Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 67South Africa
Gen4foods (Pty) Ltd v Hadebe and Another (D12392/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 67 (2 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
2 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Gen4foods (Pty) Ltd v Hadebe and Another (D12392/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 67 (2 October 2024)
Gen4foods (Pty) Ltd v Hadebe and Another (D12392/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 67 (2 October 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Defamation –
Interdict
–
Social
media posts boycotting products – Alleged that consumption
of rotten polony led to illness of multiple people
and death of
child – Unverified story – Applicant has a clear right
to prevent falsehoods about quality of its
products –
Suffered an injury in false allegations linking it to death child
– Respondent made no attempt to
ascertain truth of what it
was posting – No other satisfactory remedy –
Requirements for final interdict established
– Rule nisi
confirmed.
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
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D12392/2023
In
the matter between:
GEN4FOODS
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
ANTHONY
HADEBE
FIRST RESPONDENT
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
SECOND RESPONDENT
Coram
:
Mossop J
Heard
:
12 September 2024
Delivered
:
2 October 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The rule
nisi
granted by Bedderson J on 9 November 2023 is
confirmed against the second respondent, save for paragraph 3.1.2
thereof.
2.
The second respondent shall pay the applicant’s
costs on the
scale of attorney and client, such to include the costs of senior
counsel.
3.
The costs ordered in paragraph 2 shall be joint
and several with the
order of costs awarded against the first respondent by Pitman AJ in
confirming the rule nisi against the first
respondent on 8 December
2023.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is a manufacturer of emulsified meat products,
including polony. One of its brands is the ‘Thompson’s
Tasty Meats’ brand, which was established in 1860. Thompson’s
meat products are sold, inter alia, by Shoprite, a national
supermarket chain.
[2]
The first respondent claimed that he purchased a two kilogram
Thompson’s ‘Family Value’ chicken polony (the
polony) from Shoprite at its Bridge City, Durban store (the store)
on
14 August 2023. He claimed, further, that his nine children, wife,
and brother ate of the polony and became ill and that one
of his
children died directly as a consequence of eating the polony, which
was allegedly rotten and not fit for human consumption.
[3]
The second respondent
took up the first respondent’s cause and both began publishing
allegations on popular social media platforms
such as Facebook and
X,
[1]
calling, essentially, for
a boycott of Thompson’s products and for justice for both the
child who died and the first respondent
and decrying the quality of
the products manufactured by the applicant. The first respondent
repeatedly stated publicly that the
child had passed away as a
consequence of eating rotten and contaminated polony manufactured by
the applicant. The second respondent
also made such an allegation on
more than one occasion.
[4]
The applicant regarded those repeated statements as being
untrue and
defamatory of it and brought urgent application proceedings against
the respondents.
[5]
In this judgment, any reference to a ‘post’
is intended
to include a post on either Facebook or X where not expressly stated.
The relief claimed
[6]
The applicant commenced an application against the
respondents on 9 November 2023. It claimed a
rule
nisi
in the following terms:
‘
3.1
The Respondents be and are hereby forthwith interdicted and
restrained from:
3.1.1 making
defamatory and inflammatory statements, comments and remarks on any
social media platform, including Facebook,
Instagram, X (formerly
known as Twitter), or any other medium or social media forum, stating
that the Applicant’s product
namely Thompsons chicken polony
caused the death of the first respondent’s minor child;
3.1.2 causing
damage or harm to the Applicants (sic) business/es, any of its
employees, personnel, or service providers, its
buildings or
properties or unlawfully interfering in or obstructing the
Applicant’s business operations in any way.
3.2
The Respondents are ordered and directed to forthwith delete and
remove any communications, declarations
and statements, on social
media, including Facebook, Instagram, X (formerly known as Twitter),
or any other medium or forum, which
states that the Applicant’s
product namely Thompsons chicken polony caused the death of the first
respondents (sic) minor
child.
3.3
That the First Respondent be ordered to pay the costs of the
application, on an attorney and client
scale, only in the event of
the First Respondent opposing the application;
3.4
That the Second Respondent be ordered to pay the costs of the
application on an attorney and client
scale.
3.(sic) The Orders
contained in paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 above are to operate with
immediate effect, pending the finalisation of this
matter.’
Proceedings on 9
November 2023
[7]
The urgent application first came before Bedderson
J. He was satisfied, correctly in my view, that the matter was
urgent. Both respondents
delivered a joint notice of intention to
oppose the relief claimed by the applicant and both were represented
by one counsel, instructed
by a firm of attorneys. Ultimately,
however, a consent order was taken exactly in the terms set out in
the notice of motion, which
included the interim relief sought by the
applicant. The rule was returnable on 8 December 2023.
[8]
Subsequent thereto, and on 23 November 2023, the
firm of attorneys who acted on behalf of both respondents formally
withdrew as
the first respondent’s attorneys of record and
continued thereafter to act only on behalf of the second respondent.
A possible
reason why this may have occurred is considered later in
this judgment. The first respondent was accordingly left
unrepresented.
