Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 814South Africa
P.N v T.N and Others (2021/31102) [2024] ZAGPJHC 814 (14 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## P.N v T.N and Others (2021/31102) [2024] ZAGPJHC 814 (14 August 2024)
P.N v T.N and Others (2021/31102) [2024] ZAGPJHC 814 (14 August 2024)
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sino date 14 August 2024
SAFLII
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1. REPORTABLE: YES/NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
3. REVISED:
14 August 2024
CASE NO: 2021/31102
In the matter between:
N[…]
: P[…] P[…]
(Born L[…])
Applicant
and
N[...]:
T[...] J[...]
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SEGAL AJ:
[1]
This is an application in terms of Uniform
Rule of Court 42(1) (a) and (c) for the recission of an order granted
by the Honourable
Acting Justice Moorcroft on 29 April 2022 (“
the
order
”).
[2]
The order provided that:-
2.1
the marriage between the Plaintiff and
Defendant is dissolved;
2.2
the deed of settlement at Caselines 008-4
to 008-11 is hereby made an order of court.
[3]
The agreement of settlement had been signed
on 6 May 2021 and Summons for a decree of divorce was issued on 30
June 2021. The Summons
was personally served on the Applicant on 16
August 2021 and on 25 August 2021, the Applicant instructed her
erstwhile attorneys
to enter an appearance to defend.
[4]
The
Notice of Intention to Defend was filed on 25 August 2021.
[5]
On 13 September 2021, the Applicant’s
erstwhile attorney of record withdrew, and a Notice of Withdrawal as
Attorneys of Record
was delivered.
[6]
On 26 October 2021, a Notice of Bar was
served on the Applicant, and it appears that she failed to deliver a
Plea. In all events,
a Notice of Set Down of the divorce proceedings
on the unopposed divorce roll was served on the Applicant on 8 April
2022.
[7]
The matter came before Acting Justice
Moorcroft on 29 April 2022 when he granted the decree of divorce
together with an order that
the settlement agreement is made an order
of court.
[8]
In this application the Applicant seeks an
order that the order granted by Moorcroft AJ be rescinded on the
basis of a failure on
the part of the First Respondent, (Plaintiff in
the divorce action) to disclose to the court granting the decree of
divorce that
a customary marriage had been concluded between the
parties on 28 March 2016.
[9]
The crux of the Applicant’s grievance
on the papers is the fact that the First Respondent failed to
disclose to the court
that he was already customarily married to the
Applicant on 28 March 2016.
[10]
To this end, the Applicant attaches various
documents in support of her contention that the parties were married
in community of
property. Her case is that had the court granting the
decree of divorce been aware of the fact that the parties were
married in
community of property, the court would not have granted
the decree of divorce or the order incorporating the settlement
agreement.
[11]
Thus, the Applicant contends that the order
was erroneously sought and erroneously granted.
[12]
The Applicant does not seek a recission of
the order in terms of the common law nor does she allege mistake,
fraud, duress, undue
influence or any other valid ground for setting
aside the agreement. The high-water mark of her case is that she had
been admitted
to hospital and diagnosed with depression for seventeen
days in February 2021 and that on 6 May 2021, after she took her
medication,
the First Respondent insisted that she attend with him at
his lawyers where she was presented with documents to sign.
[13]
The Applicant goes on to state that she
later learned that this was the settlement agreement. She does not
contend that she did
not read the document. She states that she only
knew that it confirmed that she and the First Respondent were married
out of community
of property, and that she did not know what the
accrual system meant, or that by signing the settlement agreement the
First Respondent
would “take all the assets”. She does
not say that she didn’t want to sign the agreement or that she
was forced
to do so.
[14]
After having received the Summons together
with the signed settlement agreement, the Applicant consulted an
attorney who delivered
a Notice of Intention to Defend.
[15]
Had the Applicant made out a case for the
setting aside of the agreement on the bases set out in paragraph 12
above, such a case
could have been considered. But the Applicant did
not do so. She brought an application in terms of Rule 42, contending
that the
First Respondent misrepresented to the court that the
parties were married out of community of property with the accrual
system,
when, according to her, the parties were actually married in
community of property. She contends that this fact induced the court
to commit a mistake in law thus rendering Rule 42 (1)(a) applicable
to the matter.
[16]
Rule 42 (1) provides the following:-
“
(1)
The court may, in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu
or upon the application of any
party affected, rescind or vary –
(a) an order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in
the absence of any
party affected thereby; (b) an order or judgment
in which there is an ambiguity, or patent error or omission, but only
to the extent
of such ambiguity, error or mission; (c) an order or
judgment granted as a result of a mistake common to the parties.”
