Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 997South Africa
A.J v F.J (2024/001162) [2024] ZAGPJHC 997 (4 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## A.J v F.J (2024/001162) [2024] ZAGPJHC 997 (4 October 2024)
A.J v F.J (2024/001162) [2024] ZAGPJHC 997 (4 October 2024)
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sino date 4 October 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2024-001162
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
4
October 2024
In
the matter between:
J[…],
O[…] A[…] (born K[…])
Identity
Number: 8[…]
Applicant
And
J[…],
J[…] F[…]
Identity
Number: 8[…]
Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 4
October 2024.
Key
words:
Husband and wife -
Divorced - Custody of children - Variation of - Application by
custodian parent (mother) for leave to remove
minor children
permanently from South Africa - Interests of children first and
paramount consideration in relocation
application.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J:
[1]
On 10 January 2024, the applicant (mother) in the
main application launched urgent application proceedings in terms of
the provisions
of Rule 6 (12) in this Court. The father is the
respondent and applicant in the counter application. The applicant in
the main
application launched the application in Parts A and B. In
Part A, she sought urgent appointment of the Offices of the Family
Advocate
to conduct an assessment pertaining to the applicant's
relocation to Australia and other ancillary relief. On 23 January
2024,
an order was granted by Senyatsi J in terms of Part A of the
Applicant's Notice of Motion, by agreement between the parties.
[2]
Accordingly, Part A is no longer the subject of
these proceedings but Part B. Senyatsi J granted an order, inter
alia, that the
Office of the Family Advocate urgently conduct an
investigation and render a report and recommendation in relation to
the best
interests of the minor children in respect to their proposed
relocation to Australia with the Applicant as a matter of urgency,
after the filing of all affidavits and by 30 April 2024 with costs
reserved for later determination. In Part B, the Applicant (mother)
seeks the leave of this Court to permanently remove two minor
children (J[…] R[…] J[…] and J[…] A[…]
J[…]) born of her former marriage to the Respondent, (father)
from the Republic of South Africa to relocate with her to
Melbourne,
Australia ("Australia”).
[3]
The Respondent has not only opposed the
Applicant's application but has counter applied for certain relief,
inter alia that in the
event of the Applicant relocating to
Australia, the minor children, J[…] R J[…] and J[…]
A[…] J[…]
shall primarily reside with the Respondent in
South Africa, and the Applicant shall be afforded certain contact
rights, which include
daily telephonic and skype contact which the
applicant opposed. At the hearing of the main application, the
counter application
was abandoned. The respondent has since launched
a rule 49 (1) application.
PART B — RELIEF
SOUGHT BY THE APPLICANT
[4]
On 10 September 2024, having heard counsel and
having read the papers filed of record, I ordered consistent with the
relief sought
by the applicant in the main application as follows: -
1. That paragraphs 2.4 to
2.4.7 and paragraph 2.5 of the Settlement Agreement entered into
between the parties on 14 March 2023
be deleted and replaced with the
following.2. Both parties shall retain full parental responsibilities
and rights with regard to
the care, contact, and maintenance of the
minor children J[…] R[…] J[…] and J[…]
A[…] J[…]
(“the minor children”) as
contemplated in Section 18(2) (a), (b) and (d) of the Children’s
Act No. 38 of 2005.3.
The Applicant shall remain vested with the
primary residence of the minor children.
4. The Respondent’s
consent to remove the minor children from the Republic of South
Africa to reside permanently with the
Applicant in Australia is
dispensed with.
5. The Applicant is
permitted to remove the minor children from the Republic of South
Africa to reside permanently with her in Australia.