Proceedings on 8
December 2023
[9]
On the return date of the rule
nisi
,
8 December 2023, there was no appearance for the first respondent,
who was also not personally in attendance. By virtue of the
fact that
the first respondent had opposed the application, Pitman AJ confirmed
the rule
nisi
against
him with costs and extended the rule
nisi
against the second respondent until it was either
confirmed or discharged.
The issue
[10]
Before me, the applicant now seeks confirmation of
the rule
nisi
with
a punitive costs order against the second respondent, while the
second respondent seeks the discharge of the rule and an order
that
its costs be paid by the applicant.
The
first respondent’s allegations
[11]
While the rule
nisi
has already been confirmed against the first
respondent, it is still necessary to consider the allegations that he
made for they
were the catalyst for everything that subsequently
occurred.
[12]
It appears relatively certain that the first
respondent purchased the polony from the store as he claimed to have
done. He put up
a till slip establishing a purchase of such a product
from the store, although the date of the purchase itself is not
clearly reflected
on the till slip. The only date that can be clearly
discerned from the photograph of the till slip attached to the papers
is 17
July 2023, and not 14 August 2023, as alleged by the first
respondent.
[13]
Be that as it may, on 15 August 2023, the first
respondent proceeded to the store and lodged a complaint with it
based upon the
quality of the polony that he purchased, citing the
reasons mentioned in the introduction to this judgment. On 29 August
2023,
two representatives of the applicant, Mr Anthony Pillay (Mr
Pillay) and Mr Brightman Mjoka, met with the first respondent at a
popular local restaurant. They listened to the first respondent’s
complaint and, as a sign of empathy with his alleged suffering,
presented him with a complimentary pack of Thompson’s products.
A few days later, however, the first respondent sent an email
to Mr
Pillay and complained that the polony in the complimentary pack was
also ‘rotten’.
[14]
Prior to his meeting with the applicant’s
representatives, the first respondent had commenced what was to be a
series of posts
on both Facebook and X. The first was made on 25
August 2023, and read as follows:
‘
If
you wake up one morning and sea (sic) #RIP in my wall!! You must know
ShopRite South Africa took my 16 months old son life.
My son has been referred
to Poly clinic from Lindelani because he’s getting worse and he
doesn’t look good at all …
see more.’
[15]
The gender of the child was clearly established by
that post. It was, obviously, a male child. The first respondent
confirmed this
when he posted the following message on those same
platforms three days later on 28 August 2023, namely:
‘
PLEASE,
HELP ME GET #JUSTICE FOR MY SON.’
The name of this child
was never stated, although the first respondent did later provide
copies of medical documents pertaining
to a boy, aged one year and 11
months (and not a boy aged 16 months).
[16]
The applicant has submitted that the post of 25
August 2023 established that the first respondent had alleged that
his son had died.
I do not attach the same meaning to that post. The
applicant’s conclusion does not seem to consider both
paragraphs of the
post, only the first paragraph. The referral to the
fact that his son ‘has’ been referred to the Poly clinic
indicated,
in my view, that the child was alive but that his
condition was getting worse. If he was already dead, his condition
could not
be deteriorating. However, one possible meaning of the post
on 28 August 2023 is that the first respondent’s son had died,
but that is not the only meaning possible. But what is certain is
that the child was a boy.
[17]
Six days later, on 31 August 2023, the
content of the first respondent’s posts changed. He now posted
the following message
on Facebook and X:
‘
REST
IN PEACE N[...] YAM
SEKUZE KWAMANELA UMNTANAM
BECAUSE OF A PRODUCT I
PERSONALLY BOUGHT AT SHOPRITE BRIDGE CITY FOR THOMPSON FAMILY VALUE
POLONY.
I RECEIVED A CALL FROM
KWAMASHU POLY CLINIC THAT MY DAUGHTER HAS PASSED ON THIS MORNING
@04:30am,
After she’s been in
and out of government clinics and hospital trying to fight for her
life because of a product I personally
bought at shoprite in Bridge
city Mall, kwamashu highway open space that I have been nagging
people about asking for assistant
from the masses in helping my
family get #JUSTICE from Thompson’s brand and Shoprite group
for making my family ill after
eating the rotten polony.
LALA UPHUMULE SNENHLANHLA
SDUDLA
SAMHADEBE SOBONANA EKSENI
NGYAXOLISA ANGIKWAZANGA
UKUKU;WE;A
UKUZE IKWAZI UKUTHOLA
USIZO
OLUSEZINGENI
ELIPHEZULUHLEZE’
[18]
It was now clear from this post that the first
respondent’s daughter had apparently died.
[19]
Then on 10 September 2023, the first respondent
posted the following message:
‘
SHARE
SHARE SHARE SHARE SHARE
JUST A FRIENDLY WARNING!!
Good citizens of South
Africa, PLEASE DON’T BUY FOOD FROM #SHOPRITE South Africa,
especially #Thompson’s_Meat product’.
‘
If
you truly love your family, especially your kids or babies!! You will
do the right thing and never buy from #shoprite south africa,
and
Thompson’s_Meat because their products are NOT safe at all, and
they don’t care about their customers.
I’M A LIVING
TESTIMONY OF THAT.
