a
pending divorce action instituted by her in this court on
19 January 2018. The applicant
married the respondent on
2 March 2002 at Bucharest, Romania.
[4]
The applicant initially applied for
the immediate division of what she referred to as the joint estate in
terms of section 20 of
the Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984 (“
the
MPA”
) and for the appointment
of a liquidator and receiver to determine the value. This application
was brought on the 5
th
of December 2022.
[5]
The respondent opposed the
application on,
inter alia
,
the basis that there is no joint estate as the parties’
proprietary rights are governed by either Turkish or Romanian Law.
[6]
The applicant filed her
replying affidavit on 5 April 2023.
[7]
After the filing of answering papers
on 28 February 2023, both parties amended their pleadings in the
divorce action. More detail
regarding the nature of these amendments
will follow.
[8]
Simultaneously with the filing of
her replying papers, the respondent gave notice of her intention to
amend her notice of motion
in terms of Rule 28.
[9]
In terms of the proposed amendment,
the relief that the applicant now seeks is, on a mere cursory glance,
substantially different.
[10]
Firstly, the applicant seeks an
order declaring that the Turkish laws “
(alternatively
Romanian law)”
are applicable to
the parties’ marriage. Secondly, the applicant seeks an order
for the immediate division of the assets
acquired during the
subsistence of the marriage in accordance with Turkish, alternatively
Romanian law. The applicant persists
with her relief for the
appointment of a receiver and liquidator to value the assets and
divide them.
[11]
The amendment of the notice of
motion is sought on the founding papers as they currently stand. The
founding papers were not supplemented.
[12]
On the 18
th
of April 2023, the respondent formally objected to the proposed
amendment on 18 April 2023. The respondent contended that the
proposed amendments sought to introduce an entirely new cause of
action to the respondent’s prejudice.
[13]
In response to the replying papers,
the respondent filed a rule 30 notice on the 18
th
of April 2023 and objected to the replying affidavit on
inter
alia
the basis that the relief sought
constitutes an entirely new cause of action.
[14]
All three application were placed
before me for hearing.
THE AMENDED PLEADINGS
IN THE DIVORCE ACTION
[15]
Initially, the applicant at
paragraph 5 of her unamended particulars of claim dated 19 January
2018 alleged a marriage in community
of property “
according
with the laws of Romania”.
[16]
On
25 November 2019, the respondent served a plea where he admitted the
conclusion of a marriage in community of property “
save
to state that the Laws of the Republic of South Africa will govern
the division of the joint estate of the parties”
.
[1]
In his counterclaim, the respondent alleged that the parties were
married in community of property and that the assets forming
part of
the parties’ joint estate were to be divided as provided for in
the MPA with the alternative of appointing a forensic
auditor and/or
liquidator to establish the extent of the assets of the joint estate
and to divide such assets equally between the
parties.
[2]
[17]
On the 9
th
of June 2023, the applicant filed a notice of her intention to
amend her particulars of claim. The amendment was not objected
to,
and was effected on the 27
th
of June 2023. Paragraph 5 of the particulars of claim in its amended
form now reads as follows: -
“
The
parties were married to each other on the 2
nd
of March 2022 at Bucharest, Romania, in accordance with the laws
of Romania...”
[18]
At paragraph 10 of the amended
particulars of claim, the applicant pleaded that the proprietary
consequences of the marriage relationship
are governed by the laws of
Turkey, alternatively Romania and that: -
[18.1]
assets which were brought into the marriage
by either party remain separate property and ownership thereof
remains vested in that
party;
[18.2]
assets which are acquired during the
marriage relationship are to be divided equally between the parties;
[18.3]
inheritances and/or damages received by
either party during the marriage, remain separate property and remain
vested in that party.
[19]
Pursuant to the applicant amending
her particulars of claim, the respondent amended his plea on the 31
st
of July 2023 as follows: -
“
5.
The Defendant admits that the parties were married
to each other at Bucharest, Romania on the 2
nd
of March 2002…”
[20]
The
respondent also pleaded that the proprietary consequences of the
marriage are governed by the laws of Turkey, alternatively
Romania,
on the basis that “
the
Defendant was domiciled in either Turkey or Romania, at the time of
the marriage”
.
