Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1423South Africa
D.T and Another v MAMF (2023-119659) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1423 (8 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## D.T and Another v MAMF (2023-119659) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1423 (8 December 2023)
D.T and Another v MAMF (2023-119659) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1423 (8 December 2023)
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sino date 8 December 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023-119659
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED. YES
DATE
8 December 2023
In
the matter between:
DT
First
Applicant
SCT
Second
Applicant
and
MAMF
Respondent
JUDGMENT
T
VAN DER WALT AJ:
[1]
The motion proceedings underlying this
judgment appeared on the urgent roll during the last week of November
2023 at the time of
year when this division is at its busiest. The
factual and chronological matrix of the matter did not strictly
speaking justify
a hearing in the urgent court. However, the outcome
would affect a minor. Striking the matter from the roll for lack of
urgency
would have prolonged clearly apparent anxiety for the minor
and others over the festive season and well into the new 2024 school
year. The matter was thus heard as enrolled, and judgment was briefly
reserved.
[2]
The applicants essentially seek an order
declaring the respondent to be in contempt of a court order and they
seek a sanction to
the effect that she shall serve a 3 month jail
sentence or pay a R100 000 fine, both conditionally suspended
(the Contempt
Application).
[3]
To provide some provisional context, the
applicants are the two older brothers of a minor’s recently
deceased father. The
respondent is the minor’s mother and the
former wife of the deceased.
[4]
The essential facts of the matter include
the following.
[5]
The first and second applicants, Uncle D
and Uncle S (jointly, the Uncles) are brothers. Uncle D is a retired
businessman, close
to 70 years old. Uncle S is part-time consultant,
close to 80 years old. They cohabitate in Hyde Park. Uncle S is also
Minor S’s
godfather.
[6]
The respondent, Mom T, is a real estate
agent in her 50s. She resides in Fourways. Mom T was married to Dad
T, the younger brother
of the Uncles.
[7]
Mom T and Dad T divorced some 8 years ago
in 2015.
[8]
Minor S was born from the marriage between
Mom T and Dad T in 2008. Minor S is now a young man who will
turn 14 on 21 December
2023.
[9]
Since the divorce of Mom T and Dad T in
2015, Dad T lived with the Uncles in Hyde Park.
[10]
For the duration of the 8-year period
between 2015 and 2023 Mom T and Dad T had an affable co-parenting
relationship in respect
of Minor S. The co-parenting relationship was
governed by a court-ordered divorce settlement agreement in terms of
which Minor
S stayed with Dad T and the Uncles in Hyde Park from
Sunday morning until Thursday morning, 4 nights per week. He lived
with Mom T
in Fourways from Thursday afternoon until Sunday
morning, 3 nights per week. This remained the position until February
2023.
[11]
Dad T passed away in February 2023 whilst
collecting Minor S at Pridwin Preparatory School where Minor S was a
grade 7 learner at
the time.
[12]
The death of Dad T changed everything.
[13]
During May 2023, Mom T removed Minor S from
Pridwin in Melrose and enrolled him at HeronBridge College in
Fourways. The Uncles say
this was done ‘
deviously
’
to dilute the relationship between them and Minor S. Mom T says that
the reasons were that Pridwin became a sad place for
Minor S given
that Dad T passed away on the school premises and HeronBridge offered
Minor S a 5-year academic scholarship.
Minor S in any event had
no desire to have contact with the Uncles. Also, HeronBridge is in
Fourways where Mom T resides with
Minor S. Fourways is situated
approximately 25km from Melrose.
[14]
When Minor S informed the Uncles via
WhatsApp of his enrolment at HeronBridge, their reaction was:
‘
Your
poor Dad will be crying his heart out. Truly tragic.
’
To this, Minor S
responded:
‘
The
school actually has really good sportsgrounds. Big rugby fields, nice
hockey astros, nice cricket pitches, they also do basketball,
and
I’ve made many friends and everyone’s really kind. And I
really like it here.
’
When the Uncles enquired
via WhatsApp from Minor S why they were not included in the decision
regarding Minor S’s enrolment
at HeronBridge, his response was:
‘
Because
of this whole court case.
