Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 636South Africa
I.K.B v C.A.B (29564/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 636 (6 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Divorce - application for postponement – Discretion of the Court – Requirements restated – application dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## I.K.B v C.A.B (29564/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 636 (6 June 2023)
I.K.B v C.A.B (29564/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 636 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHAESBURG
CASE NO:
29564/2019
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
06.06.23
In the matter between:
B,
I K
PLAINTIFF
and
B,
C A
DEFENDANT
Neutral Citation:
B
I K v B C A
(Case No. 29564/2019) [2023]
ZAGPJHC 636 (6 June 2023)
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This
judgment and order was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name
is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines. The
date of the
order is deemed to be the 6
th
of June 2023.
Summary:
Divorce - application for postponement – Discretion of the
Court – Requirements restated – application dismissed
with costs.
Rule 33(4) of the
Uniform Rules of Court – separated issue of cancellation of
settlement agreement – plaintiff refusing
to participate in the
proceedings – plaintiff’s claim dismissed with costs -
Counter claim – defendant granted
order in terms of the counter
claim.
TWALA J
[1] On the 22
nd
of August 2019 the plaintiff instituted divorce proceedings against
the defendant seeking an order, after concluding a settlement
agreement, in the following terms:
1.1 A decree of divorce
on the ground of an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage,
incorporating the settlement entered into between
the parties on the
20
th
day of August 2019;
1.2 Costs of suit, if
defended.
[2] On the 01
st
of October 2019, the Court granted the decree of divorce and made the
settlement agreement concluded between the parties an order
of Court.
However, on the 2
nd
of April 2020 the plaintiff launched
an application for rescission of the order granted by the Court on
the 1
st
of October 2019 which application was not opposed
by the defendant. On the 6
th
of August 2020, the plaintiff
was granted an order rescinding the order of the 1
st
of
October 2019 together with leave to amend his particulars of claim
within twenty (20) days of granting of the order.
[3] On the 5
th
of November 2020 the applicant filed the amendment to his particulars
which was followed by another amendment to the particulars
of claim
on the 20
th
of November 2020. The defendant filed her plea
and counter claim in December 2020 and the plaintiff during the same
period filed
his plea to the defendant’s counter claim. In
November 2021 the defendant filed an amendment to its plea which
necessitated
the plaintiff to file a replication and the defendant
filed a rejoinder in the same month. In July 2022 the plaintiff
requested
the matter to be referred to case management by a Judge and
Dippenaar J was appointed to case manage the case. On the 30
th
of August 2022 Dippenaar J granted an order in terms of Rule 33(4)
that:
3.1
the
issue as to whether the defendant is entitled to be granted an order
that the agreement of settlement concluded between the
plaintiff and
the defendant, on or about the 20
th
day of August 2019
(“the
agreement of settlement issue”)
be
separately decided from the issue relating to the plaintiff and the
defendant’s accrual claims
(“the
accrual issue”).
3.2 the agreement
of
settlement issue be heard and determined before the accrual issue is
heard and determined.
3.3 the accrual issue is
to be stayed until the agreement of settlement issue has been
disposed of.
[4] The matter was
therefore certified trial ready, and the duration of the trial was
estimated to be 4-5 days. The plaintiff was
permitted to effect any
amendment to the accrual claim issue and not the settlement agreement
issue that was now ready for trial.
However, in due time the
plaintiff filed an amendment to his particulars of claim which were,
in essence, amendments to the particulars
relating to the settlement
agreement. Consequently, the plaintiff prayed for an order of
cancellation of the settlement agreement
and that a receiver and
liquidator be appointed to administer and distribute the parties’
accrued estate. The defendant filed
a Rule 30 notice objecting to the
proposed amendment. In December 2022, the plaintiff withdrew the
proposed amendment. On the 24
th
of January 2023 the
defendant’s attorneys served a notice that the matter was set
down for trial for the 29
th
of May 2023.