Just a quick update on
the case of my son against #Shoprite South Africa and
#Thompson’s_Meat.
I was advised to open an
official case at Ntuzuma police station yesterday (09/09/23) against
#Shoprite South Africa and #Thompson’s_Meat
but my Attorney
advised me not to share the case number on social media for safety
reasons.
Will give you the details
of the case when my Advocate gives me a go ahead.’
[20]
This post made no reference to the passing of the
first respondent’s daughter, but only mentioned his son.
The second
respondent’s allegations
[21]
The second respondent states that the first
respondent first contacted it for assistance. Assistance was given.
On 1 November 2023,
the second respondent posted the following
message:
‘
A
father from Kwa Mashu, Ward 47, who has lost his 2 year old child
because he was sold rotten polony from ShopRite in Bridge City
speaks
to the Provincial Chairperson, Commissar Mongezi Twala.
Thompson polony and
Shoprite will pay for their sins. Six members of this family are
currently seriously ill and vomiting, while
a 2 year old has now lost
her life.
#RegisterToVoteEFF’
[22]
This post conveyed the message that the first
respondent’s family were still ill from consuming ‘rotten
polony’.
The likelihood of that being true was slight
considering that the first respondent had informed Shoprite on 15
August 2023 that
his family had become ill from eating spoiled
polony. It would be extraordinary if, six weeks later, six members of
the first respondent’s
family were still ‘seriously ill
and vomiting’.
[23]
The same day, 1 November 2023, the second
respondent met with the first respondent and videotaped that meeting.
The video was then
posted on X by the second respondent. The
first respondent was interviewed in isiZulu and what he said has been
translated
into English and the transcript of that interview has been
put up. It reveals that the first respondent stated that:
(a)
His son appeared to have problems with his stomach
and he had been told to take him to a specialist, but he could not
afford that.
(b)
He had lost his job, ‘having used to run an
office’ and he now owed people and his life was ‘a mess’;
(c)
His family views him as a failure and he had
separated from his fiancé because of the loss of the child;
(d)
These events ‘… happened on the 15
th
and I reported it on the 16
th
…’
;
(e)
He had also tried to commit suicide;
(f)
The polony had worms in it;
(g)
The problem does not lie with Shoprite generally,
but with Shoprite stores situated in black communities. Other
communities have
proper services from Shoprite and their products are
‘right’; and
(h)
It is suggested that Shoprite changes the ‘best
before dates’ on the products that they sell.
No proof of any of these
allegations was provided by the first respondent and none appear to
have been demanded from him by the
second respondent.
[24]
What is notable from the transcript of the video
is that the first respondent, again, appeared to indicate that his
son had been
stricken, not his daughter.
[25]
Then, the next day, 2 November 2023, the following
was posted by the second respondent:
‘
EFF
KZN Provincial Chairperson, Commissar Mongezi Twala, went on an
oversight visit at Shoprite Bridge City in Kwa-Mashu to check
on
expired food which has resulted in a 2 year old child from KwaMashu
losing her life after purchasing Thompson polony at Shoprite.
The EFF will ensure that
the child’s life is not lost in vein (sic) and all those who
are responsible are held accountable
for their actions.
#RegisterToVote EFF’.
[26]
Contrary to what was stated in the video, this
post appeared to refer to the child that died as being a girl by the
use of the pronoun
‘her’.
Television
[27]
As news of the alleged tragedy spread, the first
respondent was interviewed by a local television station called ‘1
KZN TV’.
The footage of his interview with the television
station was posted on 3 November 2023. When he was interviewed, the
first respondent,
naturally, again spoke isiZulu and a transcript of
that interview has been prepared and translated and is before the
court.
[28]
In the interview, the first respondent stated
that:
‘…
the
16
th
of
August 2023 is the day that I will never forget it was a nightmare.
Where I woke up to the news that everyone I love and believe
in are
in hospital …’
He
claimed that the polony had expired but, confusingly, also
acknowledged that its expiry date was in 2024,
[2]
which was several months into the future relative to the date of
purchase of the polony (and of the interview). The first respondent
then acknowledged that, in fact, his daughter had died and that two
of his other children were in and out of hospital. He stated
that he
had lost his job and that the mother of his child had also lost her
job because she was forced to spend a substantial period
of time at
home nursing her children back to health.
The Sunday Tribune
[29]
The allegations of the respondents publicly
attributing the death of a child to the eating of rotten polony
manufactured by the
applicant led directly to a story being published
in the Sunday Tribune, a weekly Sunday newspaper that circulates in
KwaZulu-Natal.
The heading to the story, published on 5 November
2023, was:
‘
Child
died after eating polony’.
The opening paragraph of
the story read as follows:
‘
The
father of a toddler who died after allegedly eating expired polony
has vowed to take legal action against the company that sold
the
product and the manufacturer.’
No legal proceedings have
ever been instituted by the first respondent against the applicant.
Sympathetic support
[30]
The first respondent’s version of what had
occurred attracted sympathetic support from other members of the
public who access
the social media platforms that the first and
second respondents used. Thus, a person named Linda Zungu posted the
following message
on 28 August 2023:
‘
Those
who have Twitter, let’s apply more pressure … kuzogcina
thina kodwa eng’kwaziyo’.
