Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 230South Africa
MH v WH (52183/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 230 (11 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 April 2022
Headnotes
in the name of Respondent at FNB for the period 28th June 2021 to 26th September 2021. The bank statements showed that as on the 28th June 2021 the account had a credit balance of R71 903.94 and on the 25th September 2021 it had a closing credit balance of R93 780.41. At some stage during the 30th August 2021 the account had a credit balance of R105 000.00.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## MH v WH (52183/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 230 (11 April 2022)
MH v WH (52183/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 230 (11 April 2022)
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sino date 11 April 2022
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 52183/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
11/4/2022
In the matter between:
M[....]
H[....]
(U[....])
Applicant
and
W[....]
H[....]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME
J
:
[1]
In this matter the Applicant seeks an order
pendent lite
:
i)
That
the Respondent be ordered to pay maintenance in respect of the
parties’ minor children D[....]1 and D[....]2 at the rate
of
R7 500.00 per month per child.
ii)
Spousal
maintenance in the amount of R15 000.00 per month.
iii)
The
contribution order granted by the Germiston Magistrate Children’s
Court under case number 14/1/1-290/2021 dated the 8
th
October 2021 in terms of Section 165 of the Children’s Act of
2005 be set aside.
iv)
Contribution
to the Applicant’s legal costs in the sum of R88 025.00.
v)
That
Respondent be ordered to grant the Applicant access to the common
home to enable Applicant to collect items listed in Annexure
“A”
attached hereto.
[2]
It is common cause that two minor children were born between the
Applicant and the
Respondent namely D[....]1 born on the 29 December
2012 and D[....]2 born on 22 December 2014.
[3]
The Applicant is a Dutch National who arrived in South Africa on a
valid permit and
whilst in the country she and the Respondent who is
a church minister fell in love and proceeded to have a marriage
solemnised
in Kempton Park on the 11 June 2011 by a Registered
Marriage Officer Conradie V103.
[4]
It turned out that the Department of Home Affairs has refused to
register that marriage
on the basis that when it was concluded the
Applicant’s visa had expired meaning that she is to date hereof
in the country
illegally. The Respondent is clinging to that issue as
one of his defences both in this application as well as in the
divorce matter.
[5]
It is not for this Court to decide on the validity or otherwise of
the marriage this
application is about the best interest of the minor
children. I will accordingly ignore all issues about the validity of
the marriage
safe to say that even if it is found that the marriage
was invalid for whatever reasons it does not deprive the Applicant to
launch
these proceedings. Peregrines still retain the right to be
heard in this Court.
[6]
The Applicant is unemployed, does not have a bank account and
presently lives in a
one-bedroom flat with her two boys. She is home
schooling them and is for all intents and purposes the primary care
giver of both
children. She presently survives on interim maintenance
of R800,00 per week ordered by the Children’s Court against the
Respondent.
[7]
She tells this Court that since she left the 5-bedroom matrimonial
home she has been
receiving financial assistance from sympathetic
friends and her family in the Netherlands. She has attached a bank
statement of
a friend who has allowed her to have money meant for her
from friends and family into that account. She has for obvious
reasons
decided not to disclose the name of the account holder. The
Respondent lives all by himself in the 5-bedroom home in Dowerglen.
[8]
In response to paragraph 3 and 4 of the Applicant’s application
the Respondent
admits this Court has the jurisdiction to adjudicate
on this matter all that he disputes is the existence of a valid
marriage.
He takes no issue with the Applicant’s request that
the interim Children’s Court order in respect of the
contribution
of R800.00 per week be varied. In my view he does not
say that this court has no jurisdiction to review that order.
[9]
The order by the Children’s Court dated 8
th
October
2021 read as follows:
9.1 The
Respondent (Mr H[....]) will contribute R800.00 per week for the
subsistence of his minor children payable
every Monday by 09h00 into
a bank account nominated by the Applicant (Mrs H[....]).
9.2 The
Respondent shall buy clothes for the minor children as and when they
need it.
