Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 597South Africa
A.O v C.O (2020/41165) [2024] ZAGPJHC 597 (20 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## A.O v C.O (2020/41165) [2024] ZAGPJHC 597 (20 June 2024)
A.O v C.O (2020/41165) [2024] ZAGPJHC 597 (20 June 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2020-41165
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
20
June 2024
In
the matter between
A[...]
O[...]
Applicant / Defendant
And
C[..]
O[...]
Respondent / Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
VON
LUDWIG AJ
[1]
This is an Opposed Rule 43 Application for spousal maintenance and a
contribution to legal costs.
[2]
The Applicant requires the Respondent to be liable for:
a. House Payment
b. City of
Johannesburg
c. Estate Levies
d. House
maintenance
e. Household basic
groceries and cleaning materials
f. Insurance
household
g. ADSL
h. Domestic worker
i. Garden service
j. Medical aid
k. Car instalment
l. Car insurance
m. Car maintenance
n. Repair and
replacement of household appliances
o. Repair and
replacement of kitchenware, linen and towels and other household
items
p. Maintenance
pendente lite of R4 266
q. A contribution
to legal costs of R301 659
[3]
Respondent (contending that Applicant spends little time at the house
in question) tenders:
a. To retain
Applicant on his medical aid at his cost
b. To pay her motor
vehicle insurance
c. To make a
contribution to her legal costs of R62 584 in monthly
instalments of R10 000.
[4]
Today the Applicant asks:
a. That the matter
be removed from the roll
b. That the
Respondent pays the Applicant’s wasted costs on an attorney
client scale
c. That the
Respondent must file an FDF “for the purposes of the Rule 43
application” within 10 days
d. That the
Respondent’s Supplementary Affidavit be admitted and the
Applicant be given ten days to file a supplementary
affidavit within
10 days of the Respondent filing his updated FDF\
[5]
The Respondent contends :
a. The Respondent’s
Supplementary Affidavit of 06 May should be allowed in terms of Rule
43(5)
b. His tender
contained in paragraphs 150.1 to 150.3 of his Sworn Reply must
be made an Order of Court.
c. Any application
for removal should be refused.
[6] A
Financial Disclosure Form (“FDF”) is required in terms of
paragraph 3.5 of the Judge President’s Practice
Directive 2 of
2020 issued on 14 January 2020 to be exchanged between the parties
“
in an opposed divorce action in which maintenance or
proprietary relief is in dispute and/or in every opposed Rule 43
application
in which maintenance is in dispute.”
(3.5.1)
[7]
3.5.2 provides that in an opposed divorce action both parties must
exchange their FDFs “
no later than ten court days after the
defendant delivers his/her plea
.”
[8]
3.5.3.1 provides that in an opposed Rule 43 application the FDFs must
be exchanged “
no later than 5 days after the respondent has
delivered his/her sworn reply;”
[9]
Applicant contends that even though Respondent filed an FDF after the
Plea he is also required to file one after his R43
Sworn Statement.
The Respondent contends that once an FDF is filed another is not
required.
[10]
3.5 uses the words “and/or”. Applicant contends that
“and” requires two FDFs to be “filed”
(although the Directive requires a reciprocal “exchange”)
[11] A
first point to note is that the Directive speaks of “
A
”
financial disclosure “form” (in the singular) as opposed
to “financial disclosure forms”.
[12]
Putting these sections together to read as one sentence helps to
derive the ordinary meaning. The first uses only the
word “
and
”
of the “
and/or
”
“
A Financial
Disclosure Form must be completed…..to be exchanged between
the parties….in an opposed divorce action
in which maintenance
or proprietary relief is sought
and
in every
opposed Rule 43 application in which maintenance is sought. In any
opposed divorce action… both parties must exchange…
their respective FDFs no later than 10 court days after the defendant
delivers (the plea) plea and in any opposed Rule 43 application
…..the applicant and respondent must exchange… their
respective FDFs no later than 5 days after the Respondent’s
sworn reply is delivered
”
[13] “And”
seems to qualify the 2 processes in which “A Financial
Disclosure Form” must be completed,
and not to qualify the
Financial Disclosure Form itself.
[14]
Likewise if we do the same and use only the word “
or
”
of the “
and/or
”.
