Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 273South Africa
L.T v P.E.T (14994/2013) [2023] ZAGPJHC 273 (15 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 March 2023
Headnotes
is no longer consistent with the approach to interpretation now adopted by South African courts in relation to contracts or other documents, such as statutory instruments or patents. Whilst the starting point remains the words of the document, which are the only relevant medium through which the parties have expressed their contractual intentions, the process of interpretation does not stop at a perceived literal meaning of those words, but considers them in the light of all relevant and admissible context, including the circumstances in which the document came into being. The former distinction between permissible background and surrounding circumstances, never very clear, has fallen away.
Judgment
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## L.T v P.E.T (14994/2013) [2023] ZAGPJHC 273 (15 March 2023)
L.T v P.E.T (14994/2013) [2023] ZAGPJHC 273 (15 March 2023)
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sino date 15 March 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 14994/2013
DATE
:
18-11-2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between
L[...]
T[...]
Applicant
and
P[...] E[...]
T[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
WANLESS
AJ
Introduction
[1]
In this application one L[...] T[...], an adult female,
("the
Applicant")
sought a declaratory order and an order that her
ex-husband, one, P[...] E[...] T[...], an adult male
("the
Respondent")
, pay to her an amount in respect of arrear
maintenance. The relief sought is in terms of a settlement
agreement entered into
between the parties at the time when they were
divorced and which was made an order of this Court.
[2]
Apart from the aforegoing, there are two interlocutory applications
before this
Court namely, an application for condonation in respect
of the late filing of the Respondent's Answering Affidavit which was
opposed
and an application for condonation in respect of the late
filing of the Applicant's Answering Affidavit to the Respondent's
condonation
application, together with the late filing of the
Applicant's reply to the Respondent's Answering Affidavit, which is
not opposed.
With regard to the former
application the Applicant's opposition was withdrawn at the
commencement of the hearing. Both parties
sought an order for
costs. In respect of the latter interlocutory application, it
was agreed that there should be no order
as to costs.
[3]
The Applicant had raised a point
in limine
in respect of
the manner in which the Respondent's Answering Affidavit had been
commissioned. The commissioning of this affidavit
had been
rectified by the Respondent prior to the hearing of this application
and the Applicant withdrew this point
in limine.
The Applicant sought an
order that the costs occasioned by the postponement of the matter on
the 17
th
of August 2021 be paid by the Respondent on the
scale of attorney and client. It was conceded, during the
course of argument,
that the Respondent should pay these costs but
not on a punitive scale.
The facts
[4]
The real issue to be determined by this Court is when, upon a proper
interpretation
of the settlement agreement
("the agreement")
maintenance became payable by the Respondent to the Applicant.
The agreement was entered into between the parties on the
25
th
of February 2021 in settlement of the divorce action between them and
paragraph 3 thereof reads as follows:-
"From
the first day of the month
following
the winding up of High
Road –
3.1
The Defendant shall pay maintenance for the Plaintiff, in the amount
of R22 000,00 per month;
3.2
The maintenance aforesaid shall –
3.2.1
be paid on or before the 1st day of each consecutive month;
3.2.2
be without any deductions of any nature whatsoever;
3.2.3
be paid directly into an account nominated by the Plaintiff in
writing from time to time;
3.2.4
continue to be made to the Plaintiff until her Death, remarriage or
living with another man as husband and
wife;
3.2.5
shall increase annually on 1 March at a rate equal to the
average CPI for the preceding 12 months;
3.3
from six months after the commencement of the payment of the amount
set out in 3.1 above, either party
shall be entitled to approach a
Court with the requisite jurisdiction to vary the quantum of
maintenance payable without having
to prove a change in
circumstances. Thereafter, either party shall be entitled to
approach a Court with the requisite jurisdiction
to vary the quantum
of maintenance payable subject to proving a change in circumstances."
[5]
In terms of sub-paragraph 2.5.1 of the agreement, the following was
agreed to
in respect of the company known as "High Road":-
"2.5.1
The winding-up application of High Road launched by the Applicant
under case number 13466/2013 shall be enrolled for
hearing and an
order taken by consent within 30 days of payment having been made to
the parties arising out of the sale of 1[...]
S[...] H[...] Estate
("the final winding-up of High Road")."
[6]
The following facts were either common cause or not seriously
disputed in this
application, namely:-
[6.1]
The Applicant is unemployed and the Respondent is employed;
[6.2]
The Applicant is not able to work due to the fact that she suffers
from degenerative disc disease
and was medically boarded in 1996;
[6.3]
The Respondent maintained the Applicant before the settlement
agreement was entered into;
[6.4]
The Applicant previously received a rental income from the company;
[6.5]
The company's final winding-up order was granted on 23 December
2016;
[6.6]
The Respondent has not paid anything in terms of paragraph 3 of the
settlement agreement;
[6.7]
The parties have already received payment as provided for in the
reconciliation of payments
from the liquidators; and
[6.8]
The Respondent has a maintenance obligation towards the Applicant.
