Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 872South Africa
T.L.D v B.G (015642/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 872 (4 August 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal – s 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – an applicant now faces a higher and a more stringent threshold – leave to appeal refused.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 872
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## T.L.D v B.G (015642/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 872 (4 August 2023)
T.L.D v B.G (015642/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 872 (4 August 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_872.html
sino date 4 August 2023
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
015642/2022
DATE
:
4
th
August 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
04.08.23
In the matter between:
D
,
T L
Applicant
and
G
,
B
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
D, TE v G, B (015642/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ---
(04
August 2023)
Heard
: 03 August
2023
Delivered:
04
August 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 04 August 2023.
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal –
s 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
– an applicant now faces a higher and a
more stringent threshold – leave to appeal refused.
ORDER
(1)
The respondent’s application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT [APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL]
Adams J:
[1].
I shall refer
to the parties as referred to in the original application by the
applicant against the respondent for relief relating
to parental
responsibilities and rights in respect of their eight-year-old boy.
The respondent is the applicant in this application
for leave to
appeal and the respondent herein was the applicant in the said
application. The respondent
applies
for leave to appeal
against
paragraphs [30] (2) (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (h), (j) and (3) of
the order, which I granted on 13 July 2023. In order
to get an
understanding of the application for leave to appeal, it may be
apposite to cite in full the said order, which reads
in the relevant
part as follows: -
‘
(2)
Pending the finalisation of the action instituted in this Court under
case number: 015642/2022,
(a)
Save for
paragraphs 37, 37.1, 37.3, 42, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48 and 49, the order
granted by Moosa J on the 5
th
of June 2020 under case number: 28072/2016 be and is hereby suspended
with immediate effect.
(b)
The applicant
is awarded full parental responsibilities and rights in respect of
the minor child, [M] (“the minor child”).
(c)
Primary
residence of the minor child shall vest with the applicant.
(d)
The respondent
is granted specific parental responsibilities and rights only.
(e)
The minor
child shall not have any contact with the respondent for a period of
three months from date of this order and while the
minor child is
undergoing the therapy process outlined below.
(f)
Upon the
expiration of the three-month period referred to in subparagraph (e)
of this order, the minor child may have contact with
the respondent
on a supervised basis for two hours twice a week and two hours on the
weekend.
(g)
Once the
treating psychologist confirms that the minor child is ready, the
respondent may be reintroduced into the minor child's
life under
controlled and monitored conditions and safeguards in place to
prevent a repeat of the past years of conflict and alienation.
(h)
The contact
referred to in subparagraph (e) above, shall be supervised by a
suitably qualified social worker, which social worker
shall be
nominated by the Chairperson for the time-being of the Gauteng Family
Law Forum. The respondent shall make payment of
all costs associated
with the appointment of and supervision by the social worker.
(3)
The respondent
shall pay the costs of this application and the costs of his counter
application.’
[2].
The application for leave to
appeal is against my factual findings and legal conclusions. It is
contended by the respondent that
I
erred
and misdirected myself ‘in making final orders which have
extreme, fundamental and immediate consequences and effect
on the
interests of a minor child without first subjecting the various
versions averred to by the parties and advanced by the
Curator
ad Litem
to oral evidence’. In doing so, so the respondent further
argues, I did not have proper regard for the minor child's best
interests. As for the legal conclusions reached by me, it is the
respondent’s case that there are conflicting decisions
concerning the notion of ‘parental alienation syndrome’
and the appropriate and proper intervention that may be undertaken
by
a court considering the best interests of a minor child allegedly
subject to the syndrome.
[3].
It is
furthermore contended on behalf of the respondent that the court
a
quo
did
not adequately and properly consider the complex history of the
matter and all the circumstances which gave rise to the application
and the counter application which were relevant to its determination.
[4].
There are
further grounds on which the respondent’s application for leave
to appeal is based, it is however not necessary
for me to detail
those in full in this judgment. One such further ground which does
however require special mention is the averment
by the respondent
that I erred in finding that the respondent’s counter
application was purposed to seek an order, which
would have restarted
the whole process as was commenced by this court previously. The
purpose of the counter-application, so the
respondent submits, was in
fact purposed to ensure the proper verification of the findings and
recommendations of the psychologist,
Mr Carr, with a view to avoiding
prejudice to the minor child. Importantly, the respondent contends
that the Court
a
quo
erred
by accepting, without more, the expert opinion of Mr Car.
[5].
Nothing new has been raised by the respondent in this
application for leave to appeal. In my original judgment, I have
dealt with
most, if not all of the issues raised by the respondent in
this application for leave to appeal and it is not necessary for me
to repeat those in full.
Suffice to
restate what I said in my judgment, namely
that
very
little, if any,
purpose would be served by a so-called ‘critique report’
in relation to the report by Mr Carr, whose
expert opinion, in my
view, is well-reasoned and based on sound premises.
[6].
