Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1225South Africa
T.R.S v U.A.R and Others (2023-019086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1225 (27 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.R.S v U.A.R and Others (2023-019086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1225 (27 October 2023)
T.R.S v U.A.R and Others (2023-019086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1225 (27 October 2023)
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sino date 27 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No.2023-019086
Case
No.
2023-019086
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
27.10.23
In the matter between:
TRS
Applicant
And
UAR
First
Respondent
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER, SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Third
Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Fourth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, TRS, has applied for an order authorising her
permanent relocation with her two children to Israel. The first
respondent,
UAR, is the father of both children. The parties have a
joint custody arrangement, each spending an equal amount of time
living
with and caring for the children. UAR opposes the application.
In an ideal world, it appears that he would prefer both the children
and TRS to remain in South Africa. However, if TRS does relocate to
Israel, then UAR believes that their children should remain
with him.
2
There appear to be two fundamental drivers behind TRS’s
application. The first is that she is currently illegally in the
country.
Her spousal visa, which she acquired as a result of a
previous marriage, has long since expired. She later unwisely
obtained a
fraudulent permit on which she relied for some time to
remain in the country. She was eventually found out, charged,
convicted,
and is now subject to deportation as an illegal foreigner.
There is no suggestion that the third respondent, the Minister, is
inclined
to revisit TRS’s status as an illegal foreigner, and I
must accept, for present purposes, that she is liable to deportation
at any time. It appears that the Minister has agreed to stay his hand
until Monday 30 October 2023, but there is no guarantee that
TRS will
be allowed to remain in South Africa beyond that date.
3
The second driver behind the application is that TRS sees
Israel as a safe and prosperous place in which to bring up the
children.
She has Israeli and United States passports. She adverts to
what she says is a loving and supportive extended family in Israel,
and is intent on returning to Israel after what has been, by all
accounts, an emotionally volatile time in South Africa.
4
The question of whether TRS should be permitted to relocate to
Israel with the children seems to me to be one of real complexity.
As
things stand, both she and UAR play equally important roles in their
children’s lives. I have no doubt that each of them
has
developed a close and loving bond with the children. Whatever happens
in this case, the children are likely to suffer some
detriment. If
TRS leaves with the children, they will lose the closeness of a
loving father. If TRS leaves without the children,
they will be
separated from their mother. At the tender ages of 1 and 3, either of
these outcomes could be devastating for them.
But just as potentially
undesirable is a situation in which TRS remains precariously in South
Africa to be with the children, with
all the stress that would cause
her, and which would likely be transmitted in some way to the
children. Another possible outcome
is that TRS is given leave by the
Minister to remain in South Africa permanently, but that she never
really settles here, and is
left in a state of anguish and resentment
as a result. That, too, will clearly affect the children and their
well-being.
5
The papers in this matter are substantial, and contain, in
addition to the bare facts of the situation, a great deal of
unhelpful
crossfire. There are, however, two independent reports that
address the children’s best interests with a degree of
impartiality.
One, produced by a Dr. F, deals with the residence,
care and contact regime that should apply to the parties and their
children.
Dr. F is very clearly of the view that residence, contact
and care should be shared equally between TRS and UAR. It seems clear
that this is at least in part why the parties have adopted that
arrangement. The second report, produced by a Mr. C on 13 October
2023, less than two weeks before this matter was called for argument
before me, takes the view that the children should not be
allowed to
relocate with TRS to Israel. It criticises TRS as vague and
unrealistic in her expectations of what can be done to provide
the
necessary care and support to the children in Israel. It strongly
recommends that the children stay in South Africa, close
to UAR, but
does not appear to come to grips with the fact that long-term
residence in South Africa may not be possible for TRS
because of her
immigration status.
The postponement
application
6
When the matter was called before me on 26
October 2023, Ms. Feinstein, who appeared for TRS, applied to
postpone the relocation
application, in order to give TRS an
opportunity to deal with Mr. C’s report. Ms. Feinstein also
adverted to the present
military and political instability in Israel,
but, given the conclusion to which I have come, I need not consider
whether that
instability merits a postponement.
7
It seems to me that TRS is entitled to a
postponement to deal fairly and at length with Mr. C’s report.
