Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 147South Africa
KA v KN (A2023/055189) [2024] ZAGPJHC 147 (21 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 February 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal from a contact order granted by the Children’s Court – condonation sought – two applications to lead further evidence on appeal – s19 (b) of the Superior Courts Act 2013 – condonation application – pending litigation in High Court – mootness of appeal as subsequent events overtook appeal and appeal will have no practical effect – not in minor child’s best interests to remit matter back to Children’s Court for hearing de novo – exercise of true discretion by Children’s Court – no cogent basis to interfere with exercise of discretion or order granted - appeal dismissed with costs
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## KA v KN (A2023/055189) [2024] ZAGPJHC 147 (21 February 2024)
KA v KN (A2023/055189) [2024] ZAGPJHC 147 (21 February 2024)
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sino date 21 February 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: A2023/055189
1.
Reportable: No
2.
Of interest to other judges: No
3.
Revised: No
21
February 2024
In
the matter between:
KA
APPELLANT
and
KN
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
it to the electronic case file system. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 21
st
of FEBRUARY
2024.
Summary:
Appeal from a contact order granted by the Children’s Court
– condonation sought – two applications to lead further
evidence on appeal –
s19
(b) of the
Superior Courts Act 2013
–
condonation application – pending litigation in High Court –
mootness of appeal as subsequent events overtook
appeal and appeal
will have no practical effect – not in minor child’s best
interests to remit matter back to Children’s
Court for hearing
de novo –
exercise of true discretion by Children’s
Court – no cogent basis to interfere with exercise of
discretion or order
granted - appeal dismissed with costs
DIPPENAAR
J (et GOODMAN AJ CONCURRING)
:
[1]
This appeal concerns a contact order
granted on 16 May 2023 in the Children’s Court, Randburg (“the
court
a quo
”),
relating to the respondent’s contact with the parties’
minor son, K who is presently two years old. At the
time of the
proceedings before the court
a quo
he
was some seventeen months of age. The parties are the biological
parents of K, respectively his mother and father, who were never
married and whose relationship has terminated.
[2]
The court
a
quo
had regard to the recommendations
of the Family Advocate who, after conducting investigations, produced
a report dated 20 April
2023. Reliance was placed by the Family
Advocate on the investigations and report by a duly appointed Family
Counsellor.
Inter alia
,
a measured phased-in contact regime was recommended introducing
sleep-over contact on certain terms. At the hearing before the
court
a quo
, the
appellant made certain submissions expressing her dissatisfaction
with the Family Advocate’s report and recommendations.
[3]
The court
a
quo
accepted those recommendations with
certain time modifications granted at the behest of the respondent.
In her reasons for judgment,
the court
a
quo
stated:
“
The
court took into account the comprehensive Family Advocate’s
Report, and found no cogent nor compelling reasons to deviate
from
the recommendations”.
[4]
The appellant’s case is that the nub
of the appeal is that the Children’s Court did not exercise its
discretion appropriately
under
s 7
of the Children’s Act, 2005,
did not apply a child centric approach in considering the matter and
did not take proper account
of the facts placed before it by the
appellant, but rather rubber-stamped the recommendations of the
Family Advocate.
[5]
The appellant sought the setting aside of
the court
a quo’s
order
and a remittal of the matter back to the Children’s Court for a
hearing
de novo
.
At the hearing, the appellant further sought an interim contact order
pending the outcome of those remitted proceedings, first
raised in
the parties’ joint practice note delivered shortly before the
hearing.
[6]
The
respondent’s case is that events subsequent to the appeal and
pending litigation in the High Court have rendered the appeal
moot,
thus justifying its dismissal in terms of s16 (2)(a)(i) of the
Superior Courts Act
[1]
(“the
Act”), as the order would have no practical effect. It is
argued that the court
a
quo
exercised its discretion as upper guardian in the best interests of
the minor child and did not err and that there is no legitimate
basis
to interfere with the exercise of that discretion. The respondent
further contends that the office of the Family Advocate
conducted a
thorough investigation and took all relevant information provided by
both parties into account before a recommendation
was made and that
the court
a
quo
discharged its statutory duty in carefully considering those
recommendations and the submissions of the parties without mere
rubber-stamping.
[7]
The present appeal is somewhat unusual,
considering the events which transpired after the proceedings before
the court
a quo
.