’
Minor S’s reference
to ‘
this whole court
’
case
was to the
Assignment Application which the Uncles had by then launched against
Mom T in which they seek
inter alia
contact with and care and
guardianship of Minor S. The Assignment Application will be returned
to later in this judgment.
Having learnt that Minor
S was enrolled at HeronBridge, the Uncles posted the following
message on the Pridwin Grade 7 WhatsApp
group page:
Dear
Parents and Pridwin children, it is with great shock and a heavy
heart that we have just found out that
[Mom
T]
has
deviously
removed
[Minor S]
from
Pridwin
without our permission
or knowledge.
[Uncle S]
and
I, especially on behalf of our late beloved brother,
[Dad
T]
, would like to thank you for the
friendship and support that you have given to
[Minor
S and Dad T]
over the past seven years.
We thank you for the friendship and respect towards
[Uncle
S]
and I and the support over this
traumatic period.
(Emphasis added.)
All things considered,
little value can be attached to the version of the Uncles that the
change of schools was done deviously and
without permission to dilute
their relationship with Minor S. Objectively and on a balance
of probabilities based on the
facts available to this court, it was
prima facie
nothing more than a practical parenting
arrangement by Mom T for which the permission of the Uncles was not
required.
[15]
Since the death of Dad T in February 2023,
Minor S stayed permanently with Mom T in Fourways. Minor S has had no
in-person contact
with the Uncles since May 2023. This did and
evidently still does not sit well with the Uncles. They want Minor S
to stay
with them and they want to have contact with and exercise
care and guardianship over him.
[16]
Subsequent to the events described above,
the Uncles have instituted proceedings in this division under case
number 2023 032929
seeking relief against Mom T in two parts
(the Assignment Application).
[17]
In Part A of the Assignment Application the
Uncles sought an order in the following terms:
a.
an appointment with a clinical
psychologist, Dr Robyn Fasser (“Dr Fasser”), to
conduct an investigation into the
best
interest of S
and to make
written recommendations
as to S’s
best interests
in respect of the
relief sought by the applicants in terms of Part B of the notice of
motion;
b.
a reasonable defined contact with S
pending the final determination of the relief sought in Part B;
c.
that the office of the Family
Advocate convenes an enquiry and provide the Court and the parties
with their recommendations in relation
to the relief sought in Part B
of the notice of motion;
d.
leave to both parties to supplement
their affidavits after the receipt of the report of Dr Fasser; and
e.
the costs of Part A be reserved for
determination by the Court hearing Part B.
[18]
In the pending Part B of the Assignment
Application, the Uncles seek to be assigned rights of contact and
care of Minor S in terms
of section 23 of the Children’s Act 38
of 2005, and Uncle D seeks guardianship of Minor S in terms of
section 24 of the said
Act.
[19]
Only Part A of the Assignment Application
served before Nkutha-Nkontwana J. Part B remains pending.
Nkutha-Nkontwana
J made an order (the Order) in respect of Part A of
the Assignment Application on 24 October 2023. The relevant parts of
the Order
read as follows:
a.
…
b.
…
c.
Dr
Robyn Fasser (“Dr Fasser”), a clinical psychologist in
private practice, is appointed to conduct an investigation
into the
best interests of
[Minor S]
,
and to provide the parties and the Court with her written report
which is to include a report
which sets out the views and wishes of
[Minor
S]
and whether it is in the best
interests of
[Minor S]
that
[the Uncles]
,
or either one of them, be granted rights of contact and care in
respect of
[Minor S]
in
terms of section 23 of the Children’s Act, 38 of 2005 (“the
Children’s Act”), and if yes, what contact
arrangements
between
[the Uncles]
or
either one of them and
[Minor S]
is
in the best interest of
[Minor S]
and
whether
[the Uncles]
or
either one of them should be granted rights of guardianship in
respect of
[Minor S]
in
terms of section 24 of the Children’s Act.
d.