6. Both parties shall
retain guardianship of the minor children as contemplated in Section
18(2)(c) and 18(3) of the Children’s
Act No. 38 of 2005 subject
to the restriction of the Respondent’s rights of guardianship
in the following manner:-
6.1 The Respondent's
consent shall be dispensed with in regard to matters under Section
18(3)(c) and (vi) of the Children’s
Act No. 38 of 2005 for the
purposes of removal of the minor children from South Africa to
Australia;
6.2 The Respondent’s
consent shall be dispensed with in relation to the application and/or
renewal of the minor children’s
passports;
6.3 The minor children
shall be allowed to travel outside Australia without the consent of
the Respondent’s permission for
a period not exceeding 20
calendar days at a time subject to the following:
6.3.1 The Applicant shall
furnish the Respondent with 14 days’ notice of her intention to
take the minor children outside
Australia and shall, seven days prior
departure, furnish the Respondent with the itinerary which will
include the destination,
accommodation details, particulars relating
to flight details as well as details of any third party/parties in
whose care the minor
children may be caring that period.
6.4 The day-to-day
decisions in relation to the minor children to be made solely by the
Applicant including but not limited to:
6.4.1 The educational
institution the minor children shall attend, and ancillary decisions
related thereto;
6.4.2 All aspects
regarding the minor children’s participation in sport, social
and extramural activities; and
6.4.3 Decisions
pertaining to minor children’s mental health care and medical
care.
7. In the event that the
minor children experience emotional difficulties, the Applicant shall
communicate this to the Respondent
immediately and enroll them in
therapy in Australia.
8. The Respondent shall
be entitled to exercise contact with the minor children as follows:
8.1 Christmas school
holidays:
In year 1 (commencing
January 2025):
8.1.1 For a
period of 4 weeks during the December / January school holidays, when
the minor children shall spend Christmas
and New Year with the
Respondent, in South Africa.
8.1.2 During
this period, the children shall spend one night and one day each week
that they are in South Africa with
the Applicant’s family.
8.1.3 The
Applicant shall be obliged to bring the minor children to South
Africa in December 2025/January 2026, and
every alternate
December/January thereafter, for the said 4-week period, with the
return air tickets being for the Applicant’s
sole cost and
expense;
In year 2 (commencing
January 2026):
8.1.4 For a period of 3
weeks during the December 2026/ January 2027 school holidays, and
every alternate December/January thereafter,
when the minor children
shall spend Christmas with the Applicant, and New Year with the
Respondent (be it in South Africa, within
Australia, or anywhere else
in the world) provided that:
8.1.4.1 The Respondent
makes his election in regard to exercising his rights for
contact with the minor children in the said
Christmas school holiday
by no later than 6 months prior to the commencement of the said
Christmas school holiday concerned; and
8.1.4.2 The Respondent
being required to make payment of the return air tickets for the
minor children to fly to South Africa, within
Australia, or anywhere
else in the world, when he exercises the aforesaid contact rights
every alternate year for the said 3-week
period of the said Christmas
school holidays.
8.2
April, July and September school holidays:
8.2.1 For the
entire school holiday periods, in the April, July and/or September
school holidays, provided:
8.2.1.1 The
Respondent shall make his election in regard to exercising his rights
of contact with the minor children in the
April, July and/or
September school holidays, by no later than 6 months prior to the
commencement of each of the school holidays
concerned; and
8.2.1.2 The
Applicant shall make payment of the return air tickets, in each
alternate year, for the children to fly to South
Africa, for one of
the 3 said school holidays (April or July or September) in which the
Respondent elects to exercise contact with
the minor children in
South Africa, for the minor children to fly to South Africa, and
8.2.1.3 the
Respondent shall make payment of the return air tickets for the minor
children to fly to South Africa, within
Australia or anywhere else in
the world, for any of the other of the said school holidays in which
the Respondent elects to exercise
contact with the minor children.
8.3
School term contact in Australia:
8.3.1 Such
additional contact in Australia as the Respondent may request
provided that the Respondent shall give the
Applicant at least 4
weeks prior written notification and provided further that the
Respondent shall secure accommodation in the
Bayside area, in
Australia, to enable him to ensure that the minor children attend
school daily and complete all of their academic
and extracurricular
requirements.
