Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1413South Africa
Media 24 Holdings (Pty) Ltd v ABM College SA (Pty) Ltd and Another (4215/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1413 (6 December 2023)
Headnotes
of what happened next, leading up to the application before me:-
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Media 24 Holdings (Pty) Ltd v ABM College SA (Pty) Ltd and Another (4215/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1413 (6 December 2023)
Media 24 Holdings (Pty) Ltd v ABM College SA (Pty) Ltd and Another (4215/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1413 (6 December 2023)
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sino date 6 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
### CASE NO. 4215/2020
CASE NO. 4215/2020
In the matter between:
MEDIA
24 HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT/
PLAINTIFF
And
ABM
COLLEGE SA (PTY) LTD
1
ST
RESPONDENT/ DEFENDANT
COLLEGE
ON HILLS (PTY) LTD
2
ND
RESPONDENT/ DEFENDANT
Coram: Salmon AJ
Heard on: 17
October 2023, (MS Teams)
Delivered on: 06
December 2023
JUDGMENT
SALMON AJ:
[1]
This application comes towards the end of a
series of procedural convolutions. The Applicant, the Defendant in an
action in which
the Plaintiffs sue for damages arising out of the
publication of an allegedly defamatory article, seeks an order
dismissing the
Plaintiffs’ claim for failure to comply with an
order of court that they amend their Particulars of Claim.
This
is the third time such an application has been made.
[2]
Independently of each other, though with a
director common to both, the Plaintiffs operate educational
institutions.
The article in question was published in the
Daily Sun newspaper, and on the Daily Sun website, both of which are
published, controlled,
owned, and operated, respectively, by the
Defendant. The article bore the title “Stay away from bogus
colleges”.
[3]
The following allegations appear in the
Particulars of Claim (as of when the action was launched):
“
8
8.1. The first plaintiff
was shut down by the Department of Higher Education;
8.2. The first plaintiff
was shut down by the Department of Higher Education for operating
without accreditation;
8.3. The first plaintiff
operated without accreditation;
8.4. The first plaintiff
advertised non-accredited courses;
8.5. Students should not
enrol at the institution of the first plaintiff;
8.6. The first plaintiff
is operating illegally.
9.
Apart from the defamatory
meaning of the article as set out above, the article carries the
additional sting that the first plaintiff
is:-
9.1 not
provisionally or at all registered with the Department of Higher
Education and Training as a Private College in terms
of Section 31(3)
of the Continuing Education & Training Act 2006 (Act No. 16 of
2006); and/or
9.2. not provisionally or
all registered to provide continuing education and training in
respect of any of the advertised courses
or at all; and/or
9.3. operating illegally.
10.
The said words, in the
context of the article, are wrongful and defamatory of the first
plaintiff in that they were intended and
were understood by readers
of the newspaper and its website to mean that the first plaintiff
is:-
10.1.
A bogus college; and/or
10.2. Not
provisionally or at all registered with the Department of Higher
Education and Training as a Private College in
terms of Section 31(3)
of the Continuing Education & Training Act 2006 (Act No. 16 of
2006); and/or
10.3. Not
provisionally or at all registered to provide continuing education
and training in respect of any of their advertised
courses or at all;
and/or
10.4. Operating
illegally;
10.5. Students are
advised to not enrol at the first plaintiff at all.”
[4]
The allegations in respect of the second
plaintiff proceed on a similar footing:
“
13.
The said article stated
of and concerned the second plaintiff (who traded under the name and
style of Shepperd Academy) that:
13.1. The second
plaintiff was shut down by the Department of Higher Education;
13.2. The second
plaintiff was shut down by the Department of Higher Education for
operating without accreditation;
13.3. The second
plaintiff operated without accreditation;
13.4. The second
plaintiff advertised non-accredited courses;
13.5. The second
plaintiff is investigated by the Department of Higher Education and
Training.
15.
Apart from the defamatory
meaning of the article as set out above the article carries the
additional sting that the second plaintiff
is:-
15.1. not provisionally
or at all registered with the Department of Higher Education and
Training as a private college in terms
of Section 31(3) of the
Continuing Education & Training Act 2006 (Act No. 16 of 2006);
and/or
15.2. not provisionally
or at all registered to provide continuing education and training in
respect of any of the advertised courses
or at all; and/or
15.3. Students should not
enrol at the institution of the second plaintiff;
15.4 The second
plaintiff is operating illegally.
16.
The said words, in the
context of the article, are wrongful and defamatory of second
plaintiff in that they were intended and were
understood by readers
of the newspaper and its website to mean that the second plaintiff
is:-
16.1.
