Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 483South Africa
S v S (23967/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 483 (26 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v S (23967/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 483 (26 July 2022)
S v S (23967/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 483 (26 July 2022)
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sino date 26 July 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 23967/2012
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
26
January 2022
In
the matter between:
S
[....] 1, D [....] L [....]
Applicant
and
S
[....] 2, J [....]
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
This is an application in terms of Rule 43(6) for the
setting aside
alternately the variation of an order for payment of a contribution
towards the costs of a pending trial action.
[2]
The applicant, D [....] L [....] S
[....] 1, the
defendant in the trial action, is married to the respondent, J
[....] S [....] 2, the plaintiff
in the trial.
[3]
The applicant sought the following relief:
3.1
Declaring the order granted on 16 January 2020 for a
contribution towards the respondent’s
past and future costs,
(the ‘order’), to be a nullity;
3.2
Alternatively, varying the order, with immediate effect, by expunging
the order in its entirety;
and
3.3
Costs in the event of opposition to the application.
[4]
The respondent opposed the application.
[5]
The parties married each other on 15 January 2004 out
of community of
property and subject to the accrual regime. One child was born to the
parties.
[6]
The marriage having broken down irretrievably, the parties
are in the
midst of a part heard trial in which the respondent claims a decree
of divorce, spousal maintenance, payment of one
half of the accrual
and relief ancillary thereto.
[7]
At the close of the respondent’s case, the latter
brought an
application for payment of a contribution towards her costs (the
‘contribution application’).
[8]
The respondent launched the contribution application
after
approximately 17 days of trial. At that stage, the trial court had
heard the respondent’s evidence in its entirety,
the
applicant’s first witness and the applicant’s second
witness had commenced her evidence. Importantly, the trial
court had
not heard the evidence of the court appointed referee in respect of
the calculation of the accrual.
[9]
On 16 January 2020, the trial court ordered the
applicant to pay
a contribution towards the respondent’s legal costs in the
following terms:
9.1
In the amount of R3 000 000.00 (three million rand), for
the period 4 November
2015 up to and including 13 January
2020, in three (3) monthly instalments commencing on or before
31 January 2020 and
thereafter on or before 29 February
2020 and 31 March 2020 respectively, into the trust account of
the respondent’s
attorney, Steve Merchak Attorney;
9.2
In respect of a contribution towards the respondent’s future
legal costs in the amount
of R64 500.00 plus VAT for each day of
hearing that the matter proceeds.
[10]
On 31 January 2020, the applicant launched an application for
leave to
appeal the order. That application was heard on 6 July
2020 and dismissed on 9 January 2021. On 7 May 2021, the
applicant commenced proceedings for special leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal that was dismissed on 2 July 2021.
On
2 August 2021, the applicant brought an application for
reconsideration in terms of section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts
Act, 10 of 2013 (“the SC Act”), which application was
dismissed on 20 October 2021. The applicant launched this
rule
43(6) application on 4 November 2021.
[11]
The
applicant, before me, relied on
S
v S.
[1]
The relevant facts of
S
are that an interim maintenance order granted in favour of the wife
in terms of rule 43 proceedings was considered by the husband
to be
financially untenable. He sought to appeal the amount of the order.
[12]
The
Constitutional Court found that the High Court’s order in
S
was for payment of an amount ‘completely unrelated to the
evidence before the Court’.
[2]
[13]
Furthermore,
[3]
that a ‘patently incorrect maintenance order can be rectified
by a Rule 43(6) application’ and that ‘there may
be
exceptional cases where there is a need to remedy a patently unjust
and erroneous order and no changed circumstances exist,
however
expansively interpreted. In those instances, where strict adherence
is at variance with the interests of justice, a Court
may exercise
its inherent power in terms of Section 173 of the Constitution to
regulate its own process in the interests of justice.
…’
[14]
Accordingly, the applicant must show that this matter is exceptional
in that
the order is patently incorrect, ‘patently unjust and
erroneous … and no changed circumstances exist, however
expansively
interpreted’.