Since the lodging of the appeal by the appellant, the parties have
been involved in extensive litigation in the High Court.
[8]
It was undisputed that after the lodging of
the present appeal and during July 2023, the respondent launched an
application under
case number 2023-059941 aimed at enforcement of the
court
a quo’s
order,
which ultimately resulted in an interim contact order being granted
by Carrim AJ pending the determination of the appeal
(“the
Carrim order”).
[9]
It was further undisputed that pursuant to
the appellant launching an application for leave to appeal against
the Carrim order,
the respondent launched a further application under
case number 2023 – 055941, in which contempt relief, a
declaratory order
and enforcement of the interim contact order was
sought. That application resulted in a consent order being granted by
Liebenberg
AJ on 12 October 2023 (“the Liebenberg order”)
pertaining
inter alia
to an interim contact arrangement pending the finalisation of the
pending appeal or the provision of a forensic report, whichever
occurred first. In terms of the Liebenberg order, a forensic
psychologist was appointed to conduct a forensic assessment of the
minor child and to provide a written report and recommendations to
the court pertaining to care and contact in the best interests
of the
minor child. Those proceedings remain pending.
[10]
There are various preliminary issues which
should conveniently be dealt with first.
[11]
First, the appellant sought condonation for
the failure to timeously lodge the appeal record and reinstatement of
the appeal. That
application was not opposed. The explanation
proffered was that there were issues in procuring the full record
from the Children’s
Court occasioned by circumstances beyond
the appellant’s control. Considering the facts, condonation is
to be granted, with
costs to be costs in the appeal.
[12]
Second, the appellant launched two
applications to adduce further evidence on appeal in terms of s19(b)
of the Act. The first,
to introduce an affidavit dealing with
the submissions placed before the Children’s Court by the
appellant during the hearing
on 16 May 2023. The respondent abides
the decision of the Court. Considering the facts, it is in the
interests of justice to allow
the introduction of the affidavit,
given that it simply deals with the information placed before the
court
a quo
which
was considered by it in granting the order that forms the subject
matter of the appeal.
[13]
The second application is more contentious
and is opposed by the respondent. It relates to events which occurred
on 6 December 2023,
well after the lodging of the appeal on 8 June
2023, thus well after the hearing before the court
a
quo
. The respondent delivered an
answering affidavit in response, particularising his version of those
events. There are numerous disputes
on the papers. The appellant
elected not to deliver a replying affidavit. In argument, it was
contended that, given that the respondent
admitted the occurrence of
the events of 6 December 2023, it was not necessary to do so.
[14]
Considering
the affidavits filed by the respective parties, it cannot be
concluded that there are special circumstances justifying
the
introduction of the relevant evidence on appeal under s19(b) of the
Act. The requirements are trite and do not have to be repeated
herein.
[2]
[15]
The
averments now sought to be introduced were not placed before the
court
a quo
and it did not take such averments into consideration in exercising
its discretion as the events had not yet occurred.
[16]
Materially,
what is to be made of the events which transpired on 6 December 2023
is in dispute between the parties. It cannot be
concluded in the
circumstances that the evidence sought to be presented by the
appellant is such, that if adduced, would be practically
conclusive
[3]
, nor that the
evidence is materially relevant to the outcome of the appeal, albeit
that such evidence may be relevant to whatever
is ultimately
determined by a court to be in the minor child’s best
interests.
[17]
Those subsequent events are matters which
will undoubtedly be considered and dealt with by the forensic
psychologist in her report
and the parties in the pending litigation
in the High Court to which the Liebenberg order relates.
[18]
The affidavit does not materially
contribute to answering the question whether the Children’s
Court on 16 May 2023 properly
exercised its discretion and applied
the relevant principles in s 7 of the Children’s Act, as
contended by the appellant.
[19]
In the result, the second application to
introduce evidence on appeal, dated 23 January 2024, falls to be
dismissed. There is no
reason to deviate from the normal principle
that costs follow the result.
[20]
Third,
as a point
in
limine,
the respondent raised the issue that the notice of appeal is fatally
defective as it is generic in nature, does not specify whether
the
appeal is on a point of law, or fact, or both and does not state what
order the court a quo should have granted. It was argued
that the
notice of appeal did not comply with r 50 (2) or with r 51(7) of the
Magistrates Court Rules and thus, that the notice
of appeal and
therefore the appeal was invalid
[4]
as those requirements are peremptory
[5]
.
