Buys v Cooper and Others (847/2002) [2002] ZAFSHC 6 (12 July 2002)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Divorce — Maintenance — Application for rescission of maintenance order based on fraud — Applicant alleging that former spouse induced consent to settlement agreement by fraudulent misrepresentation of financial status — Court's jurisdiction to set aside judgment obtained through fraud established — Applicant entitled to relief if he proves that original judgment was procured by false evidence — Interim order granted pending determination of main action.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an urgent application for interim relief brought in the High Court of South Africa (Orange Free State Provincial Division). The applicant, Markus Ruben Buys, sought interim interdictory and ancillary relief directed primarily at preventing the enforcement of ongoing maintenance obligations and protecting certain pension and insurance interests pending the institution and determination of contemplated (and later commenced) main proceedings.


The first respondent, Jacomina Dorothea Cooper (previously Buys and previously Muller), opposed the application. The second and third respondents, Sanlam and Old Mutual, were cited because they administered or held interests in the relevant disability, pension, policy, and retirement annuity benefits implicated by the interim relief.


Procedurally, the matter first served before Rampai J on 13 March 2002 as an urgent ex parte application in terms of Rule 6(12)(a), when an interim order was granted. That interim order restrained payments and alienation of certain policy interests, and granted interim relief aimed at suspending the applicant’s maintenance liability under a consent paper incorporated in a prior divorce order. The matter later returned on the opposed roll for determination whether the rule nisi should be confirmed. The judgment confirming the rule nisi was delivered on 25 July 2002 (after a hearing on 13 June 2002).


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned whether the applicant had shown a basis for interim protection pending a main action in which he intended to seek, in substance, the setting aside or reopening of the prior divorce-related order (particularly the settlement provisions incorporated into it) on the basis that it had been procured by fraud, and to obtain relief from the maintenance obligation that flowed from it.


2. Material Facts


The material background accepted by the court included that the applicant and first respondent were formerly husband and wife, and that they were divorced by order of the Free State High Court on 9 February 1999. A deed of settlement (consent paper) was incorporated into that divorce order. Under the settlement the applicant undertook to pay monthly maintenance to the first respondent (figures in the papers are reflected as approximately R700–R770 per month from early 1999) and the first respondent was allocated 40% of the applicant’s pension interest and interests in certain identified policies administered by Sanlam and Old Mutual.


The applicant alleged that, during the negotiations leading to the settlement and before the divorce order was granted, the first respondent fraudulently misrepresented her financial circumstances and concealed material facts relevant to the maintenance bargain and the order sought from the court. In particular, the applicant alleged (and the court treated as central to the prima facie case) that the first respondent did not disclose that she had already married Mr Gert Johannes Muller on 30 May 1998 at Paul Roux (while her marriage to the applicant still subsisted), that this marriage was in community of property, that Mr Muller was wealthy, and that she had resources and income including employment connected to Mr Muller’s business and other ventures. The applicant further alleged concealment of additional resources such as property interests and a bird-farming venture.


In contrast to these undisclosed facts, the applicant alleged that the first respondent represented to him (and thereby caused him and the court to proceed on the basis) that she was ill, unemployed, indigent, and dependent on her sister and the applicant for subsistence; that she had no income, assets, or shelter; that she had not remarried and was living alone; and that she remained lawfully married to the applicant who had adequate means to support her post-divorce. The applicant contended that, once he discovered what he alleged to be the true position, he stopped paying maintenance on 3 October 2000, treating the settlement as cancelled on account of the alleged fraud.


Events after the divorce order also formed part of the factual matrix relevant to the interim interdict requirements. The court recorded that the first respondent later obtained an increased maintenance order of R1 200 per month from the Johannesburg Family Court with effect from 31 December 2001, apparently granted in the applicant’s absence. Pursuant to that order, the applicant’s pension was attached and Sanlam was directed to pay the monthly amount into the first respondent’s bank account; the court noted that Sanlam appeared to have complied several times before the present proceedings were initiated.


The applicant’s personal circumstances were treated as material to the assessment of harm and convenience. The court accepted that the applicant had been medically declared unfit for work in 1982, had no steady income other than a modest pension, and incurred substantial ongoing costs for essential chronic medication. The court also recorded the first respondent’s assertion that she was presently penniless, but treated that allegation as relevant to whether the applicant could recover losses if interim relief were refused and the applicant later succeeded.


Where the parties’ broader marital histories were canvassed (including allegations about the first respondent’s prior marriages and the absence of certain documentary proof), the court did not finally determine those matters but regarded them as contributing to the applicant’s prima facie case and to doubt surrounding the first respondent’s credibility and the integrity of the circumstances under which earlier legal relationships and orders were procured.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions before the court were not the final merits of rescission or the ultimate enforceability of the divorce settlement, but whether the applicant satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict confirming the existing rule nisi pending the determination of the main action.


Within that interim framework, the court had to consider whether the applicant had established a prima facie right grounded in the substantive rule that a judgment or order may be set aside if procured by fraud, together with a prima facie showing that the alleged fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation was material to the divorce settlement and maintenance provisions made an order of court.


