J V V v J V V (58485/2008) [2009] ZAGPPHC 82 (29 May 2009)

78 Reportability

Brief Summary

Maintenance — Pendente lite order — Applicant seeking maintenance and contribution towards legal costs from respondent during divorce proceedings — Respondent's financial means disputed but inferred to be substantial based on admissions and lack of evidence to the contrary — Court granting maintenance of R25 000.00 and contribution of R35 000.00 towards legal costs, considering applicant's financial shortfall and lifestyle adjustments post-separation.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application for interim relief pendente lite in the context of pending divorce proceedings, brought in terms of Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules of Court. The applicant (the wife) sought interim maintenance for herself, ancillary interim relief (including medical expenses and transport of furniture), a contribution towards legal costs, and an order permitting a departure from the limitations in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8).


The parties were M I J V V as applicant and A J J V V as respondent. The respondent was described as a medical practitioner and businessman, while the applicant was described as a suspended municipal councillor and political party member receiving monthly honoraria.


The procedural history reflected that the application was initially launched as an urgent application on 18 December 2008, but it was struck from the roll for lack of urgency, with no costs order made at that time. The matter was later postponed on 7 May 2009 to 25 May 2009, when it was argued before the court and judgment was reserved. The present judgment was delivered on 29 May 2009.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned the appropriate level of interim maintenance, the extent of interim medical expense responsibility, the proper quantum of a contribution towards legal costs, and whether the case justified allowing additional material beyond the usual confines of Rule 43 procedure, including the question of costs consequences in relation to supplementary affidavits.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant was 48 years old and that she earned monthly honoraria totalling R10 519.87 (being R8 968.50 from the Kungwini City Council and R1 551.37 from the Metsweding District Municipality). The respondent disclosed that the applicant held academic qualifications, namely a BCom and a BSc (genetics).


It was also not in dispute that the respondent was a medical practitioner, that he was not without financial resources, and that he continued to provide materially for the parties’ children. The respondent admitted that he paid R25 000 per month for the daughters “over and above their education,” and he admitted that he drove a Range Rover. He further admitted that he had purchased a “big house,” though he did not disclose its value or what he expended on it.


A substantial aspect of the factual dispute related to the extent of the respondent’s wealth and income. The applicant alleged that the respondent’s estate was substantial (said to be about R30–R31 million in 2006) and relied on an attached statement of assets and liabilities (annexure “JVV1”). She further alleged the respondent had sold a hospital belonging to one of his companies for R24 million, and she relied on further material (annexure “JVV2”) said to be a consolidated statement reflecting an investment at ABSA in his name amounting to R14 million. She also alleged significant recurring expenditures by the respondent, including monthly payments on properties in Silverlakes and Bloubergstrand and high levels of maintenance for the children.


The respondent disputed the accuracy and relevance of these allegations. He denied that “JVV1” was a true reflection of his estate or income and contended that the monies reflected were those of various trusts, listed under his name but not belonging to him personally. He also denied the allegation regarding the R24 million hospital sale and asserted that information about it was unnecessary for the application. Notwithstanding these denials, the respondent did not place before the court positive evidence setting out his “true financial means” by way of disclosure sufficient to meet the applicant’s case.


As to the applicant’s needs, she asserted that she faced a monthly shortfall and set out expenses said to total R49 000 per month, including accommodation in the range of R13 000 to R15 500 per month and R10 000 for furniture. She sought R40 000 per month in maintenance for herself, “reasonable and fair” medical costs, and R50 000 as a contribution towards costs. The judgment records that relief concerning the parties’ daughters (initially sought) was no longer pursued at the hearing.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether the applicant had shown (a) insufficient means to maintain herself pending the divorce and (b) that the respondent had the ability to pay the maintenance and contributions sought, taking account of the parties’ circumstances and standard of living. These questions required the court to assess the parties’ competing factual assertions regarding financial means and expenses, and then to apply Rule 43 principles to those facts.


A further legal issue concerned the appropriate quantum of a contribution towards legal costs: specifically, what amount would be “adequate” to enable the applicant to present her case, without amounting to an entitlement to unlimited litigation funding.


The court also had to determine costs consequences arising from the filing of supplementary affidavits in a Rule 43 application, and whether the matter justified a departure from the limitations prescribed in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8).


