Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1249South Africa
A.M v L.M (2022-054818) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1249 (1 November 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## A.M v L.M (2022-054818) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1249 (1 November 2023)
A.M v L.M (2022-054818) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1249 (1 November 2023)
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sino date 1 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
2022-054818
In the matter between:
AM
Applicant
And
LM
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Nkutha-Nkontwana J
Introduction
[1]
The
parties are married in community of property since 16 July 2005, a
marriage that was covenanted in Johannesburg.
The
respondent vacated the matrimonial home in June 2011.
On
24 January 2023, the applicant instituted a divorce action against
the respondent
.
In these proceedings, the applicant
seeks
maintenance of the parties’ children pendente
lite
in
terms
of Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules
[1]
.
Background
[2]
There are three children born of the
marriage between the parties:
2.1
PM, a dependent major male child who
is currently 20 years old;
2.2
KM, a minor male child who is currently 16
years old; and
2.3
LM, a minor male child who is currently 13
years old.
[3]
The three children
primarily
reside
with the applicant. The respondent pays the monthly rental in respect
of the applicant and children's accommodation in the
amount of
R14 500.00 per month. He is also making payment towards the
minor children’s school fees in the amount of
R 8 600.00 per
month.
[4]
The applicant contends that the respondent
had reneged on his undertaking to pay R7000.00 per month towards the
children's maintenance.
The last payment he made towards
maintenance was in May 2022 in the amount of R3500.00. Hence in
these proceedings,
she is seeking a maintenance contribution of
R7000.00 per month.
[5]
The applicant earns R 17 999.15 net income
per month. She has to resort to loans in order to make ends meet
every month. The maintenance
contribution by the respondent
would cover expenses in relation basic needs like to water and
electricity, groceries, toiletries,
clothing and related expenses and
the children. She is also seeking that the respondent contributes 50%
of the monthly medical
aid costs for the children who are currently
covered by the applicant’s the medical aid.
[6]
The applicant contends that he earns more than what he has
disclosed in his Financial Disclosure Form (FDF) as he is the sole
member
of his close corporation. As such, he is in a position to
afford the maintenance required.
[7]
The respondent is a business man and a sole
member of his close corporation. He avers that he earns about
R40 500.00
per month. He is opposing the application and,
in
limine
, takes issue with the
applicant’s
locus standi
to seek maintenance on behalf of PM. He contends that PM can
institute his own action for maintenance as a major child.
[8]
On the merits, the respondent is pleading
poverty. He contends that his business was negatively impacted by the
Covid-19 pandemic.
Consequently, he had to downsize his business
operations and he is currently operating his business from his
residential property.
His current liabilities are standing at
R13 721 724.00 with an income of R8 951 724.00.
He also
has four other children, excluding the children he has
with the applicant, that he is taking care of.
Legal principles and
analysis
[9]
In terms of Rule 43(2), a party seeking an interim relief in a
matrimonial matter is required to do so on notice with a “sworn
statement in the nature of a declaration, setting out the relief
claimed and the grounds therefor...” While a respondent
wishing to oppose the application is required by Rule 43(3) to
deliver “a sworn reply in the nature of a plea.”
[10]
It
is trite that in Rule 43 applications, the court is called upon to
intervene on an interlocutory basis and grant an interim relief
to
mostly woman litigants and their minor children who may be penurious
when litigating against their spouses, who were often in
a stronger,
financial position than themselves in divorce proceedings.
[2]
[11]
The
applicant’s eligibility to reasonable maintenance
pendente
lite
is dependent upon the marital standard of living of the parties; her
actual and reasonable requirements; and the capacity of her
husband
to meet such requirements which are normally met from income,
although in some circumstances inroads on capital may be
justified.
[3]
[12]
In the present case, it is conceded that
the respondent is paying rental and school fees for the minor
children. What he is being
asked for is a contribution towards
maintenance of the children as well. The applicant’s modest
income is not disputed, nor
her expenses seriously challenged.
[13]
On the other hand, the respondent seeks to
be excused from fully providing for his children with the applicant
but has failed to
provide the necessary details about his income. The
bank statements attached to his FDF show that his Nebank business
account is
the main account he uses to transact despite his assertion
that he earns an income. That account always has a positive balance
and enough funds to meet the maintenance contribution for his
children with the applicant.
[14]
I
have noted also that his FNB private account statement has only one
transaction of R20 000.00 that was transferred from his business
account. That, therefore, begs a question — what informs his
salary of R40 500.00? Especially because
conspicuously absent from the respondent’s FDF is the
information pertaining to the respondent’s personal income in
a
form of a payslip and/or personal income tax information (IRP5).
