Motjamela v George Local Municipality (267/25) [2026] ZAWCHC 9 (20 January 2026)

60 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Contempt of Court — Non-compliance with court order — Applicant's failure to provide necessary health report results in dismissal of application. The applicant, Thabang Motjamela, failed to comply with a previous court order requiring a report on his mental capacity, leading to the dismissal of his application against the George Local Municipality. The court held that without the requisite report, it could not determine whether the applicant's non-compliance was willful or mala fide.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned a motion-court application in the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Circuit Local Division, Thembalethu. The applicant, Mr Thabang Motjamela, appeared in person, and the respondent was the George Local Municipality, represented by counsel.


The application came before Thulare J on 20 January 2026, and judgment was delivered the same day. The court’s decision was shaped by the existence of a previous court order, made in the applicant’s presence, which required compliance before further litigation steps could properly proceed. The court recorded that the applicant had understood that earlier order and had, of his own accord, indicated an intention to comply with it, but subsequently failed to do so.


The general subject-matter of the dispute, as addressed in this judgment, was not the substantive merits of any underlying claim against the municipality, but rather the consequences of the applicant’s non-compliance with a prior court directive requiring a Department of Health report relating to an enquiry into the applicant’s mental illness or intellectual capacity. The judgment focused on whether, in the absence of that report, the court could appropriately determine the character of the applicant’s non-compliance and how the proceedings should be managed going forward.


Material Facts


It was undisputed that the court had previously issued an order in the presence of the applicant and that the applicant understood the order when it was made. It was also undisputed that the applicant expressed an intention to comply with that order, and that he did not comply with it.


The prior order contemplated an enquiry and report by the Department of Health on the question of the applicant’s mental illness or intellectual capacity. The court treated the absence of such an enquiry and report as central to its ability to deal with the matter, specifically insofar as the applicant’s state of mind and appreciation of the proceedings could bear on whether his non-compliance should be characterised as wilful and mala fide.


The court further had regard to subsequent conduct by the applicant. On 7 January 2026, while an application for leave to appeal and an application for recusal were pending for the report, the applicant prepared what he termed heads of argument for leave to appeal, and he filed these at court on 19 January 2026. On the court’s reading, these documents suggested that the applicant was attempting to argue an application that the court regarded as effectively suspended pending receipt of the health professionals’ report, and that the applicant did not appreciate that compliance with the earlier order was a prerequisite to the further hearing of the matter.


Legal Issues


The central question was how the court should respond to the applicant’s failure to comply with the previous order requiring a Department of Health report, and whether—on the information available—the court could determine that the non-compliance was wilful and mala fide.


The dispute, as addressed, primarily involved the application of legal standards to the known facts and a consequential case-management/value judgment about the appropriate procedural disposition in circumstances where the court considered itself unable, without expert input, to assess the applicant’s mental state and intellectual capacity. The court’s determination did not turn on resolving contested evidentiary disputes between the parties, but on the implications of an acknowledged non-compliance and the court’s inability to evaluate the applicant’s state of mind without the required report.


Court’s Reasoning


The court referred to Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd (653/04) [2006] ZASCA 52; 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA) (31 March 2006), particularly paragraphs 39 to 41, for the principles governing civil contempt and the requirement that contempt is not mere disobedience but involves contumacious disrespect for judicial authority. The court highlighted that, in committal-type contempt proceedings, the requisites must be established beyond reasonable doubt, and that while an applicant must prove the existence of the order, service or notice, and non-compliance, the respondent bears an evidential burden to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether the non-compliance was wilful and mala fide.


Against that framework, the court emphasised that it was not in a position, “without more,” to pronounce on whether the applicant’s failure to comply with the prior order was wilful and mala fide, because the court held a particular “view” about the applicant that made the applicant’s mental state and intellectual capacity materially relevant to that evaluative determination. The court explained that assessment of mental illness or intellectual capacity requires training, skill and experience beyond that of a judicial officer and beyond persons in the position of the litigants. It requires expert intervention by qualified professionals who can express an opinion, set out the factual basis for that opinion, and explain the scientific tools and analysis used, thereby enabling the court to formulate its own decision.


The absence of an enquiry and report from health professionals therefore prevented the court from reaching a reasoned conclusion on the question of wilfulness and mala fides in relation to the applicant’s disregard of the previous order. The court also considered the applicant’s further conduct—particularly the filing of heads of argument aimed at advancing proceedings that the court considered contingent upon the outstanding report—as reinforcing the concern that the applicant may not have appreciated the procedural posture of the case and the prerequisite nature of compliance with the earlier order. This, in the court’s assessment, fortified the view that the applicant might be in need of medical help rather than judicial intervention at that stage.


On that basis, the court concluded that the appropriate response was to dismiss the pending application and to impose a restriction on further filings or re-enrolment unless and until the required Department of Health report accompanied any renewed approach to court.


Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the application. It further ordered that the applicant is barred from filing any new application or re-enrolling the dismissed application unless and until the filing is accompanied by the Department of Health report arising from the enquiry into mental illness or intellectual capacity contemplated in the previous order of court.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd (653/04) [2006] ZASCA 52; 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA) (31 March 2006).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, given the applicant’s admitted non-compliance with an earlier order requiring a Department of Health enquiry and report, and given the court’s view that expert evidence was necessary to assess the applicant’s mental illness or intellectual capacity, it could not properly determine whether the non-compliance was wilful and mala fide. In the absence of the contemplated report, the court dismissed the application and restricted any future or renewed litigation steps by requiring that any new application or re-enrolment be accompanied by the Department of Health report. The court made no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that civil contempt is not established by mere non-compliance with a court order, but by non-compliance that is wilful and mala fide, reflecting contumacious disregard of judicial authority, and that the relevant standard of proof for contempt committal is beyond reasonable doubt, as articulated in Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd (653/04) [2006] ZASCA 52; 2006 (4) SA 326 (SCA) (31 March 2006).