The dispute therefore concerned a mixture of law (the applicable principles on fraud-based rescission and on interim interdicts), fact (whether the first respondent’s representations were false and fraudulently made or concealed), and the application of law to fact at the interim stage (whether the applicant’s version, assessed at the level required for interim relief, justified preservation of the status quo). It also required a discretionary/evaluative judgment on irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and the adequacy of alternative remedies.


A further issue raised in argument was whether the applicant’s proper remedy lay in review or appeal of the Johannesburg Family Court maintenance order under the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998, rather than approaching the High Court for interim protection. Relatedly, the first respondent advanced an argument that because her purported later marriage to Mr Muller was null and void, the applicant remained bound to maintain her under the divorce settlement; the court had to evaluate that submission within the interim context.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter by first identifying the substantive legal platform: South African law recognises that a final judgment should not lightly be set aside because it is res judicata, but it also recognises that a judgment procured by fraud cannot be allowed to stand. The court relied on Roman-Dutch authority (Voet) and a line of South African decisions confirming jurisdiction to reopen and set aside judgments where fraud is proved. In that context, the court set out the requisites for a fraud-based setting aside, namely that the evidence previously placed before the court was incorrect, that it was fraudulently made with intent to mislead, and that it diverged from the truth so materially that the court would have made a different order had the true facts been disclosed; the court also noted the requirement that the successful litigant must have been a party to the fraud.


Having framed the substantive right, the court emphasised the interim nature of the current proceedings. It described an interim interdict as a process that temporarily preserves or restores the status quo pending the final determination of rights, and it stressed that granting interim relief does not entail final fact-finding, which is reserved for the trial court in the main action.


The court then applied the four requirements for an interim interdict. On prima facie right, it held that the applicant had shown, on the papers, a prima facie case that the first respondent suppressed the truth about her financial position and relationships during settlement negotiations and when the settlement was presented for incorporation in the divorce order. The court characterised the negotiations as lacking mutual bona fides and viewed the presentation of the settlement to the presiding judicial officer, on the alleged concealed facts, as a deception amounting to fraud on the court. In analysing the duty to disclose, the court referred to authority recognising that concealment may constitute fraud where a party tries, for their own profit, to keep others from discovering material facts it is in their interest to know, and endorsed the view that good faith is relevant not only to contract interpretation and performance but also to antecedent negotiation, such that conduct inconsistent with good faith may amount to fraud.


In addressing the first respondent’s argument that the applicant remained bound because her later marriage was void, the court rejected the submission as missing the point of the applicant’s case. It reasoned that the applicant’s contention was not that a valid marriage to Mr Muller created a legal duty of support, but rather that, as a matter of fact, the first respondent cohabited with a person of substance, had employment and resources, and thus (on the applicant’s version) was not indigent and did not require support from a sickly pensioner. The court also referenced the general requisites for a support claim (need, ability, and a relationship giving rise to a duty of support) and expressed the prima facie view that these requisites had not been established on the information that had allegedly been concealed at the time of the divorce settlement.


On irreparable harm, the court accepted that continued deductions from the applicant’s pension under the maintenance arrangements would cause serious prejudice given his medical condition, dependence on expensive medication, and limited income. It treated as significant that the first respondent alleged she was penniless, because if interim relief were refused and the applicant later succeeded, recovery of amounts paid would likely be impracticable. The applicant’s fear that loss of funds would jeopardise his ability to obtain essential medication was viewed as a well-grounded apprehension of grave harm.


On the balance of convenience, the court considered the applicant’s prospects in the main action to be strong on the papers, and contrasted the applicant’s vulnerability as a pensioner requiring chronic medication with the first respondent’s demonstrated ability (on the court’s assessment of the history) to manage without his support for an extended period. The court reasoned that the applicant’s hardship if interim relief were refused would be more severe than the first respondent’s hardship if it were granted, and accordingly concluded that the balance favoured the applicant.


On absence of an alternative satisfactory remedy, the court rejected the contention that the applicant was confined to review or appeal of the Johannesburg Family Court order. It held that remedies under the Maintenance Act had not taken away the applicant’s right to approach the High Court, particularly where the High Court order incorporating the settlement was implicated and where interim protection was sought to preserve the status quo pending the main action. The court considered there to be no other adequate remedy to preserve the position pending final determination.


Having found that all the requisites for interim interdictory relief were satisfied, the court confirmed the rule nisi pending the final decision in the main action.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the rule nisi previously granted, thereby continuing the interim restraints and interim protection pending the final determination of the applicant’s main action against the first respondent.


The relief, as described in the judgment’s introductory recital of the March order and the confirmation, included restraining the second respondent (Sanlam) from making further payments to the first respondent out of specified disability and pension funds earmarked for the applicant, restraining the third respondent (Old Mutual) from alienating the first respondent’s interest in specified policy and retirement annuity contracts insofar as they implicated the applicant, and granting interim relief relieving the applicant, pending the main action, from the maintenance liability flowing from the consent paper incorporated in the divorce order.


As to costs, the court made no final costs determination. It ordered that the costs of the application be reserved for decision by the trial court hearing the main action.


