Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 416South Africa
D.A v D.T.M (2021/23816) [2024] ZAGPJHC 416 (26 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 April 2024
Headnotes
this ‘now settled’ approach to interpretation, is a ‘unitary’ exercise. This means that interpretation is to be approached holistically: simultaneously considering the text, context and purpose.”
Judgment
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## D.A v D.T.M (2021/23816) [2024] ZAGPJHC 416 (26 April 2024)
D.A v D.T.M (2021/23816) [2024] ZAGPJHC 416 (26 April 2024)
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sino date 26 April 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 – Maintenance –
Writ
of execution
–
Reliance
on terms of settlement agreement – Large amount included for
stabling of horse – Clause referring to
child’s extra
mural activities and hobbies – On textual approach to
settlement agreement the stabling costs do
not fall within clause
– Amount of writ is wrong – Little point in suspending
writ instead of setting it aside
– Nothing that might occur
following suspension of writ would cure that defect – Writ
of execution set aside.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2021/23816
REPORTABLE
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
DATE:
26/04/2024
In
the matter between:
D[...],
A[...]
Applicant
AND
D[...]:
T[...] M[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
GREEN,
AJ
1
The
Applicant and Respondent were previously married to each other.
The order of divorce incorporates an Agreement of Settlement
which
provides for, amongst other things, maintenance to be paid in respect
of the child born of the marriage.
2
The
papers reveal that the interactions between the Applicant and the
Respondent in respect of the maintenance for the child have
been
fractious. Matters came to a head when the Respondent issued a
writ of execution against the Applicant for maintenance
which she
alleged was due. The Applicant applies to set aside the writ on
two grounds:
2.1
firstly,
the Applicant says that he has complied with his obligations in terms
of the Settlement Agreement; and
2.2
secondly,
he says that the amount claimed in the writ is incorrect.
3
It
is necessary to say something about the papers that have been filed
in this matter. The issue ought to have been a simple
one –
was there a basis for the issuing of the writ and is the amount
correct? However, the issues that are canvassed
in the papers
range far and wide dealing with all manner of disputes between the
Applicant and the Respondent, some going back
to whether an amount
relating to the sale of the immovable property should be paid by the
Applicant to the Respondent. There
are also multiple issues
raised in respect of various aspects relating to the maintenance of
the child. These issues ought
not to have been raised in this
application, and those responsible for preparing the papers, who were
not the counsel that appeared
before me, should in future endeavour
to deal only with the issues that are relevant to an application and
not unnecessarily expand
the matter.
4
A
further issue that requires comment is the tone that is adopted in
the papers and the correspondence that was exchanged.
Whilst
parties who were previously married to each other have lost their
love and affection for each other, and may even harbour
animosity to
each other, that ought to be put to one side when the interests of a
child born of the marriage are considered.
Resort to
allegations of ulterior motives,
mala
fides
and
the employment of emotive and adjectival language in correspondence
and affidavits does little to progress issues and reach
a sensible
resolution.
5
I
make the observations, which I have set out above, in the hope that
they will provide guidance to both the parties and those responsible
for preparing the papers in this matter in future.
6
I
turn now to the merits of this application.
7
When
the Respondent issued the writ, she, as is customary, deposed to an
affidavit and attached a schedule setting out how the amount
claimed
in the writ was made up (“the Schedule”).
8
The
Schedule commences with an opening balance. No explanation is
provided as how that opening balance is made up, or what it
represents.
During argument, the Respondent’s counsel
informed me that over time the Applicant and Respondent had exchanged
a spreadsheet
representing amounts due and amounts that had been
paid, and that the opening balance follows from that spreadsheet.
That
may be so, but there is still no explanation on the papers of
what the opening balance is.
9
By
far the largest amount set out in the Schedule is said to be in
respect of “Stabling”. The papers include a
number
of invoices issued by various horse stables and it seems that the
description of “Stabling” in the Schedule
is the
shorthand that was used for that which is set out in the invoices
issued by the stables. The invoices issued by the
stables
reveal that the amounts claimed are in respect of the stabling and
feeding costs of a horse, the medical costs of a horse
and dressage
lessons either on a group basis or a private basis.
10
The
latter part of the Schedule sets about adding and deducting various
amounts to arrive at the total that is claimed in the writ.
The
Schedule provides no explanation for these amounts, they are not
explained in the affidavit in support of the writ, and the
papers
filed in this application did not explain these amounts. During
argument the Respondent’s counsel pointed out
that if one has
regard to some of the emails that the parties exchanged then it is
possible to work out that one of the additional
amounts claimed is in
respect of what is alleged to be shortfall owed by the Applicant in
respect of the costs of the divorce.
That is seemingly
correct. However, on my reading, it is not possible to work out
what the other amounts are for.
11
A
further issue which emerges from the papers is that after the writ
had been issued the Applicant paid certain amounts in respect
of
maths lessons and school fees. Although the writ purports to be
issued primarily for stabling costs, both parties sought
to deduct
the payments made for the maths lessons and the school fees from the
amount claimed in the writ. I raised this
with counsel during
the argument and asked why, what are seemingly disparate amounts, are
being set off? If stabling
costs are owed, then those
remain owing notwithstanding that payments are made for maths lessons
and school fees.
