Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 218South Africa
Y.R.D v K.L.D (2021/28640) [2023] ZAGPJHC 218 (14 March 2023)
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Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Y.R.D v K.L.D (2021/28640) [2023] ZAGPJHC 218 (14 March 2023)
Y.R.D v K.L.D (2021/28640) [2023] ZAGPJHC 218 (14 March 2023)
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sino date 14 March 2023
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FLYNOTES:
CONTEMPT AND SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
FAMILY
– Contempt – Settlement agreement – Whether
contempt proceedings legally competent to enforce the
pertinent
clauses – To replace ex-wife’s car every five years –
To assist the ex-wife to acquire a house
by paying the bond –
Both clauses categorised as relating to orders ad factum
praestandum (performance of an act) and
in respect of the payment
of maintenance arising from divorce proceedings.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021/28640
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED. YES
DATE:
14 March
2023
In
the matter between:
Y[....]
R[....]
D[....]1
Applicant
and
K[....]
L[....] D[....]2
Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' and/or the parties' representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to Case Lines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on 13 March 2023
JUDGMENT
WANLESS
AJ
Introduction
[1]
In this application, one
Y[....] R[....] D[....]1,
adult
female
(“the Applicant”),
seeks an order declaring
her ex-husband one
K[....] L[....] D[....]2,
adult male
(“the
Respondent”
) to be in contempt of an order made by the
Regional Court, Johannesburg on the 25
th
of January 2015
under case number 14/2134
(“the January Order”)
the
terms of which were confirmed by an order of this Court on the 30
th
of August 2021 under case number 2021/28640
(“the August
Order”).
Common
cause facts
[2]
The Applicant and the Respondent were married and subsequently
divorced on the 27
th
of January 2015 at the Regional
Court, Johannesburg. At the time of divorce the parties concluded a
settlement agreement
(“the agreement”)
which was
made an order of that court
(“the January Order”)
.
[3]
In terms of the January Order the following was agreed between the
Applicant and the Respondent
and made an order of the Johannesburg
Regional Court, namely:
“
2.1
Immovable Property
2.1.1 The
parties own property more fully described as ERF [....], Bassonia,
Johannesburg.
2.1.1.1
The abovementioned property is encumbered by a bond currently held by
Investec Private
Bank and shall be administered as follows:
2.1.1.1.1
The property shall be sold and the proceeds, after settlement of the
outstanding bond amount shall be
paid to the Defendant [the Applicant
in casu];
2.1.1.1.2
Should any of the parties refuse to sign the transfer documents after
a reasonable and legitimate offer
has been made taking into account
the current market circumstances, the Sheriff of the Court shall be
authorised to sign such documents
on behalf of the parties;
2.1.1.1.3
The [Applicant] shall be entitled to acquire a house up to the value
of R1,5 million after the divorce
and the [Respondent] shall,
should
he have the financial means to do so
, pay the bond on such
property until it is settled. The house shall be registered in both
parties’ names but shall be transferred
to the [Applicant] when
the bond is settled.
2.2
Movable Property
2.2.1 The
parties currently own two motor vehicles which they each use. The
vehicles are currently financed by Mercedes
Benz. The parties hereby
agree that the [Respondent] will continue to pay the remaining
balance of the vehicles and each party
shall retain his/her vehicle.
2.2.2 The
[Respondent],
should
he have the financial means at the time
,
will replace the [Applicant]’s motor vehicle every 5 years,
with a second hand or new motor vehicle of a similar price escalated
by inflation.”
[1]
[4]
On or about the 1
st
of September 2015 the parties entered
into a
Memorandum of
Agreement
(“the MOA”)
which dealt with,
inter alia
, the manner in which the
immovable property owned by the parties would be sold.
[5]
Thereafter the immovable property owned by both parties was sold and
it was further common
cause that once the mortgage bond was settled
in respect thereof there was no residual payable to the Applicant.
[6]
During or about the period December 2020 to March 2021 the attorneys
representing the respective
parties engaged with one another in
correspondence. The Applicant’s attorneys requested the
Respondent’s attorneys
to advise when the Respondent would
comply with the January Order. In response thereto the Respondent’s
attorneys advised
that, in light of the parties having entered into
the MOA, the Respondent was no longer obliged to comply with the
January Order.
Thereafter, the Respondent’s attorneys placed
the interpretation, implementation and conclusion of both the January
Order
and the MOA in dispute.
[7]
This gave rise to the Applicant instituting an application in this
Court for a declarator
that the Respondent was indeed still obliged
to comply with the January Order and that there had been no variation
thereof.
[8]
That application was not opposed by the Respondent and on the 30
th
of August 2021 the August Order was granted, in terms of which,
inter
alia,
the clauses of the January Order dealing with the issues of
the immovable property and the motor vehicle were declared to still
be of full force and effect. The August Order reads as follows:
“
Clauses
2.1.1.1.3 and 2.2 (including respective sub-clauses thereof) of the
court order of 27 January 2015 granted in the Magistrate’s
Court for the Region of Johannesburg under case number 14/2134, have
not been varied and remain of full force and effect.”
[9]
The Respondent has not complied with the January Order and the
Applicant has instituted
the present application of contempt. It is
not disputed by the Respondent that he is well aware of the January
and August Orders.
The relief sought by the Applicant in the
Applicant’s Notice of Motion is as follows:
“
1.
Declaring Respondent to be in contempt of the court order made by the
Regional Court, Johannesburg on 25 January
2015 under case number
14/2134 (“the Order”);
2.
Committing Respondent to imprisonment for a period to be determined
by this Honourable Court;
3.
Alternatively to paragraph 2 above, committing Respondent to
imprisonment for a period to be determined
by this Honourable Court,
which period shall be wholly or partially suspended on the following
conditions:
3.1 That
Respondent shall within 30 days from date hereof, comply with the
Order in that:
3.1.1
Respondent shall acquire a house for Applicant up to the value of
R1,5 million and register such immovable property
in the names of
both Respondent and Applicant;
3.1.2
Respondent shall pay the bond on such property until it (sic) such
bond is settled, whereafter Respondent will
transfer the property
into the name of the Applicant;
3.1.3
Respondent will replace Applicant’s motor vehicle with a second
hand or new motor vehicle of a similar price
escalated by inflation.
4.
That Respondent shall pay Applicant’s costs of this application
on the scale as between attorney
and client.
The
Respondent’s case
[10]
The Respondent raises a number of defences to the relief sought by
the Applicant. These are:
10.1
that contempt proceedings are not legally competent to enforce the
clauses of the agreement that
the Applicant seeks to enforce;
10.2
that the Applicant has not proven that the Respondent is in breach of
the agreement that was
made an order of court;
10.3
hat to the extent that the Applicant has proved non-compliance with
the agreement (which the
Respondent denies) that the Applicant has
failed to prove wilfulness and
mala fides
on the part of the
Respondent beyond reasonable doubt; and
10.4
that there are disputes of fact relating to the requirements of
contempt which prevents the adjudication
of these proceedings by way
of motion.
Are
contempt proceedings legally competent to enforce the clauses of the
agreement that the Applicant seeks to enforce?
