Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 890South Africa
Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v K.Z-S (47309/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 890 (10 September 2024)
Headnotes
and timelines were set for the filing of affidavits. The parties agreed that the Family Advocate, Gauteng be appointed to conduct certain investigations. In addition, the second applicant appointed Dr Holtz, an Educational Psychologist to compile a report for the Court. [7] The appointment of the Family Advocate was formalised by way of a court order granted by agreement between the parties. He was directed, inter alia, to investigate the best interests of the children with specific reference to whether returning the minor children to Germany would
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v K.Z-S (47309/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 890 (10 September 2024)
Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another v K.Z-S (47309/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 890 (10 September 2024)
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sino date 10 September 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 –
Abduction –
Seeking return to Munich –
Holiday in South Africa under assumption of returning home –
Respondent’s retention
of children in South Africa absent
applicant's consent – Violated applicant's rights to shared
custody of minor with
respondent and is unlawful –
Children’s habitual residence is Germany – No risk of
psychological harm to
children – Children's best interests
to return to Germany – Hague Convention, arts 12 and 13(b).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 47309/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
10 SEPTEMBER
2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
CENTRAL AUTHORITY FOR
THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
FIRST APPLICANT
J[…] R[…]
S[…]
SECOND APPLICANT
And
K
[…]
D
[…]
Z
[…]
-
S[…]
RESPONDENT
Delivered: This judgment
was delivered electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives and uploading on
SAFLII.
JUDGMENT
MAHALELO, J:
[1]
This
is an application in terms of article 12 of Chapter III of the Hague
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child
Abduction,
[1]
incorporated
in section 275 of the Children’s Act.
[2]
The application concerns
two minor girls, LS (aged 5), and MS (aged 1). The applicants
seek the return of the minor children
to H[…] Street […],
81377, Munich in Germany. The minor children came with their
parents to South Africa on
a two month holiday from 7 November 2023
until 11 January 2024 on the assumption that they would all return
prior to LS returning
to school. The second applicant had booked
return flights for all of them. On 11 January 2024, the respondent
refused to return
the minor children to Germany. The second applicant
had not consented to the children remaining in South Africa
.
[2]
The second applicant and the respondent were married to each other in
a civil
marriage on 10 January 2020 in Cape Town, which marriage
still subsists. The second applicant has been exercising rights of
custody
as envisaged by article 3 of the Convention at the time the
minor children were retained in South Africa
.
[3]
During their stay in Germany the couple had
disagreements. The relationship between them was strained. It appears
that after the
birth of the children the respondent suffered from
depression. The respondent also accused the second applicant of
infidelity and
emotional abuse. Whilst in South Africa, the
relationship became even more strained. The respondent continued to
accuse the second
applicant of infidelity. The parties underwent
counselling in an effort to resolve their differences, but it did not
help. The
respondent notified the second applicant that she would not
be returning to Germany with the minor children on 11 January 2024
and wants a divorce. The second applicant offered to take the minor
children with him to Germany but the respondent refused.
She
requested him to
move her and the children's
return flight tickets to 26 February 2024, as she intended to return
to Germany to pack the rest of
her and the children's belongings,
whereafter she wanted to return permanently to South Africa. Sometime
in January 2024, the respondent
leased a property at L
[…]
Avenue, Lonehill and enrolled LS at the Waldorf
School in Bryanston
.
[4]
On 31 January 2024, the second applicant returned
to South Africa to convince the respondent to return the minor
children to Germany,
but the respondent declined. The second
applicant returned to Germany alone on 26 February 2024
.
[5]
On 6 March 2024, the second applicant submitted a
request for return application to the Central Authority in Germany in
terms of
article 16 of the Convention. The matter was referred to the
Central Authority of South Africa for assistance
.
[6]
This application was originally launched as an
urgent one during June 2024. The application did not proceed. It was
removed and
allocated to this Court for a hearing. The application is
opposed by the respondent.
Case management meetings were held,
and timelines were set for the filing of affidavits. The parties
agreed that the Family Advocate,
Gauteng be appointed to conduct
certain investigations. In addition, the second applicant appointed
Dr Holtz, an Educational Psychologist
to compile a report for the
Court
.
