Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 546South Africa
S.L.M v B.M (2017/30005) [2023] ZAGPJHC 546 (23 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
23 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.L.M v B.M (2017/30005) [2023] ZAGPJHC 546 (23 May 2023)
S.L.M v B.M (2017/30005) [2023] ZAGPJHC 546 (23 May 2023)
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sino date 23 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce – Settlement agreement –
Providing for maintenance for ex-wife until death –
Plaintiff contending that ex-wife living with another man –
Seeking order that agreement contained tacit or implied
term that
maintenance was terminable on remarriage of ex-wife – Tacit
and implied terms discussed – Such in conflict
with express
wording of the agreement – No case made out for variation or
rescission of pertinent clause of settlement
agreement –
Divorce Act 70 of 1979
,
s 8.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2017/30005
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
23.05.23
In
the matter between –
M,
S L
PLAINTIFF
AND
M,
B
DEFENDANT
Neutral
Citation
:
M v M
(Case No. 2017/30005) [2023] ZAGPJHC
546
(23 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Freedom
to contract - Settlement agreement in divorce action –
maintenance obligation undertaken until death of the defendant
–
section 7(1)
of
Divorce Act, 70 of 1979
Tacit
and implied terms distinguished –a tacit term is a term
agreed to by parties tacitly but not reduced to writing
– an
implied term is a term implied by law
No
case made out for a tacit or implied term that obligation ceases upon
remarriage
Rescission
–
section 8
of
Divorce Act
- good reason or good cause - no
justification for rescinding clause dealing with maintenance
obligation
No
justification for holding that divorce order granted by consent was
incompetent because the maintenance obligation was not terminable
by
remarriage or cohabitation
Order
[1]
I make the following order:
1.
The action dismissed;
2.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the
defendant’s costs, such costs to include the costs reserved on
25 May 2022.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
The litigation had its origins in an application launched in 2021 in
terms of which
the applicant, now the plaintiff, sought an order that
paragraph 2 of an order granted by Vorster AJ on 20 October
2017,
in terms of which a settlement agreement in a divorce action
between the parties was made an order of Court by consent, be
rescinded
and set aside in terms of Uniform
Rule 42
, alternatively in
terms of the common law, and alternatively in terms of
section 8
of the
Divorce Act, 70 of 1979
. In the alternative the plaintiff
sought an order that the maintenance order as per the settlement
agreement be discharged and/or
varied.
[4]
The application came before Wright J. There were numerous disputes of
fact on the
papers that could not be resolved on application, and the
matter was referred to trial. In terms of the order by Wright J,
the notice of motion was to stand as a simple summons, the notice to
oppose as a notice of intention to defend, and the applicant
was to
deliver a declaration by 30 June 2022 after which the matter was
to proceed as a trial action. The costs were reserved
for
determination by the Trial Court.
[5]
The plaintiff thereafter filed a declaration that departed from the
relief sought
in the notice of motion that stood as a simple summons
and the defendant filed a plea. In the declaration the plaintiff now
sought
an order
5.1
declaring that the settlement agreement between the parties
made an
order by Vorster AJ contains a tacit, alternatively an implied
term that maintenance is terminable also upon the remarriage
of the
defendant,
5.2
that the plaintiff was discharged from paying maintenance
in favour
of the defendant,
5.3
and alternatively an order declaring that the consent
order made by
Vorster AJ was an incompetent order and should be rescinded or
varied.
The
evidence
[6]
The
plaintiff and the defendant were married in 2004 and they were
married out of community of property. The were divorced in 2017
and a
written settlement agreement
[1]
was made an order of court. The document is common cause. It deals
with proprietary matters as well as maintenance and other issues.
[7]
The
plaintiff and the former domestic worker who worked for the defendant
testified for the plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that
the
defendant did not remarry but that she lived with a man named B
[2]
at the former matrimonial home in Craigavon in Fourways. In
cross-examination he conceded that had not known that she had vacated
the property already in 2021.
[8]
The source of his information relating to the cohabitation is his
discussions with
the children, primarily it would seem the daughter
born of the marriage between the plaintiff and the defendant. He knew
that B
was the father of the minor male child born in 2012 during the
subsistence of the marriage and was in possession of a paternity
test
that showed that he was not the biological father
[9]
He
testified that he never really meant to pay maintenance of
R100 000 per month indefinitely, but conceded that the
draft
agreement
[3]
formed the subject
of a discussion between him, the defendant, and the defendant’s
attorney. In the discussion he pointed
out the clauses that he was
not satisfied with and wished to have deleted from the agreement.