9.3 The
Respondent will forthwith reimburse the Applicant the amount of
R500.00 for clothes bought by the Applicant.
9.4 The
Respondent shall pay the costs of therapeutic treatment of the minor
child D[....]1 with Psychologist
Steven Rebello from Edenvale
Therapy.
9.5 The
Respondent will negotiate the number of sessions with and pay for
sessions with Mr Rebello to accommodate
his financial means.
[10]
The Applicant says that since the marriage she has been fully reliant
on the Respondent to provide
for her in every aspect including
financially. The Respondent disputes this and says that the Applicant
had other sources of income
but does not tell this court what those
sources are.
[11]
It is common cause that the Applicant’s visa expired in 2017
She has enlisted the services
of an immigration attorneys to
regularise her situation in the meantime the Respondent is hanging on
the issue and say that the
marriage is not valid. The Applicant says
that the Respondent has threatened her with deportation- and loss of
the two children.
There is no way that this Court should allow a
separation of the two children from their mother it is not in their
best interest.
[12]
The Respondent admits that during the marriage the Applicant had
access to a joint account which
enabled her to draw between R1 600.00
to R2 000.00 per week to buy household groceries. This allegation the
Respondent denies.
She vacated the matrimonial home on the 25
th
February 2021.
[13]
The Applicant has attached to her founding affidavit a copy of a bank
statement in respect of
account number [....] held in the name of
Respondent at FNB for the period 28
th
June 2021 to 26
th
September 2021. The bank statements showed that as on the 28
th
June 2021 the account had a credit balance of R71 903.94 and on the
25
th
September 2021 it had a closing credit balance of
R93 780.41. At some stage during the 30
th
August 2021
the account had a credit balance of R105 000.00.
[14]
The Respondent does not deny those amounts and that payment and
contributions are made into his
personal account by church members
all he says is that the information was acquired illegally by the
Applicant and hence cannot
be used in these proceedings.
[15]
In response to the Applicant’s allegation that the amount of
R3 200.00 per month presently
contributed by the Respondent in
terms of the Children’s Court order is inadequate he says that
he only had a duty to maintain
his two children and not the Applicant
as the marriage is illegal. He is mistaken the dispute about the
validity of the marriage
has nothing to do with the obligation to pay
maintenance.
[16]
Trollip J in the matter of
Zaphiriou vs Zaphiriou on 1967 (1) SA
WLD 343
quoted with approval the earlier decision by Jones JP and
Kotze J in the matter of
Levy vs Levy
1904 18 EDC 113
concluded as
follows at page 345
:
“
There
is therefore good authority that in the common law even though the
validity of the marriage was being disputed nevertheless
the Court
had jurisdiction in preliminary application proceedings to award
maintenance and a contribution towards costs pending
an action to
determine that fundamental dispute.”
[17]
It is common cause that the Applicant is unemployed and is
unemployable due to the fact that
her visa to be in the country
expired during 2017. She can neither get employment nor even open a
bank account.
[18]
In the meantime it is not in dispute that the Respondent is a
director of a sales marketing company
as well as being a preacher.
There is proof that he receives vast sums of money into his personal
account on a monthly basis as
I have indicated in paragraph 13 above.
On the other hand the Applicant has had to rely on her family as well
as sympathetic friends
and church members who have donated money to
her.
[19]
She lives with the two children of the marriage and home-schools
them. She lives in a one-bedroom
flat which she says is inconvenient
has no privacy for her and the two boys. She needs to relocate to a
two- bedroom flat at a
cost of +/- R8 000.00. I find this to be
more than reasonable.
[20]
In paragraph 10 of his reply the Respondent admits that he cut off
the Applicant from using the
credit card from which she was asked to
make withdrawals and maintain herself and the minor children. He says
that even after he
had blocked the Applicant’s use of the
credit card he continued to support the Applicant and the minor
children financially.
What he does not say is how much did he
contribute and when.