The report is plainly
very prejudicial to TRS’s case. If its
conclusions are accepted, it would likely put an end to that case.
Ms. Feinstein criticised
the report on two principal bases. First, it
was said that Mr. C had simply assumed that TRS’s permanent
residence in South
Africa was a viable outcome. That, Ms. Feinstein
submitted, cannot be assumed, precisely because TRS is presently in
ongoing danger
of deportation. What Mr. C failed to come to grips
with was the possibility there may be no way that both TRS and UAR
can remain
in the same jurisdiction. Mr. C’s failure to address
that very likely eventuality, Ms. Feinstein submitted, tainted the
report.
At the very least, Ms. Feinstein submitted, Mr. C’s
conclusions were drawn under a misconception.
8
A second significant line of attack was
that Mr. C had drawn conclusions about the kind of extended family
support network TRS could
reasonably expect in Israel without
interviewing any of the people that would be involved in providing
TRS with the support she
needs. This, too, Ms. Feinstein submitted,
tainted the report, and rendered it unreliable.
9
There were other cirticisms of the report,
but I do not think I need to address them. The fact is that, on the
face of Mr. C’s
report, Ms. Feinstein’s criticisms have
some substance. That is not the same as saying that the report ought
to be disregarded,
or that its conclusions will turn out to be
unsound. I need not be convinced of that. All that matters is that
there may be aspects
of the report that require further evaluation or
elaboration. Mr. C himself accepts in his report that the report was
produced
under “circumstances of urgency” and that “there
was not enough time to explore every issue pertaining to the
parties
and their histories”. That nothwithstanding, Mr. C is clearly
as sure as he can be of his conclusions. But the pressure
under which
the report was compiled does beg the question of whether I should
accept those conclusions, and whether TRS ought not
to be given a
fair opportunity to deal with them.
10
Ms. Bezuidenhout, who appeared together
with Ms. Strathern for UAR, could not really gainsay the fact that
Mr. C’s report
is highly prejudicial to TRS’s case. Nor
could she advance any meaningful argument against the two critiques
advanced by
Ms. Feinstein, to which I have already adverted. Her
opposition to the postponement application was based principally on
the contention
that the relocation application bears no prospects of
success and that a postponement would merely delay its inevitable
dismissal.
Ms. Bezuidenhout called in aid of that proposition the
decision of the Constitutional Court in
Lekolwane
v Minister of Justice
[2006] ZACC 19
;
2007 (3) BCLR 280
(CC), where, at paragraph 17, the court made clear that the prospects
of success on the merits of the main application are material
to any
decision on whether to postpone a hearing on those merits. As a
general proposition, this is no doubt true. But in choosing
to
advance her case on that basis, Ms. Bezuidenhout set herself a very
high bar. It seems to me that the prospects of success on
the merits
would only be determinative of a postponement if the main application
were so manifestly ill-conceived that it was doomed
to failure.
11
As must be abundantly clear by now, this is
not that kind of case. Indeed, before Mr. C’s report was
delivered, UAR himself
contended that TRS’s case was such that
there were material disputes of fact on the papers that could only be
determined
by oral evidence. UAR instituted and then indicated that
he wished to withdraw an application for a referral to trial for that
reason. In addition, I was informed during the hearing of this matter
that Mr. C was present in court and willing to be cross-examined
on
his report. None of this is consistent with the proposition that
TRS’s case is so bad that it can be dismissed out of
hand.
12
The true situation is, I think, that TRS’s
application is only likely to fail if Mr. C’s conclusions are
accepted. But,
in light of TRS’s preliminary criticisms of his
report, I cannot say whether Mr. C’s report would be accepted
in the
main case. And the report’s merits cannot fairly be
assessed unless TRS is given an opportunity to deal with it.
13
Prospects of success aside, I think the
question in this case boils down to the balance of prejudice (see
Psychological Society of South Africa v
Qwelane
2017 (8) BCLR 1039
(CC)
paragraph 37). The prejudice to TRS if I refuse a postponement is
plain enough. She will not have an opportunity to deal with
a report
that, if the court adopts it, would be highly damaging to her case.