[11]
The above heading (in the form of a question) is posed using the same
terminology as put forward by the Respondent’s
Counsel. Of
course, when considering this point
in limine
as raised by the
Respondent in this application, it is imperative to note that the
clauses in question, whilst having their genesis
in the agreement
entered into between the parties at the time of divorce, ultimately
formed part of the January Order of which
the Applicant avers the
Respondent is in contempt. Since interpreting the January Order is
fundamental to arriving at the correct
answer in respect of the point
in limine
raised by the Respondent and as set out above, this
context (as only one of the factors to be applied in the
interpretation of a
court order) should not be forgotten. It is for
this reason that this Court was,
inter alia
, provided with and
referred to, the application papers in respect of the unopposed
application for a declarator in this Court to
the effect that the
Respondent was still bound to comply with the terms of the January
Order (which had incorporated the terms
of the agreement) and
resulted in the granting by this Court of the August Order.
Throughout this judgment the clauses or paragraphs
of both the
agreement and the January Order will be referred to interchangeably
as will (dependent upon the context in which they
are used)
references to the agreement; the January Order and the August Order.
It is common cause between the parties that this
Court has the
requisite jurisdiction to determine this application (being a
contempt application in respect of an order of a lower
court within
the jurisdiction of this Court the terms of which have been confirmed
by this Court).
[12]
At the
heart of the Respondent’s opposition to the application based
on this point
in
limine
is
the fact that contempt of court proceedings are not competent where
they relate to proceedings
ad
pecuniam solvendam
(the payment of money).
[2]
Indeed, this principle is fairly trite. Coupled thereto however are
the following. Whilst contempt proceedings are
not
competent where they relate to orders
ad
pecuniam solvendam
,
contempt proceedings
are
competent where they relate to orders
ad
factum praestandum
(performance of an act).
[3]
In
addition thereto, contempt proceedings
are
applicable in respect of the payment of maintenance arising from
divorce proceedings.
[4]
Adv Pye
SC, who appeared on behalf of the Respondent, conceded both of these
latter principles. However, it was his submission
that the relief
sought by the Applicant is in substance for the payment of money and
relates to the patrimonial consequences of
the marriage between the
parties rather than to maintenance. As such, it was submitted that
the relief sought by the Applicant
(contempt) was not competent and
that the application should be dismissed on this ground alone.
[13]
In order to
properly decide this issue, it is necessary (as already stated) to
interpret the relevant clauses relied upon by the
Applicant in
support of the application. When doing so, it is essential to bear in
mind the applicable principles of interpretation
as set out by the
Supreme Court of Appeal
(“SCA”)
in the matter of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[5]
where it was held:-
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract,
having regard to the
context
provided by reading the particular provision or provisions in the
light of the document as a whole and the circumstances attendant
upon
its coming into existence. Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration must be given to the
language
used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the
context
in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose
to which it is directed and the material known to those responsible
for its production.
Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of all these factors.
The process is
objective
,
not subjective. A
sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation; in a contractual context it is to
make a contract for the parties other than the one they in fact
made.
The
'inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself', read in context and having regard to the purpose of
the
provision and the background to the preparation and production of the
document
.”
[6]
Of
course, the aforesaid principles governing the interpretation of
contracts apply equally to the construction of a settlement
agreement
which was made an order of court.
[7]
[14]
As dealt with above, in order for the point
in limine
raised
on behalf of the Respondent to be upheld the relevant provisions of
the agreement pertaining to the immovable property and
the motor
vehicle must not be either the performance of an act or payments made
in respect of maintenance.
[15]
In the
matter of
Hawthorne
v Hawthorne
[8]
the Court was essentially tasked with interpreting a settlement
agreement which had been made an order of court. When considering
the
meaning of “
maintenance
”,
Herbstein J cited, with approval,
[9]
the words of Scott LJ in
Ackworth
v Ackworth
[10]
where it was held that maintenance “
is
a very wide word….It includes much more than food, lodging,
clothes, travelling and so on.”.
[16]
When
searching for an answer as to what may constitute an order
ad
factum praestandum
(performance of an act) or payment made in terms of a maintenance
order the matter of
Metropolitan
Industrial Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Hughes
[11]
provides an excellent platform. In that matter the Court
[12]
referred to the matter of
Carrick
v Williams
[13]
where Schreiner J held
[14]
the
following:
“
It seems to me
that the reason for holding maintenance orders…… to be
orders ad factum praestandum is that they are
not really money
judgments at all. In their essential nature they are
orders
that the defendant do something
,
namely
maintain
his wife
,
or the children.
This
duty might be performed in various ways including the provision of
housing
,
clothing, and food in kind
,
or the transfer of property;
………….”
[15]
[17]
In the
matter of
Strime
v Strime
[16]
it was held
[17]
that not only
must an order for maintenance, like any other court order, be
meticulously carried out but it is also final and enforceable
until
varied or cancelled.
[18]
It
was also held that arrears of maintenance could be recovered either
by way of contempt proceedings or by way of writ of execution.
[19]
[18]
When attempting to ascertain the true meaning of “
maintenance”
to enable one to draw a distinction between an order to pay a sum of
money or perform a certain act to comply with a “
maintenance
order”
and the payment of money to comply with an order in
respect of the proprietary consequences of a marriage upon divorce,
one would expect, in the first instance, to find a definition
(or definitions) which would assist in the
Maintenance Act, 99 of
1998
(“the
Maintenance Act&rdquo
;).
Unfortunately, in
section 1
of the
Maintenance Act
>, “
maintenance”
is not defined. However, “
maintenance order”
is
defined as follows:
“
maintenance
order”
means any order for the payment, including
the periodical payment, of sums of money towards the maintenance of
any person issued
by any court in the Republic, and includes, except
for the purposes of
section 31
, any sentence suspended on condition
that the convicted person make payments of sums of money towards the
maintenance of any other
person.
[19]
“
Maintenance”
is also not defined in the
Divorce
Act 79 of 1979
(“the
Divorce Act&rdquo
;)
or the
Matrimonial Property Act, 88 of 1984
(“the
Matrimonial Property Act&rdquo
;). The Concise Oxford English
Dictionary
defines “
maintenance”
as “
a
husband’s or wife’s provision for a spouse after
separation or divorce”.
[20]
Wunsh J,
when dealing with the powers of the Maintenance Court to make certain
orders in terms of the
Maintenance
Act 23 of 1963
(“the
old Maintenance Act”)
in the matter of
Schmidt
v Schmidt
[20]
drew the distinction
[21]
between “
the
quantified payment”
and the “
unquantified
obligations”
included in the same maintenance order. It should be noted that the
definition of a “
maintenance
order”
in the old Maintenance Act has remained the same in the Maintenance
Act.
[21]
What the
Court in
Schmidt
was ultimately asked to decide was whether, in terms of the
provisions of subsection 5(4)(a) of the old Maintenance Act the
maintenance
court could make an order for treatment and therapy given
by a person who is
not
a medical practitioner (the maintenance court been specifically
empowered to make orders pertaining to medical expenses in terms
of
subsections 5(4)(a)(ii) and (iii) of the old Maintenance Act) and
recurring costs of education on the basis that these would
be orders
for the payment of “
at
such times, and to such person, officer, organisation or
institution….and in such manner as may be specified in the
order,
of sums of money so specified, towards the maintenance of such
other person.”
