Case Law[2023] ZASCA 47South Africa
Giftwrap Trading (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd and Others (1009/2020) [2023] ZASCA 47; 2023 (4) SA 68 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 April 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Regulation of Interception of Communications and Provision of Communication-Related Information Act 70 of 2002 (RICA) – disclosure of customer information obtained and stored by Internet and cellular phone service providers under ss 39 and 40 of RICA – s 42(1)(c) of RICA permits disclosure if required as evidence in a court of law – not for purposes of identifying wrongdoers.
Judgment
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## Giftwrap Trading (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd and Others (1009/2020) [2023] ZASCA 47; 2023 (4) SA 68 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
Giftwrap Trading (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd and Others (1009/2020) [2023] ZASCA 47; 2023 (4) SA 68 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
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sino date 4 April 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 1009/2020
In the matter between:
GIFTWRAP TRADING (PTY)
LTD APPELLANT
and
VODACOM (PTY)
LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
MOBILE TELEPHONE
NETWORKS (PTY) LTD SECOND
RESPONDENT
TELKOM SA LTD
THIRD
RESPONDENT
CELL C (PTY)
LTD FOURTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Giftwrap
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd and Others
(1009/2020)
[2023] ZASCA 47
(4 April 2023)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, GORVEN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
OLSEN and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
16 February 2023
Delivered:
4 April
2023
Summary:
Regulation of Interception of Communications and
Provision of Communication-Related Information Act 70 of 2002 (RICA)
– disclosure
of customer information obtained and stored by
Internet and cellular phone service providers under ss 39 and 40 of
RICA –
s 42(1)
(c)
of RICA permits disclosure if required as evidence in a court of law
– not for purposes of identifying wrongdoers.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Mokose J, sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The registrar of this court is directed to bring this judgment to the
attention
of the Cabinet members responsible for the administration
of justice and state security.
JUDGMENT
Van der Merwe JA
(Gorven and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Olsen and Siwendu AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The first respondent in this appeal, Vodacom (Pty) Ltd (Vodacom),
does business as
a cellular phone and Internet service provider
(service provider). So, too, do the other three respondents. As I
shall show, service
providers are required by law to obtain and keep
specified information in respect of their customers (customer
information). The
appeal concerns rights of access to the customer
information of the respondents and arose in the manner set out below.
Background
[2]
The business of the appellant, Giftwrap Trading (Pty) Ltd (Giftwrap),
is online sales
of products such as corporate gifts and clothing.
This means that it markets and sells its products on the
international computer
network known as the Internet. Giftwrap
advertises its products on online platforms provided by the
international technological
company Google LLC. Giftwrap, of course,
has to pay for the advertisements posted. These advertising fees are
calculated with reference
to the number of visits to a particular
advertisement.
[3]
For some years, however, Giftwrap has been the victim of what is
referred to as ‘click
fraud’. Click fraud takes place
when an advertisement on the Internet is repeatedly visited (clicked
upon) with the intention
of increasing the costs of the advertisement
and/or draining the sales revenue of the advertiser. Revenue is lost
because the repeated
click fraud visits limit genuine access to the
advertisement.
[4]
Giftwrap employed various experts and strategies in attempts to put
an end to the
click fraud that it experienced. These efforts were
unsuccessful until a breakthrough was made during March 2019. With
the assistance
of an expert, Giftwrap managed to obtain a large
number of local Internet protocol (IP) addresses of devices from
which, so Giftwrap
believed, the click fraud on it had emanated. The
information at its disposal also identified the service provider that
each of
these IP addresses used to gain access to the Internet.
Giftwrap was therefore able to compile a list of IP addresses
suspected
of having perpetrated click fraud, for each service
provider. The lists of IP addresses that pertained to the respondents
(the
listed IP addresses) formed the basis of the litigation that
followed.
[5]
During June 2019, Giftwrap launched an application in the Gauteng
Division of the
High Court, Pretoria against the respondents. In
essence, Giftwrap sought the disclosure of the customer information
in respect
of each of the listed IP addresses. The purpose of the
relief was to identify wrongdoers in order to take legal action
against
them. Giftwrap initially founded the application on the
decision in
Nampak Glass (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd &
Others
[2018] ZAGPJHC 481;
2019 (1) SA 257
(GJ) (
Nampak
).