[15]
The applicant relied firstly on the order being unjust and erroneous,
secondly,
in the alternative, on a material change in the applicant’s
financial circumstances between 16 January 2020 and the
inception of the application in November 2021, and an inability to
pay the order.
[16]
The applicant’s founding papers alone ran to 137 pages. Two
separate
bundles of documents comprising an updated financial
disclosure form with accompanying documents, including a balance
sheet and
a list of expenses, and a separate bundle of correspondence
between the parties’ attorneys were uploaded on CaseLines. The
respondent’s papers were of lengthy in addition.
[17]
The applicant submitted a supplementary affidavit that comprised, in
effect,
a replying affidavit to the respondent’s answer. The
respondent claimed that the supplementary or replying affidavit ought
to be struck out, alternatively that the respondent be afforded an
opportunity to deal with the allegations in the supplementary
affidavit. I allowed the respondent such an opportunity and the
matter stood down for hearing until 20 January 2022 pending delivery
of the respondent’s supplementary affidavit.
[18]
The respondent raised various points
in limine
and in
substantively opposing the application, including the following:
18.1
The relief sought by the applicant would result in the setting aside
of the order retrospectively, effectively
nullifying the order;
18.2
The application was an abuse of process;
18.3
The application constituted a prohibited appeal in terms of s 16(3)
of the SC Act.;
18.4
The setting aside of the order claimed by the applicant was legally
impermissible and incompetent regard
being had to the wording of
Rule 43,
inter alia
;
18.5
The applicant had failed to display any material change of
circumstances justifying a variation of the Rule 43
order as
envisaged by Rule 43(6); and
18.6
The applicant failed to disclose material information pertaining to
his financial position that justified
the applicant being disentitled
to the relief sought in the application regard being had to the
prevailing legal authorities.
[19]
The respondent argued that the order was just and equitable regard
being had
inter alia
to the parties’ financial positions
at the time the order was granted, and at the time that this
application incepted.
[20]
Furthermore, the respondent alleged that the applicant
litigated in bad
faith, forcing the respondent to incur what ought to
have been unnecessary legal costs. By way of example; the applicant
allegedly
failed to tender maintenance for the respondent, tendered
inadequate maintenance for the child, forced the respondent to expend
monies on enforcing maintenance orders, claimed joint residence of
the child despite the respondent always having been the child’s
primary caregiver, approached the Family Advocate’s office to
investigate the primary residence of the child without justification,
alleged that the accrual in the respondent’s estate exceeded
that in his estate and launched the applications aforementioned
aimed
at overturning the order.
[21]
Similarly, the applicant contended that the respondent litigated in
an unreasonable
manner, directed at forcing him to incur unnecessary
legal expenditure when he could not afford to do so.
[22]
It is immediately apparent that the above issues raised by the
parties
are all matters that can be determined by the trial court
only, once it has heard and considered the totality of evidence on
behalf
of both parties.
[23]
The applicant alleged that the order for payment of R3 million
equated
to 58.8% of the respondent’s past attorney and own
client costs as at that stage, and, that the order for payment of
R64 500.00
plus VAT for each day of hearing that the matter
proceeded, amounted to an order for payment of 100% of the
respondent’s
future legal costs.
[24]
The applicant contended that the order for past and future costs was
an order
that ought to have been made by the trial court at the end
of the trial, in the exercise of that court’s discretion. The
applicant alleged that the order was final in effect.
[25]
The respondent argued that the order for payment of R3 million
arose from
the amount that the applicant had expended on his legal
costs at that stage. A statement of the applicant’s legal costs
in
respect of the divorce proceedings from 2013 up to and including
2019, including retaining senior counsel, ran to R3 380 675.66.
[26]
I am of the view that in order for me to determine this matter justly
and equitably,
I must do so based on the established principles of
applications for contributions towards costs in this Division. Those
principles
are summarised hereunder.