[7]
The appointment of the Family Advocate was formalised by way of a
court order
granted by agreement between the parties. He was
directed, inter alia
,
to
investigate the best interests of the children with specific
reference to whether returning the minor children to Germany would
expose them to harm or otherwise place them in an intolerable
situation. He provided a comprehensive report pursuant to his
investigations.
Dr Holtz also provided a comprehensive report
pursuant to the assessment which she conducted with the parties and
the minor children
.
[8]
On 15 September 2023, the respondent filed for
divorce in South Africa and sought, inter alia, full custody of the
minor children.
The matter has not been finalised
.
[9]
In this application, the respondent raised two
defenses why the court should not order the return of the minor
children to Germany.
The first is that Germany is not their habitual
country of residence. The second is that there is grave risk that the
return of
the minor children will expose them to physical or
psychological harm or otherwise place them in an intolerable
situation
.
Material Facts
[10]
The background facts in the matter are not
contentious. The second applicant was born in Germany and the
respondent in South Africa.
The parties met in Cape Town in 2015,
whilst the second applicant was on a partly holiday and partly
business trip. The parties
started dating and were in a long-distance
relationship. In 2016, the respondent resigned from her job and moved
to Munich, Germany,
and lived with the second applicant. In 2017, the
parties moved back to South Africa for two years. In 2018, they moved
into a
two bedroomed apartment which they rented, which the second
applicant eventually purchased in Cape Town.
[11]
On 1 July 2019, their first daughter LS was born
in South Africa. The following year, on 10 January 2020 the parties
were married
to each other in Cape Town. They extended their stay in
South Africa. According to the second applicant, though he does not
deny
that they went back to Germany because his mother was sick, the
intention had always been to return to Germany permanently and only
visit South Africa. The respondent denies this and states that they
returned to Germany only because the second applicant’s
mother
was sick. In March 2020 and while in South Africa, the lockdown was
implemented due to the COVID-19 epidemic. This delayed
their return
to Germany. During August 2021, the respondent was awarded a spousal
visa and residence permit for Germany. In July
2022, the parties
together with LS moved back to Germany. LS commenced kindergarten in
Munich on 1 September 2022.
[12]
The parties’ second daughter MS was born in
Munich on 18 July 2023. She attained German citizenship and
thereafter her birth
was registered in South Africa, and she attained
South African citizenship as well.
The
Issues
[13]
Against this backdrop, the primary issues to be
determined are as follows: (i) whether Germany is the minor
children’s habitual
residence immediately prior to the alleged
retention; and (ii) whether the children would be exposed to grave
risk and/or psychological
harm and/or be placed in an intolerable
situation as envisaged by article 13 (b) of the Convention,
should they be returned.
It was uncontested that if the exception
under article 13 (b) of the Convention was not established, the
retention of the minor
children in South Africa would be unlawful.
[14]
Prior to addressing the issues on a factual basis, it is first
necessary to sketch the
legal framework within which that exercise
must be undertaken.
The
Convention and the Law
[15]
In
Sonderup
v Tondelli and Another,
[3]
the
Constitutional Court explained the purpose of the Convention as
:
“
[seeking]
to ensure that custody issues are determined by the court in the best
position to do so by reason of the relationship
between its
jurisdiction and the child. That Court will have access to the facts
relevant to the determination of custody.”
[4]
[16]
The recognition of the child's interests as paramount when
applications in terms of the
Convention are considered is echoed in
the Act. Chapter 17 of the Act is dedicated to give effect to the
Convention and to combat
parental child abduction. Section 275
domesticates the Convention as law in the Republic with the important
proviso that the Convention's
provisions are subject to the
provisions of the Act. The importance and relevance of this proviso
is that in determining this application,
this Court remains
statutorily obliged in terms of s 6 to, amongst others:
“
(6)
(2)(a) respect, protect, promote and fulfil the child's rights set
out in the Bill of Rights, the best interests of the child
standard
set out in section 7 and the rights and principles set out in this
Act, subject to any lawful limitation;
(b)
respect the child's inherent dignity;
(c)
treat the child fairly and equitably.”
[17]
The
Convention provides for an internationally agreed mechanism for
dealing with the global phenomenon of child abduction. With
limited
exceptions, it provides for the prompt return of an abducted child to
their home country.
