Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 115South Africa
Jacobson v Finch (18830/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 115 (22 May 2023)
Headnotes
SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAWCHC 115
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Jacobson v Finch (18830/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 115 (22 May 2023)
Jacobson v Finch (18830/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 115 (22 May 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2023_115.html
sino date 22 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Defamation – Apology – Facebook post –
Respondent apologised twice in writing to applicant
and posted
apology on Facebook page where she made defamatory statements –
Applicant himself guilty of offensive comments
and of publishing
personal information of person feeding homeless people –
Damages not awarded – Apologies adequate
compensation for
injury to dignity and reputation
REPORTABLE
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 18830/2020
In
the matter between:
PAUL
STEPHEN JACOBSON Applicant
And
SHELLEY
ANN FINCH Respondent
Heard:
6 and 10 June, 17 October 2022, and 03 February 2023
Delivered:
22 May 2023
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email and released to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 22 May 2023 at 10h00.
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
[1]
The feeding of the homeless people by some ‘good Samaritans’
during the hard lockdown ripped the
community of Atlantic Seaboard
apart. This case manifests a broader dispute that played out on
social media platforms such as Facebook
during the Covid-19 pandemic
between some residents of the Atlantic Seaboard. These residents were
divided on how to deal with
the issues of acute poverty and
homelessness during the Covid-19 hard lockdown. They chose to express
their views on Facebook.
The applicant and some of his supporters
believed that homeless people had to be removed from the streets and
housed in shelters
in line with the Western Cape government policy.
The applicant was against those who fed homeless people on the
streets, and he
advocated for responsible giving to NGOs that housed
homeless people.
[2]
On the other hand, the respondent and some of her supporters shared a
different view. Mr Peter Wagenaar (“Mr
Wagenaar”), a
resident of Mouille Point, shared the respondent's view and had the
plight of people experiencing homelessness
at heart. He prepared
meals for the homeless and distributed them from his Beach Road, Sea
Point residence. This provoked the wrath
of certain residents,
including the applicant. At the time, the police rebuked Mr Wagenaar
for feeding homeless people and acting
in violation of the lockdown
rules. Amid the rising tension on social media platform on this
issue, the applicant publicly shared
Mr Wagenaar's personal details
on Facebook, including his identity number, address, vehicle
description, and vehicle registration
numbers. Immediately after the
applicant publicised Mr Wagenaar’s details, the latter’s
vehicle was torched by unknown
people.
[3]
Later, on 6 May 2020, the respondent wrote a post on her Facebook
page about the incident. She tagged her
friends and journalists, and
the incident was widely reported on various media platforms. In her
post, the respondent called for
people to refrain from hateful
comments and sought to use the incident to raise funds for Mr
Wagenaar’s feeding scheme. Consequent
thereto, the applicant
applied for and obtained an interim protection order against the
respondent. In his application for a protection
order, the applicant
averred that the respondent accused him of a hateful crime that he
had not committed and of spreading rumours
about him on social media.
In an attempt to resolve the conflict, the parties decided to come
together and discussed the matter.
Subsequent to those discussions,
the respondent apologised in writing to the applicant for insinuating
that the applicant was responsible
for torching Mr Wagenaar’s
vehicle. This culminated in the applicant withdrawing his application
for an interim protection
order against the respondent.
[4]
During November 2020, an event was held to commemorate the torching
of Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle. Mr Wagenaar’s
vehicle (the
shell thereof), was brought back to the Atlantic Seaboard area having
been painted and decorated and was used to raise
funds for charity.
Photos of this event were shared on Facebook. The applicant and some
of his associates, made some disparaging
remarks about the event and
about Mr Wagenaar.
[5]
In December 2020, the applicant sent a demand to the respondent. In
the letter, it was suggested for the first
time that the respondent's
apology in the interim protection order proceedings was insincere.
The applicant demanded that the respondent
apologise to him in very
broad terms. The applicant’s letter of demand did not refer to
the respondent having defamed the
applicant by referring to him as a
‘nob’ or a ‘misogynist’. The respondent
disagreed with the opinion expressed
in the letter, and on 14
December 2020, the applicant launched this application in which he
sought an interdict restraining the
respondent from publishing
defamatory statements against him and for damages in the sum of R250
000.
[6]
For the first time in his founding affidavit, the applicant averred
that the respondent defamed him by referring
to him as a ‘nob’
and a ‘misogynist’ and described the applicant’s
behaviour as ‘awful’.
In his prayers, the applicant
sought an unreserved apology from the respondent in broad terms. On
17 August 2021, the matter came
before Allie J, on the opposed roll,
who, after considering the issues, gave judgment on 1 September 2021
and granted an order
that the respondent’s direct statements
about the applicant and his business made on Facebook and other
community chat sites,
were defamatory and wrongful. Allie J ordered
the respondent to remove the offending posts and referred the
determination of whether
the applicant is entitled to an apology, the
ambit thereof, and whether he ought to receive a damages award and
the quantum thereof
to oral evidence.
[7]
This matter served before this Court for hearing of oral evidence on
the stated issues aforementioned.
