Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1478South Africa
Akani Retirement Fund Administrators Proprietary Limited and Another v Independent Media Proprietary Limited and Others (58023/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1478 (29 December 2023)
Headnotes
SUMMARY
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Akani Retirement Fund Administrators Proprietary Limited and Another v Independent Media Proprietary Limited and Others (58023/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1478 (29 December 2023)
Akani Retirement Fund Administrators Proprietary Limited and Another v Independent Media Proprietary Limited and Others (58023/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1478 (29 December 2023)
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sino date 29 December 2023
FLYNOTES:
EVIDENCE
– Findings of another court –
Probative
value
–
Main application seeking relief for alleged defamatory statements
by members of the press – Application for
admission of
further evidence – Certain passages from judgment of another
court – Rule in
Hollington
v Hewthorn
to
be strictly applied – Not applicable in circumstances of
this case – Findings of another court relevant
on facts
because of probative force in relation to issues in main
application – Matter sought to be introduced, although
it
postdates the statements, is relevant to the reasonableness or
otherwise of the making of the statements at the time.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 58023/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE:
29 December 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
In
the matter between:
AKANI RETIREMENT FUND
ADMINISTRATORS
First Applicant/Respondent
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
ZAMANI
ERNEST EPHRAIM LETJANE
Second Applicant/Respondent
and
INDEPENDENT
MEDIA
First Respondent/Applicant
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
ANEEZ
SALIE
Second Respondent/Applicant
AYANDA
MDLULI
Third Respondent/Applicant
THABO
MAKWAKWA
Fourth Respondent/Applicant
SUMMARY
Rule
in
Hollington v Hewthorn
to be strictly applied – not
applicable in circumstances of this case. Findings of another court
relevant on the facts of
this case because it has probative force in
relation to issues in the main application.
___________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
FISHER, J
Introduction
[1]
This is an interlocutory application for
the admission of further evidence in a main application.
[2]
The applicants (in the main
application) seek relief relating to alleged defamatory statements
made in articles published by the
respondents (in the main
application) at the end of 2021.
[3]
The parties are referred to as in the main
application.
[4]
The respondents are members of the press.
[5]
The evidence sought to be admitted by the
respondents takes the form of findings in certain passages in a
recent judgment of the
Full Bench of this division,
Moropa
and 9 Others v Chemical Industries National Provident Fund & 22
Others -
Appeal Case Number: A5041/21
(
Moropa
)
and a press release of the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).
[6]
The handing down of the judgment and the
publication of the press release came after the respondents had filed
their answering affidavit
in the main application and the applicants
had replied.
[7]
Although the applicants purport to raise
six objections to the admission of the evidence, in reality the
objections can be distilled
into two main arguments.
[8]
First, that there is a temporal problem in
that the judgment and the press release post-date the articles and
are thus irrelevant
to the making of the statements.
[9]
Second,
reliance on
Hollington
v Hewthorn &Co Ltd
[1]
on the basis that, properly construed, it provides that
findings in judgments are inadmissible for being the irrelevant
opinion evidence of another court. Related to this are the arguments
that there is, furthermore, prejudice arising from the fact
that (i)
that the evidence sought to be admitted is not, in any event,
properly defined and (ii) that the judgment is subject to
appeal.
[10]
These objections, in their essence, are
that the evidence is inadmissible for being irrelevant.
[11]
On the merits of the main application, the
respondents dispute the defamatory nature of the statements on the
basis that they were
reporting on facts stated by others as opposed
to themselves stating these facts.
[12]
The
respondents also deny wrongfulness. More specifically they raise the
truth of the statements and that the publication was for
the benefit
of the public. They also raise the so-called
Bogoshi
defence,
[2]
which accords to the media the privilege of reasonable publication.
[13]
A central basis for both the defences of
truth and in the public interest and the
Bogoshi
defence is the assertion that Akani was under investigation for
corruption by the FSCA relating to complaints by the CINPF against
Akani and Mr Letjane involving improper relationships with FSCA
officials. This is the sting or gist of the statements complained
of.
[14]
It is in relation to the establishing of
these defences or at least the raising of a dispute pertaining
thereto that the evidence
is sought to be admitted.
[15]
These competing arguments in relation to
relevance must be viewed against the factual and procedural
background to the main application,
to which I now turn.