The dispute therefore involved questions of fact (means, expenditure, and needs), the application of law to fact (Rule 43 requirements and the standard for interim relief), and evaluative determinations (what was “adequate,” “reasonable,” “fair,” and “equitable” in interim maintenance and costs funding).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the footing that Rule 43 interim relief depends materially on (i) the applicant showing insufficient means and (ii) establishing that the respondent can afford to meet the amount sought. The court accepted that interim maintenance is influenced by the standard of living enjoyed by the parties, but it also emphasised that interim relief is directed to needs rather than wants.


On the respondent’s means, the court regarded it as significant that the respondent did not place before the court evidence reflecting his true financial means, despite disputing the applicant’s figures. The court held that it was insufficient for the respondent merely to place the applicant’s monetary allegations in dispute; he was expected to “go an extra mile” and produce evidence countering the disclosed figures. In those circumstances, the court considered itself entitled to draw an inference, consistent with authority relied upon, that the respondent was a person of substance and could afford to contribute.


In evaluating the respondent’s explanation that the monies shown under his name belonged to trusts, the court considered that even on the respondent’s version it would have expected disclosure of what he received in return for the use of his name. The court reasoned that the probabilities suggested that the funds did not in truth belong to the trusts but to the respondent. This reasoning supported the court’s conclusion that the respondent had the capacity to pay interim maintenance, medical expenses, and a contribution towards legal costs.


In turning to the appropriate quantum, the court accepted that the parties had enjoyed a luxurious lifestyle, but it distinguished between maintaining the applicant at that prior level and meeting her reasonable interim needs. The court reasoned that the applicant could not expect to live at the same level as during the marriage at its “optimum platonic warmth,” given the reality of divorce proceedings and the separation of households. The court took into account that the applicant would need to lease accommodation for herself but expressed the view that she did not require accommodation costing R13 000 per month when staying alone. The court also took into account that the respondent still provided her with a motor vehicle and that she earned R10 519.87 per month.


Balancing these considerations, the court concluded that R25 000 per month was adequate as maintenance pendente lite for the applicant. It also held it fair and equitable that the respondent be ordered to pay the applicant’s reasonable and necessary medical costs, having regard to her circumstances.


On the contribution to costs, the court applied the principle that a spouse is entitled to an amount that places her in a position adequately to present her case, but not to unlimited litigation expenditure, and that the award is a contribution rather than full funding. The court accepted that the respondent’s trust-related assertions would likely require investigation and that preparation and consultation would be required for trial. However, it noted that the applicant had not provided evidence explaining how she arrived at the claimed R50 000. Exercising its evaluative discretion on adequacy at the interim stage, the court fixed a contribution towards legal costs at R35 000.


Regarding procedure and affidavits, the court reiterated that Rule 43 applications discourage prolix affidavits and that supplementary affidavits are generally not consonant with Rule 43 practice. It recognised the general position that filing additional affidavits without prior leave can lead to an adverse costs order. Nonetheless, because the applicant was substantially successful, the court declined to mulct her with the costs occasioned by her supplementary affidavit.


Finally, the court concluded that the circumstances justified a departure from the limitations in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8) and made an order to that effect.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted interim relief in favour of the applicant. The respondent was ordered to pay R25 000 per month as maintenance pendente lite to the applicant, to pay the applicant’s reasonable and necessary medical costs, and to pay R35 000 as a contribution towards the applicant’s legal costs.


On costs, the respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the application on the party and party scale, excluding the costs occasioned by the applicant’s supplementary affidavit.


The court further ordered that there be a departure from the limitation prescribed in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8).


Cases Cited


| Citation |
|---|
| Levin v Levin 1962 (2) SA 330 (W) |
| Grauman v Grauman 1984 (3) SA 447 at 379E |
| Greling v Greling 1959 (3) SA 967 |
| Senior v Senior 1999 (4) SA 955 (W) at 961H |
| Glazer v Glazer 1959 (3) SA 928 (W) at 932A |
| Dodo v Dodo 1990 (2) SA 77 (W) at 98F |
| Nicholson v Nicholson 1998 91) SA 48 (W) at 511 |
| Greenspan v Greenspan 2000 92) SA 283 at 288 A-B |


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 43; Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 43(7); Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 43(8).


Held


The court held that the applicant had demonstrated insufficient means to maintain herself at an adequate level pending the divorce when measured against her income and reasonable needs, and that the respondent could afford to pay interim maintenance. In circumstances where the respondent disputed the applicant’s figures but failed to make sufficient financial disclosure, the court was entitled to infer that he was a person of substance.


