Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1271South Africa
S.F.S v A.J.S (11676/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1271 (27 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.F.S v A.J.S (11676/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1271 (27 October 2023)
S.F.S v A.J.S (11676/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1271 (27 October 2023)
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sino date 27 October 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
11676/2018
In the matter between:
S,
S F
Applicant
And
S,
A J
Respondent
JUDGMENT: LEAVE TO
APPEAL
Nkutha-Nkontwana J:
[1] In this
application, the applicant (respondent in the main application) seeks
leave to appeal the judgment and order of this
Court handed down on 10 October 2023 on several grounds that are
articulated
in the notice of the application for leave to appeal.
The respondent (the applicant in the main application)
is opposing the application for leave to appeal
and
seeks that it be dismissed with costs
de bonis propriis
.
In this judgment, deem it expedient to refer
to the parties as cited in the main application.
[2] The respondent
filed
written submissions wherein the
grounds
of appeal upon which this application is pegged are succinctly stated
and relate to:
a. The finding
pertaining to whether the respondent was in wilful and mala fide
non-compliance with the orders;
b. The finding that
the circumstances justified imprisonment; and
c. The finding that the
imprisonment be suspended subject to two conditions and whether-
i. The respondent,
on the facts before Court, could purge any contempt within three
days; and
ii. A condition
could be imposed in terms whereof future non compliance with the
orders as such would be regarded as
a breach of the suspensive
conditions and hence lead to immediate incarceration.
[3] The
respondent’s counsel did not forcefully pursue the first ground
of appeal, understandably so. It is apparent
from the impugned
judgment that the respondent failed to
provided
this Court with comprehensive information of his financial position
so as
to excuse his contempt. By the same
token, the second ground of appeal is untenable. The respondent
is blowing hot and
cold. On the one hand, the respondent
concedes that he took a liberty with the impugned court orders
without proving any
evidence of his financial difficulties. Yet,
on the other hand, he contends that circumstances did not warrant
imprisonment,
despite being a repeated contemnor.
[4]
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
,
[1]
the apex court, emphasising the importance of obeying court orders,
stated that:
“
[C]ontempt
of court is not an issue
inter partes
[(between the parties)]; it is an issue between the court and the
party who has not complied with a mandatory order of court”.
Notwithstanding that this order derives its life force from
CCT 295/20
,
these proceedings are a different creature altogether. We are
not required to pursue the same purpose as we did in
CCT
295/20
: to order Mr Zuma to attend
the Commission. Indeed, in
Pheko
II
, this Court noted that ‘[a]t
its origin the crime being denounced is the crime of disrespecting
the courts, and ultimately
the rule of law’. Although the harm
caused to successful litigants, like the applicant, through contempt
of court is by no
means unimportant, the overall damage caused to
society by conduct that poses the risk of rendering the Judiciary
ineffective and
eventually powerless is at the very heart of why our
law forbids such conduct. Therefore, as I have already said,
the mischief
I am called upon to address is not that Mr Zuma failed
to comply with the summons, but rather, that he failed to comply with
the
order of this Court.
Notwithstanding this, I
might have been persuaded to compel compliance had I been given a
single reason to believe doing so would
be a fruitful exercise.
As it will not be fruitful, I defer to what was said in
Victoria
Park Ratepayers’ Association
:
‘
Contempt
of court is not merely a means by which a frustrated successful
litigant is able to force his or her opponent to obey a
court order.
Whenever a litigant fails or refuses to obey a court order, he or she
thereby undermines the Constitution.
That, in turn, means that
the court called upon to commit such a litigant for his or her
contempt is not only dealing with the
individual interest of the
frustrated successful litigant but also, as importantly, acting as
guardian of the public interest
.’
Indeed,
at the core of these contempt proceedings lies not only the integrity
of this Court and the Judiciary, but the vindication
of the
Constitution itself.” [Emphasis added.]”
[2]
[5]
On
the third ground, the respondent places reliance on the order by this
Court, per Mdalana-Mayisela J, in
Raath
v Raath.
