About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2016
>>
[2016] ZAGPJHC 16
|
|
Y v Y (2015/43663) [2016] ZAGPJHC 16 (4 February 2016)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2015/43663
DATE: 4 FEBRUARY 2016
In the matter between:
[Y…….]: [S…….]
[B……..]
......................................................................................................
Applicant
And
[Y……]: [P…….]
[J…….]
.....................................................................................................
Respondent
JUDGMENT
OPPERMAN AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1] The applicant, in terms of Rule 43
of the rules of this court, prays for an order in terms of which the
respondent is to pay
him the sum of R 13 000 per month towards the
maintenance of [N……] [K……] [Y…..]
(‘[N…….]’)
retrospectively from 1 May 2015
and a contribution of R 5000 towards his legal costs.
[2] During argument the claim in
respect of the R 5 000 contribution towards applicant’s legal
fees, was abandoned.
BACKGROUND
[3] The applicant and the respondent
were married to each other on 5 December 1998 out of community of
property and subject to the
accrual system as provided for in chapter
1 of the
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
, as amended.
[4] Three minor children were born of
this marriage, [N……..], born on [2… S…..
2……] (14
years of age), a boy named [C……...]
[D……] [Y…….] (‘[C……..]’),
born on [1…… S……. 2…….] (12
years of age) and [N…….] [A……..]
[Y……]
(‘N…….’), born on [1……. F……..
2…….] (8
years of age).
[5] On the 10th April 2015 Victor J
granted an order pursuant to an urgent application brought by Mrs
[Y……] in terms
of which, amongst other things, the
primary residence of all three minor children vested with Mrs [Y…….],
who is
the respondent in this application, subject to the applicant’s
reasonable rights of contact as determined by an expert pending
the
outcome of an investigation by the offices of the Family Advocate and
certain other requirements (‘the April order’).
It
contained no provisions relating to maintenance.
[6] Paragraph 1.6 of such order reads:
“The issue pertaining to the
interdict and the maintenance of the minor children is postponed sine
die for a date to be determined
by the Registrar.”
[7] During May of 2015, [N………]
returned to live with her father, the applicant. For the period May
2015 to
August 2015 the applicant had paid no maintenance to the
respondent in respect of any of the minor children. For the months of
September, October, November and December 2015, the applicant had
paid R 5 000 per month to the respondent for the minor sons (R
2 500.
00 per child).
[8] On the 4th December 2015, Modiba J
issued an order that, pending resolution of the divorce action, the
applicant was directed
to make payment to the respondent of the cash
component of the maintenance in respect of the minor sons in the
amount of R 10 000
per month per child (thus R 20 000). Modiba J’s
order also deals with Mr [Y……’s.] obligations to
retain
the mother of his children and their minor sons on a fully
comprehensive medical aid scheme, pay school fees and pay for
extramural
activities and school uniforms. Modiba J’s order
concluded with a provision that
Rules 43(7)
& (8) were not
applicable and the applicant was ordered to pay the costs of the
application as between attorney and client.
[9] The order granted by Modiba J was
issued on the 4th December 2015 (‘the December order’).
Six calendar days later
and on the 10th December 2015, the applicant
issued his
Rule 43
application which now serves before me.
NATURE OF THE CURRENT APPLICATION
AND THE APPLICATION HEARD ON 4 DECEMBER 2015
[10] It is clear that, although the
issue of maintenance for the minor children was a feature of the
April application before Victor
J, the Court had postponed this
aspect sine die, to a date to be determined by the registrar. This
was what gave rise to the December
application and the order made by
Modiba J. In the December order, maintenance for the minor sons is
dealt with. That order is
operative pending finalisation of the
divorce proceedings. In substance, the application and the relief
fell within the four corners
of
rule 43.