[5]
[18]
When an application for the return of a child is considered in terms
of article 12 of the
Convention, a court is obliged to keep in mind
the jurisdictional prerequisites in article 3. In terms of article 3,
the removal
or retention of a child is to be
considered wrongful where
:
“
(
a)
it
is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person, an
institution or any other body, either jointly or alone, under the
law
of the State in which the child was habitually resident in the other
state; and
(b)
at
the time of removal or retention those rights were actually
exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised
but for the removal or retention
.
[19]
Article 12 of the Convention provides that:
“
Where
child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of Article 3
and, at the date of the commencement of the proceedings
before the
judicial or administrative authority of the Contracting State where
the child is, a period of less than one year has
elapsed from the
date of the wrongful removal or retention the authority concerned
shall order the return of the child forthwith.”
[20]
In article 13 the Convention sets out the defenses
available to the abducting parent who is opposed to the return of the
child.
It reads as follows:
“
Notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding Article [Article 12], the judicial or
administrative authority of the requested
State is not bound to order
the return of the child if the person, institution or other body
which opposes its return establishes
that:
(a)
the person, institution, or other body having care of the person of
the
child was not actually exercising the custody rights at the time
of removal or retention, or had consented to or subsequently
acquiesced
in the removal and retention, or
(b)
there is a grave risk that his or her return would expose the child
to
physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an
intolerable situation.”
[21]
The child's return may be
refused if this would not be permitted by the fundamental principles
of the requested State relating to
the protection of human rights and
fundamental freedoms.
[6]
[22]
The onus of securing the
return of a child in terms of the Convention rests on the applicant
to prove that the child was habitually
resident in the requesting
State prior to its wrongful removal or retention. Therefore, the onus
of resisting the return of the
children in terms of article 13 of the
Convention rests on the respondent. In both instances the respective
parties must prove
the relevant elements on a balance of
probabilities.
[7]
[23]
Regarding what the onus
entails, Van Heerden AJA in
Pennello
v Pennello (Chief Family Advocate as Amicus Curiae)
[8]
held:
“
There is nothing
in the wording of art 13 of the Convention or in the analysis of this
wording by either the Constitutional Court
in
Sonderup
or
this Court in
Smith
to
suggest that the person resisting an order for the return of a child
under the Convention by relying on the art 13
(b)
defence
does not bear the usual civil
onus
of
proof, as it is understood in our law, in that regard, viz that he or
she is required to prove the various elements of the particular
art
13
(b)
defence
on a preponderance of probabilities.”
[9]
[24]
She proceeded to explain the underlying reasoning for this position:
“
The
Convention is predicated on the assumption that the abduction of a
child will generally be prejudicial to his or her welfare
and that,
in the vast majority of cases, it will be in the best interests of
the child to return him or her to the state of habitual
residence.
The underlying premise is thus that the authorities best placed to
resolve the merits of a custody dispute are the courts
of the state
of the child’s habitual residence and not the courts of the
state to which the child has been removed or in
which the child is
being retained.”
[10]
[25]
In
Sonderup
Goldstone J made the
point that it “would be quite contrary to the intention and
terms of the Convention were a court hearing
an application under the
Convention to allow the proceedings to be converted into a custody
application”.
[11]
[26]
To further concretise this point, article 19 of the Convention
provides that a “decision
under this Convention concerning the
return of a child shall not be taken to be a determination on the
merits of any custody issue”.
[27]
Goldstone J proceeded to consider the question of the harm that an
abducted child may suffer
as a result of an order that they be
returned to the jurisdiction of their habitual residence. He held:
“
A
matrimonial dispute almost always has an adverse effect on children
of the marriage. Where a dispute includes a contest over custody,
that harm is likely to be aggravated. The law seeks to provide a
means of resolving such disputes through decisions premised on
the
best interests of the child. Parents have a responsibility to their
children to allow the law to take its course and not to
attempt to
resolve the dispute by resorting to self-help. Any attempt to do that
inevitably increases the tension between the parents
and that
ordinarily adds to the suffering of the children. The Convention
recognises this. It proceeds on the basis that the best
interests of
a child who has been removed from the jurisdiction of a Court in the
circumstances contemplated by the Convention
are ordinarily served by
requiring the child to be returned to that jurisdiction so that the
law can take its course. It makes
provision, however, in art 13 for
exceptional cases where this will not be the case.