Cases Cited


Peel v National Bank of South Africa Ltd 1908 EDC 488


Robinson v Kingswell 1915 AD 277


De Wet v Bouwer 1919 CPD 43


Schierhout v Union Government 1927 AD 94


Paul and Paul v Cullum 1933 NPD 601


Swart v Wessels 1924 OPD 187


Viljoen v Federated Trust Limited 1971(1) SA 750 (OPD)


Makings v Makings 1958(1) SA 338 (AD)


Smit v Van Tonder 1957(1) SA 421 (T)


Gollach and Gomperts (Pty) Ltd v Universal Mills & Produce Co (Pty) Ltd and Others 1978(1) SA 914 (AD)


Meskin, NO v Anglo-American Corporation of SA Ltd and Another 1968(4) SA 793 (WLD)


Apleni v Minister of Law and Order and Others 1989(1) SA 193 (AD)


Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221


Erikson Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton 1973(3) SA 685 (AD)


Pietermaritzburg City Council v Road Transportation Board 1959(2) SA 758 (NPD)


Legislation Cited


Maintenance Act 99 of 1998


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12)(a)


Held


The court held that the applicant had established the requirements for an interim interdict pending the determination of the main action, including a prima facie right grounded in the allegation that the divorce settlement and resulting court order were procured by the first respondent’s fraudulent suppression of material facts regarding her circumstances and resources.


It further held that the applicant demonstrated a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the first respondent continued to enforce maintenance deductions against his pension, that the balance of convenience favoured preserving the applicant’s pension and medical subsistence pending trial, and that there was no adequate alternative remedy that would similarly preserve the status quo, notwithstanding the existence of remedies under maintenance legislation.


Accordingly, the rule nisi was confirmed, and the question of costs was reserved for the trial court.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court has jurisdiction to set aside or reopen a judgment or order where it is shown that the judgment was procured by fraud, notwithstanding the importance of finality associated with res judicata. The applicant seeking such relief must, at the appropriate stage, establish that false or incorrect evidence was placed before the court, that it was advanced fraudulently with intent to mislead, that the successful litigant was a party to the fraud, and that the misrepresentation or concealment was material in the sense that the court would have made a different order had the truth been disclosed.


In contractual and settlement negotiations, good faith (bona fides) is relevant to the evaluation of the parties’ conduct. The deliberate concealment of material facts in circumstances where disclosure is called for, and where the information is for the other party’s interest to know, may constitute fraud, particularly when it results in a court being asked to make an order on a materially false premise.


An interim interdict is a temporary measure aimed at preserving or restoring the status quo pending the final determination of rights, and does not entail final factual findings. The requisites are a prima facie right, a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm, a balance of convenience favouring relief, and the absence of any other satisfactory remedy. Where the enforcement of an order allegedly procured by fraud threatens serious prejudice pending trial, interim interdictory relief may be granted to prevent harm and to preserve the court’s ability to render effective final relief.

