SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this
document in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Reportable / Not reportable
Case no: 5955 /2022
In the matter between :
M[…] J[…] M[…] Applicant
(Born P […])
and T[..] S[…] M[…] Respon dent
Neutral citation:
Coram: Mbhele, DJP
Heard: 19 September 2024
Delivered: 19 March 2025
Summary: Contempt of Court – Whether non- compliance with the order was
willful and male fide – Respondent guilty of contempt of court.
ORDER
1. The respondent is found to be in contempt of the Court order issued out of this
Honourable Court on 03 February by Tsangarakis, AJ.
2. The respondent is to be committed to imprisonment for a contempt of Court for a
period of 30 (thirty) days with an option of a fine of R600.00 , which sentence is
suspended in its entirety for a period of 2 (two) years, on condition that the respondent
complies with the order granted on 03 February 2023 in respect of the applicant’s
maintenance within 14 days of the granting of this order.
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3. Should the respondent fail to comply with paragraph 2 of this order,
3.1 The performance and the execution of the Writ of Committal for contempt
of Court is hereby authorised.
3.2 The first respondent should submit himself to the South African Police
Services at Park Road precinct, failing which the South African Police
Service should take all necessary steps to ensure that the first respondent
is delivered to the keeper of prisons in order to be committed in terms of
this order.
4. The counter application succeeds only in respect of paragraphs 2- 4 of the order
of Tsangarakis, AJ pending divorce:
4.1 The Respondent is awarded care and primary residence of the minor child
as contemplated in section 18(2)(a) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005;
4.2 The Applicant is awarded contact with the minor child as contemplated in Section 18(2)(b) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 as follows:
4.2.1 Contact on alternative weekends from Friday at 17h00 to Sunday
at 17h00;
4.2.2 Short school holidays to alternate between the parties;
4.2.3 Long school holidays to be shared equally between the parties;
4.2.4 Contact on the Applicant’s birthday from 09h00 to 16h00;
4.2.5 Contact on Mother’s Day from 09h00 to 16h00.
5. The respondent to pay the costs of this application on an attorney which cost
should include the costs of Counsel.
JUDGMENT
Mbhele, DJP
INTRODUCTION:
[1] The applicant brought an application seeking to declare the respondent in
contempt of an order granted by Tsangarakis, AJ (the order) on 03 February 2023.
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[2] The parties are married to each other and the marriage still subsists with divorce
proceedings pending before this court. On 03 February 2023 this court granted an order in terms of Rule 43 pending the finalisation of divorce. The relevant terms of the order
are stated below:
‘1.
The Respondent be ordered to pay maintenance in respect of the Applicant in the
amount R5,200.00 per month, the first payment to be made on the 7th of MARCH 2023 and
thereafter on the 1st day of each succeeding month until finalisation of the divorce action;
2. The Applicant is awarded care and primary residence of the minor child as contemplated
in section 18(2)(a) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005;
3. The Respondent is awarded contact with the minor child as contemplated in Section
18(2)(b) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 as follows:
3.1 Contact on alternative weekends from Friday at 17h00 to Sunday at 17h00;
3.2 Short school holidays to alternate between the parties;
3.3 Long school holidays to be shared equally between the parties;
3.4 Contact on the Respondent’s birthday from 09h00 to 16h00;
3.5 Contact on Father’s Day from 09h00 to 16h00;
4. The Respondent is to pay maintenance in respect of the minor child in the amount of
R5 000. 00 per month, the first payment to be made on the 7
th of MARCH 2023 and thereafter on
the 1st day of each succeeding month until finalisation of the divorce action;
5. The Respondent is ordered to contribute to the Applicant’s legal costs in the amount of
R5 000.00 payable in instalments of R500.00 per month. The first payment to be made on the
7th of MARCH 2023 and thereafter on the 1st day of each succeeding month up and until the
amount of R5 000.00 is paid;
6. The costs of this application shall be cost in the main action. ’
[3] The applicant initiated these contempt proceedings against the respondent
following the respondent’s failure to comply with the court order. As discussed below, the
non-compliance with the court order is not denied by the respondent. The respondent
filed a counter application in terms of rule 43(6) wherein he seeks variation of Court
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order. At the centre of his application is that care and primary residence of the minor
child be awarded to him with ancillary prayers relating to access by the applicant. He
further seeks the variation of the maintenance order in respect of both the applicant and the minor child.