An art
13 enquiry is directed to the risk that the child may be harmed by a
Court-ordered return. The risk must be a grave one.
It must expose
the child to ‘physical or psychological harm or otherwise place
the child in an intolerable situation’.
The words ‘otherwise
place the child in an intolerable situation’ indicate that the
harm that is contemplated by the
section is harm of a serious nature.
I do not consider it appropriate in the present case to attempt any
further definition of
the harm, nor to consider whether in the light
of the provisions of our Constitution, our Courts should follow the
stringent tests
set by Courts in other countries.”
[12]
[28]
On the question of harm,
the court in
Pennello
[13]
cited with approval the dictum of Ward LJ in
Re
C (Abduction: Grave Risk of Psychological Harm)
[1999]
1 FLR 1145
(CA) at 1154
:
“
There is,
therefore, an established line of authority that the court should
require clear and compelling evidence of the grave risk
of harm or
other intolerability which must be measured as substantial, not
trivial, and of a severity which is much more than is
inherent in the
inevitable disruption, uncertainty and anxiety which follows an
unwelcome return to the jurisdiction of the court
of habitual
residence
.”
[14]
[29]
The court also commented on the approach adopted by the
Constitutional Court to the question
of harm in
Sonderup
stating:
“
Despite
the litany of alleged incidents of physical and mental abuse of the
mother by the ‘left-behind’ father on which
counsel for
the former relied in argument before the Constitutional Court in
the
Sonderup
case,
as well as the report of a South African clinical psychologist to the
effect (inter alia) that the continuation of the status
quo in
Canada would have a ‘severely compromising effect on the
healthy psychological development’ of the child
in question,
the Court held that the harm to which the child would allegedly be
subjected by a court-ordered return was not harm
of the serious
nature contemplated by art 13, but rather –
“
in
the main harm which is the natural consequence of her removal from
the jurisdiction of the Courts of British Columbia, a Court-ordered
return, and a contested custody dispute in which the temperature has
been raised by the mother’s unlawful action. That is
harm which
all children who are subject to abduction and Court-ordered return
are likely to suffer, and which the Convention contemplates
and takes
into account in the remedy that it provides’.”
[15]
[30]
On whether the age of the child matters, the court went on:
“
While the age of
the child in question may well, in certain circumstances, be
one
of
the factors relevant to the determination of whether a court-ordered
return would expose the child to a grave risk of physical
or
psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation, there is no basis to differentiate
in
principle
on
the basis of age, or to be swayed by some kind of ‘tender
years’ principle in the application of the Convention.”
[16]
Is
Germany the habitual residence of the minor children?
[31]
In terms of article 4 the Convention shall apply
to “any child who was habitually resident in a Contracting
State immediately
before any breach of custody or access rights
occurred”.
[32]
The second applicant’s case was that immediately before their
departure to South
Africa on 7 November 2023, the minor children were
habitually resident at H[…] Street […], Munich, Germany
where
they are all registered. The property is a three bedroomed
house. It is leased from 2022 and the lease is unrestricted as it is
commonplace in Munich to lease property for very long. LS School and
friends live nearby. This according to the second applicant
this is
confirmed by the fact that while in Germany he had assisted the
respondent to convert her South African driver’s
licence to a
German driver’s licence. He also enlisted the respondent and
the children on his German medical aid scheme.
The
German government contributes R5000 per month per child towards
medical aid in an effort to assist in raising the children.
His
family resides 45 minutes away from their apartment and they are able
to offer support with the children if needed
[33]
.The apartment in Cape Town was rented out as the intention was not
to stay in Germany
permanently. The agreement was to keep it as an
investment to generate extra income. The second applicant had even
put it up for
sale but did not get the right offer to purchase. LS
was enrolled in Waldorf House for Children in Germany in July 2022
and she
started kindergarten there in September 2022. MS was born in
Munich and attained German citizenship. The minor children have been
living with the second applicant and the respondent as a family. The
second applicant interacted with the children on a daily basis.
Twice
in 2022, he remained alone with the children for three weeks on each
occasion in the absence of the respondent.
