Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 364South Africa
Hlatshwayo v Multichoice South Africa and Others (2021/27076) [2025] ZAGPJHC 364 (28 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hlatshwayo v Multichoice South Africa and Others (2021/27076) [2025] ZAGPJHC 364 (28 March 2025)
Hlatshwayo v Multichoice South Africa and Others (2021/27076) [2025] ZAGPJHC 364 (28 March 2025)
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sino date 28 March 2025
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
2021/27076
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED: Yes
28
March 2025
In
the matter between:
PHUTHUMILE
JOYCE HLATSHWAYO
Plaintiff
and
MULTICHOICE
SOUTH AFRICA
First
defendant
SIYAYA
MEDIA NETWORK
Second
defendant
THANDI
NZIMANDE
Third
defendant
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff sues the defendants for defamation arising from a
televised broadcast in which she was accused of murder
and other
misconduct. The statements were made by the third defendant, aired by
the first defendant, and produced by the second
defendant. The
plaintiff claims R3 000 000.00 in general damages, special
damages of R10 000.00, and further relief related
to the online
availability of the programme.
[2]
Before the court are three exceptions: two by the first defendant and
one by the second defendant. All concern the sufficiency
and clarity
of the plaintiff's amended particulars of claim. There is also a Rule
30 application brought by the plaintiff.
[3]
The rules
of the court set out the principles of pleadings that were further
explained in
Benson
& Simpson v Robinson
[1]
as being that
"The plaintiff must
not set out the evidence upon which he relies, but he must state
clearly and concisely on what facts he
bases his claim and he must do
so with such exactness that the defendant will know the nature of the
facts which are to be proved
against him so that he may adequately
meet him in court and tender evidence to disprove the plaintiff's
allegations."
[4]
The facts
that the pleader relies on to support their claim must be set out
clearly, concisely and sufficiently particular to allow
the defendant
to reply thereto.
[2]
It is so that the court must not be too pedantic when reading
pleadings, but the allegations made by the plaintiff must be clear
and cognisable.
[3]
[5]
The first defendant delivered an exception dated 8 September 2023 to
the plaintiff's amended particulars of claim. The
plaintiff opposes
same. This will be referred to as the "first exception".
The first defendant also applied for a condonation
of the late filing
of the August 2023 exception, which the plaintiff opposes. This will
be referred to as the "second exception".
The second
defendant has also delivered an exception to the plaintiff's amended
particulars of claim, which the plaintiff likewise
opposes. This will
be referred to as the "second defendant's exception". The
plaintiff has since applied for the second
defendant's exception to
be set aside under Rule 30. This will be referred to as the "Rule
30 application".
The first defendant's
exceptions
First exception
[6]
The first defendant states that the plaintiff's amended particulars
of claim are vague and embarrassing. They submit that
the pleading
conflates multiple causes of action (defamation, negligence, breach
of dignity, and breach of privacy) without clearly
indicating which
are relied upon and on what factual basis this application relies.
[7]
In
particular, it is unclear whether dignity and privacy are pleaded as
separate causes of action or as consequences of the alleged
defamation. The pleading refers to the conduct of the first defendant
as "unreasonable" but does not allege facts that
would
establish a separate claim in negligence, nor does it plead the
essential elements of a claim for infringement of dignity,
as set out
in
Le
Roux v Dey
.
[4]
[8]
The plaintiff maintains that the claim is based on defamation under
the actio iniuriarum, and that dignity and privacy
are cited only to
show the effect of the publication. However, the particulars of claim
fail to convey this with sufficient clarity.
[9]
I say this because the particulars of claim refers to various issues,
to list but a few examples: injury to the plaintiff's
"reputation,
self-worth, dignity and privacy", "severe damage" to
the plaintiff's "reputation, dignity
and privacy" and a
defamatory publication "due to the sole negligence of the
owner(s) of DSTV".
[10]
The second defendant is entitled to know the case it must meet. A
pleading that leaves the defendant guessing the true
nature of the
claim, is excipiable. I find that the particulars, as currently
framed, are vague and embarrassing and fail to disclose
a clear cause
of action. The first exception must be upheld.
[11]
The second exception concerns the plaintiff's second and third claims
arising from repeat broadcasts. These claims incorporate
allegations
from the original and/or amended particulars, but do so imprecisely.
It is unclear which allegations are relied upon
and whether new
delicts are alleged. These claims are likewise vague and
embarrassing.
The second exception
[12]
The second exception challenges the second and third claims arising
from repeat broadcasts of the same programme on later
dates. These
claims incorporate allegations from the "main claim" under
case number 21/27076, but do so imprecisely.
[13]
The plaintiff answers as follows: the second and third claims were a
repetition of the publication in the initial claim,
with the only
difference being that it was aired on different dates. The first
defendant is linked to these defamatory statements
and behaviour
because it made a channel available to the second defendant to air
the material. The plaintiff persists that it has
disclosed the cause
of action sufficiently. I disagree.