The judgment further applied the principle that determining a person’s mental illness or intellectual capacity is a matter requiring expert assessment beyond ordinary judicial competence, and that where such expert input is contemplated by an existing court order and is necessary to guide the court’s decision-making, the absence of the required expert enquiry and report may prevent the court from making findings that depend on an assessment of the litigant’s state of mind, including whether non-compliance was wilful and mala fide.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CIRCUIT LOCAL DIVISION, THEMBALETHU)

Case No: 267/25

In the matter between
THABANG MOTJAMELA APPLICANT

AND

GEORGE LOCAL MUNICIPALITY RESPONDENT
Date of Hearing : 20 January 2026
Date of Delivering : 20 January 2026
__________________________________________________________________

JUDGMENT
__________________________________________________________________
THULARE J
ORDER
1. The application is dismissed.
2. The applicant is barred from filing a ny new application or re -enrolling this
application unless and until such application is accompanied by the report
from the Department of Health on the enquiry into the question of mental
illness or intellectual capacity as envisaged in the previous order of this
court.

3. No cost order is made.

[1] This court made an order. The order was made in the presence of the applicant.
The applicant understood the order and out of his own volition expressed his
intention to comply with the terms of the order. The applicant failed to comply
with the terms of the order. In the light of the view that the court holds on the
applicant, it is impossible, without more, to pronounce on whether the applicants
failure to comply with the terms of the order was willful and mala fide.

[2] In Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd (653/04) [2006] ZASCA 52; 2006 (4) SA
326 (SCA) (31 March 2006) at para 39 to 41 the following was said:
39. This approach conforms with the true nature of this form of the crime of contempt of
court. As pointed out earlier (para 10), this does not consist in mere disobedience to a
court order, but in the contumacious disrespect for judicial authority that is so manifested.
It also conforms with the analysis in Beyers (para 11 above), where this court held that
even though enforcement is the primary purpose of committal, it is nevertheless not
imposed merely because the obligation has not been observed, ‘but on the basis of the
criminal contempt of court that is as sociated with it’. The punitive and public dimensions
are therefore inextricable: and coherence requires that the criminal standard of proof
should apply in all applications for contempt committal.
40. Finally, as pointed out earlier (para 23), this developmen t of the common law not require
the applicant to lead evidence as to the respondent’s state of mind or motive: once the
applicant proves the three requisites (order, service and non -compliance), unless the
respondent provides evidence raising a reasonable doubt as to whether non -compliance
was wilful and mala fide, the requisites of contempt will have been established. The sole
change is that the respondent no longer bears a legal burden to disprove wilfulness and

change is that the respondent no longer bears a legal burden to disprove wilfulness and
mala fides on balance of probabilities, but need only lead evidence that establishes a
reasonable doubt. It follows, in my view, that Froneman J was correct in observing
in Burchell (para 24) that in most cases the change in the incidence and nature of the onus
will not make cases of this kind any more difficult for the applicant to prove. In those
cases where it will make a difference, it seems to me right that the alleged contemnor
should have to raise only a reasonable doubt.
41. To sum up:
1. The civil contempt procedure is a valuable and important mec hanism for securing
compliance with court orders, and survives constitutional scrutiny in the form of a motion
court application adapted to constitutional requirements.

2. The respondent in such proceedings is not an ‘accused person’, but is entitled to
analogous protections as are appropriate to motion proceedings.
3. In particular, the applicant must prove the requisites of contempt (the order; service or
notice; non-compliance; and wilfulness and mala fides) beyond reasonable doubt.
4. But once the applicant has proved the order, service or notice, and non -compliance, the
respondent bears an evidential burden in relation to wilfulness and mala fides: should the
respondent fail to advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether
non-compliance was wilful and mala fide, contempt will have been established beyond
reasonable doubt.
5. A declarator and other appropriate remedies remain available to a civil applicant on proof
on a balance of probabilities.

[3] The position as regards mental illness or intellectual capacity of a person
requires training, skill and experience beyond that of a judicial officer or a person
in the position of the applicant or respondent . It requires expert intervention by
those who qualify to express an opinion , and who can set out the facts upon which
the opinion is based as well as the scientific tools and analysis used , to guide the
court in the formulation of its own decision on the matter. In the absence of an
enquiry into a nd a report on the mental state and intellectual capacity of the
applicant, I am unable to express a judgment on whether the applicants disregard
of the court order was wilful and mala fide. The further conduct of the applicant is
not helpful. On the 7 th of January 2026, whilst the application for leave to appeal
and recusal were pending for the report , the applicant prepared what he termed
heads of argument for leave to appeal, which he filed at court on 19 January 2026.
A reading thereof suggests that the applicant is trying to argue an application which
has been suspended pending the report from health professionals. It seems that he

has been suspended pending the report from health professionals. It seems that he
failed to appreciate that there is an order whose compliance is a prerequisite for the
hearing of the application. This fortifies the view that the applicant may be a
person who needs medical help more than judicial interventio n. For these reasons
the order is made.


_____________________
DM THULARE

JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT

Appearances
Applicant : In person(Mr T Motjamela)
Respondent : Adv. A Erasmus
Instructed by : Schoeter Inc Marco