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[2002] ZAFSHC 6
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Buys v Cooper and Others (847/2002) [2002] ZAFSHC 6 (12 July 2002)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(ORANGE
FREE STATE PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
Case
No : 847/2002
In
the matter between:
MARKUS
RUBEN BUYS
Applicant
and
JACOMINA
DOROTHEA COOPER
First
Respondent
(previously
BUYS) (previously MULLER)
SANLAM
Second
Respondent
OLD
MUTUAL
Third
Respondent
_____________________________________________________________
HEARD
ON:
13
JUNE 2002
_____________________________________________________________
HEARD
BY:
RAMPAI
J
_____________________________________________________________
DELIVERED
ON:
` 25
JULY 2002
_____________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
BY:
RAMPAI
J
_____________________________________________________________
The
matter first came before me by way of an urgent application in
terms of rule 6(12)(a) on Wednesday 13 March 2002. I then
granted
an interim relief sought. The order I made restrained the second
respondent from making further payments to the first
respondent out
of specific disability and pension funds earmarked for the
applicant; restrained the third respondent from alienating
the
first respondent’s interest in a specific policy contract and
retirement annuity contract in respect of the applicant;
rescinded
specific clauses of a deed of settlement which was made an order of
court in Bloemfontein on 9 February 1999 under
case nr 1557/1996 of
the Free State High Court and also granted ancillary relief. In
short the applicant applies on a notice
of motion for an interim
order relieving him from liability to pay the first respondent an
amount of maintenance in terms of
the consent paper incorporated in
the divorce court order which amount is currently R1 200 per month.
I
made the interim order
pendente
lite
the main action which the applicant contemplated instituting
against the first respondent. In the main action contemplated by
the applicant the competing rights of the applicant
vis-a-vis
those of the first respondent shall be finally determined. The
real parties to these proceedings are the first respondent and
the
applicant. They were formally husband and wife. They were
divorced by an order of the Free State High Court in an action
where the first respondent (the wife) was the plaintiff and the
applicant (the husband) was the defendant. In terms of the deed
of
settlement incorporated in the court order on 9 February 1999 the
applicant undertook to contribute an amount of R770 per
month from
1 April 1999 towards the maintenance of the first respondent and
also gave her 40% of his pension interest.
Three
years after the divorce, the applicant commenced further
proceedings against his former wife in the same court. The pivotal
averments in support of his claim are:
3.1 that
the first respondent had induced him to sign the settlement
agreement, and to obtain a decree of divorce on the grounds
thereof,
by fraudulently representing that she was indigent and in need of
support from the applicant, her husband;
3.2 that
the representation she made was in fact incorrect;
3.3 that
she made the incorrect representation with deliberate and fraudulent
intent to mislead the court;
3.4 that
the fraudulent representation was so divergent from the true facts
that the court would not have given the judgment it
was induced to
give had the true facts been honestly divulged.
3.5 that
the applicant had taken it upon himself to cancel the settlement
agreement by stopping further payment of maintenance to
the first
respondent upon discovery of the true state of affairs.
The
particulars of the true state of affairs as alleged by the
applicant were set out in the applicant’s founding affidavit
and
summarised by his counsel in the applicant’s head of argument.
The applicant states that during the negotiations which
were aimed
at settling the dispute and before the court pronounced the
dissolution of the marriage on 9 February 1999 the first
respondent
did not disclose to him, his legal team, her legal team or the
presiding judge:
4.1 that
she had already married a certain Mr Gert Johannes Muller at Paul
Roux on 30 May 1998;
4.2 that
the marriage between her and the said Mr Muller was in community of
property;
4.3 that
Mr Muller was a wealthy man who owned several properties, business
ventures and farms at Lindley;
4.4 that
she was employed by Mr Muller as a manageress of a furniture shop
called G and M Meubels at Lindley;
4.5 that
she owned a bird farming venture at Lindley;
4.6 that
the marriage between her and Mr Muller was still subsisting and that
she was happily married.
The
applicant avers that during the negotiations which led to the
signing of the settlement agreement and prior to the grant of
the
judgment on 9 February 1999 the first respondent concealed the
aforesaid true facts and induced him, his legal team, her
legal
team and the trial judge to believe:
5.1 that
she was ill, jobless, incapable to work and entirely dependent on
her sister for her daily needs of subsistence;
5.2 that
she was an indigent person without any income, without any property,
without any shelter and without the necessary care;
5.3 that
she was still living alone and had not remarried since cohabitation
between her and the applicant ceased about six years
back;
5.4 that
she was lawfully married to the applicant who had adequate resources
to provide support to her after her divorce from him.
Mr
Claasen, counsel for the applicant, contended that by virtue of the
first respondent’s fraud, the applicant was entitled
to the
rescission of the decree of divorce in the form in which it was
pronounced and issued on 9 February 1999. Mr Cronje,
counsel for
the respondent, did not launch any challenge, in my view rightly
so, to the proposition that the law was as contended
for the
applicant; that he is entitled to the relief sought if he can show
that the original judgment was obtained through fraud
on the part
of the first respondent. In his classic work, Pandectas 42.1.28
Voet says that the vanquished party has a right
to have a judgment
set aside if such judgment was obtained by false evidence and
provided such false evidence first came to the
knowledge of the
vanquished party or the judge afterwards. In the case of
PEEL
v NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
1908 EDC 488
on p 493 Kotzé AJP says that where judgment is
founded on fraud, the defrauded party has the remedy to have the
case reopened
and the judgment set aside if the alleged fraud is
proven.
In
the case of
ROBINSON
v KINGSWELL
1915 AD 277
on 285 Innes CJ says that the plaintiff was entitled to
restitution in
integrum
if he can show that the original judgment was obtained through the
defendant’s fraud.
In
the case of
DE
WET v BOUWER
1919 CPD 43
on 46 Juta JP said that if the true facts were not
suppressed on the previous occasion and the full case was laid
before the court
then as was done afterwards, the judge in the first
or original instance would never have granted the order if he knew
what emerged
afterwards in the subsequent instance or hearing. Juta
JP was in effect saying no binding judicial order can rest on a
fraudulent
foundation.
The
effect of fraud on a judicial judgment was again considered by the
Appellate Division in the case of
SCHIERHOUT
v UNION GOVERNMENT
1927 AD 94
where De Villiers JA on p 98 reaffirmed the legal
position by saying:
“
Now
a final judgment of a court of law being
res
judicata
is not to be lightly set aside. On the other hand it stands to
reason that a judgment procured by the fraud of one of the parties
whether by forgery, perjury or in any other way such as fraudulently
withholding material documents, cannot be allowed to stand.
That
was the roman Law C.7.58), and that is our law (Voet 42.1.28).”
In
the case of
PAUL
AND PAUL v CULLUM
1933 NPD 601
on 606 Landsdown J said it was clear that the court had
jurisdiction to set aside a judgment obtained from it by fraud if
the fraud
was proven.
The
vanquished party such as the applicant who seeks to have a judgment
set aside on the ground that such judgment was obtained
by fraud
has to show the requisite of fraud which are:
7.1 that
the evidence which was previously laid before the court was
incorrect;
7.2 that
it was fraudulently made with the specific intent to mislead;
7.3 that
it diverged from the true facts to such an extent that the court
would have given a different judgment from the one it
was induced by
the incorrect evidence if the true facts had been placed before it
(
vide
SWART
v WESSELS
1924 OPD 187
on 189-190 per De Villiers JP as he then was).
Delivering judgment in the case of
VILJOEN
v FEDERATED TRUST LIMITED
1971(1) SA 750 (OPD) at 758A-B Steyn AJ elaborated on the requisites
for fraud as follows:
“
In
order to succeed on a claim that a particular judgment be set aside
on the ground of fraud it is necessary for the claimant to
allege
and to prove: (
a
)
that the successful litigant was a party to the fraud. (See
MAKINGS
v MAKINGS
1958(1) SA 338 (AD) at pp 344-345); (
b
)
that the evidence was in fact incorrect; (
c
)
that it was made fraudulently and with intent to mislead; and (
d
)
that it diverged to such an extent from the true facts that the
Court would, if the true facts had been placed before it, have
given
a judgment other than what it was induced by the incorrect evidence
to give. See
SWART
v WESSELS
1924 OPD 187
at pp 189-190;
SMIT
v VAN TONDER
1957(1) SA 421 (T) at p 426H;
HERBSTEIN
AND VAN WINSEN
,
supra
at p 424.”
The
question is whether a consideration of the evidence before me
establishes those propositions. An answer demands an examination
of the facts. The first respondent was born on 6 May 1947.
Virtually nothing is told about her childhood and family ties