[31]
This is, perhaps, understandable in a way. Our
society values human life, especially the lives of young, innocent
children. To lose
a child in circumstances where it could have easily
been avoided, unsurprisingly, evokes sympathy in other members of
society.
And the story advanced by the first respondent was
undoubtedly tragic and heart-breaking.
[32]
But was it true? It remained simply an unverified
story, confusing in its constituent elements. A terrible story
undoubtedly, but
an unverified story, nonetheless. There were no
demonstrable, objective facts that could be referenced, other than
the purchase
of the polony. There was contradictory information about
when the polony was consumed. There was no evidence that the deceased
child had eaten the polony. There was no proof that the polony was
contaminated. There was no proof that the polony had caused the
death
of a child. There was no proof that the first respondent’s
child had died.
[33]
The applicant accordingly set about conducting its
own investigations into the matter.
Scientific
examination
[34]
As a starting point, the applicant did not accept
that there was anything wrong with the product that the first
respondent had purchased.
The first respondent still had some of the
polony left and handed it over to the applicant to permit a
laboratory analysis of it
to occur (the complaint sample). The
complaint sample and a control sample (the retention sample) were
delivered by the applicant
to the South African National Accredited
System (SANAS) laboratory for testing. That testing revealed that the
pathogen load in
the complaint sample was within the normal range and
there were no distinct indicators that it was contaminated with
bacteria or
toxins that would have caused an illness.
[35]
The applicant also caused the complaint sample and
the retention sample to be examined by a laboratory called Anelich
Consulting
Food Safety Solutions. The scientist who performed the
analysis was Adjunct Professor Lucia Anelich (Professor Anelich), who
holds
a PhD in microbiology.
[36]
Professor Anelich conducted a comparative analysis
between the complaint sample and the retention sample. The retention
sample had
the same use by date and the same batch number as the
complaint sample provided by the first respondent.
[37]
Professor Anelich prepared a written report on her
findings which, in summary, were that the complaint sample was high
in its total
plate count and in its yeast and mould counts compared
to the retention sample. According to Professor Anelich, this merely
indicated
that the complaint sample had been handled by the first
respondent and had been exposed to the environment, whereas the
retention
sample had been sealed and not handled. In all other
respects, the process hygiene criteria counts were normal in respect
of both
samples.
[38]
Professor Anelich stated the following in her
written report:
‘
Importantly,
both the complaint and retention samples show an absence of
Salmonella
,
L
.
monocytogenes
and
Staphylococcus
aureus
.
The latter organism must reach high levels (in the region of 100 000
cfu/g
[3]
) before it produces a
toxin, which when ingested, causes foodborne disease. This clearly
did not occur in this case.’
The evidence of Mr
B[...] S[...]
[39]
Despite the confusing narrative advanced by the
first respondent, it is unfortunately true that a young girl with
whom he had an
association did, in fact, pass away. The deceased
child was, however, not his child. And she did not die from eating
contaminated
polony manufactured by the applicant.
[40]
The young girl who died was named M[...] Z[...]
M[...] (M[...]) who was also known as ‘S[...]’. She was
born on 29 July
2022, and she passed away on 31 October 2023. Her
official death certificate, which is before the court, records her
cause of death
to be due to ‘natural causes’. She was the
biological daughter of Mr B[...] S[...] (Mr S[...]) and Ms N[...]
M[...]
(Ms M[...]). After she was conceived, but prior to her birth,
M[...]’s parents’ relationship failed, and they
separated.
She was born after that separation. Having terminated her
relationship with Mr S[...], Ms M[...] commenced a relationship with
the first respondent.
[41]
Mr S[...] became aware that M[...] was not well
during August 2023 and was advised by Ms M[...] that this was because
M[...] was
apparently experiencing teething difficulties. Her
condition appeared to improve initially but it then deteriorated, and
she, sadly,
passed away.
[42]
Mr S[...] came to learn that allegations were
being made by both respondents that M[...] had died because of
consuming contaminated
polony, a fact that he knew not to be true. Mr
S[...]’s sister, Ms N[...] M[...], informed him that the second
respondent,
which is a well-known national political party, was using
M[...]’s death as a campaign tool for the upcoming national
elections
and she was extremely unhappy about this. She therefore
sent an email, in the name of her brother, to the applicant advising
it
to contact him. In that email, she advised the applicant that it
was being ‘scammed’.
[43]
Mr S[...] subsequently met with a
representative of the applicant and told his story. He then deposed
to an affidavit, commissioned
on 7 November 2023, confirming the
details of M[...]’s untimely death and his affidavit was filed
with this court by the
applicant’s attorneys.
[44]
Once the affidavit of Mr S[...] was received by
the applicant, its attorneys served a copy on the attorneys then
acting for both
the respondents. Reference was made previously to the
fact that the attorneys acting for both respondents suddenly withdrew
from
representing the first respondent. The reason for this might
have been the delivery to him of Mr S[...]’s affidavit. On 22
November 2023, the attorneys stopped acting for the first respondent.
