Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 791South Africa
Carlisle and Another v Wiese and Another (024692/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 791 (14 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Carlisle and Another v Wiese and Another (024692/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 791 (14 October 2022)
Carlisle and Another v Wiese and Another (024692/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 791 (14 October 2022)
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sino date 14 October 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 024692/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
14/10/2022
In the matter between:
GARY
MARK CARLISLE
First
Applicant
HONEY
FASHION ACCESSORIES (TPY) LTD
Second
Applicant
And
JACQUES
WIESE
First
Respondent
MIKO
& ANNA (PTY)
LTD
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1]
In this matter the Applicants seek an order that the first Respondent
be imprisoned
on the basis that he has breached the terms of a Court
order granted against him earlier this year.
[2]
In the order granted by this Court on the 28 June 2022 it was
specifically ordered
that he be incarcerated for 90 days which order
was suspended on condition that he desists from being in contempt of
an earlier
Court order.
[3]
It is common cause that there was a second order granted by Mudau J
on the 16
th
August 2022 which order restrained the
Respondent from contacting and poaching the clients of a company
called Honey Fashions (the
second Applicant).
[4]
The Applicants aver that it has come to their knowledge that the
Respondent has placed
orders and in fact received stock from one of
the Applicant’s suppliers which stock is earmarked for sale to
the Applicants
customers. This the Applicant says it discovered
during September 2022 through one of its existing clients.
[5]
As regards the order made on the 28
th
June 2022 the
Respondent maintains firstly that, that order was in favour of the
first Applicant only, excluding the second Applicant.
Secondly that
when the first Respondent sent the impugned emails he did not know
that the recipients thereof namely, Wayne Bredenkamp,
Valmal Van der
Merwe, Taryn Folley, Cheryl Sniders, Chantel Yzelle, Debbie Wilmot,
Gail De Wet, Roshni Naidoo and Margaret Levenson,
were employees of
the second Applicant also that when he published the impugned
statements as set out in annexures FA10 –
FA 12 he had no
malice it was but just a knee-jerk reaction to an earlier statement
uttered by one Bredenkamp who is not an employee
of the Applicants.
[6]
It is trite law that the object of proceedings relating to failure to
observe or comply
with an order of Court is the imposition of a
penalty in order to vindicate the Court’s authority such
penalty may at the
discretion of the Court take the form of
incarceration or a fine.
[7]
The jurisdictional facts required to sustain an order for contempt
were set out by
Cameron J in
Fakie N.O. v CCH systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) at 333 and 334
when the learned Judge found
that the offence is committed not by a mere disregard of a Court
order but by the deliberate and intentional
violation of the Courts
dignity repute or authority.
[8]
The Court in Consolidated Fish Distributions (Pty) Ltd vs Zive
1968
(2) SA 517
(C) concluded that an Applicant for an order of committal
must show the following:
8.1 That an order
was granted against the Respondent.
8.2 That the
Respondent was either served with the order or informed of the grant
of the order and could have
no reasonable grounds for disbelieving
that information.
8.3 That the
Respondent has either disobeyed the order or neglected to comply with
it.
[9]
It is not disputed that the order was granted on the 28
th
June 2022 and that it was communicated to the Respondent and his
attorneys. It is the third requirement that is the decisive factor
whether or not the Respondent should be incarcerated. The guiding
principle is that set out by the SCA is Fakie (supra).
BACKGROUND FACTS
[10] It
is necessary at this stage to set out a brief narrative of certain
facts and circumstances
giving rise to this litigation which bear on
the question to be decided.
[11] The
first Applicant (Gary) and the first Respondent (Wiese) hold shares
in the ratio of 60/40
respectively in the second Applicant. They at
some stage until year 2021 worked together in the employ of the
second Applicant.
Wiese left and has opened his own company the
second Respondent in direct competition with the second Applicant. It
is that fact
that led to the restraint order granted by Mudau J on
the 16
th
August 2022.
[12]
Gary and Wiese are not on good terms their relationship has soured
and what exacerbates is that
it they are in commercial competition
with each other. They are sworn enemies and clearly do not wish each
other success in their
businesses.
[13] The
first Respondent does not dispute that on the 28
th
June
2022 this Court granted an order pursuant to him having failed to
comply with the order by Matsemele AJ. Secondly in this
application
he does not dispute that he penned the disparaging words about first
Applicant’s and the second Applicant employees
as set out in
the emails attached as Annexure’s FA10 – FA12. It is in
fact correct to note that the order granted against
him on the 28
th
June 202 was after he had defended it and eventually he consented to
the order. His defence for having flouted that order now is
that it
was not intentional or done with malice it was a knee-jerk reaction.
[14] I
have no hesitation to conclude that the first Respondent Mr Wiese has
demonstrated that he
has no respect for Court orders he is a serial
transgressor of Court orders three in one year within a space of six
months.
[15] The
only issue that now remains is to determine if the first Respondent’s
non-compliance
was wilful and
mala fide
and in this instance
the onus lies with the first Respondent to prove that the
non-compliance was not wilful and
mala fide
.
[16] The
Respondent initially argued that the application was not urgent. I am
persuaded that the
application is urgent judging by the ongoing and
unabated statements in contempt of Court order.