except that she has a sister Me SW Cusons.
8.1 She
met a certain Mr Louis John Lachenicht who was born on 6 August
1942. She deposes that she married this gentleman and that
two
children were born of that marriage namely:
Craig
Louis Lachenicht a boy born on 2 January 1967; and
Timonthy
John Lachenicht, a boy born on 19 February 1968.
She
alleges that she divorced mr Lachenicht before she met the
applicant. Not much is told about Mr Lachenicht. Neither a
marriage
certificate nor a divorce certificate is available to prove
that marriage. The first respondent has failed to provide the
applicant
with copies of those documents despite numerous requests.
Mr Lachenicht apparently died on 1 November 1981 according to a copy
of the death certificate annexed to the first respondent’s
opposing affidavit -
vide
p 103 of the record.
8.2 The
applicant states that according to first respondent immediately
before her marriage to him her previous husband was a certain
Mr
Denis Hall of Electro Systems at Nelspruit. Again very little is
told or known about Mr Hall, allegedly the second husband
to the
first respondent. Again neither a marriage certificate nor a
divorce certificate relating to the alleged second marriage
of the
first respondent is available. Once more she has been called upon
to produce proof of both marriages.
8.3 The
first respondent married the applicant at Nelspruit in Mpumalanga on
28 March 1980. At that time she was 32 years old and
he was 37
years old. He was born on 18 May 1942. She brought her two sons
Craig and Timothy into the third marriage. The applicant
brought
the two boys up. Their surname was changed from Lachenicht to Buys
on 15 February 1982. The applicant states that he
was not a party
to the adoption application and that the first respondent found a
way of doing it all alone without his co-operation
or knowledge. In
1983 the couple officially adopted two children, namely Juanita and
Lourens. At that time the parties were living
at Barberton in
Mpumalanga. Ten years later cohabitation came to an end. The
applicant left the common home, 22 De Villiers Street,
Barberton and
settled at George at the Western Province. He took with him Juanita
and Lourens. He took a minibus and left the
rest of the assets with
the first respondent, among them were the following: The aforesaid
residential house, 5 rented flats, 5
undeveloped residential
properties and the household furniture. In 1993 she sued him for
divorce in Pretoria under case no 9422/1993
in the Transvaal
Provincial Division. In 1994 she sued him for maintenance. He was
then ordered to pay her R500 per month from
March 1994. In 1996 she
again filed for divorce. On this occasion she sued him in
Bloemfontein under case no 1557/1996 of the
Orange Free State
Provincial Division. This while another similar case was still
pending in the Transvaal Provincial Division.
The Bloemfontein case
dragged on for a considerable time. The fate of the Pretoria case
remained unclear to the applicant.
8.4 In
May 1996 the first respondent met a certain Mr Jacobus Johannes Van
Zyl, a provincial traffic inspector of Marquard. Shortly
afterwards
she sold her house and moved into Mr Van Zyl’s house where she
lived with him as husband and wife until about May
1997 when the
relationship broke down.
“
2.3 Hoewel
ek en die Applikant nooit enige huwelikseremonie deurloop het nie,
het ons tog verloof geraak. Ons het vir bykans ‘n
jaar as man en
vrou saamgewoon en was die bedoeling dan ook inderdaad dat ons op ‘n
stadium in die huwelik sou tree.”
“
4.3 Die
Applikant het nooit aan my openbaar dat sy ‘n getroude vrou is
nie. Indien ek bewus was van die feit dat sy ‘n getroude
was, sou
ek nooit toegelaat het dat sy by my huis ingetrek het nie. Ek sou
nooit aan haar verloof geraak het nie en daar sou nooit
enige sprake
van ‘n huwelik gewees het nie.”
Says
Mr JJ van Zyl in his sworn statement signed at Marquard on 6 June
2001. She now sues him under case number 293/1998 of Marquard
magistrate court for an amount of R44 000 in respect of money she
alleges she lent and advanced to him while she was living in
adultery with him - her marriage to the applicant was still
subsisting.
8.5 In
1998 shall I say on 30 May 1998 to be precise, the first respondent
married Mr Gert Johannes Muller at Paul Roux in the Free
State
vide
the marriage certificate on p 40 of the record. Mr Muller was born
on 17 February 1922. The marriage was in community of property.
He
is a wealthy farmer and a businessman of Lindley. When she entered
into this marriage with Mr Muller she was still legally
married to
Mr Buys of George. She did not tell Mr Muller she was still
someone’s wife.
8.6 In
1999, shall I say on 9 February 1999 to be precise, the first
respondent and the applicant signed a separation agreement
in terms
of clause 3 of the separation agreement the applicant is obliged to
contribute an amount of R700 per month from 1 March
1999 towards the
maintenance of the first respondent and that obligations shall
endure until the first respondent remarries, or
if a third party
assumes such duty, or until she dies or until the pension fund pays
out the proceeds of a specific policy. In
terms of clause 4 of the
separation agreement the first respondent acquired 40% of three
specific policies issued by Sanlam and
Old Mutual. The separation
agreement was incorporated in the court order which was given by
Pretorius AJ on 9 February 1999.
The applicant complied with this
court order until 3 October 2000. Soon afterwards he discovered
that the first respondent was
living with a third party, and that
she had in fact married the wealthy Mr Muller on 30 May 1998 while
she was still his wife in
law. He then took a unilateral decision