Those clauses were identified in
the draft as clause 2.2 and clause
4.5. In respect of clause 2.4 he demanded that a monetary limit be
included to cap the value
of the motor vehicle to be purchased. He
was then satisfied with the agreement as it stood. He testified that
at the time he just
wanted the divorce to be finalised.
[10]
The plaintiff was not represented by attorneys when these discussions
took place. The plaintiff is
a successful businessman who operates a
restaurant and a panel-beating business, and his decision to
negotiate with his wife and
her attorney without his own attorney
being involved to protect his rights, was not one based on economic
constraints.
[11]
The plaintiff also called Ms M who testified that she worked for the
defendant at various times over
the last seven years until January
2023. She testified that B’s clothes were in the defendant’s
house on a permanent
basis which would indicate some kind of live-in
arrangement, but that he would only be at the house intermittently He
came and
went, and would leave for a few days after staying over for
two or three weeks.
[12]
The defendant testified on her own behalf. She confirmed that she was
involved in an “
on and off”
romantic relationship
with B and that he would visit for days at a time before returning to
his own residence in Houghton. The
defendant and the third party have
an intermittent romantic relationship but they are not married, nor
was lobola ever paid. She
never considered entering into a marriage
with him. They had the child together in 2012 and then reconnected in
2021 on a romantic
basis. They then separated again in November 2022
and rekindled their relationship in February 2023.
[13]
She testified that her son lives with her and during 2021 to January
2023 her daughter born of the
marriage between the plaintiff and the
defendant also lived at the house.
Analysis
[14]
A tacit term -
“…
is
an unspoken provision of the contract. It is one to which the parties
agree, though without saying so explicitly. The test for
inferring a
tacit term is whether the parties, if asked whether their agreement
contained the term, would immediately say, “Yes,
of course
that’s what we agreed.” Before a court can infer a tacit
term, it must be satisfied that there is a necessary
implication that
they intended to contract on that basis.”
[4]
[15]
An implied
term is a term implied by law (which is why
Rule 18(7)
does not
require a pleader to state the circumstances from which an implied
term is to be inferred) but unfortunately the
phrase is often
used to describe a tacit term.
[5]
When reading case law referring to a tacit term, one must analyse the
judgment to determine whether the term is used with reference
to a
term implied by law, or a term impliedly (i.e. tacitly) incorporated
by the parties.
[16]
A party who
relies on a tacit contract is required to plead and prove the
unequivocal conduct from which the tacit contract can
be deduced.
[6]
A party relying on a tacit term must prove that there was no express
agreement reached on the aspect in question
[7]
and when a party contends for a construction that departs from the
prima
facie
meaning of the text, the circumstances relied upon for the
interpretation must be pleaded.
[8]
This the plaintiff did not do.
[17]
In the particulars of claim there are bald statements to the effect
that the settlement agreement contained
a tacit, alternatively an
implied term to the effect that the spousal maintenance was
terminable upon the defendant’s death
or remarriage, that the
defendant is involved in a romantic relationship with a third party –
the biological father of the
child born during the marriage of the
plaintiff and the defendant – and that the relationship amounts
to or is akin to a
marriage and/or permanent life partnership and/or
cohabitation, that the defendant’s relationship with the third
party gives
rise to the circumstances upon which the spousal
maintenance is to be terminable, and consequently it is not just and
equitable
in the circumstances for the maintenance order to continue
to exist, and the plaintiff should be discharged therefrom.
[18]
Clause 2.4 of the settlement agreement provides that the plaintiff
shall buy a motor vehicle for the
defendant every five years until
“
the death or remarriage of”
the defendant (then
the plaintiff). Clause 4 provides for maintenance of R100 000
per month “
until the
[defendant’s]
death.”
The plaintiff now seeks an order that clause 4 be read to contain
a tacit or implied term that maintenance is terminable upon the
defendant’s death or remarriage, and (although there is no
prayer to such effect in the prayers) that “
remarriage”
includes a cohabitation arrangement.