12
An
issue that looms large in this matter is whether the Applicant is
liable for the stabling costs that are claimed in the writ.
In
the papers the Respondent has relied on the terms of the Settlement
Agreement concluded between the parties as being the basis
upon which
she alleges the Applicant is liable for those costs. It is
therefore necessary to consider the terms of the Settlement
Agreement.
# 13Any
enquiry into the interpretation of a contract must adhere to the now
settled approach to interpretation. This approach
is well
established by cases likeEndumeni[1]andBlaire
Athol.[2]
13
Any
enquiry into the interpretation of a contract must adhere to the now
settled approach to interpretation. This approach
is well
established by cases like
Endumeni
[1]
and
Blaire
Athol.
[2]
# 14In
the recent Constitutional Court judgment inUniversity
of Johannesburg,[3]the present position was captured as follows:
14
In
the recent Constitutional Court judgment in
University
of Johannesburg
,
[3]
the present position was captured as follows:
“
This
approach to interpretation requires that ‘from the outset one
considers the context and the language together, with neither
predominating over the other’. In Chisuse, although
speaking in the context of statutory interpretation, this Court
held
that this ‘now settled’ approach to interpretation, is a
‘unitary’ exercise. This means that
interpretation
is to be approached holistically: simultaneously considering the
text, context and purpose.”
The
approach in Endumeni ‘updated’ the previous position,
which was that context could be resorted to if there was ambiguity
or
lack of clarity in the text.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has explicitly pointed out in cases
subsequent to Endumeni that context and purpose must be taken into
account as a matter of course, whether or not the words used in the
contract are ambiguous
.
A
court interpreting a contract has to, from the onset, consider the
contract’s factual matrix, its purpose, the circumstances
leading up to its conclusion, and the knowledge at the time of those
who negotiated and produced the contract
.”
[4]
(emphasis added)
15
The
general approach to interpreting contracts may be summarized as
follows:
15.1
Interpretation
is objective, not subjective.
[5]
It does not involve a search for the intention of the contracting
parties.
15.2
A
document must be considered by always having regard to the text,
context and purpose at the same time (a unitary interpretation
exercise).
[6]
15.3
Context
and purpose are informed by “
material
known to those responsible”
for
the production of the contract.
[7]
15.4
“
Context
”
is
not an open invitation for evidence that adds to, or modifies, words
in a contract.
[8]
15.5
Insensible
and unbusinesslike results should be avoided, where the text
allows.
[9]
15.6
The
way in which the parties to a contract carried out their agreement
may be considered as part of the contextual setting to ascertain
the
meaning of a disputed term.
[10]
16 The
relevant clauses of the Settlement Agreement are to be found in
clause 4 which in relevant part
provides:
“
4
Maintenance
for the minor child
4.1
The
Defendant shall, in respect of the minor child, make payment of the
following costs:
4.1.1 such
costs in connection with a secondary education at schools agreed upon
between the parties as set
out herein:
…
4.1.1.4
66.6%
(SIXTY SIX, SIX PERENTUM) of all or any extra murals (sic)
activities, hobbies and any associated costs relating to the minor
child’s extra mural activities or extra-curricular activities
which the minor child might wish to undertake, provided that
the
Defendant has been consulted in connection therewith.
…
4.2
The
parties agree that any tertiary educational costs of the minor child
will be shared equally between the parties. The choice
of tertiary
education, location of the institution, choice of field of study and
the accommodation during the attendance at such
institution shall be
agreed to by all parties concerned before any costs are incurred.”
17
The
Settlement Agreement goes on to provide that the Applicant will pay
R12,500 per month towards the maintenance of the child and
that:
“
Such
maintenance shall cease when the minor child reaches the age of 18
years or becomes self-supporting.”
18
The
Respondent’s counsel urged me to find that the stabling costs
are included under clause 4.1.1.4 of the Settlement Agreement.
That clause is not the model of clarity. It starts off by
saying that an amount has to be paid “
in
respect of all or any extra murals (sic) activities, hobbies and any
associated costs
”
,
but goes on to refer to the child’s “
extra
mural activities or extra-curricular activities
”
.
So, in the first part, the clause relates to hobbies but does not do
so in the second part, and in the second part it relates
to
extra-curricular activities but does not do so in the first part.
19 What
is clear is that clause 4.1.1.4 operates in respect of costs in
connection with the child’s
education at secondary school, and
that anchors the clause to school activities.
20 In
my view, and applying the text context and purpose approach to the
interpretation of the Settlement
Agreement, stabling fees do not fall
within the ambit of clause 4.1.1.4. I say this because in
context that which is contemplated
in clause 4.1.1.4 are extra mural
or extra-curricular activities that are linked to the child’s
school. Dressage from
which the stabling fees arise does not,
in my view, typically fall within the ambit of extra mural or
extra-curricular activities
that are linked to the child’s
school, and the papers do not provide facts to suggest that this may
be so. I am mindful that
the reference to “
hobbies
”
may
be wider than extra mural or extra-curricular activities, but again
the hobby is linked the child’s school, and the papers
do not
provide facts to demonstrate that dressage is a school linked hobby.