[22]
[22]
In deciding
this issue, Wunsh J held
[23]
that:
“
The payments
would be made towards the
maintenance
of a
person,
bearing in mind the wide meaning of the word
(see,
for example
Hawthorne v Hawthorne
1950 (3) SA
299
(C) at 304E-F; Scott v Scott
1946 TPD 399
at 401-2). They would
be
periodic
as distinguished from a lump sum
payment (see Hahlo
The South African Law of Husband and
Wife
5
th
ed at 357). The fact
that they are not made at regular intervals does not mean that they
are not periodic – the word can
mean from time to time –
compare para (ii)(bb) of the exclusions from the definition of
“remuneration” in para
1 of the Fourth Schedule to the
Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 which refers to amounts paid for services
which are “payable at
regular daily, weekly, monthly or other
intervals”.
And if an order
specified that amounts charged by a category of service-providers,
for example occupational or speech therapists,
schools and suppliers
of school books, but it could be more general – should be paid,
there is no reason why those should
not be amounts “specified”
in the order – such a specification will enable one to
ascertain accurately what is
payable (for example,
Pattinson and
Another v Fell and Another
1963 (3) SA 277
(D) at
279A-C).Finally, payments of such amounts will be made to payees who
fall within the class provided for in s 5(4).
It would be anomalous
if a party
seeking
to enforce an order
or have it replaced, which occurs frequently in matrimonial and
post-matrimonial proceedings, incorporating an undertaking to pay
a
quantified monthly amount and medical expenses and also an
undertaking to pay other unqualified obligations, would have to have
recourse to different courts or that two maintenance orders’
would be extant dealing with the maintenance (using the word
in a
neutral sense)obligations between the same two parties. It is also
not practical or in the interests of justice that two different
courts enquire into and deal with separate components of a
general
maintenance obligation. The determination of the obligation to pay
towards unquantified obligations must be influenced by the amount
of
the quantified payments and
vice
versa
.”
[24]
[23]
Having regard to the agreement, it is noted that in the preamble
thereto, it is stated,
inter alia
, that
“
WHEREAS the
Parties whish (sic) this settlement agreement to replace all
pleadings filed to date and form the basis of the division
of the
joint estate as well as the parental plan regarding the minor
children and maintenance obligations between the parties.”
So,
at the outset, the parties identified the issues which they wished to
deal with in the agreement upon their divorce. This is
carried
through to the body of the agreement itself, which is divided up into
numbered paragraphs and various headings.
[24]
Paragraph 1 of the agreement bears the heading of “
CHILDREN
”
and then has a number of sub-paragraphs dealing with various aspects
which are applicable to the minor children born of
the marriage
between the Applicant and the Respondent. Subparagraph 1.10 of the
agreement deals with maintenance in respect of
the minor children and
reads as follows:
“
1.10
Maintenance
The parties
agree that they will ensure that the children are cared for to the
best of their financial resources. The parties agree
that they will
jointly make financial decisions about the financial wellbeing of the
children.
Provision for
maintenance
The Plaintiff
(Respondent) shall be responsible for the maintenance of the
children, providing for their education and all expenses
necessary
for the (sic) wellbeing and sustainable living. “
[25]
Paragraph 2 of the agreement bears the heading “
Division
of Assets
”.
It is also divided up into a number
of subparagraphs with various headings. Paragraph 2 of the agreement
reads as follows:
“
2.
Division of assets
2.1
Immovable Property
2.1.1 The
parties own property more fully described as ERF [....], Bassonia,
Johannesburg.
2.1.1.1 The
abovementioned property Is encumbered by a bond currently held by
Investec Private Bank and shall be administered
as follows;
2.1.1.1.1
The property shall be sold and the proceeds, after settlement of the
outstanding bond amount shall be
paid to the Defendant.
2.1.1.1.2
Should any of the parties refuse to sign the transfer documents after
a reasonable and legitimate oiler
has been made taking into account
the current market circumstances, the Sheriff of the Court shall be
authorised to sign such documents
on behalf of the parties.
2.1.1.1.3
The Defendant shall be entitled to acquire a house up to the value of
R1,5 million after the divorce
and the Plaintiff shall, should he
have the financial means to do so, pay the bond on such property
until it is settled. The house
shall be registered in both parties
names but shall be transferred to the Defendant when the band is
settled.
2.2
Movable Property
2.2.1 The
parties currently own two motor vehicles which they each use. The
vehicles are currently financed by Mercedes
Benz. The parties hereby
agree that the Plaintiff will. continue to pay the remaining balance
of the vehicles and each party shall
retain his/her vehicle.
2.2.2 The
Plaintiff, should he have the financial means at the time, will
replace the Defendants motor vehicle every
5 years, with a second
hand or new motor vehicle of a similar price escalated by inflation.
2.2.3 All
furniture effects which are currently in the household shall become
the property of the Defendant upon the
decree of divorce being
granted.
2.3
Pension Interest
2.3.1 The
parties agree that the Defendant shall be entitled to half the
benefits to which the Plaintiff is entitled
to as a member of his
pension fund according to the statutes when such pension benefits are
paid out.
2.4
Life
Policies
The Plaintiff shall
ensure that his three children will be equal beneficiaries of his
current life policies.
2.5
Provision of Maintenance for the Defendant
Each Party shall be
responsible for his/her own maintenance.
Should the Plaintiff’s financial position change in future, the
Plaintiff will pay maintenance towards the Defendant
.
[25]
2.7(sic)
Plaintiff’s
yearly Bonus payments
The Defendant will be
entitled to half of the Plaintiffs yearly bonus paid out at the end
of June of every year and half of the
Plaintiff’s l3°
cheque bonus paid during the month of December every year for the
rest of her natural life.
[26]
Upon a cursory reading, it may appear that the agreement makes (or
purports to make) a distinction between
maintenance and the division
of assets of the joint estate (the parties having been married in
community of property). Presumably
this is the basis upon which
Counsel for the Respondent submitted that the relief sought by the
Applicant is in substance for the
payment of money and relates to the
patrimonial consequences of the marriage between the parties rather
than maintenance. However,
whilst paragraph 2 ostensibly deals with
the “
division of assets”
of the joint estate and
contains a number of subparagraphs which clearly do so, it also
contains subparagraph 2.5 which deals specifically
(and solely) with
the provision of maintenance by the Plaintiff
(Respondent
) to
the Defendant
(Applicant
) in the future. It must also be noted
that subparagraph 2.7 (which should be subparagraph 2.6) which deals
with “
Plaintiff’s yearly Bonus payments”
and
provides that one-half of the Respondent’s bonuses paid to him
at the end of June and during December each year will
be paid to the
Applicant for the remainder of her natural life, creates,
inter
alia
, an ongoing obligation and as such (in light of the
principles dealt with above and as will be seen from that which
follows later
in this judgment) can hardly be classified as a
division of assets but should rather be interpreted to fall under the
general classification
of maintenance.
