Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1003South Africa
F.B v J.B (2023/01363) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1003 (25 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 September 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Rule 43 of the Uniform rules of Court–maintenance and contribution towards costs – punitive costs order not frequently made and only when exceptional circumstances exist before warranted
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## F.B v J.B (2023/01363) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1003 (25 September 2024)
F.B v J.B (2023/01363) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1003 (25 September 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023/01363
(1) REPORTABLE: NO/YES
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO/YES
(3) REVISED: NO/YES
25/09/2024
In the matter between:
F[…]
D[…] F[…]
C[…]
B[…] (born F[…])
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: 7[…])
APPLICANT
And
J[…]
D[…] M[…]
R[…]
B[…]
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: 6[…])
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Summary:
Rule 43 of the Uniform rules of
Court–maintenance and contribution towards costs –
punitive costs order not frequently
made and only when exceptional
circumstances exist before warranted
Gundelfinger AJ
1
This is an application in terms of
Uniform Rule of Court 43. The applicant seeks maintenance
pendente
lite
in the amount of R65 000.00
monthly together with an order that the respondent make payment of
various claims to creditors
for her benefit and an initial
contribution towards her legal costs. She initially sought
maintenance
pendente lite
for
the parties’ major daughter, G[…], but that relief was
not persisted with. Furthermore, she seeks an order that
the
respondent pay the costs of the application, including the costs
occasioned by the employment of two counsel on Scale C.
2
The respondent opposes the relief
sought by the applicant. He seeks an order dismissing the application
with an order that the applicant
pay the costs of the application on
the scale as between attorney and client.
3
The application was instituted on 29
November 2023. The respondent delivered a reply to the applicant’s
founding affidavit.
Some six months after delivery of her founding
affidavit the applicant filed a supplementary affidavit together with
an amended
notice of motion. The respondent has filed an answer to
the applicant’s supplementary affidavit. Both parties completed
Financial
Disclosure Forms as required by the practice directives in
this division.
4
The parties were in agreement that,
subject to me accepting the additional evidence of the respondent set
out in his supplementary
affidavit, both additional affidavits should
be admitted. Accordingly, in the exercise of my discretion, I
admitted both parties’
additional evidence in terms of Rule
43(5).
5
The parties were married to one
another on 12 February 1994, at Germiston, out of community of
property in terms of an antenuptial
contract which incorporated the
accrual system. One child, a daughter, G[…], was born of the
marriage on 19 July 1998. G[…]has
attained majority and is
presently doing her Medical Internship at Chris Hani Baragwanath
Academic Hospital.
6
The parties separated in August 2022
and have lived apart continuously since that time.
7
On or about 28 April 2023, the
applicant, as plaintiff, instituted an action against the respondent,
as defendant, under the abovementioned
case number in which action
she sought a decree of divorce, maintenance for herself on divorce in
the sum of R150 000.00 monthly,
payment to her of one half of
the difference between the net accruals of the parties’
respective estates and costs.
8
The respondent delivered a plea and
counterclaim. In his counterclaim, he sought a decree of divorce, an
order that the party whose
estate has accrued to a greater extent
make payment to the other party of half of the difference between the
accrual of the parties’
respective estates and costs.
9
The issues for the trial Court to
determine in due course are the applicant’s maintenance claim
and the quantification of
any accrual claim and costs.
10
The applicant is 52 years of age.
She has been unemployed since March 2009.
11
The respondent was the Managing
Director of an International Group of Companies. He recently resigned
his employment and intends
to relocate permanently to Germany. He
alleged that he was financially strained as a result of his
resignation and cannot continue
to provide for the applicant’s
maintenance needs on the same scale as he previously did.
12
The parties lived a comfortable, if
not lavish, lifestyle. The applicant relied on the respondent for
financial support and it appears
that he was financially generous
towards her giving her expensive gifts including luxury motor
vehicles, jewelry and designer clothing.
They lived in an upmarket
area and travelled abroad extensively.
13
Following the breakdown of their
marriage and separation, the respondent paid a cash monthly amount of
R53 000.00 towards the
applicant’s maintenance together
with payment of costs relating to immovable properties and assets
owned by the applicant.
He furthermore paid all of the direct
expenses in respect of the former matrimonial home.