[34]
The respondent on the other hand submitted that the parties
rented
an apartment in Germany. The lease is soon expiring. In South Africa,
the parties own a house in Cape Town. The respondent
and the minor
children are currently staying in Cape Town. The second applicant has
access to the house and the minor children.
LS was born in South
Africa. The parties moved to Germany when this minor child was 2 1/2
years old. MS stayed in Germany for 1
1/2 years. LS came back to
South Africa in October 2023. She again spent eight months in South
Africa. All in all, LS spent three
years in South Africa, therefore
the habitual residence of the minor children is South Africa, not
Germany. According to the respondent,
the parties together with the
children went to Germany temporarily because the second applicant's
mother was sick. Their intentions
were always to remain in South
Africa permanently hence they bought a house in Cape Town.
[35]
With
reference to habitual residence, Opperman J found in
Central
Authority for the Republic of South Africa v LC
[17]
that:
“
[56]
The Hague Convention does not define ‘habitual residence’.
Brigitte Clark summarises the approach accurately
as follows:
‘
[H]abitual
residence should not be given a special technical definition, but
should remain a question of fact to be decided with
reference to the
facts of each individual case. Habitual residence may be acquired by
voluntarily assuming residence in a country
for a settled purpose. It
may be lost when a person leaves that country with the settled
intention not to return…. There
is a significant difference
between ceasing to be habitually resident in a country and acquiring
habitual residence in a new country.
A person can lose habitual
residence in ‘a single day’ when he or she leaves with
the settled intention not to return.
However, habitual residence
cannot be acquired in a day. An appreciable period of time and a
settled intention will be necessary
to enable him or her to become
habitually resident’.”
[36]
Referencing
Houtman,
Opperman
J explained the position thus:
“
[63]
Three basic models of determining habitual residence of a child have
developed from judicial interpretation of judicial residence,
namely
the dependency model, the parental-rights model and the
child-centered model. In terms of the dependency model, a child
acquires the habitual residence of his or her custodians whether or
not the child independently satisfies the criteria for acquisition
of
habitual residence in that country. The parental-rights model
proposes that habitual residence should be determined by the parent
who has the right to determine where the child lives, irrespective of
where the child actually lives. Where both parents have the
right to
determine where the child should live, neither may change the child’s
habitual residence without the consent of
the other. In terms of the
child-centered model, the habitual residence of a child depends on
the child’s connections or
intentions and the child’s
habitual residence is defined as the place where the child has been
physically present for an
amount of time sufficient to form social,
cultural, linguistic and other connections. South African courts have
adopted a hybrid
of the models in determining habitual residence of
children. It appears to be based upon the life experiences of the
child and
the intentions of the parents of the dependent child. The
life experiences of the child include enquiries into whether the
child
has established a stable territorial link or whether the child
has a factual connection to the state and knows something culturally,
socially and linguistically. With very young children the habitual
residence of the child is usually that of the custodian parent.”
[37]
In the respondent’s answering affidavit to the second
applicant’s supporting
affidavit, the respondent admitted that
Germany is the minor children’s country of habitual residence.
I need not deal with
this aspect any further but for the sake of
completeness, all the evidence in this case points to Germany being
the country where
the two minor children were habitually resident
prior to their retention in South Africa.
[38]
The parties travelled to South Africa with the minor children on 7
November 2023. The purpose
of the trip was for a holiday and for the
respondent to visit her family in South Africa. Prior to the parties
departing for South
Africa, it was their intention to return to
Munich with the minor children on 11 January 2024. Accordingly, the
second applicant
purchased return air tickets for all of them in
anticipation of that return.
[39]
At the time that the parties departed with the minor children for
South Africa, the second
applicant and the respondent shared parental
responsibilities and rights, custody and residence of the minors as
well as the responsibility
and rights to make decisions in respect of
the minor children. The second applicant exercised those rights and
responsibilities
in respect of the minor children together with the
respondent. The second applicant did not consent to the children
remaining in
South Africa beyond 26 February 2024, which is the date
to which the respondent and the children’s return flight
tickets
were moved to at the request of the respondent.