The retraction
[45]
A copy of Mr S[...]’s affidavit was also
provided to the Sunday Tribune by the applicant’s attorneys.
They requested
a retraction and apology from the newspaper. This was
readily acceded to, and the newspaper published an apology to the
applicant
on Sunday, 12 November 2023, in which it apologised for any
harm its story may have caused. It specifically recorded that it
retracted
its story.
Analysis
[46]
In seeking confirmation of the rule
nisi
,
the applicant argues that the narrative advanced by the first
respondent, and embraced unquestioningly by the second respondent,
was false. It submits that there is no evidence that M[...] passed
away from eating contaminated polony. It further submits that
the
first respondent’s story was not consistent and could not
withstand even the slightest strain of scrutiny. The scientific
tests
performed on the polony established that it could not have caused the
death of M[...] and the death certificate supplied
by Mr S[...]
established that proposition beyond doubt. Other than M[...], no
other child associated with the first respondent
died. In my view,
these submissions are unquestionably true.
[47]
The second respondent has disclosed that it made a
‘with prejudice offer’ to have the rule confirmed, with
no order
as to costs against it, to which offer the applicant did not
acquiesce. Reversing its stance, the second respondent now argues for
the discharge of the rule with costs, and, in argument, made four
principal submissions in justification of that order:
(a)
The applicant had not established that it was
entitled to a final interdict;
(b)
The relief granted provisionally against it had
since become moot;
(c)
It had raised a valid defence to the allegations
that it had defamed the applicant; and
(d)
The applicant was impermissibly seeking to
interdict it from making defamatory allegations about it in the
future.
Each of these allegations
must be carefully considered.
[48]
As
regards the first allegation, the applicant is a juristic entity and
is, just like a natural person, entitled to protect its
reputation
and is not required to suffer false and harmful allegations made
about it simply because is not a warm bodied person.
This was
affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Reddell
and others v Mineral Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and others
[4]
where the court remarked
that:
‘…
a
trading corporation has a right at common law to its good name and
reputation, and that right is enforceable through a common-law
claim
for defamation.’
[49]
The
requisites for a final interdict in our law have been certain for
over a century.
[5]
If
an applicant is able to establish the three basic requirements for a
final interdict, then the court hearing the application
has very
little scope for refusing that relief because there is no general
discretion to refuse to grant interdictory relief.
[6]
[50]
The second respondent asserts that the applicant
has failed to establish that the second respondent is about to, or
will continue
to, publish defamatory material about it and has not
established that it will suffer irreparable harm if a final interdict
is not
granted. In making that argument, the second respondent states
that:
‘
The
EFF uses its social media accounts to advance its political mandate.
Furthermore, it disseminates information of public importance
such as
the subject matter of this application. It therefore claims that the
social media posts containing the impugned statements
are reasonable
publication and in the public interest.’
[51]
What the second respondent regards its political
mandate to be is not disclosed or discussed. It appears to me that it
is possibly
a rather elastic concept that could be invoked when it
suits the second respondent to do so. Moreover, the second respondent
is
entirely unrepentant about its conduct. As will become apparent,
it
continues to argue that it was justified in doing what it did.
[52]
In
the Australian case of
Lange
v Australian Broadcasting Corporation
[7]
the
following was held:
‘
Whether
the making of a publication was reasonable must depend upon all the
circumstances of the case. But, as a general rule, a
defendant's
conduct in publishing material giving rise to a defamatory imputation
will not be reasonable unless the defendant had
reasonable grounds
for believing that the imputation was true, took proper steps, so far
as they were reasonably open, to verify
the accuracy of the material
and did not believe the imputation to be untrue.’
[53]
The second
respondent has claimed that it reasonably believed what it was told
by the first respondent. Why his story was believed
is not addressed
at all. Even the most cursory examination of the first respondent’s
version would have revealed inexplicable
contradictions that would
have required extreme caution to be exercised. The second respondent
has not stated at all that it interrogated
the first respondent’s
story and sought to satisfy itself of its veracity.
[54]
The applicant
has a clear right to prevent falsehoods about the quality of its
products from taking root in the community and from
being published.
It has already suffered an injury in the false allegations made by
the second respondent linking it to the death
of M[...] and, it seems
to me, it has no other satisfactory remedy at its disposal to protect
itself. In my view, the applicant
has established the requirements
for a final interdict and the second respondent’s conduct was
not reasonable in the circumstances.
[55]
The second point argued by the second respondent
is that the relief granted provisionally against it has since become
moot. This
arises, so the argument goes, from the fact that it
alleges that it complied with the provisional order granted by
Bedderson J
on 9 November 2023.
That
may be so. But it required the bringing of the application before the
second respondent was constrained to act as it now claims
to have
acted. In truth, the applicant’s attorneys wrote to the second
respondent’s attorneys on 2 November 2023 before
bringing this
application and sought certain undertakings from the second
respondent that would have averted the bringing of this
application.
The undertakings sought were not provided.
[56]
Generally,
‘a matter is moot when a court’s judgment will have no
practical effect on the parties’.
[8]
This will classically be the case where there is no longer an active
controversy in existence between the parties.