[3]
[21]
The respondent pleaded at paragraph
12 of the amended counterclaim that in accordance with both the laws
of Romania and Turkey: -
[21.1]
assets which were brought into the marriage
by either party remain separate property and ownership thereof
remains vested in that
party;
[21.2]
assets which are acquired during the
marriage are not jointly owned by the spouses and there is no
property belonging to the union
of the marriage;
[21.3]
inheritances and/or damages received by
either party during the marriage, remain separate property and remain
vested in that party;
[21.4]
the acquired property of a spouse is
his/her own property and the other spouse has a right to claim half
of the residual value upon
termination of the legal matrimonial
property regime;
[21.5]
on termination of the marriage, each spouse
has a right to a monetary claim for his/her share of the residual
value of the acquired
property or of the other spouse;
[21.6]
the residual value of the acquired property
is determined as at the date of the institution of divorce
proceedings, but only becomes
due and payable upon divorce and after
the completion of the liquidation of the property regime.
[22]
The respondent pleaded further that
the matrimonial consequences of a marriage concluded in accordance
with the laws of Romania
are as follows: -
[22.1]
assets which were brought into the marriage
by either party remain separate property and ownership thereof
remains vested in that
party;
[22.2]
inheritances and/or damages received by
either party during the marriage, remain separate property and remain
vested in that party;
[22.3]
assets which are acquired during the
marriage are to be divided equally between the parties,
alternatively, in accordance with the
proven contribution(s) of each
party during the subsistence of the marriage;
[22.4]
the matrimonial property regime terminates
on the date of the institution of divorce proceedings.
[23]
The applicant admitted the aforesaid
allegations in her plea to the counterclaim to the extent of such
allegations being consistent
with the averments in the particulars of
claim.
[24]
The respondent seeks an order
declaring that the parties were married either in terms of Turkish or
in terms of Romanian law. The
applicant does not. She seeks this
declaratory relief in the present application.
THE APPLICATION
[25]
In her founding papers, which
preceded the amended pleadings, the applicant described the parties’
applicable marital regime
as follows: -
“
6.1
The respondent and I were married to each other on
2 March 2002 in Bucharest, Romania in terms of Romanian
law, in terms of which it can be accepted that we are married in
community of property, as no marital contract/antenuptial contract
was executed and/or registered between us.”
[26]
The respondent denies this:-
“
4.
…There is no joint estate existing between
my wife and myself because in simple terms, our proprietary
rights
are governed by either Turkish or Romanian law, and the said Act
[the
MPA]
has no relevance to our marriage.
5.
… I denied that it is common cause between us that the
marriage regime is one in community
of property…”
[27]
In
her replying affidavit, the applicant asserts that the respondent
agrees that the proprietary consequence of a marriage in accordance
with Turkish or Romanian law is a division of assets acquired during
the marriage.
[4]
This is not
entirely correct. There is a distinct difference between these
two laws in that the Romanian law provides for
an alternative to a
division of assets and that is a division in accordance with the
proven contribution(s) of each party during
the subsistence of the
marriage.
[28]
The applicant went further and
attached to her replying papers expert opinions on the patrimonial
consequences of Turkish and Romanian
law.
APPLICATION OF LEGAL
PRINCIPLES TO THE FACTS
Replying papers/Rule
30
[29]
It
is trite that the necessary allegations must appear in the founding
papers
[5]
for the court will
not, save in exceptional circumstances,
[6]
allow the applicant to make or supplement a case in a replying
affidavit, and will order any matter appearing in it that should
have
been in the founding affidavits to be struck out.
[7]
[30]
It may well be that the averments in
the replying papers were necessitated by the respondent’s
denial in his answering papers
that the parties were married
community of property, but the applicant ought then to have applied
for leave to supplement her papers,
whereafter the respondent would
have been able to answer to the averments and expert evidence.
In such instance, the respondent
would have been afforded a fair
opportunity to put up rebutting expert evidence. That is on the
assumption that the expert evidence
sought to be adduced by the
applicant was properly before this court. In my view, it is
not.
[31]
The
provisions of Rule 36(9) provide for the leading of expert evidence.
Erasmus
[8]
aptly
describes the purpose of the sub-rule thus:
“
..
to require the party intending to call a witness to give expert
evidence to give the other party such information about his evidence
as will remove the element of surprise from the trial. Furthermore,
proper compliance with the subrule may enable experts to exchange
views before giving evidence and thus to
reach
agreement on at least some of the issues, thereby saving costs and
the time of the court.”