[27]
In the
premises, it would be incorrect to rely solely (or at all) on the
structure of the agreement when interpreting same in order
to
ascertain whether the point
in
limine
as raised by the Respondent should be upheld or dismissed.
[26]
As can immediately be ascertained the proper interpretation of the
agreement is not as simple or as straightforward as Respondent’s
Counsel would suggest.
[28]
It is the
considered opinion of this Court that a single factor in the
interpretation of a term or terms of an agreement which has
been made
an order of court should never be over-emphasised to the detriment of
others. This Court is also well aware of the caution
issued by the
Supreme Court of Appeal
(“SCA”)
of the danger of “
context”
being over-utilised
[27]
as a
tool of interpretation. Nevertheless, it is the opinion of this Court
that in this particular matter the context as to how
the terms relied
upon by the Applicant were incorporated into the January Order before
being confirmed by the August Order, is
a fairly significant factor
in the interpretation of the agreement (and ultimately the January
Order). Of course, this does not
mean that this Court should not be
alive to (and apply) other relevant factors when adopting a correct
and objective approach to
interpretating the agreement which gave
rise to the January Order.
[29]
At the outset, it is imperative to note that the parties were married
in community of property. Hence the
provision (and
prima facie
distinction between proprietary consequences of the marriage and
maintenance, as noted above) for a recordal of the division of
the
joint estate which had existed between the parties upon divorce. In
this regard, it has already been noted that “
Provision of
Maintenance for the Defendant (Applicant)
” is a
subparagraph
(subparagraph 2.5)
under the general heading of
“
Division of Assets”
which is paragraph 2 of the
agreement. The other subparagraphs also falling thereunder
are
“Immovable Property” (subparagraph 2.1); “Movable
property” (subparagraph 2.2); “Pension Interest”
(subparagraph 2.3); “Life Policies” (subparagraph 2.4)
and “
Plaintiff’s (Respondent’s) yearly Bonus
payments” (subparagraph 2.7 which, as noted above, is a
typographical
error and should be 2.6).
[30]
Upon closer scrutiny, it is clear that the first subparagraph of the
agreement which forms the subject matter
of the dispute between the
parties, namely subparagraph 2.1 “
Immovable Property”
is divided up into two parts. In the first part the agreement
makes provision for the sale of the immovable property owned jointly
by the parties by virtue of their marriage in community of property
(subparagraphs 2.1.1.1.1 and 2.1.1.1.2).
The second part of
this subparagraph provides for the acquisition by the Defendant
(Applicant)
of an immovable property to a limited value after
the date of divorce
(subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3).
Importantly, the
second part of this subparagraph is not conditional upon the first
part thereof; the bond in respect of the immovable
property to be
acquired by the Defendant
(Applicant
) was to be paid by the
Plaintiff
(Respondent
) provided he had the financial means to
do so and the parties would own the immovable property jointly until
the bond was fully
paid whereupon the said property would be
transferred to the Defendant
(Applicant)
. From the aforegoing
the only reasonable and objective interpretation to be given thereto,
giving the wording of the subparagraph
its normal grammatical meaning
and interpreting same in a sensible manner to give it business
efficacy, is that provided the conditions
contained therein were
satisfied the Applicant would have the right to reside at the
immovable property; the Respondent would be
obliged to pay the
monthly bond instalments in respect thereof and, once the bond in
respect of the property was settled, the Applicant
would become the
owner of the property.
[31]
This clear and distinct separation between the sale of the immovable
property owned by the parties and the
acquisition of an immovable
property by the Applicant is further borne out by the parties
entering into a
Memorandum of Agreement
(“the MOA”
)
on the 1
st
of September 2015. The primary purpose of the
MOA was to deal with the sale of the immovable property owned by the
parties. It
made no reference to and was in no manner whatsoever
connected with the acquisition of an immovable property by the
Applicant.
[32]
As set out in
Hawthorne
, maintenance “
is a very wide
word which includes much more than food, lodging, clothes, travelling
and so on”.
At the very least, for present purposes, it
must obviously include the provision of an immovable property
(“lodging”).
Further, as seen from
Metropolitan
,
the duty to maintain can be carried out in various ways which would
include,
inter alia
, the provision of housing or the transfer
of property. Moreover, as dealt with earlier in this judgment,
“
maintenance order”
is defined in the Maintenance
Act as “
any order for the payment, including the periodical
payment, of sums of money towards the maintenance of any person”.
Having regard to the aforegoing, it is the opinion of this Court that
the provisions of subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 of the agreement
whereby the
Respondent, should he have the financial means to do so, pay the bond
on an immovable property to be acquired by the
Applicant up to the
value of R1,5 million, when made an order of this Court, became a
maintenance order and, as such, an order
ad factum praestandum.
This view is fortified by the findings of the Court in
Schmidt
as also set out earlier herein.
[33]
Further
support for this finding is to be found in the wording of the
subparagraph with particular reference to “
should
he have the financial means to do so”.
If
this subparagraph of the agreement had been intended to deal
specifically with the proprietary consequences of the marriage or,
put slightly differently, a division of the joint estate, wording of
this nature would have been inappropriate and superfluous.
On the
other hand, these words wholly support an interpretation that this
subparagraph is one which provides for a maintenance
obligation. In
addition to the aforegoing the provision of assets (such as an
immovable property or motor vehicle) as a means of
providing
maintenance has long been a common and acceptable practice within the
wider meaning of that term.
[28]
Also, as is clear from
Schmidt
,
an order which incorporates an “
unquantified
amount
”
payable to service providers in respect of maintenance is perfectly
competent.
[29]
[34]
The second subparagraph of the agreement which forms the subject
matter of the dispute between the parties
is subparagraph 2.2. More
particularly, it is subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 which are in
dispute. As is clear from the excerpt
of the agreement set out in
this judgment (above) these subparagraphs, like the previous
subparagraph in dispute, fall under the
general heading of “
Division
of Assets”.
Further, similar to the subparagraph in the
agreement dealing with immovable property, it is important to note
that the two subparagraphs
(2.2.1 and 2.2.2)
are clearly
separate and distinct.
[35]
Subparagraph 2.2.1 of the agreement deals with the retention of each
party of their own motor vehicle and
that the Plaintiff
(Respondent
)
shall continue to pay the remaining finance in respect of both motor
vehicles. In terms of subparagraph 2.2.2 of the agreement,
an
obligation is imposed upon the Plaintiff
(Respondent)
to
replace the Defendant’s
(Applicant’s
) motor
vehicle with a second hand or new motor vehicle of a similar price
escalated by inflation every 5 years, provided the Plaintiff
(Respondent)
has the financial means at the time to do so.
Whilst the Respondent may have had some basis upon which to argue
that the provisions
of subparagraph 2.2.1 should be categorised as
relating to the proprietary consequences of the marriage and hence
are in respect
of proceedings
ad pecuniam solvendam
(the
payment of money) it cannot be said that this is true for
subparagraph 2.2.2 of the agreement.