21
On
a textual approach to the Settlement Agreement the stabling costs do
not fall within clause 4.1.1.4 of the Settlement Agreement.
22 A
further point of relevance is that for some time the stabling fees
were not claimed by the Applicant
as part of the maintenance that was
due in terms of the Settlement Agreement. If the stabling fees had
consistently been claimed
as being due in terms of the Settlement
Agreement than they would presumably have been included in the
spreadsheet that the parties
kept recording amounts due and payments
made, and the opening balance of the Schedule would have included the
stabling fees. This
is subsequent conduct of the parties that is
relevant to the interpretation of the Settlement Agreement.
23 I
therefore find that the stabling costs which are claimed in the writ
do not fall within the ambit of
the Settlement Agreement. It follows
from this finding that the amount of the writ is wrong.
24
My
finding that the stabling fees do not fall within the ambit of the
Settlement Agreement is expressly not a finding that the Applicant
is
not liable for those expenses. Whether the Applicant is liable for
the stabling fees is a separate question to whether they
are included
in the Settlement Agreement. Stated differently, the Settlement
Agreement does not define, by limitation, the
Applicant’s
maintenance obligations to the child. Whether the Applicant ought to
pay for the stabling fees will depend on
an assessment of the
lifestyle to which the child has become accustomed and the Applicant
and Respondent’s financial means.
When this enquiry is
undertaken the fact that the child has for several years participated
in dressage will have to be taken into
account when assessing what
the child has become accustomed to. That is an enquiry which is
beyond the scope of this application
and the papers before me do not
deal with it.
25
During
argument the Respondent’s counsel urged me not to set aside the
writ but to instead suspend its operation. There
was a debate
with counsel for both the Applicant and the Respondent on what would
become of the matter if I were to suspend the
operation of the writ.
Both counsel were asked to submit a note setting out what options
would be available to the parties
in the event of the writ being
suspended as opposed to being set aside. The note was provided, and I
am grateful to counsel for
their assistance.
26
I
have carefully considered whether I should accede to the Respondent’s
request that the writ should be suspended as opposed
to being set
aside. It seems to me that, given my finding that stabling fees
do not fall within the scope of the Settlement
Agreement, and that
the amount of the writ is wrong, there is little point in suspending
the writ instead of setting it aside.
This is so because the
writ ought not to have been issued and nothing that might occur
following the suspension of the writ would
cure that defect. I
will therefore order that the writ should be set aside.
# 27 That
leaves the question of costs. Both parties urged that costs
should be granted in their favour.
In my view, the issuing of
the writ and the bringing of this application ought not to have been
necessary. The parties ought to
have engaged each other to resolve
the issue in the best interests of the child. On my assessment
of the papers, both parties
are at fault in allowing circumstances to
develop that precipitated this application and both parties are at
fault in preparing
the papers in the manner they were presented.
For that reason, and in the exercise of my discretion, I will make no
order
as to costs.
27 That
leaves the question of costs. Both parties urged that costs
should be granted in their favour.
In my view, the issuing of
the writ and the bringing of this application ought not to have been
necessary. The parties ought to
have engaged each other to resolve
the issue in the best interests of the child. On my assessment
of the papers, both parties
are at fault in allowing circumstances to
develop that precipitated this application and both parties are at
fault in preparing
the papers in the manner they were presented.
For that reason, and in the exercise of my discretion, I will make no
order
as to costs.
# 28 For
the reasons set out above, I make the following order:
28 For
the reasons set out above, I make the following order:
## 1. The
writ of execution issued by this court on 20 September 2022 under
Case No. 2021/23816 for payment
of the amount of R101 082.22 by the
Applicant is set aside.
1. The
writ of execution issued by this court on 20 September 2022 under
Case No. 2021/23816 for payment
of the amount of R101 082.22 by the
Applicant is set aside.
## 2. There
is no order as to costs.
2. There
is no order as to costs.
##
I.
GREEN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 26 April 2024
and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e mail and
by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed to be 26 April 2024.
Date
of hearing:
18 April 2024
Date
of delivery of judgment: 26 April 2024
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff:
Adv T. Cartens
Instructed
by:
Boela Van Der Merwe Attorneys Inc
For
the defendant:
Adv B. Smith
Instructed
by:
Ross Munro Attorneys
#
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA).
[2]
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan v Blair Atholl Homeowners Association
2019
(3) SA 398 (SCA).
[3]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
2021
(6) SA 1
(CC)
.
[4]
At paras 65 to 67.
[5]
Endumeni
at
para 18, fn 21; See also
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma and Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
2014
(2) SA 494
(SCA); para 18.
[6]
University
of Johannesburg
at
para 65.
[7]
Endumeni
at para 18, fn 21.
[8]
University
of Johannesburg
supra,
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments
194 (Pty) Ltd and
others 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA).
[9]
Endumeni
at para 18, fn 21
[10]
Comwezi Security Services (Pty) Ltd v Cape Empowerment Trust Limited
2012 JDR 1734 (SCA) at para 15.
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