Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 12South Africa
D.N.Q v P.Q (49090/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 12 (12 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 January 2024
Headnotes
in the applicant’s personal bank account should be used to settle the electricity bill. According to the respondent, initially, the applicant used the savings money to pay the City of Tshwane’s adjusted fee account.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## D.N.Q v P.Q (49090/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 12 (12 January 2024)
D.N.Q v P.Q (49090/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 12 (12 January 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NR: 49090/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
12 January 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
D[...]
N[...] Q[...]
APPLICANT
and
P[...] Q[...]
RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed
down electronically by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic
file of this matter on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be 12 January 2024.
JUDGMENT
MARUMOAGAE AJ
A
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This application is yet another example of how expensive protracted
divorce proceedings
can be. It demonstrates how divorcing parties, at
times, fail to resolve disputes that arise pending their divorce and
are more
than willing to spend money on unnecessary litigation. At
the heart of the parties’ latest dispute is the non-payment of
the arrear municipal electricity bill that amounts to R 38 671.97.
There is also a pending rule 43(6) matter between the parties.
[2]
This application is opposed, and both parties are represented by
their respective
law firms and Counsel. There is no order stating
that any of the parties should contribute towards the legal costs of
the other.
This means that each party is responsible for the payment
of its own legal representatives. This is a High Court litigation and
the amount of money that is due to be paid or may have already been
paid to the parties' respective legal teams in this application
is
likely to be way much higher than the disputed amount of the
electricity bill that brought the parties to court.
[3]
Notwithstanding this, the parties decided that the best way to deal
with the electricity
bill issue at the place where the applicant and
their children reside (hereafter ‘matrimonial home’) was
not to meaningfully
engage each other to find an amicable solution
but to litigate their dispute. In their respective affidavits, both
parties accuse
each other of failing to respond to correspondences
from their respective legal practitioners. This in my view, is an
unfortunate
reality of parties that call on the courts to dissolve
their marital relationships without first seriously engaging each
other
in good faith.
[4]
The court is called upon to determine whether the respondent is in
contempt of part
of the order granted by Van der Schyff J dated 15
February 2022 (hereafter ‘van der Schyff J’s order’),
by failing
to comply with paragraph 8.1.3 of that order. Should it be
found that the respondent is in contempt of this order, the court is
also required to determine the circumstances under which the
respondent should be sentenced.
B
FACTS AND CONTENTIONS
[5]
Van der Schyff J, among others, ordered the respondent to pay the
City of Tshwane’s
account directly to the service provider. The
applicant contends that the respondent failed to make a sufficient
payment toward
the City of Tshwane’s electricity account
relating to the matrimonial home. This led to the City of Tshwane
disconnecting
the electricity supply. The respondent has made
inconsistent payments towards this account and the applicant requires
him to make
payment of the full outstanding amount.
[6]
The applicant attempted, through her attorneys, to get the respondent
to approach
the City of Tshwane to make payment arrangements that can
lead to the reconnection and/or restoration of the electricity supply
at the matrimonial home. The applicant alleges that the respondent
ignored her. She is of the view that this demonstrates that
the
respondent is in wilful contempt of Van der Schyff J’s order.
[7]
The applicant is convinced that the respondent refuses to pay the
electricity bill
as ordered because he wants to have an upper hand in
their divorce dispute. According to the applicant, the respondent has
the
financial means to make payments to the City of Tshwane because
his financial position has not changed since the order was granted.
[8]
The applicant asked this court to sentence the respondent to prison
for a period of
30 days but to suspend that order for a period of 14
days, within which the respondent can make payments if he does not
want to
go to prison. In the alternative, the applicant asked this
court to sentence the respondent to prison for a period of 30 days
but
suspend that order for a period of one (1) year on condition that
the respondent complies with the order dated 15 February 2022
within
fourteen days of this judgment.