[36]
This is so in light of,
inter alia
, the same factors and the
application of the same principles as dealt with by this Court
earlier in this judgment when considering
the provisions of the
agreement in respect of the sale of the immovable property owned by
the parties and the acquisition of the
Applicant of an immovable
property. In addition thereto, is the fact that the duty to provide a
replacement motor vehicle is ongoing
(every 5 years). It is not a
single event or even a number of limited events which gives rise to a
division of assets. In the premises,
subparagraph 2.2.2 of the
agreement must, as in the case of subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 of the
agreement, be categorised as relating
to orders
ad factum
praestandum
(performance of an act) and, more particularly, in
respect of the payment of maintenance arising from divorce
proceedings.
[37]
In the premises, the point
in limine
taken by the Respondent
that contempt proceedings are not legally competent to enforce the
clauses of the agreement that the Applicant
seeks to enforce, cannot
be upheld.
Has
the Applicant proven that the Respondent is in breach of the
agreement that was made an order of court?
[38]
It is
common cause between the parties that in order to succeed in contempt
proceedings the Applicant must prove, beyond a reasonable
doubt, the
grant of the August Order and the service thereof; non-compliance by
the Respondent with the August Order and that the
Respondent’s
non-compliance was wilful and
mala
fides
.
[30]
Further, it is common cause that once the Applicant proves service
and non-compliance as aforesaid the Respondent bears an evidential
burden in relation to wilfulness and
mala
fides
to advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether
his non-compliance was indeed wilful and
mala
fides
.
Being motion proceedings (and this was also common cause between the
parties), where there was a genuine or bona fide dispute
of fact on
the application papers before this Court, the “
Plascon-Evans
”
rule applies in that subject to the “robust” elimination
of denials and “fictitious disputes” this
Court must
decide the matter on the facts stated by the Respondent together with
those the Applicant avers and the Respondent does
not deny.
[31]
[39]
As already noted in this judgment, it was common cause between the
parties (and as is clear from the facts
of this matter) that the
Applicant had proved the first two requisites of a successful
contempt application, namely the grant of
the August Order and the
service thereof (more particularly that the Respondent was aware of
the granting of that order and the
terms contained therein) and that
the Respondent had not complied with the August Order. What remained
for this Court to decide
was whether the Respondent’s
non-compliance with the August Order was wilful and
mala fides.
[40]
On the 8
th
of December 2020 the Applicant’s
attorneys addressed a letter to the Respondent’s attorneys. In
this letter it was
stated,
inter alia
, that the Applicant had
identified a house for sale in the Parkhurst area of Johannesburg
which was for sale and for which the
seller was seeking a sale price
of approximately R3 million. The Applicant’s attorneys sought a
financial contribution from
the Respondent in the amount of R1,5
million with the remainder of the purchase price to be financed by
the Applicant. This was
prior to the granting of the August Order. On
the 16
th
of September 2021, after the granting of the
August Order, the Applicant’s attorneys addressed a further
letter to the Respondent’s
attorneys in terms of which,
inter
alia
, a demand was made that the Respondent make a payment to the
Applicant, up to the value of R1,5 million in respect of the
acquisition
of an immovable property.
[41]
In support
of the argument put forward on behalf of the Respondent that the
Applicant had failed to prove that the Respondent was
in breach of
the relevant clauses of the agreement, it was submitted that
subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 comprises of the following rights
and
obligations, namely (a) the Applicant is entitled to acquire a house
up to the value of R1,5 million; (b) the Respondent may
finance the
purchase of the house by way of mortgage bond finance; and (c) the
house must be registered in the names of the Applicant
and the
Respondent until the mortgage bond is repaid and (d) after such
repayment the Respondent must transfer the said property
to the
Applicant. Of course, it was emphasised on behalf of the Respondent
that the Respondent’s obligations in terms of
this subparagraph
of the agreement were conditional upon him having the financial means
to comply therewith. In support of the
aforegoing, it was correctly
submitted by Counsel appearing on behalf of the Respondent that a
court order, like any document,
must be interpreted with due regard
to its language, context and purpose.
[32]
[42]
Based on the aforegoing, Adv Pye SC submitted that this subparagraph
contemplates the purchase of a home
of the Applicant’s choice
and for her benefit up to a value of R1,5 million. Counsel accepted
(correctly in this Court’s
opinion) that a proper
interpretation of this subparagraph did not include the right of the
Respondent to select any property in
any area and foist it upon the
Applicant as a property contemplated in terms of the agreement.
However, what was further submitted,
was that on a proper
interpretation of subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 of the agreement the
Applicant is required to,
inter alia
, (a) source and identify
a property of her choice that does not exceed R1,5 million in value;
and (b) present the Respondent with
a Purchase and Sale Agreement
that complies with the provisions of the Alienation of Land Act 68 of
1981(as amended) for signature.
In addition thereto the Respondent
had to be given a reasonable opportunity to apply for mortgage bond
finance.
[43]
It was the Respondent’s case, as set out in his answering
affidavit, that if the Applicant did not
identify a property that
satisfied the requirements of subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 of the
agreement, a valid sale agreement could not
be concluded; the
Respondent would be unable to apply for mortgage bond finance and the
relevant transfer documents could not be
signed and/or completed to
enable the transfer of the property from the name of the seller into
the names of the Applicant and
the Respondent. The argument put
forward on behalf of the Respondent concluded by pointing out to this
Court that the demands made
by the Applicant upon the Respondent (as
dealt with above) do not comply with the provisions of subparagraph
2.1.1.1.3 of the agreement
and thus the Respondent cannot be held to
be in contempt thereof.
[44]
This Court is in agreement with all of the aforesaid submissions made
on behalf of the Respondent. The aforegoing
interpretation satisfies
all of the relevant requirements of interpretation dealt with earlier
in this judgment and provides a
reasonable and objective
interpretation of the subparagraph under scrutiny. It is worthy to
note that when this interpretation
was put forward by the Respondent
in his answer, it was merely denied by the Applicant in her reply. In
the premises, this Court
finds that the Applicant has failed to prove
that the Respondent is in contempt of subparagraph 2.1.1.1.3 of the
agreement which
was made an order of court. For the reasons set out
above and the basis upon which this finding is reached, it is
unnecessary for
this Court to consider whether the Respondent has the
financial means to finance a bond of up to R1,5 million in respect of
a property
and whether he has discharged the evidential burden in
relation to wilfulness and
mala fides
by advancing evidence
that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether his non-compliance
was indeed wilful and
mala fide.
In passing, with regard to
the condition that the Respondent would only be obliged to assist the
Applicant by financing the purchase
of the property if he had the
financial means to do so, this would obviously have become
self-evident had the Applicant properly
interpreted subparagraph
2.1.1.1.3 of the agreement and when the Respondent applied for
mortgage bond finance from the appropriate
institutions who would, in
the normal course, have determined his financial status prior to
granting or refusing an application
for a mortgage bond to purchase
the property.