[27]
The purpose
of an order for a contribution towards costs is to place the party
applying for the contribution, the respondent herein,
in a position
to adequately prepare and present her case.
[4]
[28]
The party applying for the contribution is not entitled to the
entirety of
her costs, effectively in advance, but only to those
reasonably required to prepare and present her case adequately up to
and including
the first day of trial.
[29]
The
anticipated fees must be reasonable both in respect of their nature
and amount.
[5]
[30]
The
contribution is for the costs of the pending divorce action. It
excludes the costs of interim or interlocutory applications
and other
disputes between the parties.
[6]
[31]
Past costs
or costs already incurred `by the party applying for the contribution
are excluded.
[7]
[32]
The
anticipated costs are not limited to disbursements
[8]
but may include a contribution towards the fees of the attorney,
subject to the following:
32.1
An
applicant is not permitted to have her attorney and own client costs
covered or even substantially covered;
[9]
32.2
The attorney’s fees must be the attorney’s reasonable
fees being fees that are reasonable and
ordinarily payable as between
an attorney and his/her own client;
32.3
Not all the
fees payable between an attorney and own client should be granted in
advance and the attorney is obliged to carry some
risk in respect of
his/her fees and those fees as between his/her own client;
[10]
32.4
The fees payable as between the attorney and his/her own client must
be necessary and such as would be adequate
for the applicant to
prepare for and conduct her pending trial.
[33]
The claims made must be for amounts that can reasonably, necessarily
and properly
be required in order for the party to prepare for and
conduct the litigation in an adequate manner.
[34]
The scale
upon which the parties litigate and the trial proceeds must take
account of the parties’ means.
[11]
[35]
The wealth
of the husband, usually the party ordered to make the payment, is not
determinative of the amount ordered as the intention
of a
contribution is to cover the applicant’s reasonable needs of
preparation for trial up to and including the first day
of trial.
[12]
[36]
The quantum of the amount ordered is determined regard being had to
the prevailing
circumstances of the matter, the parties’
respective financial positions and the issues in dispute before the
court.
[37]
The scale
upon which the opposing party, usually the husband, is litigating and
intends to litigate is relevant as the parties ought
to be placed in
approximately equal positions to conduct the litigation and present
their cases.
[13]
[38]
An
applicant may apply for additional contributions if the initial
contribution ordered proves insufficient.
[14]
Application may be made on the principles articulated hereinabove for
a daily contribution on each day that the trial continues.
[15]
[39]
Rogers J,
as he then was, in
AR
v JR,
[16]
relying on
A
G v L G,
[17]
adopted the approach that an application for a contribution towards
costs does not preclude costs already incurred from being taking
into
account in determining a contribution to costs, and that costs
incurred or to be incurred in respect of applications that
are truly
interlocutory to the divorce proceedings must be included as per
R M
v A M.
[18]
[40]
Whilst the
cases relied upon by Rogers J were all decided in the Cape and do not
reflect the prevailing position in this Division,
the time may have
come for this Division to incorporate the approach reflected in
AR
v JR
[19]
in
respect of costs already incurred being taking into account in
determining a contribution towards costs, and that costs in respect
of applications that are truly interlocutory to the divorce
proceedings be included in addition. It is not appropriate to deal
with such an extension of the prevailing practice in this Division,
in this judgment.
[41]
Both
parties contended for the rights of access to court and equality. I
am acutely aware that the respondent is entitled to approximate
parity of arms,
[20]
that the
parties are in the midst of highly contested litigation and that a
period of approximately two and a half years has elapsed
since the
order was granted.
[42]
Moreover, I am bothered by the fact that a trial in divorce
proceedings endured
for 17 days during which the evidence of only one
of the parties,’ in effect, was heard, that the extent and
duration of
the trial proceedings to date apparently failed to take
account of the respondent’s alleged financial means and that
the
contribution application was launched so late in the trial
proceedings.