[9]
The respondent denies that he is in wilful default of the court
order. He alleges
that he has always partially complied with Van der
Schyff J’s order. He contends that he is making payments of as
much maintenance
every month as he possibly can. The respondent
is of the view that this application is a frivolous draconian step
meant to
not only harass him but also delay the finalisation of the
divorce proceedings between them to force him to accede to her
demands.
The respondent alleges that the applicant failed to use debt
enforcement mechanisms such as obtaining a writ of execution in this
matter.
[10]
The respondent further contends that the applicant in this
application relies on broad, sweeping,
and unsubstantiated
allegations regarding the bill to the City of Tshwane without any
reference to the other items on the Van der
Schyff J’s order.
Further, the applicant unilaterally approached the City of Tshwane
before Van der Schyff J’s order
was granted, to make payment
arrangements for the arrear amount without consulting him.
[11]
The respondent alleges that he proposed that an emergency joint
family savings in the amount
of R 150 000.00 held in the
applicant’s personal bank account should be used to settle the
electricity bill. According
to the respondent, initially, the
applicant used the savings money to pay the City of Tshwane’s
adjusted fee account.
[12]
It is also contended by the respondent that instead of responding to
his proposal, the applicant
lodged her contempt application. This led
the respondent to institute an application in terms of section 43(6)
to vary Van der
Schyff J’s order by deleting paragraph 8.1.3
thereto. This application is yet to be finalised. The applicant
denies that
such a proposal was made.
[13]
The respondent alleges that several events impacted his income. In
August 2021, the respondent
moved out of the matrimonial home. He
started staying with friends and eventually moved to his mother’s
house in the Free
State. In January 2022, the respondent found a
place of his own where he moved in without taking anything from the
matrimonial
home.
[14]
The respondent is now paying for the expenses associated with his own
place of residence and
matrimonial home. He contends further that he
is currently solely contributing towards the medical aid, mortgage
bond, City of
Tshwane’s account, and the maintenance of the
parties' children. The respondent alleges that notwithstanding the
rise in
commodity prices, his income has not increased.
[15]
The applicant alleges that she has never paid nor was she ever
responsible for the payment of
the City of Tshwane’s account
when the parties lived together. Further, in terms of Van der Schyff
J’s order, the respondent
is liable to make full payment to the
City of Tshwane and cannot dictate how this bill should be paid.
Apart from her founding
affidavit and replying affidavit, the
applicant further filed a supplementary affidavit.
[16]
The purpose of the supplementary affidavit was to indicate to the
court that the applicant settled
the amount of R 38 671.97. Further,
she received a final demand from the City of Tshwane threatening to
deactivate the electricity
supply if the outstanding amount of R
12 313.72 was not paid. The applicant contends further that she
is not in the financial
position to pay this amount. She further
states that the respondent also failed to pay child maintenance for
October 2023.
[17]
In the heads of arguments submitted on behalf of the applicant, it is
recorded that in September
and October 2023, the municipal bill was R
5 242.77 and R 6 553.84 respectively but the respondent
only paid R 4 000
for each month. The respondent alleges that
partial non-compliance with the payment of the City of Tshwane’s
account is due
to issues of affordability, the ever-increasing cost
of living, and hiked interest rates. This was not attributable to
wilfulness
and bad faith on his part.
C
THE LEGAL POSITION
i)
Civil Contempt
[18]
In terms of section 165(1) of the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (hereafter ‘Constitution’),
‘
[t]he
judicial authority of the Republic is vested in the courts’.
The Constitution further provides that ‘
[a]n
order or decision issued by a court binds all persons to whom and
organs of state to which it applies’
.
[1]
[19]
Judicial authority can be referred to as the power vested in judicial
officers to preside over
disputes and independently decide the
outcomes of such disputes without fear, favour, or prejudice through
the application of the
law. There is a constitutional expectation
that once courts have determined disputes, the orders they grant will
not only be respected
but will also be carried out. Obeying court
orders not only demonstrates unwavering respect for the important
role played by the
judiciary but also the commitment to the rule of
law.
[20]
It is a crime to disobey court orders unlawfully and
intentionally.