to withhold any further payments to first respondent in terms of the
court judgment.
8.7 In
2001 her purported marriage to Mr Muller began to crack. The
formal heading of Mr JJ van Zyl’s affidavit shows that the
first
respondent has instituted legal proceedings in 2001 against Mr
Muller under case number 1762/2001 of the Free State High
Court.
Still in the same year on 31 December 2001 thirteen months since the
applicant had stopped paying her maintenance, she
apparently
appeared in the Johannesburg Family Court where she obtained an
increased maintenance order of R1 200 per month with
effect from 31
December 2001 against the applicant but in his absence. The order
was then served on Sanlam, the applicant’s
pension was attached
and Sanlam directed to deposit the amount of R1 200 per month into
the bank account of first respondent 245308199
at Standard Bank (SA)
Limited Senekal in the Free State. It seems to me that Sanlam
complied with that court order three times
before these proceedings
were initiated. When the applicant became aware of this, he took
the necessary legal steps at once.
That then concludes the romantic
saga of the first respondent and all the known men she has loved
before but ended up suing them
all.
On
13 March 2002 the applicant launched this urgent application
ex
parte
.
I considered that the applicant had established a
prima
facie
right to the interim relief sought. It is that right which I am
now asked to protect further by a final order confirming the
rule
nisi
.
But the respondent opposes the application and contends that the
rule
nisi
has to be discharged. It is averred in the founding affidavit that
the first respondent made certain representations with fraudulent
intent in order to mislead and that such fraudulent representations
induced the applicant to enter into the separation agreement
and to
consent to a divorce order in terms of such an agreement. It is
also averred and contended on behalf of the applicant
that, but for
the fraud, on 9 February 1999 the court would not have made an
order of divorce in its present form. Annexed to
the founding
affidavit is the separation agreement signed by the parties which
recorded the applicant’s obligations to provide
regular
maintenance towards the respondent. It is further averred by the
applicant that during the settlement negotiations the
first
respondent represented to the applicant that she was an indigent
woman in a poor state of health, without any income or
any assets
or anyone to rely on for her daily necessities of subsistence other
than her sister and the applicant. The respondent
knew, it is
further alleged, that all the representations were not true;
moreover she knew the applicant was unaware of the true
state of
affairs; she knew the applicant was unlikely to agree to carry on
supporting her after the divorce if he knew the true
facts; she
knew he would not have signed the separation agreement in the
present form. In short she knew very well that the
true facts were
detrimental to her interest. With that knowledge in the forefront
of her mind she deliberately suppressed the
true facts, invented
false stories, sugarcoated them in order to conceal their true
colors and their bitter taste, thereby cunningly
induced her
adversary to sign the separation agreement so that she could
present it to the judge with the request that it be
made a binding
order of the court. In my view those settlement negotiations
lacked mutual
bona
fides
.
The separation agreement was underpinned by suppression of the
truth. Its presentation to the presiding judicial officer was
a
deceitful act. All these deliberate acts of deception boil down to
nothing more and nothing less than fraud perpetrated on
the court
itself.
The
first respondent concealed the true facts that she was living with
another man, as husband and wife, a wealthy man for that
matter,
that she was gainfully employed as a manageress of a furniture shop
belonging to the same rich man; that she owned properties
and that
she was the seller of exotic birds. The applicant lost his job in
1982 on the grounds of medical unfitness. Ever since
then he has
been on permanent but expensive medication. For two decades now he
has not been gainfully employed. Therefore he
has no steady source
of income other than his pension which he has been sharing with the
respondent until 3 October 2000. He
spends the bulk (± R2 000) of
his money on medications which is indispensable for his survival.
Although he is a member of
a medical aid society, his limit on
chronic medication is R8 000 per annum. This amount gets exhausted
in four months every
year. For the remaining eight months of the
year he depends on his modest pension of approximately R3 700. In
those circumstances
frank disclosure was clearly called for.
Vide
GOLLACH
AND GOMPERTS (PTY) LTD v UNIVERSAL MILLS & PRODUCE CO (PTY) LTD
AND OTHERS
1978(1) SA 914 (AD) at 924A-B per Miller JA. The respondent owed
the applicant a duty to disclose the true facts relevant to
her
need to be supported and the applicant’s ability to provide such
support. In the case of
MESKIN,
NO v ANGLO-AMERICAN CORPORATION OF SA LTD AND ANOTHER
1968(4) SA 793 (WLD) at 802H Jansen J said the following about
concealing the truth:
“
Cicero’s
own view is:
`The
fact is that merely holding one’s peace about a thing does not
constitute concealment, but concealment consists in trying
for your
own profit to keep others from finding out something you know, when
it is for their interest to know it.’ ”
Jansen
J at p 802A of the same case said the following about the conduct of
the contracting parties:
“
It
is now accepted that all contracts are
bonae
fidei
(some are even said to be
uberrimae
fidei
).
This involves good faith (