The traditional test in deciding whether leave to
appeal should be granted was whether there is a reasonable prospect
that another
court may come to a different conclusion to that reached
by me in my judgment. This approach has now been codified in
s
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which came into
operation on the 23
rd
of August 2013, and which provides
that leave to appeal may only be given where the judges concerned are
of the opinion that ‘the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success’.
[7].
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[1]
,
the SCA held that the test of reasonable prospects of success
postulates a dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the
law
that a court of appeal ‘could’ reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court. These prospects
of
success must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance
of succeeding. An applicant who applies for leave to appeal
must show
that there is a sound and rational basis for the conclusion that
there are prospects of success.
[8].
The ratio in
Ramakatsa
simply followed
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA),
[2011] ZASCA 15
, in which Plasket AJA
(Cloete JA and Maya JA concurring), held as follows at para 7:
‘
What
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the law that the
Court
of Appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant
must convince this Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote, but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that there is a mere possibility of
success. That the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words, be
a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.’
[9].
In
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen
[2]
,
the Land Claims Court held (in an
obiter
dictum
)
that the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that
now has to be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal
before
leave should be granted. I agree with that view, which has also now
been endorsed by the SCA in an unreported judgment in
Notshokovu
v S
[3]
.
In that matter the SCA remarked that an appellant now faces a higher
and a more stringent threshold, in terms of the Superior
Court Act 10
of 2013 compared to that under the provisions of the repealed Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959. The applicable legal principle
as enunciated in
Mont
Chevaux
has also now been endorsed by the Full Court of the Gauteng Division
of the High Court in Pretoria in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National Director
of
Public Prosecutions and Others
[4]
.
[10].
I am not persuaded that the
issues raised by the respondent in his application for leave to
appeal are issues in respect of which
another court is likely to
reach conclusions different to those reached by me. I am therefore of
the view that there are no reasonable
prospects of another court
making factual findings and coming to legal conclusions at variance
with my factual findings and legal
conclusions. The appeal therefore,
in my view, does not have a reasonable prospect of success.
[11].
There is, in
my view, another reason why the respondent’s application for
leave to appeal should not succeed and that relates
to the fact that
the judgment and the order I granted on 13 July 2023 is not
appealable.
[12].
As
was held by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of South Africa
[5]
,
for a judgment or an order to be appealable the following
requirements must be complied with: (a) The decision must be final in
effect and cannot be altered by the court of first instance; (b) It
is definitive of the rights of the parties; and (c) It has
the effect
of disposing of at least a substantial portion of the relief claimed
in the main proceedings.
[13].
Put
another way, as was said in
Jacobs
v Baumann NO
[6]
,
the test for appealability is to say that an order will be appealable
when it ‘irreparably anticipates or precludes some
of the
relief which would or might be given at the hearing’. Moreover,
as was more recently held by the SCA in
Nova
Property Group Holdings Ltd v Cobbett
[7]
,
in deciding whether a decision is appealable, the interests of
justice are of paramount importance.
[14].
The order
which the respondent seeks to have taken on appeal does not comply
with any of these criteria. The said order is not appealable
as, by
any stretch, it is not final in effect – all it does is to
suspend, for a period of three months, the respondent’s
contact
with the minor child. Moreover, the relief that was sought in the
original application is not what the trial court will
ultimately be
called upon to determine and that is whether the order granted by
Moosa AJ, namely shared residency and joint decision-making,
should
prevail.
[15].
Therefore, and
howsoever one views this matter, my order of 13 July 2023 is not
final in effect and same is accordingly not appealable.
[16].
For all of these reasons, the
respondent’s application for leave to appeal should therefore
be refused.
Order
[17].
In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
(1)
The respondent’s application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
3
rd
August
2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
4
th
August
2023
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Advocate F
Bezuidenhout
INSTRUCTED BY:
Etienne Cloete
Attorneys, Southdale, Johannesburg.
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Advocate R Rosenberg
SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
Cuthbertson &
Palmeira Attorneys Inc, Sandton
CURATOR
AD LITEM
FOR THE MINOR CHILD:
Advocate M L Haskins
SC
[1]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021);
[2]
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen,
LCC 14R/2014 (unreported).
[3]
Notshokovu
v S,
case
no: 157/2015
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016).
[4]
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National
Director of
Public Prosecutions and Others
(19577/09) [2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24 June 2016).
[5]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of South Africa
1993 (1) SA 523 (A);
[6]
Jacobs
v Baumann NO
2009 (5) SA 432 (SCA);
[7]
Nova
Property Group Holdings Ltd v Cobbett
2016 (4) SA 317
(SCA) at 323B – D;
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
T.L.D v B.G (015642/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 801 (13 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 801High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
T.L.M v MEC for Health and Social Development, Gauteng Province (39328/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 442 (9 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 442High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
T.D.N v City Of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2769/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 727 (26 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 727High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
T.K.L v G.A.L (33544/2017) [2025] ZAGPJHC 838 (22 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 838High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
L.D.B v J.S.B (A3079/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 786 (13 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 786High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar