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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 79
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## M.U v W.H (2022/026981)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 79 (6 February 2023)
M.U v W.H (2022/026981)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 79 (6 February 2023)
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sino date 6 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
6 February 2023
Case
No. 2022/026981
In
the matter between:
MU
Applicant
and
WH
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
On 3 February 2023, I dismissed an application for leave to
appeal brought by the respondent, WH, against my order of 11 January
2023. In that order, I directed WH to return two children, DPH and
DWH, to the care of the applicant, MU. As well as dismissing
WH’s
application for leave to appeal, I directed the South African Police
Services to take the steps necessary to execute
my order of 11
January 2023. I indicated that my reasons for refusing leave to
appeal would follow in due course. These are my
reasons.
The
divorce, the related proceedings and the urgent application
2
WH and MU are in the midst of an acrimonious divorce. DPH and
DWH are WH’s and MU’s children, born during the marriage.
Pending the finalisation of the divorce, DPH and DWH have resided
with MU, subject to WH’s agreed rights of contact with
them.
Initially that arrangement was embodied in an agreed interim order of
the Germiston Children’s Court. However, that
interim order
expired when the Children’s Court inquiry was closed on 8 March
2022.
3
After the expiry of the interim order, MU moved with DPH and
DWH to Swellendam in the Western Cape. WH was not happy with this,
but MU described it as a necessary step to secure access to a home
and an income. Various proceedings brought by WH in this court
to
obtain an order placing the children in his care have so far been
unsuccessful. The latest iteration of those proceedings is
a
directive from the Deputy Judge President of this court staying WH’s
application for primary residence and care of DPH
and DWH pending a
report from the Family Advocate, which has not yet been produced.
4
That notwithstanding, late last year, WH and MU agreed that WH
would have unsupervised contact with DPH and DWH between 5 and 26
December 2022, and return them to MU’s care at Tyger Valley
Mall at 10am on 26 December 2022. The arrangement was reduced
to
writing and signed by WH.
5
WH did not honour the arrangement. He instead returned to
Gauteng with DPH and DWH, and broke off contact with MU.
6
On 10 January 2023, MU placed an application for the return of
DPH and DWH on my urgent roll. WH opposed that application in person.
Mr. Scholtz, a member of the Pretoria Bar, represented MU. When the
matter was first called before me, WH said that he had not
had
adequate time to prepare his argument. In order to afford WH some
extra time, I stood the application down to 11 January 2023.
7
On 11 January 2023, having heard extensive argument from WH
and Mr. Scholtz, I took the view that WH had advanced no good reason
for failing to honour the agreement with MU, and I ordered that DPH
and DWH to be returned to MU’s care. My reasons for making
that
order were given
ex tempore
. My judgment was later transcribed
and made available to the parties.
The
application for leave to appeal
8
It was not always easy to understand the bases upon which WH
sought leave to appeal against my order. My questions to WH in
seeking
to clarify his argument were, to put it mildly, not welcomed.
In the end, WH asked that I listen in silence to a speech he had
pre-written and wished to read out to me. I acceded to WH’s
request and listened carefully to the speech. I sought to distil
from
it the bases on which WH sought leave to appeal.
9
I was able to identify three broad grounds of appeal, which I
will address in turn.
10
WH first argued that MU’s urgent application should not
have been entertained at all. That proposition was apparently based
on a letter from the Deputy Judge President which states that,
pending the delivery of the Family Advocate’s report, to which
I have already referred, WH’s application for primary residence
and care of DPH and DWH may not be set down in the Family
Court. The
Deputy Judge President also directed that “neither party shall
bring any other ancillary or extraneous proceedings
whilst [WH’s]
case is pending”. WH argued that MU’s urgent application
was barred by that directive.
11
I do not think that is correct. Read as a whole and in
context, the Deputy Judge President’s directive was clearly
intended
to preserve the situation as it stood at the time the letter
was written. The Deputy Judge President clearly did not contemplate
that WH would attempt to force a change in DPH’s and DWH’s
primary residence, and his directive cannot reasonably be
read to
prevent MU from bringing an application to reverse the effect of WH’s
conduct.
12
Even if I am wrong in that respect, the Deputy Judge
President’s directive is not binding on me. It would, of
course, be a
weighty consideration in deciding whether to entertain
MU’s urgent application, but the ultimate decision to entertain
MU’s
application was mine, and mine alone.
13
The second ground of appeal WH pursued was that he had been
forced into signing the agreement to return DPH and DWH to MU’s
care, because MU would not otherwise allow WH to see the children.
However, WH’s claim of duress is not consistent with his
concession, while arguing the main application, that he entered into
the agreement with MU freely and voluntarily. I questioned
him
directly on whether he had signed the agreement freely at the outset
of his argument. WH said that he had. While he later sought
to
disavow that admission, I do not think that the disavowal was
realistic. In addition, I am not satisfied that a person who signs
an
agreement to obtain a benefit is under duress simply because they
would not obtain the benefit without signing the agreement.