8.4
Electronic contact
8.4.1
Electronic contact via MS Teams, Zoom, WhatsApp or any other suitable
electronic platform to ensure that the Respondent
can communicate
with the minor children as often as he may wish to do so, at all
reasonable times.
8.5
Accompanying the minor children on flights:
8.5.1 Until
the minor children have reached an age when they are able to fly as
unaccompanied minors, when the Respondent
elects to exercise contact
to the minor children in South Africa, within Australia or anywhere
else in the world, and when same
shall be for his sole cost and
expense, the Respondent shall collect the minor children from
Australia and accompany them to South
Africa, within Australia or
anywhere in the world, and the Respondent shall accompany them back
to Australia.
8.5.2 Until
the minor children have reached an age when they are able to fly as
unaccompanied minors, when the Respondent
elects to exercise contact
to the minor children in South Africa, and when the return air
tickets shall be for the Applicant’s
sole cost and expense, the
Applicant shall accompany the minor children from Australia to South
Africa, and the Applicant shall
accompany them back to Australia.
9. Additional Contact
between the date of this Order and the date of the Applicant’s
departure to Australia with the children:
9.2 The Respondent shall
be entitled to exercise additional contact between the date of this
Order and the date of the Applicant’s
departure to Australia
with the minor children as follows:
9.1.1 On the weekends in
which the Respondent does not exercise contact with the children
until the December 2024 school holidays
commence, the Respondent
shall be entitled to exercise contact to the children on either the
Saturday from 9h00 until 17h00, or
the Sunday, from 9h00 until 16h00
on an alternating basis;
9.1.2 In the December
2024 school holidays:
9.1.2.1 From the 13th
December 2024 until the 21st December 2024,
9.1.2.2 From 10h00 on
Christmas day until 17h00 on the 29th December 2024;
9.1.2.3 From 10h00 on New
Years Day until 17h00;
10. The Respondent shall
contribute towards the minor children’s maintenance from the
date of the grant of this order until
the 1st day of the month in
which the minor children relocate to Australia with the Applicant as
follows:
9.2 The Respondent shall
affect maintenance payments of R12 500.00 (twelve thousand, five
hundred rand) per month to the Applicant,
with payment due on or
before the 1st day of each month;
9.3 The maintenance
payments shall be subject to an annual increase on 1 March 2026 to
R15 000.00 (fifteen thousand rand) per month;
9.4 The maintenance
payments shall continue up to and including the 1st day of the month
in which the minor children relocate to
Australia with the Applicant,
whereafter the Respondent shall not be required to make payment of
any contributions towards the
minor children’s monthly living
expenses / maintenance requirements.
11. The Respondent’s
counter application is dismissed.
12. The Respondent is
ordered to make payment of the costs of the main application and the
counter application on the scale as between
attorney and client on
Scale C.”
Accordingly, Part A is no
longer the subject of these proceedings but Part B.
[5]
In issue is whether the Respondent's consent to
the removal of the minor children, from the Republic of South Africa
to reside permanently
with the Applicant in Australia should be
dispensed with. Equally, whether the Applicant should be permitted to
remove the minor
children, from the Republic of South Africa to
reside permanently with her in Australia. Also, if leave to relocate
is permitted,
the nature and extent of the contact that the
Respondent will exercise to the minor children whilst they live
abroad. Also, the
extent to which each party should be responsible
for maintaining the children, and the allocation of the children's
costs and the
Respondent's travel costs.
[6]
At the hearing before me, the Respondent indicated
that he abides by the recommendation of the Family Advocate. The
Respondent contends
that the Applicant's Draft Order is not in line
with the recommendations of the Family Advocate. The Respondent
contends further
that each party should be ordered to pay their own
costs as the opposition to both applications were bona fide.
