Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 369South Africa
Liberty Two Degrees Limited and Another v Magudu (2024/008639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 369 (15 April 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Liberty Two Degrees Limited and Another v Magudu (2024/008639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 369 (15 April 2024)
Liberty Two Degrees Limited and Another v Magudu (2024/008639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 369 (15 April 2024)
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sino date 15 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2024-008639
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:NO
3.
REVISED: NO
15
April 2024
In the matter between-
LIBERTY TWO DEGREES
LIMITED
First Applicant
2 DEGREES PROPERTIES
(PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant
and
YVONNE
MAGUDU
Respondent
ORDER
a.
This application is urgent and is dealt
with as such.
b.
The respondent is declared to be in
contempt of the order of Ford AJ dated 13 February 2024 (the order).
c.
The respondent is sentenced to a period of
incarceration of 60 days to be administered by those officers in the
police and prison
authorities who are responsible for the committal
of the respondent and administration of the sentence which includes
the taking
of the respondent into custody and her processing at a
center of incarceration.
d.
The sentence referred in paragraph (b) is
suspended for a period of five years on the condition that the
respondent does not, during
such period, conduct herself so as to be
in breach of the order; in the event of such breach being
established, she shall immediately
be committed it prison to serve
the sentence imposed.
e.
The costs of this application must be paid
by the respondent on the scale as between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
FISHER J
Introduction
[2]
This is an application brought urgently in
order to address the alleged contempt of an order of this court
handed down in the urgent
court by Ford AJ (the order). In terms of
the order the respondent was interdicted against, inter alia,
engaging in harassment
and threatening behavior directed at the
applicants and their employees.
Background facts
[3]
The first and second applicants are
property owning companies; the first being the sole shareholder of
the second. The first is
also a wholly owned subsidiary of the
Liberty Group Ltd.
[4]
On 24 May 2023 the respondent, Ms Magudu,
who was at that stage unknown to the applicants, arrived at the
applicants’ head
office in Sandton. She was unannounced.
[5]
She advised that she was the holder of a
title deed in respect of an immovable property owned by the first
applicant. She stated
that she wished to hand the title deed to the
Chief Executive officer (CEO) of the first applicant, Ms Amelia
Beattie.
[6]
The title deed related to a property which
had been owned by the first applicant but which had subsequently been
disposed of. The
title deed did not convey ownership of the property
to the respondent.
[7]
The respondent also presented what
purported to be a share certificate dated 02 January 2018 which
reflected that she owned 3 million
shares in the second applicant.
The applicants confirm that this position is manifestly false and the
certificate is not genuine.
[8]
The respondent also attended at the
applicant’s bankers, Standard Bank seeking that she be given
access to and signing rights
to the bank accounts of the applicants.
In addition, she has on two occasions sought to lodge fraudulent
documents in respect of
her alleged shareholding in the second
applicant.
[9]
The respondent repeatedly entered the
premises of the applicants and had to be escorted off the property by
security. She furthermore
embarked on a campaign whereby she sent
text messages and emails and made telephone calls to Ms Beattie that
were insulting and
threatening in their tone and content.
[10]
The applicants contended that they and
their personnel were being harassed and that they had no option but
to seek interdictory
relief. They thus filed an urgent application
for interim relief in this court.
[11]
The respondent was afforded due notice of
the interdictory proceeding. In response she filed a document
which purported to
be notice of her opposition. It notified her
opposition and, in addition, set out a number of complaints in
relation to the applicants
including that she and her child had been
evicted from the property in issue and that she had not been afforded
her shareholder
status and rights flowing therefrom.
[12]
The document also contained a letter
addressed to Ms Beattie which demanded as follows:
“
I
need R 30 000 000 with a basic salary of R 550 000 monthly or R27 000
000 with a basic salary of R650 0000 monthly, or R16 000
000 with a
basic salary of R1.2 000 000 monthly. At least I don't request to be
granted the whole R3 billion, or permit me to utilize
my bank
accounts accordingly.”
[13]
The allegations in the document were not made
under oath. The respondent did not appear at the urgent hearing which
served before
Ford AJ. After hearing the applicants,Ford AJ
handed down an interdict which in essence restrained the respondent
from:
entering the offices of the
applicants;
making threats against or harassing the
applicants’ executives and staff; interfering with the
shareholding and directorships
of the applicants in the registration
documents at the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission
(CIPC) and interfering
with the applicants’ bank accounts and
granted punitive costs against her.
