T.S.Y v L.E.Y (2022/3952) [2026] ZAGPJHC 34 (26 January 2026)

70 Reportability

Brief Summary

Divorce — Separation of issues — Application for separation of divorce decree from division of joint estate — Parties married in community of property — Court finding that dissolution of marriage inseparable from division of joint estate — TSY's application for divorce without addressing proprietary claims deemed inconceivable — Convenience and conceptual distinctness not established — Application dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an interlocutory application in pending divorce proceedings for an order directing a separation of issues. The applicant (the husband, TSY) sought to have the question of the dissolution of the marriage (the decree of divorce) determined separately and in advance of the questions concerning the proprietary consequences of the divorce. The respondent (the wife, LEY) opposed that separation in circumstances where the marriage was in community of property.


The parties were married to each other in community of property and, although they were agreed that the marriage had irretrievably broken down, they were in dispute about the financial and proprietary consequences of the divorce, including maintenance and the mechanism for division of the joint estate.


Procedurally, the divorce action had progressed to the stage where pleadings had closed and the parties had made discovery. A further dispute arose concerning whether TSY was obliged to discover documentation relating to trusts associated with him, which LEY suggested could be relevant to the joint estate. Against that background, and after the divorce action had stalled, TSY launched the present application seeking to decouple the divorce decree from the unresolved proprietary issues.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was therefore whether, in a divorce arising from a marriage in community of property, the court could (and should) order that the divorce decree be granted first, leaving issues relating to the division of the joint estate and maintenance to be determined later.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that TSY and LEY married in community of property on 27 July 1989 and had two children, who were adults at the time of the application. The parties lived together as spouses for 22 years and separated in 2011. TSY thereafter lived with a new domestic partner, AS, from 2011, and had two children with AS.


It was also not in dispute that TSY only instituted divorce proceedings much later, in February 2022. In her plea, LEY admitted the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage and attributed it largely to TSY’s alleged extra-marital affairs. LEY delivered a counterclaim in which she sought maintenance of R150 000 per month (with index-linked annual adjustment) and also sought the appointment of a receiver and liquidator to divide the joint estate. TSY, in turn, denied that LEY was entitled to maintenance and opposed the appointment of a receiver and liquidator.


After pleadings closed and discovery was made, LEY’s attorney complained (in August 2024) that TSY’s discovery was incomplete, on the basis that TSY should discover documentation relating to various trusts under his control or from which he benefited. LEY’s position, as reflected in the papers, was that such trusts might be relevant because they could be part of (or otherwise materially connected to) the joint estate. TSY disputed this, contending that the trusts did not form part of the joint estate and were irrelevant to the divorce issues as framed. TSY consequently refused to disclose the demanded documentation. The court recorded that LEY had not yet taken steps to compel the production of those documents.


By October 2024, the divorce action had reached a point of practical standstill. TSY then brought the present application seeking a separation of issues, proposing that the court grant an unopposed decree of divorce (since irretrievable breakdown was admitted), while postponing determination of maintenance and the division of the joint estate to a later stage.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the competence and convenience of separating issues in trial proceedings in circumstances where the parties were married in community of property.


The court was required to determine, first, whether the issues TSY sought to separate were conceptually distinct in the relevant legal sense—specifically, whether the dissolution of a marriage in community of property could be treated as conceptually separable from the division of the joint estate that exists by operation of law.


Second, the court had to determine whether such a separation would be convenient, which required a value-laden procedural assessment (rather than the determination of a pure question of fact). The dispute thus involved the application of procedural principles to the particular matrimonial property regime and litigation context, including an assessment of foreseeable prejudice and inefficiency.


Although maintenance featured in the background, the immediate issue was not the merits of a maintenance claim, but whether granting a divorce decree first would create procedural or substantive uncertainty, including (as raised in argument) the potential effect on interim maintenance claims if the marriage were dissolved before proprietary matters were resolved.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the application from the established premise that convenience is the overriding consideration in an application for separation of issues. It identified that separation is generally appropriate only where issues are conceptually distinct and can be determined without substantial overlap of evidence, thereby avoiding repeated testimony and duplicative credibility findings. In assessing convenience, the court adopted the approach that once conceptual separability and limited evidential overlap are established, the court must weigh the advantages of separation against the disadvantages, granting separation where the balance favours it, with reference to S v Malinde 1990 (1) SA 57 (A).


On conceptual separability, the court emphasised the distinctive legal nature of marriage in community of property. It distinguished the authorities relied upon by TSY’s counsel on the basis that they concerned marriages out of community of property, where each spouse’s estate remains separate and a divorce decree can be granted without directly affecting ownership of the other spouse’s assets. The court further noted that, even where a marriage out of community of property gives rise to an accrual claim, that claim is typically a personal right to payment capable of later quantification, which lends itself to separation from the divorce decree.