The court held that interim maintenance should meet needs rather than preserve the full pre-separation luxury standard, and it fixed maintenance pendente lite at R25 000 per month. The court held it fair and equitable that the respondent pay the applicant’s reasonable and necessary medical costs. It further held that an adequate contribution towards legal costs at the interim stage was R35 000, rather than the R50 000 sought, particularly given the absence of evidence substantiating how the claimed figure was computed.


The court held that although supplementary affidavits are generally discouraged in Rule 43 proceedings and may attract costs consequences, the applicant’s substantial success justified not penalising her with the costs occasioned by her supplementary affidavit. The court also held that the circumstances justified a departure from Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8).


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Interim relief under Rule 43 requires the applicant to show insufficient means and that the respondent has the ability to pay the maintenance or contribution sought, with reference to the parties’ living standard but constrained by the distinction between needs and wants.


Where a respondent disputes allegations of wealth or expenditure but fails to place before the court evidence of his or her true financial means, the court may draw an inference on the available material that the respondent is a person of substance capable of meeting interim obligations.


A contribution towards costs in matrimonial interim litigation is aimed at placing the applicant in a position adequately to present her case, and it is not an entitlement to unlimited expenditure or full indemnification of all trial costs. The quantum is assessed with regard to the nature of the litigation, the manner and scale on which the respondent litigates, and the respondent’s financial position, assessed at the interim stage.


Rule 43 procedure discourages prolix affidavits and generally disfavors supplementary affidavits without leave. While filing additional affidavits may attract an adverse costs consequence, the court retains a discretion on costs and may withhold such a sanction where the filing party is otherwise substantially successful and the circumstances justify that approach.


Where circumstances warrant it, the court may order a departure from the limitations in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8).

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[2009] ZAGPPHC 82
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J V V v J V V (58485/2008) [2009] ZAGPPHC 82 (29 May 2009)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
)
Date: 29/05/2009
CASE NO. 58485/2008
UNREPORTABLE
In
the matter between:
M
I J V V
APPLICANT
And
A
J J V V
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MAVUNDLA
J,
[1] The applicant seeks a
pendete lite order against the respondent, in the following terms:
“1. Payment of an
amount of R40 000. 00 for the maintenance
of the applicant;
Payment of an amount of
R10 000, 00, alternatively transportation of the return of the
plaintiff’s furnisher from Bloubergsrand
in Cape Town to
Pretoria;
Reasonable and fair
medical costs;
Contribution towards
cost in the amount of R50 000. 00;
Departure from the
provisions of Rule 43(7) and Rule 43 (8) of the Uniform Court Rules
of this Court.
[2] The application was
initially brought by way of urgency on 18 December 2008. However it
was struck off the roll for lack of
urgency and there was no costs
order made. On the 7 May 2009 the matter was postponed to 25 May
2009, on which last mentioned date
it appeared before me and I
reserved my judgment.
[3] The applicant is 48
years of age. She describes herself as a suspended council member in
the Kungwini City Council and a member
of the Democratic Alliance
Party. She receives an honorarium in the amount of R8 968. 50 per
month. She also receives from Metsweding
district Municipality an
honorarium in the amount of R1 551. 37 per month. The total amount
of the honorarium is R10 519. 87
per month. The respondent revealed
that the applicant has a BCom and Bsc degrees in genetic.
[4] The respondent is a
medical practitioner and a businessman whose estate according to the
applicant, in 2006 was about R30 million.
The applicant has attached
to her papers annexure JVV1, a statement of assets and liabilities of
the respondent as on 31 October
2006 to be about R31million. She has
further averred that respondent has sold a hospital in Benoni which
belonged to one of his
companies for an amount of R24 million.
[5] The respondent denies
that JVV1 is a true reflection of the value neither of his estate nor
of his income. He further says that
the moneys reflected in this
annexure is money belonging to various trusts whose portfolios are
listed under his name but the moneys
are not his. The respondent, in
respect of the R24 million, denies these allegations and further says
that the information pertaining
thereto is not necessary for purposes
of this matter.
[6] What is significant
is that the respondent has however not placed any evidence reflecting
his true financial means. However,
that the respondent is not a man
of straw, but of substance can be gleaned from various admissions,
although he denies the figures.
The applicant avers that he is paying
an amount of R17 000. 00 per month for the house at Bully Bunion in
Silverlakes; an amount
of R15 000. 00 per month for a house in
Bloubergstrand in Cape town; he pays toward the maintenance of his
daughters an amount
of R24 000. 00 per month. She further says that
he drives Range Rover costing about R1 million. She further avers
that the respondent
has an investment at ABSA in his name amounting
to R14 million and in this regard she has attached annexure “JVV2”