If the
benefit was being unlawfully withheld, or being made subject to
unlawful or unconscionable conditions, things might be different,
but
there was no suggestion of that in this case.
14
The third ground of appeal discernible from WH’s
argument was the suggestion that I had improperly excluded affidavits
WH
wished to introduce which tended to show that DPH and DWH did not
want to leave his care, and were being abused in MU’s care.
I
excluded these affidavits because WH had not previously raised the
issues that they addressed in his answering affidavit or in
argument,
and MU had been given no opportunity to deal with them. The existence
and content of the affidavits were revealed in
what WH clearly
intended to be a flourish at the end of his submissions. It had never
been suggested, at any stage before WH’s
argument, that MU had
exposed DPH or DWH to abuse, or was otherwise unfit. The claim that
there was now important new evidence,
based on conversations between
WH and the children, that DPH and DWH were in danger in MU’s
care, struck me as incredible
and vexatious.
15
WH did finally place the affidavits before me as annexures to
his written application for leave to appeal. They were signed and
commissioned on 16 January 2023, five days after I had given
judgment. It is accordingly clear that I could not have erred in
failing
to admit them in the main application, because they did not
exist at that time. The affidavits purport to be “transcripts”
of conversations between WH, DPH and DWH. For the most part, they
record DPH and DWH telling WH what WH has already suggested to
them
that he wants to hear. They are, as evidence, of very little value.
16
This, I hope, summarises WH’s main grounds of appeal. It
is clear that none of them carries any prospect of success, and that
I was bound to refuse leave to appeal as a result.
The
putative
amicus curiae
17
At the commencement of the hearing of the application for
leave to appeal, a man identifying himself as “Lieutenant
Commander
Sylvester Vulani ‘Madala’ Mangolele”
sought to place himself on record as
amicus curiae
. Lt. Com.
Mangolele had not applied for admission as
amicus curiae
. He
had not participated in the main application. He had not sought MU’s
consent to intervene. Even after I gave him the
opportunity to
address me on the reasons for his presence in court, it was not at
all clear to me what submissions he wished to
advance, or what
interest he had in the proceedings. I refused to hear from him on the
basis that he was not properly before me,
and had no rights of
audience as a result. I made clear that he was welcome to remain in
the public gallery as an observer, but
that he had no standing in the
matter before me. Lt. Com. Mangolele nonetheless initially declined
to retreat to the public gallery,
and it became necessary for me to
adjourn the court for a short while to allow him the opportunity to
reconsider his position.
18
When I came back into court, Lt. Com. Mangolele, had, wisely,
taken a seat in the public gallery, and argument on the application
was allowed to proceed. Lt. Com. Mangolele nonetheless sought to
address me again after I gave my order dismissing the application.
I
refused his request to do so, and adjourned the court again.
19
WH complained that he was prejudiced by my refusal to grant
Lt. Com. Mangolele a right of audience. That complaint obviously
misconceives
the role of an
amicus curiae
, which is to assist
the court, not to assist the parties. While a party might be
prejudiced by the improper admission of an
amicus curiae
that
goes on to make inappropriate submissions, it is inconceivable that
there can be any legally recognisable prejudice to a party
from a
court’s decision not to admit an
amicus curiae
. Indeed,
not only was I satisfied that I would not be assisted by anything
that Lt. Com. Mangolele had to say, but it would also
have been
irregular and potentially highly prejudicial to MU to entertain
argument from him.
20
It was for these reasons, and in these circumstances, that I
refused WH’s application for leave to appeal, and directed that
the
DPH and DWH be returned to MU forthwith.
The second application
for leave to appeal
21
On Saturday 4 February 2023, WH filed a further application
for leave to appeal. That application was directed at my decision to
refuse WH’s first application for leave to appeal, and my
decision not to afford Lt. Com. Mangolele standing in the first
application for leave to appeal.
22
WH’s second application for leave to appeal is obviously
irregular. There is no basis on which I can entertain an application
for leave to appeal against my own order refusing leave to appeal. WH
lacks the standing necessary to challenge my decision not
to
recognise Lt. Com. Mangolele as
amicus curiae
, and that
decision is, in any event, not appealable in itself. The second
application for leave to appeal strikes me as a vexatious
attempt the
thwart the execution of my order of 11 January 2023. It will be
struck from the roll with costs. An order on those
terms will be
delivered to the parties with these reasons.
23
For the avoidance of doubt, I record that neither WH’s
application for leave to appeal, nor my order striking it from the
roll has any effect on the rights of MU to enforce my order of 11
January 2023. I also record I will not entertain any further attempt
to seek leave to appeal from me against any of the orders I have made
in this matter. WH’s further remedies, such as they
are, are
spelt out in the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 6
February 2023.
HEARD
ON: 3
February 2023
DECIDED
ON: 3 February
2023
REASONS: 6
February 2023
For
the Applicant: H Scholtz
Instructed by JJR Botha
Attorneys
For
the Respondent: In person
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