[2]
This is a
crime of contempt of court which amounts to failure to maintain the
dignity and authority of the court that made an order.
Such failure
interferes with the courts’ capacity to carry out their
functions.
[3]
There must first
have been wilful and bad-faith non-compliance with an order. The
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Compensation
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Compensation Commissioner,
held that to establish contempt there must be proof beyond a
reasonable doubt of:
‘…
(a)
the existence of a court order; (b) service or notice thereof; (c)
non-compliance with the terms of the order; and (d) wilfulness
and
mala fides beyond reasonable doubt. But the respondent bears an
evidentiary burden in relation to (d) to adduce evidence to
rebut the
inference that his non-compliance was not wilful and mala fide’.
[4]
[21]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd,
held that:
‘…
once
the applicant has proved the order, service or notice, and
non-compliance, the respondent bears an evidential burden in relation
to wilfulness and mala fides: should the respondent fail to advance
evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether
non-compliance was wilful and mala fide, contempt will have been
established beyond reasonable doubt’.
[5]
ii)
Imprisonment
[22]
Contempt of a civil order involves the disobedience of that court
order that attracts a criminal
sanction. It should be noted however,
that ‘
[n]ot
every court order warrants committal for contempt of court in civil
proceedings’
.
[6]
The objective of civil contempt proceedings is to compel parties to
comply with court orders.
[7]
[23]
In
Matjhabeng
,
the Constitutional Court held that ‘
[i]n
some instances, the disregard of a court order may justify committal,
as a sanction for past non-compliance’.
[8]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Fakie
held
that:
‘
[i]n
the hands of a private party, the application for committal for
contempt is a peculiar amalgam, for it is a civil proceeding
that
invokes a criminal sanction or its threat. And while the litigant
seeking enforcement has a manifest private interest in securing
compliance, the court grants enforcement also because of the broader
public interest in obedience to its orders, since disregard
sullies
the authority of the courts and detracts from the rule of law’.
[9]
[24]
Where contempt is established, there might be a need to consider
whether a punitive or coercive order would
be appropriate. In
Secretary of the
Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations
of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector including
Organs of
State v Zuma and Others
, the Constitutional Court
stated that:
‘
[a]
coercive order gives the respondent the opportunity to avoid
imprisonment by complying with the original order and desisting
from
the offensive conduct. … [A] punitive order: a sentence
of imprisonment cannot be avoided by any action on the
part of the
respondent to comply with the original order; the sentence is
unsuspended …’.
[10]
D
EVALUATION
[25]
It cannot be denied that the respondent was notified of Van der
Schyff J’s order and is
aware of its contents. It is also
common cause that apart from the October 2023 maintenance and the
City of Tshwane electricity
bill, the respondent generally complied
with Van der Schyff J’s order. While the applicant referred the
court to the October
2023 maintenance matter, the main issue in this
application is the alleged lack of payment of the City of Tshwane
bill.
[26]
It is not true that the respondent failed to make payment. The
evidence before the court illustrates
that the respondent made
payments inconsistently and not in full. There has not been a total
disregard for the order to pay the
City of Tshwane. There has been
partial compliance with that part of the order. The respondent's
failure to pay the municipality
bill in full led to the municipality
disconnecting electricity at the matrimonial home. The applicant
has since settled that bill and the electricity has been
restored. Given the fact that it is the respondent’s
responsibility
to pay that bill, the applicant may have a claim to
recover the settlement amount from the respondent. I doubt that it
could be
concluded that the respondent deliberately failed to fully
comply with the order of the court. Partial payment may also be proof
of financial difficulties.
[27]
The respondent must pay the municipality bill because he has been
ordered to do so by the court.
Court orders must be carried out and
failure to do so amounts to contempt. For the respondent to be held
to be in contempt, the
applicant must demonstrate, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the respondent acted wilfully and in bad
faith. This can be demonstrated
by illustrating that the respondent
has the means to pay and simply decided to stop making payments.
