Key points
- The South Gauteng High Court dismissed a father’s appeal to block contact between his daughter and her grandparents.
- The ruling prioritises the child’s constitutional right to maintain family bonds in the absence of proven harm.
- It affirms a broader interpretation of caregiving under the Children’s Act, recognising intergenerational support.
When eight-year-old T packed her overnight bag for another weekend with her grandparents, she didn’t know their presence in her life had become the centre of a bitter legal dispute. Her father believed it was best to end the visits. Her grandparents disagreed, and so did the law.
The South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg has put an end to months of legal wrangling, upholding the February decision granting the grandparents regular contact with their granddaughter. The court found that the appeal by the father lacked merit, particularly in the absence of expert evidence suggesting that the contact harmed T in any way.
Rights over opinions
Acting Judge KL Meikle made it clear that parental feelings do not override a child’s rights. “The contact awarded… is the child’s right, not her father’s,” the judgment stated. While the father voiced concerns about manipulation and emotional strain, he offered no professional assessments or formal investigations to back his claims.
In contrast, the grandparents showed a pattern of involvement, routine visits, and emotional care that, far from destabilising, added to the child’s sense of security.
The court also dismissed the argument that mediation should have been attempted before legal action, ruling that the relationship between parties had deteriorated so severely that judicial intervention was warranted.
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