Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 285South Africa
Nyathela and Another v National Arts Council of South Africa and Another (14562/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 285 (29 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 April 2022
Headnotes
judgment, it was not a procedural irregularity or mistake in respect of the issue of the order. It is not possible to conclude that the
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nyathela and Another v National Arts Council of South Africa and Another (14562/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 285 (29 April 2022)
Nyathela and Another v National Arts Council of South Africa and Another (14562/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 285 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
14562/2018
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED. NO
DATE: 29 April 2022
In the matter between:
NYATHELA, FREDDIE
FIRST APPLICANT
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
ROADIES ASSOCIATION SECOND APPLICANT
And
THE NATIONAL ARTS
COUNCIL OF SOUTH
FIRST RESPONDENT
AFRICA
MANGOPE,
ROSEMARY
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Manoim J
[1] This is an
application for rescission of an order that had been granted on an
unopposed basis. The order was granted on 20 September
2018 and is
based on defamatory allegations that the applicants had made
concerning the respondents.
[2] Briefly the order
required the applicants in this rescission (Freddie Nyathela
(Nyathela) and the South African Roadies Association
(SARA)) to:
a. Remove certain
defamatory material concerning the respondents from their social
media sites; and
b. Interdicted them
from making on social media and otherwise, defamatory statements
about the respondents including “…the
same or similar to
the subject matter of this application”.
[3]
The
second applicant (SARA) is a voluntary association that represents
the interests of persons who provide sound and lighting solutions
to
the musical industry. Its focus is to provide skills training on this
aspect of the industry to previously disadvantaged individuals
The
first applicant (Nyathela) is its president.
[4]
The
first respondent, the National Arts Council of South Africa (NACSA)
is an organ of state, established in terms of the
National Arts
Council Act, 56 of 1997
. Relevant to this application is that
NACSA provides funding from the public purse to persons and
organisations engaged in
the creative industry sector. The second
respondent Rosemary Mangope (Mangope) was at the relevant time its
chief executive officer.
[5] During 2014 Nyathela
applied to NACSA for funding for his organisation. He made at least
two applications; there is some dispute
if he caused a third funding
application to be made in 2015 (he alleges it was a fake to discredit
his two earlier applications)
but that is irrelevant to the current
matter.
[6] He was unsuccessful
in his applications. Aggrieved by these refusals which he considered
unfair, Nyathela became vocal and made
accusations against NACSA and
Mangope, inter alia, accusing her and NACSA of maladministration,
corruption and abuse of power.
These allegations were first published
in three articles in the Sowetan Newspaper and later on a social
website belonging to SARA
and a private twitter account belonging to
Nyathela, for a period ranging from April 2015 well into 2017.
[7] The respondents then
applied for an interdict against NACSA and Nyathela in April 2018. I
will refer to this from now on as
the main application.
[8] The applicants filed
a notice of intention to oppose and then in May 2018 brought an
application in terms of
rule 35(12)
for discovery of certain
documents and for security for costs in terms of
Rule 47.
Both
applications were opposed by respondents. The applicants then brought
an application to compel in terms of
Rule 35(12)
in July 2018.
Meantime the respondents had set the main matter down on the
unopposed roll on the 24 July.
[9] The applicants
objected and the main matter was by consent removed from the roll.
The respondents then filed an affidavit opposing
the
Rule 35
application in August. Thus this application was then opposed.
However, the applicants never took any further steps to set
this
Rule
35
application down. Nor did the applicants file an affidavit to
oppose the main application.
[10] The respondents had
the main application set down on the unopposed roll for 20 September.
There was no appearance for the applicants
and the order was granted.
[11] There is no dispute
that the notice of set down for that day had been properly served on
the applicant’s correspondent
attorneys. But due to an error
made by the correspondent (which is acknowledged together with a
mea
culpa
) the set down never came to the notice of the applicants or
their instructing attorneys. Accordingly, the order was granted on an
unopposed basis. This is the order the applicants now seek to
rescind.
Basis
for the challenge
[12] The applicants seek
rescission on three possible bases.
Rule 31(2)(b)
,
Rule 42
and the
common law.
[13]
Rule 42
applies when
an order has been granted erroneously in the absence of an affected
party.
[14] There is no basis to
invoke this rule. The order was not granted erroneously. The
applicants were properly served with notice
of the set down of the
application – this is not disputed – and it is the fault
of their attorneys, not the respondents
who had complied with the
rules that they were not appraised of the set down.
[15] This was clearly set
out in the leading case on this point
Colyn v Tiger Food
Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA)
where the court held:
“
The defendant
describes what happened as a filing error in the office of his Cape
Town attorneys. That is not a mistake in the proceedings.
However,
one describes what occurred at the defendant's attorneys’
offices which resulted in the defendant's failure to oppose
summary
judgment, it was not a procedural irregularity or mistake in respect
of the issue of the order. It is not possible to conclude
that the
order was erroneously sought by the plaintiff or erroneously granted
by the Judge. In the absence of an opposing affidavit
from the
defendant there was no good reason for Desai J not to order summary
judgment against him."