which is a consolidated statement of the respondent. She further
avers that the respondent purchased a R2 million house whereafter
he
moved to another house he rented for an amount of R17 000. 00. She
further says that they have a house in Silverlakes which
is
R15million.
[7] The respondent
admits that he has proceeded to purchase a big house. He does not,
however, disclose the amount he expended
towards the purchase thereof
nor what the value thereof is. Save for denying the amounts alleged
by the applicant, the respondent
admits that he is providing well
for his daughters, he says in fact that he is paying R25 000. 00 per
month for them over and above
their education. He however, he fails
to take the court into his confidence and disclose the amounts he is
expending in towards
the daughters. It needs noted that all the
daughters are at tertiary studying senior degrees. The respondent
admits that he is
driving a Range Rover motor vehicle. He
conveniently remains silent about its costs.
[8] In my view, it is
not enough for the respondent to merely put in dispute the amounts
it is alleged he is worth. The respondent
must go an extra mile and
place before the court, evidence that gainsays the averments made by
the applicant with regard to the
figures she has disclosed. If he
does not do so, the court, in my view, is entitled to infer from the
evidence at hand that the
respondent is indeed a man of substance
and can afford; vide Levin v Levin
1962 (2) SA 330
(W) 331D.
[9] The applicant is
entitled to a
pendente
lite
order depending on the living standard of the parties, vide; Grauman
v Grauman
1984 (3) SA 447
at 379E. In applications of this nature,
the applicant must show that she has insufficient means, vide Greling
v Greling
1959 (3) SA 967.
She must also show that the respondent can
afford to meet the amounts she seeks from the respondent.
[10] In the circumstances
of this case, I conclude that the respondent is indeed a man of
substance. In arriving at this conclusion,
I have further taken into
account that, according to his version, he is in one way or another
associated with various trust. He
does not disclose, even if I for
moment accept that the amounts mentioned by the applicant are not his
but of the trusts, I would
nonetheless have expected him to disclose
what does he get for having his name employed to have the money
belong to the trusts
reflected under his name. The probabilities are
that the moneys do not belong to the trusts but to him.
[11] The applicant has
stated that her net salary is R10 519-87 per month. She says that she
would be having a shortfall of an amount
of R40 000. 00. She says
that she needs an amount of R13 000. 00 to R15 500. 00 for renting a
house in Silverlakes; R10 000.00
for furniture. She has also detailed
in paragraph 36 of her founding affidavit her monthly expenses
totalling R49 000. 00 wherein
she says that the shortfall is R37
030.13.
[12] In the matter of
Senior v Senior
1999 (4) SA 955
(W) at 961H the court cited with
approval what was said in Glazer v Glazer
1959 (3) SA 928
(W) at 932A
and proceeded to state in regard to the quantum to be made towards
contribution towards costs that:

The essential
principle in determining this issue appears from various
authorities…. and I would summarise them as being
the
following:
(
i)
‘The test to be applied in considering the amount is that
the plaintiff should be placed in a position adequately
to present
her case.