[4] The non- compliance which the applicant alleges are short payments of cash
maintenance for the months of September 2023 and October 2023, and complete non -
payment from November 2023 up to the date of hearing this matter in respect of t he
minor child. From June 2024 the respondent stopped paying maintenance towards the applicant. From September 2023 to Octob er 2023 the respondent made part payment s
of R500.00 in respect of the minor child as opposed to R5 000.00. As a result of the
respondent’s failure to honour the court order, the minor child left the applicant to stay
with him .
[5] The respondent denies that he was in willful default. He attributes his failure to
pay the R5 000.00 ordered by the court to the advice he received from his legal
representative that he should deduct school fees from the maintenance amount which
R4 150.00 as at August 2023. It is not clear why an amount of R4 500.00 was deducted.
The Rule 43 record shows that the minor child’s school fees were R1 390.00 per month.
The other reason he advanced for non- compliance was that the Family Advocate’s
report issu ed on 17 November 2023 recommended that he be the primary care giver
with the applicant awarded contact rights . This version is untenable. The Family
Advocate’s report was issued 2 months and 27 days after the respondent had started
defaulting on the maintenance of the minor child. [6] R espondent contends that he stopped paying the applicant’s maintenance
because the applicant moved back to their marital home in May 2024, and further that
the applicant owns a vehicle registered in her name which vehicle is operated as a taxi. These assertions are vehemently denied by the applicant. The applicant’s version is
supported by affidavit s confirming that she had been staying with her sister in Gauteng
since December 2023 and that the vehicle referred to is being used by a third party who
continued to pay instalments because the applicant could not afford paying for it. The
etoll invoice attached to the answering affidavit is not sufficient proof that the said
vehicle is operated as a taxi by the applicant. There is no indication that the applicant
owns a license to operate public transportation or a taxi.
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[7] Contempt of court is defined as “the deliberate, intentional disobedience of an
order granted by a court of competent jurisdiction. The responde nt’s knowledge of the
order, non-compliance thereof and that he owns two companies through which he
operates businesses in the construction sector are common cause. Once order, non-
compliance and service have been established the next step is to determine whether
the respondent’s non- compliance was not willful and mala fide. ”1 If the respondent fails
to provide evidence raising a reasonable doubt as to whether non- compliance was
willful and mala fide, he has to be found guilty of contempt of the relevant court order.
See: Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd2; Matjhabeng Local Municipality v Eskom
Holdings Ltd & others; Mkhonto & others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd 3
[8] It is common cause that the respondent has not paid to the applicant the
maintenance as ordered by this C ourt on 03 February 2023. He is of the view that he
was under no obligation to fully comply with the Court order for reasons advanced
above. Owing to the respondent’s failure to comply with the C ourt order the applicant
had to allow the minor child to return to the respondent as she could no longer afford to take care of his daily needs. This explains the frustration that the applicant had to
endure while armed with a Court order. The Family Advocate’s report is not a court
order. Respondent, having been legally represented throughout the proceedings, should have approached Court for variation, he did not do so, instead he resorted to self -
service . Failure to comply with the court order by the respondent left the applicant with a
difficult choice, whether to continue starving with the minor child or allow the child to stay with the respondent where there were resources that he was withholding from the
applicant in violation of a Court order.
1 Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Compensation Commissioner [2016] ZASCA 59; (2016) 37 ILJ 1625 (SCA)
‘The question which then arises is whether the appellant proved that the Commissioner’s failure to comply
with the [consent order] amounted to civil contempt of court, beyond a reasonable doubt to secure his
committal to prison. An applicant for this type of relief must prove (a) the existence of a court order; (b) service
or notice thereof; (c) non -compliance with the terms of the order; and (d) willfulness 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. Here, requisites (a) to (c) were
always common cause. The only question was whether the Commissioner rebutted the evidentiary burden
resting on him. ’
2 Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd 2006 (4) SA 326 ( SCA) at para 14 .