[57]
For the
second respondent to claim that the issue is moot it must necessarily
concede that its own conduct was unlawful, has permanently
ceased,
and will not be repeated in the future. It does not do so. The fact
that one party may obey a court order granted against
it does not, in
my view, make an issue moot. That is even less so where the party
obeys the court order but continues to argue,
as in this matter, that
it was justified in doing what it did.
[58]
The second
respondent contended in argument that it was entitled to disseminate
the information that it did.
The
deponent to the second respondent’s answering affidavit
acknowledged that he was not a medical expert but asserted that
he
did a Google search relative to the ‘acceptable plate count’
arising out of the laboratory tests conducted on the
polony at the
instance of the applicant. He pointed out that the laboratory test
results identified high plate and yeast counts.
He stated that he did
not know what that meant but concluded that the applicant’s
polony was not suitable for consumption.
Thus:
‘
I
submit that the death of M[...] following her consuming the
Applicant’s product cannot be remotely removed from the
conclusion
reached by Mr Hadebe [the first respondent] and
subsequently conveyed to me prompting the EFF to make the statements
on social
media.’
[59]
That
extract reveals the continued error in the second respondent’s
approach. There was no evidence whatsoever that M[...]
consumed any
polony. The matter is consequently not moot. The issue between the
parties has not been conceded and is accordingly
alive. Orders of
court are to be complied with. Grudging compliance does not create
mootness.
[60]
The
second respondent raises as a third point the allegation that it has
a bona fide defence to the applicant’s claim. To
defend itself
against such a claim, a
respondent is entitled to, and must, present facts that establish a
defence recognised in law. The essential allegations of defamation
are:
(a)
the wrongful
and
(b)
intentional
(c)
publication of
(d)
a defamatory statement
(e)
concerning
the plaintiff.
[9]
[61]
In
Le
Roux and others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and
Restorative Justice Centre as Amici Curiae)
,
[10]
the Constitutional Court expressed itself as follows concerning what
each of the parties is required to establish:
‘
All
the plaintiff has to prove at the outset is the publication of
defamatory matter concerning himself or herself. Once the plaintiff
has accomplished this, it is presumed that the statement was both
wrongful and intentional. A defendant wishing to avoid liability
for
defamation must then raise a defence which excludes either
wrongfulness or intent. Until recently there was doubt as to the
exact nature of the onus. But it is now settled that the onus on
the defendant to rebut one or the other presumption is not
only a
duty to adduce evidence, but a full onus, that is, it must be
discharged on a preponderance of probabilities. A bare denial
by the
defendant will therefore not be enough. Facts must be pleaded and
proved that will be sufficient to establish the defence.’
(footnotes omitted)
[62]
Ms
Qono, who appears for the second respondent, submitted in her heads
of argument that the second respondent had, indeed, put up
a defence
that was good in law. Thus, it was submitted that the following
proposition from
Heilbron
v Blignault
[11]
applied
to the position of the second respondent:
‘…
if the
defendant sets up that he can prove truth and public benefit, the
Court is not entitled to disregard his statement on oath
to that
effect, because, if his statement were true, it would be a
defence...’.
[12]
[63]
While the wording of this extract is clear
and uncontroversial, its relevance to the facts of this matter is
less so. The second
defendant has not stated at any juncture in its
answering affidavit that what it published was both true and that it
was in the
interests of the general public that it be disclosed. The
second respondent could not do so, because it could not establish the
first part of that proposition: it could not establish that what it
published was the truth. To the contrary, it was not the truth,
as
M[...] did not die from eating contaminated polony.
[64]
In stating what it did, the second respondent took
no steps to satisfy itself that the allegations made by the first
respondent
were true and failed to closely question the obvious
inconsistencies in the first respondent’s changing versions of
what
had allegedly occurred. It is to the shame of the second
respondent that it considered it acceptable to seize upon the death
of
a young child and assimilate it into its election campaign to make
political capital out of it.
[65]
The
statements made by the second respondent were unequivocally untrue.
It hardly needs to be stated that it cannot be to the benefit
of the
public to permit untrue narratives to be published masquerading as
the truth.
As
was stated in the Canadian case of
Hill
v Church of Scientology of Toronto
:
[13]
‘
False
and injurious statements cannot enhance self-development. Nor can it
ever be said that they lead to the healthy participation
in the
affairs of the community. Indeed they are detrimental to the
advancement of these values and harmful to the interests of
a free
and democratic society . . . False allegations can so very quickly
and completely destroy a good reputation. A reputation
tarnished by
libel can seldom regain its former lustre.’
[66]
In my
view, the granting of a final interdict will be justified where a
respondent has palpably demonstrated that it has no defence
to the
allegations made about its conduct. No defence has been established
by the second respondent.
[67]
The
final point taken by the second respondent is that the applicant is
unlawfully attempting to muzzle it from making defamatory
statements
about it in the future. Section 16 of the Constitution,
[14]
identifies the right of citizens to freely
receive
or impart information or ideas. It is a
right
that is jealously protected. This right to freedom of expression is
often met with a counter argument that the subject of
such expression
has the right to protect his or her dignity
[15]
and reputation, which are no less important rights. Indeed, there is
an argument that
human
dignity is ‘perhaps the pre-eminent value’.