[4]
[15]
Listed also in the respondent’s FDF is a Range Rover and
M3 BMW motor vehicles; and two Harley-Davidson motor bikes. The
respondent
contends that the vehicles belong to the close
corporation. This contention is flawed given my observation that the
affairs of
the close corporation are obviously intermingled with his
private affairs. In my view, the respondent cannot accuse the
applicant
of refusing to downgrade her standard of living when he, on
the other hand, is living large.
[16]
The respondent tells this court that he has
other children he is proving for and chronicles the expenses as
follows, I suppose in
respect all of his children:
Expenditures
Children
Lodging (rental)
R 14 250.00
Food, Groceries and cleaning material
R 8 000.00
School Fees
R 16 021.67
Baby food
R 2 000.00
Sporting Clothes
R 4 000.00
Pocket Money
R 10 000.00
Medical Expenses
R 4 000.00
Creche/Day Care
R 3 000.00
Other Educational Expenditure
R 5 000.00
After School Fees
R 1 800.00
Total
R 68 071.67
[17]
What is curious from the above schedule is
that a paltry amount is expended towards the to the applicant’s
children in rental
and educational expenses (including school fees).
Yet, despite pleading poverty, the respondent seemly expends an
amount of R10 000.00
in pocket money and R8 000.00 in
groceries in respect of his other children without affording the same
level of provision
to his children with the applicant.
[18]
In
my view, this is a typical case where, because of the respondent’s
failure to make
a full and frank disclosure of his financial affairs, the
apportionment of the burden of child support is obviously skewed.
The
effect is that the applicant has had to resort to loans in
order to support herself and the children while the respondent’s
burden is congruently eased and in turn unfairly shielded at the
expense of the applicant.
[5]
[19]
It
cannot be overemphasised that in every matter concerning minor
children invokes the constitutional imperatives regarding their
best
interests, including a right to parental care. The applicant requires
a contribution towards the daily requirements which
clearly implicate
the constitutional rights of the minor children.
[6]
Accordingly,
the respondent should contribute towards the costs of putting bread
on the table for his children over and above the
other expenses which
he is already providing for.
[20]
When
it comes to PM, the major child, the respondent’s in
limine
impugn of the applicant’s
locus
standi
is untenable. In
Z
v Z
,
[7]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal referred, with approval, to the following
views expressed by Professor M de Jong
[8]
and the court in
AF
v MF
:
[9]
“
Professor
M de Jong also advocates a similar interpretation of
inter
alia
s 6 of the Divorce Act. In doing
so, she persuasively advances the view that-
‘
In
the context of family law, policy considerations therefore include
the values of equality and non-discrimination and the obligation
of
parents to maintain their children in accordance with their ability,
as well as the needs of the children. Other policy considerations
that should accordingly be taken into account are the following: the
fact that adult dependent children’s general reluctance
to get
involved in litigation against one of their parents and institute
their own separate maintenance claims upon their parents’
divorce may perpetuate and exacerbate women’s social and
economic subordination to men and real inequality of the sexes;
the
fact that the duty to support their minor children should be borne
equally by both parents; and possibly the fact that it could
have
negative repercussions for adult dependent children if their
maintenance claims were to be adjudicated in isolation or after
the
date of their parents’ divorce . . .’
In
AF
it was
correctly observed that,
‘
.
. . courts should be alive to the vulnerable position of young adult
dependants of parents going through a divorce. They may be
majors in
law, yet they still need the financial and emotional support of their
parents. The parental conflict wrought by divorce
can be profoundly
stressful for young adult children, and it is particularly awkward
for the adult child where the parents are
at odds over the quantum of
support for that child. Moreover, where one parent is recalcitrant,
the power imbalance between parent
and child makes it difficult for
the child to access the necessary support. It is unimaginably
difficult for a child to have to
sue a parent for support — the
emotional consequences are unthinkable.’
I also agree with the
conclusion reached that,
‘
.
. . it is important to protect the dignity and emotional wellbeing of
young adult dependants of divorcing parents by regulating
the
financial arrangements for their support in order to eliminate family
conflict on this score and create stability and security
for the
dependent child.’”
[21]
Despite the fact that the respondent is
pleadings poverty, it is clear that he has not totally abdicated his
duty of care as he
is continuing to pay for the rental and school
fees for the minor children. Even so, the respondent is in a better
financial position
to pay for the maintenance as well. The WhatsApp
communication between the respondent and the minor children, which he
places reliance
on to prove that he still communicates with his
children, is, conversely, supporting the applicant’s contention
that she
cannot afford to maintain the children. Most of the
messages are about the minor children asking the respondent to buy
them
food as they had nothing to eat. In response, the
respondent would buy them fast food.