[9]
[32]
The opposing party is given notice,
the expert report is filed, and the expert is qualified as such. The
applicant failed to comply
with this rule, has not applied for
condonation or advanced any reason why the Court should receive
the expert evidence in
this manner and in motion proceedings where
the respondent is deprived of his right to cross-examine these
witnesses and to adduce
rebutting expert evidence which may very well
differ from that of the applicant’s expert evidence not only in
relation to
the proprietary consequences, but whether or not an
immediate division as sought can be granted under the circumstances.
[33]
Moreover, the declaration of
whether the proprietary consequences of the parties’
marriage is in terms of Turkish or
Romanian Law is a pending issue in
the divorce action which is the correct forum within which these
issues should be ventilated
with the benefit of
viva
voce
evidence.
[34]
In the circumstances, I find that
the Rule 30 application has merit and should be granted.
The proposed amendment
to the notice of motion
[35]
Even if I am wrong on this point, it
does not detract from the fundamental difficulty that the applicant’s
founding papers
do not make out a case for the relief that she seeks
in her proposed amendment to the notice of motion, and for this
reason
I refuse the proposed amendment to the notice of motion.
Immediate division
applications and international private law
[36]
The case before me is accordingly
premised on the original notice of motion and the applicant’s
reliance on section 20 of
the MPA.
[37]
At the outset it is important to
deal with the critical difference between substantive and procedural
law as pointed out by Mr Pincus
SC who appeared for the respondent.
F
oreign law governs the proprietary consequences of the
marriage (substantive law), while the procedural law relates to the
methodology
applied by a South African Court to enforce the
proprietary consequences.
If anything, the MPA
would be the source of procedural law.
[38]
Section 20 of the MPA provides as
follows:-
“
The
court may on the application of a spouse, if it is satisfied that the
interest of that spouse in the
joint
estate
is being or will probably
be seriously prejudiced by the conduct or proposed conduct of the
other spouse, and that other persons
will not be prejudiced thereby,
order the immediate division of the
joint
estate
in equal shares or on
such other basis as the court may deem just.” (emphasis added).
[39]
The legislature’s intention is
clear and that is to protect a spouse from proprietary abuse in a
joint estate.
[40]
As
patriarchal and discriminatory as it is in our country’s
hard-fought constitutional dispensation, the common rule remains
that
the proprietary consequences of a marriage are governed by the
husband’s domicile at the time of the marriage.
[10]
This is especially so where there is no antenuptial contract.
[41]
Forsyth
[11]
describes
the proprietary consequences of a marriage to include whether the
marriage is in community of property, or out of community
of property
or whether a regime of partial community is established, and the
division of the estate upon divorce.
[42]
The
authorities also make it plain that the matrimonial domicile
determines the law applicable to the proprietary consequences
of the
marriage once and for all.
[12]
Therefore once adopted, it cannot be changed during the subsistence
of the marriage.
[13]
[43]
In
Bell
[14]
the
plaintiff instituted action for divorce in South Africa,
claiming a redistribution of assets in terms of ss 23 and 24 of
Part
2 of the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1973 of England. Issue was taken
with the prayer by way of exception and, in dismissing
the exception,
Kuper AJ said the following at 196H—I and 197E:
“
It
is clear beyond doubt and has been clear for more than 70 years
that in the absence of an antenuptial contract the
proprietary consequences of a foreign marriage must be determined in
accordance with the law of the matrimonial domicile, which
is to say
the domicile of the husband at the time of marriage.
“
I
am bound to decide this matter by reference to the laws of England as
embodied in her common law and in her statutes (and it is
immaterial
whether for that purpose the private international law system of
England is itself taken into account or not). Included
in those
statutes, of course, is the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1973.”
[44]
Josman
AJ held in
Esterhuizen
[15]
held that the MPA was intended to deal with local marriages where the
domicile of the husband was in South Africa. In that matter
the
parties, who were domiciled in Namibia at the time of the marriage,
had concluded an antenuptial contract there. The plaintiff,
the
wife, sought an order in terms of
s 7(3)
of the
Divorce Act 70 of
1979
, requiring that one-half of the net value of her husband's
assets be transferred to her. The court found that
section 7(3)
is
not applicable to foreign marriage by antenuptial contract.