In a supplementary founding affidavit, however, it placed reliance on
s 42(1)
(c)
of the Regulation of Interception of Communications
and Provision of Communication-Related Information Act 70 of 2002
(RICA). I
shall reproduce this subsection shortly. For purposes of
the narrative it suffices to say that it would permit access to
customer
information which is required as evidence in a court of law.
[6]
The second to fourth respondents abided the outcome of the
application, but Vodacom
delivered an answering affidavit. It
clarified its stance from the outset. This was that Vodacom did not
dispute Giftwrap’s
factual averments nor that the information
in question could be useful for the purpose for which it was
required. It said that
were the decision solely up to it, Vodacom
would have provided the information to Giftwrap. In its view,
however, the provisions
of RICA precluded the disclosure that
Giftwrap sought, hence the opposition to the application.
[7]
The court a quo (Mokose J) agreed with Vodacom. It essentially
reasoned that s 42(1)
(c)
of RICA does not permit disclosure of
customer information for the purpose of identifying wrongdoers. It
accordingly dismissed
the application with costs. Giftwrap’s
appeal against that order is with the leave of this court. In this
court Vodacom continued
to adopt the aforesaid stance.
Relevant RICA
provisions
[8]
Sections 39 and 40 of RICA are concerned with customer information.
Before I turn
to their provisions, however, it is necessary to deal
with an oddity in RICA. When it was enacted, RICA contained
definitions of
‘telecommunication system’,
‘telecommunication service’ and ‘telecommunication
service provider’.
These expressions were widely employed in
RICA, especially in Chapter 5 (ss 30-31), Chapter 6 (ss 32-38) and
Chapter 7 (ss 39-41).
[9]
Section 97
of the
Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2005
amended
RICA by replacing the ‘telecommunication’ definitions
with definitions of ‘electronic communication system’,
‘electronic communications service’ and ‘electronic
communication service provider’. Curiously, however,
corresponding amendments were not effected in the body of RICA, not
even in
ss 30
and
32
, which were amended in other respects. When
s 40
of RICA was subsequently substituted by Act 48 of 2008,
[1]
however, the ‘electronic communication’ expressions were
employed.
[10]
The result is that many provisions of RICA still employ the
‘telecommunication’ expressions,
even though they were
replaced by the ‘electronic communication’ definitions.
In particular, s 39 refers to information
to be kept and obtained by
certain telecommunication service providers. Section 40, as I have
said, concerns information to be
obtained and kept by an electronic
communication service provider (which provides a mobile cellular
electronic communications service).
[11]
The
Telecommunications Act 103 of 1996
was repealed and replaced by
the
Electronic Communications Act and
s 97
thereof introduced
amendments to reflect that fact. There are no intrinsic differences
between the ‘telecommunication’
and ‘electronic
communication’ definitions. The definition of
‘telecommunication service provider’ included
an Internet
service provider and so does the definition of ‘electronic
communication service provider’.
[12]
In the result it must be concluded that the legislature intended to
replace all the ‘telecommunication’
expressions with the
‘electronic communication’ expressions, but as a result
of an unfortunate oversight failed to
effect that. In these peculiar
circumstances, I think that the proper thing to do is to read the
‘telecommunication’
expressions in RICA as ‘electronic
communication’ expressions as defined. That would, as a matter
of statutory interpretation
akin to filling in a
casus
omissus
,
give effect to the intention to the legislature. The legislature
should, however, correct this with expedition and for that purpose
I
shall direct that this judgment be brought to the attention of the
Cabinet members responsible for the administration of justice
and for
state security.
[2]
[13]
Various provisions of RICA enable an ‘applicant’ to
obtain disclosure of information,
including customer information
(under
ss 39(3)
and
40
(7)). An ‘applicant’ is defined in
RICA. It is not necessary to reproduce this rather extensive
definition. It suffices
to say that only specified government
officials (such as officers in the South African Police Service) are
included in the definition
and that Giftwrap is not an ‘applicant’
under RICA.
[14]
As I have demonstrated,
ss 39
and
40
of RICA apply to service
providers.