[43]
As stated afore, the respondent launched the contribution application
once
the respondent closed her case in the trial. As a result, the
contribution application included a claim for the costs incurred by
the respondent from inception of the matrimonial proceedings up to
and including the close of the respondent’s case, an amount
in
excess of R5 million.
[44]
The trial court determined the contribution application after the
respondent
had a full opportunity to present the entirety of the
evidence she considered relevant before the trial court whilst the
applicant
was deprived of a similar opportunity. As a result, the
trial court heard all of the respondent’s evidence, the
applicant’s
first witness and part of the evidence of the
applicant’s second witness only. Importantly, the court
appointed referee,
tasked with determining the accrual, had not yet
given evidence.
[45]
Audi alteram partem
is a cornerstone of our justice system. It
is fundamental that an order or a judgment is not granted until both
sides have been
afforded an adequate opportunity to present their
arguments for or against a particular outcome. Compliance with
audi
alteram partem
did not take place in this matter as the trial
court granted the order prior to the applicant having the same
opportunity to present
his case as the respondent had. The parties
were not heard or treated equally or given equal access to the trial
court prior to
the order being made.
[46]
The trial court did not hear the applicant’s version of his
financial
means and ability to pay the order or his version of the
respondent’s financial circumstances and ability to contribute
towards
her legal costs, prior to granting the order. Nor did the
trial court hear the evidence of the court appointed referee in
respect
of the respondent’s accrual claim
.
The trial
court heard only the respondent’s version of the parties’
respective financial circumstances and the respondent’s
accrual
claim, presented by the respondent’s financial expert.
[47]
In the circumstances, the trial court could not consider, fairly and
reasonably,
the reasonableness of the order, or reasonably assess the
parties’ respective financial circumstances and the applicant’s
ability to pay the order, based on a consideration of both parties’
evidence, equally and justly.
[48]
The respondent sought justification for the order in the
parties’
respective financial circumstances at the time that
the order was granted by the trial court. Given the absence of
audi
alteram partem
prior to the granting of the order, the parties’
respective financial positions were not before the trial court.
[49]
Furthermore, the respondent argued that the order for payment of
R3 million
resulted from the applicant’s spend of
approximately R3 million on legal costs at that stage and the need
for parity of resources
between the parties. The applicant incurred
legal costs of R3 380 675.66 from 2013 to 2019, or,
calculated from 2015
to 2019 (in accordance with the order for past
costs), R2 925 109.06.
[50]
However, the applicant’s legal costs of R2 925 109.06
from
2015 to 2019, comprised his attorney and own client costs in
their entirety at that stage of the proceedings.
[51]
The
respondent is not entitled to payment of her attorney and own client
costs or to the entirety of her costs in terms of a contribution
application. The respondent’s claim is limited to a
contribution in respect of the party and party costs of her
disbursements
and a contribution towards her attorney’s
reasonable costs as abovementioned,
[21]
in respect of preparation and presentation up to and including the
first day of trial and thereafter if necessary.
[52]
In addition, the respondent is not entitled to a contribution for
past costs
or costs already incurred by her and those in respect of
interlocutory applications.
[53]
There is no authority that I am aware of, no principle and no case
precedent
that allows for an award for payment of a contribution
towards pasts costs, made in the middle of a trial, effectively for
payment
of past costs and costs already incurred in the trial. The
reason is that costs incurred in a trial are the preserve of the
trial
court upon consideration of the entirety of the evidence led in
the trial.
[54]
Regard being had to the absence of
audi alteram partem
in
particular as well as the principles and factors set out afore, the
order of R3 million for past costs is, in my view, manifestly
unjust
as envisaged in
S
.
[55]
In respect of the order for future costs of the pending action, the
fact that
it provides for payment of 100% of the respondent’s
costs for every day that the trial proceeds, results in the
respondent’s
future costs of trial being secured fully.