[19]
Clause 6 of the settlement agreement provides that the agreement
“
constitutes the whole agreement”
and there is
nothing in the evidence, the conduct of the parties, and the
circumstances of the matter that merits the inference
that a tacit
term such as contended for by the plaintiff, was agreed upon. It is
also not so that reading the tacit term into the
settlement agreement
is the only reasonable interpretation of the agreement.
[20]
Importing a
tacit term that the maintenance liability should cease upon
remarriage (or cohabitation) would be in conflict with the
express
wording of clause 4 of the agreement.
[9]
[21]
The term contended for is also not implied by law and there is no
such statutory limitation on the
freedom of contract in
section 7(1)
of the
Divorce Act, 70 of 1979
. In terms of
section 7(1)
a Court
granting a decree of divorce may in accordance with a written
agreement between the parties make an order with regard to
the
division of the assets of the parties or the payment of maintenance
by one party to the other.
[22]
It is only in the absence of a settlement agreement that
section 7(2)
applies. The Court then has the power to order payment of maintenance
until the death or remarriage of the party in whose favour
the order
is given. The limitation is not found in subsection (1) and the
legislature made a clear distinction in this regard.
[23]
A reference to cohabitation in clause 4 of the settlement agreement
is therefore neither a term implied
by law nor a term tacitly agreed
upon by the parties. If it had been the intention of the parties to
include cohabitation in clause
2.4 of the agreement, there is no
reason why they would not have said so. The parties expressly chose
to refer to “
death or remarriage”
in clause 2.4
and to “
death”
in clause 4. The plaintiff argues
that the phrase “
until the Plaintiff’s death”
in clause 4 included a tacit reference to remarriage but there is no
logical reason why firstly a tacit or implied term that maintenance
is terminable upon death
or remarriage
must be read into the
contract, and then secondly that the well-known word “
remarriage”
must be interpreted to include something that is not a marriage but a
cohabitation. No argument can be made out to explain why
they tacitly
agreed that remarriage be included in clause 4 when it was expressly
included in clause 2.4 and excluded in clause
4, and that it
was then also tacitly agreed that cohabitation be included in the
concept of remarriage.
[24]
For the sake of completeness it is important to note also that the
plaintiff does not rely on rectification.
This is not a matter where
the parties had agreed that maintenance would cease upon remarriage
but that due to a common error,
the reference to remarriage was not
included in clause 4.1 of the agreement. The plaintiff expressly
avowed reliance on the remedy
of rectification.
[25]
The order that was made by Vorster AJ was an order by consent
between the parties and there is
no indication in the pleadings or
the evidence as to why the order would be “
incompetent.”
The averments relating to “
incompetence”
found in
the particulars of claim seem to relate to the incorrect stance
adopted by the plaintiff that a maintenance liability
terminable only
by death is not to be recognised in the law (particularly
section
7(1)
of the
Divorce Act).
[26
]
Rescission and variation of a court order is dealt with in
Rule 42
of
the Rules of Court, in the common law, and in
section 8
of the
Divorce Act. In
argument the plaintiff’s counsel quite
correctly did not seem to rely on the common law or on
Rule 42
, the
rule that applies to an order sought or granted erroneously, or
granted because of an ambiguity or because of a mistake common
to the
parties.
[27]
Section 8
of the
Divorce Act provides
for the rescission, variation or
suspension of maintenance orders “
if
the court finds that there is sufficient reason therefor.”
The
corresponding phrase in the previous legislation
[10]
was “
good
cause”
and the two phrases
[11]
have
the same meaning.
[12]
[28]
The Courts
have, for obvious reasons, refrained from an exhaustive definition of
“
sufficient
reason”
or “
good
cause.”
In the absence of a change of circumstances a Court is not likely to
interfere
[13]
but a change of
circumstances is not a statutory requirement. The particular
circumstances of each case must be considered and
the Court may vary
an ill-considered agreement when it is
contra
bonos mores
.
In
Baart
v Malan
[14]
the Court deleted maintenance provisions from a settlement agreement
on the basis that the provisions whereby the applicant undertook
to
pay her whole income to the respondent as maintenance for their
children, were
contra
bonos mores
.
[15]
However, an unjust
[16]
settlement is not necessarily
contra
bonos mores
.
Parties have freedom of contract and it is not for the Court to make
a contract for the parties.
[29]
Remarriage
may possibly constitute sufficient reason for the rescission or
variation of a maintenance order in terms of
section 8
of the
Divorce
Act, but
there is no room for an implied term to effect automatic
termination of maintenance upon remarriage.
