Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 36South Africa
Huysamen and Others v Bluechip Retail Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another (8528/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 36 (19 January 2023)
Headnotes
as follows regarding concurrent or inherent jurisdiction principle:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Huysamen and Others v Bluechip Retail Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another (8528/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 36 (19 January 2023)
Huysamen and Others v Bluechip Retail Solutions (Pty) Ltd and Another (8528/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 36 (19 January 2023)
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sino date 19 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE
NO
: 8528/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
19 JANUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
HUYSAMEN
IZAK
DANIEL
First Applicant
HUYSAMEN
DENISE
Second Applicant
HUYSAMEN
DYLAN Third
Applicant
and
BLUECHIP
RETAIL SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD First
Respondent
THULANI
MAKHATHINI Second
Respondent
Delivered:
By transmission to
the parties via email and uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is
deemed to be delivered. The date for hand-down
is deemed to be 19
January 2023.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI
J:
[1]
The controversy in this application is whether or not the respondent
is in civil contempt
of an order issued by the Tembisa Magistrates
Court on the 24 February 2022 for a spoliation relief.
[2]
The respondent opposes the application on various grounds, which
inter alia
include:
(a)
A point
in limine
regarding lack of jurisdiction, because the
order forming subject of this application was not pursued under
section 106 of the
Magistrates Court Act No.32 of 1944 and that the
Magistrates Court is capable of enforcing its own process;
(b)
Accordingly that the court should exercise its
discretion sparingly in adjudicating on this matter;
(c)
The respondent also raises a second
point in limine
that the
matter falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Labour Court of
South Africa;
(e)
The failure to disclose material facts at ex-parte application.
I
will deal with each point raised by the respondent.
[3]
At the hearing of the application the respondent contended that an
appropriate costs
de bonis propriis
had to be made against the
legal representative of the applicant. Consequently, the court
requested that the legal representative
who appeared before the
Tembisa Magistrates Court on behalf of the applicant should provide
written submissions.
[4]
This was done and the court regrets that the matter slipped through
the cracks and
the reserve judgement could not be delivered on time.
[5]
The law pertaining to contempt of court declaratory orders is trite.
In
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[1]
the court restated the legal principle regarding the civil contempt
of court order in the following terms:
“
6.
It is a crime unlawfully and intentionally to disobey a court
order.
[2]
This type of contempt
of court is part of a broader offence, which can take many forms, but
the essence of which lies in violating
the dignity, repute or
authority of the court.”
[3]
[6]
The court in
Fakie
N.O
.
[4]
continued as follows:
“
9.
The test for when disobedience of civil order constitutes contempt
has come to be stated as whether the
breach was committed
deliberately and
mala
fide
.
[5]
A deliberate disregard is not enough, since non-complier may
genuinely, albeit mistakenly, believe him or herself entitled to act
in the way claimed constitute the contempt. In such a case good faith
avoids the infraction.
[6]
Even a
refusal to comply that is objectively unreasonable may be
bona
fide
though unreasonableness could evidence lack of good faith.”
[7]
[7]
Accordingly, the applicant bears the
onus
, assuming that the
court has jurisdiction to hear this matter to show that the court
order was deliberately disobeyed.
[8]
I now deal with defence raised by the respondent that the court has
no jurisdiction
to adjudicate on the contempt application declaratory
order.
[9]
It is trite that there is no statute that grants the High Court
jurisdiction to grant
an order for civil contempt of court. To grant
an order for the civil contempt of court, the High Court invokes its
inherent jurisdiction.
[8]
[10]
In
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd and Others v Thobejane and Others; Standard Bank of SA
Ltd v Gqirana NO and Another
[9]
the court held as follows regarding concurrent or inherent
jurisdiction principle:
“
[27]
It is also a law of long standing that when a High Court has a matter
before it that could have been brought in a Magistrates’
Court,
it has no power to refuse to hear the matter. In
Goldberg
v Goldberg
[10]
,
the point was taken that as a Magistrate's Court had jurisdiction in
respect of contempt jurisdiction concerning the non- payment
of
maintenance, the Supreme Court should refuse to hear the matter.