[40]
In the circumstances, the respondent, by virtue of her failing to
return the minor children
to Germany and remaining in South Africa
together with the minor children post 26 February 2024, unlawfully
retained the minor
children in South Africa. In so doing, the
respondent breached the second applicant’s rights of custody
exercised together
with the respondent immediately prior to the
respondent retaining the minor children in South Africa. The second
applicant would
have exercised his rights of custody absent the
respondent’s retention of the minor children in South Africa.
[41]
The respondent's retention of the minor children in South Africa
absent the second applicant's
consent thereto violated the latter's
rights to shared custody of the minor with the respondent and is
unlawful. The question then
is whether the minor children should be
returned to their country of habitual residence.
[42]
As already indicated the respondent raised the defence under article
13(b) of the Convention.
Article
13(b) defence
[43]
The focus of the respondent’s case is aimed
at the exception in article 13(b) of the Convention in terms of which
a court
is not bound to order the return of the child if the person
opposing the return establishes that:
“
There
is a grave risk that his or her return would expose the child to
physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child
in an
intolerable situation.”
[44]
The respondent’s reasons and the factual
basis for her allegation that the provisions of article 13(b) find
application can
be summarised as follows: The second applicant’s
work commitments prevent him from caring for the children. The second
applicant
cannot care for the children alone. The respondent did not
receive the support she required to help care for the children while
she was in Germany. Her mother is unemployed therefore while in South
Africa she will be able to help and support her in taking
care of the
minor children. In Germany she felt isolated because the second
applicant regarded his work as more important than
helping her with
the children. The load of household work was overwhelming and
exacerbated by the fact that the second applicant
refused to hire a
nanny due to exorbitant costs involved. She was struggling to learn
German and she felt disregarded and eventually
fell into a
depression. In Germany, she does not have close friends. In South
Africa she has the benefit of being able to obtain
employment in the
entertainment industry, whereas in Germany she was unable to do so.
Therefore, returning the minor children to
Germany will destabilise
her parenting of the minor children to a point where their situation
would become intolerable.
[45]
The suggestion that the second applicant cannot
care for the children alone, or that his work somehow prevents him
from doing so,
is not supported by the evidence in this matter. The
second applicant has plainly set out inter alia that he is able to
work from
home, that the children will have access to kindergarten
and aftercare facilities if needed, and access to any therapeutic
assistance
they may require. It is undisputed that the second
applicant remained alone with the minor children on two previous
occasions for
a period of three weeks while the respondent was
travelling on work commitments. The second respondent has also
indicated that
whilst in Germany both him and the respondent will be
able to care for the minor children. His family resides 45 minutes
away from
their apartment and they are able to offer support with the
children if needed.
[46]
The court in
Koch
[18]
observed that in dealing
with the scope of article 13(b), a court dealing with a return
application is entitled in limited circumstances,
to refuse to order
the return of that child. The focus is on the child and the issue is
the risk of harm to the child in the event
of their return.
[47]
Of particular importance
regarding the matter in
casu
,
the court in
Koch
determined that the words
“grave risk” in article 13(b) indicate that the exception
is “forward looking”
in that it requires the court to
look at the future by focusing on the circumstances of the child upon
their return and on whether
those circumstances would expose the
child to a grave risk as envisaged in article 13(b). The focus, in
determining what constitutes
a “grave risk” of
“psychological harm” as contemplated by article 13(b), is
on the harm that is likely
to eventuate should the children be
returned. The evidence must therefore be limited to psychological and
emotional impact of returning
a child to their habitual
residence.
[19]
[48]
On the approach with article 13(b), the Court in
Koch
elaborated further that:
“
[62]
The approach that Article 13(b) does not require elaboration beyond
its terms must be endorsed. It is implied in the plain
meaning of the
words used in art 13(b), that it sets a high threshold and any other
approach will be inconsistent with the language
used and the
objectives of the Convention. The level of the risk must be of a
serious nature, and the words ‘otherwise place
the child in an
intolerable position’ through considerable light not only on
the degree of seriousness of the risk of the
harm, but also the harm
itself, that the Convention has in mind. The word ‘otherwise’
is indicative of a conclusion
that the physical and emotional harm
contemplated is harm to the degree that also amounts to an
intolerable situation.