Dr
Fasser is further to address in her report
the
relationship between
[Minor S]
and
[the
Uncles]
, the attitude of
[Mom
T]
towards the exercise of care, contact
and guardianship rights by
[the Uncles]
or either one of them, the capacity of
[the Uncles]
or
either one of them to provide for the needs of
[Minor
S]
including emotional and intellectual
needs, the effect of the changes brought about to the life of
[Minor
S]
by the death of his father, and the
views and wishes of
[Minor
S]
and the
parties regarding an appropriate secondary school for
[Minor
S]
to attend in 2024.
e.
…
f.
…
g.
…
h.
Pending the final determination
of Part B of the application
[the
Uncles]
shall be entitled to
reasonable contact with
[Minor
S]
which shall include
i.
reasonable telephonic contact and contact by electronic and virtual
on Monday, Wednesday and Friday between
17h00 and 19h00, commencing
on Monday 29 October 2023;
ii.
every alternate Saturday from 08h00 to 17h00, commencing on Saturday
4 November 2023,
[the Uncles]
,
or either one of them, shall collect and return
[Minor
S]
from the Hobart Shopping
Centre, Bryanston or such other place as agreed by the parties;
iii.
on
[Minor S’s]
birthday
from 12h00 until 18h00 the collection and return arrangements set out
in paragraph h.ii shall apply.
i.
…
j.
…
k.
…
l.
Part
B of the application is postponed sine die.
m.
…
(Emphasis added)
[20]
Paragraph h.ii of the Order in the
Assignment Application forms the genesis of the Contempt Application
now under consideration.
[21]
The events subsequent to the Order dated 24
October 2023 can be summarised as follows:
[21.1]
The Uncles, Mom T and Minor S were notified
of the Order.
[21.2]
The Uncles had telephonic contact with
Minor S in terms of paragraphs h.i of the Order on Monday 30 October
2023 and Wednesday 1
November 2023.
[21.3]
On Saturday 4 November 2023 at 08h00 the
Uncles arrived at the Hobart Shopping Centre in Bryanston to collect
Minor S for in-person
contact in terms of paragraph h.ii of the
Order.
[21.4]
At the Hobart Shopping Centre the Uncles
encountered Mom T, her attorney and Minor S.
[21.5]
Uncle S had a conversation with Minor S who
advised Uncle S that:
‘
I don’t
want to go with you
.’
[21.6]
Uncle S asked Minor S for the reason behind
his refusal, to which Minor S responded that:
‘
I
only stayed there for my Dad.
’
This being reference to
Minor S previously staying with Dad T at the Uncles’ Hyde Park
residence four nights per week.
[21.7]
Uncle S then continued the conversation and
attempted to convince Minor S to accompany him and Uncle D.
[21.8]
Minor S steadfastly refused to accompany
the Uncles.
[21.9]
Subsequently, on 17 November 2023, prior to
their scheduled in-person contact arrangement on 18 November 2023,
Minor S telephonically
informed Uncle D that
‘
I
don’t want to come, I don’t want to be with you, I was
only there for my Dad, but you don’t believe me
.’
[21.10]
On 18 November 2023 at the Hobart Shopping
Centre the events of 4 November 2023 essentially repeated themselves.
Minor S again refused
to accompany the Uncles.
[21.11]
Save for driving Minor S to the Hobart
Shopping Centre on both occasions, Mom T had no active involvement in
the events described
above.
[22]
These events prompted the Uncles to launch
the Contempt Application against Mom T.
[23]
The Uncles formed certain views based on
the events at the Hobart Shopping Centre. The papers reveal their
views
inter alia
as follows:
[23.1]
They perceived Minor S’s refusal to
accompany them for in-person contact, and his reasons, as
‘
robotically
’
repeated.
[23.2]
They perceived the presence of Mom T’s
attorney and the fact that Minor S climbed out of Mom T’s
vehicle into the attorney’s
vehicle as ‘
extremely
strange
’ and that ‘
something
very strange was happening
’.
[23.3]
They were ‘
dismayed
and shocked
’ by what had
transpired.
[23.4]
Their conclusion was that ‘
the
entire encounter had been carefully planned and stage-managed
’
by Mom T with the consent of her attorney who, according to the
Uncles, ‘
played a central role
’.