[22]
The respondent has means to contribute
towards maintenance of his children. In my view, R7000.00 per month
for all the children
is reasonable; representing R2500.00 per month
for each minor child and R2000.00 per month for the dependent major
child. This
amount is over and above the amount the respondent is
currently paying towards rental and school fees for the minor
children. He
should also contribute 50% towards medical expenses for
all the children.
[23]
When it comes to the claim for PM’s
tertiary fees, there is no evidence to show that he is registered as
a tertiary student.
Accordingly, this claim must fail.
Conclusion
[24]
In all the circumstances, and in the light
of the reasons alluded to above, I deem it appropriate to make an
order in the following
terms:
Order
1.
Pending the determination of the divorce action between the
parties;
the respondent shall pay maintenance for
the children as follows:
1.1
By paying cash maintenance for the children in the sum of R 7
000. 00 (seven thousand rand) per month, payable in advance and
directly to the applicant, without set off or deduction, into a bank
account nominated by the applicant from time to time, on or
before
the first day of every month, to commence within 7 (seven) days of
date of this order and to operate retrospectively for
that month, and
thereafter on the first day of each month and
increasing
on the anniversary of the first payment, by the average weighted
consumer price index;
1.2
By paying R14 500.00 (fourteen
thousand five hundred rand) per month towards the rental of the
premises occupied by the applicant
and the children, which amount
shall increase annually in terms of the lease agreement entered into
from time to time or any other
similar lease agreement should the
applicant and the children relocate;
1.3
By paying R1 450.00 (one thousand four
hundred and fifty rand) per month towards the children's medical aid;
the children will
be retained on the applicant's medical aid;
1.4
By paying half of all reasonable and
essential medical expenses not covered by medical aid, additional
expenses, and excess payments,
including but not limited to dental,
surgical, hospital, orthodontic, and ophthalmological medical-related
expenses;
1.5
By paying half of all upfront payments for
medical consultations, procedures, or half of all upfront payments
for medical consultations,
procedures or medication paid by the
applicant and not covered by medical aid within 7 days after receipt
of the invoice in regard
thereto;
1.6
By paying for all educational expenses for the minor children,
such which include
but not limited to
,
private school fees, textbooks, stationary,
tuition for extra mural activities, school tours and other school
related expenses.
1.7
In the event of the applicant incurring any
of the expenses as referend to in prayers 1.1 to 1.6 above, the
respondent shall reimburse
the applicant within 5 (five) calendar
days of receiving proof of payment, invoice or any till sip of such
expense being paid.
2.
The respondent is to pay the costs of the
application.
P Nkutha-Nkontwana J
Judge of the High
Court,
Johannesburg
Heard
on: 06 October 2023
Handed
down on: 01 November 2023
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
S Meyer
Instructed
by:
Paul
Friedman & Associates
For
the Respondent:
Adv
N Mohlala
Instructed
by:
Ngoetjana
Attorneys
[1]
Rule 43 provides:
“
(1) This rule
shall apply whenever a spouse seeks relief from the court in respect
of one or more of the following matters:
(a) Maintenance pendente
lite;
(b) A contribution
towards the costs of a matrimonial action, pending or about to be
instituted;
(c) Interim care of any
child;
(d) Interim
contact with any child.”
[2]
See
S.K
v J.L.K
[2023] ZAWCHC 62
at para 15.
[3]
See
Taute
v Taute
1974
(2) SA 675
(E) 676 D-E;
C.M.S.C
v N.C
[2021] ZAWCHC 227
at
para 14.
[4]
TS v TS
supra
fn 9
at para 12.
[5]
See
TS
v TS
2018 (3) SA 572
(GJ) at para 18-9.
[6]
See:
Section 28(2)
of the Constitution and section 9 of the Children’s Act;
see
also
Kotze
v Kotze
2003 (3) SA 628
(T) at 630G and endorsed by the Constitutional Court
in
Mpofu
v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
[2013]
ZACC 15
;
2013 (9) BCLR 1072
(CC) at para 21.
[7]
[2022] ZASCA 113
;
2022 (5) SA 451
(SCA) at paras 19-21.
[8]
M de Jong “
A
better way to deal with the maintenance claims of adult dependent
children upon their parents’ divorce”
2013
THRHR 654
at 655.
[9]
AF v MF
2019 (6) SA 422
(WCC) (AF) paras 71-7.
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