Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 143South Africa
Oosthuizen and Others v Konar (21/58019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 143 (15 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Oosthuizen and Others v Konar (21/58019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 143 (15 March 2022)
Oosthuizen and Others v Konar (21/58019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 143 (15 March 2022)
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##
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21/58019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15
March 2022
In
the matter between:
OOSTHUIZEN,
MARYKA
First Applicant
ASA,
JOSHUA
Second Applicant
OUTSOURCED
RISK AND COMPLIANCE ASSESSMENT
(PTY)
LTD
Third Applicant
and
DR
DEENADAYALEN (LEN)
KONAR
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
This opposed application came before me in
the urgent court on 23 December 2021. I heard the parties on the
urgency of the
application as well as the substantive relief claimed
by the applicants.
[2]
The latter sought urgent interdictory
relief against the respondent, interdicting him personally and on
behalf of any third party,
either directly or indirectly, from:
2.1
Distributing copies of a charge sheet dated
25 October 2021 issued by the Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners (‘ACFE’)
against the first and second
applicants, to the clients and potential clients of the third
applicant and any third parties;
2.2
Disseminating copies of any complaints made
by the respondent or any party acting on the respondent’s
behalf to any of the
third applicant’s clients, potential
clients and any third parties;
2.3
Defaming and making untrue statements in
respect of the applicants to any of the third applicant’s
clients, potential clients
and any third parties;
2.4
Communicating in any way, be it verbally or
in writing, the contents of ACFE’s charges and complaints dated
25 October
2021 against the first and second applicants, to any
of the third applicant’s clients, potential clients and any
third parties;
and
2.5
Costs of the application.
[3]
The applicants claimed final interdictory
relief in their founding papers and interim relief in the
alternative, in their reply.
The applicants did not justify an order
for final interdictory relief in the urgent court and I considered
the alternative for
interim relief only.
[4]
The first applicant, Maryka Oosthuizen,
(‘Oosthuizen’), was a director and internal auditor of
the third applicant,
Outsourced Risk Compliance and Assessment (Pty)
Ltd (‘ORCA’). ORCA provided risk advisory and management
services to
its clients.
[5]
The second applicant was Joshua Asa
(‘Asa’), a director of ORCA and employed as ORCA’s
IT auditor.
[6]
The third current director of ORCA, one
Mulaudzi, was not a party to the application.
[7]
The respondent was Dr Deenadayalen (Len)
Konar (‘Konar’), a businessman and former director of
ORCA. Konar resigned
his directorship on 2 August 2018 and
allegedly transferred his shareholding in ORCA during 2018.
[8]
ORCA’s bouquet of services included
internal audit, IT audit, forensics, corporate governance and risk
management services,
all aimed at ensuring sound internal audit
controls in Orca’s clients.
[9]
Oosthuizen and Asa were both members of the
Association of Certified Fraud Examiner (‘ACFE’), a body
representing and
governing fraud examination professionals in South
Africa.
[10]
Oosthuizen alleged that Konar’s
involvement with ORCA ceased from late 2020 and that Konar
established a new company, LKA,
that competed directly with ORCA.
[11]
Konar denied that the applicants were
entitled to the relief claimed and that the matter was urgent. Konar
sought the dismissal
of the application with punitive costs against
the applicants. Furthermore, Konar denied that his conduct was
unlawful and contended
that no justifiable grounds existed for the
interdict.
[12]
The issues that I was required to determine
comprised whether or not Konar’s conduct complained of by the
applicants amounted
to defamation and if so, whether Konar acquitted
himself of his onus to furnish a defence that served to exclude the
elements of
wrongfulness and / or intention on his part. Furthermore,
whether the applicants met the requirements of the interdictory
relief
sought by them, which Konar denied.
[13]
Turning to the applicants’ claims of
defamation, the applicants relied upon various allegedly defamatory
statements made in
respect of Oosthuizen and Asa and Konar’s
communication of the contents of the ACFE charge sheet, to the
Takeover Regulation
Panel (‘TRP’), a client of ORCA.
[14]
Oosthuizen alleged that the ACFE charges
arose from two baseless allegations of misconduct levied by Konar
against Oosthuizen and
Asa with ACFE, resulting in the latter raising
a charge sheet on 25 October 2021. Oosthuizen contended that the
charges were
devoid of merit.
[15]
ACFE’s hearing on the misconduct
charges was not finalised yet, the applicants were yet to present
their evidence and no determination
on the merits or the veracity of
the respondent’s allegations had been made.
[16]
On 9 December 2020 the applicants’
attorney requested Konar to furnish an undertaking that he would
desist from contacting
ORCA’s clients. Konar declined to
provide the requested undertaking. Notwithstanding, Konar tended an
undertaking in terms
similar to those sought by the applicants on 15
December 2021, which tender came to nought.