Background
[16]
The first article, titled “
Akani's
boss Zamani Letjane accused of ‘unsavoury’ relationship
with the Financial Sector Conduct Authority
”,
was published by the respondents on 30 November 2021.The second
article, titled “
Akani Retirement
Fund MD in hot water over claims of extortion and failing to hand
over documents
” was published by
respondents on 06 December 2021.
[17]
There were subsequent tweets on the social
network
Twitter
related to these articles but the argument centres on the articles
themselves.
[18]
In essence, the articles make reference to
reports made by others about Akani and its CEO, Mr Letjane, the
applicants in the main
application.
[19]
These reports pertain to alleged complaints
made by the Chemical Industries National Provident Fund (CINPF) to
the FSCA against
Akani and Mr Letjane relating to improper
relationships with FSCA officials, extortion and failure to hand over
documents
for forensic investigation.
[20]
The procedure adopted by the applicants is
pertinent to this application. The applicants opted to use a hybrid
model which entails
launching motion proceedings to pursue a
declaration that the articles and tweets contained false and
misleading allegations which
are defamatory of the applicants and/or
injurious to them, final interdictory relief and the publication of
an apology or retraction.
A declaration is then sought that the
respondents are liable for damages in an amount to be determined in
action proceedings.
[21]
The approach is based on the assertion by
the applicants that there is no dispute of fact in relation to the
defamation and that
the only disputed issues relate to the
determination of the quantum of damages.
[22]
The respondents contend,
in
limine,
in the main application that
this hybrid procedure is incompetent. They argue that they are
entitled to the dismissal of the application
on that basis alone.
[23]
I need not make any comment on the
correctness or otherwise of the procedure as this is for the court
dealing with the main application.
[24]
Whether the evidence is admissible is,
however, pertinent to whether a dispute of fact arises. This
obviously affects the argument
as to whether the application
procedure is appropriate.
[25]
With this in mind, I turn to an examination
of the relevancy objections raised in this application.
The
temporal argument
[26]
The argument is that the evidence sought to
be introduced arose after the making of the statements and is thus
irrelevant to the
issues surrounding their making.
[27]
This assertion ignores that the events
forming the subject matter of the findings in
Moropa
pre-dated the publication of the
defamatory matter forming the subject of the main application.
[28]
The passages in
Moropa
involve findings that an associated company of Akani which was run
and controlled by Letjane, Neighbour Funeral Scheme (NFS) paid
bribes
to three trustees of CINPF in order to benefit Akani.
[29]
The events described in
Moropa
occurred in November and December 2019.
[30]
The respondents argue that these findings
create context for their defences of lack of wrongfulness at the time
the statements were
made – i.e. at the end of 2021. They argue
that the press release is relevant for the purposes of raising the
required rebuttal
or at least establishing a dispute of fact as to
the truth of the sting being that the applicants were involved in
corrupt activities
which were being investigated by the FSCA.
[31]
The applicants argue that the respondents
must show that the investigation mentioned in the press release was
pending at the time
the articles in issue were written and that this
was known of by the respondents at that time.
[32]
I
disagree. The matter sought to be introduced, although it postdates
the statements is relevant to the reasonableness or otherwise
of the
making of the statements at the time.
Bogoshi
provides that publication by the press of false defamatory
allegations of fact will not be regarded as unlawful if it is found
to have been reasonable
in
the circumstances of the case
to publish the particular facts at the particular time of
publication.
[3]
[33]
The respondents raise also that the
applicants have no reputation worthy of protection.
[34]
It
is relevant that defendant ‘need not justify immaterial details
or mere expressions of abuse which do not add to its sting
and would
produce no different effect on the mind of the reader than that
produced by the substantial part justified’.
[4]
[35]
The
underlying logic behind this approach appears from the judgment of
Wessels JA in
Johnson
.
The reason, he explained, why truth and public benefit is recognised
as a defence, is because a plaintiff is not entitled to recover
damages in respect of an injury to a reputation which he does not
deserve.
[5]
[36]
The question of
whether the applicants have such a reputation is central evidence in
the case. The applicant’s place their
reputation for honesty
and integrity in the forefront of their case. A large portion of the
founding papers is devoted to extolling
this alleged reputation.
The
rule in Hollington v Hewthorn
[37]
The
rule in
Hollington
originated from English law, which forms the basis of the South
African evidentiary process and is regarded as its common law.