Security for the entirety of the respondent’s future trial
costs is not the purpose
of an order for a contribution towards
costs.
[56]
Additionally, given that the trial endured for 17 days in respect of
the respondent’s
case alone, the order for future costs
probably serves to inhibit the respondent’s consideration of a
reasonable settlement
of the matter as a whole, or various of the
issues in dispute. As to the order for future costs resulting in the
trial enduring
further for a potentially unreasonable and unlimited
period of time, the applicant is at liberty to raise the issue in
argument
before the trial court at the appropriate time.
[57]
This is in circumstances where the issues in dispute are relatively
uncomplicated
and ought to be resolved between the parties, given the
appropriate will on their part duly advised by their attorneys, to do
so.
[58]
Whilst the order for future costs is equally subject to my concerns
around
the absence of
audi alteram partem
and the factors and
principles abovementioned, the order for future costs relates to the
costs of a pending action as envisaged
in s 16(3) of the SC Act.
[59]
Accordingly,
the order for future costs is subject to the absolute prohibition
against appeals in terms of s 16(3), which provision
withstands
constitutional scrutiny.
[22]
[60]
As to the
applicant’s alternate claim based on an alleged material change
in his circumstances in terms of Rule 43(6),
[23]
this is a factual matter.
[61]
The applicant alleged that he was not financially able to meet the
order and
was not so able even at the time that the order was
granted. As proof of the latter, the applicant referred to the
respondent’s
attorney’s attachment of the applicant’s
major assets, being his member’s interests in Truval, United
Merchants
and Lovar Investments CC, the sole asset in respect of
which was the immovable property in Norwood, being the erstwhile
marital
home.
[62]
The applicant alleged that United Merchants had been forced into
liquidation
as a result and that various sureties executed in favour
of the United Merchants’ creditors could not be enforced as a
result.
[63]
Attorney Steve Merchak allegedly set a reserve price of R4 500 000.00
in respect of the applicant’s member’s interests in the
businesses aforementioned.
[64]
I am well aware that the parties are in the middle of a part heard
trial in
which only the respondent’s evidence and version of
events has been heard.
[65]
In the circumstances, it would be wrong on my part to make an order
that pre-empts
or serves to supplant the trial court’s
determination of the evidence regarding the parties’ financial
circumstances,
the applicant’s financial ability to pay the
order and any material change in the applicant’s financial
circumstances.
[66]
As a result, it is my view that the trial court is the court best
placed to
determine these factual issues once that court has heard
and considered all of the evidence. At that stage, the trial court
will
have before it the oral evidence of the parties themselves in
respect of their financial affairs, the relevant documentary evidence
together with the evidence of the respective financial experts,
including the court appointed referee, and the evidence of the
parties’ respective witnesses.
[67]
Hence, it is the trial court that is best placed to determine the
factual issues
raised by this application, including whether or not
the applicant is financially able to meet the order and whether or
not the
order is one that should stand, in the light of the entirety
of the evidence before the trial court at the close of the trial
proceedings.
[68]
The question is how do I deal, fairly and justly, with the order for
past costs
in the light of the prohibition in terms of s 16(3) of the
SC Act, the pending trial and the critical need for parity between
the
parties’ in respect of their trial resources.
[69]
As a result, and, in an attempt to strike a fair balance
between the
parties regard being had to the principles aforesaid, I
am not inclined to nullify or vary the amount of R3 000 000.00
(three million rand) ordered by the trial court. Instead, I intend to
suspend payment thereof pending finalisation of the evidence
in the
trial, and reconsideration of the order for past costs by the trial
court in the context of the overall costs order/s to
be made by that
court upon the close of the trial proceedings.
[70]
It may well be that upon finalisation of the trial, the trial
court,
having heard the totality of the parties’ evidence as
well as argument by the parties, including on the parties’
respective
alleged unreasonable conduct of the litigation, determines
that the order for payment of R3 million towards the
respondent’s
past costs stands to be varied in one way or
another or not at all.