[28]
Beyond a reasonable doubt is a much higher standard than a
preponderance of probabilities. With
beyond a reasonable doubt, the
applicant had a duty to place evidence before the court that would
convince the court that there
is no reasonable justification to
question the respondent’s guilt. If it is reasonably possible
that the respondent’s
explanation might be true, the respondent
cannot be held to be in contempt. Hence, the respondent must adduce
evidence to rebut
the inference that his ‘partial’
non-compliance was not wilful and
mala fide
.
[29]
The respondent claims that while his income has not increased, his
expenses have increased which
makes it difficult to make consistent
payments towards the municipality. Apart from the mortgage loan,
municipality account, home
insurance, domestic worker salary,
gardener’s salary, ADT, and insurance in respect to the
children’s tablets that
he was ordered to pay directly to the
service providers of the matrimonial home where the applicant and the
parties children are
residing, the respondent also has to shoulder
the expenses of the place where he is currently residing.
[30]
It is difficult to refuse to accept that generally income does not
catch up with the continuing
rise in the cost of living. Despite
increased expenses, the respondent attempted to comply with Van der
Schyff J’s order
by paying what he could afford to pay. Apart
from the October 2023 maintenance non-payment, the applicant did not
complain about
the lack of payment or partial payment regarding all
the other items that the respondent was ordered to pay.
[31]
The allegation is not that the respondent stopped making payments
toward the municipality, but that payment
has been inconsistent and
not made in full. The applicant wants the court to disregard all the
other payments and focus solely
on the municipality bill.
Unfortunately, this was not the only financial obligation placed on
the respondent’s shoulders.
To establish whether the respondent
wilfully and in bad faith failed to carry out the court order, he
must be judged holistically
regarding his commitment to the payment
of all the items included in the order.
[32]
In my view, it cannot be said that the respondent acted wilfully and
in bad faith merely because
he only made partial payments to the
municipality and failed to pay maintenance of the children for
October 2023. This in my view,
can be interpreted as proving the
respondent’s version that he is not coping with all the
expenses that he was ordered to
pay.
[33]
The respondent provided evidence of partial payment of the
municipality bill. In the heads of
arguments submitted on behalf of
the applicant, it was conceded that the respondent made partial
payments towards the municipality
bill. In my view, the respondent
advanced evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt whether
non-compliance was wilful and
mala fide
. In this case, there
was partial non-compliance. In my view, there is no evidence of bad
faith on the part of the respondent in
this case.
[34]
I accept the respondent’s version that payments towards the
increasing expenses of the
matrimonial home where the applicant and
their children are residing and those relating to his own place of
residence contributed
to his partial compliance with Van der Schyff
J’s order regarding the payment of the matrimonial home’s
municipal account.
[35]
If my reasoning is wrong, nonetheless, the respondent instituted Rule
43(6) proceedings which
will provide the court with an opportunity to
evaluate whether the respondent can fully comply with Van der Schyff
J’s order
relating to the matrimonial home municipality
account.
[36]
While a further high court interlocutory application between the
parties is regrettable, Rule
43(6) proceedings may establish the
respondent’s true financial position and liabilities. I
deliberately refrained from making
any comments on the R 150 000.00
amount that the respondent alleges is held by the applicant. I think
the status of this amount
will be dealt with by the court that will
decide the Rule 43(6) application.
[37]
I doubt whether this application was the most adequate route to
pursue. I am of the view that
a four-way collaborative approach where
both sets of lawyers and the parties could meet in a structured
environment to meaningfully
engage each other to find a practical and
less expensive solution would be ideal in these circumstances.
[38]
A collaborative approach to the resolution of legal disputes is one
of the alternative dispute
resolution mechanisms that can be used to
resolve family disputes. Should the parties utilise this method,
‘
both
spouses and their legal representatives pledge in a binding written
agreement … not to litigate while the process is
pending, but
to work together constructively and in a respectful manner to settle
the case by way of consensus’
.
[11]
Alternatively, parties can also use mediation.
