Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1281South Africa
L.S.P.v R.S.P (2014/2941) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1281 (9 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 November 2023
Headnotes
in Trust; equity in his matrimonial property; motor vehicle; household furniture; personal goods; jewellery and positive balances in his bank accounts. The defendant puts his assets at R 4 573 173.00 and of that amount R 3 878 223.91 is held in trust by Court order.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## L.S.P.v R.S.P (2014/2941) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1281 (9 November 2023)
L.S.P.v R.S.P (2014/2941) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1281 (9 November 2023)
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sino date 9 November 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO.
2014/2941
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
P,
L. S
(born
T)
Plaintiff/Applicant
And
P,
R. S
Defendant/Respondent
JUDGMENT
Thupaatlase AJ
Introduction
[1] This is an
application in terms of Rule 43 of the Uniform Rule
s
of Court. The application is launched by the plaintiff in a pending
divorce action. The application is opposed. Plaintiff brought
this
application on an urgent basis wherein she seeks; firstly, an order
condoning her non-compliance with the Rules and secondly
that the
defendant pays a contribution of R 711 337.00 towards costs of
the pending divorce litigation or such other amount
as the Court may
deem meet.
[2] The plaintiff further
seeks an order granting her leave to apply for the striking out of
the defendant’s plea and counterclaim
on the same papers
supplemented as may be necessary in the event that defendant fails to
comply with an order of contribution to
costs. It is also prayed that
the defendant be ordered the costs of this application on the
attorney and client scale.
[3] The plaintiff
instituted divorce proceedings against her husband in January
2014.The parties are married out of community of
property and have
concluded an antenuptial contract. The marriage still subsists. From
the union between the parties, two children
were born. The children
are still minors.
[4] The matter was
previously set down for trial on 8 March 2018 and was postpone
d
sine die
. Eventually the trial was re-enrolled and set
down for hearing on 31 January 2020. Unfortunately, on the weekend
preceding the
hearing the defendant was seriously injured whilst
riding a bicycle. This necessitated a further postponement by
agreement. The
trial is now set down for 20 November 2023.
[5] According to
plaintiff the divorce proceedings have been acrimonious and resulted
in two Rule 43 applications. The first application
related to the
children as contemplated in Rule 43(1) (a) and (b) and the second to
an order preventing the defendant from dissipating
or concealing
proceeds of his pension fund. This is the first instance that
an application for
contribution towards
legal costs has been made.
The plaintiff’s
financial position
.
[6] The plaintiff resides
with the minor children at her parents’ house in Durban, as she
cannot afford accommodation of her
own. She is currently receiving
monthly maintenance of R 3 000.00 per child from the defendant.
The plaintiff submits that
the maintenance is not enough to provide
for the needs of the children.
[7] The plaintiff’s
income
as supported by payslips is R
46 327.79, with her total monthly expenditure amounting to R
55 873.85. The expenses submitted
are for the general household.
The expenditure appears to be modest.
[8] There is a shortfall
of R 6 500.00 in her monthly budget. She also points to the fact
that she was forced to sell her engagement
ring and that she is being
sued by her attorneys for professional services rendered.
[9] The plaintiff has
already incurred legal costs amounting to R 345 637.63 and that
if the defendant does not contribute
to her legal costs for the
pending divorce trial, she stands to suffer extreme prejudice and
irreparable harm.
[10] plaintiff’s
Financial Disclosure Form
(
FDF
)
shows that the matrimonial property bond
is
paid for by the defendant and holds
100%
equity in the property. The value of the plaintiff’s interest
in the family home is subject to accrual calculation. She
has no
immovable
property registered in her
name. The balance in her Standard Bank current account as of 24
October 2023 was –R 35662.79. She
has no investment
s
and no recoverable loans and no policies. At the time she
prepared FDF she had no cash to disclose.
[11] The plaintiff does
not own a motor vehicle or have any business interest
s
.
She has
a
pension interest of R
575 179.56 and
owes her attorneys
an amount of
R 446 990.00.
She is also indebted to Standard Bank for a credit card facility in
the amount of R 165 000.00.
The defendant’s
financial position
[12] The defendant has
stated through his answering affidavit that he is unemployed. He
details the injuries sustained during a
mountain bike incident. He
suffered a spinal cord injury which has paralysed him from chest down
and with no use of his legs and
very little of his arms. He will be
wheelchair-bound for the rest of his life.
[13] The defendant goes
to lengths in explaining the litigation history between the parties.
He confirms numerous interlocutory
applications launched since the
inception of the divorce proceedings in 2014.
[14] He lists assets
consisting of money held in Trust; equity in his matrimonial
property; motor vehicle; household furniture;
personal goods;
jewellery and positive balances in his bank accounts. The defendant
puts his assets at R 4 573 173.00
and of that amount R
3 878 223.91 is held in trust by Court order.
[15] The defendant
receives a rental income of R 17 000.00, and his monthly
expenses amount to R 108 798.00. The bulk
of these are medical
expenses. He has had a monthly shortfall of R90 161.00 since
2020.