Domestic statutes regulate South Africa’s procedures and where
statutes are silent on certain issues, the English law of
evidence
which was in force on 30 May 1961 in South Africa takes precedence.
This is provided for in various sections of the Criminal
Procedure
Act,
[6]
as
well as section 42 of the Civil Proceedings Evidence Act.
[7]
The
common law that must be followed includes English cases decided prior
to 30 May 1961. It is on this basis that the rule in
Hollington
has been said to bind South African courts.
[38]
Because the
Hollington
rule has had its detractors and because it’s strict application
often makes no sense our courts have tended to seek to limit
its
range whilst calling for its abolition
[39]
In
Institute
for Accountability in Southern Africa v Public
2020
(5) SA 179 (GP),
[8]
Coppin J in an eloquent treatment of the rule found that the rule
should be strictly construed and confined to the facts in
Hollington
and as
such did not encompass a bar to admitting findings of civil courts in
that
Hollington
related only to the admission of a criminal conviction.
[9]
I am bound by this decision and like Coppin J and I cannot find that
it is clearly wrong as the applicants ‘argue that I
should. I
prefer the route
of
its strict containment or “extirpation” as applied by
Coppin J.
[40]
Thus, I find that it has no application in
this matter and does not operate in a blanket fashion to exclude the
evidence of the
passages in
Moropa.
[41]
However, even if one were to engage in a
less restrictive approach as to the ratio in
Hollington
being that it is essentially no more than a restatement of the rules
against receiving opinion evidence and hearsay, the evidence
is to my
mind still admissible.
[42]
The
Constitutional Court held in
Helen
Suzman Foundation v President of the Republic of South Africa
(
HSF
),
[10]
that
any opinion, whether from a lay person or expert, which is expressed
on an issue the court can decide without receiving such
opinion is,
in principle, inadmissible because of its irrelevance. But when an
opinion has probative force, it can be considered
admissible.
[43]
On the application of
Hollington
this exclusion applies also to the opinions of judges expressed in
court cases.
[44]
Consequently, the evidence is receivable if
it is capable of putting the court in a better position when deciding
on the matter.
[45]
The court in
HSF
was dealing with an application to strike out but the pronouncements
as to relevance have application here. The applications to
strike out
and the application to introduce further evidence are two sides of
the same coin and the inquiry into relevance and
prejudice is, to my
mind, the the same in each instance.
[46]
Had the evidence which is sought to be
introduced been available to the respondents earlier it would, no
doubt, have been included
in the answering affidavit. The remedy of
the applicants would thus have been to apply to strike out the
evidence if they felt
it to be objectionable. The basis for such a
strike out would have been that the evidence is irrelevant and
prejudicial.
[47]
In
HSF
the position was explained in the judgment of Fronamen J (in which
Cameron J concurred) as follows:
“
In
an application to strike out evidence on affidavit, neither the
eventual veracity of the evidence nor the prospects of success
of the
main application are at issue. This is a trite proposition. The only
question in a striking out application is whether
the evidence
is admissible. The truth of the evidence plays no role at this stage;
it is only determined at the end of the matter
if the evidence is
admitted.”
[11]
[48]
Therefore, whether an opinion carries any
probative force will depend on the issues before the court and the
purpose for which the
evidence is sought to be used.
[49]
The court in the main application is asked
to consider the question of wrongfulness. This consideration includes
an inquiry related
to the applicants’ reputation.
[50]
These questions could, to my mind, be
impacted upon by the fact of litigation involving the applicants in
the context of the function
of Akani in the pension fund industry and
its activities. Seen from this perspective, the truth or
otherwise of the findings
is not necessarily the basis for the
admission of the evidence. The fact that there have been allegations
of corruption which have
been a matter of public record and scrutiny
at material times in relation to the publications in issue, to my
mind, creates relevance
in the context of the wrongfulness inquiry.
[51]
It is also important that this application
comes at an interlocutory stage of the consideration of the main
application.
[52]
The
judgment in
Crypto
Open Patent Alliance v Craig Steven Wrigh
t,
[12]
in the UK is instructive. The claimant brought an action for a
declaration that the defendant did not own certain copyright.