14
Over time the respondent
unilaterally reduced his monthly cash contribution towards the
applicant’s maintenance. In both February
and March 2024 he
paid the sum of R34 000.00 towards the applicant’s
maintenance in addition to payment of other amounts
for her benefit.
15
It is common cause that the
respondent is presently paying maintenance for the applicant and
tenders to continue to do so. In addition,
he has tendered to pay
certain expenses for the benefit of the applicant. Accordingly, the
principle of the applicant’s entitlement
to maintenance
pendente lite
,
is not in dispute. What is in dispute is the quantum of maintenance
to be paid by the respondent to the applicant on an interim
basis as
well as his obligation to pay a contribution towards her interim
legal costs.
16
The respondent seeks a dismissal of
the applicant’s application with a punitive order for costs.
The respondent’s contention
is that the sum of R28 000.00
that he has tendered by way of cash contribution is more than
sufficient to cover the reasonable
maintenance needs of the
applicant. The tender of R28 000.00 monthly is in addition to
payment by him of other expenses that
he tendered to continue to pay
pendente lite
and
was paying for the benefit of the applicant.
17
In order to determine the
applicant’s needs I must consider whether such needs are
reasonable having regard to the parties’
standard of living,
her own financial ability to meet her needs as well as the
respondent’s financial means and his ability
to maintain the
applicant.
18
As indicated above, there is no
dispute regarding the respondent’s obligation
pendente
lite
to maintain the applicant. The
issue is one of reasonable need and, according to the respondent, one
of affordability. On the score
of affordability, as will appear more
fully below, the respondent clearly has sufficient financial means at
his disposal to maintain
the applicant.
19
The applicant’s financial
position according to her Financial Disclosure Form (FDF) is as
follows:
Description
of Assets
Value
Interest
in family home (50%)
R
2 750 000.00
Money
in bank accounts
R
232 773.99
Investments
R
2 394 654.00
Immovable
property, investments and policies, life policies and personal
belongings
R
18 400 306.27
Pension
interest
R
736 068.00
Total
amount
R
25 549 874
20
The
applicant’s disclosed liabilities in her FDF were R333 662.00
being an amount owed to her attorney.
21
In his FDF, the respondent
disclosed, in summary, the following assets:
Description
of Asset
Value
Interest
in the family home
R 2 500 000.00
Interest
in all other property
R 3 085 000.00
Personal
assets
R 42 103 924 .57
Business
assets
R 3 000 000.00
Pension
interests
R 2 583 639.00
Total
R 53 222 563.57
22
The respondent disclosed no
liabilities. His FDF was deposed to on 29 January 2024. The
applicant’s FDF was deposed to on
23 November 2023.
23
On 29 April 2024, the respondent
provided a reply to the applicant’s Notice in terms of
Section
7
of the
Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984
. In his
Section 7
response, he disclosed:
23.1
immovable properties in South Africa to the value
of R9 815 000.00;
23.2
overseas properties to the value of €310 449.75
or approximately R6 164 695.20, depending on the rate of
exchange;
23.3
movable assets in South Africa to the value of
R51 764 219.04;
23.4
overseas assets being cash in bank accounts with a
value of €1 388 452.31 or approximately
R27 572 385.81.
24
The respondent’s Section 7
reply cannot be reconciled with his FDF. It evidences an estate of
substantially greater value
than the value he disclosed in his FDF.
25
The respondent’s opposition to
payment of the cash amount of R65 000.00 monthly claimed by the
applicant is broadly as
follows:
25.1
The applicant has inflated her expenses;
25.2
There was no need to bring the application because
he had always paid certain expenses, would continue to do so and
would pay R28 000.00
as a cash contribution to her maintenance;
25.3
He is unemployed and unable to meet the extent of
the applicant’s claims.
26
In considering the grounds of
objection to the applicant’s claim, I find that:
26.1
The respondent has by his own conduct in reducing
the applicant’s maintenance unilaterally, shown a need that the
applicant’s
maintenance
pendente
lite
be regulated by a Court Order.
26.2
I do not consider that the applicant’s
claims are inflated and I have had regard to the lifestyle of the
parties.
26.3
In assessing the applicant’s claims, I am
satisfied that the respondent can and should make payment to the
applicant
pendente lite
of
a cash amount of maintenance of R65 000.00 each month.