[14]
The order was served on the respondent by email on 15 February 2024,
such service being permissible under the order.
[15]
The respondent acknowledged receipt thereof by sending an email
to Ms Beattie and Jonathan Sinden, the Chief Operations
Officer (COO)
of the applicants on 18 February 2024 in which opened in the
following manner:
“
Greetings
Amelia and Team
In regards to this "court
order ", you guys are really playing games in the first degree.
I mean, this is the first document
with different headings. Ahaaa!
Everyone can see that you really are wasting your time and mine. You
cannot keep on evicting me,
meanwhile you have expelled me without
the support of the law months ago.”
[16]
This was followed up the next day with a
second email addressed to Ms Beattie and Ms Reniera Naidoo, the
candidate attorney in the
employ of the applicants’ attorneys
which began:
“
Greetings
Renira Naidoo/Amelia Beattie and Team
Please re- think this
fraudulent court order or filing sheet, with a court online cover
page on the 3rd page of this page, what
is all this? You guys are
really funny now, stop it with this game.”
[17]
Two days later the respondent sent a
further email in which she accused the applicants of being
“swindlers” and expressed
that Ford AJ is not a motion
judge but only deals with Road Accident Fund default judgment court.
Ms Beattie was referred to as
a “disgrace”.
[18]
On 26 and 29 February 2024 the respondent
sent further text messages to Ms Beattie. In the text of 26 February,
the respondent suggests
that Ms Beattie should constantly be having
to look over her shoulder for signs of her (the respondent).
[19]
The text message of 29 February 2024 again
accuses Ms Beattie of fraud and even brutality.
[20]
Further text messages in the same vein were
sent to Ms Beattie on 1, 2 and 3 March 2024.
[21]
The text message of 3 March 2023 states
that the repondent "won't stop until you do the right (sic)”.
And warns
“Evil will never leave you cause you pay evil
for good."
[22]
On 6 March 2024, the respondent addressed a
text message to Mr Sinden accusing him of being "covetous and
brutal." Additionally,
she accused the executives of the
applicants of "dancing with the devil."
[23]
Most troubling, is a reference made to Mr
Sinden's family which reads:
"you have kids
that you dear love and take care of, however you have decided to
oppress mine and l, as a father. How would
you feel if GOD would take
them away from you would you survive or be sane for the rest of your
life, or how would you cope all
your life should you loose (sic) your
job?"
[24]
On the same day, Ms Beattie received a text
message making similar accusations of dishonesty.
[25]
On 8 March 2024 the respondent sent a text
message to Ms Beattie in terms of which she stated:
"You know what to
do. To remove that sin engraved on you four (sic) head of
covetousness, which everyone gaze (sic) at on a
daily basis when you
come in and when you go out. Thanks. What time should I expect my
money, long awaiting?".
[26]
The respondent has, thus, been in constant
contact with the applicants since they notified her of the order. The
unprovoked communications
have occurred on almost a daily basis.
This contempt
application
[27]
The applicants allege that they had no
option but to bring this application for contempt. They argue that
the respondent will, by
her own indication not stop unless deterred.
[28]
The contempt application was set down for
hearing on Tuesday 2 April 2024.
[29]
The day before the hearing the respondent
delivered a document which purported to be notice of opposition.
[30]
Similarly to the document filed in
the application for the interdict, this purported notice contains
demands and allegations. Ms
Beattie is accused of stalking the
respondent and being obsessed with her.
[31]
On the day set down of the hearing the
applicants’ counsel Ms Bosman appeared in court and addressed
the notice of opposition.
The applicant notwithstanding the filing of
the document did not appear.
[32]
I, accordingly, stood the matter down
asked that the applicants attorneys attempt to communicate with the
respondent and inform
her that I was awaiting her attendance. I asked
also that they communicate the seriousness of the matter to her.
[33]
Pursuant to this request the
applicants’ attorneys sent the respondent a text message which
read as follows:
“
Good
day Madam On behalf of Moody & Robertson attorneys we would like
to let you know that we are appearing on behalf of the
Applicants
today in Case no. 2024-00863. We have noted your Notice of Intention
to Defend and would like to let you know that the
matter is being
heard in court 9E in Johannesburg High Court. Please note that an
order may be granted for your incarceration today,
Please, kindly
make an appearance to speak on your behalf, Kind regards”
[34]
The respondent responded:
“
Hi.