[5] On the 10
th
of
May 2023 the plaintiff’s attorneys wrote to the defendant’s
attorney informing them that plaintiff’s senior
counsel has
withdrawn from the matter and that their instructions are to apply
for postponement of the matter on the 29
th
of May 2023.
The immediate response from the defendant’s attorneys was
that the thought of postponement of the matter
was unacceptable when
the hearing was still 20 days away and the plaintiff still has time
to can secure the service of another
senior counsel. The prejudice to
the defendant was stated in that response regarding the undertaking
made by the defendant not
to dispose of any of her properties until
finalisation of the divorce. The plaintiff’s response was that
they are looking
for senior counsel to assist and will revert in due
course.
[6] On the 26
th
of May 2023 the plaintiff then served the defendant with an
application for a postponement. This was on Friday and the matter was
set down for hearing on Monday. The defendant filed its opposition to
the postponement on Sunday. The application for a postponement
is
based on two points being the unavailability of senior counsel and
that the plaintiff wishes to make an amendment to its particulars
of
claim.
[7] It has long been
established that an application for a postponement is not there for
the taking but the Court has a discretion
whether to grant or refuse
same. However, the Court must exercise its discretion judicially. The
party who seeks the postponement,
since he or she seeks an
indulgence, must show good cause and reason for the postponement. He
must demonstrate his bona fides and
that the postponement is not just
to delay the other party from obtaining the relief she seeks.
[8] Mr Londt, attorney
for the plaintiff, submitted that he does not have the requisite
experience to represent the plaintiff in
this matter since the
defendant has engaged the services of senior counsel. The plaintiff,
so it was contended, would want the
playing field to be levelled –
hence he requests the opportunity to also engage the services of
senior counsel. His senior
counsel withdrew from the matter on the
8
th
of May 2023 and he has been unable to secure another
senior counsel to assist him. Although he has consulted another
counsel, so
the argument went, counsel has advised that he is
unavailable to attend to the matter on 29
th
of May 2023
but suggested that certain amendments should be effected on the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim.
[9] The issue of the
divorce is common cause between the parties. What is before this
Court is the separated issue in terms of Rule
33(4) which is the
cancellation of the settlement agreement and division of the accrued
estate of the parties by the liquidator
to be appointed. When asked
on whether the plaintiff was prepared to make any concessions
regarding the undertaking of the defendant
not to dispose of any of
her properties, Mr Londt submitted that he does not have instructions
in that regard.
[10] The difficulty is
that plaintiff does not seem to understand that the defendant has a
right to deal with her properties as
she pleases, and the undertaking
was to allow the litigation process to reach its finality. The
plaintiff does not seem to be cognizant
of prejudice being suffered
by the defendant with this matter continuing to be dragged on for
almost four years. She has a life
to live like any other person
rather than to wait for the plaintiff to organise himself who seems
to be enjoying good life travelling
all over the country and
forgetting that he has litigation to attend to.
[11] The parties were
divorced in 2019 after reaching a settlement. The plaintiff, for
whatever reason, obtained a rescission of
the divorce order and an
order making the settlement agreement and order of Court in 2020
predicated on the same reason of wishing
to amend the particulars of
claim. Plaintiff has failed to take this Court into his confidence
and disclose what other amendment
does he intend to effect to his
particulars of claim and why he could not do so for a period of more
than three (3) years. The
unavoidable conclusion is therefore that
the application is not bona fide and is meant to delay the defendant
from obtaining the
relief she seeks.
[12] Furthermore, I do
not agree that plaintiff could not secure the service of senior
counsel over a period of three (3) weeks.
I do not suggest for one
minute that I know how many senior counsels serve in this Division,
but my view is that the plaintiff
deliberately failed to give this
matter the urgency it deserves and thought it better to serve the
defendant with the application
for a postponement on the eve of the
hearing under the guise of wanting to level the playing field. It is
incomprehensible that
the plaintiff wants the defendant to keep to
her undertaking not to deal with her properties for an extended
period because she
has not approached him and asked for the release
of any of her properties. It is my considered view that the
application for a
postponement falls to be dismissed with costs.