[23.5]
The Uncles are of the firm view that the
‘
entire charade
’
was intended to and did prevent the Uncles’ in-person contact
with Minor S as envisaged by paragraph h.ii of the Order
and that it
was
a
‘
wilful
and mala fide
’ non-compliance the
Order, deliberately intended to ensure that the Order and in
particular paragraph h.ii thereof was breached.
[23.6]
The Uncles are of the view that the actions
on the part of Mom T were deliberate, malicious and in contempt of
the Order and its
provisions.
[24]
Mom T’s version of the situation is
different.
[24.1]
Minor S was traumatised by the death of his
father. His trauma is compounded, and his anxiety is heightened, by
the fact that the
Uncles persistently attempt to force him to have
in-person contact with them.
[24.2]
Minor S’s last voluntary in-person
contact with the Uncles was in May 2023.
[24.3]
Since May 2023 Minor S refused to have
in-person contact with the Uncles, something which he has conveyed to
them, together with
his reasons, repeatedly. Minor S never wanted
in-person contact with the Uncles in the first place. The only reason
why he previously
had any contact with them at all was to be with Dad
T who then lived with the Uncles.
[24.4]
Minor S has experienced considerable
anxiety since the handing down of the Order. He experiences severe
headaches, tummy ache and
inability to sleep and he also started
stuttering occasionally. These symptoms are worse on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays
being the days scheduled for telephonic
contact as per paragraph h.i of the Order.
[24.5]
The encounters at the Hobart Shopping
Centre on 4 and 18 November 2023 occurred solely as a result of Minor
S’s refusal to
have in-person contact with the Uncles, not
because of anything done or omitted by Mom T.
[24.6]
Due to the hostility and acrimony between
the Uncles and Mom T – something that is apparent from
inter alia
the correspondence exchanged between the parties’ attorneys –
Mom T requested her attorney to be present at the Hobart
Shopping
Centre drop-offs.
[24.7]
On both drop-off occasions, Minor S refused
to leave with the Uncles.
[24.8]
The reason for Minor S climbing into the
vehicle of Mom T’s attorney was that Minor S was concerned that
the Uncles would
forcibly remove him from Mom T’s vehicle. He
felt more comfortable being in a third party’s vehicle and he
wanted to
ensure that the Uncles understood clearly that he alone was
expressing his own wish not to go with them.
[24.9]
Mom T denies the existence of a ‘
staged
charade
’.
Minor S is aware of the provisions of the Order. Mom T has explained
the provisions thereof to him and he understands all
of it.
[24.10]
Mom T is of the view that the perceptions
of the Uncles indicate that they have no concern for Minor S’s
wishes and well-being
or his best interest. They have been informed
on numerous occasions by Minor S that he does not want to have
in-person contact
with them, but they persist with their demands.
This causes Minor S severe distress and recurrence of the symptoms
referred to
above.
[24.11]
Mom T is not prepared to go to the extreme
of exerting physical force on Minor S to facilitate in-person contact
between him and
the Uncles.
[25]
Minor S also expressed his views. The
papers in the Contempt Application include a handwritten note by him.
It was addressed to
‘
Dear
sir/madam
’ and it is dated 20
November 2023. The date indicates that Minor S probably intended his
note to be read by the court hearing
this application. It reads as
follows:
I do not want to visit
my uncles. I dont want to call them and I do not want to see them. I
dont want to be forced to do this. My
uncles do not and have not
asked me what I want, they have not asked me where I want to stay. If
I want to stay at Heronbridge
and whenever I tell them what I want,
they dont believe me and put the blame on my mum. I only stayed there
4 times a week so that
I could see my father. And they are not
treating my mum nicely.
[26]
The function of this court is not to
determine what the wishes of the Uncles, Mom T or Minor S are,
or what best serves the
interests of Minor S or to prefer one version
over the other. That is a process to be completed in due course by
the court hearing
the pending Assignment Application.
[27]
The function of this court is to determine
whether Mom T was in contempt of the Order and, if so, to determine
an appropriate sanction.
It is only for purposes of the proper
contextual exercise of this function that the background to the
Contempt Application is set
out in detail above.