[3]
In my view, this judgment is evidently distinguishable as the court
was not faced with a repeated contemnor. In the present
matter,
on
20 June 2023,
the
respondent
was
found to be in wilful contempt of the impugned orders by Tshombe AJ.
Yet, this court still prioritised compelling the
respondent’s
compliance by ordering a
suspended
committal, contingent on an order compelling compliance with the
impugned court orders.
[4]
[6]
The
stringent conditions imposed are obviously informed by the level of
disdain shown by the respondent; the real possibility that
the
respondent would shirk the indulgence; the constitutional imperative
given the vulnerability of the applicant as a woman and
cancer
survivor who needs medical attention with the costs thereof being
covered by the impugned orders; and the fact that the
respondent has
the means and ability to purge himself of contempt. Thus, the
respondent has a choice either to purge himself
of the contempt as
indulged or, if the indulgence is rendered
futile
by the
respondent’s
incorrigible contemptuous conduct, the order of committal is an
appropriate sanction.
[5]
[7]
However, since the order of committal is
suspended for 12 months, in the event there is interminable contempt
of the impugned orders,
the applicant would still have to seek leave
to approach this Court on the same papers, or duly supplemented, to
seek an order
that the suspension be lifted and for the Court to
authorise a warrant of arrest and imprisonment of the respondent
forthwith in
execution of the order.
[8]
It
is well accepted that for the leave to appeal to be granted, the
applicant should in essence show that the appeal would have
a
reasonable prospect of success. In
Member
of the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and
Another
,
[6]
the court described ‘reasonable prospects of success’ as
follows:
“
Once again it is
necessary to say that leave to appeal, especially to this court, must
not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable
prospect of
success.
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes
it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge
concerned is of the opinion that the appeal
would
have a
reasonable prospect of success; or there is some other compelling
reason why it should be heard.
An applicant for leave to
appeal must convince the court on proper grounds that there is a
reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of success on appeal. A mere
possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is not hopeless,
is not enough. There must be
a sound, rational basis to conclude that
there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.”
[9] Having assessed
all the grounds of appeal, I am persuaded that there are no prospects
that another court would reasonably
arrive at a decision different to
the one reached by this Court.
[10] I now turn to the
issue of costs. Granted, this application for leave to appeal
is unmeritorious, especially given the
fact the impugned order is
granted in terms of
Rule 43.
I am, however, disinclined to award
costs
de bonis propriis
as sought by
the applicant. Still, a cost order is warranted.
[11] In the
circumstances, the application for leave to appeal is dismissed with
costs
.
P Nkutha-Nkontwana J
Judge of the High
Court,
Johannesburg
Heard:
24 October 2023
Judgment
handed down: 27 October 2023
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Adv
P Ternet
Instructed
by:
Kim
Meikle Attorneys
For
the first respondent:
Adv
N Jagga
Instructed
by:
Vardakos
Attorneys
[1]
[2021] ZACC 18; 2021 (5) SA 327 (CC); 2021 (9) BCLR 992 (CC).
[2]
Id
at paras 61-2.
[3]
The parties referred the Court to a judgment handed down by
Mdalana-Mayisela J on 26 August 2022, however the judgment is not
available on any of the official law reports or SAFLII. The judgment
is, however, available on the website “LawLibrary”,
and
can be accessed at:
https://lawlibrary.org.za/akn/za/judgment/zagpjhc/2022/577
[4]
See
E.K
v P.K and Others
[2023] ZAGPPHC 69.
[5]
Id
at para 34.
[6]
[2016] ZASCA 176
at paras [16]- [17]. See also
Smith
v S
[2011] ZASCA 15
;
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA) at para [7]
;
Greenwood v S
[2015] ZASCA 56
at para
[4]
;
Kruger
v S
[2013] ZASCA 198
;
2014 (1) SACR 647
(SCA)
at para [2];
Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v
Democratic Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National
Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
[2016] ZAGPPHC 489.
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