[7]
The parties were married to one another on 1
November 2017. As traversed above, two minor children were born of
the marriage, their
daughters, namely, J[…] R[…] J[…]
("J[..]") (born on 8 December 2017, presently aged 6) and
J[…]
A[…] J[…] ("J[…]") (born
on 11 May 2019) respectively, presently aged 5. However, by July
2020,
the marriage had irretrievably broken down. The parties were
divorced by order of this Court on 24 April 2023, which incorporated
a settlement agreement between the parties.
[8]
The settlement agreement provided for primary
residence of J[…] and J[…] to vest with the Applicant.
The Applicant
is and has always been the primary caregiver of the
minor children. However, the Respondent was afforded reasonable
rights of contact
to the minor children on alternate weekends from
Friday to Sunday afternoon and every Wednesday from after school
until the following
morning. In addition, the respondent was afforded
contact to them on their respective birthdays, on his birthday, on
Father's Day
and half of religious holidays.
[9]
The Applicant is a quantity surveyor who holds a
BSC Honours degree in Quantity Surveying ("QS"), a BCOM
Accounts degree,
a Post Graduate Diploma in Management Accounts and a
Property Development Certificate. Judgment
[10]
Since October 2022, the Applicant communicated to
the Respondent her desire to relocate with the minor children to
Melbourne. In
March 2023, the Applicant's erstwhile attorney of
record addressed correspondence to the Respondent's attorney of
record, requesting
that the Respondent provide the necessary consent
and sign the forms required by her to apply for a visa for herself
and the minor
children, but there was no response. The reasons for
relocation, are inter alia, for socio-economic reasons.
[11]
In July 2023, the Applicant obtained a job offer
to commence employment in Melbourne in February 2024, thus escalating
her relocation
ambitions. She got the offer whilst still employed in
South Africa at Enigma Group (Pty) Ltd "(Enigma”), a
property
development company where she had been employed as the
development manager with effect from 2014, which she communicated to
the
respondent. In time Enigma commenced pay reduction, retrenchment
process considering the declining economic circumstances. The
Applicant received notification that with effect from 1 April 2024
she would be retrenched from her employment at Enigma. The Applicant
is currently unemployed and would have received her final salary in
terms of the retrenchment package on 31 July 2024.
[12]
However, the Applicant has an offer of employment
from Switch Design Services Australia (Pty) Ltd ("Switch
Design”) in
a position as a quantity surveyor. She will earn a
gross income of 110 000 AUD per annum (based on a three- month
performance and
salary review in month four from start date, a salary
increase can be offered coupled with other favourable benefits.
Switch Design
initially indicated that the Applicant would be
required to commence her employment on 1 July 2024, however they have
later indicated
that the Applicant may commence her employment on 13
January 2025. She is required to obtain visa for the children which
she cannot
do without the consent of the Respondent, who has refused,
or an order of court.
[13]
The Applicant has established that she is
recognised as a professional in Melbourne by the Australian QS
Authority ("AIQS"I)
and that she would immediately be able
to commence employment. It is the applicant’s case that, this
employment offer is
a better career development for her as it will
also benefit the children. Furthermore, it will create financial
stability for her
to be able to provide better financial care for the
children as compared to when she is in South Africa.
[14]
The applicant explains that at the time that the
divorce action was settled, the Respondent was in arrears with his
maintenance
obligations in terms of the Rule 43 order then extant, in
the sum of R140 000.00 but negotiated down to R100 000.00 and to
agree
to the terms contained in paragraph 9 of the agreement of
settlement.
[15]
In Australia, she will be living in the suburb
called B[…] R[…], Melbourne with her fiancé,
B[…] F[…].