By contrast, the court reasoned that a marriage in community of property entails that there are not two estates but one joint estate, in which each spouse holds an undivided half share arising only by virtue of the marriage. Because the joint estate exists as a legal consequence of the marriage, the court considered there to be “no meaningful sense” in which the joint estate can survive the granting of a divorce decree without at least addressing how the joint estate is to be dealt with upon dissolution. The court accepted that a liquidator could be appointed to administer division, but stressed that TSY’s proposed separation sought a divorce decree without anything being said about dissolution or management of the joint estate, while TSY simultaneously opposed appointment of a receiver and liquidator. That combination led the court to conclude that the requested separation was inconceivable within the logic of community of property.


The court addressed reliance on TD v LD [2024] ZAGPJHC 751 (12 August 2024), where the concept of a “strike date” was invoked. It held that this reasoning was inapplicable because TD concerned a marriage out of community of property with an outstanding accrual valuation dispute, where the claim was a personal monetary claim rather than a claim involving co-ownership of a single estate. In the present matter, each party’s claim was characterised as a claim to ownership of half of “nearly everything the other has”, making the “strike date” notion unsuitable because the core issue was not merely valuation, but division of co-owned assets.


The court also considered Gillespie v Gillespie (case no. 6133/05, 1 December 2005), concluding it did not support TSY’s case. The court interpreted Gillespie as permitting separation between (on the one hand) the decree of divorce and appointment of a liquidator to divide the joint estate and (on the other hand) outstanding maintenance issues. That was materially different from TSY’s request, which sought to sever the divorce decree from the question of what becomes of the joint estate, while opposing the appointment of a liquidator. Gillespie was therefore not authority for the separability TSY advanced.


Having concluded that dissolution and division were not meaningfully separable in this context, the court nevertheless went on to address convenience, noting that it could find no case where dissolution of a marriage in community of property had been separated from division of the joint estate, and expressing the view that this absence likely reflected the tacit acceptance that such a separation makes little practical sense.


In evaluating convenience on the facts, the court was not persuaded that separation would alleviate TSY’s difficulties. TSY’s desire to “get on with his life” and avoid being “shackled to a dead marriage” (with reference to NK v KM 2019 (3) SA 571 (GJ)) did not, in the court’s assessment, translate into procedural advantage if the joint estate remained unresolved. The court reasoned that if TSY remarried before the division of the joint estate was determined, he would carry an encumbered estate into the new relationship, with foreseeable complications for any future proprietary regime.


The court further considered the potential prejudice to LEY. It regarded as problematic the uncertainty about whether interim maintenance could survive dissolution of the marriage, noting an absence of unanimity in the case law. It contrasted decisions holding that interim maintenance claims do not survive divorce—NK v KM 2019 (3) SA 571 (GJ), Gunston v Gunston 1976 (1) SA 179 (W), Beckley v Beckley (case number 01098/2015, 6 May 2015), and Beinstein v Beinstein 1965 (4) 449 (T)—with decisions suggesting the contrary, including Gillespie v Gillespie (case no. 6133/05, 1 December 2005) and TD v LD [2024] ZAGPJHC 751 (12 August 2024). The court held that it was not “convenient” to cast LEY’s rights into doubt, especially where the separation offered no clear compensating benefit.


The court also weighed the ongoing dispute about trust-related disclosure. While noting TSY’s complaint that LEY had not joined trusts or compelled discovery, the court considered that granting a divorce decree before the assets in the joint estate had been identified and valued, or before a liquidator had been appointed, could prejudice LEY’s ability to pursue such relief. The court reasoned that TSY appeared to be better resourced, and that a divorce decree granted before proper disclosure could diminish the incentives for full transparency, potentially enabling litigation tactics that could exhaust LEY’s capacity to obtain adequate post-divorce disclosure.


Finally, the court rejected TSY’s expressed concern that LEY could delay the divorce indefinitely, observing that procedural mechanisms exist to move litigation forward, including compelling attendance at pre-trial procedures, setting the matter down, and seeking orders that enforce litigation compliance.


5. Outcome and Relief


On the reasoning set out in the provided extract, the court concluded that the issue of dissolving a marriage in community of property is not meaningfully separable from the division of the joint estate, and that, in any event, ordering such a separation would be inconvenient and potentially prejudicial, particularly to LEY.


The excerpt provided does not include the formal order paragraph. However, the court’s analysis culminated in the conclusion that TSY’s application for separation of issues could not succeed on both conceptual separability and convenience.


