Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1217South Africa
Nisamoseki Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd t/a Nisa Willckx Interiors v Sithole (2023 - 101760) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1217 (26 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nisamoseki Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd t/a Nisa Willckx Interiors v Sithole (2023 - 101760) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1217 (26 October 2023)
Nisamoseki Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd t/a Nisa Willckx Interiors v Sithole (2023 - 101760) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1217 (26 October 2023)
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sino date 26 October 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2023 - 101760
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the application by
NISAMOSEKI TRADING
ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD trading as NISA WILLCKX INTERIORS
Applicant
and
SHOZI,
SITHOLE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Defamation –
interdict – automatically removed from social media platform –
fear of re-publication – interdict
granted
Order
[1] In this matter
I make the following order:
1.
The
respondent is interdicted and restrained from
1.1.
repeating the defamatory statement quoted in the Instagram post
annexed to the founding affidavit as “FA5”
1.2.
referring to the applicant and its business as a “fraudulent”
business, operation or manufacturer.
2.
The
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
[3] This is an
application launched in the Urgent Court to interdict the publication
of defamatory material on social media.
I am satisfied that the
application was of a sufficiently serious and urgent nature to
justify a hearing in the Urgent Court.
[4] The applicant
is a company carrying on business as a furniture manufacturer; the
respondent is described as a ‘
social media influencer’
in the founding affidavit. The description is not denied in the
answering affidavit.
[5] The respondent
ordered furniture from the applicant in terms of an oral contract and
a dispute arose when the applicant
insisted on a lead time for
manufacture and delivery of six to eight weeks while the respondent
insisted on delivery within a shorter
time frame. The applicant
agreed to refund the purchase price. However, the respondent posted
on Instagram:
“
PLEASE BE
WARNED
Don’t make the
mistake of ever ordering any pieces from this fraudulent furniture
operation.”
[6] The words are
clearly
per se
defamatory and no other meaning was suggested.
In the absence of any context the reader is not in a position to
evaluate the weight
to be attached to the statement. The post
elicited numerous negative comments on social media and there is no
dispute that publication
of the comment took place. It is stated on
the respondent’s Instagram page (which is not in dispute) that
she is followed
by a million people and the inference is that
publication took place to many people, many of whom reacted.
Responses ranged from
“
So Sithole Shozi almost
got
scammed by this Instagram furnsher shop.”
to
“
Mayor says y’al are
fraudulent.”
[7]
Some
of the people who commented resorted to language so gross that I do
not see any need or justification to quote the comments
in this
judgment. The gross language was not used by the respondent but was
used by those who ‘follow’ her on Instagram
and who
responded in this unacceptable manner to the defamatory material.
[8]
The
applicant complains that a number of its clients had expressed
reservations about doing business with the applicant again. The
applicant says that the business suffered reputational harm because
of the defamatory remarks.
A
business enterprise may be entitled to protection against defamation
by way of an interdict.
[1]
[9]
The
post was subsequently removed and the evidence is that posts stay on
Instagram for only a 24-hour period and are then removed
automatically. It was argued on behalf of the respondent that ‘
the
horse has bolted’
[2]
and
that the applicant cannot show a reasonable apprehension of continued
harm if an interdict were not granted. It is also argued
that the
applicant has an alternative remedy, namely damages.
[10]
Damages
will be difficult to prove and publication of defamatory material
generates continuous harm. Under those circumstances I
am not
satisfied that a possible claim for damages provide a suitable
alternative remedy.
[3]
The
possibility of damages at some future point in time to a business
being hurt now by defamatory remarks, provides cold comfort.
[11] There is no
tender from the respondent not to publish any further defamatory
statements on social media or otherwise.
When the software used on a
social media platform is such that material published disappear
automatically after a set period the
‘
horse has bolted’
argument does not mean that a respondent may defame his or her victim
with impunity, safe in the knowledge that the victim will
not be able
to prove a reasonable apprehension of future harm because by the time
the matter comes to court, the offending material
had disappeared
into the thin air of cyberspace.
Social media platforms
enable individuals to reach many people easily and quickly, and with
the power to influence others should
come the obligation to act
responsibly and cautiously when it comes to the rights of others. An
ordinary person armed with a cellphone
and Internet access can reach
more people today than a King with his armies two thousand years ago.
[12] The respondent
admits publication of the defamatory material and adopts the view
that she was entitled to publish the
post. She states that the post
is not defamatory. The respondent relies on the defence that the post
was true and in the public
interest,
[4]
and therefore not unlawful.
The onus to prove the
defence is on the respondent.
[5]
I pause to state that the
the
so-called Plascon-Evans
[6]
rule
applies and that the rule is not affected by the onus.
[13] The statement
made by the respondent does not permit any reader to form an
objective opinion and it does not serve to
protect the interests of
the public. It is a bald allegation of fraud made on the basis of
disputed facts as to oral or tacit terms
of a contract.
[14] I am satisfied
that the applicant has a clear right in its good name, that it has no
other suitable remedy, and that
it has a reasonable apprehension of
harm in the event that the defamatory remarks are again published by
the respondent.
In the answering
affidavit the respondent points out that she has “
not said
anything about the applicant since I published the statement”
and there was an opportunity to simply state that publication will
not be repeated. The opportunity was not taken.
[15] I will
therefore interdict the future publication of the offending and
defamatory statement. The relief sought in the
notice of motion is
over-broad
[7]
and in the order I make is aimed at the offending statement. The
respondent has now sought legal advice in preparation for this
matter
and will be in a position to take a more informed decision when
deciding on social media posts.
[16] For the
reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
26 OCTOBER 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
R
MORE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TJALE
JUBILEE ATTORNEYS INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
R
LEKALA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MARWESHA
ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
18
OCTOBER 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
26
OCTOBER 2023
[1]
Halewood
International South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Van Zyl and another
2023 JDR 1011 (GJ) paras 28 to 31, and the authorities referred to
in footnotes 1 to 5.
[2]
See
Tsichlas and
Another v Touch Line Media (Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 112 (W).
[3]
See the authorities quoted by Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
vol 2, D6-16B and footnotes 152 to 154.
[4]
See the discussion by Kinghorm ‘Defamation’ in
The
Law of South Africa
vol 7, 2
nd
ed. 2005, para 247.
[5]
See
National
Media Ltd and others v Bogoshi
[1998] ZASCA 94
;
[1998] 4 All SA 347
(A) and
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
2002 (5) SA 401 (CC).
[6]
Plascon-Evans Paints
Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) 634C to 635B and
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA)
para 12.
[7]
RM v
RB
2015 (1) SA 270
(KZP) paras 21 to 29 and
Halewood
International South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Van Zyl and another
2023 JDR 1011 (GJ) paras 28 to 31.
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