Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 672South Africa
L.M.G V J.M.G (124145/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 672 (9 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 July 2024
Headnotes
to be in contempt of the order of Retief J, that he be sentenced to 3 months' imprisonment which is to be suspended for two years on condition that the respondent purges his contempt within three days. The respondent raised an in limine defence to the effect that the proceedings were not urgent. As will be noted hereunder, it is my view that the respondent is in ongoing contempt of the order, which must inherently be addressed urgently.[1] Nothing more is required to be said on this issue.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## L.M.G V J.M.G (124145/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 672 (9 July 2024)
L.M.G V J.M.G (124145/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 672 (9 July 2024)
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sino date 9 July 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number:
124145/2023
Date of hearing: 25
June 2024
Date delivered: 9 July
2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 9/7/24
SIGNATURE:
In the matter of:
L[...]
M[...] G[...]
Applicant
and
J[...]
M[...] G[...]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL J:
[1]
It is
essential to the proper administration of justice, and ultimately, to
the preservation of the rule of law, that there is a
common
understanding that court orders are to be obeyed. Should the view
prevail, that persons may decide whether they are bound
to a court
order or that they may choose to ignore an order if they so wish, the
very foundations of our legal system would be
in jeopardy.
[2]
Courts do not enjoy the enforcement powers of the
executive branch of government. However, the judiciary does enjoy the
power to
enforce its orders through contempt proceedings, and in
appropriate cases, by imposing an appropriate sentence on a
recalcitrant
party in instances where the conduct violates the
dignity and authority of the court. There is, in my view, a distinct
obligation
on the judiciary to jealously guard against the willful
failure of a party to comply with a court order.
[3]
In this case an interim order was granted against
the respondent by Retief J on 21 May 2024, pursuant to an application
in terms
of Rule 43. The respondent was ordered (inter alia} to do
the following:
[3.1] To effect payment
of maintenance to the applicant in the sum of R 6 000 per month per
child, thus a total of R 12 000 per
month;
[3.2] To pay R 300 per
month as maintenance for the applicant;
[3.3] To pay for the
repairs and maintenance of the applicant's motor vehicle, and if the
vehicle were not available, to provide
the applicant with an
alternative vehicle;
[3.4] To arrange and
accept a quotation for new tyres for the applicant's vehicle within
three days of the order being handed down;
[3.5] To pay R 3000 per
month in respect of the solar system;
[3.6] To make a
contribution to the applicant's costs in the sum of R 40 000, in four
instalments of R 10 000 each.
[4]
The respondent chose not to comply with any of the
aforesaid orders. He continued to make payment of those items that he
had decided
to pay before the Rule 43 order was granted. It is not in
dispute that the respondent was aware of the order. It is also not in
dispute that the respondent has not complied with the parts of the
order set out in paragraph 3 above. Within days of the order
being
granted the respondent's attorneys wrote to the applicant's attorneys
to advise them that the respondent did not intend to
comply with the
abovementioned sections of the order. They advised that the
respondent did not have the means to comply with the
order, and that
he intended to seek a reconsideration of the order in terms of rule
43 (6). The letter alleged that the respondent
was obliged to pay
maintenance in the sum of R 73 683.03 monthly, on a monthly income of
R 73 950.98, and that, in addition to
the aforesaid maintenance
obligation, he had personal expenses of R 31 203.87 per month, thus
leaving a monthly deficit of R 30
935.92.
[5]
The respondent's salary was alleged to be R 66
200.98, and he received a further R 6 400 as rent on an immovable
property. His total
income was alleged to be R 73 950.98 (the
mathematical discrepancy is not explained). The respondent had been
receiving a further
R 10 000 per month as payment for shares that he
had sold. The letter alleged that it was "common cause"
that he was
no longer receiving those monies. The letter also alleged
that the respondent had additional expenses as he was now living with
his mother, although the respondent's bank statements do not support
that contention.
[6]
In a letter dated 7 June 2024 the respondent's
attorneys contradicted themselves by providing a list of monthly
debit orders that
amounted to R 75 106.93. That list, however,
included R 8 559.77 for the vehicle that the respondent had purchased
in November
2023, the respondent's monthly cell phone charges, his
credit card and personal loan repayments, and R 4 038.88 towards his
insurance.
[7] The respondent has
therefore refused to pay the monthly cash portion of the maintenance,
nor has he paid the solar system instalments,
he has not arranged to
service the applicant's vehicle, nor has he sought a quotation, nor
purchased tyres for the applicant's
vehicle. He has also made no
contribution towards her costs. By the time that this application
came before me the respondent had
also not brought a variation
application. The respondent seeks an order now that he must deliver
such an application within 10
days of this order. I am not entirely
sure why the respondent requires such an order, as he has been at
liberty to launch a variation
application since the Retief J order
was granted.