[53]
The defendant made an application at an interlocutory stage of
action proceedings for a declaratory order that findings of fact made
in litigation he was a party to in America were not admissible in the
main action on the basis of the rule in
Hollington
. The court
dealt with such argument thus:
“
But, even in the
narrower form of order, that the judicial findings from the US
litigation be not admissible as evidence of the
facts so found, I do
not consider that I should make the order. The rule in
Hollington
v Hewthorn
is clear, and it will be the duty of the trial judge
to decide whether it applies to the particular evidence tendered.
It
would be unusual for another judge, long before the trial, and with
less information than the trial judge will have, to bind
the hands of
the trial judge in this respect. If this limb of the order is made
now, what is to prevent other orders being sought
at this stage to
prevent admissibility of evidence at trial which infringes other of
the rules of evidence? These are matters best
left to the trial
judge
.” (Emphasis added).
[54]
The court explored the justification for
the rule, finding that it lies in the requirements for a fair trial
in that it is ultimately
the trial judge’s responsibility to
make an independent assessment of the evidence and therefore weight
ought not to be attached
to conclusions reached by another judge.
This is in line with the approach taken by the Constitutional Court
in
HSF
.
[55]
The hybrid approach taken by the applicants
in the main application seeks to have the court determine liability
in a vacuum which
seals the inquiry off from context.
[56]
To my mind, the purpose of the objection to
the evidence is not to protect the applicants from the prejudice
attached to the receipt
of opinion evidence of the court in
Moropa;
its purpose is to suppress
evidence which has relevance to and creates context for the defences
in respect of which the respondents
bear the onus.
[57]
The respondents would to my mind be
prejudiced by the exclusion of the evidence at an interlocutory
stage, especially in light of
the hybrid procedure chosen by the
applicants.
[58]
The introduction of the evidence even for
the purposes of context as opposed to truth arguably creates disputes
of fact which would
require an oral ventilation of the factual
complex. This, ultimately, is for the consideration of the court
hearing the main application.
To my mind the existence of this
evidence should not be excluded from the consideration as to whether
the hybrid approach was apposite.
Conclusion
[59]
Thus, I find that the evidence is
admissible for being relevant to a determination of wrongfulness in
this matter.
[60]
The respondents’ argument that the
receipt of this evidence creates or assists with the creation of a
dispute of fact and
thus has relevance to the process adopted by the
applicants is also accepted.
[61]
To the extent that these disputes are
ultimately dealt with by way of oral ventilation of all the evidence,
the applicants be entitled
to their protections in due course.
Costs
[62]
The respondents seek that the costs be in
the cause. This is an appropriate order.
Order
[63]
I thus make an order which reads as
follows:
[1]
The
factual findings
made by the High Court, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg in the matter
between
Moropa & 9 Others v Chemical
Industries National Provident Fund & 22 Others
,
Appeal Case No. A5041/2021,( 29 June 2022) in the following
paragraphs are admitted into evidence:
[1.1]
Paragraph 5;
[1.2]
Paragraph 10;
[1.3]
Paragraph 13;
[1.4]
Paragraphs 15-16;
[1.5]
Paragraphs 29-36;
[1.6]
Paragraph 50; and
[1.7]
Paragraphs 80-82.
[2]
The press release of the Financial Sector Conduct
Authority dated 14 July 2022, is admitted into evidence.
[3]
The costs of this application are to be costs in
the cause.
D FISHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by
uploading to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
29 December 2023.
Heard:
19 October 2023.
Delivered:
29 December 2023.
APPEARANCES:
For
the applicants:
Adv
H J De Waal SC.
Instructed
by:
Abrahams
Kiewitz Inc.
For
the respondents:
Adv.
JPV McNally SC, Adv. S Scoot.
Instructed
by:
Webber
Wentzel.
[1]
1943
All ER 35
[2]
After
National
Media Ltd v Bogoshi
[1998]
ZASCA 94;
1998
(4) SA 1196 (SCA).
[3]
Id
at 30-31.
[4]
Johnson
at
205-206
[5]
See
also
Modiri
op.
cit.
at para 13.
[6]
51
of 1977.
[7]
25
of 1965.
[8]
Institute
for Accountability in Southern Africa v Public Protector
2020 (5) SA 179 (GP)
[9]
Ibid
at para 23 -25
[10]
Helen
Suzman Foundation v President of the Republic of South Africa
2015 (2) SA 1 (CC).
[11]
HSF
at
par 127
[12]
Crypto
Open Patent Alliance v
Craig
Steven
Wright
[2021]
EWHC 3440
(Ch).
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