Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 664South Africa
Tjabadi v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (2024/039872) [2024] ZAGPJHC 664 (19 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 July 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tjabadi v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (2024/039872) [2024] ZAGPJHC 664 (19 July 2024)
Tjabadi v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (2024/039872) [2024] ZAGPJHC 664 (19 July 2024)
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sino date 19 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 19 July 2024
Case
No. 2024-039872
In
the matter between:
SIPHO
TJABADI
Applicant
and
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LTD
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Mr. Tjabadi, applies for an order declaring
that three sets of averments made on papers filed in legal
proceedings
to which he was not a party were defamatory. He also asks
that I order the respondent, Eskom, on whose behalf the averments
were
made, to apologise publicly for having made them. Finally, he
seeks an interdict restraining Eskom from publishing any similar
material in future.
2
Though it is clearly aware of Mr. Tjabadi’s complaint,
and was properly served with Mr. Tjabadi’s founding papers,
Eskom
did not oppose the application, which was enrolled in my
unopposed court on 17 July 2024. After hearing from counsel, I
dismissed
the application. I indicated that my reasons for doing so
would be issued in due course. These are my reasons.
Mr.
Tjabadi’s dismissal from Eskom
3
Mr. Tjabadi is a former employee of Eskom. In June 2015, he
was disciplined and dismissed from his role. On 25 October 2019, the
Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA)
confirmed Mr. Tjabadi’s dismissal, finding it to have been both
procedurally and substantively fair. Eskom disciplined Mr. Tjabadi on
three charges. The first charge alleged the mishandling of
contracts
between Eskom and various of its service providers. The second charge
alleged that Mr. Tjabadi had been negligent in
assessing quotations
provided to Eskom for services it wished to procure. The third charge
alleged that Mr. Tjabadi had acted contrary
to Eskom’s
interests in his role as its agent in the management of one of its
contracts with a service provider.
4
It is hard to be more precise about the nature of the charges
Mr. Tjabadi faced, because the only relevant evidence before me is
the charge sheet proffered against Mr. Tjabadi at his disciplinary
inquiry. I have not seen any of the evidence led at that inquiry,
or
any of the material placed before the CCMA.
5
Mr. Tjabadi is in the process of reviewing the CCMA award at
the Labour Court. That review has not yet been heard.
The
alleged defamatory matter
6
Whatever the facts underlying Mr. Tjabadi’s dismissal,
his conduct seems to have become relevant in three other sets of
contentious
legal proceedings involving Eskom.
7
In an affidavit made on Eskom’s behalf in proceedings in
the Supreme Court of Appeal, which was filed on 28 January 2016, a
Ms. Leena Ramprsad alleged that Mr. Tjabadi had become “the
subject of criminal fraud charges”.
8
In a further affidavit, deposed to on Eskom’s behalf in
the Labour Court on 22 April 2016, a Ms. Winile Madonsela alleged
that Mr. Tjabadi had engaged in “irresponsible and dishonest
behaviour”. The affidavit was filed in proceedings concerning
another of Eskom’s employees.
9
On 30 August 2021, while engaged in an arbitration with a
joint venture it is not necessary to name, Eskom sought to amend its
statement
of defence to include an allegation that Mr. Tjabadi had
“wrongfully” approved a “task order” in
“collusion”
with some other person. The gist of the
allegation is that Mr. Tjabadi knew that he should not have approved
the order, but did
so anyway, apparently for some improper motive.
10
Mr. Tjabadi says that all of this is untrue and defamatory. He
also says that Eskom’s allegations go well beyond anything for
which he was disciplined and dismissed. He is clearly aggrieved that
allegations have been made about him in proceedings to which
he is
not a party. He wishes to protect his reputation against further
attack.
11
On 5 December 2023, Mr. Tjabadi’s attorney wrote to
Eskom seeking the retraction of the allegations I have set out, a
public
apology for having made them, and an undertaking not to make
them again. On 19 December 2023, Eskom replied. It asserted the truth
of all the allegations. It stated that the evidentiary basis on which
the allegations were made is set out in the record of the
CCMA
proceedings. It refused to accede to Mr. Tjabadi’s demands.
Relief
not available on the established facts
12
I shall assume in Mr. Tjabadi’s favour that the material
of which he complains is defamatory, and that Eskom was solely
responsible
for publishing the defamatory material, rather than the
legal representatives who drafted the pleadings or the deponents to
the
affidavits in each case. That notwithstanding, the relief Mr.
Tjabadi seeks is not available to him, because his own papers
establish
that the defamation of which he complains was probably
lawful.
13
Mr. Tjabadi says that the allegations in Eskom’s papers
are false. Eskom says that they are true. The grounds on which Eskom
asserts the truth of the allegations are not addressed in Mr.
Tjabadi’s affidavit. Mr. Tjabadi says no more than that the
charge sheet in his disciplinary inquiry does not allege dishonest or
criminal conduct. But that simply begs the question of what
was
established by the evidence proffered on those charges. Mr. Tjabadi
does not produce the CCMA record. Nor does he seriously
address
Eskom’s allegation that the record contains the evidence
necessary to confirm the truth of the statements made on
its behalf
in the affidavits and the pleadings with which Mr Tjabadi takes
issue. The record was plainly available to Mr. Tjabadi.
His failure
to deal with it justifies the inference that Eskom was probably right
in asserting that the CCMA record confirms the
truth of its
statements.
14
Moreover, the defamatory statements were each made in
affidavits and pleadings tendered in legal proceedings. It is
well-established
that those who make statements on affidavit or in
pleadings enjoy a qualified privilege against liability for
defamation, so long
as their statements are relevant to the issues in
the proceedings, and are not made maliciously or recklessly (
Findlay
v Knight
1935 AD 58).
There is no suggestion that Eskom’s
statements exceeded the bounds of the privilege that would normally
attach to them.
Onus
15
Counsel for Mr. Tjabadi approached the matter on the basis
that Mr. Tjabadi merely had to establish that the statements were
defamatory.
Once he had done that, counsel submitted, Mr. Tjabadi was
entitled to rely on the onus to justify a defamatory publication that
usually rests on a defendant in defamation proceedings.
16
There are at least two problems with this approach. The first
is that it has long been accepted that “[i]n motion proceedings
the question of onus does not arise”. The rule in motion
proceedings is that final relief may only be granted on the
undisputed
facts “irrespective of where the legal or evidential
onus lies” (
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA), paragraph 27).
17
Secondly, and assuming against the authority in
Zuma
that the onus counsel relied upon can meaningfully be applied in
these motion proceedings, the facts necessary to discharge the
onus
appear in Mr. Tjabadi’s own papers. It is Mr. Tjabadi who
discloses that the defamatory matter was probably published
on a
privileged occasion. It is Mr. Tjabadi who discloses Eskom’s
version that the truth of the defamatory allegations is
apparent from
the CCMA record, the contents of which he declines to address. And if
the allegations are true, then it was plainly
in the public interest
that they were published at the time and in the manner they were.
18
I do not know why Eskom chose not file an affidavit formally
placing Mr. Tjabadi’s allegations in dispute, but in these
circumstances
I do not think that it matters. Mr. Tjabadi’s own
papers establish that Eskom’s statements were probably
justified.
19
For at least those reasons, no relief could be granted, and
the application had to be dismissed.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 19 July 2024.
HEARD
ON:
17
July 2024
DECIDED
ON:
17
July 2024
REASONS:
19
July 2024
For
the Applicant:
C
Liebenberg
Instructed
by Cavanagh and Richards Attorneys
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