[15]
“
A Financial Disclosure Form must be completed…..to
be exchanged between the parties….in an opposed divorce action
in which maintenance or proprietary relief is sought
or
in every opposed Rule 43 application in which maintenance is sought.
In any opposed divorce action… both parties must exchange…
their respective FDFs no later than 10 court days after the defendant
delivers (the plea) plea or in any opposed Rule 43 application
…..the
applicant and respondent must exchange… their respective FDFs
no later than 5 days after the Respondent’s
sworn reply is
delivered
”
[16]
Neither sentence infers any sense of more than one FDF per party.
[17]
The fact that there is only one standard Financial Disclosure Form
advances the argument that only one document was intended
to be
completed only once. The Form used is not a different one if it is
filed after the Plea or of it is filed after the Rule
43 papers. What
then would be the purpose of exchanging the same form twice in what
will almost always be close proximity?
[18]
Examining how a divorce action generally proceeds is instructive
[19]
After service of Summons the Defendant generally (distance excepted)
has 5 days to deliver Notice of Intention to Defend
and 20 to deliver
a Plea. The “trigger” for the FDF is the Plea. The FDFs
would be exchanged no later than 10 days
after the Plea. The outside
parameter is thus 35 days after service of Summons.
[20]
If a Rule 43 application were served simultaneously with the Summons,
the Opposing Sworn Statement would be due within
10 days, and the
FDFs exchanged no later than 5 days thereafter. The R43 Respondent’s
Sworn Statement would be the FDF trigger
and the FDF’s outside
parameter would be 15 days.
[21]
This would generally be the shortest time between the two processes.
[22]
The “first” FDF would thus be due at latest on day 15. If
the interpretation for two FDFs is correct a second
would be due at
latest on day 35, only 20 days later. There can be no rationale or
justification for a repeat of the same document
only 20 days later,
especially since the FDF is at minimum 26 pages long, requires
significant annexures and is a document which
needs care, time and
attention to prepare and must be properly deposed before a
Commissioner of Oaths. It is not an insignificant
or “quick”
document. When the exchange is in close proximity the content will be
the same and there can be no justification
whatsoever for an argument
that the Directive intended two.
[23]
In practice, pleadings are not always delivered within the time
periods prescribed by the Rules. Not all Rule 43 applications
are
served simultaneously with or even close to Summons. Can this be used
in support of an argument that a second FDF is what the
Directive
intended?
[24] The
Directive makes no reference to lengths of time between main action
pleadings and Rule 43 Sworn Statements, which
it would do if it
intended to cater for different requirements in different time
parameters.
[25] Having
regard to the much-shortened time periods in which Family Law matters
can be brought to adjudication in the new
Family Courts there are
unlikely to be many matters in which the details disclosed in the
FDFs exchanged pursuant to the first
“trigger” are out of
date by the time the second trigger occurs.
[26]
Even if this does occasionally occur, there are other ways in which a
Court and parties can access documents and details,
and there would
still not be any motivation to suggest that an entire second (even if
new or partially new) FDF is mandatory.
[27]
It is important also to understand that the trigger events for the
exchange of the FDFs occur not at the hearing stage
of matters, but
at the preparation stage just after the cases of both parties have
been put to paper. Between the FDF exchange
and adjudication of the
main divorce action there are numerous other methods to address
absence of current or relevant information
and documents. Even in a
Rule 43 application, depending on where in the process it is brought,
many of these processes may have
taken place, but even if not, the
Court may obtain the information pursuant to R43(5).
[28]
The FDF is one of the many tools of litigation. Early disclosure by
FDF can assist Family Law litigants to achieve correct
results sooner
and more cost effectively than they would without it, but the FDF is
not the only, or even the most important, tool
in every financially
oriented divorce. Hence one FDF is sufficient to achieve its purpose.
[29]
The FDF does not replace or oust
inter alia
, the power of the
Court in a Rule 43 application to call for further information in
terms of R43(5) and
mero motu
if same is needed to properly
adjudicate the application.
[30]
Discovery, subpoenas, expert evidence and notices, the pre-trial
conference process, a Request for Further Particulars
for the
Purposes of Trial and the exchange of Rule 33(4) Agendas and replies
are all still available to the litigants in divorce
actions.
[31]
There thus seems to be no purpose or rationale for two FDFs being
required.