After referring to a statutory provision that was unique to
Natal at
the time, that allowed for the transfer of cases where there was
concurrent jurisdiction Schreiner J held:
‘
But
apart from such cases and apart from the exercise of the Court’s
inherent jurisdiction to refuse to entertain proceedings,
which
amount to abuse of its process (and that in my opinion, is not the
case here). I think that there is no power to refuse to
hear a matter
which is within the Court's jurisdiction. The discretion which the
Court has in regard to costs provides a powerful
deterrent against
the bringing of proceedings in the Supreme Court, which might more
conveniently have been brought in the Magistrate's
Court. Not only
may a successful applicant be awarded only Magistrate Court costs,
but he may even be deprived of his costs and
be ordered to pay any
additional costs incurred by the respondent of the case having been
brought to the Supreme Court. In all
normal cases, these powers
should suffice to protect the respondent against the hardship of
being subject to bring unnecessarily
expensive proceedings.’
[11]
Accordingly, I am satisfied that this Court has an inherent
jurisdiction to adjudicate this matter.
Consequently, the defence
raised by the respondent that this Court has no jurisdiction to
adjudicate on this matter cannot be supported
by the law and facts.
[12]
The respondent also raised a defence that his matter falls within the
exclusive jurisdiction
of the Labour Court because of the employment
contracts concluded, copies of which were attached to the papers.
This may well be
the case. However, this was not the case that was
before the Tembisa Magistrates Court. The case before
court a quo
was the alleged spoliation. The
ex parte
order that was
brought in that court has not been set aside or appealed against. The
new facts that are now raised can only be
considered, in my
respective view, if the challenge is mounted against the existing
order. This challenge was not done in a form
of counter-application
in terms of the rules of this court and as a consequence, I am not in
a position to deal with the defence.
It follows that the challenge on
jurisdiction based on the new facts cannot be sustained.
[13]
It follows that; therefore the applicant has discharged the
onus
showing an existing order which has not been complied with.
[14]
In opposing this application, the respondents also raised points
related to the non-compliance
with the
ex parte
application.
The challenge I have with those points is that they did not bring a
counter application to either review or set aside
the order based on
the circumstances set out in the papers. I am not in a position to
consider the new facts in the absence of
the challenge, in terms of
the rules, of the existing order.
[15]
Accordingly, I am bound to consider the papers
within the four corners of the pleadings, which only relate
to the
applicant’s application and the existing spoliation order.
[16]
I need not consider the prayer by the respondent that the legal
representative of the applicant
must be ordered to pay the costs out
of his pocket because the applicants have succeeded in their case.
[17]
Having considered the papers filed of record and submissions made, it
is ordered that:
(a)
The ordinary rules and forms of service are dispensed with so as to
hear this matter, as one of urgency;
(b)
The first and second respondents are in joint civil contempt of the
interim order dated 24 February
2022, handed down by the District
Magistrate for Ekurhuleni North held at Tembisa;
(c)
The first respondent and second respondents are ordered to vindicate
the aforesaid spoliation order
and give immediate peaceful and
undisturbed possession and access to the property situated at corner
West Road and Fifth Street,
Midrand Industrial Park commercially
known as Sign House and to do all things necessary to give effect
thereto;
(d)
The first and second respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application jointly and severally
the one paying the other to be
excused on a party and party scale.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
:
11 March 2022
DATE
JUDGMENT DELIVERED:
19
January 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicants: Adv
L C M Morland
Instructed
by:
Rudie Kok
Attorneys
Counsel
for the
Respondents:
Adv A Berkowitz
Instructed
by:
Freyson
Attorneys
[1]
(653/04)
[2006] ZASCA 52
; 2006(4) SA 326 (SCA) (31 March 2006)
[2]
See
S v Beyers
1968 (3) SA 70
(A)
[3]
See
Melius de Villiers The Roman and Roman- Dutch Law of Injuries (1899)
page 166; Attorney- General v Crockett 1911 TPD 6893
925-6
[4]
Supra
[5]
[5]
See
Frankel Max Pollak Vinderine Inc v Menell Jack Hyman Rosenberg &
Co Inc
[1996] ZASCA 21
;
1996 (3) SA 355
(A) 367 H-I, Jayiya v MEC
for Welfare, Eastern Cape
2004 (2) SA 602
(SCA) para 18 and 19
[6]
Consolidated
Fish (Pty) Ltd v Zive 1968(2) SA 517 (C) 524 D; See also Noel Lan
[7]
Noel
Lancaster Sands (Edms) Bpk v Theron 1974 (3) SA 688 (T) 692 E-G
[8]
See
M v M (A3076/2016) [2017] ZAGPJHC 279 (28 March 2017) at para [12]
[9]
[2021]
ZASCA 92
;
[2021] 3 All SA 812
(SCA);
2021 (6) SA 403
(SCA)
[10]
1938
WLD 83
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