F[…] has been living in Austria for
the past 11 years. He has a house in Australia. They have been in a
relationship since
2022, though they have known each for years. The
Applicant has investigated the best available schools for the minor
children and
has established that B[…] R[…] Primary
School would be the most favourable option for J[…] and is 400
meters
and a five-minute walk from F[…]'s residence. B[…]
R[…] Pre School ideal for J[…] is located 650 meters
and a ten-minute walk from F[…]'s residence. It is the feeder
school for B[…] R[…] Primary and similarly highly
rated
in the Bayside council area.
[16]
The Respondent opposes the application on various
grounds and claims that if the Applicant relocates, the children
should reside
primarily with him. He contends that what is most
important for the children is to maintain their current arrangements
with him
and his extended family. The Respondent inter alia indicates
that he envisions fostering the children' growth and development in
the crucial areas of physical and emotional security, intellectual
development, emotional development, social development, cultural
development, the provision of unconditional love, supportive
relationships, stability and consistency, emotional guidance, role
modelling, encouragement and empowerment. As the applicant points
out, what is unambiguously absent from the Respondent's affidavits
is
evidence of his actual involvement in the children's daily lives or
of his practical contributions towards their care particularly
the
relatively long separation of almost 3 years after the divorce. The
Applicant is and always has been the children' primary
attachment
figure and financial provider, which is not contradicted.
[17]
The parties were jointly interviewed by the Family
Advocate, A. Magahle and the Family Counsellor, BQ. Mpogo on 18 July
2024. On
19 August 2024 the Family Advocate released a report
consequent upon an investigation, in which it is recommended that the
Applicant
be permitted to relocate to Australia with the children,
since she is their primary caregiver, attachment figure and also
having
regard to her bona fides and the reasonableness of her request
for relocation. The Family Advocate recommends that the parties
should exercise their parental responsibilities and rights outlined
in paragraph 10 of "FA1" (the Family Counsellor's
report).
[18]
The
Family Counsellor’s report takes account of the provisions of
Section 28(2) of the Constitution of the Republic South
Africa
[1]
, and section 9 of the Children's Act
[2]
which provides that "a child's best interests are of paramount
importance in every matter concerning the child.” The
reports
indicate further, that Section 10 of the Children's Act which
provides that "the views and wishes of a child should
be given
due consideration if that child is of such an age, maturity and stage
of development so as to be able to participate in
any matter
concerning him or her" was complied with. In this case both
children expressed their wish to relocate.
[19]
The Family Counsellor made recommendations, inter
alia, “that both parties retain their full parental
responsibilities and
rights with regard to the care, contact, and
maintenance of the children as contemplated in Section 18 (2) (a) (b)
and (d) of The
Children's Act. In addition that:
10.2 The Mother should
retain the children's primary residence and she be allowed to remove
the children from South Africa to Australia.
10.3 Both parties to
retain guardianship of the minor children as contemplated in section
18(2)(c) and 18(3) of The Children's Act
subject to the restriction
of the Father's rights of guardianship in the following manner:
10.3.1 The Father's
consent be dispensed with in regard to matters under section
18(3)(c)(iii) and (vi) of the Children's Act for
the purposes of
removal of the minor children from South Africa to the Australia.
10.3.2 The Father's
consent be dispensed with in relation to the application and/or
renewal of the minor children's passport…
10.4 The Father to
exercise contact with the children at Ieast twice a year (during the
school holidays) for no less than 14 consecutive
days at a time; the
contact to be exercised in the Republic of South Africa at the
Mother's cost.”
[20]
The Applicant takes no issue with the Family
Counsellor and Family Advocate's recommendations save for the
recommendation contained
in paragraph 10.4 (above) of the Family
Counsellor's report, which provides for the Applicant to make payment
of the costs of two
trips for the children to visit the Respondent in
South Africa per annum.
[21]
It is
trite that, in relocation matters is to interrogate the bona fides
and the reasonableness of an Applicant's decision to relocate.