[45]
Subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 dealing with the obligation of the
Respondent to replace the Applicant’s
motor vehicle every 5
years was also dealt with by the Applicant’s attorneys in the
letter of the 8
th
of December 2020. In that letter it was
stated,
inter alia
, that 5 years had passed since the date of
divorce; the Applicant was in possession of a Mercedes-Benz C180
Coupe (2014 model)
which had a new list price of approximately
R468 875.00 and a current retail value of R205 000.00. It
was requested that
the Respondent replace the said motor vehicle with
an A-class Mercedes Benz (with a maintenance plan) which would be of
a similar
price to the motor vehicle in the Applicant’s
possession taking into account inflation over the past 5 years.
Finally, it
was stated that the A-class vehicle did not have to be a
new vehicle and could be second-hand, provided it was in good
condition
and came with a maintenance plan. The Applicant also
offered to source such a motor vehicle to assist the Respondent and
avoid
any delays in procuring same. In the letter of the 16
th
of September 2021 (also referred to above) the demand is simply made
that the Respondent replace the Applicant’s motor vehicle
with
a second-hand or new motor vehicle of a similar price, escalated by
inflation.
[46]
In support of the Respondent’s argument that the Applicant has
failed to prove that the Respondent
is guilty of contempt in respect
of subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the agreement the first
submission made is that the said subparagraphs
do not require the
replacement motor vehicle to be a Mercedes Benz or to have a
maintenance plan. This is quite correct but, as
set out above, the
demand in the letter of the 16
th
of September 2021 (after
the granting by this Court of the August Order) makes no reference to
either.
[47]
It was further submitted (as stated by the Respondent in his
answering affidavit) that properly interpreted
the agreement requires
the Applicant to hand over her current motor vehicle as a trade-in
and that the Applicant has not tendered
the motor vehicle to him in
order for him to trade the motor vehicle in. In this regard, it was
conceded by the Applicant in her
replying affidavit that she was
obliged to return her current motor vehicle as a trade-in and stated
that she agreed with the Respondent’s
interpretation of the
agreement in this regard. In fact, she went so far as to state that
she does not interpret the order to mean
that the Respondent is to
“
provide for a fleet of motor vehicles”.
Despite
the aforegoing the argument that the Respondent could not be held to
be in contempt of the subparagraphs dealing with the
replacement of
the motor vehicle was persisted with on the basis that this tender
was not made by the Applicant prior to the institution
of the
application for contempt. This argument cannot be sustained by this
Court. Firstly, it is clear that the subparagraphs can
only be
interpreted on the basis that the Applicant would be required to give
up possession of the motor vehicle which was being
replaced to the
Respondent in order that he could realize the value thereof towards
the expense he would incur in replacing the
Applicant’s motor
vehicle every 5 years. This fact was so obvious it did not require to
be dealt with in either of the two
letters from the Applicant’s
attorneys referred to above or in the Applicant’s founding
affidavit. Moreover, the fact
that this “tender” (if it
even is a tender in the true sense) is dealt with in the Applicant’s
replying affidavit,
is not new evidence but arises directly as a
result of the “issue” being raised by the Respondent in
his answering
affidavit. The fact that the Respondent attempts to
rely on this point at all in order to support an argument that the
Applicant
has failed to prove that the Respondent is guilty of
contempt in respect of subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the agreement
is,
in the opinion of this Court, rather disingenuous.
[48]
It is worth mentioning at this stage that whilst it is obviously open
to the Respondent (as it is to any
Respondent in contempt
proceedings) to criticise the interpretation placed upon the
agreement by the Applicant and point out to
the Court the shortfalls
in the Applicant’s demands or requests for the Respondent to
comply with the order in line with
those interpretations, what is
ultimately the test as to whether the Respondent is in contempt, is
the proper interpretation of
the order and, in light thereof, whether
the Respondent’s non-compliance was wilful and
mala fides
.
[49]
Possibly the high-water mark in the Respondent’s defence to the
Applicant failing to have proved that
he is guilty of contempt in
respect of failing to replace the Applicant’s motor vehicle are
the submissions made in the answering
affidavit that the agreement
does not require him to enter into a credit agreement in order to
purchase a replacement motor vehicle
and that he does not have the
cash available to purchase such a motor vehicle.
[50]
This interpretation which the Respondent wishes to give to
subparagraph 2.2.2 of the agreement (the answering
affidavit singles
out this subparagraph for interpretation only) is untenable, for one
or more of the following reasons. Firstly,
it is common cause on the
application papers before this Court that at the time of the divorce
and during the subsistence of the
marriage between the parties the
motor vehicles in possession of both parties were subject to finance
agreements. In this regard
(as dealt with above), subparagraph 2.2.1
of the agreement recorded that both motor vehicles in possession of
the parties were
financed by Mercedes Benz and that the Respondent
was paying the instalments in respect thereof. In the premises,
simply because
the agreement is silent as to how the Respondent is to
pay for the replacement motor vehicle and in fact gives the
Respondent an
election in this regard (either to finance the
outstanding purchase price of the replacement motor vehicle or pay
the balance in
cash after trading in the motor vehicle presently in
the Applicant’s possession) does not mean that the Respondent
can avoid
his obligation in terms of the agreement to replace the
motor vehicle by refusing to enter into a credit agreement to enable
him
to do so. It must have been envisaged at the time when the
agreement was entered into that in light of the fact that (and once
again this was common cause) the motor vehicles in the possession of
both parties were subject to finance agreements which were
being paid
by the Respondent the Respondent would once again enter into a
finance or credit agreement to enable him to replace
the Applicant’s
motor vehicle thereby fulfilling his obligation in terms of the
agreement. This is in no manner of means
“making up a contract
for the parties” but simply, once again, applying the relevant
requirements to interpret this
subparagraph objectively and thereby
give it a sensible meaning with business efficacy. Of course, the
Respondent’s ability
to comply with this obligation would
always be determined when he applied for finance from the relevant
institutions and whether
such institutions, upon consideration of his
financial status, either granted or refused his application for
credit to finance
the purchase of the replacement motor vehicle.
[51]
It is interesting to note that when opposing the Applicant’s
application for contempt in respect of
the provision of an immovable
property for the Applicant the Respondent relies (as he is entitled
to do) on the fact that,
inter alia
, it will be necessary for
a mortgage bond to be registered over the property. In that instance
the Respondent has no objection
thereto. However, when it comes to
the Respondent’s obligation to replace the Applicant’s
motor vehicle every 5 years
the Respondent, simply on the basis that
subparagraph 2.2.2 of the agreement (looked at in isolation) does not
specifically mention
the fact that the Respondent shall be entitled
to apply for finance in terms of a credit agreement, seeks to do
precisely the opposite
by complaining that he “
cannot be
forced to incur credit in order to meet the applicant’s
unreasonable demands”.
[52]
This Court holds that upon a proper interpretation, subparagraphs
2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the agreement include
any means available to the
Respondent to finance the replacement of the Applicant’s motor
vehicle, including the Respondent
applying for finance in terms of a
credit agreement and paying the monthly instalments in respect
thereof, read with the remaining
provisions of the said
subparagraphs. It is in this manner that the aforesaid subparagraphs
are not only given their ordinary grammatical
meaning within the
context and purpose thereof but, perhaps most importantly in this
instance, are interpreted sensibly and given
business efficacy.