[8]
The above is a brief background to the circumstances in which this
application was brought. The applicant seeks an order that
the
respondent be held to be in contempt of the order of Retief J, that
he be sentenced to 3 months' imprisonment which is to be
suspended
for two years on condition that the respondent purges his contempt
within three days. The respondent raised an
in
limine
defence
to the effect that the proceedings were not urgent. As will be noted
hereunder, it is my view that the respondent is in
ongoing contempt
of the order, which must inherently be addressed urgently.
[1]
Nothing more is required to be said on this issue.
[9]
When
contempt of court is sought to be punished by the imposition of a
sentence, it has a criminal element to it that requires a
Court to
find beyond a reasonable doubt that the elements of the crime of
contempt have been established. In
Uncedo
Taxi Service Association v Maninjwa and Others
[2]
Pickering
J pointed out that previously the civil standard of proof had been
applied in contempt applications. The learned Judge
referred to
Kamma
Park Properties (Pty) Ltd v Ngesi and Others
[3]
,
a
case of the same division, in which the learned Judge held that in
cases where a party chooses to follow the route of bringing
civil
contempt proceedings by way of application, the civil standard of
proof applied. In such cases,
Kamma
said,
if the order and its breach are proven, the respondent bore the onus
of rebutting the inference of willfulness and mala fides.
[10]
Pickering
J held that such an approach was unconstitutional. This approach was
later applied in
Burchell
v Burchell
[4]
and in
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[5]
.
[11]
Once it has been established that the
respondent is aware of, and that he has not complied with the order,
which is common cause
in this matter, then one must consider whether
the respondent acted willfully and with
mala
fides.
The Court must then bear in mind
what Cameron J said in
Fakie (supra):
"A deliberate
disregard is not enough [to establish mala fides], since the
non-complier may genuinely, albeit mistakenly, believe
him or herself
entitled to act in the way claimed to constitute the contempt. In
such a case, good faith avoids the infraction.
Even a refusal to
comply that is objectively unreasonable may be bona fide (though
unreasonableness could evidence lack of good
faith). These
requirements - that the refusal to obey should both be willful and
mala fide and that unreasonable noncompliance,
provided it is
bona fide, does not constitute contempt - accord with the broader
definition of the crime, of which non-compliance
with civil orders is
a manifestation. They show that the offence is committed not by mere
disregard of a court order, but by the
deliberate and intentional
violation of the court's dignity, repute or authority that this
evinces. Honest belief that non-compliance
is justified is
incompatible with that intent."
[12] The respondent's
reason for not complying with the order is that he was financially
not able to do so. The question is whether
that is objectively so.
Firstly, as I have said in para 6 above, the respondent's attorneys'
own letters show that there was not
such a shortfall as they allege.
[13] Furthermore, the
respondent's explanation regarding his involvement with a number of
companies other than his formal employment,
and in relation to the R
10 000 monthly payments (that he says have stopped) is highly
suspicious. In a CIPC search that was conducted
by the applicant's
attorneys on 12 June 2024 the respondent was reflected as being an
active director of various companies: Clara's
Hair Design (Pty) Ltd,
Flexmed (Pty) Ltd, Flexmed Africa (Pty) Ltd, Grundlingh Investment
Holdings (Pty) Ltd, Hawkeye Protection
Services (Pty) Ltd, Hawkeye
Protection Services Africa (Pty] Ltd, and K2017349980 (Pty) Ltd. The
application was served on respondent
on 14 June 2024. In a CIPC
search conducted by the respondent's attorneys shortly thereafter, on
18 June 2024, the respondent's
status as director in Grundlingh
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd, Flexmed (Pty) ltd, Flexmed Africa
(Pty) Ltd, K2017349980 (Pty)
Ltd and Clara's Hair Design (Ply) Ltd
had suddenly been changed to 'inactive'. The respondent provides no
explanation for the sudden
change in status. The inference that the
respondent orchestrated the change in status in order to distance
himself from those companies
is inescapable.
[14]
Interestingly, the respondent remains a
director of Hawkeye Protection Services (Pty) Ltd ("Hawkeye")
and Hawkeye Protection
Services Africa {Pty) Ltd, although he denies
that that is the case. The respondent alleges that he sold his 50%
shareholding in
Hawkeye to one Fanus Theunis Prinsloo in terms of a
written agreement dated 3 February 2023 at a purchase price of R 120
000, which
was payable in 12 instalments of R 10 000 monthly. The
final payment was to be made on 30 April 2024. If that were so, that
the
respondent does not have any further interest in Hawkeye, then it
begs the question why the respondent was still a director of Hawkeye
on 18 June 2024. The respondent does not provide an explanation.