The Court in
Protea Holdings Ltd vs Wriwt and Another
1978 (3) SA 865
(W) at 868 H
said the following:
“
as one of the objections of
contempt proceedings is by punishing the guilty party to compel
compliance of the orders, it seems to
me that the element or urgency
would be satisfied if in fact it was shown that the Respondents were
continuing to disregard the
order of 3 August 1977. If this be so,
the Applicant is entitled as a matter of urgency to attempt to get
the Respondent to desist
by the penalty referred to be imposed.”
[17] The
Court in
Victoria Park Rate Payers Association v Greyvenouw CC and
2 Others Case Number (511/03)
[2003] ZAECHC 19
(11 April 2003)
emphasised that the public interest in the administration of justice
and the vindication of the Constitution also renders the ongoing
failure or refusal to obey an order a matter of urgency. All matters
in which ongoing contempt of an order is brought to the attention
of
a Court must be dealt with expeditiously as the circumstances and the
dictates of fairness allow.
[19] The
second point in
limine
argued by the first Respondent is that
the order of contempt only relates to the first Applicant not the
company Honey Fashions
the second Applicant. The Respondent is wrong
and has misinterpreted the order attached to this application as
annexure FA3. Paragraph
1.3 and 1.4 of that order reads as follows:
“
(1.3) Publishing any statements
on any platform whether in print or virtual of any nature in which
the Applicant or employees of
the Applicant are either directly or
indirectly harassed and
(1.4) Harassing the Applicant’s
direct or indirect employees.
[20] The
first Respondent justifies his non-compliance by stating that the
comments were not intentional,
that he was lured into the private
communications by various social media posts that agitated him and
that the wording of the communication
is taken out of context with no
intention to disregard the orders.
[21]
This argument is in my view hopelessly inadequate and falls to be
dismissed. The communications
were not single or isolated events but
multiple, continuous and persistent. That behaviour and actions
should be viewed holistically
under the existing circumstances of
feuding parties who are in competition with each other. Mr Wiese
clearly had the necessary
men’s area and wilfulness to disobey
an existing Court order which was handed down in his presence barely
3 months ago.
[22] In
the result I find that he clearly contravened the terms and
conditions of the order FA2 and
for that it is now time that he must
be punished.
THE
SECOND URGENT ORDER
[23] As
regards the second urgent order there is a dispute whether the
Respondent is trading prior
to the expiration of the
dies
in
that order. In his Answering Affidavit and in the submission before
me the first Respondent admits that the stock has been paid
for and
has in fact arrived. He says that despite that nothing can be done
with the stock until after the 27
th
October 2022. In the
result I have to give the first Respondent the benefit of doubt and
cannot find that he has disobeyed the
Court order by Mudau J.
SHOULD
THE COURT ORDER DATED 28
TH
JUNE 2022 BE EXECUTED AS IS OR
NOT
[24] The
Constitutional Court in Matjabeng Local Municipality v Eskom &
Others as well as in Shadrack
Mkhonto and others vs Compensation
Solutions (Pty)L Ltd Case Number CCT217/15 and CCT 99/`6 a judgment
handed down on the 26 September
2017 at paragraph 54 Nkabinde ADCJ
said the following:
“
The relief in civil contempt
proceedings can take a variety of forms other than criminal sanctions
such as declaratory order, mandamus
and structural interdicts. All
these remedies play an important part in the enforcement of Court
order in civil contempt proceedings.
Their objective is to compel
parties to comply with a Court order. In some instances, the
disregard of a Court order may justify
committal as a sanction for
part non-compliance. This is necessary because breaching a Court
order wilfully and mala fide undermines
the authority of the Court
and thereby adversely affects the broader public interest.”
[25]
Once again Nkabinde J in the matter of
Nthabiseng Pheko &
Another vs Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality Case Number CCt19/11
a judgment delivered on 7 May 2015 said the following at paragraph
37;
“
However where a Court finds a
recalcitrant litigant to be possessed of malice on balance, civil
contempt remedies other than committal
may still be employed. These
include any remedy that would ensure compliance such as declaratory
relief a mandamus demanding the
contemnor to behave in a particular
manner a fine and any further order that would have the effect of
coercing compliance.”
[26] I
have taken into consideration the fact that this matter arises out of
a fierce and tense commercial
dispute involving two individuals. As a
result, I have decided that there should be no direct imprisonment
with the hope that the
first Respondent will by now have learnt a
lesson and will desist from further unwelcoming conduct which amounts
to contempt of
Court.
[27] In
the result I make the following order:
1.
The first Respondent is
hereby committed to imprisonment for a period of 90 (Ninety) days.
2.
The order of imprisonment
is wholly suspended for a period of one year on the following
conditions:
a.
That the first Respondent
fully complies with the Court order granted against him dated the
31
st
May 2022 under case number 22/16990.
b.
The first Respondent pays
an amount of R50 000.00 (Fifty Thousand Rand) as a fine which
amounts shall be paid not later than
the 31
st
December 2022. The payment is to be made to the Registrar of this
Court and proof of such payment be submitted to the Applicant.
3.
The first and second
Respondents are ordered jointly and severally the one paying the
other to be absolved to pay costs of this
application on an attorney
and own client scale including costs of two counsel.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this 14
th
day of October 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF
HEARING
: 10 OCTOBER
2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT
: 14 OCTOBER
2022
FOR
APPLICANT
: ADV RF DE VILLIERS
INSTRUCTED
BY
: MESSRS JAN KEMP NEL
ATTORNEYS
FOR RESPONDENT
: ADV B STEVENS
INSTRUCTED
BY
: MESSERS AYOOB
KAKA ATTORNEYS
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