Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 197South Africa
W.D.H v S and Others (2022-026981) [2023] ZAGPJHC 197 (3 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 February 2023
Headnotes
of the ongoing litigation is contained in the judgment of Wilson J, delivered on 6 February 2023, rendering it unnecessary to re-summarise the events here. However, it is necessary to explain how the current application instituted by WH is related to the Wilson J proceedings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## W.D.H v S and Others (2022-026981) [2023] ZAGPJHC 197 (3 March 2023)
W.D.H v S and Others (2022-026981) [2023] ZAGPJHC 197 (3 March 2023)
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sino date 3 March 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 2022-026981
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/ NO
DATE: 03 MARCH 2023
In the matter between
:
W[...]1
D[...]1 H[...]1
Applicant
And
THE
STATE
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Third
Respondent
M[....]
U[....]
Fourth
Respondent
In Re:
W[...]1
D[...]1 H[...]1
Appellant
and
M[….]
U[….]
Respondent
In Re:
D[...]2
P[....] H[....]2
Minor
Child
D[…]3
W[….]2 H[….]3
Minor
Child
JUDGMENT
KEIGHTLEY
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This matter is the latest in a long-running
salvo of litigation between the applicant, WH, and the third
respondent, MU. These parties
are involved in divorce proceedings.
The husband, WH, is a prolific self-represented litigator. A summary
of the ongoing litigation
is contained in the judgment of Wilson J,
delivered on 6 February 2023, rendering it unnecessary to
re-summarise the events here.
However, it is necessary to explain how
the current application instituted by WH is related to the Wilson J
proceedings.
[2]
It is not over-dramatic to say that WH and
MU are at war over their children. Save for recent events giving rise
to the Wilson J
litigation, the two minor children, who are 8 and 10
years old, have been in the primary care of MU, the wife and mother
of the
children. She and the children left the previous family home
in 2021. For reasons explained in the affidavits filed in the Wilson
J litigation, MU relocated with the children to the Western Cape. WH
remains resident in Gauteng. An agreement was reached between
WH and
MU that the children were to visit WH in Gauteng from 9 December 2022
and return to MU’s custody and care on 26 January
2023. WH
reneged on the agreement by refusing to return the children. Instead,
he kept them in his custody in Gauteng. It was this
action on his
part that led MU to institute urgent proceedings in this Court. The
application came before Wilson J.
[3]
It is important to highlight what relief
was sought by MU in her notice of motion. She sought an order:
[3.1]
directing the Family Advocate to investigate the best interests of
the minor children and to compile a report
with recommendations
pertaining to their primary care, residence and contact;
[3.2]
directing that pending the Family Advocate’s investigation,
primary care and residence of the minor children
to vest in MU, with
telephonic contact for WH;
[3.3]
directing WH immediately to return the minor children to the care of
MU in the Western Cape; and
[3.3]
authorising and directing the Sheriff to facilitate the return of the
children should WH fail to comply with the
order within 5 days.
On 11 January 2023 Wilson
J made an order in the terms sought, save for substituting the South
African Police Service for the Sheriff.
WH sought leave to appeal the
11 January order. Wilson J refused the application for leave to
appeal on 3 February 2023. As part
of his order dismissing the
application, Wilson J directed the South African Police Service:
‘…
forthwith (to) assist with the execution of the
order of (11 January 2023)
’.
[4]
Undaunted, on 4 February (which was a
Saturday), WH uploaded a second application for leave to appeal. Not
surprisingly, that application
was struck from the Roll. On 6
February Wilson J delivered reasons for his refusal of the first
application for leave to appeal
and the striking of the second. In
the final paragraph of his reasons, he records:
‘
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
.’
[5]
WH must have taken head of what is stated
in the final sentence because on 9 February 2023, before the 11
January order could be
executed, he lodged an application for leave
to appeal with the Constitutional Court. On 10 January 2023 the SAPS,
acting in terms
of that order, and the order of 3 February 2023,
removed the children from WH’s custody and returned them to
that of MU.
In response, WH filed an urgent application in this Court
on 16 February 2023 seeking, on an urgent basis, an order that the
minor
children immediately be returned to his custody within two
days. He also sought an order interdicting the Minister of Police
from
‘
aiding and abetting (MU)
pending the hearing of the appeal by the Constitutional Court
’.