SUMMARY
OF EVIDENCE
[8]
The applicant and the respondent presented oral evidence. The
applicant testified and called his wife to corroborate
his version.
The respondent testified and closed her case without calling any
witnesses. For the purposes of this judgment, I will
summarise the
evidence of the witnesses to the extent necessary, and I will not
regurgitate their evidence verbatim. The applicant
testified that he
grew up in Sea Point and went to School at Camps Bay. He went to the
University of Cape Town (“UCT”)
and studied Business
Science and later, did an honours degree in marketing. He stayed in
different parts of the world, and around
1992, the applicant settled
in the Western Cape and started to be involved in business
enterprises. The applicant testified that
he got involved in
community matters and in the rate-payers’ associations. He also
wanted to understand the dynamics of street
dwellers. To this end, he
collaborated with the CEO of the Heaven Night Shelter, Mr Hassan
Khan, to house homeless people.
[9]
He chaired community meetings, and Mr Khan advised the community on
how to give responsibly to street dwellers
and how to deal with the
destitute. He works with the City of Cape Town (“the City”)
to do more for the vulnerable
and for people without homes. He
testified that he is not controversial and always endeavours to be
ethical and honourable. Residents
persuaded him to take up office as
a ward councillor for the Freedom Front Plus. He thought he would
succeed, but unfortunately,
he did not get sufficient support due to
negative publicity. He came second in the race.
[10]
The applicant testified that he does not tolerate rudeness and is
sensitive to words, as he believes one can lift people
up or bring
them down with words. He held the view that the community needed to
uplift the destitute by engaging with NGOs, with
support systems, and
shelters. People should not live on the streets but in shelters. His
Facebook Action group is underpinned
by three cardinal values the
City of Cape Town shares: appreciating the city's law and by-laws,
appreciating giving with dignity
rather than handouts, and being
respectful to others.
[11]
The applicant referred the court to the initiative of the City of
Cape Town, in which the City asserts that the Covid-19
Pandemic has
made life challenging for everyone and that our most vulnerable
residents have been the hardest hit. The applicant
believed that
those who are in a position to make a difference in someone’s
life should consider donations. The donations
would go to an NGO
working in the community that the City has vetted. He desires to lift
the destitute by engaging with NGOs as
they have a structured support
system. His view is aligned with that of the City and its policy of
giving responsibly and ensuring
that the vulnerable, particularly the
homeless, are placed in shelters and removed from the streets.
[12]
Given his status and involvement in the community, and as the
administrator of his Facebook group (the Atlantic Seaboard
and City
Bowl action group), in April 2020, during the hard lockdown, he
received a complaint from Mouille Point residents that
one Peter
Wagenaar who lived in an apartment block in Mouille Point was handing
out food parcels from his Mini Cooper motor vehicle
on Beach Road,
Mouille Point. He was further informed that residents of the
apartment block were upset by this behaviour because
it violated the
lockdown regulations, and that scores of homeless people waited
outside the apartment block all day for food parcels.
[13]
According to him, Mr Wagenaar was not following the City’s
policy of responsible giving by supporting shelters;
instead, Mr
Wagenaar was handing out food directly. Another group, Sea Point
Community Network, posted a video in which Captain
Penz warned Mr
Wagenaar and told him that he was not allowed to feed the homeless in
the street and that if he continued with this
behaviour, he would be
arrested. The applicant further testified that in order to name and
shame Mr Wagenaar, he published on a
Facebook group of Mouille Point
residents that it was unlawful and against public policy to hand out
food parcels to homeless people.
People enquired and wanted to know
Mr Wagenaar. He testified that he never spoke to Mr Wagenaar nor saw
his car. However, hundreds
of residents posted their disapproval of
the conduct of Mr Wagenaar.
[14]
Frustrated and worried about Mr Wagenaar’s behaviour, he
published the name, ID numbers, address, and vehicle details
of Mr
Wagenaar on Facebook. The reason for posting these details was to
garner support and pressure Mr Wagenaar to desist once
he had seen
the extent to which Mouille Point and other residents disapproved of
his actions. Pursuant to his posting the particulars
of Mr Wagenaar
on the Facebook page, Mr Wagenaar’s Mini Cooper motor vehicle
was burnt to ashes. Applicant testified that
he was not involved in
torching Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle. However, he regrets posting Mr
Wagenaar’s details on Facebook.
His family had to go through a
lot due to that post. He had nothing to do with the burning of that
car. The police investigated
the matter; he was neither a suspect nor
charged for this act or arson.
[15]
The applicant testified that the respondent went on a campaign on the
social media platform that he burnt Mr Wagenaars’
vehicle.
According to him, the respondent contacted every conceivable media
house on the allegations that the applicant was involved
in torching
Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle. The respondent also claimed that the
applicant threatened and bullied people far too many
times. People
phoned his pet shop – Vondis - and asked if that
is where
the applicant worked.
They threatened to come to the shop to attack him. He was frightened
and nervous. People phoned in and threatened
to burn his house. He
had to get security services for a week to protect his family.
