Key Points 

  • High Court dismisses appeal, upholding a R222 197.22 child maintenance order. 
  • Subpoena for income verification ruled lawful despite procedural objections. 
  • Judgment reinforces financial transparency and children’s rights in support disputes.  

A father’s appeal to overturn a maintenance order amounting to R222 197.22 has been dismissed. On 19 June 2025, Judge JD Lekhuleni of the Western Cape High Court also affirmed a subpoena issued to obtain records of the income of the applicant. 

The applicant, SP, and the respondent, SB, were married and have two children aged 15 and 19 respectively. The children are staying with the mother. They were divorced by the same court on 20 August 2010, and their decree of divorce incorporated a maintenance order for the maintenance of their two children.  

They were involved in a trial over a maintenance dispute of their children in the Cape Town Magistrates Court. In that case, the father launched a substitution application in respect of the maintenance payable for the minor children. The wife opposed the application. 

Cost of care and dispute over affordability 

The maintenance proceedings endured several days, culminating in an order granted on 14 February 2025. In addition to medical aid and other related costs, the maintenance court ordered the applicant to pay a cash component of maintenance to the first respondent in the sum of R172 188.63 towards the tuition cost of their major child from 26 March 2025 into the first respondent’s bank account.  

The court also ordered the father to pay R20 906.14 towards the yearly school fees of their minor child. The total amount that the applicant had to pay as maintenance for his two children as of 26 March 2025 was a total sum of R222 197.22. 

After the maintenance order was granted, the applicant brought an urgent application in court to suspend the implementation of the court order granted by the maintenance court. He averred that the order granted by the maintenance court was almost double his net salary and that he could not afford to pay it. 

The applicant sought an order to have the maintenance order suspended pending the outcome of an appeal against that order. He also prayed for an interim maintenance order to be granted to provide for the children’s interim maintenance. 

Subpoena dispute and judgment focus on transparency 

Claiming financial distress, SP challenged the legitimacy of a subpoena duces tecum served by SB to his employer, the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa, seeking verification of his declared income. 

In his application, SP argued that the subpoena was procedurally flawed and thus invalid, particularly within motion proceedings. This argument was firmly rejected by the High Court. The judge found the subpoena both lawful and necessary, given SP’s lack of transparency about his financial capacity. 

SB, acting without legal representation, contended that the subpoena was critical to assessing SP’s actual earnings, asserting that his declarations to the court did not reflect his true financial position. She submitted that the information was essential for the court to make a fair determination concerning the financial support owed to their children. 

Judge Lekhuleni concurred, finding that the children’s best interests could not be set aside in favour of technical objections. The ruling commended SB’s efforts in representing herself and underscored the importance of full disclosure in family law matters, particularly those involving financial responsibilities towards minor children. Each party was directed to cover their own legal fees. 

#Conviction  

Get your news on the go. Click here to follow the Conviction WhatsApp channel 

Share.

Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Prove your humanity: 6   +   8   =  

Exit mobile version