bona
fides
)
as a criterion in interpreting a contract (
Wessels
,
op
cit
,
para 1976) and in evaluating the conduct of the parties both in
respect of its performance (
Wessels
,
para 1997) and its antecedent negotiation. Where a contract is
concluded the law expressly invokes the dictates of good faith,
and
conduct inconsistent with those dictates may in appropriate
circumstances be considered to be fraud.”
I
associate myself with these views expressed in the two passages.
Mr
Cronje, counsel for the first respondent, argued that the applicant
was still obliged to support the respondent in terms of
the
challenged provisions of the separation agreement seeing that the
marriage between the respondent and Mr Muller was null
and void.
In developing that argument he made the submission that the
criminal prosecution of the respondent and her subsequent
conviction for bigamy in the Lindley magistrate court did not in
any way adversely affect her right to be supported by the applicant
in terms of the separation agreement which was confirmed by the
court order thereby granting her the strongest right to enforce
the
provisions thereof. I have no hesitation in saying there is no
foundation whatsoever in this submission. It is not the
applicant’s case that there was a legal duty created by a valid
bond of marriage on the part of Mr Muller to support the first
respondent as his lawful spouse. His case is that as a matter of
fact she was staying with a third party, that they were living
together as husband and wife; that the third party was a man of
great substance; that she was gainfully employed; that she had
a
business venture in her own right and that in the circumstances she
had resources which exceeded his humble resources by far.
Now,
there are cardinal requisites for the right to claim support.
Boberg:
LAW OF PERSONS AND THE FAMILY
2
nd
edition on p 233-234 writes:
“
The
law imposes a duty upon one person to support another when three
requirements are satisfied:
(a) the
person claiming support must be unable to support himself or
herself;
(b) the
person from whom support is claimed must be able to support the
claimant; and
(c) the
relationship between the parties must be such as to create a legal
duty of support between them.”
It
is my
prima
facie
view that
in
casu
none of the requisites has been established. As regards the first
two requisites the respondent concealed the true facts. Her
motive
for concealing them is obvious now. The truthful disclosure would
have revealed that she was not an indigent poor, jobless,
husbandless woman who needed to be supported by a jobless, sickly
pensioner. As regards the third requisite it has become
increasingly
doubtful whether a valid marriage really subsists
between the applicant and the first respondent. Firstly on 9
February 1999 she
deceived Mr Buys - she did not tell him she was
already married. Secondly, on 30 May 1998 she deceived Mr Muller -
she did not
tell him she was still married. Instead she tied a
marital knot with him. Thirdly, in May 1996 she deceived Mr Van Zyl
- she
did not tell him she was still another man’s wife. Instead
she promised to marry him. She became engaged to him.
What
can convince any reasonable person in these circumstances to
believe that she did not deceive Mr Buys at Nelspruit on 28
March
1980 when she told him there were no legal hassles or impediments
and that she was free to marry? Despite the applicant’s
specific
requests over the years, she has failed to produce her divorce
certificate relating to Mr Lachenicht who died on 1 November
1981,
hardly two years after her marriage to the applicant. She provided
proof of mr Lachenicht’s death. But for no apparent
reason she
cannot produce proof that she was divorced from him. Mr
Lachenicht’s death certificate shows that he was still
a married
man at the time of his death at Pinetown on 1 November 1981. The
applicant’s suspicion that the first respondent
might have still
been married to Mr Lachenicht or Mr Hall at the time she married
him on 28 March 1980, is not without substance.
It is
understandable should the applicant’s private investigation
confirm his suspicions, it would meant that his marriage
to the
first respondent was null and void. The effect thereof would be
that there was never a valid relationship between the
parties which
imposed a legal duty on the applicant to support the first
respondent. Should such fact be established, it would
constitute
another dimension of fraud perpetrated on the applicant and the
marriage officer at Nelspruit. The further implication
may be that
the marriage the first respondent entered into subsequent to the
death of Mr Lachenicht was valid because her marriage
to Mr
Lachenicht would have been dissolved by his death.
The
nature of the process before me is in essence not final in
substance it is an interim interdict. An interim interdict was
defined as a court process which temporarily preserves or restores
the
status
quo
between the litigants to what it was before an act complained of
pending the determination of their rights. The granting of
an
interim process does not entail a final determination of the
competing rights and does not affect their final determination.
Vide
Joubert
: THE LAW OF SOUTH AFRICA
,
first re-issue vol 11 paragraph 314;
APLENI
v MINISTER OF LAW AND ORDER AND OTHERS
1989(1) SA 193 AD at 201A-B. The grant of an interim interdict
does not amount to any finding on the facts. The making of such
findings is a prerogative reserved for the trial court hearing the
main action.
There
are four requisites which the applicant has to prove in order to
establish a right to claim relief in the nature of an interim
interdict namely:
15.1 that
the applicant has a