[45]
I
find no reason to differ from
Esterhuisen
despite
the applicant’s allegation that the parties’ property
regime contains elements of division. In my view the underlying
principles of
lex
domicilii matrimonii
remain the same. The MPA forms part of South African law and does not
apply to foreign marriages, unless expressly provided for
by way of
antenuptial contract, as South African law is not the
lex
causae
of
such marriages.
[16]
[46]
For the aforestated reasons, the application is destined to
fail.
COSTS
[47]
Once the answering papers were filed
and after the pleadings were amended, it ought to have been clear to
the applicant that the
success of her application was in jeopardy.
Had she withdrawn her application at that stage or applied for leave
to supplement
her founding papers, matters, especially as far as the
issue of costs are concerned, may have turned out very differently.
Despite
these warning signs, the applicant persisted with
her application.
[48]
Having
said that, this Court cannot ignore the fact that the respondent is
to some extent to be blamed for the woes of the applicant.
The
respondent presented a completely different case in his answering
papers to his pleadings in the divorce action and this necessitated
the amendments in the action and in the application for immediate
division. In the circumstances, I am disinclined to grant costs
in
favour of the respondent in respect of the application to amend and
the
Rule 30
application, although he was substantially
successful.
[17]
ORDER
[49]
I accordingly grant an order in the
following terms: -
“
1.
The
Rule 30
application succeeds with no order as to costs.
2.
The application for leave to amend is dismissed with no order as to
costs.
3.
The application for immediate division is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel
where employed.”
F
BEZUIDENHOUT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE OF
HEARING:
6 September 2023
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
9 February
2024
APPEARANCES:
On
behalf of applicant:
Adv W Pretsch
wernerpretsch@clubadvocates.co.za
Instructed
by
:
Day Vergeer Attorneys
alex@dayvergeerlaw.co.za
/
elmarie@dayvergeerlaw.co.za
.
On
behalf of respondent:
Adv B K Pincus SC
bpincus@capebar.co.za
;
Adv A Christians
ashleigh.christians@capebar.co.za
Instructed by:
Maurice Phillips
Weisenberg Attorneys
bertus@mpw.co.za
[1]
Plea,
paragraph 3.1.
[2]
Counterclaim,
paragraph 12.
[3]
Paragraph 12,
amended plea.
[4]
Replying
affidavit: para 3.10 and 3.11.
[5]
Pearson
v Magrep Investments (Pty) Ltd
1975
(1) SA 186 (D)
;
[6]
Shephard
v Tuckers Land & Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd (1)
1978
(1) SA 173 (W)
at
177G–178A
[7]
Seymour
v Seymour
1937 WLD 9
; Victor v Victor
1938 WLD 16
; De
Villiers v De Villiers
1943 TPD 60
; Mauerberger v
Mauerberger
1948
(3) SA 731 (C)
;
[8]
Erasmus;
Superior Court practice: RS 21, 2023, D1-488B
[9]
Coopers
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung
mbH
1976
(3) SA 352 (A)
at
371F
[10]
Brown v Brown
1921 AD
478
; Frankel’s Estate and Another v The Master and Another
1950 (1) SA 220
(A); Sperling v Sperling
1971 (3) SA 707
(A) at
716F-G.
[11]
Forsyth; Private
International Law (Fifth Edition), The Family And Choice of Law;
p.
291.
[12]
Forsyth
supra
at 298; Brown v Brown
supra
at
482; Sperling v Sperling
supra
at 716G-H, Blatchford v Blatchford’s Estate and Anderson v The
Master
1949 (4) SA 660
(E) at 667-668.
[13]
A principle of
immutability is hence adopted; Blatchford’s Estate
supra
at 373; Chiwell v Carlyon
(1897) 14 SC 61
at 67-8.
[14]
Bell v Bell
1991
(4) SA 195 (W)
[15]
Esterhuizen
v Esterhuizen
1999 (1) SA 492
(C) at 500A.
[16]
Ex
parte Senekal et Uxor
1989 (1) SA 38
(T) at 39 H.
[17]
Berkowitz
v Berkowitz
1956
(3) SA 522
(SR)
;
Howe
v Essey
1963
(3) SA 402
(T)
at
404A–D.
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