[17]
The First Respondent opposes the
application on various grounds including
inter
alia
:-
18.1
the Applicant’s failure to institute
the application within a reasonable time and her subsequent failure
to apply for condonation;
18.2
a denial that the parties were married in
community of property;
18.3
that the Applicant had failed to make out a
case for the relief sought in this application.
[18]
The First Respondent contends that the
order granted by Moorcroft AJ on 29 March 2022 was not granted
erroneously.
[19]
The First Respondent’s view is that
the Applicant has failed to make out of case in support of the relief
which she seeks
or to satisfy the requirements to succeed on the
basis of an application in terms of Rule 42.
[20]
Notably, the First Respondent points out
that our courts have warned against the recission of a decree of
divorce, given that such
an order would have far reaching
consequences and render the parties remarried.
[21]
The First Respondent also argues that he
was under no obligation and in no position (given that he disputes
it) to disclose to the
court that the parties were married in terms
of customary law. There is no explanation on the Applicant’s
part for:-
22.1
whether she read the agreement;
22.2
whether she obtained advice from her
erstwhile attorneys on her rights;
22.3
why she did not attend at court and bring
to the attention of Moorcroft AJ what she considers to be the
pertinent fact of the parties
having been married in community of
property.
[22]
On this score, the Applicant admits that
she received notice of the set down of the matter and she goes on to
say that the link
for the virtual court was not sent to her. When I
asked the Applicant’s counsel whether she in fact attended
court on the
day of the divorce, he replied in the negative.
THE EFFECT OF
CONCLUDING A SETTLEMENT
[23]
It is common cause that the parties both
signed the agreement of settlement which is attached to these papers.
[24]
A
settlement or “compromise” is in and of itself a contract
which has as its object the prevention, avoidance or termination
of
litigation. It has the effect of
res
iudicata
irrespective of whether it is embodied in an order of court. It is an
absolute defence to any action based on the original claim.
[1]
[25]
A
compromise is a substantive contract which exists independently of
the cause that gave rise to the compromise. Clearly the agreement
relates directly to the
lis
between the parties and the agreement was made an order by consent
between the parties. Once the agreement has been concluded the
court
does not consider the merits of the litigation.
[2]
[26]
In
the absence of a reservation of right to proceed on the original
cause of action, the compromise agreement bars any proceedings
based
on the original cause. In addition, the Defendant is not entitled to
go behind the compromise and raise defences to the original
cause of
action when sued on the compromise.
[3]
[27]
The
only basis upon which a compromise may be set aside is if it was
obtained fraudulently or on the grounds of mistake, provided
that the
error vitiated true consent and did not merely relate to the motive
of the parties or the merits of the dispute, which
was the purpose of
the parties’ compromise.
[4]
[28]
Significantly,
even if the Applicant had made out a case in support of the relief
she seeks in this application, she would still
be faced with the
difficulty of the agreement of settlement having been entered into.
In other words, even if the settlement agreement
were not made an
order of court and even if the decree of divorce were to be revoked
and the parties were to be married again,
it would still not release
the Applicant from the fact that an agreement of settlement had been
concluded.
[29]
Once the agreement of settlement was
signed, the court would not delve into the merits of the underlying
case or lightly interfere
with an agreement reached between the
parties.
[30]
If the Applicant had brought this
application in terms of the common law and made out a case that the
agreement was obtained fraudulently,
or on the grounds of mistake, or
on other contractual defences such as impossibility of performance,
illegality, duress or undue
influence and made out a case in support
of such contentions, then the position might have been different.
[31]
Regrettably, on the facts before me and the
relief, which is sought, I am unable to find that a case has been
made out.
[32]
In the circumstances the application is
dismissed with costs on the party and party scale, on Scale A.
SEGAL
AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be
on
14 August 2024
Heard
on:
31
July 2024
Delivered
on:
14
August 2024
Appearances:
Mr
Malejwe:
for
the Applicant
A
Khoza:
for
the First Respondent
[1]
Gollach
and Gomperts (1967) (Pty) Ltd v Universal Mills and Produce Company
(Pty) Ltd
1978 (1) SA 914
(A) and Gbenga – Oluwatoye v Reckitt
Benckiser South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another 2016 (12) BCLR 1515
(CC)
[2]
Moraitis
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Montic Dairy (Pty) Ltd and Others
2017 (5) SA 508
SCA
[3]
Van
Zyl v Nieman 1964 (4) SA 661 (A)
[4]
Chapmans
Peak Hotel (Pty) Ltd v South Peninsula Municipality
1998 (4) All SA
619
(C) and Gollach v Gomperts supra and Wilson Bayly Holmes (Pty)
Ltd v Maeyane
1995 (4) SA 340
T
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