[15]
Even more troubling is that the agreement
that the respondent relied upon to support his version has nothing to
do with Hawkeye.
It is an agreement between the respondent and
Prinsloo for the sale of shares in lndodana Security Services (Pty)
Ltd, a completely
unrelated company. The question must be asked why
the respondent would attempt to bolster his version by putting up a
clearly irrelevant
agreement? This is, in my view, an indication that
the respondent is not being open and transparent with the Court.
[16] There is no doubt
that the respondent has access to monies that have not been accounted
for in the rule 43 application, nor
in this application. On 3 May
2024 the respondent received R 106 000 into his Standard Bank account
with the reference "magtape
credit". The source of the
monies has not been disclosed. However, the respondent's bank
statements show that he paid R 106
563.61 to his attorneys for their
services on 6 May 2024. It is evident that the respondent is able to
access substantial amounts
of money when he so wishes.
[17] Finally, the
respondent's bank statements show that when:the rule 43 order was
granted, he had access to funds, albeit on his
overdraft and credit
cards. He was able to comply with the order, and if he was truly of
the view that the order was unreasonable,
he could have then brought
the application after having complied with the order. The fact is
that the respondent chose not to comply
with the court order.
[18] Furthermore, the
question remains that if the respondent were so adamant that the
order was unsustainable, and reflected a
"misunderstanding"
of the respondent's finances, as his attorneys phrased their
objection, then why has he not brought
his variation application? By
the time that the matter came before me more than a month had elapsed
since the order was granted.
One would have expected the respondent
to realize that his non-compliance with the order was worrisome, and
to have launched the
application. Instead, the respondent sat back
and did nothing.
[19]
An aspect that makes it clear to me that the
respondent is willfully disobeying the rule 43 order is this. On the
respondent's own
version, he knew in November 2023 that the
applicant's vehicle would require new tyres "at some point in
future". He
was ordered to obtain a quotation for new tyres. He
was not obliged to simply accept the applicant's quotation, and he
could have
tried to obtain a cheaper rate. The fact that he has taken
no action whatsoever to even obtain a quotation convinces me that the
respondent is willfully and
mala
fide
in breach of
the order.
[20]
Furthermore, even if the respondent was not fully
able to comply with the order, which I do not believe to be the case,
then one
must ask why he did not comply to the extent that he was
able? The fact that the respondent has not paid one cent in terms of
the
disputed parts of the order puts the issue of
mala
fides
beyond question, in my view.
[21] The respondent has
made much about the fact that the applicant earns a salary, and he
has 'challenged' her to disclose what
she does with her money. The
suggestion is that the applicant is not in need of the cash portion
of the maintenance, and that the
rule 43 order was incorrectly
granted in this regard. The respondent's submission is irrelevant to
this application. Retief J has
already considered the respective
parties' income and has spoken on the issue. It is not for the
respondent to decide not to abide
by the order because of his belief
that Retief J incorrectly granted the order that she did. However,
the belief that respondent
holds strengthens my view that his failure
to comply with the order is not so much the result of an inability to
comply, but out
a sense of grievance that his views did not triumph
in the rule 43 application.
[22]
I find, therefore, that the applicant has
established that the respondent is willfully and
mala
fide
in contempt of the order of 21 May
2024. In my view, respondent's
mala
fides
justify a punitive costs order.
However, the applicant did not seek such an order, nor was it dealt
with in argument, and therefore
the normal costs order will follow.
[23]
In the premises, I make the following order:
[23.1] The respondent
is found to be in contempt of the order granted by Retief J on 21 May
2024 ("the order").
[23.2] The respondent
is sentenced to imprisonment for a period of three months, which
imprisonment is suspended for a period of
two years on the following
conditions:
[23.2.1] That the
respondent complies fully with the order during the period of
suspension;
[23.2.2] That the
respondent purges his contempt within 3 days of this order by:
[23.2.2.1] Paying all
amounts due to date in terms of paragraphs 5, 6, 12 and 14 of the
order;
[23.2.2.2] Complying
with paragraphs 10 and 11 of the order.
[23.3] The respondent
shall pay the costs of the application.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv.
N. van Niekerk
Instructed
by:
Chari
Lochner Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv.
B. Bergenthuin
Instructed
by:
VFV
Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
25
June 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
9
July 2024
[1]
Protea
Holdings v Wriwt and Another
1978 (3) SA 865
(W) at 867 G
[2]
1998
(3) SA 417 (E)
[3]
Eastern
Cape unreported case no 1220/97
[4]
(2005)
ZAECHC 35
(3 November 2005)
[5]
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA)
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