Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 811South Africa
C.A.W v D.H.W and Another (16760/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 811 (21 July 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## C.A.W v D.H.W and Another (16760/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 811 (21 July 2023)
C.A.W v D.H.W and Another (16760/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 811 (21 July 2023)
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sino date 21 July 2023
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THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 16760/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
C
A W
Applicant
and
D
H W
First
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
VAN EEDEN, AJ
1.
In this matter I granted an order on 20
July 2023 in terms of prayers 1, 2 and 3 of the notice of motion
dated 30 January 2023.
My reasons for doing so follow.
2.
The applicant and the first respondent are
wife and husband. The second respondent is the Registrar of Deeds,
Pretoria. The first
respondent left the matrimonial home on 22 August
2017 and the parties have not lived together since then. On 15
November 2017
the applicant instituted divorce proceedings against
the first respondent, which are still pending.
3.
On 3 August 2017 the first respondent
donated his half share of the immovable property known as Remaining
Extent of Portion 29 (a
Portion of Portion 1) of Erf […]
Atholl Township (“
the property”
)
to the applicant in terms of a written deed of donation. When the
first defendant failed to take the necessary steps to effect
registration of transfer into the name of the applicant, the current
application was launched as long ago as 2 May 2018. The applicant
now
seeks an order compelling the first respondent to take all steps and
to sign all documents necessary to effect registration
of transfer
into the name of the applicant and failing him complying with such
order, that the sheriff be authorised and directed
to take all such
steps.
4.
The applicant was represented by Ms
Masemola. The joint practice note dated 7 July 2023 requested
that the matter be heard
by way of online Microsoft Teams due to the
first respondent “
being elderly
and having recently fractured his femur causing a myriad of issues
with his mobility”
. The first
respondent had personally provided heads of argument and a list of
authorities, and I had assumed that he would personally
appear, he
not being represented by an attorney. However, when the matter was
called at 10h00 on 17 July 2023, Ms Masemola
indicated that the
first respondent had apparently been hospitalised on Friday, 7 July
2023.
5.
Given the inordinate delay in hearing this
matter since the time that it was instituted, I allowed the matter to
stand down until
14h00 on Thursday, 20 July 2023. The matter had
already been postponed on 16 February 2023 when the first
respondent’s affidavit
did not comply with rules pertaining to
the commissioning of affidavits.
6.
When the matter was called on 20 July, Ms
Masemola informed me that the first respondent was still in hospital
and too ill to personally
attend to the matter. Ms Masemola urged
that the matter should continue in his absence. A court will not
easily proceed in the
absence of one of the parties. However, in this
matter the first respondent used the opportunity to file heads of
argument. He
was previously represented by an attorney, and he had
the opportunity to appoint an attorney. The first respondent was also
aware
that his health was failing him. It appears to me that he took
a calculated risk when he decided not to appoint an attorney, or
to
appear in person. It is also not clear that the first respondent will
soon recover to such an extent that he can again attend
court. I
think it would be unfair to the applicant and the children of the
applicant and the first respondent, some of whom are
still minors, if
finality is not reached. In the circumstances I directed that the
application should proceed in the absence of
the first respondent.
7.
The reason for the donation does not appear
from the founding affidavit or the deed of donation. In paragraph 20
of this replying
affidavit, the first respondent stated that in
making the donation, he was “
acting
out of pure liberality”
. I thus
accept that the donation was a pure donation.
8.
The first respondent opposes this
application on the basis that he had revoked the donation,
alternatively
that he revoked it in terms of a counterclaim instituted at the time
that he filed his answering affidavit. The first respondent
contended
that he was entitled to revoke the donation based on gross
ingratitude. In contending for such gross ingratitude on the
part of
the applicant, the first respondent explained that the applicant had
assaulted him after the deed of donation had been
signed and he also
claimed infidelity on her part. The first respondent referred to
DE
and Another v CE and Others
[2020]
1 All SA 123
(WCC)
in support of his
contentions in his list of authorities dated 28 November 2002 (it
should presumably be 2022).
9.
It is correct that the first respondent is
as a matter of law entitled to revoke a donation in the case of gross
ingratitude. However,
it does not appear to me that the facts set out
in his affidavits are supportive of a finding of such gross
ingratitude.
10.
Assuming the correctness of the first
respondent’s allegations that the applicant had assaulted him,
it appears that the first
respondent’s complaints relating
thereto date back to 2009. In the first respondent’s practice
note of 24 October 2022
(Caselines 17-1, paragraph 4.1) he states
that the applicant “
has a bad and
erratic temper and started assaulting Respondent in 2009”
.
In paragraph 4.2 he also gives a description of the alleged first
assault on him in 2009, together with various further alleged
incidents of assault. These assaults preceded the donation. If the
assaults preceding the donation were not of such a nature as
to
prevent the donation, assaults post the donation can hardly be relied
upon to demonstrate gross ingratitude. Moreover, the claim
of
infidelity relates to the period after the first respondent had left
the matrimonial home and can also not be relied upon to
establish
gross ingratitude.
11.
There is a further factor which is to be
considered when evaluating the first respondent’s entitlement
to claim revocation
of the donation on the basis of gross
ingratitude. The applicant submitted a supplementary affidavit
(Caselines 13-1). The applicant
attached 2022-correspondence between
her attorney and the first respondent’s erstwhile attorney
demonstrating that the first
respondent was prepared to perfect the
donation and that he would no longer rely on the defence of gross
ingratitude. “CW3”
(Caselines 13-26) reflects an email
from the applicant’s attorney to the first respondent’s
attorney recording that
the first respondent “
has
unconditionally agreed to sign over his 50% share of the house”
on the “…
proviso that you
first cast your eye on the documents and see if you are happy with
them”
. The settlement that the
parties reached in this manner, was not proceeded with, as the first
respondent later sought to tie it
to a condition that the applicant
should waive the maintenance debt he owed her. The correspondence
does not reflect that the parties
had ever negotiated this waiver of
debt. It appears to me that it was an afterthought by the first
respondent to escape the consequences
of the donation and then the
subsequent settlement. His intention had always been that the
donation was out of pure liberality
and not to satisfy his
obligations towards the applicant. Thus, even if the assaults post
the donation and the infidelity complained
of constituted sufficient
grounds to establish gross ingratitude, they were forgiven during the
negotiations during 2022, just
as the earlier assaults were forgiven
at the time of the donation.
12.
In the premises the first respondent failed
to prove an entitlement to claim revocation of a pure donation based
on gross ingratitude
and the application should succeed. I
accordingly granted an order in terms of the notice of motion as
already explained.
H VAN EEDEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Counsel for
Applicant:
Ms Masemola
Instructed by:
Leslie Cohen &
Associates
Counsel for First
Respondent:
No appearance.
Date of hearing: 20
July 2023
Date of judgment: 21 July
202
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