Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Ex-wife owed R3m arrears 29 years after divorce

- ZELDA VENTER zelda.venter@inl.co.za

THE Supreme Court of Appeal has confirmed that maintenanc­e orders lapse after 30 years only, if they’re not altered.

The result of the order is that a husband has to pay maintenanc­e arrears, 29 years after he initially got divorced. In the case of Simon Arcus, the arrears run into more than R3 million.

While Arcus did not dispute the fact that he was in arrears, he said the maintenanc­e order he agreed to when he and his wife Jill divorced in 1993 had lapsed after three years.

Under the agreement, Simon had to pay Jill monthly maintenanc­e until she died or remarried. He also had to pay maintenanc­e towards his two children until they became self-supportive. They became self-supportive in 2002 and 2005 respective­ly.

Although her husband failed to pay the maintenanc­e stipulated in the agreement, Jill did not take steps to recover the arrears, until December 2018, when she instructed her attorneys to send a letter of demand to her former husband.

Notwithsta­nding the demand, he failed to pay the arrears but commenced paying the monthly maintenanc­e from only January 2019.

A few months later, he lodged an applicatio­n in the maintenanc­e court for the retrospect­ive discharge of his maintenanc­e obligation­s. That applicatio­n is pending.

Jill had, meanwhile, instructed her lawyers to issue a writ of execution against her former husband, to have his assets sold so that she could recover the R3.5 million she believed he owed her.

Subsequent­ly, Simon turned to the Western Cape High Court, where he asked for a stay of the writ of execution. He also applied for an order declaring that his maintenanc­e obligation­s had lapsed or expired.

The Western Cape High Court ruled against him. It found that an order for maintenanc­e was not an ordinary debt under the Prescripti­on Act. A maintenanc­e order was in fact a judgment debt that lapsed after 30 years.

Simon then turned to the appeal court.

He said that maintenanc­e orders expired within three years if they were not in the meantime altered or changed. According to his reasoning, a maintenanc­e order could not constitute a final judgment as the orders could be changed from time to time.

Thus, he reasoned, debts that arise from maintenanc­e orders could not be regarded as “judgment debts”.

The majority judgment (three judges), written by Acting Justice John Smith, found that a maintenanc­e order had the same legal consequenc­e that flowed from an order made in a civil action.

It was said that a maintenanc­e order fixed the obligation­s of the judgment debtor until such time as it was discharged or varied on new facts. Thus, it remained in place for 30 years – even if payment is not enforced in the meantime.

While all five justices of the Supreme Court of Appeal came to the same conclusion, two of them wrote a separate, concurring judgment, citing other reasons as well as to why maintenanc­e orders remained in place for 30 years.

They reasoned that if the husband’s reasoning that these judgments lapsed within three years if they were not enforced, was to be accepted, it would perpetuate the hardships suffered by the most vulnerable groups in society – women and children.

This, they reasoned, was so because at the core, the Maintenanc­e Act was to provide for a fair recovery of maintenanc­e money and to avoid failures to enforce maintenanc­e orders.

Justice Baratang Mocumie and Acting Justice Anna Kgoele said if the husband’s reasoning was accepted, it would “definitely cause hardship to the maintenanc­e creditors as they will be compelled to approach the courts every three years to enforce their claims to avoid prescripti­on.”

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