[28]
The law relating to contempt of court is
clear. The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA
326
(SCA) held
inter alia
as follows:
[9] The test for
when disobedience of a civil order constitutes contempt has come to
be stated as whether the breach was committed
‘deliberately and
mala fide’. A deliberate disregard is not enough, since
the non-complier may genuinely, albeit
is mistakenly, believe him- or
herself entitled to act in the way claimed to constitute the
contempt. In such a case good faith
avoids the infraction. Even a
refusal to comply that is objectively unreasonable may be bona fide
(though unreasonableness could
evidence lack of good faith).
[10] These
requirements … show that the offence is committed not by
mere disregard of the court order, but by the deliberate
and
intentional violation of the court’s dignity, repute or
authority that this evinces. Honest belief that non-compliance
is
justified or proper is incompatible with that intent.
[19]
… the Eastern Cape decisions that the criminal standard of
proof
(beyond reasonable doubt, as
opposed to a balance of probability)
applies
whenever committal to prison for contempt is sought, are correct.
[25]
… the criminal standard of proof
(beyond
reasonable doubt)
is appropriate also
here.
[29] Since the
applicant in punitive committal proceedings must prove contempt
beyond reasonable doubt, why should a lesser standard
be warranted
when committal is sought or coercion alone? In my view, there can be
no reason …
[42] To sum up:
(a)
…
(b)
…
(c)
In particular, the applicant must prove the requisites of contempt
(the order; service or notice; non-compliance;
and wilfulness and
mala fides) beyond reasonable doubt.
(d)
But once the applicant has proved the order, service or
notice, and non-compliance, the respondent bears an evidential
burden
in relation to wilfulness and mala fides: should the respondent fail
to advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt
as to whether
non-compliance was wilful and mala fide, contempt will have been
established beyond a reasonable doubt.
[29]
As stated in paragraph 5 of the judgment in
Fakie NO
,
the question whether a respondent acted in contempt of a court order
depends on the circumstances.
[30]
But, in this matter, before the
circumstances can be considered, it must first be established what
the Order requires of Mom T and
whether she was in non-compliance of
the Order.
[31]
Paragraph h of the Order places no
obligation on Mom T to do or to refrain from doing anything. It
merely states that, pending the
final determination of Part B of the
Assignment Application, the Uncles shall be entitled to reasonable
contact with Minor S. This
includes paragraph h.ii which determines
that they or either one of them shall be entitled to collect Minor S
from and return him
to the Hobart Shopping Centre or any other agreed
place on specific days at specific times.
[32]
Paragraph h of the Order is a judicial
declaration of the rights of the Uncles. The Order does not purport
to place any obligation
on Mom T to do or to refrain from doing
anything in this regard. Minor S could, for example, himself take an
Uber to the Hobart
Shopping Centre or any other agreed place, he
could be dropped off there by a friend of Mom T or the parents of one
of his own
friends.
[33]
Counsel for the Uncles submitted that Mom T
is the respondent in the Assignment Application and therefore it is
implicit in the
Order that the declaration of rights in favour of the
Uncles places converse obligations on Mom T. For the
reasons stated
in paragraph 32, the reasoning behind the submission
is not sustainable and requires no further analysis.
[34]
This court accordingly finds that Mom T was
not in breach or non-compliance of the Order either on 4 or 18
November 2023 at the
Hobart Shopping Centre or at all.
[35]
The absence of non-compliance with the
Order renders an enquiry into the presence or otherwise of wilfulness
and
mala fides
superfluous.
[36]
However, should this court’s reading
of the Order and its finding in respect of the absence of
non-compliance be wrong, a
proper interpretation of the common cause
facts in any event precludes a finding beyond reasonable that Mom T
acted
mala fide
.
[37]
Counsel for the Uncles submitted that the
judgment of Nkutha-Nkontwana J should be understood to mean that,
pending final determination
of Part B of the Assignment Application,
Mom T is required to temporarily disregarded the wishes of Minor S
and that Mom T
cannot adopt what he described as a lax and
supine approach by deferring to Minor S’s wishes. That is not
correct. Nkutha-Nkontwana
J merely stated that Minor S’s wishes
are not paramount, not that they are to be temporarily disregarded.