[13] It is worth noting
that the plaintiff was not in Court when the matter was heard. After
handing down the order and undertaking
that the reasons will be
incorporated in this judgment, Mr Londt withdrew as attorneys of
record for the plaintiff. However, he
was directed by the Court to
call the plaintiff and inform him that the matter was proceeding at
14H00 and report to Court at that
time as well. Mr Londt came back at
14H00 and informed the Court that the plaintiff has refused to come
to Court. Once again, the
Court directed Mr Londt to inform his
former client, the plaintiff, that he still has an opportunity to
attend and address the
Court on the 30
th
of May 2023 at
10H00 and the case was then adjourned to the 30
th
of May
2023 at 10H00.
[14] On the 30
th
of May 2023, the plaintiff and Mr Londt approached the Court in
chambers where Mr Londt informed the Court that his mandate has
been
reinstated. The Court directed the plaintiff and Mr Londt to attend
Court and place all issues on record but that the Court
will not
entertain the issue of the postponement since it has already been
determined. The reality is that both Mr Londt and the
plaintiff did
not appear in Court at 10H00 and the matter then proceeded in the
absence of the plaintiff and his counsel.
[15] The defendant
testified that she was married to the plaintiff on the 17
th
of May 1996 in Benoni out of community of property with the inclusion
of the accrual system and the marriage between them still
subsists.
There are no children born of the marriage. The marriage relationship
between herself and the plaintiff has broken down
irretrievably and
reached such a state of disintegration that there are no reasonable
prospects of the restoration of a normal
marriage relationship, in
that:
14.1 since 2019 the
parties have not been living together as husband and wife;
14.2 since his retirement
in 2017 the plaintiff has been rarely at home preferring to pursue
his own interests;
14.3 the plaintiff abused
intoxicating liquor and when under the influence of alcohol would be
aggressive and abusive towards the
defendant;
14.4 she has lost
all love and respect for the plaintiff and does not wish to continue
with the marriage relationship.
[16] The defendant
testified further that she prays for the plaintiff’s claim to
be dismissed with costs and that, in terms
of her counter claim, she
be granted a decree of divorce incorporating the settlement agreement
concluded between the parties on
the 20
th
of August 2019.
[17] It is a principle of
our law that for a party to succeed with its claim against another,
she or he must establish on a balance
of probabilities that her or
his version is reliable and can be believed. Put in another way, the
plaintiff or the defendant must
prove its claim by tendering reliable
evidence before the Court. The plaintiff or defendant must tender
evidence to the satisfaction
of the Court for him or her to obtain
the relief that he or she seeks.
[18] As stated in the
above paragraphs, the plaintiff absconded from testifying before this
Court to prove its claim. The defendant
took the stand and exacted
her claim against the plaintiff which evidence of the defendant
stands uncontroverted. I have no doubt
in my mind that the evidence
of the defendant is clear, plain and reliable. I am of the view
therefore that the defendant has proved
its claim against the
plaintiff and is therefore entitled to the relief that she seeks in
terms of her counter claim.
[19] In the
circumstances, I make the following order:
1. The application for
the postponement of this case is dismissed with costs.
2. The plaintiff’s
claim is dismissed with costs.
3. The decree of divorce
incorporating the settlement agreement of the 20
th
of
August 2019 is granted with costs.
TWALA M L
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
Date of Hearing:
29
th
– 30
th
of May 2022
Date of Judgment:
6
th
of June 2023
For
the Plaintiff:
Mr
DC Londt
Instructed
by:
McCormick
Londt Inc
Tel:
010 612 6451
office@mccla.co.za
For
the Defendant:
Advocate
SP Pincus SC
Instructed
by:
Howard
S Woolf Attorney
Tel:
011 268 8400
hwoolf@mweb.co.za
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