Section 39(1)
[3]
specifies the customer information that a service provider other than
a cellular phone service provider, must obtain and verify
before it
enters into a contract with any person for the provision of an
electronic communications service to that person.
Section 39(1)
(a)
lists the customer information to be obtained and verified in respect
of a natural person and
s 39(1)
(b)
with those of a juristic person. The keeping of records of this
information is prescribed in
s 39(2).
[4]
[15]
In terms of
s 40(1)
(a)
a service provider who provides a cellular phone service shall not
activate a Subscriber Identity Module (SIM-card) on its electronic
communications system unless
s 40(2)
[5]
has been complied with. That section specifies the information that
such a service provider must record, verify and store in respect
of
South African citizens, non-South African citizens and juristic
persons. When a customer sells or otherwise provides a SIM-card
to a
person other than a family member, the customer and the person who is
to receive the SIM-card are obliged, in terms of
s 40(5)
, to provide
similar information to the service provider. In terms of
s 40(6)
that
information must also be recorded, verified and stored as
contemplated in
s 40(2).
[16]
Section 40(3)
[6]
prescribes the
process of verification of information for purposes of
s 40(2).
In
terms of
s 40(4)
a service provider must ensure that the process
contemplated in
s 40(2)
, the information recorded and stored in terms
of that subsection and the facility in or on which the information is
recorded and
stored ‘are secure and only accessible to persons
specifically designated . . .’.
Section 40(10)
essentially provides that customer information must be stored for a
period of five years after the termination of the contract
between
the customer and the service provider.
Analysis
[17]
In determining whether Giftwrap is entitled to disclosure of the
customer information in respect
of the listed IP addresses, it is
firstly necessary to have regard to
Nampak
.
[7]
There the applicant had been the victim of a robbery. In an urgent
application, it sought information from Vodacom and a number
of other
cellular phone service providers on the basis that the information
would assist in an investigation to identify the wrongdoers.
The
information sought firstly related to the identification of all the
cellular phones that had been used in the vicinity of the
applicant’s
premises during a specified period (approximately an hour). Secondly,
the applicant essentially sought customer
information and detailed
call logs in respect of all the cellular phones so identified.
Vodacom and the service providers did not
oppose the urgent
application.
[18]
The court nevertheless determined to develop the common law as
expounded in
House of Jewels & Gems & Others v Gilbert &
Others
1983 (4) SA 824
(W). It did so on the basis of: the
applicant’s constitutional right to access to courts; the
‘regrettable omission’
of the Uniform Rules of Court to
provide a remedy in advance of litigation having been instituted; and
the inherent power of the
High Court to regulate its own process.
After adopting English law in this regard, the court granted the
far-reaching relief sought.
[19]
The court was not, however, referred to the provisions of RICA. A
development of the common law
in this regard could not legitimately
have been undertaken without consideration of the provisions of RICA.
For the reasons furnished
below, RICA precluded the disclosure of
customer information. To this extent
Nampak
was wrongly decided. It also appears to me that at least the bulk of
the call logs in
Nampak
constituted archived communication-related information, the
disclosure of which is strictly regulated by RICA.
[8]
However, it is not necessary for purposes of this case to make a
final determination in respect of the call logs.
[20]
Returning to RICA, the starting point is s 42(2). It
inter alia
provides that no service provider may disclose any information
obtained in the exercise of its powers or the performance of its
duties in terms of RICA, except for the purposes mentioned in s
42(1). This clearly applies to customer information obtained under
s
39 and s 40.
[21]
Section 42(1) reads:
‘
(1)
No person may disclose any information which he or she obtained in
the exercising of his or her powers or the performance of
his or her
duties in terms of this Act, except-
(a)
to
any other person who of necessity requires it for the performance of
his or her functions in terms of this
Act;
(b)
if
he or she is a person who of necessity supplies it in the performance
of his or her functions in terms of this
Act;
(c)
information
which is required in terms of any law or as evidence in any court of
law; or
(d)
to
any competent authority which requires it for the institution, or an
investigation with a view to the institution,
of any criminal
proceedings or civil proceedings as contemplated in Chapter 5 or 6 of
the Prevention of Organised Crime Act.’