She was throughout
her judgment in the Assignment Application acutely
aware of the importance of Minor S’s wishes. In paragraph c of
the Order,
she expressly directed Dr Fasser to investigate and report
on the views and wishes of Minor S. In paragraph d of the Order she
expressly directed Dr Fasser to investigate and report on the
relationship between Minor S and his Uncles. If, under these
circumstances,
Nkutha-Nkontwana J nevertheless intended to declare
the Uncles’
interim
contact rights in disregard of Minor S’s views and wishes, she
could and would have done so, for example by an express order
against
Mom T as opposed to a declaration of rights in favour of the Uncles.
This court is not prepared to interpret the Order
or its underlying
judgment callously to mean that, for the time being, Minor S’s
wishes are to be ignored and that the
Uncles’ wishes shall
prevail, come what may.
[38]
Such an interpretation would, in this
matter, operate contrary to the child-orientated spirit of this court
being the upper guardian
of minors. This court is of the view that,
if anything, the Order should be interpreted to imply the voluntary
co-operation of
Minor S and that, in absence of his voluntary
co-operation, one would expect of the Uncles to act lovingly and
caringly by desisting
from forcing themselves on Minor S against his
clearly expressed will.
[39]
Counsel for the Uncles submitted that Mom
T’s
mala fides
should be inferred from her persistent reliance, both in the
Assignment Application and in the Contempt Application, on the fact
that she is not prepared to apply physical force to Minor S to have
in-person contact with the Uncles, and the fact that she has
not to
their satisfaction demonstrated a willingness to do anything else to
force Minor S into submission to change his mind. The
mere fact that
such reasoning requires an inference is sufficient to identify it as
contrary to the requirement that
mala
fides
must be proved beyond reasonable
doubt.
[40]
The Uncles’ interpretation that the
Order requires of Mom T to coerce Minor S to have in-person contact
with them, whether
by force, threat or otherwise, constitutes in this
court’s mind a repulsive notion under the circumstances. Minor
S is not
a piece of furniture or a pet. He is a human being, one who
has already endured considerable trauma since February. The young man
deserves to be treated accordingly.
[41]
In support of the Uncles’ case, their
counsel
inter alia
relied on an unreported judgment by Crutchfield AJ in the matter of
ND v PT
in
this division under case number 2020-25792 in which, similarly, the
applicant sought a contempt order against the respondent
pursuant to
the respondent’s alleged failure to comply with an order
regulating in-person and electronic contact with a minor.
Reliance
was placed on this judgment to support the Uncles’ case that
Mom T’s conduct constitutes wilfulness and
mala
fides
. However, a careful comparison of
the facts and issues in
ND v PT
with
the ones in this matter reveals that, although there are superficial
similarities, they differ materially and are clearly distinguishable.
[42]
There is in any event, at the very least,
sufficient common cause evidence to support this court’s
finding that Mom T as biological
mother and primary caregiver of
Minor S was at all material times acting in good faith – in
other words, not acting
mala fide
– by putting first what she
bona
fide
believes to be in the best
interest of Minor S namely to acknowledge his repeatedly expressed
and motivated wish to avoid in-person
contact with the Uncles. Her
sin – in the eyes of the Uncles – is that she has stopped
short of forcibly, threateningly
or otherwise coercing an already
traumatised Minor S to have in-person contact with the Uncles against
his express will. Apart
from the fact that the Order does not require
this of her, there simply is no
mala
fide
element to it.
[43]
For these reasons the application is
dismissed with costs.
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date
of hand-down is deemed to be Friday 8 December 2023.
T
VAN DER WALT AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Johannesburg
Application
heard on Thursday 30 November 2023.
Judgment
handed down electronically on Friday 8 December 2023.
Appearances
:
For
the applicants: Adv
N Konstantinides SC
Instructed
by: Van
Hulsteyns
Attorneys
For
the respondent: Adv
ST Subroyen
Instructed
by: KG
Tserkezis
Incorporated
sino noindex
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