A bogus college; and/or
16.2. Not
provisionally or at all registered with the Department of Higher
Education and Training as a Private College in
terms of Section 31(3)
of the Continuing Education & Training Act 2006 (Act No. 16 of
2006); and/or
16.3. Not
provisionally or at all registered to provide continuing education
and training in respect of any of their advertised
courses or at all;
and/or
16.4. Operating
illegally; and/or
16.5. were closed
down by the Department of Higher Education and Training;
16.6. Students
should not enrol at the second plaintiff at all;
16.7. A fraudulent
college.”
[5]
Each Plaintiff claims an amount of R700
000,00 comprised by damages to their reputation in the sum of
R200 000,00 and loss
of income in the sum of R500 000,00
[6]
The Particulars of Claim are dated 21
January 2020. The Defendant took objection on the basis that the
pleading failed to comply
with Rules 18(4) and 18(12) of the Uniform
Rules of Court, and are therefore an irregular step as contemplated
by Rule 30. This
led to an opposed application which came before
Acting Justice JF Pretorius who, in a judgment dated 26 August 2021,
upheld the
Defendants’ objections and granted the following
order:-
1.
Paragraphs 10.2, 10.3,10.4, 12, 16.2, 16.3,
16.4, 16.6 and 18 of the Plaintiffs’ Particulars of Claim are
struck out.
2. The Plaintiffs
are ordered to amend their Particulars of Claim within 10 days of the
date of this order.
3. Leave is granted
to the Defendant to approach this court on the same papers, duly
supplemented, for an order to dismiss
the Plaintiffs’ claims in
the action should the Plaintiffs fail to amend their Particulars of
Claim within 10 days from date
of this order.
[7]
The following is a summary of what happened
next, leading up to the application before me:-
·
On 10 September 2021, the Plaintiffs served
a Notice of Intention to Amend their Particulars of Claim. On 27
September 2021, the
Defendant served a comprehensive Notice of
Objection to the intended amendment, recording what in its view were
several objectionable
allegations. The Plaintiffs did not apply to
have the amendment granted, and thus did not amend. Put differently,
the Plaintiffs
did not comply with the order of Acting Justice JF
Pretorius.
·
As a result, on 6 October 2021, the
Defendants delivered an affidavit supplementing their Rule 30
Application, and sought the dismissal
of the Plaintiffs’ claim,
as per Order No. 3 granted by Acting Justice JF Pretorius. The
application was set down for hearing
on 17 March 2022.
·
The Plaintiffs did not file any answering
papers, but on that day their then newly appointed attorney of record
(Letshabo Attorneys)
sought a postponement. Justice Ally
granted the postponement, ordering the Plaintiffs to pay the costs on
the scale of attorney
and client.
·
On 24 March 2022, the Plaintiffs appointed
yet further new attorneys of record (Du Toit’s Attorneys). On
29 April 2022, the
Defendant served the order of Justice Vally on Du
Toit’s Attorneys.
·
By 18 May 2022, there had been no movement
from the Plaintiffs, and the Defendant delivered a further affidavit
supplementing those
before, again seeking the implementation of Order
No. 3 by Acting Justice JF Pretorius. Notice of the set down of
the application,
for 3 October 2022, was served on 19 July 2022. On
10 August 2022, Du Toit’s Attorneys withdrew as the Plaintiffs’
Attorneys of Record due to a termination of mandate. On 30 September
2022, the Plaintiffs appointed Letshabo Attorneys, again,
as
their Attorney of Record.
·
Also on 30 September 2022, the Plaintiffs
delivered an application for condonation for the “
late
filing of the amendment as per the Court order of 26 August 2021”
…
. It will be remembered that
this is the order of Acting Justice JF Pretorius.
·
As against that state of affairs, the
Defendant’s application to dismiss the Plaintiffs’ claim
came before Justice Adams
who, on 4 October 2022, granted the
following order:
1.
The Plaintiffs are directed to deliver a
draft notice of intention to amend the particulars of claim within 5
days from the date
of granting this Order.
2.
The Defendant is authorised to deliver an
answering affidavit opposing the condonation application within 5
days of receipt of the
draft notice of intention to amend.
3.
The Plaintiffs are authorised to deliver a
replying affidavit to the Defendant’s answering affidavit
within 5 days from receipt
thereof.
4.
The
Application
[1]
is
removed from the roll.
5.
The First and Second Plaintiffs are ordered
to pay the Defendant’s wasted costs occasioned by the removal
of the application
on a scale as between attorney and client, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
·
On 11 October 2022, the Plaintiffs
delivered a notice of intention to amend their Particulars of Claim,
as well as the Particulars
of Claim as if amended. As he had to, it
was accepted by Mr BD Stevens, who appeared for the Defendant in the
hearing before me,
that this is within the five day framework
envisaged in the Order of Justice Adams.
·
No further steps consequent upon this step
were taken by either party. The Plaintiffs did not further serve
amended pages, and the
Defendant did not object to any irregular
step.
