Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 516South Africa
Quandomanzi Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a SM Structures v Govender and Others (2023/43063) [2023] ZAGPJHC 516 (19 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Quandomanzi Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a SM Structures v Govender and Others (2023/43063) [2023] ZAGPJHC 516 (19 May 2023)
Quandomanzi Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a SM Structures v Govender and Others (2023/43063) [2023] ZAGPJHC 516 (19 May 2023)
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sino date 19 May 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 2023/43063
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
19.05.23
In the matter between:
QUANDOMANZI
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD trading as
SM
STRUCTURES
Applicant
And
DEVI
SANKAREE GOVENDER
First Respondent
EMEDIA
HOLDINGS LTD
Second
Respondent
ETV
(PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
ENCA
(PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
EMEDIA
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
Neutral citation: Quandomanzi
Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a SM Structures v Devi Sankaree Govender
(2023/43063) [2023] ZAGPJHC 516 (19
May 2023)
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
The applicant, SM Structures, seeks urgent and final relief
restraining the respondents from publishing or broadcasting material
defaming it, and from broadcasting a television programme about it
which is scheduled to go out on 21 May 2023. The respondents,
to whom
I shall refer collectively as “Etv”, accept that the
application is urgent, but they do not accept that it
should be
granted.
The
complaints about SM Structures’ work
2
SM Structures specialises in the construction of large
steel-framed structures, such as warehouses, worker accommodation,
and (presumably
small and medium-sized) factories. In common with
most construction companies, some of its clients are happy with the
work that
SM Structures does, but others are not. This application
was triggered by one dissatisfied customer, Bianca Gericke. Ms.
Gericke
complains that SM Structures performed substandard work on
the structure her company contracted it to erect. She suggests that
SM Structures was both late in performing the work and that the work,
when it was complete, was of an unacceptably low quality.
3
SM Structures strongly disputes that it has performed
substandard work, but it is not necessary for me to get into the
detail of
the controversy. It is enough to note that Ms. Gericke was
sufficiently dissatisfied to post a negative review of SM Structures
on “HelloPeter”, a well-known online forum in which
consumers can review and comment on the quality of goods and services
for which they have contracted.
4
HelloPeter also allows for providers of goods and services to
reply to the reviews they have received. SM Structures took the
opportunity
to reply to Ms. Gericke’s review. It characterised
her complaints as inaccurate and misguided. There followed an
exchange
of views on the HelloPeter platform between SM Structures
and Ms. Gericke. The exchange was robust, but, by the standards of
internet
commentary, relatively tame. SM Structures and Ms. Gericke
did not agree about the standard of work that SM Structures had done.
Nor could they agree about what SM Structures characterised as Ms.
Gericke’s own contribution to whatever delays and defects
she
said had characterised the work.
5
Ms. Gericke was by no means the only person dissatisfied with
work SM Structures had done for them. Etv’s answering papers
annex a substantial number of negative HelloPeter reviews, together
with SM Structures’ comments on those reviews. Etv produced
photographs of crumbling buildings it was told show SM Structures’
shoddy work. The affidavit also sets out the content of
three
interviews: one conducted with Ms. Gericke, and two conducted with
other people dissatisfied with SM Structures’ work.
6
These interviews were conducted by the first respondent, Devi
Govender. Ms. Govender is a well-known broadcast journalist, whose
programme, “the Devi Show”, focusses on consumer affairs.
Ms. Gericke contacted researchers working on the Devi Show
with her
complaints about SM Structures. She referred those researchers to
information about other people dissatisfied with SM
Structures’
work.
7
Ms. Govender also conducted an interview with Amanuel
Gebremeskel, the chief executive of the Southern African Institute of
Steel
Construction. In paragraph 17 of her answering affidavit, Ms.
Govender says she conducted that interview “to gain an
understanding
of the type of work being undertaken by [SM Structures]
and the quality which could be expected by customers using [its]
services”.
Ms. Govender’s answering affidavit also
outlines a range of other investigations – mostly internet
research about building
standards and steel-based construction –
aimed at evaluating and contextualising the complaints the Devi Show
had received
about SM Structures’ work.
8
Once all this had been done, on 29 March 2023, Ms. Govender
went to SM Structures’
premises in Wynberg
with a camera crew. She
asked for an interview with Jon-Marco
Maycock, who is SM Structures’ general manager. After some
demur, Mr. Maycock sat for
an interview and gave SM Structures’
views on the complaints that had been brought to Ms. Govender’s
attention. It
is not clear whether this interview was on camera, but
Mr. Maycock agreed to a further interview, presumably on camera,
provided
that a list of questions was sent to him in advance.