3 Matjhabeng Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd & others; Mkhonto & others v Compensation Solutions (Pty)
Ltd [2017] ZACC 35; 2018 (1) SA 1 (CC) at par 67 and 85- 88.
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[9] In Fakie4 Cameron, JA asserted that it is a crime to unlawfully and intentionally
disobey a court order. Flagrant disrespect of court orders threatens the rule of law. The
rule of law is at the center of constitutional democracy and needs to be protected and
advanced. Contempt proceedings serve as one of the tools to protect the authority and
honour of the courts .
[10] In K.P.T and Others v A.P.T the court remarked as follows:
‘[95] Compliance with court orders is always important. There is a particular scourge in this
country of spouses, particularly husbands, failing to pay judicially ordered maintenance. While a
spouse facing a criminal sanction is entitled to the benefit of reasonable doubt, a court should
not too readily find such doubt to exist where the spouse has failed to put up evidence which
should have been available to him to support a claim of unaffordability. In the present case, the
husband acted in a high-handed and disdainful way in giving effect to the proposals in his
attorneys’ letter of 28 April 2016. I conclude that his evidence does not raise reasonable doubt.
Contempt in the respects identified above has thus been established.’5
[11] Failure to comply with maintenance court orders can have devastating impact on
the affected child. As it was apparent in the current matter, it hindered the child’s access to essential needs while in the care of the mother. A closer look into how things unfolded in the current matter, reveals that the applicant was staying with the minor child until non-compliance with the court order frustrated her right to primary care and
residence of the minor child. This shows how a party armed with a court order can be
bullied into submitting to the demands of a party in control of resources. The applicant, due to lack of resources, had to allow the child to go back to the respondent in violation of the court order because she was under pressure and could not provide the minor child with essential needs. This has to be frowned upon. Should it be allowed to flourish,
respondents who did not win cases in court will continue to bypass court orders by withdrawing resources to a party whom a court has appointed as the primary care giver of the minor child.
4 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA) .
‘it is a crime unlawfully and intentionally to disobey a Court order. 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. The offence had, in general terms, received a constitutional 'stamp of approval', since
the rule of law — a founding value of the Constitution — 'requires that the dignity and authority of the Courts,
as well as their capacity to carry out their functions, should always be maintained.'
5 K.P.T and Others v A.P.T (1215/2019) [2020] ZAWCHC 110 (2 October 2019) .
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[12] The respondent does not raise affordability as the reason for non- compliance. It is
clear that he could afford to pay maintenance in full, he just did not want to pay the
amount ordered by the Court . In Pheko and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality and Others6 Nkabinde, J held as follows:
‘[1] The rule of law, a foundational value of the Constitution, requires that the dignity and
authority of the courts be upheld. This is crucial, as the capacity of the courts to carry out their
functions depends upon it. As the Constitution commands, orders and decisions issued by a
court bind all persons to whom and organs of state to which they apply, and no person or organ
of state may interfere, in any manner, with the functioning of the courts. It follows from this that disobedience towards court orders or decisions risks rendering our courts impotent and judicial authority a mere mockery. The effectiveness of court orders or decisions is substantially determined by the assurance that they will be enforced.
[2] Courts have the power to ensure that their decisions or orders are complied with by all
and sundry, including organs of state. In doing so, courts are not only giving effect to the rights of the successful litigant but also and more importantly, by acting as guardians of the
Constitution, asserting their authority in the public interest. It is thus unsurprising that courts
may, as is the position in this case, raise the issue of civil contempt of their own accord.’
[13] The Constitutional Court has also warned against recalcitrant maintenance
defaulters who use legal processes to sidestep their obligations towards their children.
The Constitutional Court remarked as follows:
‘Courts need to be alive to recalcitrant maintenance defaulters who use legal processes to side-
step their obligations towards their children. The respondent was entitled to apply for a variation
of the maintenance order. But whatever excuse he might have had for failing to comply with the
existing order, there was not excuse for his failure to pay even the reduced amount that he
contended should be substituted for it. The respondent appears to have utilized the system to
stall his maintenance obligations through the machinery of the Act. It appears from the evidence
of the CGE that this happens frequently in the maintenance courts. The hardships experienced
by maintenance complainants need to be addressed and the proper implementation of the
provisions of the Act is a matter that calls for the urgent attention of the Department of Justice.’7
6 Pheko and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others ZACC 10; 2015 (5) SA 600 (CC); 2015 (6) BCLR
711 (CC) (7 May 2015) at par. 1-2.