The Applicant's
case
[7]
The Applicant's case can best be summarised as follows:-
[7.1]
Since a final winding-up order was granted on 23 December 2016 the
Respondent became liable
to pay maintenance to the Applicant as
provided for in paragraph 3 of the agreement on the 1
st
of January 2017, which is the first day of the month following the
winding - up of the company.
[7.2]
The Respondent has refused and/or failed to pay maintenance in terms
of paragraph 3 of the settlement
agreement to the Applicant from the
1
st
of
January 2017 to date; and
[7.3]
Accordingly the Respondent is in arrears with his maintenance
obligation.
[8]
On the other hand the Respondent opposes the date upon which the
Respondent
is liable to pay in accordance with the maintenance
obligation set out in the agreement in that he alleges that his
maintenance
obligation is suspended pending a Master's final
certificate, certifying that the company's winding up/liquidation has
been finalised,
including the dissolution thereof.
The law
[9]
In the matter of
Botha-Botho
Transport (Edms) v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk.
[1]
the SCA held,
inter
alia
,
the following:-
[12]
That summary is no longer consistent with the approach to
interpretation now adopted by South African courts
in relation to
contracts or other documents, such as statutory instruments or
patents. Whilst the starting point remains
the words of the
document, which are the only relevant medium through which the
parties have expressed their contractual intentions,
the process of
interpretation does not stop at a perceived literal meaning of those
words,
but
considers them in the light of all relevant and admissible context,
including the circumstances in which the document came into
being.
The former distinction between permissible background and surrounding
circumstances, never very clear, has fallen away.
Interpretation is no longer a process that occurs in stages but is
'essentially one unitary exercise'. Accordingly it is
no longer
helpful to refer to the earlier approach."
[2]
[10]
Of course, no consideration of the correct legal principles to be
applied in respect of
interpretation of contracts would be complete
without mentioning the matter of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality,
[3]
where
,
inter alia,
Wallis
JA held:-
"The
present state of the law can be expressed as follows:
'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 a 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.'"
[11]
The law regulating the winding-up of a company is contained in Part G
of the Companies
Act, Act 71 of 2008
("the new companies
act")
and Chapter XIV of the Companies Act, Act 61 of 1973
("the old companies act").
[12]
In terms of item 9(2) of schedule 5, sections 342, 344, 346 and 348
to 353 do not apply
to the winding-up of solvent companies, which are
now dealt with in terms of sections 79 to 81 of the new companies
act, and their
deregistration is dealt with in terms of sections 82
and 83 thereof.
[13]
As part of the definitions in the old companies act, a "winding-up
order" is
defined as:
"
Any order of
court whereby a company is wound up and includes any order of court
whereby a company is placed under provisional winding-up
for so long
as such order is in force
."
[14]
In terms of subsection 79(1), a company may be
dissolved
voluntarily or by:
"
(b)
winding-up and liquidation by a court order, as contemplated in
section 81.
"
[15]
In terms of the commentary to be found by the learned authors in
Henochsberg on the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
at page 310 and
more particularly the notes in respect of
section 79
, subsection
79(1)(b) refers to winding-up and liquidation as two separate words
indicating two separate definitions. The
learned authors state
the following:
"
It is difficult
to think of circumstances where the use of these words in this
context would lead to any difficulties, and so it
is submitted that
the term 'winding-up' refers to the order granted by the Court under
s81
, and the term 'liquidation' to the process of liquidating the
company and distributing the assets or proceeds amongst those
entitled
to it.
"
[16]
Subsection 81(4) of the new companies act states that:
"
(4)
A winding-up of a company by a Court
begins
when:
(a)
An application has been made to the Court in terms of subsection
(1)(a) or (b); or
(b)
The court has made an order applied for in terms of subsection
(1)(c), (d), (e) or (f).
"
[17]
Section 82
of the new companies act, which is to a large extent a
re-enactment of
section 419
of the old companies act, except for new
grounds of deregistration of a company under subsection (3) of
section 82
, deals with the
dissolution
of companies and the
removal of the company's name from the register of companies.
It states as follows:
"
(1)
The Master must file a certificate of winding up of a company in the
prescribed form when the
affairs of the company have been
completely
wound up.
(2)
Upon receiving a certificate in terms of subsection (1), the
Commission must
(a) record
the
dissolution
of the company in the prescribed manner; and
(b) remove
the company's name from the companies register."
[18]
In terms of
section 83
of the new companies act, upon deregistration
of a company it is dissolved. Dissolution follows the winding
up of a company.
Findings
[19]
In the first instance, it is fairly trite that upon a court granting
a final winding-up
of a company what occurs is a
concursus
creditorum
and for all intents and purposes the company (in
liquidation) ceases to trade. Having regard to the present
matter, it is
clear that prior to the winding-up of High Road
("the
company")
the maintenance of the Applicant was paid by the
company. From the context in which the agreement was born and
the clear
language thereof, it is further clear that upon the
winding-up of the company the obligation of the company to provide
maintenance
to the Applicant would cease and would be replaced by a
personal obligation which fell upon the Respondent.
