Roxanne Barnard Attorneys

Roxanne Barnard Attorneys At Roxanne Barnard Attorneys we are committed to providing a high standard of legal services and pride ourselves on going the extra mile for our clients.

14/09/2022
24/02/2019

Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane's office stepped in after a father ignored a court order stating he should support his child. The father has now had R300 000 taken from his pension fund to cover years of outstanding child support payments and future maintenance costs. Mkhwebane's office said it had decided to step in after the mother complained that the Government Pension Administration Agency (GPAA) had failed to comply with maintenance court orders to pay the amount from the father's pension fund. 'On 18 September 2012, the court granted an order for the attachment of up to R40 000 of the defaulting father's pension fund held at the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF). The order was sent to the GEPF the same day it was granted, with a requirement for the GEPF to pay the amount concerned by 31 October 2012. This was not complied with, the statement read. 'On 2 September 2015, another order was granted for the attachment of the outstanding arrears, which took the total amount due to the mother to R72 000. This order, too, was not complied with. 'On 16 November 2016, a third order was granted for the attachment of outstanding arrears of R104 000 plus an additional R240 000 for future maintenance. This order, in terms of which GEPF had to pay the mother a total of R344 000 by 30 November 2016, replaced the one granted earlier on 02 September 2015. Again, the GEPF failed to comply, the Public Protector said. In June 2018, the mother of the child sought assistance from the Public Protector's Office. 'Five months down the line, the GPAA paid the mother all that was due to her,' the office said.
Legalbrief LSSA Weekly 350: News for the week of 16 to 22 February 2019

10/11/2018

Help kids of all ages understand how to practice consent.

10/11/2018

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02/11/2018

Whether a ‘known s***m donor agreement’ is valid in South Africa: The facts in BR v LS 2018 (5) SA 308 (KZD) concerned a boy, ES, who was born on 12 March 2015, after having been naturally conceived by the applicant (the father) and the respondent (the mother). The couple, never married, had in June 2014 revived an earlier relationship after the father agreed to the mother’s request to impregnate her via natural insemination. By July 2014 the mother was pregnant. The father had, inter alia, accompanied her on visits to obstetricians, attended pre-natal classes with her, and had paid certain expenses in respect of the pregnancy. But when the father told her he wanted to take on parental responsibilities, she objected. The relationship remained under strain, and in September 2015 the mother, having obtained legal advice, sent the father an e-mail in which she raised the notion of a ‘known s***m donor agreement’, pointing out that it was more ‘appropriate’ than the parenting plan suggested by the father. The father did not sign the agreement and in November 2015 he applied for an order granting him scheduled contact and assigning him the full rights and obligations of unmarried fathers set out in s 21(1)(b) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005.

The court granted an interim order and referred the following questions for oral evidence:
◦whether the father met the requirements of s 21(1)(b);
◦whether the parties had concluded a ‘known s***m donor agreement’; and
◦whether it was in the best interest of ES for the father to be assigned rights of contact.

While the father stated that the agreement between him and the mother was that he could choose his level of involvement in ES’s life, the mother argued that the alleged ‘known s***m donor agreement’ meant that the usual consequences of biological fatherhood in s 21(1)(b) did not apply. She acknowledged that such agreements were not recognised by the Act and would be novel in South African law, but contended that they were increasingly common and that their recognition would be consistent with mothers’ rights to dignity and sexual preference.

Koen J held that the ‘known s***m donor agreement’ contended for by the mother was an innominate contract, the terms of which she had to establish on a preponderance of probabilities. The recognition of such agreements, which were not necessarily invalid, was a novel issue, which required the benefit of detailed argument. Any such inquiry would have to consider the best interest of the child and whether recognition might be contra bonos mores.

The court assumed – without deciding – that a ‘known s***m donor agreement’ could be validly concluded in South Africa to vary the rights and responsibilities the Act awarded to biological fathers. In the present case, however, the father had satisfied the level of commitment required by the Act to confer on him the rights and responsibilities mentioned in s 21. The mother’s conduct was consistent with the father’s view that he could elect to involve himself in ES’s life, and the fact that a parenting plan was even considered also pointed in this direction. Since the mother failed to prove, on a balance, the agreement alleged by her or to contradict the father’s more probable version that there had been no variation of the normal consequences of biological fatherhood, the father was entitled to an order declaring that he had acquired full parental rights and responsibilities under s 21.

No costs order was made.
Source: De Rebus Newsletter - November 2018

It is an honour to be recognised by Paizes Attorneys this women's month.
07/08/2018

It is an honour to be recognised by Paizes Attorneys this women's month.

During the month of August we celebrate woman’s month.

This month, PAIZES Attorneys will be featuring other prominant woman in the East Rand community. These woman are simply not recognized enough.

PAIZES Attorneys has a team of selected attorneys and advocates who are connected to Paizes Attorneys and provide valuable advice not only to Paizes attorneys but also to our clients.

PAIZES Attorneys further have clients and acquaintances who are prominent woman and are East Rand based. We will be featuring people who are worthy of such recognition.

Our first salute goes to Boksburg based Roxanne Barnard. Roxanne Barnard Attorneys is PAIZES Attorneys Johannesburg correspondent attorney and ensures that all PAIZES Attorneys documents are in the court, she ensures that when we arrive at Court that everything is in order. This is not an easy task at all

Roxanne completed her LLB degree through the University of Johannesburg. Her practice is situated in the center of Johannesburg but she resides on the East Rand. Roxanne, you are a valuable asset to us at Paizes Attorneys and we thank you for your constant assistance.

Thank you for being part of our team. PAIZES Attorneys salutes you and your practice and we wish you growth.

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