[16] The defendant
concedes that prior the accident that caused his paralysis he had
good prospects for the future, but that changed
since the accident.
Defendant’s
financial transactions
[17] Analysis of the
financial transactions of the defendant during the period the period
of separation reveals that he granted
his girlfriend an interest free
loan of R 2.9 million on 20 October 2023. He is the sole director of
a company called Body 20 Dainfern
Square. In his previous affidavit
deposed in 2018 he denied any involvement in the company. He
previously loaned the company an
amount R 3 453 000.00
during 2018 and further
a
R 500 000.00
on 11 May 2011.
[18] A conspectus of the
evidence illustrates that post his accident, during the period
s
20 January 2020 and 31 December 2022, the defendant
has
received large sums of money as deposits or transfer
s
into his Standard Bank current account. As of 3 January 2023, the
said account had a positive balance of R 575 947.52. An
amount R
99 900.00 was deposited in the same current account and a
further sum of R 40 000 was deposited on 2 October
2023.
[19] The defendant also
has Standard Bank Home Loan account and analysis of the account also
that there has been transactional activity
into that account. On 01
March 2019 the account had an opening balance of R 728 661.50.
On the 23 March 2020 an amount R 400 000.00
was transferred into
this account.
The law contribution
towards legal fees in matrimonial suites
[20] The claim for a
contribution towards matrimonial suit is
sui generis
. Its
basis is the duty of support and should not be regarded as providing
‘sinews of war’ the other party. The guiding
principle in
in considering claims for contribution towards legal costs was
formulated as follows in
Van Rippen v Van Rippen
1949 (4) SA
634
(C) at page 639: ‘the quantum which the applicant for a
contribution towards costs should be given is something which is to
be determined in the discretion of the Court. In the exercise of that
discretion the Court should, I think have the dominant object
in view
that, having regard to the circumstances of the case, the financial
position of the parties and in particular issues involved
in the
pending litigation, the wife must be enabled to present her case
adequately before the
Court. In any assessment the question of
essential disbursements must necessarily be a very material factor.
Equally it seems to
me that it is inevitable in the procedure that
the solicitor acting for the wife must run some potential risk, to
this extent that
he is not fully secured in advance; he has not, in
the usual phrase, full cover for his fees. That appears to me
unfortunate, but
also to be inevitable. The paramount consideration
is that, as I have indicated, the Court should have as its object the
determining
of an amount which in its discretion it considers
necessary for the wife adequately to place her case before the Court.
Beyond
that, it is my view, undesirable to attempt to state any more
specific rules. In matters of discretion, it is not desirable to
attempt to propound detailed rules’.
[21] The above exposition
was confirmed in
HS v H
[2022] 2023 (1) SA 413
(GJ) at para 82
where the court stated that ‘in respect of rule 43 applications
Van Rippen is old authority for the rule
that the discretion in
determining quantum of contribution to costs must be exercised such
that ‘wife must be enabled to
present her case adequately
before court’.
[22] Whilst the language
by the learned Ogive-Thompson J (as then was) is reflective of a
social milieu where ‘wives’
were subject to marital P,
and there was no equality of gender; the principles propounded
therein are still applicable to present
day nuances where gender
disparities are still rife. Notwithstanding, a spouse of either
gender is entitled to this relief if the
circumstances so demands.
[23] In the case of
AF
v MF
2019 (6) SA 422
(WCC) para [27] the court restated the
position as follows: ‘The claim for a contribution towards
costs in a matrimonial
action originated in Roman-Dutch procedure and
is well established in our procedure- Rule 43 regulates the procedure
to be followed
where a contribution to costs is sought. The
substantive basis of the claim is the reciprocal duty to support
between spouses which
include the costs of legal proceedings’.
[24] The court continued
as follows at para [41] that ‘The importance of equality of
arms in divorce litigation should not
be underestimated. Where the is
a marked imbalance in the financial resources available to the
parties to litigate, there is a
real danger that the poorer spouse-
usually the wife- will be forced to settle for less than that which
she is legally entitled,
simply because she cannot afford to go to
trial. On the other hand, the husband who controls the purse strings,
is well able to
deploy financial resources in the service of his
cause. That situation strikes me as inherently unfair. In my view the
obligation
on courts to promote constitutional rights to equal
protection and benefit of the law and access to courts requires that
courts
come to the aid of spouses who are without means, to ensure
that they are equipped with the necessary resources to come to court
to fight what is rightfully theirs’.
[25] In our current
constitutional dispensation it is even a more imperative that this
relief is favourably considered to ensure
access to courts as a
fundamental right entrenched in section 34 of the Constitution.
Denying a deserving party this relief will
amount to denial of basic
human right, same can be said of the right to equality in section 9
of the Constitution.
[26] As succinctly put in
AF
supra at para [42]: ‘The right to dignity is also
impacted when a spouse is deprived of the necessary means to
litigate.