[16]
People discussed boycotting his business and called him a despicable
human being. He had to apply for a protection order
against the
respondent to stop her from tarnishing his good name. However, he
withdrew the interim protection order against the
respondent based on
their settlement agreement. His attorney subsequently filed a notice
of withdrawal of the interim interdict
application. In that
settlement, the respondent apologised for her post on Facebook
concerning the applicant, which had insinuated
that the applicant was
responsible for the burning of Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle. However,
the applicant testified in this court
that he disagreed with his
legal representative on the terms the interim protection order was to
be withdrawn.
[17]
The applicant also testified on the impact of the respondent’s
words that Allie J found defamatory against him,
namely, calling him
a ‘nob’, that he was abusing the courts and bullying
people, that his behaviour was awful, that
he was a ‘misogynist’
and a harasser of women, that he was involved in criminal activity
such as fraud, maliciously
tried to have respondent arrested, and
implied that he was involved with the crime of torching Mr Wagenaar’s
vehicle.
[18]
The applicant testified that he had a clean record and that being
labelled an arsonist was disgraceful and disturbing.
These
accusations dearly affected him and his family. On the word ‘nob’,
he testified that this word did not shake
him and that he has been
called far worse than a nob; however, he finds this word highly
disturbing. These allegations against
him affected his family
negatively. The applicant refuted the allegations that he is a
misogynist. He testified that he is involved
in woman’s sports
and to be labelled a harasser of women is outrageous and he finds it
difficult to recover from these accusations.
As a result of these
accusations, no one allowed their children to play with his kids.
During cross-examination, he conceded that
people have different
views in dealing with homelessness and hunger. He also acknowledged
that he thanked the respondent through
the social media platform for
posting the apology. However, he did not accept or recognise that
apology.
[19]
Regarding the second apology that the respondent tendered to him
after Allie J's judgment, the applicant acknowledged
that the
respondent posted that apology on her Facebook page, and he was
initially unaware of it. He testified that the respondent
should have
shared it with his family, peers, and friends. The applicant
criticised the respondent for not sending the apology
directly to
him. The apology was only sent to him directly, a few weeks later, by
Mr Gootkin, the respondent’s attorney,
to his attorney.
[20]
During cross-examination, counsel referred him to two controversial
posts he made on Facebook in which he referred to
Mr Julius Malema as
a ‘monkey’. In that post, he stated: “
State of
the nation address Tonight. Which clowns are going to turn up? Are
they gonna address the state of this nation? Are the
princesses going
to turn up in attire worth tens of thousands of rands? Will the
monkey be making a spectacle of himself again?”
In response
to the question whether he was aware of the undertone of calling one
a monkey, he responded that he was not aware.
He was also referred to
a post that he made on Facebook in which he stated that 20 percent of
the world’s Muslims are radical.
In that post, he stated that
every fifth Muslim you meet has the potential to kill you. He
conceded that Muslim people would find
his post offensive. He was
also asked during cross-examination whether his posts of September
2020 were not offensive against women,
where he stated, “
looking
for woman with balls”
. In response, he stated that it was a
cry for organisations to stand up for women’s rights. That was,
in short, his evidence.
[21]
His wife, Josephine Jacobson (“Ms Jacobson”), also
testified. She stated that she was aware of the words
the respondent
posted that the court found defamatory against the applicant. She
testified that these posts affected their family
and business
tremendously. Many clients cancelled business with them due to the
derogatory statements made against them on social
media. The
applicant suffered greatly as they had to keep a low profile. She
testified that the applicant was involved at their
daughter’s
school as an assistant netball coach. Due to the tension in the
community, her husband had to withdraw from this
coaching
responsibility. The alleged statements by the respondent caused
tension in their marriage, and people threatened to blow
up their
house. This in her opinion, was scary.
[22]
Ms Jacobson did not deny during cross-examination that the applicant
posted the personal particulars of Mr Wagenaar,
and that a few weeks
thereafter, Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle was burnt. She admitted that
the publication of the personal details
of Mr Wagenaar drew public
outcry. She also testified that the applicant was vilified for
sharing the personal details of Mr Wagenaar
on social media and that
this was triggered by the respondent’s publication of
defamatory statements against the applicant.
That was, in brief, the
applicant’s case.
[23]
The respondent testified that she currently resides in the United
Kingdom, travelling around doing some house-sitting.
She previously
resided in Sea Point for about three years. She lived in Claremont
before and moved to Sea Pont around 2019. She
relocated to the United
Kingdom during the course of these proceedings. She testified that
she left school in standard nine, studied
journalism at Cape
Peninsular University of Technology (“CPUT”) for a short
while, and completed a certificate in journalism.
Later, she embarked
on a career in the hospitality industry. She has a one-person digital
marketing agency and does social media,
graphic design, and marketing
for businesses and organisations. She is also involved in charitable
organisations. She does a lot
of professional work with charities and
has been a volunteer for a charity called, The Santa Shoebox Project
for many years. During
the lockdown, she partnered with charitable
groups in Gugulethu, and they supported soup kitchens in Gugulethu.