[63] The risk of harm
that will meet the threshold of in art 13(b) will inevitably be
determined by the facts of any particular
case. As a general
proposition, it may be said that the risk of harm must be of a
severity which is more than is inherent in the
inevitable disruption,
uncertainty and anxiety which follow on an unwelcome return to the
jurisdiction of the child's home country.
It is important to make the
observation that Article 13 (b) does not require there to be a
certainty that harm will occur. What
is required is persuasion by
applying the legal standards of proof that there is a risk which
warrants the qualitative description
of a ‘grave risk’
that the return will ‘expose’ the child to harm. Whether
the risk reaches that threshold
must inevitably be determined on the
facts of the case and by the nature of the projected harm.”
[49]
In this case all the jurisdictional facts required in order to invoke
the obligatory provisions
of article 12 are present. The minor
children reside habitually in Germany in terms of the Convention. The
minor children's retention
by the respondent in South Africa beyond
26 February 2024 was unlawful. Furthermore, less than a year has
passed since the date
of the minor children's unlawful retention in
South Africa and the date on which the return application commenced.
As a result
and in terms of the Convention, I am required to order
the return of the minor children to Germany unless the respondent
proves,
on a balance of probabilities, a grave risk of harm to the
minor children.
[50]
There are no facts alleged by the respondent that the minor children
are at risk of psychological
harm in the event of an order for their
return to Germany. There is nothing before me in respect of the
circumstances of the minor
children upon their return to Germany to
demonstrate on a balance of probabilities that the circumstances will
expose them to a
“grave risk” of harm in terms of article
13(b). I accept that if the respondent chooses not to accompany the
children
to Germany and to facilitate their resettlement in Germany,
they will be upset. But I also take into consideration that the
relationship
between second applicant and the minor children remains
intact.
[51]
The threshold for meeting the exception in article 13(b) of the
Convention is high. The
level of risk alluded to by the respondent in
the founding affidavit does not rise to the standard of a serious
nature required
by the exception and does not reach the degree of
seriousness envisaged in the Convention. The emotional harm that is
contemplated
by the article must rise to the level equivalent to an
intolerable situation. The facts and the evidence before me do not
meet
this threshold. The alleged intolerable situation relied upon by
the respondent in the event of the return of the minor children
to
Germany is that described by the Constitutional Court in paragraph 63
of the
Koch
judgment. The severity of the harm or intolerable
situation must be more than is “inherent in the inevitable
disruption,
uncertainty and anxiety which follow on an unwelcomed
return to the jurisdiction of the child's home country”.
[52]
In
considering the issues raised by the respondent, I have considered
the reports filed by Dr T Holtz and the Family Advocate. In
her
report, Dr Holtz having interviewed both the second applicant and the
two minor children did not find that a grave risk of
harm or other
intolerability exists in the event the children are returned to
Germany. Dr Holtz writes - “from the investigation
it therefore
appears that if the children are returned to Germany, it is
reasonable to conclude that it is improbable that harm
will come to
them or that they will otherwise be placed in an intolerable
situation.”
[20]
[53]
The
Family Advocate, while sympathetic to the respondent’s marital
struggles and inability to adjust to the German lifestyle
has
concluded that “no grave risk of harm or other intolerability
exist and that the children should be returned to Germany.”
[21]
[54]
In the circumstances, I am not persuaded that the alleged intolerable
situation is serious.
Further, I am persuaded that there is no real
or grave risk that the minor children, upon their return to Germany
will be exposed
to harm or risk to the level that might be termed
grave. In my view the children will also not be placed in any
intolerable siuation.
[55]
The respondent also raised a defence under article 20 of the
Convention which was not enthusiastically
pursued during argument. No
facts in support thereof are furnished by the respondent in her
answering affidavit. There is no explanation
furnished why returning
the children to Germany will not be permitted by our Constitution.
Our courts, including our highest courts,
routinely apply the
provisions of the Convention, and there can be no doubt that
Convention passes Constitutional muster.
[56]
In conclusion, I am of the view that the respondent has not
discharged the burden of proof
resting upon her to demonstrate the
existence of Article 13(b) defence. In my view, the minor children's
best interests and the
general purposes of the Convention will both
be met by an order that they be returned to Germany, their place of
habitual residence.