[6]
I should add that WH cited the Minister of
Home Affairs as the third respondent. He sought no relief from this
Minister but sought
costs against ‘the Respondents’.
Consequently, the Minister of Home Affairs briefed counsel to appear
and oppose the
application. I dismissed with costs the application
insofar as the Minister is concerned for reasons given
ex
tempore
.
[7]
Neither the remaining Minister nor MU
entered appearance to oppose. My registrar contacted MU to determine
her position regarding
the application and she advised that she could
no longer afford to engage attorneys to act for her. Given the
barrage of litigation
WH has engaged in, MU’s response cannot
be perceived to be unreasonable. I accordingly decided the matter
without the benefit
of an answering affidavit from MU. Despite this,
I am unpersuaded that WH has made out a case for the relief he seeks.
[8]
I will proceed on the basis that the matter
was urgent despite the fact that, on the date it was set down for
hearing, the children
had been returned to the custody of MU for over
10 days. The upheaval that would undoubtedly occur were they to be
uprooted once
again after a lapse of this period of time mitigates
against urgency. However, the application involves minors and it is
in their
interests that some certainty prevails as to where they are
to live pending further proceedings.
[9]
WH’s primary contention was that the
removal of the children subsequent to his lodging of an application
for leave to appeal
with the Constitutional Court was unlawful,
unconstitutional and invalid. He relies on
s 18(1)
of the
Superior
Courts Act for
support. This section states:
‘
Subject
to subsection (2)
and (3), and unless
the court under exceptional circumstances orders otherwise, the
operation and execution of a decision which
is the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended pending
the decision of the application or appeal.’
(my emphasis)
[10]
Subsection (2) provides that:
‘
Subject
to subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional circumstances
orders otherwise, the operation and execution of a decision
that is
an interlocutory order not having the effect of a final judgment,
which is the subject of an application for leave to appeal
or of an
appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the application or
appeal.’
[11]
No final order has yet been made about the
primary residence, care and contact regarding the children. The 11
January 2023 order
is an interim order. It is to prevail pending a
report by the Family Advocate. What is more, as part of his suite of
litigation,
WH has instituted an application that he be awarded
primary residence and care of the children. That application was
filed prior
to the urgent application that served before Wilson J.
The Deputy Judge President has directed that WH’s application
cannot
proceed without a report from the Family Advocate. It is thus
plain that the state of play as far as the children are concerned
is
that no final order can be made without the Family Advocate’s
involvement. The 11 January 2023 order is consistent with
the DPP’s
directive. It is patently interlocutory in nature. It follows that
s
18(1)
does not apply. On the contrary, under
s 18(2)
, the 11 January
2023 and 3 February 2023 orders were not suspended pending the
outcome of WH’s application for leave to appeal
to the
Constitutional Court. The SAPS were acting under the authority of the
Wilson J order when they removed the children from
WH. Quite simply,
the removal of the children from WH and their placement, once again,
with MU was not unlawful. This finding alone
is sufficient to result
in a dismissal of the application.
[12]
There is a second reason why the
application must be dismissed. The 11 January 2023 had been executed
by the time WH’s urgent
application was instituted. In a
dispute like this one, where children are involved, one cannot simply
turn back the clock. Their
best interests must be considered. The
best interests of the children were considered by Wilson J when he
made his original order
on 11 January 2023. He decided that it was in
their best interests to be returned to the care of MU. He refused
leave to appeal
against that ruling. In these circumstances, very
exceptional circumstances would have to be demonstrated, based on
solid evidence,
to convince a court, in a new application a few weeks
later, that it could possibly be in the children’s best
interests that
they be returned to WH in the interim. In his founding
affidavit WH made no more than unspecified and unfounded allegations
that
if the children were left in MU’s care they would suffer
‘maltreatment, neglect, abuse or degradation’. These
unfounded allegations are insufficient to establish that it would be
in the children’s best interests to be placed with WH.
[13]
For all of these reasons, the application
must fail.
[14]
I make the following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
R
M KEIGHTLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPLICANT:
SELF
REPRESENTED
COUNSEL FOR THIRD
RESPONDENTS ADVOCATE
R PETERSON
THIRD RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS OFFICE
OF THE STATE ATTORNEY
DATE OF
HEARING: 23 FEBRUARY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03 MARCH 2023
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