[24]
The respondent testified that one could have three levels of presence
on Facebook. The first one is that of a personal
Facebook profile.
One can connect directly with friends and acquaintances in terms of
this tier and can post to friends only or
make it available to the
public. If one only makes that content available to friends, it is
only seen by people you have connected
with through a friend request
you had to accept. The second tier is the Facebook page. She
testified that organisations or businesses
generally use Facebook
pages. Whatever is posted on a page is always public, and there's no
option of making it private. One must
have a Facebook profile to be
able to manage a page. The third type of presence one can have is a
Facebook group which is intended
to be a meeting and engagement place
for people with shared interests. In these groups, people request to
join, and the group administrator
determines whether people may join
the group. Typically, the content that is shared in that group can
only be seen by people who
are members of that group.
[25]
The respondent testified that three Facebook groups are relevant in
this matter, namely: The Sea Point Community group,
The Sea Point
Community Network, and the City Bowl Action Group. According to the
respondent, the applicant is the City Bowl Action
Group
administrator. This group discussed community news. Shortly before
her initial engagement with the applicant, a new administrator
took
over the group, and she subsequently observed a perceptible change in
the content and tone of the group. It was much more,
in her opinion,
anti-homeless, advocating not to give homeless people handouts on the
street.
[26]
The respondent further testified that she was quite assertive and
vehement in her engagement with the applicant because
she was very
passionate about the treatment of homeless people during the
pandemic. The applicant's stance was that residents were
not to give
food or money to homeless people; a stance maintained particularly
during the hard lockdown. She disagreed strongly
with him on that
stance because she knew that at that time, there were very few food
resources that the homeless could access.
She believed the
applicant's stance and opinions were impractical and unfair and could
endanger the community. Her stance was that
it was not just about
providing meals to the homeless people but rather ensuring that their
community remained safe. She was removed
from the group because she
argued vehemently with the applicant. She is not a member of the Sea
Point Community Group. According
to her, this group is administered
by the applicant and his legal representative. It is quite
exclusionary, and of the view that
the only people who matter in
their community are ratepayers and property owners.
[27]
The respondent is a member of the Sea Point group. This group is
founded on the principle that Sea Point is a multicultural
community
with residents of varying socio-economic groups. She testified that
this group supports an inclusive community, a Sea
Point that welcomes
all its residents, including the homeless, whether they own property
or not. When the hard lockdown was announced,
it profoundly impacted
the homeless people. People knew that she was involved in charity
projects, and she started getting direct
messages and WhatsApp
messages from families pleading for help because they had not eaten
in days.
[28]
The lockdown impacted her deeply, especially when she saw homeless
people wandering around from bin to bin, desperately
looking for
something to eat. At the time, the shelters that were generally in
operation, reduced their capacity because of social
distancing
restrictions. According to the respondent, it was evident that the
situation for homeless people was dire and desperate.
As a result,
community action networks grew, and people prepared sandwiches to
feed the homeless people.
[29]
Mr Wagenaar was one of the people involved in the outreach to feed
the poor. She testified that Mr Wagenaar, out of his
pocket, began to
cook meals for up to 100 people per day from his kitchen. Mr Wagenaar
would cook meals daily and then take them
to a bus stop outside of
his apartment and offer those meals to the homeless. She testified
that Mr Wagenaar was cautious about
adhering to social distancing
rules. He also distributed personal protective equipment and offered
the homeless masks and hand
sanitizers. She was aware that the
applicant posted the personal details of Mr Wagenaar and that
subsequent thereto, the latter’s
vehicle was torched.
[30]
On 06 May 2020, the respondent posted on Facebook and condemned the
applicant’s posting of Mr Wagenaar’s
detail on a Facebook
page. She disputed that she labelled the applicant an arsonist in her
Facebook post, nor did she accuse him
of torching Mr Wagenaar’s
car. The respondent further testified that she posted a factual
account of what happened on her
personal profile. She tagged her
friends who were members of the media or journalists to alert them to
the story. She testified
that she did not share it with other groups,
and she did not do anything to actively distribute it.
[31]
The respondent testified further that after her post, the applicant
applied for a protection order against her not to
harass him and his
family. She saw this endeavour as an attempt to revenge and
intimidate her. She disputed that she harassed the
applicant or
insinuated that the applicant was involved in a criminal offence. She
instructed an attorney to oppose the applicant’s
application
for a protection order against her. However, it turned out that the
parties were able to settle the matter between
them. She apologised
to the applicant to the extent that the latter felt that she had
insinuated that he was responsible for torching
Mr Wagenaar’s
vehicle. Pursuant to that, the applicant withdrew his application for
an interim protection order against her.
Thereafter, the applicant’s
attorneys filed a formal notice of withdrawal of the application. She
testified that the applicant’s
attorney posted the apology on
the social media platform. It transpired later that there were some
misunderstandings on the terms
of the withdrawal. The applicant
wanted the notice of withdrawal to incorporate terms to the effect
that the respondent would not
post anything in the future about the
applicant. When the respondent demanded a reciprocal undertaking from
the applicant, the
latter refused.
