Whyte said he had no idea what the argument was about.
"I was there, yeah. They had an argument. Yeah. But I don't even know what it was about."
Asked if the pair were drunk, Whyte said: "Well, my wife certainly was. It's just really a trivial non-event of a thing."
When asked if Sokona-Whyte had any qualms about sticking up for herself, Whyte replied, "No, that's why I had to drag her out."
He added: "There was no big incident and I don't even know what they were discussing, I have no idea. There was no underlying issue either, it was just childishness."
As for whether the pair would be on speaking terms sometime soon, Whyte said they would, but "It will take a while".
Whyte said although Sokona-Whyte and Kirkpatrick were not close friends, they had a mutual friend in fellow former Housewife Michelle Blanchard.
"They would never go out together without Michelle, they're not independently friends, but they've known each other for a few years off and on now.
"I think Gilda can be blunt, you've seen her on the Housewives of Auckland, so I think she just delivered some of that to Zainab and Zainab doesn't take too kindly to that kind of thing."
When contacted yesterday by the Herald on Sunday, Blanchard declined to say if she had witnessed the incident.
"I am not commenting on anything. I have nothing to say," she said.
Sokona-Whyte was yesterday also staying tight-lipped about the stoush.
"I want nothing to do with it, I have nothing to say," she told the Herald on Sunday. "Let it go, it's ridiculous."
A spokeswoman for Augustus also declined to say if bistro staff or management were aware of the incident.
Real Housewives of Auckland screened in July last year and also featured Julia Sloane, Angela Stone, Anne Batley-Burton and Louise Wallace.
It caused controversy when Sloane used a racial slur against Blanchard.