·
Moreover, it appears from the record
on Caselines that the Defendant did not take up the option afforded
by the order of Justice
Adams to deliver affidavits in opposition to
the condonation sought by the Plaintiffs for the late filing (late,
according to the
Order of JF Pretorius AJ) of their intended
amendment.
[8]
However, on 8 June 2023, the Defendant
delivered a third supplemental affidavit by way of which it again
sought the dismissal of
the Plaintiffs’ claims according to the
initial order of JF Pretorius AJ. It set the application down for
hearing on 16 October
2023, by way of a Notice delivered on 28 July
2023. (This is the application before me.) On 10 October 2023, Mr
Letshabo, the Plaintiffs’
Attorney of Record who appeared for
them in the hearing before me, deposed to an affidavit in opposition
to the grant of the relief.
[9]
According to Mr Stevens, the crisp issue is
that, having served a Notice of Intention to Amend on 11 October
2022, the Plaintiffs
failed to effect the amendment by serving the
amended pages in terms of Rule 28(5) - that is to say, after a period
of ten days
there being no objection to the amendment. Therefore, the
intended amendment fell away, the consequence being that there is no
amendment. Therefore, the Order of JF Pretorius AJ for the dismissal
of the Plaintiffs’ claims can be activated – which
is
what the Defendant now does.
[10]
I am not convinced that the issue is so
crisp. It is so that the Plaintiffs did not wait out the regulated
period in terms of Rule
28(5) and consequent thereupon serve amended
pages. But, if the position adopted by the Defendant is correct, it
means the Defendant
could ignore the step taken by the Plaintiffs in
serving the amended pages (simultaneously with the Notice of
Intention to Amend)
– put differently, procedurally, it is to
be considered
pro non scripto
.
In this event, as there was no objection to the intended amendment,
the Plaintiffs were left anyway then to serve the amended
pages.
Conversely, if the Defendant was not entitled to consider the amended
pages as a non-event, then it was for it to raise
an irregular step
complaint under Rule 30. This it also did not do.
[11]
There is some significance, in the fact
that the condonation application is not yet determined –
whether as an opposed or
unopposed application. Adams J did not
engage with the application – indeed, the learned Judge set
time periods for the filing
of affidavits to enable the matter to
become ripe for hearing. However, Justice Adams seems to have
anticipated the condonation
application by directing the Plaintiffs
to deliver a draft Notice of Intention to Amend within five days (and
which is what the
Plaintiffs did).
[12]
Leaving aside the qualification of a
‘draft’ Notice of Intention to Amend, to which I advert
next, the best I
can make of this is that the question of
condonation may be redundant – unless one is to read into the
order of Justice Adams
that his direction to the Plaintiffs to
“
deliver a draft notice of
intention to amend”
is subject to
the Plaintiffs (in due course) securing condonation for the past
delay. If so, it is difficult to ascertain then the
intention of the
directive to deliver a notice to amend. Even then, why the direction
to deliver a
draft
Notice of Intention to Amend? One might deduce that the Notice is
only to be a ‘draft’ so that the Defendant can get
an
advance peek at what the Plaintiffs will do when once they secure
condonation, but either way, it makes for a lack of clarity.
At
least, it seems that the Defendant has accepted that the Notice
delivered by the Plaintiffs on 11 October 2022 was not a “draft”;
it accepted it as invoking Rule 28, because the complaint is that
there was no further step as contemplated by Rule 28(5).
[13]
The fact remains, however, that the
question of condonation for the Plaintiffs’ failure to meet the
order of JF Pretorius
AJ is still open. As is recorded in the
parties’ Joint Practice Note (paragraph 8.10) “
the
Applicants can only assume that the Respondents’ notice to
amend is subject to the condonation filed in September 2022.”
In effect, it seems to me,
enforceability of the Order by JF Pretorius AJ is still hanging.
[14]
This being so, the relief sought by the
Defendant cannot be granted. Nearly four years have elapsed
since the launch of proceedings
and
litis
contestatio
seems still a long way off.
Tempting though doing so may be, it would go beyond that with which I
am seized to make directions for
the further disposal of this matter.
The application must be put on ice until the Plaintiffs’
application for condonation
is determined, to be prosecuted
accordingly thereafter.
[15]
In my view, this is a matter in which the
parties should bear their own costs.
[16]
The order I make is as follows:
1.
The application for dismissal of the
Plaintiffs’ claims is postponed
sine
die
.
SALMON AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 17
October 2023
Date Delivered: 06
December 2023
For the Plaintiff/
Applicant: Adv B.D Stevens
Brookstevens@lawcircle.co.za
Instructed by:
Jurgens Bekker Attorneys
For the Defendant/
Respondents: Sylvester Letshabo
Sletshabo@hotmail.com
Instructed by:
Letshabo Attorneys
[1]
In other words, the Defendant’s Application to Strike Out the
Plaintiffs’ claims for want of compliance with the
order of JF
Pretorius AJ.
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