[57]
The second applicant tendered to provide the respondent with
accommodation separate from
the parties’ rented home if I order
the return of the minor children to Germany.
[58]
In the result the following order is made:
Order
1.
The minor children, LS and MS are to be returned forthwith to
the
jurisdiction of Germany, Munich in accordance with the provisions of
article 12 of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects
of
International Child Abduction
.
2.
The Respondent is to hand over all the travel documents of the
minor
children to the first applicant forthwith.
3.
The Sheriff of this Court is to forthwith search for and seize
all
the travel documents of the minor children, wherever they may be
found and hand same over to the first applicant, in the event
the
respondent fails to comply with prayer 2.
4.
The respondent is to indicate to the applicants within 7 days
of this
order whether she intends to travel with the minor children to
Germany.
5.
In the event the respondent chooses to travel with the minor
children
and does not wish to stay with the second applicant and the children
at their apartment, the second applicant is ordered
to pay for the
accommodation and all related costs for the respondent’s stay
in close proximity to the apartment in Germany.
6.
In the event the respondent elects not to return to Germany
with the
minor children, the second applicant, or a representative of the
Germany Central Authority, being a registered social
worker, or an
Advocate of the High Court, duly appointed by the Family Advocate,
shall be entitled to remove the minor children
from the borders of
South Africa and travel to Germany with them.
7.
The second applicant and the respondent shall agree on issues
relating to the education of the children for which the second
applicant will make payment of all costs inclusive of any
registration
fees.
8.
The second applicant shall secure, in consultation with the
respondent and with the involvement of Child Services or institutions
of Germany and pay for, such objective and independent
English-speaking
therapeutic support services as may be required by
the minor children after their return to Germany, including, but not
limited
to, psychotherapy or such other appropriate counselling
services as the minor children may require.
9.
Either party may approach the Family Courts in Germany inter
alia:
a.
for a variation of this order; and
I
or
b.
making this order a mirror order of court in
Munich.
10.
No order as to costs is made
.
M B MAHALELO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
:
For
the 1
st
Applicant:
Adv T A Mokadikoa
For
the 2
nd
Applicant:
Adv KG Knill
Instructed
by:
For
the Respondent:
OS Matlaila
Instructed
by:
Matlaila Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
01 August 2024
Date
of Judgment:
10 September 2024
[1]
Hague
Convention,
Civil
Aspects of International Child Abduction
1980
(‘
the
Convention
’
).
[2]
38
of 2005 (‘
the
Act
’
).
[3]
[2000]
ZACC 26
;
2001 (1) SA 1171
(CC);
2001 (2) BCLR 152
(CC) (‘
Sonderup
’
).
[4]
Id
at
para 30.
[5]
See
in this regard
Ad
Hoc Central Authority, South Africa and Another v Koch N.O. and
Another
[2023]
ZACC 37
;
2024
(3) SA 249
(CC);
2024 (2) BCLR 147
(CC) (‘
Koch
’
).
[6]
Article
20 of the Convention.
[7]
See
Senior
Family Advocate, Cape Town and Another v
Houtman
2004
(6) SA 274
(C)
(‘
Houtman
’
)
at paras 6 and 15; see also
Smith
v Smith
[2001]
ZASCA 19
;
2001
(3) SA 845
(S
CA)
at 851A.
## [8][2003]
ZASCA 147; [2004] 1 All SA 32 (SCA); 2004 (3) SA 117 (SCA)
(‘Pennello’).
[8]
[2003]
ZASCA 147; [2004] 1 All SA 32 (SCA); 2004 (3) SA 117 (SCA)
(‘
Pennello
’
).
[9]
Id
at
para 38.
[10]
Id
at
para 25.
[11]
Sonderup
above,
n 3 at para 30.
[12]
Id
at
paras 43-44.
[13]
Pennello
above,
n 8.
[14]
Id
at
para 34.
[15]
Id
at
para 30.
[16]
Id
at
para 52.
[17]
2021
(2) SA 471 (GJ).
[18]
Koch
above,
n 5 at para 55.
[19]
Id
at
paras 56-57.
[20]
Caselines
pages 08-13 to 08-42 para 5.15
[21]
Caselines
08-3 to 08-11 para 21
sino noindex
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