Against this Ms. Bezuidenhout, despite being given
a full opportunity
to do so, could advert to no competing prejudice to UAR if a
postponement were granted. It is of course true
that the prolongation
of this case is inherently undesirable, but even less desirable is a
decision that is highly likely to separate
two boys of tender age
from one of their parents without the relevant expert facts being
properly matured and interrogated. To
put it crudely, this is a case
the parties, and the court, have to get right. To rush to the merits
in the circumstances I have
outlined risks serious error, with
unfathomable, long-term detrimental consequences for two young boys
only dimly aware, if they
are aware at all, of the maelstrom of
litigation surrounding them.
14
Ms. Bezuidenhout was trenchantly, and I
think appropriately, critical of TRS’s conduct of this
litigation. There are choices
that TRS has made in the pursuit of her
case that plainly should not have been made. Her principal error was
to seek a hearing
of this matter before anyone else accepted that it
was ripe for hearing. The publication of Mr. C’s report has led
to the
ironic turn that TRS no longer believes that the matter is
ripe for hearing. And UAR, seeing the wholesale adoption of Mr. C’s
report as his path to victory, has now abandoned his earlier view,
expressed in correspondence from his attorney sent to my registrar
shortly after the matter was allocated to me, that the case could not
be properly heard so soon after that report was due to become
available. It turns out that UAR was right then, even if he now
disavows his wisdom.
15
It seems to me that neither party has been
consistent in their attitude to whether the matter is ripe for
hearing. But neither party’s
prevarication makes any difference
to whether the matter should be postponed. Ms. Bezuidenhout’s
justified criticisms of
TRS’s approach do not translate into a
good argument for the main application to be heard prematurely.
16
For all these reasons, I think the
prejudice to TRS that would result from my refusing a postponement
outweighs, by some margin,
any prejudice to UAR, or, more
importantly, to the children’s best interests, that would
result from my granting the postponement.
The postponement
application must succeed.
17
The parties were agreed that, whatever the
outcome of the application, a postponement
sine
die
would be inappropriate without
directions for the further conduct of the matter. I asked Ms.
Feinstein to tender the terms of a
postponement with which TRS would
be content. I also asked her to engage with Ms. Bezuidenhout, and
with Mr. Moodliyar, who appears
for the third and fourth respondents,
to the extent necessary to ensure that any deadlines set out in an
order outlining the terms
of a postponement are realistic. I made
clear that engagement with the terms of the draft order obviously did
not imply consent
to it. I derived considerable assistance from the
draft when it was submitted. I was able to have regard to, and I am
grateful
for, the first respondent’s comments on it.
Interim relief in
restraint of TRS’ deportation
18
As things stand, TRS must report to the
Department of Home Affairs on Monday 30 October 2023. Mr. Moodliyar
was unable to give any
undertaking on the Minister’s behalf
that TRS would not be deported there and then, or at any time
thereafter if, in the
exercise of the relevant officials’
discretion, her deportation was considered appropriate. This is
obviously a highly unsatisfactory
situation. If TRS is deported
before this application is finally determined, this court’s
jurisdiction will be compromised,
and, perhaps more importantly, the
parties’ children will experience a sudden rupture in their
realtionship with TRS. Nothing
could be more disruptive of the
children’s best interests, or of this court’s ability to
determine where those interests
lie, than an outcome of that nature.
19
Despite quite properly acknowledging that
section 165 (4) of the Constitution, 1996 requires his clients to
“assist
and protect the courts” and ensure their
“independence, impartiality, dignity, accessibility and
effectiveness”,
Mr. Moodliyar resisted an order restraining
TRS’ deportation on the basis that the separation of powers
forbade it. I do
not agree. The separation of powers is not a trump
card that can be produced whenever counsel for an organ of state
wishes to immunise
their client from judicial oversight. It is a
carefully balanced set of norms pregnant in the constitutional text
that ensure that
the executive, legislature and the judiciary assist
and protect each other in the exercise of their proper functions. The
capacity
to determine a case that has been properly committed to it
lies at the very heart of a court’s function. Mr. Moodliyar
identified
no basis on which the Minister could justify TRS’s
deportation before this case is finally determined, but he was
nevertheless
unable to assure me that the Minister would stay his
hand.