[17]
Accordingly, Oosthuizen alleged that Konar
was intent on defaming her and Asa’s reputations, destroying
ORCA’s business
and procuring ORCA’s clients for LKA’s
benefit and to the detriment of ORCA.
[18]
Thus, the applicants contended that absent
an order of this Court, the respondent would continue with his
unlawful and intentional
misconduct in publishing the charges pending
against the first and second applicants, causing irreparable harm and
prejudice to
the applicants.
[19]
I could not determine the veracity or
otherwise of the two additional incidents of Konar’s allegedly
questionable conduct
raised by the applicants given that these were
motion court proceedings.
[20]
The applicants alleged that there was no
alternate satisfactory remedy available to them and that the
institution of a claim for
damages would not bring an end to the
respondent’s unlawful conduct.
[21]
The
elements of defamation were reiterated by the Constitutional Court in
Le
Roux v Dey
[1]
,
namely; the wrongful and intentional publication of a defamatory
statement(s) of and concerning a complainant.
[22]
Furthermore, at the outset, a complainant
must prove only the publication of defamatory matter concerning the
complainant. Thereafter,
wrongfulness and intention on the part of
the wrongdoer are presumed, and, it is for the wrongdoer, wishing to
avoid liability,
to raise a defence that excludes either wrongfulness
or intention.
[23]
It
is settled law that it is the respondent who carries the onus to
rebut either or both of the presumptions and that this onus
is a full
onus to be discharged on a balance of probabilities, not a duty to
adduce evidence. A bare denial of the averments by
the respondent
will not suffice. Facts must be pleaded and proved by way of evidence
sufficient to establish the defence/s raised
by the respondent.
[2]
[24]
A
statement is defamatory if it ‘tends’ to reduce the
status, good name or reputation of the complainant.
[3]
[25]
The
test is objective – the meaning the words conveyed to the
reasonable recipient of the words.
[4]
[26]
The
respondent relied on the test in
Hix
Networking Technologies v System Publishers (Pty) Ltd &
Another,
[5]
referred to in
Midi
Television,
[6]
to the effect that a party seeking such a restraint must show that
the proposed ban is necessary, (meaning that the objective cannot
be
achieved by a reasonably available and effective alternate measure);
that it is as limited in scope, time and content as possible;
and, is
proportional as between the salutary and deleterious effects of the
ban.
[27]
The respondent argued that the relief
claimed by the applicants failed on all three of the grounds of the
test in
Hix
.
[28]
Furthermore, the respondent raised a
plethora of factual disputes between the applicants and himself and
relied upon various constitutional
issues. The latter are not for the
urgent court.
[29]
The factual disputes alleged by the
respondent related to extraneous issues outside of the relief claimed
and did not impact the
applicants’ claims directly.
[30]
Oosthuizen alleged that TRP, to which ORCA
rendered services for the five-year period prior to the hearing,
advised Oosthuizen through
its officials on 8 December 2021,
that it had decided not to renew its contract with ORCA upon
termination thereof at the
end of March 2022. That was despite TRP
renewing its contract with ORCA in previous years.
[31]
Oosthuizen alleged that Konar’s
allegations of misconduct by Oosthuizen and Asa, relayed by him to
TRP on 6 December
2021, caused TRP’s decision not to renew
its contract with Orca.
[32]
Konar admitted meeting with TRP’s
officials, denied handing the ACFE charge(s) sheets to them, denied
that he contributed
to TRP’s decision not to renew Orca’s
services and denied any wrongdoing on his part. Konar relied upon a
dispute of
fact in respect of TRP’s reason for its decision not
to renew its contract with ORCA.
[33]
The typed transcript of the conversation
between Oosthuizen and Asa of ORCA with TRP’s representatives
on 8 December
2021, reflected that Konar showed TRP’s
representatives the ACFE charge sheet alleging VAT fraud and/or
misconduct and/or
misrepresentation, allegations laid by Konar
himself against Oosthuizen and Asa with ACFE. TRP’s Risk
Management team adopted
the stance that further dealings with ORCA
exposed TRP to reputational risk.
[34]
Hence, Konar’s denial that he ‘handed
over’ the ACFE charge sheet to TRP was disingenuous as Konar
informed TRP
of the charges by showing them the charge sheet, albeit
not making a copy of the charge sheet available to TRP’s
representatives.
[35]
Considering the nature and content of the
charges laid by Konar against Oosthuizen and Asa in the context of
the environment in
which ORCA conducted business and the nature of
the services offered by ORCA, it followed that TRP’s
representatives were
concerned that any future engagement by TRP with
the applicants might bring reputational risk to TRP.
[36]
Konar relied on a duty to disclose the
pending charges that he allegedly believed to be true. The fact that
Konar levied the charges
with ACFE and thereafter utilised the
circumstances of the pending charges for his own gainful ends
reflected Konar’s
mala fides
.