In
further amplification hereof, it is common cause that prior to the
winding-up of the company the Applicant's maintenance was
paid by way
of rental income received by the company. Upon the final
winding-up order being granted, this income (if any)
became payable
to the appointed liquidators and was no longer payable to the
Applicant. In the premises, it is this meaning
of "winding-up",
namely the date upon which the final order was granted by this Court,
that should be given to the wording
in paragraph 3 of the agreement.
[4]
[20]
As dealt with earlier in this judgment, there is a clear distinction
between the definitions
of a winding-up order, as contained in the
companies act and the terms used to describe a "winding-up"
and a "liquidation"
or "dissolution" of a
company. Put simply, there is the winding-up order of the Court
which, as we know, creates
the
concursus creditorum
and which
is thereafter followed by the liquidation process leading up to the
final dissolution of a company by the distribution
of all of its
assets; its deregistration and the issuing of a certificate by the
Master.
In the context of this
agreement, it would never have been envisaged that the Respondent's
maintenance obligation would only commence
on the dissolution of the
company and not, as so clearly stated in the agreement, upon the
first day of the month following the
winding-up of the company.
[21]
It was submitted on behalf of the Respondent that the agreement must
be interpreted as
a commercial agreement and not one dealing with
maintenance. If this was so the Respondent may have had a case
but it is
clear from the facts of this matter that the relevant
paragraphs of the agreement, which the Court has been called upon to
interpret,
clearly deal with the Respondent's maintenance obligations
and must therefore be interpreted in this context.
[22]
In the premises, this Court finds that the interpretation as
contended for on behalf of
the Applicant in respect of paragraph 3 of
the agreement should be applied and that the Respondent is liable to
pay maintenance
to the Applicant from the 1
st
of January
2017.
[23]
At the hearing of this application, Adv Van der Westhuizen
(after taking
instructions in respect thereof), confirmed the
correctness of the amount claimed by the Applicant in respect of
arrear maintenance
should this Court find in favour of the Applicant
and order the Respondent to pay to the Applicant arrear maintenance
from the
1
st
of January 2017 to the date claimed
in the application. That amount, as per the Applicant's Notice
of Motion, is
the sum of R1 333 909.56.
Costs
[24]
It is trite that not only is the question of costs within the Court's
discretion but that,
unless exceptional circumstances exist, costs
should normally follow the result. In this matter it is clear
that the Applicant
is entitled to the costs of the application.
No exceptional circumstances exist. The Applicant has asked
this Court
to make a costs order on the punitive scale. Upon
serious consideration this court must agree that the opposition to
the
application was frivolous and vexatious. Not only has it
deprived the Applicant of maintenance but it has burdened the roll
of
this Court unnecessarily. On this basis the Respondent should
pay these costs on the scale of attorney and client.
[25]
With regard to the application for condonation in respect of the late
filing of the Respondent's
Answering Affidavit, two factors are
clear. Firstly, the Applicant gave the Respondent many
indulgences to file that affidavit
and, secondly, the Respondent
sought the indulgence of this Court to do so. On the basis the
Respondent should pay those
costs on the party and party scale.
[26]
The last cost issue is that pertaining to the postponement of the
matter on the 17
th
of August 2021. Those costs have
been conceded by the Respondent. It is only the scale of those
costs which remains
an issue for this Court to decide. On the
facts before this Court and on the basis that the Respondent has
ultimately sought
to delay the finalisation of the application,
together with his duty to pay to the Applicant the maintenance due to
her and in
light of the frivolous defence referred to earlier in this
judgment, it would be just and equitable if these costs were also
paid
on the attorney and client scale.
Order
[27]
In the premises, this Court makes the following order:
[27.1] It is
declared that the date from which the Respondent became liable to pay
maintenance to the Applicant is from
1 January 2017, as provided for
in paragraph 3 of the Deed of Settlement dated 28 February 2015,
which was incorporated in the
Decree of Divorce granted in this court
under the case number 2013/14994 on 2 March 2015.
[27.2] The
Respondent is to pay to the Applicant within seven (7) days of the
granting of this order the sum of R1 333
909.36 (one million, three
hundred and thirty three thousand, nine hundred and nine rand, thirty
six cents), which is the arrear
maintenance payable by the Respondent
to the Applicant for the period 1 January 2017 to 1 January 2021.
[27.3] The
Respondent is to pay to the Applicant interest at the prescribed rate
of interest calculated from 2 January
2017 to date of final payment
in respect of the amount in paragraph 2 hereof.
[27.4] The
Respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the scale of
attorney and client.
[27.5] The
Respondent is to pay the costs of the application for condonation for
the late filing of the Respondent's
Answering Affidavit on the party
and party scale.
[27.6] The
Respondent is to pay the costs occasioned by the postponement on
17 August 2021 on the scale of attorney
and client.
That order, as I
indicated at the commencement of the judgment, has already been typed
and has been signed by me. It has been
marked "X" for
the purposes of identification, signed by me and dated today's date.
It will be uploaded onto CaseLines
by the clerk of this Court as soon
as possible. I hand down that order.
WANLESS AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
DATE
:
15 March 2023
[1]
2014
(2) SA 494 (SCA)
[2]
Emphasis
added.
[3]
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA)
[4]
C B &
Another v H B
[2021] JOL 49207
(SCA)
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