[14]
It is firstly unclear whether the plaintiff relies on the original
particulars of claim or the amended version and whether
all or only
some of the original allegations are incorporated. This creates
uncertainty regarding the factual and legal basis of
the second and
third claims. These claims, too, are vague and embarrassing. This
exception is, likewise, upheld.
Condonation
[15]
The first defendant seeks condonation for the late filing of the
second exception. The delay arose after a change in
counsel, and the
plaintiff had already received the Rule 23(1)(a) notice more than a
year earlier, raising the same issues.
[16]
The test for condonation considers the length of the delay, the
explanation provided, the prospects of success, and potential
prejudice. The delay here is not excessive, has been adequately
explained, and caused no discernible prejudice to the plaintiff.
The
plaintiff had ample opportunity to respond and was not ambushed by
new grounds. I am satisfied that condonation should be granted.
[17]
The first defendant is, therefore, successful in their exception.
Second defendant's
exception
[18]
The second
defendant's exception is based on five grounds. Firstly, the
plaintiff's claim for R3 000 000.00 in general damages
is framed
as "pain and suffering", a term which, in law, is
associated with bodily injury and not compensable under the
actio
iniuriarum. This is indeed so.
[5]
[19]
While general damages may be claimed to vindicate one's reputation
and good name, as well as for pain and suffering,
the reference to
"pain and suffering" in the present context, particularly
where the plaintiff frames the claim as an
actio iniuriarum, is
confusing and requires clarification.
[20]
Secondly,
the second defendant contends that the plaintiff's claim for special
damages fails to allege that the second defendant
knew the defamatory
statements were false, a necessary averment where patrimonial loss is
claimed in the context of defamation.
Such a claim falls under the
actio legis aquiliae, not the actio iniuriarum. In
Media
24 Ltd v SA Taxi Securitisation (Pty) Ltd,
[6]
the Supreme Court of Appeal clarified that liability for pure
economic loss, caused by defamatory publication, would arise only
if
the plaintiff pleads and proves that the statement was false, that
the defendant knew it was untrue, and that the falsehood
was the
cause of the loss. This reflects the principles of injurious
falsehood, where liability turns not merely on the statement's
falsity but also on the defendant's knowledge and intention to cause
harm. The plaintiff's pleadings, as they stand, do not allege
such
knowledge on the part of the second defendant.
[21]
The third to fifth ground alludes to the fact that the plaintiff
claims interest without specifying the date from which
it is to run,
rendering that part of the claim incomplete.
[22]
While I agree that a pleading for interest on unliquidated damages
must allege the date from which interest is claimed.
This defect can
be cured by amendment and does not render the claim entirely
excipiable.
Rule
30 Application
[23]
The plaintiff seeks to set aside the second defendant's exception as
an irregular step. While the exception may have
been filed outside of
time, no condonation was sought. However, the plaintiff has suffered
no prejudice, and the parties have engaged
with the exception on the
merits. It would serve no purpose to set it aside now. The Rule 30
application is dismissed.
[24]
The second defendant is also substantially successful in its
exception.
Conclusion
[25]
It is well established that a pleading must be excipiable on every
reasonable interpretation. That principle assumes,
however, that a
reasonable interpretation is available. Upon reading the plaintiff's
pleading, one gets the impression it simultaneously
says too much and
too little. Despite the further explanation offered at the hearing,
the
particulars
remain obscure. The defendants are entitled to
know what case they are expected to meet, and the court must be able
to discern,
without undue interpretive effort, the legal basis on
which relief is sought.
[26]
Pleadings are instruments intended to clarify the issues in dispute.
In their current form, the plaintiff's particulars
do not fulfil that
purpose, and the exceptions should be upheld.
## Order
Order
[27]
The following order is made:
1. The late filing
of the first defendant's exception is condoned;
2. The first
defendant's exception is upheld, with costs taxed on scale B;
3. The plaintiff's
rule 30 is dismissed with no order as to costs;
4. The second
defendant's exception is upheld;
5. The plaintiff
shall pay the second defendant's costs, costs to be taxed on
scale B;
6. The plaintiff is
afforded 20 days from date of order to amend their particulars of
claim, failing which the plaintiff's
particulars of claim will be
struck out.
WJ
du Plessis
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
10
February 2025
Date
of judgment:
28
March 2025
For
the plaintiff:
TC
Matbuye in terms of
s 34(2)(b)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
For
the first defendant:
S
Kazee instructed by Weber Wentzel
For
the second defendant:
B
Winks instructed by Rupert Candy Attorneys
[1]
1917
WLD 126.
[2]
Rule
18(4).
[3]
SA
Onderlinge Brand Versekeringsmaatskappy v Van den
Berg
1976 (1) SA 602
(A).
[4]
[2011] ZACC 4.
[5]
Potgieter. (2020).
Law
of Delict
8th Ed.
LexisNexis
SA.at page 301.
[6]
[2011]
SCA 117 paras 13 – 14.
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