That Modiba J considered it
to be such is clear from the fact that, but for her order, the
respondent’s attorney and counsel
were bound by the fee tariffs
in
rule 43
(7) and (8). There would have been no need to make the
costs order in the form made by Modiba J unless that Court was
dealing with
rule 43.
To have expressly excluded, as Modiba J did,
certain sub-rules of
rule 43
would have been entirely pointless
unless the application before her was one brought in terms of
rule
43.
[11] Accepting as I do, that the
December order is a
rule 43
one, and bearing in mind that any order
granted in terms of
Rule 43
may only be varied in the event of a
material change of the circumstances of either party, or of a child,
Mr Yoko’s present
application’s seems to be doomed, for
no allegation of any change of circumstances is made out in his
papers. In Grauman
vs Grauman
1984 (3) SA 477
(WLD) at 480A - 480C
Van Der Walt J held:
“The question to be posed is what
does a party have to do if the other party has obtained relief from a
Court based on false
information. There are ordinary motion
proceedings. Mr Weavind, for the applicant, in his reply to the
preliminary point, said
that the only way open was to utilize
Rule 43
(6).
I am not certain that it is so. If that
is the case, the Court will be faced in any number of
Rule 43
applications with virtually a review of a previous decision, based on
the existing facts, but now having been given time to deal
with the
matter in more detail, having been able to utilize more information,
another slant being given to those very same facts,
or one or two
additional facts might be discovered, which puts a different
complexion on matters.
After all, this is merely to assist
parties in resolving their differences, and if one makes of
Rule 43
procedure a procedure whereby acrimony is engendered and further
issues are brought forward, which only complicate the divorce
instead
of simplifying it,
Rule 43
misses its point.
In my view,
Rule 43
(6) should be
strictly interpreted to deal with matters which it says has to be
dealt with, that is, a material change taking place
in the
circumstances of either party or child. That relates to a change
subsequent to the hearing of the original
Rule 43
application. That
has not shown to be the case in this particular application, and I am
satisfied that this is not the proper method
to deal with the
information now brought forward.”
[12] A rehearing of the application
based on new evidence is not permitted. The new application must be
based on a material change
in circumstances subsequent to the first
application. See too Micklem vs Micklem,
1988 (3) SA 259
(CPD) at
262(E)
[13] The position in the current
application is the following: Applicant contends that his evidence in
relation to his earnings
was not before Modiba J at the time of the
hearing on 4 December 2015. The matter was argued from the premise
that applicant’s
gross earnings was in the region of R 100 000
per month, which is what his wife contends Mr [Y…..’s]
earnings to be
(all of this was submitted from the bar). Assuming
these facts to be properly before court and assuming these facts to
be correct
it is clear that Mr [Y……] had had an
opportunity to disclose his “correct earnings” to the
court but
he had either elected not to take the court into his
confidence or had omitted to do so. In the papers before the court
the applicant
does not explain why he omitted to place his true
financial position before Modiba J. What is, however, crystal clear
is that evidence
in respect of his actual earnings (assuming for the
moment such figure differs from the R 100 000 per month contended for
by the
respondent), cannot be considered “new evidence”.
This is not a fact which only became known subsequent to the December
order. He would have known what he earned then, he would not have
found out about his earnings after that hearing.
[14] Further, the applicant is unable
to refer to a single change to his circumstances, let alone a
material change, subsequent
to the granting of the December order.
This is hardly surprising having regard to the fact that he launched
the ‘fresh’
rule 43
application within 6 days of the
granting of the December order. That smacks of spite, the reaction of
a stung ego rather than
any genuine need for financial support. He is
obliged to show that the circumstances which existed at the time of
the granting
of the order as at 4 December 2015, changed materially.
His argument, advanced by Mr Dawood representing him, was that the
material
change occurred at the moment that the December order was
granted. This is not the type of change that merits a variation of
the
rule 43
order. If it did, each and every
rule 43
order would be
capable of variation in terms of
rule 43(6)
and the argument, if
accepted, would defeat the purpose of the rule.
