Unpacking the Contempt of Court Process
Submitted by: Nicolene Schoeman-Louw, SchoemanLaw Inc Save to Instapaper
Nicolene Schoeman-Louw | SchoemanLaw Inc
Category: Dispute Resolution| Commercial Law
Many litigants often find that getting recourse at Court only partially resolves all issues between them. It usually calls for referring the matter back even after it was concluded and is typically where a contempt of court application would follow.
"Contempt of Court is any behavior or wrongdoing that conflicts with or challenges the authority, integrity, and superiority of the Court. These acts might include failure to comply with requests, witness tampering, withholding evidence, interruption of proceedings, or defying a court order. These wrongful acts may be committed by attorneys, officers of the Court, court personnel, jurors, witnesses, protestors, or any party involved in a court proceeding."
How does it work?
In a recent Supreme Court of Appeal case, that of Samancor Chrome Limited v Bila Civil Contractors (Pty) Ltd and Others (Case no 159/2021) [2022] ZASCA 154 (7 November 2022), the mechanism was explored.
The appellant, Samancor Chrome Limited (Samancor), is the co-owner of specific properties.
Accordingly, it has the sole and exclusive right to mine. In terms of these rights, it is obliged to take all necessary steps to safeguard and protect the environment and the mining area from any possible damage. It also has to protect any persons using or entitled to use the surface mining area from injury associated with any activities in the mining area.
On 12 June 2019, Samancor lodged an urgent application before the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (High Court), seeking an order interdicting Bila, its employees and contractors from conducting unlawful mining operations. The High Court dismissed the application.
Requirements for Contempt Application
(a) the existence of the order;
(b) service or notice of that order to the respondent;
(c) non-compliance with the order by the respondent; and
(d) wilfulness and mala fides.
The onus is on the applicant to prove all these requirements beyond a reasonable doubt. However, once the applicant has established the existence of the order, service or notice and non-compliance, the respondent bears the evidential burden concerning wilfulness and mala fides.
Damages
The next issue to determine is the penalty imposed against the respondents. Samancor sought an order directing each of the respondents to pay a fine of R100 000 or any other sum the Court would deem appropriate. The Court ordered the first respondent to pay a fine of R100 000, while the second to fifth respondents were to pay a fine of R50 000 each. There was no order on imprisonment.
Conclusion
If the requirements are met, the contempt of court application will succeed, and the Court may be approached to impose a fine or compensation as a penalty. However, imprisonment is not always the result. Contact an Attorney at SchoemanLaw for assistance.
Nicolene Schoeman-Louw | SchoemanLaw IncDispute Resolution and Commercial Specialistwww.schoemanlaw.co.za
SchoemanLaw Inc Attorneys, Conveyancers and Notaries Public is a boutique law firm offering its clients access to high quality online legal documents and agreements, together with a wide range of legal services. The firm has an innovative and entrepreneurial mindset that distinguishes it from other law firms. We apply our first-hand understanding of the challenges facing entrepreneurs (regardless of their business size) to develop proven, practical solutions incorporating legal compliance, risk aversion and business sense. We achieve this by offering clients tailored, yet holistic support comprising of legal gap analysis, the design of tailored legal solutions and the practical implementation thereof through training and automation. With your personal interests in mind, our ultimate aim is to implement measures that protect the results of your hard work as effectively as possible.
Latest Press Articles
- Bridging Work and Home - A Conveyancing Approach to Employee Tenancies.
- Suretyships in Commercial Contracts - What Every Business Should Know
- Navigating South Africa’s Labour Law Reform - Proposed Amendments to the Labour Relations Act
- Review Applications in South African Labour Law - Legal Constraints and Procedural Discipline
- Parental Alienation in South Africa - A Silent Form of Emotional Abuse in Family Law Disputes
- Market Trust Starts Inside - Aligning Your Legal Documents with Your Marketing Message
- Exploring Suretyship - Capacity, Liabilities, and Types of Sureties.
- The "Without Prejudice" Rule Under Fire - Recent Developments in South African Law
- Navigating the Storm - How Rule 43 and Rule 58 Applications Provide a Lifeline During Divorce
- Beyond the Traditional - Execution of Judgments Through Attachment of Bank Accounts
- Guardianship vs Custody in South Africa - What Parents Need to Know When Travelling Abroad with a Minor
- What steps can I take if someone registers a domain name that is too similar to mine?
- Understanding the Revised Automotive Aftermarket Guidelines for Competition (R2R)
- Considering Artificial Intelligence, the responsibility of Employee management
- Mistake, Misrepresentation, and Duress - When Can a Business Escape a Contract?
The Pulse Updates
- New Report Reveals Msme Funding Realities In South Africa – And What Must Change (May 30, 2025)
- Opinion Piece: Incorporating Ai Into Workforce Planning (May 26, 2025)
- Bridging The Gap: Why Finance And Hr Must Collaborate For Business Success (May 19, 2025)
- Reclaiming Johannesburg’s Running Narrative Powered By The Streets. Refreshed By Pura. (May 16, 2025)
- Double Gold Triumph For Hansgrohe Innovations (May 16, 2025)