[32]
The respondent testified that on 09 December 2020, she received a
letter of demand from the applicant’s attorney
in which the
applicant rejected the respondent’s apology regarding the
protection order. In that letter, the applicant suggested
that the
respondent’s apology was not sincere. The demand did not refer
to the words ‘misogynist’ or ‘nob’.
The
letter of demand also set out how the respondent should apologise to
the applicant broadly and comprehensively. It also demanded
that the
respondent admit that she was wrong to abuse the applicant on
Facebook. The respondent testified that this was an apology
she
simply could not give in the format demanded. She testified that the
applicant never demanded an apology for calling him a
‘nob’
or ‘misogynist’ in her post of 2 May 2020.
[33]
The respondent testified that, in her view, the judgment of Allie J
found that the respondent was justified in opposing
the applicant's
application because the apology the applicant sought was too
prescriptive and dogmatic. However, the court referred
the matter to
oral evidence to ascertain whether the applicant was entitled to an
apology and if so, on what terms. She testified
that in accordance
with the judgment of Allie J, in March 2022, she posted a second
apology to the applicant on her Facebook personal
profile, and shared
it. She also posted it on the Sea Point Facebook, where she had made
the defamatory remarks against the applicant.
She felt it was
appropriate to share it in that platform. In the second apology, she
apologised for referring to the applicant
as a ‘nob’, a
‘misogynist’, and for stating in a Facebook post that the
applicant attempted to harass and
intimidate her by obtaining the
interim protection order against her. She stated in that apology that
she regrets having made these
remarks and unreservedly apologized to
the applicant for doing so.
[34]
The respondent stated that her apology was sincere, and she was happy
in court to apologise to the applicant for calling
him names. She
never had any direct engagement with the applicant and she asked her
attorneys to do so. That was, in short, the
evidence before court.
SUBMISSIONS
BY THE PARTIES
[35]
At the hearing of this matter, Mr Fehr, who appeared for the
applicant, argued that the damages for defamation are not
given to
punish a respondent but to console an applicant through compensation
for the harm that was caused by the defamation. Counsel
argued that
the award in each case must depend upon the facts of the particular
case seen against the background of prevailing
attitudes in the
community. Mr Fehr submitted that the quantum of the award is at the
court’s discretion. To this end, Counsel
referred the court to
several authorities, in particular, to the decision of the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Mogale and Others v Seima
2008 (5) SA 637
(SCA), in which the court set out factors that the court must
consider when exercising its discretion, namely: the seriousness
of
the allegations, how widely the statements were circulated, the
nature of the publication, the reputation, character, and conduct
of
the applicant, the motives and conduct of the respondent.
[36]
Counsel also referred the court to the decision of
Katz and Welz
Another
(22440/2014)
[2021] ZAWCHC 76
(26 April 2021), where the
court held that expressions of regret or apology may be mitigatory.
Mr Fehr acknowledged that an apology
was made in this matter however,
in his view, it was half-hearted. He argued that the question of the
apology becomes a factor
to consider in the size of the award instead
of not awarding anything at all. Even though there is an apology,
Counsel argued that
there should still be a substantial damages
award. Counsel further submitted that an apology alone was not a
sufficient redress.
According to Counsel, the court should determine
the question of ordering an apology at the same time as damages. Mr
Fehr implored
the court to award damages in favour of the applicant
and to direct the respondent to repost the two previous apologies on
her
Facebook wall, the applicant's Facebook wall, and all the groups
she made previous posts about the applicant. Counsel further implored
the court to grant costs against the respondent on an attorney and
client scale.
[37]
Meanwhile, Mr Kelly, who appeared on behalf of the respondent, argued
that the applicant is the author of his own misfortune
by deciding to
publicise Mr Wagenaar’s personal details during the time when
the community was divided on the issue of feeding
the homeless during
the hard lockdown. Counsel contended that the respondent’s
apology addressed the words that Allie J found
defamatory against the
applicant. Mr Kelly submitted that the respondent apologised to the
applicant after the latter applied for
a protection order in so far
as the applicant felt any of her posts insinuated that he had done
wrong. Pursuant to that apology,
counsel argued that the applicant
and his wife acknowledged the apology publicly.
[38]
Mr Kelly further submitted that after Allie J found that the insults
the respondent made against the applicant were defamatory,
the
respondent wrote an apology and posted the apology in the same group
on Facebook in which the defamatory comments were made.
According to
Counsel, this was the best way to compensate for and ameliorate the
defamatory effect on the applicant. Only later
was the apology sent
to the attorney with an invitation to withdraw the proceedings. Mr
Kelly argued that the applicant’s
attorney accepted the
respondent’s apology on the applicant’s behalf and
further wanted damages. The argument that
the respondent’s
apology is insincere, so the argument proceeded, is undermined by the
applicant’s conduct. Counsel
relied on the Constitutional Court
case of
Dikoko v Mokhatla
2006 (6) SA 235
(CC), and argued
that it is entirely within the court’s discretion if it were to
find that the apology was sincerely given,
to find that it is
sufficient to remedy the harm the applicant suffered and that in this
case, a damages award would not be appropriate.