[21]
Although there is merit in these
contentions, we are not persuaded to dismiss the appeal on this basis
alone. The merits of the
appeal must be considered against the
backdrop of these defects.
[22]
The basis for the appellant’s
complaint is that the court
a quo
did not take into consideration the issues raised by her and failed
to properly weigh up and consider her concerns, but rather
blindly
followed the recommendations by the Family Advocate and did not take
the real life experience of the minor child into account.
It is
argued that the minor child’s tender age, his attachment to the
appellant as primary caregiver and the need for
stability and routine
should have been taken into account. According to the appellant, the
court
a quo
adopted
an approach which favoured the respondent and failed to consider her
objections and concerns adequately and that the imbalance
produced a
result which was not in the minor child’s best interests.
[23]
To support this conclusion, reliance was
inter alia
placed
on (i) the failure in the order of the court
a
quo
to make provision for the appellant
to have contact with the minor child on Christian holidays and
Mother’s Days whereas
the respondent was afforded contact on
Hindu holidays and Father’s Days and (ii) the fact the
respondent was awarded contact
on every public holiday despite the
appellant’s objection that this precludes her from ever sharing
public holidays with
the child.
[24]
It
appears that the appellant’s primary complaint is aimed at the
commencement of sleepover contact when the child was two
years old.
This is to commence during March 2024 in terms of the order of the
court
a
quo
[6]
.
The appellant’s complaint regarding the recommendation made
when the child was seventeen months old, was that he was a co-sleeper
(with the appellant) and still breastfeeds.
[25]
It
was not disputed that the court
a
quo
was exercising a discretion in the true sense in granting the
impugned order. The relevant principles pertaining to discretions
are
well established
[7]
and do not
require repetition. It is not disputed that the court
a
quo
was exercising a discretion in the true sense where it had a range of
equally permissible options open to it.
[26]
It
is trite that an appellate court will only interfere with the
exercise of a true discretion in circumscribed circumstances
[8]
.
The circumstances in which such interference will be justified are
cases of vitiation by misdirection or irregularity, or the
absence of
grounds on which a court, acting reasonably could have made the order
in question.
[9]
[27]
On a contextual, purposive and grammatical
interpretation of the order of the court
a
quo,
it did not disregard the
appellant’s parity of rights as contended by her and did not
preclude the appellant from exercising
contact to the minor child on
Christian holidays or Mother’s day, given that the order
expressly regulated the specific occasions
on which the respondent
could exercise access to the minor child, rather than delineate the
parties’ respective contact rights.
[28]
From the Family Advocate’s report it
is clear that the emails from the appellant providing her input
regarding the contact
and care issues, were considered by the Family
Advocate. The correspondence received from the parties were
summarised in and attached
to the Family Advocate’s report, and
placed before the court
a quo
.
The fact that the appellant’s concerns were not all expressly
dealt with in the report does not equate to a conclusion that
they
were not taken into consideration. It can also not be concluded that
the court
a quo
did
not take all the information placed before her into account,
including the submissions of the appellant made at the hearing,
in
making her determination. From the available evidence, it can further
not be concluded that the court
a quo
favoured the respondent, as contended by the appellant.
[29]
Given the present facts, it cannot be
concluded that the court
a quo
did not judicially exercise its discretion, nor that it was
influenced by wrong principles or material misdirections of fact. As
such there is no basis to interfere with the exercise of the court
a
quo’s
discretion.
[30]
Moreover, given the history of the
litigation, there is merit in the respondent’s contention that
the appeal would have no
practical effect or result as envisaged by s
16(2)(a)(i) of the Act as the appeal has been overtaken by the
subsequent events already
referred to, which culminated in the
Liebenberg order, justifying the dismissal of the appeal.
[31]
Considering the present pending forensic
investigation of the minor child, a referral back to the Children’s
Court for a
de novo
investigation would cause unnecessary delays and a duplication of
process, given that the High Court is seized with receipt of
the
forensic report pertaining to the issue of care and contact with the
minor child and his best interests.
[32]
The appellant’s contentions that the
appeal has not been rendered moot and that the High Court is not
seized with the issue
of care and contact, given that the proceedings
before Liebenberg J related to contempt and the interim contact order
was granted
only pending the appeal, do not pass muster. Although the
papers in that application were not placed before this Court, the
respondent’s
contention that that application included
declaratory and other relief in addition to contempt relief, was not
disputed.