[17]
[30]
The evidence falls short of confirming a permanent cohabitation
arrangement, and no case is made out
for a variation or rescission of
clause 4 of the settlement agreement in terms of
section 8
of the
Divorce Act.
Contra
preferentem
[31]
The
agreement was drafted by the defendant’s attorney and the
plaintiff’s counsel argued that the agreement ought to
be
interpreted
contra
preferentem
.
[18]
The rule is a rule of last resort, to be applied when all other
methods to ascertain the intention of contracting parties have
failed. In the present matter there is no ambiguity and no room for
application of the rule.
Contracts
of unspecified duration
[32]
In argument
the plaintiff’s counsel relied also on
Plaaskem
(Pty) Ltd v Nippon Africa Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
[19]
where the Court interpreted a specific contract and recognised a
tacit term allowing for termination of a commercial co-operation
agreement of unspecified duration on reasonable notice. There was no
express term dealing with the duration of the agreement nor
any
indication that the parties intended to be bound in perpetuity.
[33]
The present matter is of course distinguishable on the facts: The
duration of the maintenance obligation
is specified in the settlement
agreement and it is perfectly acceptable to agree to pay maintenance
until death.
The
recognition of relationships other than marriage
[34]
It was
argued on behalf of the plaintiff that the recognition
[20]
of same-sex relationships and permanent life-partnerships between
people merited the recognition of co-habitation as a ‘
marriage’
and therefore that the alleged cohabitation between the defendant and
the third party meant that the duty to maintain in paragraph
4 of the
settlement agreement was terminable. There is no merit in the
argument.
[35]
The fact that the law now recognises other relationships as akin to
marriage and the parties to such
relationships equally deserving of
the protection of the law, does not mean that in the settlement
agreement now before Court the
word ‘
marriage’
should be given an extended definition never intended by the parties.
Conclusion
[36]
For all the reasons set out above, I make the order in paragraph 1.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
23 MAY 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
K
KABINDE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LETHAGE
ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
P
MARX
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TRACY
SISCHY ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
15
& 16 MAY 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
23
MAY 2023
[1]
CaseLines 001-A-19.
[2]
Mr B N, referred to as “B.”
[3]
CaseLines 001-F-166.
[4]
Food
and Allied Workers Union v Ngcobo NO
2014
(1) SA 32
(CC) para 37.
[5]
Van Loggerenberg DE and Bertelsmann E
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
RS 18, 2022, D1-241.
[6]
See
Roberts
Construction Co Ltd v Dominion Earth-Works (Pty) Ltd and Another
1968 (3) SA 255 (A).
[7]
See
Nel
v Nelspruit Motors (Edms) Bpk
1961 (1) SA 582 (A).
[8]
SociÉTé
Commerciale De Moteurs v Ackermann
1981 (3) SA 422 (A).
[9]
Compare
Odgers
v De Gersigny
2007 (2) SA 305
(SCA) para 10.
[10]
Section 10 of the Matrimonial Affairs Act, 37 of 1953.
[11]
The Afrikaans text in both the old and the new Act referred
to “
voldoende
rede.”
[12]
Levin
v Levin
1984 (2) SA 298 (C).
[13]
Havenga
v Havenga
1988 (2) SA 438 (T) 445.
[14]
Baart
v Malan
1990 (2) SA 862
(E).
[15]
The l
ocus
classicus
is
Sasfin (Pty)
Ltd v Beukes
1989 (1) SA 1 (A)
[16]
Reid
v Reid
1992 (1) SA 443 (E).
[17]
Welgemoed
v Mennell
2007 (4) SA 446
(SE) 450E – 451B.
[18]
Compare
Cairns
(Pty) Ltd v Playdon & Co Ltd
1948 (3) SA 99 (A).
[19]
Plaaskem
(Pty) Ltd v Nippon Africa Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
2014 (5) SA 287 (SCA).
[20]
See
Bwanya
v the Master of the High Court and Others
2022 (3) SA 250
(CC),
J
and Another v Director General, Department of Home Affairs, and
Others
[2003] ZACC 3
;
2003 (5) SA 621
(CC),
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC),
Pillay
v Naidoo
2022 JDR 0445 (GJ), and
Ripoll-Dausa
v Middleton NO and Others
[2005] ZAWCHC 6
;
2005 (3) SA 141
(C).
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