Applicant’s
claim for an interim contribution towards her legal costs
27
In her supplementary affidavit, the
applicant placed before the Court an amended bill of costs. She
acknowledged that her bill of
costs annexed to her founding statement
contained computing and typographical errors. The bill of costs on
which she relies reflects
a total amount of fees and disbursements,
inclusive of VAT in the sum of R2 647 077.50. She has to
date paid her attorney
the sum of R1 350 690.26.
28
The respondent makes no tender
towards the applicant’s costs. His case is that the applicant
has sufficient assets of her
own which she should realise to pay her
own costs. Whilst the applicant has significant assets, her estate is
not liquid save for
her limited cash (R232 773.09) and various
investments that she has to the value of R2 394 654.00
29
The claim for contribution towards
costs in a matrimonial action is well established in our law and is
regulated by Uniform Rule
43. It is based on the reciprocal duty of
support between spouses, which includes the legal costs of pending
divorce proceedings.
30
In
Griesel
v Griesel
[1]
the Court held that:
It
is trite that the applicant is entitled to a contribution to enable
her to adequately put her case before the Court, if she has
insufficient means and an inability to fund the litigation.
31
The
determination of the quantum lies in the discretion of the presiding
judge.
[2]
This discretion must
be exercised in light of the fundamental right to equality and equal
protection before the law. In order for
a trial to be fair, there
should be equality of arms between the parties.
[3]
32
In
Dodo
v Dodo
[4]
the court held:
The test as to the amount
awarded by way of contribution is that the applicant ‘should be
placed in a position adequately
to present her case’. What is
‘adequate’ will depend on the nature of the litigation,
the scale on which the
husband is litigating and the scale on which
she intends to litigate, with due regard being had to the husband’s
financial
position.
33
The
Court in in
AF
v MF
[5]
stated it best when it held:
The
importance of equality of arms in divorce litigation should not be
underestimated. Where there is a marked imbalance in the
financial
resources available to the parties to litigate , there is a real
danger that the poorer spouse - usually the wife - will
be forced to
settle for less than that to which she is legally entitled simply
because she cannot afford to go to trial. On the
other hand, the
husband, who controls the purse strings, is well able to deploy
financial resources in the service of his cause.
That situation
strikes me as inherently unfair. In my view the obligation on courts
to promote the constitutional rights to equal
protection and benefit
of the Law, and access to courts requires that courts come to the aid
of spouses who are without means to
ensure that they are equipped
with the necessary resources to come to court to fight for what is
rightfully theirs.
The
right to dignity is also impacted when a spouse is deprived of the
necessary means to litigate. A person’s dignity is
impaired
when she has to go cap in hand to family or friends to borrow fund
for legal costs, or forced to be beholden to an attorney
who is
willing to wait for payment of fees – in effect to act as her
“banker”. The primary duty of support is
owed between
spouses, and a wife who is without means should be entitled to look
to her husband, if he has sufficient means, to
fund her reasonable
litigation fees.
34
The Courts also recognize that
litigation can be conducted either luxuriously or economically and an
applicant cannot be expected
to exhaust all of her assets before she
can apply for a contribution from her spouse.
35
The respondent contends that the
applicant is not financially constrained as she claims to be, which
is evidenced by her recent
purchase of an Audi Q5 RS worth
R1 500 000.00. However, it appears that the applicant sold
two other vehicles and used
an amount received from the sale to
acquire the Audi motor vehicle and to pay her attorney R1 million
towards her past and future
costs.
36
The applicant argues that although
she possesses assets of value, she has very limited liquid resources
and no access to any income
(even from her own assets) save for the
maintenance paid by the respondent.
37
The
Court in
Glazer
v Glazer
[6]
dealt with this particular issue, holding that:
He
cannot call upon her to realise all she has, which is very small in
any event, and pay everything out of that and then only,
if she has
exhausted her assets, apply for a contribution. The scale upon which
she is entitled to litigation in my view is a scale
commensurate also
with the means of the parties. People in this position are not
expected to litigate upon the basis that they
have to watch every
penny that is spent in litigation. Litigation can be conducted
luxuriously or economically. I do not say that
she is entitled to
every luxurious expense in litigation , but she is entitled to
litigate upon the basis you would expect rich
people to litigate. She
is the wife of a rich man who is obviously going to litigate against
her upon a luxurious basis. In this
comparatively simple preliminary
application he has appeared through senior counsel and junior
counsel. I think she is entitled
to litigate upon somewhat the same
sort of scale as that upon which he can be expected to litigate.
