Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 290South Africa
Pinkney v Northier and Another (2023/088082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 290 (18 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 March 2025
Headnotes
“It is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it can be shown that ex facie the allegations made by a plaintiff and any document upon which his or her cause of action may be based, the claim is (not may) bad in law.” [8] In Living Hands (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ditz and Others 2013 (2) SA 368 (GSJ) at paragraph 15 the applicable principles when considering exceptions were set out as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Pinkney v Northier and Another (2023/088082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 290 (18 March 2025)
Pinkney v Northier and Another (2023/088082) [2025] ZAGPJHC 290 (18 March 2025)
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sino date 18 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-088082
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
RICHARD
PINKNEY
Plaintiff
And
ALAE
EIRLYS NORTIER
Excipient /
First Defendant
ASHLEY
GITTINS
Excipient /
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
DREYER
AJ
:
[1]
On or about 1
September 2023 the Plaintiff instituted action against the Excipients
/ Defendants. For ease of reference the parties
will be referred to
as Plaintiff and Excipients respectively.
[2]
On 22 March 2024 the
Excipients served a Notice of Exception on the attorney of record of
the Plaintiff on the ground that the Particulars
of Claim lack the
necessary averments to sustain a cause of action.
[3]
The Plaintiff’s
claim against the Excipients is for defamation.
[4]
The first ground of
exception raised by the Excipients is that:
4.1
The Plaintiff fails to plead how or on what basis the alleged
defamatory statements are materially incorrect
or untrue.
4.2
The Plaintiff has failed to plead what harm the Plaintiff has
suffered from the alleged statements.
4.3
The Plaintiff has failed to plead or make the necessary averments
that the alleged statements were made
with the intention of
prejudicing the Plaintiff.
[5]
The second ground of
exception raised by the Excipients is that the Plaintiff seeks
damages of a globular amount of R200 000.00
and R400 000.00
respectively, but fails to plead how or on what basis the Plaintiff
has calculated the claimed amounts.
[6]
In the circumstances
the Excipients set out the Plaintiff’s pleadings fail to set
out the necessary averments to sustain a
cause of action.
[7]
In
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty Ltd
2001
(3) SA 986
(SCA) at paragraph 7 it was held that “
It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it can be shown that
ex
facie the allegations made by a plaintiff and any document upon which
his or her cause of action may be based, the claim is
(not may) bad
in law.
”
[8]
In
Living
Hands (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ditz and Others
2013 (2) SA 368
(GSJ) at paragraph 15 the applicable principles when
considering exceptions were set out as follows:
8.1
In considering an exception that a pleading does not sustain a
cause of action, the court will accept, as true, the allegations
pleaded by plaintiff to assess whether they disclose a cause of
action.
8.2
The object of an exception is not to embarrass one’s
opponent or to take advantage of a technical flaw, but to
dispose of
the case or a portion of thereof in an expeditious manner, or to
protect oneself against embarrassment which is so serious
as to merit
the costs even of an exception.
8.3
The purpose an exception is to raise a substantive question of
law which may have the effect of settling the dispute
between the
parties. If the exception is not taken for that purpose, an excipient
should make out a very clear case before it would
be allowed to
succeed.
8.4
An excipient who alleges that a summons does not disclose a
cause of action must establish that, upon any construction
of the
particulars of claim, no cause of action is disclose.
8.5
An
over-technical approach should be avoided because it destroys the
usefulness of the exception procedure, which is to weed out
cases
without legal merit.
8.6
Pleadings
must be read as a whole and an exception cannot be taken to a
paragraph or a part of a pleading that is not self-contained.
8.7
Minor
blemishes and unradical embarrassments caused by a pleading can and
should be cured by further particulars.
[9]
In
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
2002 (5) SA 402
(CC) the Constitutional Court in paragraph 18 held
“
At common
law the elements of the delict of defamation are:
(a)
the wrongful
and
(b)
intentional
(c)
publication
of
(d)
a defamatory
statement
(e)
concerning
the plaintiff.
It
is not an element of the delict in common law that the statement be
false. Once a plaintiff establishes that a defendant has
published a
defamatory statement concerning the plaintiff, it is presumed that
the publication was both unlawful and intentional.
”
[10]
Falsity is not a
matter to be alleged or proved by the plaintiff because the
defamatory nature of a statement does not depend on
its falsity (See
Sutter v Brown
1926 AD at p. 172 and
Adams
v Makhoye
(2974/2029
[2023] ZANWHC 142
(17 August 2023) at paragraph 9).
[11]
It is not necessary
for a plaintiff to allege what harm the plaintiff has suffered from
the defamatory statement/s. Nor is it necessary
for a plaintiff to
allege that the defamatory statement/s were made with the intention
of prejudicing the plaintiff.
[12]
Having regard to the
Particulars of Claim, the Plaintiff has set out terms of the
statements (paragraphs 8.1 and 14.1), alleged
publication of the
defamatory statements (paragraphs 6, 8 and 13) and that the
defamatory statements were published of and concerning
the Plaintiff
(paragraphs 8.1 and 14.1). The Plaintiff has established the
publication of defamatory matter concerning himself.
It is therefore
presumed that the statements were both wrongful and intentional. In
my view the Particulars does contain the averments
which are
necessary sustain a cause of action.
[13]
The first ground of
the exception is therefore without merit and stands to be dismissed.
[14]
It is not incumbent
on a plaintiff to furnish particulars of general damages. All that a
plaintiff was required to do was to furnish
the defendant with the
‘ground upon which the claim is based’ (See
Simmonds
v White
1980 (1)
SA 755
(C) at p. 758) and
Adams
v Makhoye
above
at paragraph 14).
[15]
The second ground of
the exception is therefore also without merit and stands to be
dismissed.
[16]
I therefore make the
following order:
1.
The exception is
dismissed.
2.
The Excipients are
to pay the costs, jointly and severally the one paying the other to
be absolved, of the application on scale
C.
E
DREYER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date for hand down is deemed to be 18 March 2025.
Appearances:
Appearance
for Plaintiff:
R Kok
Plaintiff’s
Attorney
Appearance
for Excipients / Defendants: Adv. T Mirtle
Instructed
by:
Gittins Attorneys Incorporated
Date
of hearing:
5 March 2025
Date
of Judgment:
18 March 2025
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