9
On 3 April 2023, one of Ms. Govender’s researchers
invited Mr. Maycock to an interview at Etv’s studios in Hyde
Park.
The purpose of this interview was said to be to afford SM
Structures a right of reply to the various complaints about it. SM
Structures’
response – first from Steve Maycock, SM
Structures’ chief executive, and later from SM Structures’
attorneys
– was to request the list of questions to which
Jon-Marco Maycock had earlier referred. That list was sent to SM
Structures
on 12 April 2023. The list only refers to the facts
applicable to the three individuals, including Ms. Gericke, that Ms.
Govender
had interviewed. This is because, although there were
numerous complaints against SM Structures, the Devi Show’s
producers
had decided to focus on these three in the time allocated
to the segment of the Show meant to address SM Structures’
work.
10
On 19 April 2023, through its attorneys, SM Structures
submitted a 19-page response to Ms. Govender’s questions, but
declined
to make anyone available to be interviewed. It also made
clear that its written answers to the Devi Show’s questions
could
not be used in the show, unless its prior consent was obtained.
Bernadette Maguire, the Devi Show’s managing editor, responded
to this message on the same day. It is hard not to read into her
message a degree of exasperation. Ms. Maguire asked SM Structures’
attorney to confirm that SM Structures really did not want the Devi
Show to communicate the contents of its detailed reply on the
programme.
11
Ms. Maguire’s message was met with an assertion that SM
Structures considered that, in light of the reply SM Structures had
given, a broadcast featuring the three complaints on which the Devi
Show submitted questions would be defamatory and unlawful.
An
interdict application was threatened, eventually launched, and was
ultimately enrolled before me.
The
defamation alleged
12
SM Structures declined to set out the defamatory statements
that it wishes to restrain in its founding affidavit. That was
unfortunate.
It is an elementary rule of motion proceedings that the
applicant must make out their case in the founding affidavit. In a
case
in restraint of alleged defamation, it is close to an absolute
rule that the defamatory matter alleged must be quoted or otherwise
clearly adverted to in the founding affidavit. I cannot say why SM
Structures departed from this rule.
13
The best offering Ms. Carstens, who appeared for SM
Structures, could make was to draw my attention to paragraph 42 of
the founding
affidavit. There, it is suggested that the material Etv
intends to broadcast will create the wrongful impression that SM
Structures
is unprofessional, dishonest, supplying inferior
materials, or otherwise conducting itself in breach of its
contractual obligations
to its customers. But these are plainly not
the allegedly defamatory statements of which SM Structures complains.
They are conclusions
that SM Structures fears will be drawn from the
defamatory matter alleged. The defamatory matter itself is completely
absent from
SM Structures’ founding affidavit.
14
In light of this, Ms. Carstens was constrained to rely on
Etv’s answering affidavit, in which Ms. Govender outlines what
she
was told in the three interviews she conducted with Ms. Gericke
and the two other complainants that Etv intends to feature in its
programme. Ms. Carstens submitted that the material gathered in those
interviews is false and defamatory, and that Etv intends
to report
that material as the truth.
15
However, on any construction of the papers, this submission
fails at every step. In the first place, it has not been established,
even
prima facie
, that the information conveyed to Ms.
Govender was false. SM Structures clearly disagrees with it, but
there is nothing on the
papers – and especially nothing on SM
Structures’ affidavits – that demonstrates that the
complaints are false
as opposed to merely contested.
16
Secondly, there is no basis on which to suggest that Etv
intends to report the complaints as the truth rather than as one side
of
a contested story. Having chosen to apply for a final interdict,
SM Structures is bound to make out its case on the facts set out
in
Etv’s answering affidavit, and on any other undisputed facts.
The facts set out in Etv’s answering affidavit demonstrate
a
careful and measured approach to the complaints made against SM
Structures. This approach keeps the complaints at arms-length,
and
seeks to contextualise them with, and test them against, facts about
the standards applicable to the industry in which SM Structures
operates, and, critically, facts about SM Structures’ response
to the complaints themselves.