Has
the Applicant proved wilfulness and mala fides on the part of the
Respondent beyond a reasonable doubt?
[53]
Having decided that subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the agreement do
indeed create clear and certain obligations
upon the Respondent with
which he has failed to comply, it then becomes necessary to examine
whether the Respondent has the financial
means to replace the
Applicant’s motor vehicle. The inclusion of the relevant
provision in the agreement
(“should he have the financial
means at the time”)
really amounts to a re-instatement of
the common law in that it is inextricably bound to the question of
whether the Respondent’s
non-compliance has been wilful and
mala fides
. As seen earlier in this judgment the Respondent
bears an evidential burden in relation to wilfulness and
mala
fides
to advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as
to whether his non-compliance was indeed wilful and
mala fides
.
In the present matter this equates to placing evidence before this
Court to establish a reasonable doubt that he has the financial
means
to replace the Applicant’s motor vehicle as contemplated by
subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the agreement.
[54]
It was submitted by Adv De Wet on behalf of the Applicant that the
Respondent had failed to prove that he
is incapable of complying with
the August Order and that the allegations made by him in his
answering affidavit are largely bald
and unsubstantiated. It was also
pointed out on behalf of the Applicant that despite requests made by
the Applicant’s attorneys
for the Respondent to provide proof
of his financial position, he had failed to do so. Finally, it was
further submitted that no
application had ever been instituted by the
Respondent to vary the terms of the January Order (confirmed by the
August Order) if
indeed the Respondent did not have the financial
means to comply therewith.
[55]
In his answering affidavit the Respondent avers that he earns a net
salary of R60 000.00 per month.
In support thereof he attaches a
copy of a salary advice as an annexure to the said affidavit which
reflects a gross monthly salary
(cash) of R113 894.08; various
deductions and a net salary of R60 000.00. No explanation is
given in the answering affidavit
as to the nature of the deductions
and no affidavit was filed by the Respondent’s employer to
elucidate any facts for this
Court in relation to the said salary
advice.
[56]
Following thereon, in another annexure to his answering affidavit,
the Respondent puts up a schedule (with
supporting documentation) in
terms of which he seeks to illustrate that his monthly expenses
amount to R60 297.33. In the
premises, on his version, his
monthly expenses exceed his monthly income by R297.33. It is also
averred by the Respondent that
he is liable to pay his daughter’s
University tuition fees in the sum of R53 205.00 per annum. The
Respondent did not
include this expense as a monthly expense but this
would equate to an amount of R4 433.75 per month. On the
Respondent’s
version (without stating so) it would appear that
he then has a monthly deficit of R4 731.08 per month. There is
no attempt
in the answering affidavit to explain the various
expenses; whether these expenses are fixed or vary from month to
month and how
the various documents correspond to the schedule
allegedly reflecting the Respondent’s monthly income and
expenditure.
[57]
The Respondent has only utilised two paragraphs in his answering
affidavit to deal with this extremely important
issue and, when doing
so, simply refers broadly to what he states is his monthly income and
expenditure without providing this
Court with any detail whatsoever
in respect thereof. In the premises, this Court is left with the
distinct impression that, despite
the Respondent’s utterings to
the contrary, he has failed to take this Court truly into his
confidence and has failed to
fully disclose his true financial
position to enable this Court to properly adjudicate same. Arising
therefrom, this Court must
hold that the Respondent has failed to
place evidence before this Court to establish a reasonable doubt that
he has the financial
means to replace the Applicant’s motor
vehicle as contemplated by subparagraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the
agreement.
[58]
As submitted by the Applicant, there is nothing to show a change in
the Respondent’s financial position
from the time when he was
paying the monthly instalments in respect of two Mercedes Benz motor
vehicles. Furthermore, no application
has been made by the Respondent
to vary the terms of the January Order. At the same time the fact
that the Respondent made no attempt
whatsoever to apply for finance
to enable him to replace the Applicant’s motor vehicle has not
escaped this Court. Had he
made an earnest and honest attempt to do
so and had those efforts proven fruitless, he would have had the
evidence thereof to place
before this Court in support of the fact
that financial institutions had refused to grant him credit because
of his financial position.
Instead, he elected to hide behind a
position that he should not be forced to incur credit to comply with
his obligations in terms
of the agreement. Moreover, it is important
to remember that the Respondent’s ability to obtain credit to
replace the Applicant’s
motor vehicle will be measured without
the liability to finance a property for the Applicant up to the value
of R1,5 million until
the Applicant correctly implements the relevant
subparagraph of the agreement (as dealt with earlier in this
judgment).
[59]
Sight should also not be lost of the Respondent’s conduct as
set out in the application papers before
this Court pertaining to,
inter alia
, the various denials of liability and various
interpretations placed upon the agreement by the Respondent giving
rise to the Applicant
seeking the August Order which was then not
opposed by the Respondent. In the premises and taking all of the
aforegoing factors
into consideration, it must follow that the
failure of the Respondent to comply with subparagraphs 2.2.1 and
2.2.2 of the agreement
is both wilful and
mala fides
.
Are
there disputes of fact relating to the requirements of contempt which
prevents the adjudication of these proceedings by way
of motion?
[60]
This is the final ground of opposition raised by the Respondent to
avoid being held in contempt of the January
Order. Whilst it was
raised by Adv Pye SC on behalf of the Respondent this Court does not
recall that the point was argued with
much conviction. This was
possibly due to the fact that Counsel had conceded (correctly) that
the Respondent bore the evidential
burden of proving that his
non-compliance with the January Order was neither wilful or
mala
fides
. As set out above the Respondent has failed to discharge
this onus or what has been described as this “
weerlegingslas”
(evidential burden).
As a result, this largely (if not wholly)
does away with the need to consider whether, on the application
papers before this Court,
there exists a genuine or
bona fide
dispute of fact in respect of whether the Respondent’s
non-compliance was wilful or
mala fides
(it being common cause
that the other requirements of contempt had been proven by the
Applicant).
[61]
Considering the facts of this matter it cannot be said that such a
dispute of fact exists. On the one hand
the Applicant merely seeks to
enforce the terms of the January Order. These terms remain intact and
are enforced by the August
Order. In addition thereto the Respondent
has never sought to vary the terms of the January Order and elected
not to oppose the
granting of the August Order. Rather, the
Respondent has sought to avoid liability in terms thereof by
attempting to cast doubt
upon the interpretation of the agreement.
The Respondent has also sought to illustrate that he does not have
the financial means
to comply with his obligations. In this regard,
he has failed to place before this Court sufficient evidence (having
regard to
all of the facts before the Court) to raise a reasonable
doubt that he has such means. In the premises, having particular
regard
to the onus of proof and evidential burden in this matter,
there exist no genuine or
bona fide
disputes of fact in this
matter which prevent this Court from adjudicating these proceedings
by way of motion.
Conclusion
[62]
In light of the aforegoing it is clear that (a) the Respondent cannot
be held to be in contempt of subparagraph
2.1.1.1.3 of the January
Order; and (b) the Respondent is in contempt of subparagraph 2.2.2 of
the January Order.
