- A Pretoria man attempted to challenge a divorce settlement after signing it twice, claiming he misunderstood the document.
- The High Court found no evidence of coercion or fraud, ruling that the signed agreement was valid and binding.
- The case highlights the legal importance of honouring signed agreements in divorce and understanding what you sign.
“I thought I was just signing to say I got the papers.”
But what he actually signed, twice, was a binding divorce agreement that cost him his share of the family home.
In a case that serves as both a personal story of loss and a public lesson in legal caution, the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria has reminded South Africans that honouring signed agreements in divorce isn’t optional; it’s a legal obligation.
The court granted a final divorce decree between Mr S and Mrs O, a couple married in community of property since 2006, whose union had produced two minor children. The heart of the dispute wasn’t about the divorce itself, both agreed the marriage was over. The battle was about what they had, or hadn’t, agreed to along the way.
And it all hinged on a document titled “Settlement Agreement.”
One agreement, two signatures, no escape
When Mrs O filed for divorce in early 2022, she attached to her summons a signed settlement agreement detailing everything from child maintenance to the division of their property. The agreement stated that she would keep the house, as she had been paying the bond alone.
Mr S not only signed that agreement in March 2022, he did it again in April, after meeting with Mrs O and her legal representative. But when the case went to trial months later, he claimed he never agreed to give up his share of the property and thought he had merely acknowledged receipt of the court papers.
But the court wasn’t buying it
Judge Elmarie van der Schyff was direct in her ruling: “Mr S is not an uneducated or unschooled person. He is a consulting engineer. The document is clear and titled as a settlement agreement. He signed it twice and even had witnesses.”
The court ruled that no fraud, no coercion, and no misrepresentation had taken place. In fact, Mr S’s failure to read the agreement properly or ask questions did not entitle him to back out. His signature, the court said, had legal weight and he must live with what he agreed to.
This case reinforces the legal and moral principle of honouring signed agreements in divorce, especially when both parties have had the opportunity to review, witness, and reaffirm their consent.
The real lesson: Know what you’re signing
This case is more than a courtroom drama between former spouses—it’s a reminder for all South Africans that signing a legal document is not a formality. It is a commitment.
As Judge Van der Schyff wrote:
“When a person is asked to sign a document, they are called upon to signify, by doing so, their assent to whatever words appear above their signature.”
The ruling reinforces the time-tested principle of pacta sunt servanda, agreements voluntarily entered into must be kept. It also echoes the Constitutional Court’s view that context matters, but a contract signed in plain language is still a contract.
In this case, Mr S had multiple chances to question, clarify, or refuse to sign. He did none of those. Instead, he signed, twice, and only objected months later when he realised the cost.
A gentle warning in a harsh moment
Divorce is never easy, and legal paperwork can feel overwhelming in emotionally charged times. But that’s precisely when extra care is needed.
Always read before you sign. Always ask questions if you don’t understand. And never assume something is “just a formality.” In law, a signature is more than ink; it’s intention.
For Mrs O, the ruling offers closure and legal recognition of what she believed had already been agreed. For Mr S, it’s a costly reminder that misunderstanding isn’t always a defence, and that honouring signed agreements in divorce begins with understanding them.
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