[39]
Counsel contended that the cases relied upon by the applicant,
namely:
Katz v Welz (supra),
and
Young v Shaikh
2004
(3) SA 46
(C), are distinguishable from this matter in that those
case dealt with serious allegations of fraud and corruption
respectively,
levelled against plaintiffs. Whereas in the present
matter, the respondent only insulted the applicant. To this end,
counsel submitted
that the claim for damages in defamation cases are
only granted in very serious cases where the integrity of a party is
impugned,
not where insults are found to be defamatory. Pursuant to
the respondent’s sincere apology, and in the context of this
case
where no one was suggesting that the applicant was dishonest,
counsel submitted that that should be the end of the matter. He
implored
the court to dismiss the applicant’s case with costs.
ISSUES
IN DISPUTE
[40]
Pursuant to the finding of Allie J, this court is enjoined to
determine the following disputed issues:
40.1 Whether
the applicant is entitled to an apology from the respondent, and if
so, the ambit thereof; and
40.2 Whether
the respondent should be ordered to pay damages to the applicant, and
if so, the quantum of such damages.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
[41]
It is common cause that on 1 September 2021, Allie J determined that
the respondent had wrongfully defamed the applicant.
The learned
justice found that the determination of whether the applicant is
entitled to an apology, the ambit thereof, as well
as whether he
ought to receive a damages award and the quantum thereof requires
further elucidation at a hearing in due course.
Pursuant to that
finding, the respondent issued a second apology to the applicant on
07 March 2022. The respondent apologised for
what Allie J found were
defamatory statements against the applicant. The respondent
unreservedly apologised for referencing the
applicant as a ‘nob’.
The respondent apologised for referring to the applicant as a
‘misogynist’ in her
Facebook account. She also apologised
for stating on a Facebook page that the applicant attempted to harass
and intimidate her
when he obtained an interim protection order
against her.
[42]
The respondent, of her own volition, posted the apology to the same
Facebook group in which the defamatory statements
were made. It
appears to me that the respondent unreservedly regrets her actions
and that her apology was sincere. The respondent
has expressed
penitence and deep contrition towards the applicant. The respondent
accepted responsibility and expressed heartfelt
remorse for her
wrongdoing. In my view, her apology was honestly made with a clear
understanding that her behaviour was wrong and
that the applicant
should accept her undertaking that she would not engage in such
conduct in the future. More so, during her evidence
in chief, the
respondent testified that upon reflection, she understood that she
should not have called the applicant names. She
testified that her
apology was sincere and that she was contented in court to apologise
to the applicant for calling him names
- which she did. All she
wanted was to move on with her life.
[43]
Notably, she apologised twice in writing to the applicant. I repeat,
the sincerity and credibility of the respondent’s
apology are
buttressed by her posting the apology to her Facebook page where she
made the defamatory statements. The first apology
that the respondent
made to the applicant on 29 September 2020, was a sequel to an
interim protection order the applicant applied
for and obtained
against the respondent on 29 June 2020. In that apology, the
respondent apologised to the applicant for any perception
that the
applicant may have formed that the respondent’s post of 6 May
2020 had insinuated that the applicant was responsible
for torching
Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle. Pursuant to that apology, a negotiated
settlement was reached, and the applicant withdrew
his protection
order application against the respondent. The respondent posted that
apology (the first apology) on her Facebook
page, and the applicant,
in response, thanked her on the same platform. The applicant’s
wife also acknowledged the respondent’s
apology on Facebook.
She even expressed a wish for the rest of the community to do
likewise.
[44]
On the objective facts before court, I am of the view that the
applicant's incessant misgivings and discontent with the
respondent’s
apology are unjustified.
[45]
In her testimony, the respondent told the court that she intended to
apologise to the applicant for her comments and
that she desired that
the matter should come to an end. These assertions, in my view, are
corroborated by the instructions that
the respondent gave her legal
representatives on 5 April 2022, after she made the second apology,
to invite the applicant to end
the impasse by withdrawing the current
proceedings on the basis that each party pay its own costs. In
response, the applicant,
through his attorneys of record, accepted
the apology to the extent that the respondent apologised for
referencing him as a nob,
a misogynist, and attempting to harass and
intimidate the respondent. The applicant contended that the
respondent’s apology
was deficient in many respects. Among
others, the applicant submitted that Allie J found that describing
the applicant’s
behaviour as ‘awful’ was a direct
statement and was defamatory. Whilst I agree with the findings of
Allie J, I am constrained
to disagree with the applicant’s
stance.
[46]
It must be stressed that effective apologies do not have a precise
formula. See Guthrie
et al
‘Contrition in the Courtroom:
Do Apologies Affect Adjudication?’
Cornell Law Review
2013 (98) 1189 at 1197. Many people who are genuinely sorry struggle
to find the right words. A meaningful apology may be difficult
to
capture in words. However, the crux of the apology must express
heartfelt remorse for the wrongful action and an undertaking
that the
wrongful conduct will not be repeated.