[16]
There
is thus an uneasy tension between these two rights and a balance must
accordingly be struck between them.
[68]
A
court should accordingly be cautious
to
grant a final interdict against a party preventing future
publication, even if potentially defamatory, lest the right enshrined
in s 16 of the Constitution be unnecessarily assailed.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal indicated in
Herbal
Zone (Pty) Ltd and others v Infitech Technologies (Pty) Ltd and
others
[17]
that an interdict to prevent a party from making defamatory
statements in the future is ‘only infrequently granted’
because:
‘…
it
impinges upon that party’s constitutionally protected right to
freedom of speech.’
However,
where the facts of a matter call for the granting of a final
interdict, for example, where no true defence is raised, a
court
should not hesitate to do so.
[18]
[69]
The relief sought by the applicant,
however, is specific and not wide ranging in its reach. The applicant
does not seek to generally
prohibit the second respondent from making
defamatory statements about it or its products in the future. The
relief claimed by
the applicant is more specific, nuanced and
limited. It is designed only to prohibit the second respondent from
making statements
on social media platforms about M[...] having died
from consuming the applicant’s product. The second defendant
was accordingly
only required to remove posts from those social
networking platforms that it used that related to that specific
allegation.
[70]
The second respondent is thus incorrect in
asserting, as it does, that the applicant is attempting to prevent it
from generally
making defamatory statements about the applicant in
the future. Such a prohibition may be objectionable given that the
wording
of the future statements sought to be interdicted cannot be
known now and thus interdicting them may legitimately interfere with
the right to freedom of expression. But that is not what the notice
of motion seeks to achieve. The point is accordingly misconceived.
[71]
That
the applicant seeks the form of relief that it does is a reflection
of the fact that we live in a digital age in which there
is easy and
ready access to the internet. The internet is regarded widely as
being the main source of information-sharing and knowledge
production
presently in existence. As was stated by Chetty J in
RM
v RB
:
[19]
‘
In
today's world the most effective, efficient and immediate way of
conveying one's ideas and thoughts is via the internet. At the
same
time the internet reaches out to millions of people instantaneously.
The possibility of defamatory postings on the internet
would
therefore pose a significant risk to the reputational integrity of
individuals.’
Conclusion
[72]
I am
satisfied that the applicant is entitled to the confirmation of the
rule granted on 9 November 2023, save in one respect. The
relief
granted by Bedderson J at paragraph 3.1.2 of the order has not been
established. There was no evidence to show that there
was any
physical threat made to the persons associated with the applicant or
the property of the applicant. It is so that when
the second
respondent’s leadership cohort descended upon the store on 2
November 2023, there had been a degree of civil unrest
caused by the
second respondent’s officials’ behaviour and the South
African Police Services were summoned to restore
order. That,
however, did not involve the applicant and it was not their premises
or employees that were at risk. There has been
no other evidence that
any threat was made to justify the granting of the relief set forth
in paragraph 3.1.2 of the order and
I accordingly intend discharging
that paragraph.
Costs
[73]
As
regards the issue of costs, the second respondent acted recklessly
and made false allegations about the applicant, which were
intended
to be read by a large number of people. In
Nkosi
v Mazwai
,
[20]
the
court observed that:
‘
Any
person who has [a] substantial social media following and who is
able, as a consequence thereof to reach out to and influence,
a large
community of people, as the respondent is able to do, is required to
ensure that they exercise temperance and responsibility
in the
dissemination of public posts. More importantly, the respondent ought
to ensure that her public statements are based and
founded in truth
and in fact.’
Moorcroft
AJ accurately observed in
Nisamoseki
Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd t/a Nisa Willckx Interiors v Sithole
[21]
that
an
ordinary person armed with a cellular telephone and with access to
the internet can reach more people today than a king with
his armies
two thousand years ago.
[74]
There was no attempt on the second respondent’s part to
act with any temperance and there was no attempt to ascertain the
truth of what it was posting
.
The potential for harm was thus maximised. The second respondent
still maintains that it was justified in posting the messages
and
videos that it did. In its first message posted on 1 November 2023,
the second respondent stated that the applicant
and
Shoprite would ‘pay for their sins’. In its post on 2
November 2023, the second respondent stated that those responsible
would be ‘held accountable for their actions’. The sinner
was, in fact, neither the applicant nor Shoprite, but the
second
respondent. The second respondent will accordingly understand that it
must now also be held accountable for its actions.
In such circumstances, the applicant is entitled to its costs on a
punitive scale.
Order
[75]
I
accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The rule
nisi
granted by Bedderson J on 9 November 2023 is
confirmed against the second respondent, save for paragraph 3.1.2
thereof.
2.
The second respondent shall pay the applicant’s
costs on the
scale of attorney and client, such to include the costs of senior
counsel.
3.