7 Bannatyne v Bannatyne (Commission of Gender Equality, as Amicus [2002] ZACC 31 ; 2003 (2) SA 363 at par. 32 .
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[14] In my view, the respondent has failed to rebut the inference that his non-
compliance was not willful and mala fide. In the circumstances I find that the respondent
is in contempt of the Court order of Tsangarakis, AJ of 03 February 2023. I am unable
to find that there is change in the applicant’s personal circumstances warranting
variation of her maintenance order pending divorce.
[15] I have considered the F amily Advocate’s report and noted that its author holds a
view that the other child already stays with the father and that he has a strong bond with the minor child. He further recommends that care and primary residence of the minor child be awarded to the respondent pending divorce.
[16] Section 9 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2008 provides that the standard to apply to
all matters concerning the care, protection and well -being of a child, is that of the child’s
best interests . In Potgieter v Potgieter8 the Supreme Court of Appeal stated that the
determination of the best interests of the child, ‘in any particular case involves the High
Court making a value judgment, based on its findings of fact, in the exercise of its
inherent jurisdiction as the upper guardian of minor children’ .
[17] The evidence before me shows that the applicant has relocated to Gauteng since
December 2023 while the minor child remained with his father in Bloemfontein. The minor child has been staying with the respondent and his brother since November 2023
and attending school in Bloemfontein. I do not see it prudent to interfere with this
arrangement. It is in the best interest of the child to remain with the respondent until
finalization of the divorce.
[18] Costs are in the discretion of the court. The respondent’s non- compliance with the
court order left the applicant and the minor child in a precarious situation. The applicant was left out of pocket and desolate. Costs should follow the event.
[19] I, therefore , make the following order .
ORDER:
8 Potgieter v Potgieter [2007] 3 All SA 9 (SCA); 2007 (5) SA 94 (SCA).
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1. The respondent is found to be in contempt of the Court order issued out of this
Honourable Court on 03 February by Tsangarakis, AJ.
2. The respondent is to be committed to imprisonment for a contempt of Court for a
period of 30 (thirty) days with an option of a fine of R600.00 , which sentence is
suspended in its entirety for a period of 2 (two) years, on condition that the respondent
complies with the order granted on 03 February 2023 in respect of the applicant’s
maintenance within 14 days of the granting of this order.
3. Should the respondent fail to comply with paragraph 2 of this order,
3.1 The performance and the execution of the Writ of Committal for contempt
of Court is hereby authorised.
3.2 The first respondent should submit himself to the South African Police
Services at Park Road precinct, failing which the South African Police
Service should take all necessary steps to ensure that the first respondent
is delivered to the keeper of prisons in order to be committed in terms of
this order.
4. The counter application succeeds only in respect of paragraphs 2- 4 of the order
of Tsangarakis, AJ pending divorce:
4.1 The Respondent is awarded care and primary residence of the minor child as contemplated in section 18(2)(a) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005;
4.2 The Applicant is awarded contact with the minor child as contemplated in Section 18(2)(b) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 as follows:
4.2.1 Contact on alternative weekends from Friday at 17h00 to Sunday at 17h00;
4.2.2 Short school holidays to alternate between the parties;
4.2.3 Long school holidays to be shared equally between the parties;
4.2.4 Contact on the Applicant’s birthday from 09h00 to 16h00;
4.2.5 Contact on Mother’s Day from 09h00 to 16h00.
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5. The respondent to pay the costs of this application, which cost should include the
costs of Counsel on scale B .
MBHELE, DJP
Appearances:
For the Applicant : Adv E. Ngantweni
Instructed by: Thulo Attorneys
Bloemfontein
For the Respondent : Mr. W Phalatsi
Instructed by: NW Phalatsi & Partners
Bloemfontein