[22]
It is necessary to point out that in terms of s 13 of the Prevention
of Organised Crime Act 121
of 1998 (POCA), proceedings under Chapter
5 (Proceeds of Unlawful Activities) are civil proceedings and not
criminal proceedings.
In terms of s 37 of POCA the same applies to
proceedings under Chapter 6 (Civil Recovery of Property). It follows
that s 42(1)
(d)
of RICA applies to the institution of criminal
proceedings, as well as to proceedings under Chapters 5 and 6 of
POCA.
[23]
As I have said, Giftwrap requires the customer information to
identify the perpetrators of click
fraud in order to take legal
action against them. It goes without saying that disclosure of the
customer information in respect
of the listed IP addresses would not
necessarily lead to legal action against a person so identified. It
follows that in reality
Giftwrap requires the customer information as
part of an investigation with a view to taking appropriate legal
action. The question
is whether s 42(1)
(c)
permits this. The
answer must, of course, be found in an interpretation of s 42(1)
(c)
of RICA by a holistic consideration of its text, context and apparent
purpose.
[24]
According to its text (‘information which is required . . . as
evidence in any court of
law’), s 42(1)
(c)
conveys that
the information must at the time of its disclosure be required as
evidence in a court of law. It therefore envisages
disclosure of
information which is required as evidence in proceedings that are
pending in a court of law. On this basis, information
that is
required to investigate whether legal proceedings could be
instituted, falls outside the ambit of s 42(1)
(c)
. This is
supported by the context provided by s 42(1)
(d)
. It expressly
provides that information may be disclosed for purposes of ‘an
investigation with a view to the institution’
of (criminal or
POCA-related) proceedings. The absence of a similar provision in s
42(1)
(c)
indicates that disclosure for the purpose of an
investigation or identification of wrongdoers is excluded from s
42(1)
(c)
.
[25]
In the main, RICA prohibits the interception of the contents of
communications and the disclosure
of related and other specified
information, subject to prescribed exceptions. The purpose of s 42(1)
is to prohibit the disclosure
of private information, save in limited
cases where it is justified in the public interest. Thus, the limited
ambit of s 42(1)
(c)
that its text and context indicate,
accords with the purpose of s 42(1).
[26]
This interpretation would not render a person in the position of
Giftwrap remediless. As counsel
for Vodacom rightly pointed out, RICA
does not preclude the preservation of customer information pending
the institution of legal
proceedings in which it would be required as
evidence. A criminal complaint could also be laid, after which
s 205
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
or
s 42(1)
(d)
of RICA
could be employed to obtain customer information.
[27]
For these reasons I conclude that
s 42(1)
(c)
of RICA does not
permit the disclosure of customer information of a service provider
for purposes of investigation or identifying
wrongdoers. It follows
that the appeal must fail. Vodacom did not ask to be awarded costs of
the appeal.
[28]
The following order is issued:
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The registrar of this court is directed to bring this judgment to the
attention
of the Cabinet members responsible for the administration
of justice and state security.
________________________
C H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
F
W Botes SC with A S L van Wyk
Instructed
by:
Hefferman
Attorneys, Pretoria
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
1
st
respondent:
S
Budlender SC with H P Pretorius and K A R Thobakgale
Instructed
by:
Adams
& Adams Attorneys, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
The Regulation of Interception of Communications and Provision of
Communication-Related Information Amendment Act 48 of 2008.
[2]
‘Minister’ is defined in RICA as the Cabinet member
responsible for the administration of justice, except in Chapter
6
where it means the Cabinet member responsible for state security.