…
If
he is to employ the best possible legal assistance obtainable by
means of his wealth, she is entitled to be assisted upon a somewhat
similar scale.
38
In my view, it has been established
on the evidence before me and in argument presented before me that
the respondent is a man of
considerable financial means. He also has
excellent prospects for future employment
39
In addition to the ordinary costs of
litigation, the applicant alleges that she will need to employ the
services of other experts
such as an industrial psychologist to
evaluate her future employability and income prospects and an actuary
to determine her future
financial needs to enable her to enter into
meaningful settlement discussions or mediation with the respondent.
40
Further, the applicant will need the
services of sworn valuers to value at least 9 immovable properties
and a forensic accountant
to express his expert opinion as to the
causal connection between the respondent’s assets and
inheritances that have been
received by the respondent during the
marriage and which would be excluded in terms of the provisions of
the
Matrimonial Property Act.
41
The applicant cannot be expected to
liquidate her assets (which are meagre when compared to the
respondent’s) to fund her
litigation.
42
In all the circumstances having
regard to the financial position of both parties, the bill of costs
presented by the applicant in
her supplementary affidavit and the
issues involved, the applicant’s claim for a contribution to
her legal costs in the sum
of R1 million is reasonable.
# Punitive costs
Punitive costs
43
Before concluding this matter, it is
worth taking a moment to address the contention by the respondent
that the applicant has abused
the process of Court and that she
should accordingly pay his costs on an attorney and own client scale.
44
The basis of this claim, is the
contention by the respondent that the application was unnecessary
(because of his tender) and that
the applicant can and should fund
her own legal costs.
45
The respondent further contended
that the applicant has not been honest with the court by attempting
to cure a defective application
by filing a further defective
supplementary affidavit some 6 months after filing her founding
papers. He contends that she has
done this without providing an
explanation for the delay. Additionally, he alleges that the
applicant’s claim is inflated
and cannot be justified or
substantiated. As to the filing of further affidavits it was common
cause between the parties (subject
to what I set out above) that the
evidence should be admitted. I have already addressed the
reasonableness of her maintenance claim.
46
A
cost order on an attorney and own client scale is a punitive order
made under exceptional cases. The Constitutional Court in
Mkhatshwa
[7]
held
Generally
speaking, punitive costs orders are not frequently made, and
exceptional circumstances must exist before they are warranted.
In
SARB
[8]
,
this Court affirmed the following guiding principles in relation to
punitive costs, elucidated by the Labour Appeal Court in
Plastic
Converters Association of SA
:
[9]
“
The scale of
attorney and client is an extraordinary one which should be reserved
for cases where it can be found that a litigant
conducted itself in a
clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner. Such an
award is exceptional and is intended to
be very punitive and
indicative of extreme opprobrium.”
47
The respondent has not provided this
court with any evidence that the applicant has conducted herself in a
clear and unquestionable
vexatious and reprehensible manner. To the
contrary, the applicant has substantially succeeded in her
application.
48
Accordingly, there is no basis for
any award of costs in favour of the respondent let alone a punitive
cost order in his favour.
49
The applicant has been substantially
successful in the application. There is no reason why costs should
not follow the result. In
my view however, the matter is not one of
such complexity that warrants the employment of two Counsel.
ORDER
In all of the
circumstances, I make the following order
pendente lite
: -
1
The respondent shall make payment of R 65 000.00
monthly to the applicant, the first payment to be made on 1 October
2024 and thereafter
on the first day of each and every succeeding
month. All payments shall be made directly into the applicant's bank
account, held
with ABSA Bank Limited under cheque account number 4[…]
2
The respondent shall retain the applicant, at his
cost, as a dependent on his medical aid scheme, held with Discovery
Health, namely
the Classic Comprehensive Plan.
3
The respondent shall pay all the applicant's
excess medical, dental and related expenses not covered by the
benefits of such medical
aid scheme and shall reimburse any excess
expenses paid by her within 7 Court days of production of an invoice
to him.