Why was 9E court room not mentioned on the order. The time mentioned
on the order was 10:00 am and you decided to let me know
of the court
room at 11:27am. What kind of the law is this? You know you are wrong
and you know the truth about all that you’re
doing. Thanks.”
[35]
About a half hour later the following
further message was sent by the applicants’ attorneys:
“
Good
day madam,
The Honourable Judge is
still busy and the above mentioned matter has still not been heard.
Please kindly make an appearance to
speak on your behalf, Kind
regards.”
An hour later the
respondent sent a message stating
“
What
about 10:00am the time that you agreed on. What changed it. Why
postponed from 10:00am to anytime when the Judge becomes available?
What about other people's busy schedules?”
[36]
In response, the applicants’
attorney explained the position thus:
“
Good
day Madam There are 45 matters on the Urgent court roll today. The
Honourable Judge is hearing each matter as they appear on
the court
roll, today. This is available online, this court roll did not get
published in advance. There was no indication of which
court we would
be in until this morning. Kind regards”
[37]
At approximately 14h00 the respondent
replied:
“
No
ruling could change the court date and recent time for other matters
postponed. Be guarded at it. Thanks”
[38]
I was loathe to entertain a matter of this
seriousness without hearing from the respondent, especially in light
of the fact that
she was engaging with the applicants’
attorneys. I thus stood the matter down to the following day, 03
April and again imposed
upon the applicants’ attorneys to
convey to the respondent that I wished her to appear in court and
address me on her defence.
[39]
Pursuant to this request the applicants’
attorneys addressed a text message to the respondent on the afternoon
of 02 April
2024 which read as follows:
“
Good
afternoon Madam
On
behalf Moodie & Robertson attorneys, with regard to Case No.,
2024-008639, we would like to inform you that the Honourable
Judge
Fisher has stood the matter down until tomorrow morning at 10;00am,
in the same court, Court room 9E. Please kindly take
note that the
Honourable Judge Fisher has directed you to attend tomorrow morning
regarding the abovementioned matter. Please let
us know if you
require any further information. Kind regards”
[40]
The response of the respondent was as
follows:
“
Hi.
The motion/ court order that I received had today's ruling, time and
date with no court room and a different judge that you
now mention.
Please stop flooding me with your non jurisdiction powers. Stop this
unfair gameplay and stop wasting my time. I have
other engagements in
KZN, including Liberty Midlands, and John Ross Junction...My time is
valuable to me, I cannot waste it with
you. You have bridged (sic)
your own motion/ Court by not attending to court twice this with no
court room for ruling. What you
are telling me now is not on your
motion/ court order. What kind of attorneys are you to send
fraudulent motions/ court orders
with no ruling court rooms,
mentioning the times, with no attending schedules by forcing matters
through WhatsApp, involving new
judges not mentioned on the
motions/courts. Fixing errors via WhatsApp with no fixation module. I
just need my money. That is all
I need from Amelia Beattie. This is
totally illicit. I don't concur. Stop wasting my time by sending
false statements to my WhatsApp.
I tolerated you for too long You
have broken the law by not adhering to your motions/ court orders. No
more. bye.”
[41]
The applicants’ attorneys confirmed
receipt of this text as follows:
“
Good
evening Madam
Received, with thanks.
Please take note that you may address the Court and Honourable Judge
Fisher tomorrow regarding the above,
Please, kindly let us know
should you require any further information, Kind regards”
The respondent replied
that night:
“
Stop
wasting my time, don't act as if you don't reason. Have you no shame?
You don't play court on WhatsApp.”
[42]
The respondent did not make an appearance
at the hearing.
Applicable legal
principles – contempt
[43]
The
applicants must establish the existence of the order, its service on
the respondent and the respondent’s non-compliance
with the
order. Once this is done, if the respondent is to avoid being
found guilty of the offence contempt, she must furnish
to the court
evidence raising a reasonable doubt as to whether her non-compliance
was willful and mala fide. If she fails to do
this then the offence
of contempt is established.
[1]
[44]
The
burden of proof rests with the applicants. The burden must be
discharged beyond reasonable doubt due to the criminal component
of
the offence and the fact that the applicants seek an order of
committal.
[2]
[45]
In this matter, there can be no doubt that
there has been service of the order on the respondent. The questions
for determination
by this court are thus as follows:
a.
Does the conduct of the respondent
constitute a breach of the order?
b.