[12]
[39]
I would be surprised if the parties’ respective legal fees for
this application alone do
not exceed R 38 671.97 which the applicant
claims to have already paid and the R 12 313.72 that she claims to be
outstanding. Both
parties are represented by their respective firms
of attorneys and Counsel. Each party is responsible for covering the
fees of
their respective legal practitioners. Apart from the initial
Rule 43 application and this application, the parties will be facing
each other again in a further Rule 43(6) application before their
divorce matter is heard. Is all this expensive litigation really
necessary?
E
CONCLUSION
[40]
Finally, I am of the view that contempt has not been established and
there is no need to deal
with the issue of imprisonment. It is hoped
that the parties will consider one of the alternative dispute
resolutions and settle
their divorce. I am of the view that every
divorce can be settled. It is only when parties are extremely
positional and do not
pause to consider the reasonable interests of
the other party that divorces become difficult to settle,
particularly when emotions
are still high. I am also of the view that
there is no need to burden any party with the costs of this
application.
[41]
Both parties argue that the other should bear the costs of this
application. Generally, the costs
should follow the cause. However,
given the fact that this is a contempt of court matter that arises
from a Rule 43 order, the
court that will hear the divorce action
should deal with the issue of costs. By then, hopefully, the parties
would have meaningfully
engaged each other and settled their divorce
dispute, including the issue of legal costs.
ORDER
[42]
Consequently, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
Costs occasioned by this interlocutory application will be costs in
the cause of the
divorce action.
C MARUMOAGAE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv Y
van der Laarse
Instructed
by:
VFV
Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv Z
Ndlokovane
Instructed
by:
Jafta
Z Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
16
October 2023
Date
of judgment:
12
January 2024
[1]
Section 165(5) of the Constitution.
[2]
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Limited and Others; Mkhonto and
Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Limited
2017 (11) BCLR 1408
(CC);
2018 (1) SA 1
(CC) para 50.
[3]
Coetzee
v Government of the Republic of South Africa, Matiso and Others v
Commanding Officer Port Elizabeth Prison and Others
[1995] ZACC 7
;
1995 (10) BCLR 1382
(CC);
1995 (4) SA 631
(CC) para 61. See also
W[....]
v W[....]
(17217/2019) [2020] ZAGPJHC 364 (10 December 2020) para 35, where it
was held that ‘
[a]
contempt of court may be adequately defined as an injury committed
against a person or body occupying a public judicial office,
by
which injury the dignity and respect which is due to such office or
its authority in the administration of justice is intentionally
violated’.
[4]
(2016) 37 ILJ 1625 (SCA) para 15. See also
Mthimkulu
& another v Mahomed & others
[2010] JOL 26546
(GSJ) para 16.
[5]
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) para 42. This court also held that
‘
[t]he
civil contempt procedure is a valuable and important mechanism for
securing compliance with court orders, and survives constitutional
scrutiny in the form of a motion court application adapted to
constitutional requirements’.
[6]
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality
(n 2 above) para 54.
[7]
Ibid.
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) (CC) para 8.
[10]
2021 (9) BCLR 992
(CC);
2021 (5) SA 327
(CC) para 47.
[11]
See
South African Law Reform Commission ‘Alternative dispute
resolution in family matters’ Discussion Paper 148: Project
100D (31 January 2019) 217.
[12]
See
MB
v NB
2010 (3) SA 220
(GSJ) para 52, where it was stated that ‘[i]f
mediation is appropriate in commercial cases, how much more apposite
is it
in family disputes. They engage the gamut of emotions, from
greed through pain to vengefulness; they generally involve the
rights
of children, majors as well as minors, who can only
experience fear and bewilderment at the breakdown of the structures
of love
and support on which they, as family members, have come to
depend; and the division of the estates of the parties, intertwined
as they invariably are, can be very complex and are frequently made
the more so by the parties’ bloody-mindedness and duplicity.
Throughout the process, moreover, the legal costs come out of the
common pot and, since they deplete the assets that can be used
for
the advancement of members of the family, must be the subject of
continual concern and anxiety. Divorces proceedings are
by their
nature ‘traumatic events’.
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