No costs order is reflected in the provided text.


Cases Cited


Estate Sayle v Commissioner for Inland Revenue 1945 AD 388.


De Wet NO v Jurgens 1973 SA 38 (A).


S v Malinde 1990 (1) SA 57 (A).


TD v LD [2024] ZAGPJHC 751 (12 August 2024).


Gillespie v Gillespie (case no. 6133/05, 1 December 2005).


NK v KM 2019 (3) SA 571 (GJ).


Gunston v Gunston 1976 (1) SA 179 (W).


Beckley v Beckley (case number 01098/2015, 6 May 2015).


Beinstein v Beinstein 1965 (4) 449 (T).


Legislation Cited


No legislation is cited in the provided extract.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court are cited in the provided extract.


Held


The court held that, where parties are married in community of property, the dissolution of the marriage is legally and conceptually bound up with the existence and termination of a single joint estate in which both spouses hold undivided shares. As a result, the decree of divorce is not meaningfully separable from determining (or at least providing for) the manner in which the joint estate will be divided.


The court further held that, even apart from conceptual inseparability, the proposed separation was not shown to be convenient, because it would leave unresolved the proprietary consequences of the divorce, generate uncertainty (including regarding interim maintenance), and risk prejudice in the context of ongoing disputes about disclosure and identification of assets potentially relevant to the joint estate.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that convenience is the overriding consideration when a court is asked to order a separation of issues. For separation to be appropriate, the issues must be conceptually distinct and capable of being determined with little or no overlap in evidence, thereby avoiding duplication of testimony and repeated credibility assessments. Once conceptual separability and limited overlap are established, the court weighs the advantages of separation against its disadvantages, granting separation only when the balance favours it.


The judgment further applied the principle that the proprietary consequences of a marriage in community of property are not merely ancillary financial consequences, but part of the legal structure of the marriage itself, because the marriage creates a single joint estate in which spouses have undivided co-ownership by operation of law. On this approach, dissolution of such a marriage inherently implicates the termination and division of that co-ownership, limiting the procedural utility (and potentially the competence) of divorcing the parties while leaving the joint estate entirely unaddressed.


The court also treated as relevant, for the convenience enquiry, that there is divergent authority on whether claims for interim maintenance can survive the granting of a divorce decree, and that a separation order which introduces uncertainty or prejudice in that respect may be procedurally inappropriate where no countervailing benefit is demonstrated.

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Estate Sayle v Commissioner for Inland Revenue 1945 AD 388 at 395 to 396
and De Wet NO v Jurgens 1973 SA 38 (A) at 46D-H). Accordingly, a marriage
in community of property is a particularly intimate union, which, depending on
the value and complexity of the joint estate, may only be dissolved with some
difficulty.
The parties and their marriage
2 The applicant, TSY, married the respondent, LEY, in community of property
on 27 July 1989. The parties had two children, both of whom are now adults.
They lived together as husband and wife for 22 years. In 2011, TSY and LEY
separated, but TSY did not sue LEY for divorce until February 2022. In her
plea, LEY admitted that the marriage had irretrievably broken down – largely,
she claimed, as a result of what she referred to as TSY’s “various extra-marital
affairs”. LEY counter-claimed for maintenance in the sum of R150 000 per
month, which was to be index-linked and adjusted accordingly each year. She
also sought the appointment of a receiver and liquidator to divide the joint
estate. In his plea to LEY’s counter-claim TSY denied that LEY was entitled to
any maintenance, and opposed the appointment of a receiver and liquidator.
3 Pleadings then closed, and each party made discovery. On 24 August 2024,
LEY’s attorney complained that TSY’s discovery was incomplete, because, it
was alleged, TSY is obliged to discover documents relating to various trusts
under his control or of which he is a beneficiary. The suggestion appears to
have been that some or all of those trusts form part of the joint estate. TSY
denies that any of the trusts form part of the joint estate. He also denies that
their value and nature are relevant to the issues in the divorce action, and has