[21]
If indeed it is correct as he says that he continues to maintain the
Applicant and the minor
children then there would have been no need
for the Applicant to approach the Children’s Court in Germiston
for interim relief
during October 2021 shortly after he had blocked
the credit card.
[22]
In paragraph 7.3 of the founding affidavit the Applicant say that
since she got married to the
Respondent she has been fully reliant on
the Respondent to provide for her in every aspect including
financially. In answer to
that the Respondent denies and say that the
Applicant had other sources of income apart from what he provided.
The strange thing
once more is that he does not tell the Court what
those sources of income were and how much was it.
[23]
What is further strange is that at paragraph 23 of his answering
affidavit which is in reply
to paragraphs 8.4, 8.5, 8.6, 9.10 and 11
of the Applicant’s founding affidavit he says that he has
consistently provided
for the Applicant even though he had no duty to
do so. In particularly in paragraph 9 and 10 the Applicant has set
out details
of amounts that she required to enable her to maintain
herself and the minor children. She indicates that she requires R34
950.00
month.
[24]
It is strange that the Applicant now says he bears no duty to
maintain the Applicant simply on
the basis that their marriage is
invalid. This in my view is nonsensical and must be rejected. As
regards the minor children the
Respondent does not dispute the
reasonableness of the expenses claimed but does not make an offer. He
seems to rely on the R400.00
per week per child as ordered by the
Children’s Court which amount is clearly inadequate and was
agreed as a stopgap after
the Respondent disqualified the Applicant
from using the credit card. Had he not done so there would have been
no need for the
Applicant to approach Court in terms of Rule 43.
[25]
As far as a contribution to legal costs the Applicant at paragraph 16
of her founding affidavit
says that she foresees a prolonged dispute
as the Respondent is placing in dispute the validity of their
marriage and including
the care and custody of the minor children.
She concludes that given the complexity of the Respondent’s
financial affairs
and his unwillingness to disclose financial
information she foresees considerable dispute about the patrimonial
aspects of the
divorce. It is therefore only fair that the Applicant
who is a foreigner in the country get the assistance of legal counsel
to
assist her. In his reply the Respondent still raised the
invalidity of the marriage and say that the Applicant should first
wait
for the validity of the marriage to be established before she
can claim entitlement to financial assistance.
[26]
I have been referred by counsel for the Applicant to the decision in
Taute vs Taute
1974 (2) SA 675E
Wherein the court said the
following:
“
There
are certain basic principles which in my view govern an application
of this type. As already indicated such maintenance is
intended to be
interim and temporary and cannot be determined with the degree of
precision and closer exactitude which is afforded
by detailed
evidence.
The Applicant’s
spouse (Who is normally the wife) is entitled to reasonable
maintenance
pendente lite
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 in roads on
capital may be justified.
The question of maintenance payable must in
the final result depend upon reasonable interpretation of the
summarised facts contained
in the founding and answering affidavits
as indeed is contemplated and intended by Rule 43.”
[27]
In Pommeril v Pommeril
1990 (1) SA 998
F
the court held that:
“
a
wife should in my view be able to expect the same standard of living
that she had as a married woman. In most cases, it may not
be
possible to achieve this goal and of course, a husband should be
entitled to the same expectation but in the final result it
is a
question of balancing up the needs of both parties and making an
equitable distribution of available income.”
[28]
The Applicant has explained in detail what the reasonable monthly
expenses are in respect of
the needs of herself and the children. She
has not exaggerated figures and has in my view been realistic given
the lifestyle of
the family before separation. On the other hand, the
Respondent’s expenses are unreasonable judging by the fact that
the
children only spent 6 days per month with him. He has put the
amount of R16 000.00 for the 6 days which amount is more than
that required by the Applicant for the 24 days in a month he says he
need R16 000.00 whilst the Applicant needs R15 000.00.
[29]
A close examination of the bank account of the Respondent clearly
indicates that he can afford
to pay reasonable maintenance for the
Applicant and the minor children pending the divorce. In his
financial disclosure the Respondent
has not been truthful for example
he declares an income of “minus R78879” for the past six
months and yet left out
the amount of R217959 of other income. His
declared income for the past six months should have been R139 080
which is R23 180
per month.