[33]
The Family Advocate’s report was
produced during April 2023, when the minor child was some seventeen
months old. The investigation
into his best interests, which will be
undertaken by the psychologist, is due to commence during April 2024,
a year later. It is
inevitable that the circumstances will have
changed, given that the child is older and that a determination must
be made based
on the present circumstances and best interests of the
minor child.
[34]
In the parties’ joint practice note,
this Court was notified that the appellant would seek certain interim
relief pertaining
to the respondent’s contact to the minor
child. The proposed relief would grant the respondent less contact to
the minor
child than that ordered by the court
a
quo
and less relief than agreed to in
terms of the Liebenberg consent order.
[35]
On a proper contextual and purposive
interpretation of the Liebenberg order, the appointment of the
forensic psychologist and the
provision of a report to the High Court
containing findings and recommendations regarding the issue of care
and contact is a final
order. The only order of an interim nature is
the contact regime agreed to in paragraph 9 of that order.
[36]
It
was argued that there is no other court seized with the care and
contact of K and that a court has inherent jurisdiction as the
upper
guardian of minor children to grant such relief. Reliance was placed
on
AD
[10]
,
in arguing that an overly technical approach should not be adopted. I
am not persuaded that
AD
avails the appellant in the present context or affords an appeal
court such broad powers to simply make interim orders pertaining
to
matters which are not the subject matter of an appeal.
[37]
This Court is constituted as an appeal
court and not as a court of first instance and has the powers
prescribed in s 19 of the Act.
The interim relief sought by the
appellant does not fall within the ambit of those powers. It was not
raised on the papers, but
for the first time in the joint practice
note.
[38]
Moreover, it cannot be correct, as the
appellant argues, that the issue of care and contact is not presently
pending before the
High Court in other proceedings. The parties have
remedies at their disposal to have those issues finally determined by
the High
Court in the current pending proceedings, for example by way
of an amendment to the relief sought and supplementation of the
papers
filed of record, if deemed necessary.
[39]
The granting of any interim relief as
proposed by the appellant would not be competent or appropriate.
[40]
For all these reasons, the appeal is doomed
to failure.
[41]
Considering all the facts, there is no
reason to deviate from the normal principle that costs follow the
result. Although it is
open to this court to direct each party to pay
its own costs, given that it is a minor child’s best interests
at stake, what
tips the scales in favour of the granting of a costs
order is the appellant’s persistence with the appeal, despite
the subsequent
developments and pending litigation already referred
to.
[42]
In the result, the following order is
granted:
[1] The applicant’s
condonation application for the late delivery of the appeal record is
granted, costs to be costs in the
appeal;
[2] The appellant’s
application to introduce the appellant’s written statement into
evidence dated 16 October 2023 is
granted, costs to be costs in the
appeal;
[3] The appellant’s
application to introduce further evidence on appeal dated 23 January
2024 is dismissed with costs;
[4] The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
:01 FEBRUARY 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:21 FEBRUARY 2024
APPELLANT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. S. Muchet
APPELLANT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
AKA Attorneys Inc.
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. F. Bezuidenhout
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Ulrich Roux and Associates
[1]
10
of 2013
[2]
Putco (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
[2023] 2 All SA 601
(SCA) para [14]
[3]
Colam v Dunbar
1933 AD 141
at 162
[4]
Scott-King (Pty) Ltd v Cohen
1999 (1) SA 806
(W) at 810F
[5]
Leeuw v First National Bank Ltd
2010 (3) SA 410
(SCA) 413D-E
[6]
Based on the recommendations in the report of the Family Counsellor
paragraphs
[7]
Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation
of South Africa Ltd
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC) par [85]
[8]
Public Protector v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service and Others
[2020] ZACC
28
paras [31]-[33]; Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources &
Others
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC) paras [29]-[30] with reference to the
principle in Attorney-General, Eastern Cape v Blom & Others
1988
(4) SA 645
A at 670 D-F
[9]
Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources & Others
2009 (6)
SA 232
(CC) paras [29]-[30] with reference to the principle in
Attorney-General, Eastern Cape v Blom & Others
1988 (4) SA 645
A
at 670 D-F
[10]
AD and Another v DW and Others
[2007] ZACC 27
;
2008 (3) SA 183
(CC) par [55]
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