[32] If
a second FDF was required, its sole reasonable purpose would be to
update some information contained in an outdated
first FDF. It is
highly unlikely that the entire FDF content would change during the
course of a divorce, save in the most exceptional
circumstances and
those could properly, with no prejudice to either litigant, be dealt
with as contemplated above. To require a
further exchange of
comprehensive FDF documents to cater for those eventualities cannot
be what the Directive intends.
[33]
I therefore find that the Directive does not require more than one
exchange of FDFs, at whichever of the trigger points
occurs the
soonest, and that the Applicant’s contention that it is
mandatory for the Respondent to file a second FDF “for
the
purposes of the Rule 43 Application” is without foundation.
[34]
In light of the finding that there is no mandatory requirement for a
second FDF (which, I add, is not to be “filed”
but is to
be “exchanged” and which would thus require the
Applicant to do likewise), and that there follows no
distinction
between an “FDF for the purposes of the main divorce
action” and a “R43 FDF” the Applicant’s
prayer for costs must fail.
[35]
It is worth noting that none of the three FDFs was filed in
accordance with the Directive. Each was unilaterally submitted,
seemingly at times of each litigant’s own choosing. There was
no “exchange” and the first trigger for the exchange
(namely 10 days after the Plea) was ignored. Neither chose to avail
themselves of the provision of 3.5.6 of the Directive to compel
the
other’s FDF. The Applicant then went on, totally unrelated to
either of the trigger dates, and thus contrary to the argument
advanced on her own behalf herein, to file an “amended”
FDF a few days after launching this Rule 43 Application.
[36]
It is clear from the times during the litigation at which the FDFs
were filed that neither party has paid heed to the
actual purpose of
an FDF and what use a litigant is to make of it. It seems unwise for
the submissions made on the Applicant’s
behalf herein to have
been so made in the context of her disregard of the Directive to
date.
[37]
What of the Respondent’s submission that the application was
ready to be heard and must proceed, the more so because
it was
Applicant who set it down (again) and because the application is
based almost entirely on the Respondent’s FDF?
[38] The
very reservation of judgment to adjudicate on the basis for the
Applicant’s argument to remove the application
from the roll
resulted in the application not proceeding on the merits. Does
the Respondent thus have a costs remedy against
the Applicant?
[39]
Respondent made much of “finality” in this Rule 43
Application. He is however not prejudiced by the delay.
The Applicant
seeks payments from him. The longer the Application is delayed the
longer Applicant does not secure such payments.
A self-evident
benefit (and a self-inflicted prejudice to Applicant it seems).
[40]
A R43 Application is an Interim Application and does not delay the
prosecution of the Main Divorce Action. He is not
bound to await the
outcome hereof before he proceeds with the main action. His right to
overall “finality” is not affected
by the pursuit of or
delay in this Rule 43 application.
[41]
He too came to Court not entirely ready to proceed, asking for his
Supplementary Affidavit of 06 May 2024 to be admitted,
but this was a
simple and quick issue with the main focus being on the “2
nd
FDF” issue.
[42]
It was only in a 04 June 2024 letter, scant days before the hearing
on 10 June 2024, that the Applicant raised, for the
very first time,
the alleged mandatory need for Respondent to “file” a
“
financial disclosure form within 5 days of the filing of
his formal reply in the application
” and contended that,
his FDF having been filed “
in the context of the principle
matrimonial proceedings…some two years ago”,
that
FDF “
cannot, on any construction, constitute compliance with
this provision of the relevant Practice Directive
”
[43]
As the chronology of process shows, neither litigant complied with
the Directive’s requirement that “
both parties must
exchange…their respective FDFs no later than ten court days
after the defendant delivers his/her plea
”.
[44]
Given my finding that there is no distinction between an FDF filed
after the plea and an FDF filed after the R43 Opposing
Affidavit, the
allegation that the Respondent’s FDF was non-compliant because
it was filed “
in the context of the principle matrimonial
proceedings
” was not correct.
[45]
There is no Directive as to “expiry” of an FDF; hence its
filing “
some two years ago
” likewise did not
render it non-compliant.