[16] The facts of this
case are identical to those in Colyn. There is no basis then for
rescission under
Rule 42.
[17]
Rule
32(1)
and the common law basis for rescission both have a common
aspect: Under
rule 32
the applicant must show
that
he has a bona fide defence to the plaintiff’s
claim.
[1]
[18]
Under
the common law the applicant must show the applicant must show he has
a bona fide defence, which prima facie has some prospect
of
success.
[2]
[19] The sting of the
defamation published by the respondents on their website is to accuse
the respondents of corruption, maladministration
and abuse of power.
Other allegations are made but this was the most serious to be made
out in the main application.
[20]
The
applicants defence is that these comments were justified as being
true and to the public benefit or fair comment. It is trite
law that
in defamation where a party raises such a defence that party
bears an onus; not merely an evidential onus.
[3]
[21] After these claims
had been made by the applicants, two investigations into them were
conducted at the instance of the Department
of Arts and Culture.
These investigations were conducted by independent firms. Both firms
concerned came to the conclusion that
there was no basis to the
allegations.
[22] In addition, Ms
Mangope became the subject of internal disciplinary proceedings. In a
supplementary affidavit she reports that
the following the inquiry
she was found not guilty.
[23] The applicants
attempt to show a bona fide defence by criticising the two
investigations on procedural grounds. Even if this
criticism is
correct, and I express no view on this, it does not help them. What
they fail to show is that they have any facts
to justify the
accusations they made in the first place. They have not begun to make
out such a case.
[24] Nor does the
interdict constitute a grave invasion of their democratic rights to
criticise the first respondent for denying
its funding application.
They may not make defamatory comments but they are not gagged from
otherwise commenting.
[25] The applicants have
failed to demonstrate that they have a bona fide defence. I do not
consider therefore that there is any
basis made out for rescission
either under
Rule 32
or the common law.
[26]
The application must fail
Costs
[27]
At a late
stage in this litigation the first and second respondents became
separately represented, as Mangope was no longer employed
by NACSA.
Mangope had separate heads of argument drawn up by counsel on her
behalf and was separately represented at the
hearing. However, both
in heads of argument and at the hearing, her counsel made common
cause with counsel for the first respondent.
It would be unfair to
make the applicants pay the for the cost of two legal teams. I will
therefore only award one set of costs
for that period and those are
awarded to the first respondent.
ORDER
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. Costs are
awarded to the first and second respondent, up until the time they
became separately represented, and thereafter
to the first respondent
only.
N
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on
29
April 2022.
Date
of Hearing:
8 March 2022
Date
of
Judgment:
29 April 2022
Appearances:
Counsel
for the 1
st
& 2
nd
Applicant:
Adv M. M. du Plessis
082 389
0392
Instructed
by:
Mthembu Inc Attorney
zthokozani@mmlegal.co.za
Counsel
for the 1
st
Respondent:
Adv W. Bezuidenhout
Instructed
by:
Mobeen Moosa Attorneys Inc
011 483
0945
info@mmoosa.co.za
Counsel
for the 2
nd
Respondent:
Adv Dzimba
The
Maisels group
qhawe@law.co.za
[1]
See for instance
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v El-Naddaf
1999
(4) SA 779
(W) at 784
It
is sufficient to set out facts that would constitute a defence at
trial:
Nathan (Pty) Ltd v All Metals (Pty) Ltd
1961 (1) SA
297
(D) at 300F;
Sanderson Technitool (Pty) Ltd v Intermenua
(Pty) Ltd
1980 (4) SA 570
(W) at 575–5
[2]
De Wet
v Western Bank Ltd
1979
(2) SA 1031
(A) at 1042
[3]
See
for instance
Kemp
v Another v Republican Press (Pty) Ltd
1994
(4) SA 261
(E) where the court held that: “
One
of the ways in which the presumption of unlawfulness may be rebutted
is by showing that the publication was made on a so-called
'privileged occasion', for example that the words complained of are
true and their publication to the public benefit
- in
which case the publication is regarded as being in the interest of
public policy and therefore lawful - see for example
Borgin v De
Villiers and Another
1980 (3) SA 556
(A) at 571. The defence of
truth in the public benefit thus relates to the
'onregmatigheidselement' of the delict of defamation
- Marais v
Richard en 'n Ander
1981 (1) SA 1157
(A) at 1166G-1167A and H
Neethling v Du Preez and Others
[1993] ZASCA 203
;
1994 (1) SA 708
(A) at 770C.
Accordingly, in our law, a defendant in a defamation action is
burdened with a full onus, not merely an evidential
onus, of proving
the facts in support of his defence of truth in the public benefit -
Neethling v Du Preez (supra, in particular
at 770H-J).
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