prima
facie
right;
15.2 that
the applicant has a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm
to that right;
15.3 that
the balance of convenience favours the granting of an interim
interdict;
15.4 that
the applicant has no other satisfactory remedy besides the interim
relief sought.
Vide
SETLOGELO
v SETLOGELO
1914 AD 221
on 227 and
ERIKSON
MOTORS (WELKOM) LTD v PROTEA MOTORS WARRENTON
1973(3) SA 685 (AD).
The
applicant was
prima
facie
defrauded by the respondent. As we have seen in terms of our
substantive law he has the right to have the case reopened and
the
judgment set aside if he can show that but for the fraud the court
would have given a judgment different from the one it
was induced
to give had the true facts been placed before it. Before he signed
the separation agreement, the applicant had the
right to know the
truth. But the first respondent fraudulently suppressed the truth
concerning her resources. The frank disclosure
of the correct
information was in the interest of the applicant. The applicant
signed the separation agreement in the mistaken
but
bona
fide
belief that the first respondent acted in good faith during the
negotiation. However, subsequent developments revealed that
there
were no
bona
fides
on the part of the first respondent. She suppressed the truth on
purpose. She exploited the applicant’s ignorance of the
truth,
violated his right to know and presented perjured evidence to the
court. In my view the applicant has proved the facts
that he has a
prima
facie
right in terms of substantive law for the relief he seeks.
Objectively
speaking, any reasonable man, confronted by the facts confronting
the applicant, would be apprehensive that if the
first respondent
continues taking away his modest pension money in terms of a
judgment obtained by fraud, it will cause him irreparable
harm.
The first respondent obtained an increased maintenance order of R1
200 per month from 31 December 2001 issued by the Johannesburg
Family Court. She obtained the order in somewhat dubious
circumstances against the applicant in his absence. The applicant
stated that he was unaware of those proceedings. The first
respondent alleges that she is penniless at present. Now, it is
clear that if she is truthful on this point, she will not be able
to make good the applicant’s loss if the interim relief is
refused but the ultimate relief is eventually granted in the main
action. It is significant to bear in mind that the applicant
was
medically declared unfit to work in 1982. Since then he has been
on permanent medication. It is an expensive kind of medicine.
But
it is indispensable to him for his survival. He fears he will die
if he stops taking the prescribed medication. In my
opinion his
fear for his life is well-grounded. His hardship if the interim
relief is not granted, will be far worse than the
hardship of the
first respondent if it is granted.
I
have examined the facts of this case. It is my considered opinion
that the applicant has strong prospects of success in the
main
action. Moreover, the first respondent was able to do without any
support from the applicant from November 2000 until November
2001.
The applicant is a pensioner, since he receives this pension money
from the employer’s disability pension scheme he
does not qualify
for the state welfare grant. If the first respondent is medically
incapable of doing any work now, she will
qualify for a state
welfare grant, which can alleviate her problem pending the outcome
of the main action. By hook or by crook
she pocketed a lion’s
share of the joint estate, cashed cheques in excess of R27 300
which were drawn in favour of the applicant
and also collected
rental from the tenants for her own exclusive benefit. Her
ridiculous claim that a certain magistrate authorised
her to
exchange those cheques only shows that she has a propensity for
fraudulent acts. While she was living in the fool’s
paradise
with Mr Muller she did not care about the support from the
applicant. Now that that relationship also has gone sour,
she has
turned to the applicant. She now wants the court to believe that
she is this poor, needy, sickly and penniless woman.
It seems to
me the applicant will suffer greater prejudice if the interim
relief is not granted than the first respondent will
if it is
granted. I therefore hold that the balance of convenience favours
the applicant.
Counsel
for the respondent argued that the applicant’s proper remedy was
limited to taking the order of the Johannesburg Family
Court on
review or appeal. He submitted that it was not open to him to seek
relief from this Court. This submission holds no
water. The
appellant was within his right to approach this Court. The
remedies provided for in the
Maintenance Act No 99 of 1998
have not
taken away the applicant’s right to seek relief in this Court.
After all it is this Court which was deceived. I
can see no other
alternative remedy of preserving the
status
quo
other than the remedy he now seeks
vide
PIETERMARITZBURG
CITY COUNCIL v ROAD TRANSPORTATION BOARD
1959(2) SA 758 (NPD) at 773A-B per Fannin J.
The
applicant has in my view established all the requirements of an
interim interdict. Accordingly the rule
nisi
is confirmed pending the final decision of the main action already
commenced by the applicant against the first respondent.
As
regards costs I see no reason to depart form what is usual in cases
of this nature. Therefor I order that the question of
costs in
this application be reserved for the decision of the trial court.
_________________
MH
RAMPAI, J
On
behalf of the Applicant : Adv JY Claasen
Instructed
by
Hechter
Attorneys
On
behalf of the First Respondent : Adv PR Cronjé
Instructed
by
UV
Legal aid
/Jacobs