[63]
With regard
to the issue of costs, it is also clear that both parties have been
partially successful in this matter. Looked at from
a different
perspective the Applicant has succeeded in proving that the
Respondent is guilty of contempt in respect of the replacement
of her
motor vehicle but failed to prove that the Respondent is guilty of
contempt in respect of the acquisition by her of an immovable
property. On the one hand, this Court is acutely aware of the
importance that orders of court be obeyed. This is fundamental to
the
upholding of the rule of law which is a founding value of our
Constitution.
[33]
However, it
is also true that this Court cannot ignore the underlying tension and
historical disputes that have arisen between
the parties which (as
unfortunately is so often the case in these type of matters) taints
the entire proceedings. Allied to the
aforegoing, is the unfortunate
manner in which the agreement was drafted which has, in no small way,
contributed towards the litigation
in this matter.
[64]
Taking all of the aforegoing factors into careful consideration and
in the exercise of the general and wide
discretion vested in this
Court in respect of the issue of costs, this Court deems it just and
equitable that each party be ordered
to pay their own costs.
Order
[65]
In the premises, this Court makes the following order:
1.
The application that the Respondent be declared to be in contempt of
subparagraph
2.1.1.1.3 of the court order made by the Regional Court,
Johannesburg on 25 January 2015 under case number 14/2134 is
dismissed.
2.
The Respondent is declared to be in contempt of subparagraph 2.2.2 of
the court
order made by the Regional Court, Johannesburg on 25
January 2015 under case number 14/2134.
3.
The Respondent is committed to imprisonment for a period of six (6)
months which
period is wholly suspended on the condition that the
Respondent shall, within sixty (60) days from the date of this order,
replace
the Applicant’s motor vehicle with a second hand or new
motor vehicle of a similar price escalated by inflation.
4.
Each party shall pay their own costs.
B.C.
Wanless
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
19 October 2022
Judgment
:
14 March 2023
Appearances
For
Applicant
: Adv L de Wet
Instructed
by
: Petker & Associates Inc.
For
Respondent
: Adv WB Pye SC
Instructed
by
: Dyasi M Inc.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2021/28640
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES
[14
March 2023]
In
the matter between:
Y[….]
R[….] D[….] Applicant
and
K[….]
L[….] D[….] Respondent
SUMMARY
WANLESS
AJ
Contempt
of court – failure of Respondent to comply with provisions of a
settlement agreement upon divorce which was made
an order of the
Magistrates’ Regional Court and confirmed by an order of the
High Court – point in limine raised by
the Respondent that he
could not be held in contempt of court since upon a proper
interpretation the clauses of the agreement related
to the
proprietary consequences of the marriage (a division of the joint
estate the parties having been married in community of
property) and
contempt proceedings are not competent where they relate to
proceedings ad pecuniam solvendam (the payment of money).
Held
– properly interpreted the relevant clauses whereby the
Respondent was to assist the Applicant to acquire an immovable
property to a certain value and the Respondent was to replace the
Applicant’s motor vehicle every five (5) years, relate
to
orders ad factum praestandum (performance of an act) in terms of
which contempt proceedings are competent – in addition,
these
clauses, properly interpreted, are in respect of the payment of
maintenance arising from divorce proceedings in respect of
which
contempt proceedings are competent – point in limine
accordingly dismissed.
Maintenance
- meaning and definition of discussed with reference to various
authorities and statutes – “maintenance”
to be
given a wide meaning.
Interpretation
– principles confirmed and applied.
Onus
and evidential burden – onus upon Applicant to prove, beyond a
reasonable doubt, the grant of the order- the service
of the order –
non-compliance with the order by the Respondent and that the
Respondent’s non-compliance with the order
was wilful and mala
fides – evidential burden upon the Respondent to advance
evidence to create a reasonable doubt as to
whether his
non-compliance was wilful and mala fides.
Held
- Respondent not in contempt of clauses in respect of the Applicant
acquiring an immovable property but in contempt of the
clauses
dealing with the replacement of the Applicant’s motor vehicle
every five (5) years – Respondent committed to
imprisonment for
a period of six (6) months which period was wholly suspended on the
condition that the Respondent, within sixty
(60) days from the date
of the order, replace the Applicant’s motor vehicle with a
second hand or new motor vehicle of a
similar price escalated by
inflation.
Costs
- on the one hand Court acutely aware of the importance that orders
of court be obeyed - this is fundamental to the upholding
of the rule
of law which is a founding value of our Constitution - however, also
true that the Court could not ignore the fact
that both parties
partially successful and the underlying tension, together with the
historical disputes that had arisen between
the parties which (as
unfortunately is so often the case in these type of matters) had
tainted the entire proceedings - allied
to the aforegoing was the
unfortunate manner in which the agreement had been drafted which had,
in no small way, contributed towards
the litigation in this matter –
just and equitable that each party pay their own costs.
B.C.
WANLESS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
[1]
Emphasis
added.
[2]
Uncedo
Taxi Service Association v Maninjwa and Others
1998 (3) SA 417
(E);
Metropolitan Industrial Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Hughes 1969 (1) SA
224 (T).
[3]
Uncedo
at 420; Metropolitan at 227.
[4]
Metropolitan
at 227-230.
[5]
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA).
[6]
At para
[18]; Emphasis added
[7]
Engelbrecht
and Another NNO v Senwes Ltd
2007 (3) SA 29
(SCA) at 32D; Coopers &
Lybrand v Bryant
[1995] ZASCA 64
;
1995 (3) SA 761
(A) at 767E-758E.
[8]
1950
(3) SA 299 (C).
[9]
At 304.
[10]
1943 P
at page 22.
[11]
1969
(1) SA 224 (T).
[12]
At 227
and 228.
[13]
1937
WLD 76.
[14]
At page
83.
[15]
Emphasis
added.
[16]
1983
(4) SA 850 (C).
[17]
At page
852.
[18]
Williams
v Carrick (supra) at 152,158; Hawthorne at 306H.
[19]
Williams
v Carrick at 158; Young v Coleman
1956 (4) SA 213
(D) at 220C.
[20]
1996
(2) SA 211 (W).
[21]
At page 218.
[22]
At page
220.
[23]
At page
220.
[24]
Emphasis
by the Court in Schmidt in bold; emphasis added by underlining.
[25]
Emphasis
added.
[26]
In
the context of a challenge to an arbitral award in terms of
subsection 33(1)(b) of the Arbitration Act the Supreme Court of
Appeal, in the matter of
Enviroserv
Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Wasteman Group (Pty) Ltd
[2012] JOL
28939
(SCA),
has
held that the structure of the award is cardinal in deciding what
the tribunal decided and why.
[27]
Tshwane
City v Blair Athol Homeowners Association
2019 (3) SA 398
(SCA) at
paragraphs [63] and [64].
[28]
Paragraph
[16] ibid
.
[29]
Paragraphs
[20] to [22] ibid.
[30]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) at paragraph
[42]
.
[31]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) at paragraph
[63]
.
[32]
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Gentiruco AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 304D;
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (supra);
University of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological
Seminary and
Another
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC); Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v
Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others 2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA).
[33]
Fakie
NO (supra).
sino noindex
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