The costs ordered in paragraph 2 shall be joint
and several with the
order of costs awarded against the first respondent by Pitman AJ in
confirming the rule nisi against the first
respondent on 8 December
2023.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr
D Ramdhani SC
Instructed
by:
McGregor
Erasmus Attorneys Incorporated
Bond
Square
First
Floor
12
Browns Road
The
Point
Durban
Counsel
for the first respondent:
No
appearance
Counsel
for the second respondent:
Ms
Z Qono
Instructed
by:
Ian
Levitt Attorneys
The
Leonardo
Office
Level 12
75
Maude Street
Sandown
Sandton
## [1]For
an analysis of the nature of these ubiquitous social networking
platforms seeHeroldt
v Wills[2013]
ZAGPJHC 1; 2013 (2) SA 530 (GSJ); 2013 (5) BCLR 554 (GSJ); [2013] 2
All SA 218 (GSJ) paras 11-23.
[1]
For
an analysis of the nature of these ubiquitous social networking
platforms see
Heroldt
v Wills
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 1; 2013 (2) SA 530 (GSJ); 2013 (5) BCLR 554 (GSJ); [2013] 2
All SA 218 (GSJ) paras 11-23.
[2]
A photograph of the offending polony that forms part of the papers
reveals its expiry date as being January 2024.
[3]
‘
Cfu/g’
is a reference to ‘colony-forming units’, which is ‘a
small number of microbial cells that are
able to multiply via binary
fission to form a colony’:
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/colony-forming-unit.
[4]
Reddell
and others v Mineral Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and others
[2022]
ZACC 38
;
2023 (2) SA 404
(CC);
2023 (7) BCLR 830
(CC) para 87.
## [5]Setlogelov
Setlogelo1914
AD 221: The requisites, all of which must be present, are (a)
a clear right on the part of the applicant; (b) an injury
actually
committed or reasonably apprehended; and (c) the absence of any
other satisfactory remedy; see alsoLiberty
Group Ltd and others v Mall Space Management CC[2019]
ZASCA 142; 2020 (1) SA 30 (SCA)para
22.
[5]
Setlogelo
v
Setlogelo
1914
AD 221: The requisites, all of which must be present, are (a)
a clear right on the part of the applicant; (b) an injury
actually
committed or reasonably apprehended; and (c) the absence of any
other satisfactory remedy; see also
Liberty
Group Ltd and others v Mall Space Management CC
[2019]
ZASCA 142; 2020 (1) SA 30 (SCA)
para
22.
[6]
Hotz
and others v University of Cape Town
[2016]
ZASCA 159
;
2017 (2) SA 485
(SCA);
[2016] 4 All SA 723
(SCA) para 29;
Lester
v Ndlambe Municipality and another
[2013]
ZASCA 95
;
2015
(6) SA 283
(SCA)
paras 23-24.
[7]
Lange v
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
[1997] HCA 25
;
(1997)
189 CLR 520
at 574, quoted, inter alia, with approval in
National
Media Ltd and others v Bogoshi
1998
(4) SA 1196
(SCA) at 1211F-G (‘
Bogoshi
’
)
.
## [8]Solidariteit
Helpende Hand NPC and others v Minister of Cooperative Governance
and Traditional Affairs[2023]
ZASCA 35 para 12.
[8]
Solidariteit
Helpende Hand NPC and others v Minister of Cooperative Governance
and Traditional Affairs
[2023]
ZASCA 35 para 12.
[9]
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
[2002]
ZACC 12
;
2002
(5) SA 401
(CC);
2002
(8) BCLR 771
(CC)
para 18.
[10]
Le Roux
and others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and Restorative
Justice Centre as Amici Curiae)
[2011]
ZACC 4
;
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC) para 85.
[11]
Heilbron
v Blignault
1931
WLD 167
.
[12]
Ibid
at 169.
[13]
Hill v
Church of Scientology of Toronto
(1995)
126 DLR (4th) 129 (SCC) at 159-160, quoted, inter alia, with
approval in
Bogoshi
at 1209F-G
.
[14]
Section
16(1) of the Constitution reads as follows:
‘
Everyone
has the right to freedom of expression, which includes -
(a)
freedom of the press and other media;
(b)
freedom to receive or impart information or ideas;
(c)
freedom of artistic creativity; and
(d)
academic freedom and freedom of scientific research.’
[15]
Which
is protected by section 10 of the Constitution.
[16]
I Currie and J de Waal
The
Bill of Rights Handbook
6
ed (2013) at 250. See also
Christian
Education South Africa v Minister of Education
[2000]
ZACC 11
;
2000 (4) SA 757
(CC) para 15, where it is referred to as
‘the central constitutional value’.
[17]
Herbal
Zone (Pty) Ltd and others v Infitech Technologies (Pty) Ltd and
others
[2017]
ZASCA 8
;
[2017] 2 All SA 347
(SCA)
para
36.
[18]
NBC
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Akani Retirement Fund Administrators (Pty) Ltd
[2021]
ZASCA 136
;
[2021] 4 All SA 652
(SCA) paras 29
-30.
[19]
RM
v RB
2015
(1) SA 270
(KZP) para 28.
[20]
Nkosi
v Mazwai
[2022]
ZAGPJHC 129
para
9.
[21]
Nisamoseki
Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd t/a Nisa Willckx Interiors v Sithole
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 1217
para
11.
sino noindex
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