If so, is there reasonable doubt that the
breach was willful and in bad faith?
[46]
I will now consider each of these
questions?
Does the respondent’s
conduct constitute a breach of the order?
[47]
The portions of the order which the
applicants allege the respondent to have breached are those directed
at the
making of threats against or harassing the applicants’
executives and staff.
[48]
The contact that the respondent seeks
to make via messaging, email telephonically and otherwise with the
applicants’ executives
has occurred almost daily since the
order came to her notice.
[49]
An analysis of the material sent reflect
incredulity on the part of the respondent as to the whether the order
is genuine or fraudulent.
[50]
To the extent that the respondent was
genuinely of the belief that the order was a fabrication, this may
serve to create some doubt
as to her willfulness. I have thus,
notwithstanding the failure on the part of the respondent to adduce
any evidence, considered
this possibility.
[51]
The following factors, however, lead me to
the view that the respondent was not operating under the genuine
belief that the court
order was fraudulent or otherwise invalid:
a.
The conduct of the respondent shows her to
be aware of the stature of the applicants as companies which hold
significant value.
b.
She is told in the applications that the
applicants are part of a stable of companies owned and led by a
public company of some
repute and the tenor of her messages is such
that she understands this position.
c.
She saw fit to note her opposition in both
the interdictory proceedings and these proceedings which leads me to
the view that she
regards the proceedings as valid.
d.
She understands that she is dealing with
attorneys of considerable repute that represent the applicants.
e.
Those attorneys repeatedly conveyed to her
the directive of this court that she should attend and deal with the
application.
f.
The respondent does not appear to be an
unsophisticated person. Indeed, she presents herself in her dealings
with the applicant
as a businesswoman of some acumen.
g.
Her protestations as to why she will not
take the proceedings of this court seriously emerge as contrived and
willfully obtuse.
[52]
Accordingly, accepting that the respondent
was aware of the order preventing her from conducting herself in a
manner that constituted
harassment, she could not, to my mind, have
been of the belief that the sending of almost daily messaging
containing hostile and
insulting content was not harassment. This
conduct was, to my mind, calculated to harass and intimidate.
[53]
The impression created by the respondent’s
protestations as to the validity of the process is that she seeks to
suggest a
level of naiveite on her part which is inconsistent with
her conduct. This contrivance is sinister in itself.
[54]
Whilst the content of the messages and
emails sent by the respondent after notice of the order are such that
there are no overt
threats, the sheer volume of the communications
and the hostility conveyed therein is such that it is threatening in
itself.
[55]
This, taken with the communications which
resulted in the interdict by Ford AJ is, to my mind, sufficient to
invoke a sense of substantial
unease and even fear in the recipients.
Furthermore, it is clearly calculated to do so.
Conclusion
[56]
The respondent is in breach of paragraphs
3.3 of the order of Ford J.The breach is willful and in bad faith.
This is established
beyond reasonable doubt.
Appropriate penalty
[57]
I consider that a suspended sentence of
committal will have a chastening effect on the respondent. It seems
to me that it is likely
to give her some pause for thought and a
realization of the gravity of the granting of such an order.
Costs
[58]
In such matters which are by their nature
founded in a disrespect of the law, costs are usually granted on a
punitive scale. There
is no reason in this matter why costs should
not follow this result.
Order
[59]
I grant an order which reads as follows:
a.
The application is urgent and is dealt with
as such.
b.
The respondent is declared to be in
contempt of the order of Ford AJ dated 13 February 2024 (the order).
c.
The respondent is sentenced to a period of
incarceration of 60 days to be administered by those officers in the
police and prison
authorities who are responsible for the committal
of the respondent and administration of the sentence which includes
the taking
of the respondent into custody and her processing at a
center of incarceration.
d.
The sentence referred in paragraph (b) is
suspended for a period of five years on the condition that the
respondent does not, during
such period conduct herself so as to be
in breach of the order; in the event of such breach, she shall
immediately be committed
it prison to serve the sentence imposed.
e.
The costs of this application must be paid
by the respondent on the scale as between attorney and client.
FISHER
J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This Judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 15 APRIL 2024.
Heard:
04 April 2024
Delivered:
15 April
2024
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. P Bosman
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Moodie & Robertson Attorneys
Respondent
No appearance
[1]
Fakie
N.O. v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd 2006 (4) 326 (SCA) at 338C-339A
[2]
Id
at 344H
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