[47]
In the present matter, the respondent sincerely apologised and
admitted the wrong she did. This court listened to the
applicant's
and respondent's oral evidence and observed the respondent's deep
contrition during the proceedings. Both apologies
in respect of the
protection order and the one made after the Allie J’s judgment,
were published widely on Facebook. The
applicant is free to republish
these apologies should he so wishes, in his group and on his Facebook
personal profile. This view
is fortified by the relief the applicant
seeks in his heads of argument that this court should direct the
respondent to republish
the two apologies widely on Facebook.
[48]
I must also add that I find the applicant ‘s stance somewhat
puzzling, perhaps even duplicitous. For example, when
he withdrew the
interim protection order against the respondent, he wanted an
undertaking from the respondent that the latter would
not post
anything about him in the future. When a reciprocal undertaking was
sought from him not to post anything concerning the
respondent on any
social media platform, he did not oblige. Conveniently, the applicant
wanted the respondent to be gagged against
him while, at the same
time, he would enjoy the freedom of posting anything against the
respondent.
[49]
Furthermore, I had the opportunity to read all the various Facebook
posts discovered and filed on record and observed
that the applicant
has never apologised to anybody for his indiscretions. As an aside,
and an issue which cast aspersions on his
credibility, the applicant
made extremely controversial and defamatory statements online,
including referring to Mr Julius Malema
as “a monkey”.
The applicant stated on social media that every Muslim you meet has
the potential to kill you. He has
not publicly apologised for these
public posts. In my view, these public statements are offensive and
express hatred of Mr Malema
and the Muslim community. The applicant’s
comments amount to hate speech prohibited by
section 10
of the
Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4
of 2000
. The applicant’s posts are also inimical to the values
of our Constitution that the people of South Africa are united in
their diversity.
[50]
In addition, the applicant further published sensitive personal
information of Mr Wagenaar on social media in violation
of the
Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013
, which in all
probability, led to the torching of Mr Wagenaar’s vehicle.
Without a doubt, that did not only come at an expense
emotionally,
but also financially. Ostensibly, he has not apologised to Mr
Wagenaar or any of the aforementioned for his religious
and racial
stereotypes, profiling and/or undertones. Remarkably, his evidence
was concentrated on protecting himself and his business.
[51]
Not only that, in an endeavour to garner support for his political
campaign, he publicly posted a demeaning flyer on
Facebook depicting
naked homeless people. He has not apologised for that post or perhaps
could see nothing wrong with that flyer.
During cross-examination, he
sought to distance himself from this flyer and denied sharing it on
social media. However, when pressed
for an answer and the
respondent’s counsel exhibited the applicant’s Facebook
post headed “
judge for yourself
”, the applicant
admitted that, indeed, he shared these nude photographs on Facebook.
He was publicly condemned and chastised
for his reprehensible conduct
in the mainstream media and on Facebook. Notwithstanding his gross
posts on his Facebook page, he
insists that the respondent must
apologise to him and over and above, be awarded damages. In my view,
the applicant tarnished the
value of his own integrity and
reputation.
[52]
Interestingly, when the respondent apologised for the first time
after the interim protection order was granted, the
applicant thanked
her on social media. He did not challenge the respondent that the
apology was insincere or half-hearted. The
applicant’s wife
acknowledged the respondent’s apology on Facebook. She stated
that the respondent had apologised and,
hopefully, the rest of the
community would do likewise. I find it very opportunistic for the
applicant to acknowledge the respondent's
apology publicly and then
later institute proceedings based on the same complaint for which he
had accepted an
apology.
[53]
In any event, whilst I accept that the respondent defamed the
applicant, I am of the view, that the payment of damages
in the
present matter is unwarranted. I am further of the view that the
respondent's public apologies were genuine enough to assuage
and ease
the applicant's feelings for the injury to his reputation. To this
end, I share the views expressed i
n
Mineworkers
Investment CO (Pty) Ltd v Modibani
2002
(6) SA 512
(W) para 25, where Willis J, observed that
the
harm done by a defamatory statement is the damage to the reputation
of the victim. The learned justice noted that courts should
attempt,
wherever feasible, to re-establish a dignified and respectful
relationship between the parties. The court held that a
public
apology which will usually be far less expensive than an award of
damages, can set the record straight, restore the
reputation of
the victim, give the victim the necessary satisfaction, avoid severe
financial harm to the culprit, and encourage
rather than inhibit
freedom of expression.’
[54]
Similarly,
Neethling on Personality Rights
(2020) at 95,
points out that a retraction or apology is also accepted as an
alternative remedy in foreign legal systems because
this remedy can
be much more effective for natural restitution purposes – such
as restoring or vindicating a person’s
good name than a sum of
money. Similar sentiments were expressed by the Constitutional Court
in
Le Roux v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and Restorative
Justice Centre as Amici Curiae)
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC), where the
court recognised an apology as a competent remedy for restorative
justice in defamation cases.