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steadfastly refused to disclose the documents LEY demands. LEY has not yet
taken steps to compel the production of the documents. The parties have
apparently explored the possibility of settling the divorce action, but have been
unable to come to an agreement. Since October 2024, the divorce action has
been at a standstill.
The separation of issues
4 TSY has lived with his current domestic partner, AS, since 2011. TSY has two
children with AS, and says he wishes to marry her. To this end, TSY now
applies to me for a separation of issues in the divorce action. TSY proposes
that the dissolution of his marriage to LEY be separated from the proprietary
consequences of the divorce. Since LEY and TSY agree that a decree of
divorce should be granted, TSY says there is no reason why such a decree
may not be granted unopposed, with LEY’s claims for maintenance a nd the
division of the joint estate being postponed for later determination.
5 Convenience is the overriding consideration in any application to separate the
issues arising in a trial action. To be capable of convenient separation, the
issues to be separated must be conceptually distinct. They must also generally
be capable of determination without hearing evidence that will later have to be
repeated in relation to other triable issues. It is also desirable that a repetition
of witnesses is avoided, especially if credibility findings will have to be made
in relation to particular witnesses who may have to testify more than once in
respect of different issues.
6 Once a court is satisfied that the issues sought to be isolated for separate
determination are conceptually distinct from those arising in the rest of the

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action, and that there will be little or no overlapping evidence required to hear
them, the question is whether there is some advantage to be had in ordering
a separation which is not outweighed by any obvious or foreseeable
disadvantage. If the advantages outweigh the disadvantages, the court will
generally order the separation (see S v Malinde 1990 (1) SA 57 (A) at 68C–
E).
Conceptual separability
7 At the outset of the argument before me, I asked Ms. Woodward, who
appeared for TSY, whether a marriage in community of property is, legally
speaking, conceptually separate from the union of estates it embodies. Ms.
Woodward submitted that it is. She adverted to several cases in which the
prayer for a decree of divorce has been separated from prayers for
maintenance and the division of assets, with the effect that the divorce
proceeded on an unopposed basis and the parties’ monetary and proprietary
claims stood over for later determination.
8 The problem with Ms. Woodward’s reliance on each of those cases was that
they all dealt with the dissolution of marriages out of community of property.
In other words, the marriage in each case did not involve the mingling of the
spouses’ estates. It followed that a decree of divorce could be granted without
any direct impact on either party’s estate. Each party took out of the marriage
the assets they owned at the point of divorce. In cases where the matrimonial
property regime was subject to an accrual claim, that claim was conceptually
separable from the claim for divorce, since it embodied no more than a

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personal right to payment of half the difference between the nett increase in
the value of each spouse’s estate during the marriage.
9 Marriages in community of property are different, precisely because there are
not two estates involved but one. Moreover, once married, each party owns
an undivided share in that estate by operation of law. That ownership right
arises because, and only because, the parties are married in community of
property. There is accordingly no meaningful sense in which the joint
matrimonial estate can survive a decree of divorce. Since each party owns an
undivided half-share in the estate, it is necessary to determine how the estate
is to be divided before the parties can be divorced. In other words, the fusion
of the parties’ estates is conceptually inseparable from the marriage itself.
10 It is of course possible to place the joint estate in the hands of a liquidator, and
to say that the estate will be divided in the manner that the liquidator
determines, subject to whatever guidance the law or a court may provide. But
what TSY wants is a divorce without anything at all being said about the
dissolution of the joint estate. That, it seems to me, is inconceivable. A
marriage in community of property entails the formation of one joint estate.
Likewise, the dissolution of such a marriage entails the division of that estate.
11 Taking her cue from the decision in TD v LD [2024] ZAGPJHC 751 (12 August
2024), Ms. Woodward submitted that this problem is more apparent than real.
Ms. Woodward argued that the only effect of a decree of divorce in this case
would be to provide what was referred to in TD as a “strike date” (see TD,
paragraph 20), by reference to which the value of the joint estate can be
calculated and then later divided. In other words, the decree of divorce would

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freeze each party’s claim against the other for a portion of the value of the joint
estate as at the date of divorce.
12 This submission overlooks the fact that in TD the main outstanding issue
between the parties was the value of the accrual in a marriage out of
community of property. The claim for the value of the accrual could be
determined later, since it was no more than a personal right to payment of a
sum of money, rather than a claim for the division of a joint estate. In TD, the
parties’ estates had been kept separate notwithstanding their marriage.
Accordingly, there was no co-ownership of assets – at least not by virtue of
the marriage. This case is different. As things stand, each party owns half of
one undivided estate. Their claim is neither personal nor exclusively monetary
in nature. It is to ownership of half of nearly everything the other has. The
concept of a “strike date” is inapplicable, since the problem is not merely the
valuation of the estate, but the division of the parties’ joint ownership of it.
13 In her post-hearing submissions, Ms. Woodward relied upon the decision of
this court in Gillespie v Gillespie (case no. 6133/05, 1 December 2005)
(“Gillespie”). But that case does not assist TSY. In that matter, Van Oosten J,
in dealing with the dissolution of a marriage in community of property,
separated prayers for a decree of divorce and division of the joint estate, on
the one hand, from prayers for rehabilitative maintenance, on the other. The
plaintiff was granted leave to apply for a decree of divorce and the
appointment of a liquidator and receiver to divide the joint estate, while
postponing the defendant’s maintenance claims. As I have already pointed
out, that is not the separation TSY seeks here. TSY wishes to separate his