4
The respondent shall pay on due date:
4.1
The
applicant's monthly cellular telephone and data costs, and any
increase thereof, directly to the service provider, Vodacom .
4.2 The monthly
insurance premiums payable to Discovery Insure in respect of the
motor vehicle driven by the applicant, being
an Audi Q3RS with
Registration Number F[…]
4.3
The annual motor vehicle licensing fees in respect
of the motor vehicle driven by the applicant and referred to above.
4.4
The following expenses in respect of NO […]
G[…] ROAD, B[…], JOHANNESBURG ("the matrimonial
home")
directly to the service provider concerned on due date:
4.4.1
Domestic worker;
4.4.2
Gardener;
4.4.3
Armed response;
4.4.4
Road closure levies;
4.4.5
Openserve Fibre;
4.4.6
Vox Telecom;
4.4.7
DSTV;
4.4.8
Streaming subscriptions: Netflix,
iTunes and Disney Plus;
4.4.9
TV License;
4.4.10
Postal Box fees; being P.O. BOX 1[…] B[…]
2[…];
4.4.11
Recycle service conducted by EcoMonkey;
4.4.12
Water delivery undertaken by Aquazania.
4.5
The maintenance of and repairs to the former
matrimonial home, including but not limited to the swimming pool,
fishpond, roof, back-up
power systems, electrical and plumbing and
ancillary maintenance items.
4.6
Monthly window cleaning.
4.7
The insurance premiums in respect of the policy
held with Discovery Insure for the building, household contents
including inter
alia the jewelry and watches at the matrimonial home
.
4.8
The municipal
accounts
that inter alia include the monthly rates, taxes, water, sewerage,
levies and other imposts in respect of the following
immovable and
sectional title properties:
4.8.1
[…] G[…] ROAD , BEDFORDVIEW,
JOHANNESBURG.
4.8.2
UNIT 3[…], T[…] P[…], […]
M[…] ROAD, B[…], JOHANNESBURG.
4.8.3
UNIT 4[…] […], T[…]
N[…], 4[…] […] N[…] ROAD B[…],
JOHANNESBURG
4.8.4
UNIT 2[…] S[…], […] S[…]
C[…], G[…] H[…], EXT. 2[…]
4.8.5
UNIT 1[…] S[…], […]
S[…] C[…], G[…] H[…], EXT. 21.
4.8.6
UNIT 2[…] G[…] R[…],
[…] S[…] C[…], G[…] H[…], EXT. 21.
4.8.7
UNIT 2[…] S[…], […]
S[…] C[…], G[...] H[…] EXT. 21
4.9
All monthly premiums in respect of the applicant's:
4.9.1
Classic Life Plan held with Discovery Accelerator under
policy number 5[…]
4.9.2
Life policy held with Momentum
Myriad under policy number 2[…].
5
The respondent shall pay a first and initial contribution towards the
applicant's legal costs in the sum of R 1 000 000.00 (one
million
Rand), which amount shall be paid into the trust account of the
applicant’s attorneys of record by way of 5 (five)
equal
instalments of R 200 000,00, commencing on 1 October 2024
and thereafter on the first day of every succeeding month
until
payment is made in full.
6
The respondent shall pay the costs of this application, including the
costs of senior counsel, on scale C of the applicable scales
published.
B GUNDELFINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
25 SEPTEMBER 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the
applicants:
A De Wet SC, A Saldulker
For the
respondents: GT
Kyriazis
[1]
1981
(4) SA 270
(O) at 277A.
[2]
AF v
MF 2019 (6) SA (WCC) at 27.
[3]
Ibid
at [37].
[4]
1990
(2) SA 77
W.
[5]
Ibid
at [42].
[6]
1959
(3) SA 928
(W) at 932A-E.
[7]
2021
(10) BCLR 1182 (CC)
[8]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[2019]
ZACC 29
,
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC),
2019
(9) BCLR 1113
(CC)
at paras [224] and [227] and
Limpopo
Legal Solutions v Eskom Holdings
(
Soc
)
Limited
[2017]
ZACC 34
,
2017
(12) BCLR 1497
(CC)
at para [20].
[9]
Plastic
Converters Association of South Africa
(
PCASA
)
v
National Union of Metalworkers Union of South Africa and
others
[2016]
ZALAC 39
, (2016) 37 ILJ 2815 (LAC)
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