A person’s dignity is impaired when she has to go cap
in hand to family or friends to borrow funds for legal costs or
forced
to be beholden to an attorney who is willing to wait for
payment of fees- in effect to act as her ‘banker’. The
primary
duty to support is owed between spouses, and a wife who is
without means should be entitled to look to the husband, if he means,
to fund her reasonable litigation costs. The same applies if the
husband is indigent and the wife affluent. And where an impecunious
spouse has already incurred debts, in order to litigate, whether to
family or to an attorney, I consider that a court should protect
the
dignity of that spouse by ordering a contribution to cists sufficient
to repay those debts (at least to the extent that the
court considers
the expenditure reasonable’.
Analysis
[27] The sum to be
contributed is to be determined by the court’s analysis of the
amount necessary for the applicant adequately
to put its case before
court. The financial position of the parties must be objectively
considered.
[28] In applying this
test to the present case, it is apparent that plaintiff has very
limited financial resources. She currently
depends on a salary and
maintenance money that she receives from the defendant. I am
satisfied she has made a full and honest disclosure
of her financial
position
,
can safely be described as dire. The
situation has been exacerbated by the delays in finalising the
matter.
[29] The defendant’s
financial position in contrast to the plaintiff’s, appears to
be stable. As indicated above, the
defendant
is
operates various bank accounts and all with considerable positive
balances. The defendant has not engaged with the evidence which
was
been placed before the court regarding his strong financial position.
The argument that the plaintiff is relying on old transactions
cannot
stand in the face of recent transaction
s;
including an interest free loan advanced to his girlfriend.
[30] It has not being
denied that the defendant has bought art worth R 80 000.00 in
December 2022. The defendant has been found
to have dissipated assets
thus, the curren
t
anti-dissipation order
against him. He has been unable to disclose the source/s of large
sums of money that are from time to time
transferred or deposited
into his banks accounts.
[31] In addition,
plaintiff has demonstrated that the defendant is an heir to his
mother’s Will, and he has not denied this
with any form of
conviction.
[32] I have been apprised
of the state of health of the defendant and huge medical bills he is
required to pay; however, I am satisfied
that he is able to
contribute to the costs of the plaintiff as outlined in the preceding
paragraphs. It is clear that the plaintiff
is not
able
to fund the divorce
litigation.
Prolixity
[33] The defendant has
complained that plaintiff has bedevilled him with voluminous
documents in support of this application.
Whilst I accept the principle that courts should frown upon
such practice; I take the view that a practical approach needs to be
adopted. A strict approach may have the effect of denying a party a
right to vindicate a legitimate right or procedural entitlement.
[34] The matter of
prolixity has been authoritatively answered by a full court of 3
senior judges of this division in the case of
E v E; R v R; M v M
(12583/17; 20739/18; 5954/18) [2019] ZAGPJHC 180;
[2019] 3 All SA 519
(GJ);
2019 (5) SA 566
(GJ) (12 June 2019). The conflicting decisions
emanating from this division were comprehensively analysed and in the
end the court
made an order that:
‘Affidavits filed in terms of Rule 43(2) and (3)
shall only contain material or averments relevant to the issues for
consideration.
It shall not be competent for a court to dismiss an
application in terms of Rule 43, only on the basis of prolixity. If
the court
finds that the papers filed by a party contain irrelevant
material, the court only has the P to strike off the irrelevant and
inadmissible
material from the affidavit in question and make an
appropriate cost order’.
[35] Before granting
order the court quoted with approval the remarks of Spilg J in
TS
[1]
that: ‘“While many Rule 43 applications may not require
more than a succinct set of affidavits to enable a court to
make a
proper determination that will serve the best interest of the child,
in my respectful view, a one- size-fits-all approach
to the
sufficiency of evidence that should be placed before a court may in a
given case have difficulty either in passing constitutional
scrutiny
or being capable of meeting the requirements that the outcome will
serve the child’s best interests. [63] The adjudication
of
maintenance for children pendente lite involves
establishing the actual expenditure requirements that have been
incurred
historically, establishing whether there is any change and
if so, why.” The argument that the application be struck off
for
prolixity is dismissed.
Finding
[36] I am satisfied that
the plaintiff has shown that she has insufficient means,
and
that the defendant is in a better financial position to contribute
towards the costs of her litigation.
[37] Having found as
aforementioned, it follows that the defendant’s counterclaim
must fail.
[38] Lastly, I am not
satisfied that that the court hearing an application brought under
the purview of Rule 43(6) is competent
to grant relief sought by the
plaintiff in prayer 2 of the notice of motion.
Order
[39] In the
circumstances, it is ordered as follows:
1. The defendant is
directed to forthwith to pay R 711 337.00 towards cost of the
pending divorce trial action instituted under
case no. 2014/2941.
2. Prayer 2 is hereby
dismissed.
3. The defendant’s
counterclaim is dismissed.
4. The defendant to pay
costs of the application on attorney and client scale.
THUPAATLASE AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Date of Hearing: 31
October 2023
Judgment Delivered: 09
November 2023
For the Applicant:
Adv. M Nowitz
Instructed by:
Hirschowitz Flionis
Attorneys .
For the Respondent:
Adv. G Olwagen-Meyer
Instructed:
Cummings Attorneys
[1]
case
number 28917/2016
(7th
August 2017)
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