[55]
In
casu,
the applicant sought an order for damages coupled
with an order directing the publication of the respondent’s two
apologies
on Facebook. I am of the view that in the circumstances of
this case, the three apologies that the respondent made are adequate
and sufficiently good to mitigate the applicant’s reputational
injury suffered pursuant to the respondent’s wrongful
conduct.
[56]
Visser and Potgieter,
Law of Damages
3 edition (2012) at 528, argues, and quite correctly so, in my view,
that in suitable circumstances, the honourable amends or public
apology, a Roman-Dutch law remedy which has recently found favour in
South African law, can be utilized by a person who defamed
another to
make an appropriate public apology in lieu of paying damages whilst
the victim of a defamation may similarly have the
opportunity of
having a damaged reputation restored by the remedy of a public
apology. This remedy can take three forms: an exclusive
remedy; an
alternative remedy to damages (satisfaction); and a cumulative remedy
with damage. See also
Mineworkers
Investment CO (Pty) Ltd v Modibani (supra)
para
28
.
[57]
Crucially, it cannot be said that the insults that Allie J found
defamatory against the applicant are so egregious and
abhorrent that
they warrant three apologies and an additional payment of damages. In
my view, the respondent's apology is restorative
and far less costly
than an award of damages which ordinarily is retributive, punitory
and will have a chilling effect on the respondent.
In
National Media Ltd
and Others v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196
(SCA) at 1210G, Hefer JA, as he then was,
observed that 'much has been written about the 'chilling' effect of
defamation actions,
but nothing can be more chilling than the
prospect of being mulcted in damages for even the slightest error’.
[58]
As discussed above, the respondent published her unconditional
apology long before the applicant instituted the application
against
her (the first apology which led to the withdrawal of the interim
protection order). The respondent also apologised (the
second
apology) before the oral evidence was heard and immediately after the
pronouncement of Allie J. The respondent has also
apologised orally,
during her evidence in chief at the hearing of this matter (the third
apology). The applicant seeks an order
that the respondent be ordered
to repost the two written apologies (which the applicant considers
insincere) on her Facebook wall
and on all the groups she made her
previous posts about the applicant. In addition, the applicant also
seeks an order in the sum
of R250 000 as damages for the injury to
his personality. I do not agree.
[59]
I must emphasise that the applicant’s claim for damages against
the respondent is not and should not be a quick
money making scheme.
In my view, the damages sought by the applicant can only be granted
in very serious cases where the integrity
and reputation of a party
are impugned, not where retracted insults, as in this case, are found
to be defamatory. To my mind, in
the present matter, where an
unconditional apology was tendered within a reasonable time,
publicised, and publicly acknowledged
by the applicant, and where no
one suggested that the applicant was dishonest, that should be the
end of the matter.
[60]
Furthermore, an apology should not be used as a measure to embarrass
the respondent. As discussed above, the respondent
apologised and
widely circulated her apology on her Facebook wall. Importantly, the
applicant is in possession of the two apologies
from the respondent.
He is at liberty to share these apologies widely to his satisfaction
to assuage his feelings. The two apologies
the respondent made and
the apology she made under oath during her evidence-in-chief, are
more than sufficient, in my view, to
ease and abate the personality
injury that the applicant suffered as a result of the respondent’s
wrongful conduct. Several
people on Facebook have commented on these
apologies. Some even thought that the respondent was forced to
apologised.
[61]
On a conspectus of all the evidence before court, I am of the view
that this is not a case where damages are to be ordered.
The
apologies that the respondent tendered are adequate in the
circumstances to compensate the applicant for his injury to his
honour, dignity, and reputation.
COSTS
[62]
The general rule in matters of costs in civil suits is that costs
follow the event; that is, the successful party's costs
are to be
paid by the unsuccessful party. This rule applies except where there
are good grounds to depart from its application,
such as misconduct
on the part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. However, the court has a discretion
in awarding costs,
and such discretion must be exercised judicially upon a consideration
of the facts in each case.
Ferreira v Levin NO and Others;
Vreyenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Ohers
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
(CC).
The decision to award costs is a matter of fairness to both parties.
[63]
In the present matter, it cannot be disputed that the respondent
defamed the applicant; however, she sincerely apologised
for her
wrongful conduct. Notwithstanding her apology, which the applicant
publicly acknowledged, the applicant proceeded to institute
this
application against the respondent. The respondent apologised again
after Allie J found that her statements against the applicant
were
defamatory. Her apology was sincere and adequate. As a result, I am
of the view, that this is a case where each party must
pay its own
costs.
ORDER
[64]
The applicant’s claim for damages against the respondent is
hereby dismissed, with each party ordered to pay its
own costs.
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE HIGH COURT
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Jacobs and Another v Van Niekerk N.O and Others - Appeal (114/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 21 (2 February 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 21High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar
Jacobs and Others v City of Cape Town (5453/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 53 (18 February 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 53High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar
Bengston and Others v Preuss NO and Another (17699.2018) [2025] ZAWCHC 432 (16 September 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 432High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar
C.H v A.C and Others (13612/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 245 (4 September 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 245High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar
Jacobs v S (A 190/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 23 (10 February 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 23High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar