Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1477South Africa
Finnaughty and Others v Malan and Others (22/15159) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1477 (29 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Finnaughty and Others v Malan and Others (22/15159) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1477 (29 December 2023)
Finnaughty and Others v Malan and Others (22/15159) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1477 (29 December 2023)
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sino date 29 December 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 22/15159
In the matter between:
FINNAUGHTY,
HEATHER
First Excipient
KASONKOMONA,
CANDY
Second Excipient
COGLE,
CHARMAINE
Third Excipient
and
MALAN,
JEAN-PAUL
First Respondent
MALAN,
BARBARA
Second Respondent
CRICHTON,
VANESSA
Third Respondent
JORDAN,
STUART
Fourth Respondent
JORDAN,
NIKKI
Fifth Respondent
PILLAY,
KUMARAN
Sixth Respondent
PILLAY,
NATISHA
Seventh Respondent
DAVISON,
PETER
Eighth Respondent
DAVISON,
YOLANDE
Ninth Respondent
DAWSON,
DAVID
Tenth Respondent
DAWSON,
MICHELLE
Eleventh Respondent
In re the matter between:
MALAN,
JEAN-PAUL
First Plaintiff
MALAN,
BARBARA
Second Plaintiff
CRICHTON,
VANESSA
Third Plaintiff
JORDAN,
STUART
Fourth Plaintiff
JORDAN,
NIKKI
Fifth Plaintiff
PILLAY,
KUMARAN
Sixth Plaintiff
PILLAY,
NATISHA
Seventh Plaintiff
DAVISON,
PETER
Eighth Plaintiff
DAVISON,
YOLANDE
Ninth Plaintiff
DAWSON,
DAVID
Tenth Plaintiff
DAWSON,
MICHELLE
Eleventh Plaintiff
and
FINNAUGHTY,
HEATHER
First Defendant
KASONKOMONA,
CANDY
Second Defendant
COGLE,
CHARMAINE
Third Defendant
MCBMA
PROPERTIES
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The excipients and respondents in this
matter are all residents of a freehold complex called Saint Cloud
Estate, and members of
the St Cloud Homeowners Association NPC
(“HOA”). The excipients are, or were at the time
proceedings were instituted,
also members of the board of directors
of the HOA.
2.
The respondents instituted an action
against the excipients and the former property managing agent of the
HOA, MCBMA Properties
(Pty) Ltd (“MCBMA”), claiming
damages for defamation, resulting from a notice published by email on
25 February 2022
to 47 members of the HOA. It is not clear whether
this notice was published to all members of the HOA.
3.
The excipients have noted an exception to
the particulars of claim on the basis that it lacks averments
necessary to sustain the
cause of action. The respondents have
opposed the exception, which now comes before me to decide. MCBMA
does not participate in
the exception, and has apparently been
deregistered.
4.
The basis of the exception is that the
words in the statement which is the subject of the action are not
capable of bearing the
meaning attributed to them, either in their
ordinary sense, or by way of innuendo in the circumstances alleged in
the particulars
of claim.
5.
The parties are
ad
idem
on the elements of defamation, and
the test to be applied to determine whether a statement is
defamatory. They are also agreed
that it is not the ordinary meaning
of the statements that is at issue, but whether, in the circumstances
alleged in the particulars
of claim, the statements bear an innuendo
that is defamatory.
6.
The respondents contend that the question
of innuendo can only be determined by reference to evidence, and
therefore that the exception
should be dismissed. The excipients
contend that there is no allegation in support of which evidence can
be adduced, which would
result in the conclusion that the defamatory
innuendo is present.
7.
The question then is whether the background
alleged in paragraph 24 of the particulars of claim, if proven,
supports the conclusion
of innuendo alleged in paragraph 26 of the
particulars, with regard to the statements alleged in paragraph 25
thereof.
8.
The background alleged is:
24.1.
The plaintiffs and the defendants have, since October 2021, been
engaged in a dispute regarding, among
other things, the Board’s
purported appointment of a security service provider to the Estate
and the publication and validity
of HOA’s management accounts.
24.2.
The plaintiffs and the defendants agreed to refer the dispute to
arbitration in January 2022.
24.3. The arbitration has
not concluded, alternatively has failed, and the dispute between the
plaintiffs and the defendants in
ongoing.
24.4. To the knowledge of
the addressees, the defendants have referred to the plaintiffs, in
the context of the dispute between
the plaintiffs and the defendants,
as “the concerned group of residents”.
9.
The statement complained of is contained in
an email informing homeowners of the cancellation of a contract with
a security service
provider and the appointment of a new one. The
specific statements within the email complained of are purportedly
set out in paragraph
25 of the particulars of claim. The averments in
paragraph 25 do not set out the contents of the email accurately.
10.
The particulars of claim identify the
third, fourth and fifth (unnumbered) paragraphs of the email as
having defamatory meaning,
and I set those out here, complete with
any grammatical or spelling errors.
As you are no doubt
aware, the Board of Directors have spent most of their term to date
locked in legal battles with the previous
board and other “concerned
residents” to cancel the contract with TRSS. The Board has been
thwarted in every attempt
to excise their obligations towards the HOA
and its Members regarding the termination of the agreement with TRSS.
The Board have
also been thwarted with regards to entering into a new
agreement with Sys Control Secure, the terms of which are more
favourable
in terms of cost to the HOA and for the security staff who
have guarded the complex for numerous years.
The attempt to resolve
the dispute between the group of residents and the HOA via
arbitration over the past two months has failed,
due to the parties
not being able to agree to the terms of the Arbitration, with the
“concerned residents” insisting
that the HOA pays for the
full Arbitration and that they be allowed to submit oral submissions
and call witnesses, while the Directors
maintain the HOA can only
afford a process whereby written submissions from both parties are
considered by the arbitrator (which
was initially the terms to which
the HOA agreed and persuaded them to proceed with Arbitration –
ie, a fixed quote versus
a process that could drag on for an
indefinite period of time).
The TRSS probation period
expires at COB Monday 28 February and as such the Board had no option
but to terminate the TRSS contract.
Failure to do so will mean that
St Cloud is locked into a 3-year contract we can’t afford, one
that is also detrimental to
our guards and thus has a direct impact
on our security. The group of “concerned residents” has
threatened the Board
with High Court action should we go this route,
but we have no options left.
11.
At paragraph 26 of the particulars of claim
it is alleged that the content of the email notice is defamatory, as
it contains the
false innuendo that the respondents are:
26.1
vexatious;
26.2
irrational and unreasonable;
26.3
dishonest;
26.4
acting selfishly and contrary to the interests of the HOA generally;
26.5
deliberately acting in a manner that threatens the safety and
security of the Estate and its
residents;
26.6
intentionally, and without just cause, obstructing the Board in the
execution of its duties in
serving the HOA;
26.7
intentionally, and without just cause, issuing idle threats against
the Board, [and]
26.8
insistent that other HOA members’ levy contributions fund the
resolution of the disputes
between the plaintiffs with the first to
third defendants.
12.
I agree with the excipients that there is
nothing in paragraph 24 which supports a conclusion that the impugned
statements mean
the respondents are dishonest; acting selfishly and
contrary to the interests of the HOA; intentionally and gratuitously
obstructing
the Board; issuing idle threats against the Board, or
insistent that the arbitration be funded only from the levy
contributions
of other HOA members.
13.
If there are other facts which are not
pleaded which support the conclusion that the statements have this
innuendo, it does not
help the respondents to say that it is a matter
for evidence. Those facts are fundamental to the defamatory meaning
complained
of and must be pleaded. They cannot be held in reserve for
evidence.
14.
It seems to me that a conclusion that the
Board is saying that the respondents are vexatious, irrational and
unreasonable may be
supported by the pleadings as they stand, but
that is not necessarily defamatory in the context, although it may be
insulting.
15.
The particulars of claim therefore do not
contain the averments necessary to sustain the pleaded cause of
action.
16.
Since this judgment is being handed down
during the festive season, I consider that it is appropriate to give
the respondents (plaintiffs)
more time than usual to amend their
particulars of claim.
17.
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The exception is upheld with costs.
2.
The plaintiffs may amend their particulars
of claim within 25 days from the date of this order.
3.
Should the plaintiffs fail to amend their
particulars of claim within 25 days of this order, their particulars
of claim are struck
out in their entirety.
____________________________
S. YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
For
the excipients:
HF Jacobs SC
Instructed by:
Marguerite D Loots Attorneys
For the
respondents:
D Wild
Instructed
by:
Brian Wilken Attorneys
Date of
hearing:
03 October 2023
Date of
judgment:
29 December 2023
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