[15] Advocate Wilcock on behalf of Mrs
[Y……..] argued that the order granted by Modiba J
precludes the applicant from
launching further proceedings as the
issue of the maintenance of the children has become res judicata.
Although this principle
might have been one which informed the
introduction of
Rule 43(6)
, I do not believe that the res judicata
principle has application.
Rule 43
relief is, in its very nature,
interim and is granted (and was indeed granted by Modiba J) pending
finalisation of the divorce
action. Being interim, it can be changed
where a material change in circumstances arises. Res judicata applies
only where the order
is a final one. It does not find application to
interim orders.
[16] In my view, this matter falls to
be considered according to the provisions of
Rule 43(6).
Having
regard to the factors mentioned herein above, I conclude that the
applicant has failed to place facts before this court
which would
enable it to conclude that a material change in the circumstances of
the applicant occurred subsequent to the granting
of the December
order which would entitle this court to vary the order granted by
Modiba J.
MAIN APPLICATION
[17] Assuming I were wrong in my
findings set out above, I would nonetheless conclude that the
applicant’s application is
fatally flawed in that he has failed
to, inter alia, set out what his wife’s earnings are and that
she has the means to pay
the maintenance claimed. The respondent in
the answering papers has stated that she earns between R 16 000 and R
20 000 per month.
The application must thus be adjudicated on the
basis that this factual allegation is correct. That being so, a
payment to the
applicant would leave the respondent with between R
3000 and R 7000 after the R 13 000 was paid to the Applicant.
The applicant
has lumped his expenses and the expenses of [N…….],
the daughter who lives with him, together. The court is unable
to
establish what [N…….’s] needs are from the facts
contained in the founding affidavit. The applicant has
failed to set
out what assets he has and what investments he has. It would appear
that the applicant resides in a property worth
around R 5 million
which is unbonded, that he drives two expensive (luxury) motor
vehicles, that he made a cash payment to the
respondent in the amount
of R 2 150 000 for the respondent’s half share of the
matrimonial property without having to
take out a bond on the
property. Access to cash of this quantum is a strong indication, as
is the knee-jerk timing of his application,
of a man motivated more
by a desire for revenge than for genuine financial assistance of the
sort that the Courts are allowed to
order in appropriate
circumstances. These are not those.
[18] The applicant, Mr [Y…….],
supported the entire family throughout the subsistence of the
marriage which commenced
in 1998. The respondent’s
contributions were nominal and the applicant did not rely on Mrs
[Y…….’s].
The current position does no more than
preserve the status quo as it existed during the marriage and the
parties’ period
of cohabitation. This entire situation will be
re-assessed at trial.
COSTS
[19] The issue of costs remains. The
ineluctable conclusion is that this application was ill-motivated
when launched. I have found
that the application in this case under
both
Rule 43
and
Rule 43(6)
are ill founded. The applicant has failed
to take this court into his confidence in respect of his assets and
his income. In respect
of his income, he has not provided any
financial details, something which he could have done. The applicant
is the sole member
of Techniche CC and employs at least four IT
consultants. None of the management accounts or financial statements
of the Close
Corporation were made available to the court but
applicant simply relied, to verify his income, on a document
purportedly generated
by Techniche CC.
[20] The parties still have a long way
to walk together as co-parents of three children. He would be well
advised to put this acrimony
behind him during what is undoubtedly a
difficult and painful time and to attempt to resolve the differences
in a more constructive
way.
[21] The application is dismissed with
costs on the scale as between attorney and client. The tariff in
terms of the
Rule 43(7)
& (8) is once again waived.
I OPPERMAN
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg
Heard: 3 February 2016
Judgment delivered: 4 February 2016
Appearances:
For Applicant: Adv A Wilcock
Instructed by: Martin’s Brown
Inc
For Respondent: Mr Dawood
Instructed by:Dawood Attorneys