Muhlmann’s
case supra at 418G; Dodo’s case surpa at 98C.
(ii) The fact that the respondent
may be wealthy does not entitle the wife to unlimited spending, there
being a difference between
what she wants and what she needs.’
See Dodo’s case
supra at 98D-E.
What is ‘adequate’ would
depend on the nature of the litigation, the scale on which the
husband is litigating and
the scale upon which she intends to
litigate, with due regard being had to the husband’s financial
position. Dodo,s case
supra at 98C.
The applicant is not entitled to all
here costs of the trial but merely a ‘contribution towards’
her costs up to,
as previously stated. The first day of the trial.
There appears to me to be no reason
in logic or equity that such a contribution should be limited to
disbursements only and to
exclude therefore attorney’s
reasonable fees.”
[13] As stated herein
above, the applicant is not entitled to every thing she wants but
what she needs. I accept that the parties
have been enjoying a
luxurious life stile. The very fact that she has two degrees but has
been living, according to the respondent,
an indolent life spending
most of her time sleeping, is indicative of such luxurious life
stile. The probabilities are that the
plaintiff countenanced such
life stile, when the parties were still looking at each other with
rose tinted glasses.
[14] I am of the view
that the applicant cannot expect to enjoy the same life style she had
become accustomed to while the marriage
was at its optimum platonic
warmth. In view of the fact that they have reached a point where they
have since discovered that they
were not meant to each other to be
separated by death, but it is best that they walk away from each
other, she needs to adjust
her life style to the cold comfort that
the source of that previous comfort was the respondent from whom she
is divorcing. It can
not be expected of the respondent to still
continue to keep her in that luxurious comfort she had gotten used
to.
[15] I am taking into
consideration the fact that the applicant would have to lease
another place for herself. I am of the
view that she does not need a
R13 000. 00 accommodation when she is going to stay alone. I am also
taking into consideration
the fact that the respondent still
provides her with a motor vehicle. The applicant earns R10 519. 87 as
a councillor for the DA.
I am consequently of the view that an amount
of R25 000. 00 as maintenance
pendent
lite
for herself, should be adequate.
[16] The applicant seeks
also that the respondent be ordered to pay her reasonable medical.
Having regard to the fact that the applicant’s
daughters are
all at tertiary, it can be safely accepted that she is no longer a
young person. I need not venture of her age. It
suffices to state
that it is, in my view, fair and equitable that the respondent should
be ordered to pay the applicant’s
reasonable medical costs.
[17] The applicant seeks
a contribution of R50 000.00 towards contribution of her legal costs.
The respondent is not necessarily
obliged to pay all the costs of the
applicant even if he can afford to pay same. The applicant is,
however, entitled to only a
substantial contribution towards her
costs, vide Dodo v Dodo
1990 (2) SA 77
(W) at 98F; Nocholson v
Nicholson
1998 91) SA 48
(W) at 511. Not all her fees are payable but
the amount must be adequate to enable her to conduct defence and
prepare her case.
[18] The respondent says
that all the moneys reflected under his name belong to trusts. The
respondent has submitted that she would
have to cause a forensic
investigation of all these trust. I am inclined to agree with this
submission. It is not only the investigation
that would have to be
conducted with regard to the size of the respondent’s estate.
Preparation and consultation would have
to be conducted before she
goes to trial. However, the applicant has not placed any evidence how
she arrives at the figure of R50
000.00. I am therefore of the view
that an amount of R35 000.00 as contribution towards legal cost
should adequate at this stage.
[19] In rule 43
applications, the parties are discouraged from filing prolifix
affidavits, which include supplementary affidavits,
vide Greenspan v
Greenspan
2000 92) SA 283
at 288 A-B.
[20] When the applicant
launched these proceedings, she sought
inter
alia
,
certain relief in respect of the accommodation of their four
daughters in Cape Town. Any relief relating to their daughters is
no
longer being pursued by the applicant. The filing of the
supplementary affidavit resulted in the respondent also filing his

supplementary affidavit. The filing of supplementary affidavits is
not consonant with the practice relating to Rule 43 applications.
[21] The party who files
additional affidavits, without the prior leave of the court having
been obtained is generally mulcted with
the costs order. However,
in
casu
,
notwithstanding the supplementary affidavit, the applicant has been
substantially successful. In the premises I deem it not necessary
to
mulct her with the costs occasioned by the filing of the
supplementary affidavit.
[22] I am of the view
that the circumstances of this matter justifies a departure from the
provisions of Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8)
of this Court.
[23] In the result I
make the following order:
1. That the respondent
pays
pendete
lite
an
amount of R25 000.00 per month towards the applicant’s
maintenance;
2. That the respondent
pays applicant’s reasonable and necessary medical costs;
3. That the respondent
pays contribution towards the applicant’s costs in an amount of
R35 000.00;
4. That the respondent is
ordered to pay the costs of this application on party and party scale
save the costs occasioned by the
supplementary affidavit of the
applicant.
5. That it be departed
from the limitation prescribed in Rule 43(7) and Rule 43(8) of this
Court.
DATE OF HEARING : 25/ 05 / 2009
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29 / 05/
2009
N.M. MAVUNDLA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
PLAINTIFF’S
ATT : MARITZ SMITH MATSHIDISO INC
PLAINTIFF’S ADV : ADV J
G W BASSON
DEFENDNAT’S ATT :
EFSTRATIOU & VISAGIE ATTORNEYS
DEFENDNAT’S ADV : ADV G T
AVVAKOUMIDES