[37]
However, Konar’s alleged ‘duty’
did not extend to besmirching the applicants’ good names and
reputations,
especially in circumstances where the applicants had not
yet been heard by ACFE and the hearings fnalised by ACFE.
[38]
The applicants explained the facts
underlying their contention that the charges were without merit and
nothing more than ‘mere
allegations’. I am not inclined
to foreshadow the outcome of the ACFE hearings by dealing in this
judgment with the merits
or otherwise of the charges or the
applicants’ defences to them.
[39]
Accordingly, Oosthuizen and Asa
demonstrated
a prima facie
right to limited protection of their reputations, and ORCA, Asa and
Oosthuizen to the interim protection of ORCA’s business
interests.
[40]
In so far as the applicants contended that
Konar’s dealings with ORCA terminated in approximately November
2020, Konar could
not have knowledge of ORCA’s potential or
future clients. Thus, the applicants should be entitled to relief in
respect of
existing clients only and not future clients of ORCA.
[41]
As regards the apprehension of harm, the
applicants contended that Konar would continue with his defamatory
and prejudicial conduct
in the event that the order sought was not
granted,
[42]
Konar emphasised that he showed ACFE’s
charges to TRP only and not to any other party. Accordingly, Konar
contended that the
single publication to TRP served to exclude the
applicants’ claim for an interim interdict.
[43]
The loss of TRP as a client to ORCA
together with the resultant income stream is, in all probability,
irreparable to ORCA given
that TRP’s renewed contract would
have endured for a five-year period. Furthermore, the potential loss
of any additional
client/s to ORCA and / or damage to Oosthuizen and
ASA’s reputations would be, in all probability, similarly
irrecoverable
to the applicants justifying interim relief of a
limited nature.
[44]
The balance of convenience of interim
relief, pending finalisation of ACFE’s charges against
Oosthuizen and Asa and limited
to OCAR’s current clients,
favours the applicants. This is because such an order would serve to
protect the applicants interests
for as short a period as possible,
being the period pending finalisation of the charges raised by ACFE
and finalisation of this
application.
[45]
The urgency in the application arose from
the applicants being made aware on 8 December 2021, that Konar
informed TRP’s representatives
of the content of the charge
sheet.
[46]
Thereafter, on 9 December 2021, TRP’s
representatives advised Oosthuizen and Asa that TRP would not renew
its contract with
ORCA, the reason being potential reputational risk
to TRP. That alleged potential risk could only have arisen pursuant
to Konar
exhibiting the content of the charge sheet to TRP’s
representatives.
[47]
In the circumstances, the applicants are
entitled to interim relief and I propose granting an order in such
terms.
[48]
The costs of this application will be
reserved for determination by the court seized with finalisation of
this application.
[49]
By reason of the abovementioned, I grant
the following order:
[50]
Pending final determination of:
50.1.1
This application in the ordinary course;
and
50.1.2
The charges raised by ACFE against the
first and second applicants:
50.2
The respondent is interdicted, both on his
own behalf and / or on behalf of any other person or party, (be they
natural or juristic),
directly or indirectly, from:
50.2.1
distributing or disseminating copies of the
charge sheet dated 25 October 2021 issued by the Association of
Certified Fraud Examiners
(“ACFE”) against the first and
second applicants, to any of the third applicant’s clients or
any third parties;
50.2.2
distributing or disseminating copies of any
complaints made by the respondent or any person or party, (natural or
juristic), acting
on the respondent’s behalf, to any of the
third applicant’s clients or any third parties;
50.2.3
Defaming and/or making untrue statements in
respect of any one or more of the applicants to any of the third
applicant’s clients
or any third parties; and
50.2.4
Communicating the contents of ACFE’s
charges and / or complaints dated 25 October 2021 against the first
and second applicants,
in any manner, verbally or in writing, to any
of the third applicant’s clients or any third parties.
[51]
The costs of this application are reserved
for determination by the court seized with finalisation of this
application.
CRUTCHFIELD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the 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 15 Match 2022.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Ms E R Venter.
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Stan Fanaroff & Associates.
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Mr C Snoyman.
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Ebrahim Asvat Attorneys.
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
23 December 2021.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
15 March 2022.
[1]
Le
Roux v Dey
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC) (‘
Le
Roux’
)
para 84.
[2]
Id
para 85.
[3]
Le
Roux v Dey
2010
(4) SA 210
(SCA) para 8.
[4]
Id
para 15.
[5]
Hix
Networking Technologies v System Publishers (Pty) Ltd & Another
[1996] ZASCA 107
;
1997
(1) SA 391
(SCA) at 402 (‘
Hix
’).
[6]
Midi
Television (PTY) Ltd t/a E-TV v Director of Public Prosecutions
(Western Cape)
[2007] ZASCA 56
;
2007
(5) SA 540
(SCA) (
Midi
Television).
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