However, the best interest of the child is still the determining
factor. The appellate division in Jackson v Jackson
[3]
Scott JA stated the position at para 2 of the majority judgment as
follows:
" It is trite
that in matters of this kind the interests of the children are the
first and paramount consideration. It
is no doubt true that,
generally speaking, where, following a divorce, the custodian parent
wishes to emigrate, a Court will not
lightly refuse leave for
the children to be taken out of the country if the decision of the
custodian parent is shown to be
bona fide
and
reasonable. But this is not because of the so-called rights of the
custodian parent; it is because, in most cases, even
if the access by
the non-custodian parent would be materially affected, it would not
be in the best interests of the children that
the custodian parent
be thwarted in his or her endeavour to emigrate in pursuance of
a decision reasonably and genuinely taken.
Indeed, one can well
imagine that in many situations such a refusal would inevitably
result in bitterness and frustration which
would adversely affect the
children. But what must be stressed is that each case must be decided
on its own particular facts. No
two cases are precisely the same and,
while past decisions based on other facts may provide useful
guidelines, they do no
more than that. By the same token care should
be taken not to elevate to rules of law the
dicta
of
Judges made in the context of the peculiar facts and circumstances
with which they were concerned.”
[22] In this case,
relocation has belatedly been conceded by the respondent father. This
is one such case where the facts
justify the relocation order.
Opposition thereto, in my view was completely unjustified.
Conversely, the withdrawal of the counterclaim
was made informally
from the bar and proposed in a draft order. In any event, the
counterclaim is devoid of any merit and fell
to be dismissed.
[22]
The applicant contends that the Family Advocate
seemingly has fundamentally misunderstood the Applicant's tender
which is a tender
to pay the costs of the flights to bring the
children to South Africa and return them to Australia and both
children's return flights
annually. Further, that, it is financially
impossible for the Applicant to forego the maintenance and make
payment for two trips
per annum. It is the applicant’s case
that, the further visits are tendered by the Applicant but for the
Respondent's account.
This is so, against the background that the
Applicant has agreed to forego the entirety of the amount of
maintenance which the
Respondent has been ordered to pay for the
children, which amounts to R150 000.00 in 2024, escalating to R180
000.00 in 2025 and
escalating annually thereafter.
[23]
The Respondent contends in addition, that the
Applicant's Draft Order is not in line with the recommendations of
the Family Advocate.
The Respondent contends further that each party
should be ordered to pay their own costs as the opposition to both
applications
were bona fide. The respondent contends further that,
each party shall pay his or her own costs occasioned by the main
application
and the counter application. In my judgment, there is
nothing to gainsay the contention made by the applicant mother
regarding
the tender for one annual return trip coupled with her
agreement to forego the entirety of the amount of maintenance which
the
Respondent has been ordered to pay. In any event, the
recommendation in that regard is nothing else but just that, which
this court
is entitled to accept, reject or amend.
[24]
As regards the question of costs, it is trite
that, the general rule is that the successful party is entitled to
his costs. In determining
who is the successful party in this case,
in favour of the applicant mother, the court looks to the substance
of the judgment and
not merely to its form.
[25]
The father’s conduct regarding this matter,
inter alia, by failing to file heads of argument consistent with the
practice
directives of this Division is reprehensible. The Respondent
has not filed his heads of argument despite having been called upon
to do so by the applicant. The Respondent is accordingly in default
of the requirements of the practice manual which require him
to file
his heads of argument 5 days after receipt of the Applicant's heads
of argument. In so doing, the respondent clearly showed
a
contemptuous disregard for his opponent’s rights in this
regard. This court in the excise of its discretion was at liberty,
to
show its disapproval of the respondent’s conduct. It is for the
above reasons that the order was made.
TP MUDAU
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
L Segal SC
Chimes
Law Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
F Bezuidenhout
Di
Siena Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
Date
of Judgment:
9
September 2024
4
October 2024
[1]
Act
108 of 1996.
[2]
Act
38 of 2005.
[3]
2002
(2) SA 303
(SCA) at 318.
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