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Home » Courts send strong warning to litigants who deliberately ignore binding court orders
Constitutional Law

Courts send strong warning to litigants who deliberately ignore binding court orders

North West High Court says frustration with legal delays cannot justify taking the law into your own hands.
Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliMay 12, 2026No Comments
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  • The North West High Court handed a former provident fund official a suspended 30-day jail sentence for contempt of court.
  • The court found that attempts to enforce a CCMA award without leave of court violated an existing curatorship order.
  • Judge Masike warned that frustration with legal delays does not justify disregarding binding court orders.

Frustration with slow-moving court cases, delayed reviews or unresolved disputes does not give litigants the right to ignore binding court orders. This was the warning of the High Court in the North West in handing a former provident fund official a suspended jail sentence for contempt of court.

The court stressed that parties who believe legal proceedings are dragging on must still use lawful channels to challenge or vary existing orders instead of taking matters into their own hands.

That warning came after Daniel Poonyane Tlholoe attempted to enforce a CCMA arbitration award worth nearly R1 million against the Bosele National Provident Fund despite an existing curatorship order that barred legal enforcement steps without prior leave of court.

In a strongly worded judgment delivered on 11 May 2026, Acting Judge T Masike said court orders remain binding until properly set aside or varied by a court. Judge Masike said, “It is a crime to disobey a court order unlawfully and intentionally. Our courts cannot tolerate the disregard of their orders.”

Tlholoe, the former principal officer of the provident fund, had obtained a CCMA arbitration award after his dismissal in 2016. The provident fund later launched review proceedings in the Labour Court challenging that award.

Before the review could be finalised, the provident fund was placed under curatorship in 2018. A High Court order granted at the time specifically stayed all claims, legal proceedings and execution processes against the fund unless leave of court had first been obtained.

Court rejects frustration defence

Despite the curatorship order, Tlholoe later obtained an enforcement award and attempted to attach more than R915 000 from the provident fund’s Standard Bank account.

The court accepted that Tlholoe had become frustrated with delays surrounding the Labour Court review proceedings. However, Judge Masike found that frustration could not excuse deliberate non-compliance with a binding order.

The judgment noted that another court had previously advised Tlholoe to approach the Labour Court if he believed the review application had lapsed. Judge Masike said, “There was no impediment for the first respondent to bring an application declaring that the applicant’s review application had lapsed.”

Instead, the court found that Tlholoe bypassed the proper legal process and proceeded with execution despite knowing that the curatorship order remained in force. “The previous order remains in force for so long as the applicant is under curatorship,” Judge Masike said.

The court found that the requirements for contempt had been established because Tlholoe knew about the order, failed to comply with it and could not provide a convincing explanation showing his conduct was not wilful or mala fide.

Court authority must be protected

Judge Masike also stressed that contempt proceedings are not only about disputes between private parties but also about protecting the authority and effectiveness of the courts. “It is vital to the administration of justice that those affected by court orders obey them,” the judgment stated.

The court warned that allowing litigants to ignore orders whenever they become frustrated with delays would undermine the rule of law and weaken public confidence in the justice system.

Although the provident fund sought direct imprisonment, the court imposed a suspended 30-day sentence instead. The sentence was suspended on condition that Tlholoe complies with the curatorship order while it remains in effect.

Judge Masike said the suspended sentence was intended to compel future compliance and deter further disregard of court orders. “One hopes that this will have a salutary effect on the first respondent and ensure that he desists from and refrains from repeating his contemptuous conduct,” Judge Masike wrote.

The court also ordered Tlholoe to pay attorney and client costs after finding that his conduct justified the court’s disapproval.

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Kennedy Mudzuli

Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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