[3]
Section 39(1) reads:
‘
(1)
Before a telecommunication service provider, other than a
telecommunication service provider who provides a mobile cellular
telecommunication service, enters into a contract with any person
for the provision of a telecommunication service to that person,
he
or she-
(a)
must, if that person is a natural person-
(i) obtain
from him or her-
(aa)
his or her full names, identity number, residential and business or
postal address, whichever is applicable; and
(bb)
a certified photocopy of his or her identification document on which
his or her photo, full names and identity number,
whichever is
applicable, appear;
(ii) retain
the photocopy obtained in terms of subparagraph (i) (bb); and
(iii)
verify the photo, full names and identity number, whichever is
applicable, of that person with reference to
his or her
identification document; or
(b)
must, if that person is a juristic person-
(i) obtain
from the person representing that juristic person-
(aa)
his or her full names, identity number, residential and postal
address, whichever is applicable;
(bb)
the business name and address and, if registered as such in terms of
any law, the registration number of that
juristic person;
(cc)
a certified photocopy of his or her identification document on which
his or her photo, full names and identity
number, whichever is
applicable, appear; and
(dd)
a certified photocopy of the business letterhead of, or other
similar document relating to, that juristic person;
(ii) retain
the photocopies obtained in terms of subparagraph (i) (cc) and (dd);
and
(iii) verify
the-
(aa)
photo, full names and identity number, whichever is applicable, of
that person with reference to his or her identification
document;
and
(bb)
name and registration number of that juristic person with reference
to its business letterhead or other similar document;
and
(c)
may obtain from such person any other information which the
telecommunication service provider deems necessary for
purposes of
this Act.’
[4]
Section 39(2) provides:
‘
(2)
A telecommunication service provider referred to in subsection (1)
must ensure that proper records are kept of-
(a
)
the information, including the photocopies, referred to in
subsection (1) and, where applicable, any change in such
information
which is brought to his or her attention;
(b)
the telephone number or any other number allocated to the person
concerned; and
(c)
any other information in respect of the person concerned which the
telecommunication service provider concerned may require
in order to
enable him or her to identify that person.’
[5]
Section 40(2) reads:
‘
(2)
From the date of commencement of this section an electronic
communication service provider must, subject to subsection (4),
at
own cost implement a process to record and store, and must record
and store-
(a)
the Mobile Subscriber Integrated Service Digital Network number
(MSISDN-number) of the SIM-card that is to be activated
by an
electronic communication service provider at the request of a person
contemplated in paragraphs (b) and (c);
(b)
in the case of a person who-
(i)
is a South African citizen or is lawfully and permanently resident
in the Republic, the full names and surname,
identity number and at
least one address of such person who requests that a SIM-card
referred to in subsection (1) be activated
on the electronic
communication system of an electronic communication service
provider; or
(ii)
is not a South African citizen or who is not permanently resident in
the Republic, and who requests that a SIM-card
referred to in
subsection (1) be activated on the electronic communication system
of an electronic communication service provider,
the full names and
surname, identity number and at least one address of such person and
the country where the passport was issued;
or
(c)
in the case of a juristic person-
(i)
the full names, surname, identity number and an address of the
authorised representative of the juristic person; and
(ii)
the name and address of the juristic person and, where applicable,
the registration number of the juristic person.’
[6]
Section 40(3) provides:
‘
(3)
(a)
For the purposes of
subsection (2), an electronic communication service provider must,
in the manner provided for in paragraph
(b), verify-
(i)
the full names, surname, identity number and identity of the person
contemplated in subsection (2)
(b)
and
(c)
and, where
applicable, the country where the passport was issued;
(ii)
the name and, where applicable, the registration number of the
juristic person;
(iii)
in the case of a person contemplated in subsection (2)
(b)
(i)
and
(c)
, the address; and
(iv)
the authority of the representative of a juristic person.
(b)
An electronic communication service provider must verify-
(i)
the information contemplated in paragraph
(a)
(i) by means of
an identification document;
(ii)
the information contemplated in paragraph
(a)
(ii) by means of
documentation, including a registration document, founding
statement, document issued by the South African Revenue
Service or
any other similar document;
(iii)
the address contemplated in paragraph
(a)
(iii) by means of
documentation, including a bank statement, a municipal rates and
taxes invoice, telephone or cellular phone
account of not older than
three months, or any other utility bill or an account of a retailer
of not older than three months,
or an existing lease, rental or
credit sale agreement, insurance policy, a current television
licence or a new motor vehicle
licence document; and
(iv)
the authority of the representative of the juristic person by means
of a letter of authority or an affidavit.’
[7]
Para 5 above.
[8]
Part 2 of Chapter 2 of RICA.
sino noindex
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