[30]
The Respondent proffered monthly deficit is not supported by the
information gleaned from the
bank statements for example his positive
balance ranged between R71903 and R105 437.34. He has not disputed
this income instead
when he noticed that he suddenly on the 2
nd
November 2021 made payment of R21 000.00 as rent office for the
first time out of that account. He has been disingenuous and
has not
played open cards.
[31]
It is clear that the Respondent in all probabilities has access to
accounts of his many business,
associated trusts donations and income
from his church. He as a director of five active companies and has
failed to disclose any
of those companies’ financial
activities. He is clearly hiding information from this Court. He is
also linked to four Trust
but declares only one being the Kingdom
Business Trust even then does not say what income or benefit he gets
from it.
[32]
The Respondent’s lifestyle as demonstrates by payment of rental
of R21 000.00 per month
garden services; R6 500.00 per month on
groceries whilst he lives all by himself reveals that his income and
benefits which
he received from whatever sources is greater than the
amount that he has declared.
[33]
It is correct that until separation the Respondent had been
financially caring from the Applicant
and the minor children. Nothing
has changed in his financial situation since then.
[34]
I am accordingly persuaded that the Respondent will be in a position
to afford the amounts as
I had set out in the order that I granted on
the 7
th
March 2022 copy of which I attach hereto.
[35]
In the result I hereby confirm the order that I issued prior to
furnishing my reasons for judgment.
DATED
at JOHANNESBURG this the 11 day of APRIL 2022.
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING
:
22 FEBRUARY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT :
11 APRIL 2022
FOR
APPLICANT
:
ADV SCHOLTZ
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
ATTORNEYS
FOR
RESPONDENT
:
IN PERSON
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021/52183
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE
JUDGE
MAKUME
In the matter between:
HORAK : MIRJAM (BORN:
UPPELSCHOTEN)
APPLICANT
(Passport Number: [....])
and
HORAK:
WARREN
RESPONDENT
Identity Number: [….])
DRAFT ORDER
MAKUME
J
Having
read the documents filed of record, heard counsel and having
considered the matter: -
1.
The contribution order granted by
the Germiston Magistrate's Court (Children's
Court)
under
case
number
14/1/4-290/2021
on 8 October
2021 is hereby set aside.
2.
That, pendente lite, the
Respondent is to
pay
maintenance in respect of the minor children, as follows:
2.1
R 7,500.00 per month per child,
payable on or before the last day of each month,
directly
into
the
nominated
account
of
the
Applicant
or
any other
electronic
funds
transfer
service
if
preferred
by
the
Applicant, free
of
any
transactions-
and/or
bank
charges.
The
maintenance amount
shall escalate annually
on the date of the granting of this order, at a rate of 10%;
3.
That, pendente lite, the
Respondent is to pay spousal maintenance in respect of the Applicant,
as follows:
3.1
R 10,000.00 per month, payable on
or before the last day of each month, directly into the nominated
account of the Applicant or
any other electronic funds transfer
service if preferred by the Applicant, free of any transaction-
and/or bank charges. The maintenance
amount shall escalate annually
on the date of the granting of the decree of divorce, at a rate of
10%.
4.
The Respondent is to
make a contribution
towards the Applicant's legal costs in the sum of R50 000.00 payable
at the rate of R5 000.00 (Five Thousand
Rand) per month
with
effect
1
st
April
2022
into the same
account
as
in
2.1
above.
5.
The Respondent is to give the
Respondent access to the erstwhile common home, within a period of 5
(five) days from the granting
of this order, in order to collect the
items listed in annexure “FAI0”,
alternatively that the
Respondent is to,
within
a period of 5 (five) days from the granting of this order, deliver
the
items
listed
in
annexure
“
FA10”
to
the applicant.
6.
Costs
of the application.
DATED
at JOHANNESBURG
this
day of MARCH 2022
the
BY
THE COURT
REGISTRAR
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