Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 292South Africa
C.K v J.J.S (2023/058030) [2024] ZAGPJHC 292 (22 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## C.K v J.J.S (2023/058030) [2024] ZAGPJHC 292 (22 March 2024)
C.K v J.J.S (2023/058030) [2024] ZAGPJHC 292 (22 March 2024)
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sino date 22 March 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Children –
Relocation
–
Child
aged 11 – Mother seeking to relocate child to pursue her
professional aspirations – Clinical psychologist
report
considered – Relocation caused child stress and anxiety –
Child verbalized that he does not want to move
– Best
interests of child standard considered and applied – Forcing
child to relocate will not be in his best
interests – Forced
relocation will negatively impact his relationship with respondent
– Application denied.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023-058030
1.
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
C[...]
K[...]
Applicant
and
J[...]
J[...]
S[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
LANGE, AJ
[1]
This is an urgent relocation application in which
the Applicant wishes to relocate with the parties’ minor child,
J[...],
a son aged eleven, to Ballito at the end of the school-term.
[2]
The application was brought in two parts. Part A
was unopposed, and Judge Kuny granted an order on 26 September 2023,
in terms of
which:
2.1 The Office of the
Family Advocate was requested to investigate and make recommendations
regarding the best interests of the
minor child, in relation to the
proposed relocation of the applicant with him, within one month of
the granting of the order; and
2.2
Professor Gertie Pretorius, a clinical
psychologist, was appointed to investigate and make recommendations
regarding the best interests
of the minor child, in relation to the
proposed relocation of the applicant with him.
[3]
Professor Pretorius released her report on 30
November 2023, which report was provided to the Office of the Family
Advocate on their
request.
[4]
The Family Advocate filed their report on 18 March
2024, the day before the matter was heard.
[5]
The Applicant launched Part B of the application
on an urgent basis on 26 February 2024 on the basis that she received
a call on
21 February 2024 indicating that there was only one place
left in the Afrikaans stream at Curro for the second term which
commences
on 3 April 2024.
[6]
At the hearing of the matter counsel for the
Applicant submitted that the legal test for relocation matters is the
reasonableness
of the decision to relocate and whether the relocating
parent’s decision is bona fide. The Applicant listed a number
of factors
which she took into account when considering a relocation
to Ballito. There is no doubt in my mind that the decision was
taken in a thoughtful manner and that the Applicant’s decision
had nothing to do with creating distance between the Respondent
and
the minor child.
[7]
Likewise the Respondent has justifiable reasons
for his refusal to agree to the relocation and this Court sees
nothing to censure
the Respondent in his dogged refusal to agree to
the relocation.
[8]
It was clear from all the affidavits, Professor
Pretorius’s report and even the Family Advocate’s report
that this proposed
relocation has caused J[...] enormous stress and
anxiety. He has clearly verbalised to both Professor Pretorius and
the Family
Counsellor as well as both the parties that he does not
want to move and wants everything to remain the same.
[9]
Counsel for the Applicant submitted that the
Family Advocate report is defective in that it is piggy backing off
Professor Pretorius’s
investigation and report, and in addition
the Family Advocate and Counsellor created the impression that a
future meeting would
be convened. The report is helpful in that
it corroborates Professor Pretorius’s findings vis a vis
J[...]’s
desire for everything to remain the same.
[10]
Counsel for the Applicant was insistent that in
reaching a decision, I should have regard to the matter of
LW
v DB
2020 (1) SA 169
(GJ) where Judge
Satchwell summarises the legal principles that a court must consider
when adjudicating relocation matters and
exhorted me to find in
favour of the relocation.
[11]
Counsel for the Respondent argued that the
abovementioned matter was distinguishable from the current matter as
the minor child
in
LW v DB
was only four years old and J[...] is already 11.
Moreover, J[...] has his residence jointly with the parties and
spends equal amount
of time with each parent which was not the case
in
LW v DB
,
where the applicant was the primary residential parent.
[12]
Section 9 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005
unequivocally states that “in all matters concerning the care,
protection
and well-being of a child the standard that the child’s
best interest is of paramount importance, must be applied.”
[13]
If I have regard to the best interests of child
standard as set out in section 7 of the Children’s Act, I
cannot escape the
conclusion that forcing J[...] to relocate will not
be in his best interests. Professors Pretorius’s report
makes it
clear that J[...] is equally bonded to both his parents and
forcing him to leave Johannesburg will negatively impact on his
relationship
with the Respondent. Electronic contact and
alternate weekends do not make up for the lived experience of seeing
both parents
weekly. Furthermore he is entrenched in his school and
social circles and disruptions to this, on top of the disruption to
his
relationship with the Respondent weigh heavily against the
reasons for relocation.
[14]
Whilst counsel for Applicant correctly pointed out
that regard must be had to the Applicant’s constitutional
enshrined right
to freedom of movement, of association and freedom to
pursue her professional aspirations, this has to be weighed against
the potential
harm to the minor child if he is forced to relocate.
[15]
There is no proof that the Applicant cannot pursue
her professional aspirations by remaining in Johannesburg and
travelling to Ballito
when she is required to be there in person. The
Applicant has a partner who is already in Ballito to assist her. In
the same way
that the Applicant maintains that electronic contact
between the minor child and the Respondent is a mitigating factor in
support
of her relocation, the same thinking can be applied to her
business.
[16]
In
McCaLL v McCaLL
1994 (3) SA 201
(C) the Court stated in
the context of a relocation application, that the “Court is not
adjudicating a dispute between antagonists
with conflicting interests
in order to resolve their discordance. The Court's concern is for the
child”. It is inevitable
that in all relocation matters,
one of the parties will be unhappy with the decision and this is no
different.
[17]
The Court also confirmed that, if a Court is
satisfied that a “child has the necessary intellectual and
emotional maturity
to give in his/her expression of a preference a
genuine and accurate reflection of his feelings towards and
relationship with each
of his parents, in other words to make an
informed and intelligent judgment, weight should be given to his/her
expressed preference.”
[18]
Counsel for the Respondent provided a very helpful
table in her heads of argument which I have appropriated hereunder:
JOHANNESBURG
BALLITO
Continue
in Afrikaans schooling
Change
to English school with Afrikaans stream
Settled
and familiar home environments with both parents
New
and unfamiliar home environment with only one parent
Enrolled
in same school for 6 years
Unknown,
new school
Continues
with Grade 7 in known school environm
Change
of schools between two school terms
Friendships
since pre-school. Friends indicated at Family Advocate as L[...[n,
L[...]m, H[...], Lu[...] and C[...].
Friendship
with one child made during holidays
Settled
and happy in current school
Uncertainty
and displeasure about having to start new school
All
significant relationships in Johannesburg would be maintained as
they are currently
Child
will have mother, stepfather and half-brother and grandmother in
daily routine
Teachers
since January 2024
New
teachers
Continue
with theraphy at Ms Sharp
New
therapist
[19]
For all the reasons set out above, I cannot find
in favour of the Applicant and must refuse her application to
relocate with the
minor child.
[20]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1. The Rules pertaining
to notice, and service are dispensed with and this application
is heard as one of urgency in
accordance with the provisions of Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
2. The application is
denied.
3. No order as to costs.
LANGE AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the
Applicant:
Adv K Meyer
Instructed
by:
Mr R van Reenen
For the
Respondent:
Adv L Keisjer
Instructed
by:
Lombard & Partners
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