20
In the circumstances, I am left with no
option but to restrain TRS’s deportation pending the final
determination of her relocation
application on its merits. As that
interdict is interim in nature, it remains open to the Minister or to
the fourth respondent,
the Director-General, to apply to court for
appropriate relief in the event that new circumstances arise which
justify the interdict’s
variation or discharge.
The 23 August 2022
interdict
21
On 23 August 2022, Francis-Subbiah J, then
sitting as an Acting Judge, interdicted and restrained TRS from
leaving South Africa.
That order was part of a broader set of
arrangements dealing with the residence, care and contact regime to
apply to the children.
It is not clear to me on what basis that
interdict was imposed, and none of the parties sought to justify it
before me. TRS asks
that it be discharged. I see no reason not to do
so.
Costs
22
There remains the question of costs. Each
party sought a costs order against the other. I do not think that any
costs order is appropriate
at this stage. It seems clear that neither
party has genuinely persisted in the view that this matter is
presently ripe for hearing.
TRS pushed the matter to a hearing
despite ultimately acknowledging that a final determination of the
merits could not appropriately
be reached. UAR was firmly of the view
that the matter could not proceed on the merits until Mr. C’s
report held out the
prospect of a quick victory. For the reasons I
have already given, that outcome was never realistic, and could not
fairly be pursued.
The costs of this postponement application will be
the costs in the main application.
Order
23
For all these reasons, I make the following
order –
23.1
The application is postponed
sine
die
.
23.2
The interdict imposed under
paragraph 1.12
of Justice Francis-Subbiah’s order dated 23 August 2022 under
case number 004561/2022 is discharged.
23.3
The third and fourth respondents are interdicted
and restrained from
deporting the applicant
pending the final determination of these proceedings.
23.4
The first respondent is granted leave to withdraw
his application for consolidation and referral to trial of the
proceedings under
case numbers 004561-2022 and 019086- 2023 dated 14
September 2023.
23.5
The applicant is granted leave to file her
affidavit dated 11 September 2023, and the affidavit is received onto
the record.
23.6
The first respondent is granted leave to file his
affidavit dated 17 October 2023, and the affidavit is received onto
the record.
23.7
The applicant is directed to approach the office of the Deputy Judge
President to request a hearing of the relocation application
during
the second half of the second term of 2024. The approach must be made
by no later than 1 December 2023.
23.8
The applicant may, if she chooses to do so, deliver a supplementary
affidavit containing those expert facts strictly necessary
to deal
with Mr. C’s report, dated 13 October 2023. This must be done
by no later than 15 March 2024.
23.9
The applicant shall deliver her reply to the first respondent’s
supplementary affidavit dated 17 October 2023, by no later
than 15
March 2024.
23.10
The applicant shall deliver her replying affidavit to the third and
fourth respondents’ answering affidavit dated 10
October 2023
by no later than 15 March 2024.
23.11
The respondents shall deliver their responses to the applicant’s
supplementary affidavits, if any, by 17 April 2024.
23.12
The applicant shall deliver additional written submissions and an
updated practice note by no later than 10 May 2024.
23.13
The respondents shall deliver additional written submissions and an
updated practice note by no later than 24 May 2024.
23.14
Should any party identify any factual disputes which in that party’s
view require a referral for the hearing of oral
evidence, such party
shall notify the other parties, the Office of the Deputy Judge
President, or the allocated presiding Judge
by no later than 24 April
2024. The relevant party may request that additional hearing days be
allocated for the hearing of the
oral evidence they consider
necessary.
23.15
The party seeking the hearing of oral evidence shall immediately
thereafter, and no later than 29 April 2024, request a case
management meeting with Deputy Judge President or the allocated
presiding Judge in order that the parties, with the assistance
of the
relevant Judge, define the issues on which oral evidence is to be led
and witnesses to be called.
23.16
The costs in the postponement application will be
the costs in the main application.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
HEARD ON: 26
October 2023
DECIDED ON: 27
October 2023
For the Applicant:
M Feinstein
Instructed by
Alan Levin and Associates
For the First
Respondent:
F Bezuidenhout
N Strathern
Instructed by
Steyns
Attorneys
For the Third and
Fourth Respondents
D Moodliyar
Instructed by
The State Attorney
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