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prayer for the decree of divorce from the question of what happens to the joint
estate on divorce. He expressly opposes the appointment of a receiver and
liquidator. Gillespie is accordingly not authority for the proposition that the
question of the dissolution of a marriage in community property can be
separated from the question of the division of the joint estate.
14 It follows that the issue of the dissolution of the marriage in this case is not
meaningfully separable from the issue of the division of the joint estate.
Convenience
15 Despite the assistance of counsel, I have not been able to find a case in which
the dissolution of a marriage in community of property has been separated
from the division of the joint estate. Nor have I found a case in which it has
expressly been held that such a separation is impossible. In my view, this is
at least partly because it has been tacitly accepted that it makes no sense to
order such a separation. But it is also because there are few if any conceivable
circumstances in which such a separation would be convenient in the required
sense.
16 This case provides a good example of the inconvenience to the both parties
that such an order would cause. TSY says that he wishes to get on with his
life. He does not, he says, wish to be “shackled to a dead marriage” (NK v KM
2019 (3) SA 571 (GJ) (“NK”) at paragraph 10). He fears that LEY is dragging
her feet in the divorce proceedings, and foresees many painful months or
years of litigation over the division of the joint estate.

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17 While it is possible to muster a degree of sympathy for that position, I cannot
see how separating the decree of divorce from the division of the joint estate
would assist TSY with what he believes is his predicament. Assuming that it
were possible to divorce the parties without dividing the joint estate, the
question of exactly what form that division should take would continue to haunt
TSY. There can be no question, in the absence of the appointment of a
receiver and liquidator, of LEY’s ownership of half of TSY’s assets simply
coming to an end on divorce – at least not without some sense of which assets
presently in the joint estate the parties will be allowed to retain, or of the
monetary value to which their co-ownership rights should be liquidated. If TSY
chooses to marry AS before that question is settled, he will take an
encumbered estate into his new marriage. It is hard to foresee what effect that
encumbrance might have on the new marriage or on any joint estate or accrual
that new marriage might involve, but I am sure that nothing good will come of
it. The problems for all concerned are likely to multiply as time goes on.
18 The likely inconvenience to LEY is even greater. LEY has yet to apply for
interim maintenance pending the resolution of the divorce action. She may
never do so. But she is increasingly likely to do so the longer the divorce action
takes to resolve. Ms. Woodward urged me to find that it is competent to
preserve LEY’s right to apply for interim maintenance even after the decree of
divorce is granted. But there is no unanimity on that point in the applicable
case law (contrast, for example, the decisions in NK, Gunston v Gunston 1976
(1) SA 179 (W), Beckley v Beckley (case number 01098/2015, 6 May 2015)
and Beinstein v Beinstein 1965 (4) 449 (T), all of which decide that a claim for
interim maintenance cannot survive the dissolution of a marriage, with the

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decisions in Gillespie and TD, which say otherwise). I do not think it can be
“convenient” in the relevant sense to cast LEY’s rights into such doubt,
especially where there is no concomitant upside for either party in my doing
so.
19 There is, in addition, the question whether LEY will ultimately succeed in
proving that TSY’s various trusts should form part of the joint estate. TSY quite
reasonably complains that LEY has taken no steps to join the trusts or compel
discovery of documents relating to them. But I do not think it would be
appropriate to prejudice LEY’s right to seek that relief by allowing the divorce
to go ahead before the assets in the joint estate have been identified and
valued, or before a receiver and liquidator has been appointed to do so. It
seems clear on the papers that TSY is the better-resourced of the two parties,
and is able to litigate more extensively than LEY. His only real incentive to
disclose his true worth is to obtain a decree of divorce. If a decree of divorce
is granted before the contents and value of the joint estate are known, there
is no reason to believe that TSY will not simply deploy his litigious firepower
to exhaust LEY’s capacity to ensure adequate post-divorce disclosure.
20 TSY worries that LEY will simply exhaust him by delaying the resolution of the
divorce action indefinitely. But that is an unrealistic concern. There are
numerous procedural mechanisms available to hurry the divorce action along.
LEY’s attendance at a pre-trial conference may be compelled. The divorce
action may be set down. LEY’s defence and counter-claim may be struck out
unless she complies with the various obligations placed on a party in making
a case ready for trial. Ms. Woodward freely conceded that none of this has