[71]
In respect of the order for payment of the respondent’s future
costs,
it is subject to the prohibition in terms of s 16(3) of the SC
Act. The order is interlocutory in nature and capable of variation
by
the trial court in terms of rule 43(6).
[72]
There is no reason why the costs of this application should not be
costs in
the cause of the divorce proceedings and I intend to grant
such an order.
[73]
I intend to admit the parties’ respective supplementary
affidavits.
[74]
By reason of the aforementioned, I grant the following order:
1.
The parties’ respective supplementary affidavits are admitted.
2.
Payment by the applicant of the amount of R3 million in respect of
a
contribution towards the respondent’s past legal costs, ordered
by Moosa J (‘the order for past costs’), is
suspended
pending reconsideration of the order for past costs by the trial
court, in terms of the overall costs order/s to be made
by the trial
court in respect of the trial proceedings.
3.
The application for the nullification, alternatively, the variation
of the order of Moosa J for payment by the applicant of a
contribution towards the respondent’s future costs of trial, is
dismissed.
4.
The costs of this application are costs in the cause of the pending
trial action.
CRUTCHFIELD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be
26 July 2022
.
APPEARANCE
FOR THE APPLICANT:
In person
Heads
of argument prepared by Attorney Tanya Brenner.
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Ms A de Wet SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Steve Merchak Attorney
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
17 & 20 January 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
26 July 2022
Authorities
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa, Herbstein &
Van Winsen, Cilliers Loots Nel, 5
th
Edition, Vol 2;
The
Law of Divorce and Dissolution of Life Partnerships in South Africa,
Heaton, Juta, 1
st
Edition;
Superior
Court Practice, Erasmus, 2
nd
Edition, Juta, Vol 2.
[1]
S
v S
2019 (6) SA 1
(CC) para [58] (‘
S
’).
[2]
Id at [24].
[3]
Id at
[57] – [58].
[4]
Senior
v Senior
1999 (4) SA 955
(W) (‘Senior’).
[5]
Senior
id.
[6]
Winter
v Winter
1945
WLD 16
;
Service
v Service
1968
(3) SA 526
(D);
Micklem
v Micklem
1988
(3) SA 259
(C);
Maas
v Maas
1993 (3) SA 885
(O) at 888I;
Senior
id.
[7]
Nicholson
v Nicholson
1998
(1) SA 48
(W) (‘
Nicholson
’)
Senior
id.
[8]
Senior
id.
[9]
Nicholson
note 7
above at 51H-J.
[10]
Senior
note
4 above para 10.
[11]
Glazer
v Glazer
1959
(3) SA 928
(W) (‘
Glazer
’).
[12]
Id.
[13]
Dodo
v Dodo
1990 (2) SA 77
(W) (‘
Dodo’
)
at 98;
Carey
v Carey
1999
(3) SA 615
(C
)
(‘Carey’);
Senior
note
4 above para 10.
[14]
Service
v Service
1968
(3) SA 526
(D);
Maas
v Maas
1993 (3) SA 885 (O).
[15]
Mühlman
v Mühlman
1984 (1) SA 413
(W);
Dodo
note 13 above
;
Nicholson
v Nicholson
1998
(1) SA 48
(W) (‘
Nicholson’)
at 51.
[16]
AR
v JR
(unreported)
WCC Case No 4366/2016 dated 23 October 2020.
[17]
A
G v L G
[2020]
ZAWCHC 83
paras [15] – [17] and the cases there cited.
[18]
R M
v A M
[2019]
SAWCHC 86 para [24].
[19]
AR
v JR
(unreported)
WCC Case No 4366/2016 dated 23 October 2020.
[20]
Nicholson
note
15 above;
Carey
note
13 above.
[21]
Senior
note 4 above para 10;
Nicholson
note 15 above at 52B.
[22]
S
note
1 above para 51
[23]
CL 0009-5 para 12.
sino noindex
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