No
basis for interdictory relief
17
A publication is defamatory if it tends to lower the person
defamed “in the estimation of the ordinary intelligent or
right-thinking
members of society” (
Hix Networking
Technologies v System Publishers (Pty)
Ltd
[1996] ZASCA 107
;
1997 (1) SA 391
(A) (“
Hix
”), 403G-H). The test is objective. What
matters is not what the publisher intends, but “what meaning
the reasonable
reader of ordinary intelligence would attribute to the
statement. In applying this test, it is accepted that the reasonable
reader
would understand the statement in its context and that he or
she would have had regard not only to what is expressly stated but
also to what is implied” (
Le Roux v Dey
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC), para 89).
18
Once it has been established that a publication is defamatory,
wrongfulness and intent to injure are presumed (
Le Roux
, para
85), but that presumption may be rebutted if any one of a number of
known justifications is established. One of these justifications
is
that the defamatory publication constitutes “fair comment”.
A publication is fair comment where it is an expression
of opinion,
where it is based on true facts and where it relates to a matter of
public interest. The publication must also be fair
in the sense that
that it conveys an honestly-held opinion without malice. It need not,
however, be “just, equitable, reasonable,
level-headed and
balanced” (
The Citizen 1978 (Pty) Ltd v McBride
2011 (4)
SA 191
(CC) (“
McBride
”), paras 80 to 83).
19
In
Hix
, it was held that applications for orders
placing prior restraints on publication ought to be approached with
caution (p 402C-D)
. Moreover, where “a sustainable foundation
[is] laid by way of evidence that a defence such as truth and public
interest
or fair comment is available to be pursued by the
respondent” in any post-publication damages claim, a prior
restraint will
not generally be granted (
Herbal Zone (Pty) Ltd v
Infitech Technologies
2017 BIP 172 (SCA), paras 37 and 38). This
is because, where such a defence has been set up, the applicant has
no reasonable apprehension
that it will be unlawfully defamed in the
forthcoming publication.
20
It is, in my view, clear from the facts of this case that SM
Structures cannot reasonably apprehend that it is about to be
unlawfully
defamed. Etv has done more than enough to establish that
the broadcast it intends to put out will constitute fair comment on
SM
Structures’ business practices and the complaints made about
them, even if the broadcast contains some
prima facie
defamatory material. In the context of this case, the “true
fact” on which Etv set up its fair comment defence was
the fact
that it had been approached with complaints about SM Structures which
were credible and honest on their face. What Etv
had to establish,
therefore, was not that the complaints against SM Structures were
well-founded and meritorious in every respect,
but that they were
genuinely and honestly pursued. That has plainly been established on
Etv’s version – which, as I
have already pointed out, is
the version on which SM Structures was bound to make out its case.
21
Ms. Carstens appeared to submit in her argument that SM
Structures reasonably anticipates that the programme to be broadcast
will
be so one-sided as to be defamatory: that, in other words, the
complaints will be set out without weight being given to SM’s
views on them. I do not think this has been established. There is no
reason to believe that the programme will not give due weight
to the
material it has gathered from SM Structures’ responses to the
HelloPeter reviews, or from its initial, presumably
unembargoed,
interview with Jon-Marco Maycock.
22
In any event, any apprehension of an adverse slant to the
programme can only reasonably arise from SM Structures’ own
refusal
to have its comprehensive written response to the complaints
aired on the programme, and its own refusal to honour Jon-Marco
Maycock’s
undertaking to be interviewed for that programme.
23
A business that offers goods and services to the general
public must expect, at some point, to be criticised – with or
without
justification – for the quality of the goods and
services it has provided. Where that criticism is not in itself
defamatory,
false and injurious or otherwise unlawful, and is to be
published by a third party, the business faces a choice. That choice
is
either to ask the third party publisher to present, fairly and in
context, the business’s own take on the complaints featured,
or
to eschew the publication completely.
24
Unhappy with either of these responses, SM Structures seeks to
chart a third course. It asks me to restrain what it says will be
an
unbalanced broadcast in circumstances where it is preventing the use
of the information that it considers necessary to strike
the
appropriate balance. Whatever else may be said of our broadcast
media, it is clearly entitled not to be held to ransom in this
way.
25
SM Structures has established neither a clear right to the
relief its seeks, nor a reasonable apprehension of harm.
26
The application is dismissed with costs.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
HEARD ON: 16 May 2023
DECIDED ON: 19 May 2023
For
the Applicant:
T
Carstens
Instructed
by
Retief
& SJ Meintjes Inc
For
the Respondents:
B
Winks
Instructed
by
Rosengarten
and Feinberg
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