[46]
The only sense in which that FDF might be said to be non-compliant
was that it was not “exchanged” no later
than 10 days
after the Defendant’s Plea was filed. However the Applicant did
not bring an Application to Compel it on time,
did not adhere to the
requirement for an exchange, and filed hers out of compliance with
the Directive too. It is nowhere suggested
that FDFs submitted or
exchanged at times not compliant with the Directive are somehow
disqualified from use or in some way “
pro non scripto
”
(and if it were suggested my view is that suggestion would be
incorrect).
[47]
In a second letter of 09 June 2024 the Applicant’s attorney
persisted that the then-relevant Directive required
Respondent to
file another FDF, this one 5 days after his R43 Affidavit, on 25
January 2024.
[48]
These letters, presumably advanced to support Applicant’s claim
for punitive costs against the Respondent, do the
converse. They set
out submissions which have been found to have no basis, which the
Respondent was accordingly correct to reject.
[49]
Respondent cannot reasonably have been expected to accept the
proposal that the filing of the “required”
FDF from the
Respondent would be unilateral, as the Directive clearly provides for
“exchange”.
[50]
The proposal that the Applicant be permitted to file a supplementary
affidavit in the application within 2 weeks of receiving
the
Respondent’s second FDF does not flow from any reading of the
Directive. It is trite that a Rule 43 Application is limited
to 2
Affidavits unless the Court permits more. Respondent could not be
expected to agree. (It cannot on any reading of this correspondence
be suggested that all the Applicant sought was an opportunity to
address the short Supplementary Affidavit of 06 May).
[51]
Respondent was not offered the same, namely to receive an exchange of
FDFs and also to file an Affidavit with 2 weeks
thereof. Even had he
been so offered, there is no basis for the in R43 or in the Directive
and his rejection would have been justified.
[52]
Respondent cannot be blamed for rejecting this entire unfounded
proposal and thus cannot be blamed for not agreeing to
the
application being removed from the roll.
[53]
That Applicant sought removal from the roll on these unsubstantiated
(and Directive and Rule 43 non-complaint) conditions
seems even more
egregious when she had earlier refused the Respondent’s request
to remove the matter due to counsel’s
unavailability.
[54] Who
in fact then wasted the costs of 11 June 2024?
[55]
Clearly the Applicant did so by requiring Respondent’s
compliance with something that the relevant Directive does
not
require (the 2
nd
FDF), and by further imposing
unsubstantiated and unreasonable conditions for the matter’s
removal from the roll which the
Respondent could not have been
expected to accept.
[56]
For such reason the Respondent’s wasted costs of 11 June are to
be paid by the Applicant, on the party and party
scale.
[57]
All that remains is to admit the Respondent’s Supplementary
Affidavit of 06 May 2023, which is short and which
directly addresses
current information on a business of the Applicant which may not have
been available to the Respondent when
he submitted his Sworn
Affidavit. It appears relevant to the issues to be adjudicated and
for the Court to arrive at a just and
expeditious decision and as
such may be admitted in terms of R43(5) subject to the Applicant’s
right to file an Affidavit
dealing only with its content as I order
below. The application to admit same cannot be contended to be the
reason for the matter
not proceeding on 11 June, especially in light
of Respondent’s counsel’s tender to withdraw same if it
were the reason
for the matter not to proceed. Hence this does not
affect the costs order I make above.
Order
a. The Applicant’s
prayer that the Respondent must file an FDF “for the purposes
of the Rule 43 application”
within 10 days is dismissed.
b. The Applicant’s
prayer that she be given ten days to file a supplementary affidavit
within 10 days of the Respondent
filing his updated FDF is
consequently also dismissed.
c. The Applicant
shall pay the costs of the Respondent of 11 June 2024
d. The Respondent’s
Supplementary Affidavit of 06 May 2024 is admitted and the Applicant
is given ten days from date
of emailing of this Order to the parties
to serve and upload to Caselines an Affidavit dealing only with the
content thereof.
e. The costs
pertaining to the Respondent’s Supplementary Affidavit and the
Applicant’s Affidavit dealing with
the content thereof are
reserved for the Court hearing the Rule 43 Application.
f. The Rule 43
Application is postponed sine die.
C
VON LUDWIG AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading
to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
20 June 2024.
Heard:
11 June 2024
Delivered:
20 June 2024
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. D Hodge
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Steve Merchak Attorneys
Respondent's
Counsel:
Adv. L. Bedeker
Respondent
Attorneys:
Minnie & Du Preez Incorporated
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