Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 656South Africa
Phaleng-Podile v Dovey (28223/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 656 (6 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary of relevant facts
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 656
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Phaleng-Podile v Dovey (28223/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 656 (6 September 2022)
Phaleng-Podile v Dovey (28223/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 656 (6 September 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_656.html
sino date 6 September 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 28223
/2020
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
6/09/2022
In the matter between:
MMATLOU
HELLEN PHALENG - PODILE
Applicant
And
NORANNE
DOVEY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Todd AJ
Introduction
1.
The Applicant and Respondent live in the same
residential scheme, known as Ambiance, in Fourways, Johannesburg. The
Applicant is
a member of the Board of Trustees of the Ambiance body
corporate.
2.
The Applicant seeks relief on grounds that the
Respondent published a defamatory and false statement concerning her
on a Whatsapp
group established for members of the body corporate.
She seeks an award in an amount of R500,000 as a
solatium
for the infringement of her good name and
reputation and an apology and ancillary relief.
Summary of relevant
facts
3.
The facts giving rise to the application took
place at the onset of the first Covid lockdown, on 27 March 2020.
4.
The Applicant and Respondent are among 42
residents of the Ambiance residential scheme who were, at the time,
members of the residents’
Whatsapp group.
5.
The trouble started when the Applicant posted a
message on the Whatsapp group in which she said she was alerting
residents to the
fact that two people were walking around the scheme
as a form of exercise, in breach of the recently announced lockdown
regulations.
6.
Her message went on to state, among other things
that –
“…
this
should be dealt with before they open flood gates otherwise if it
does not stop then it is reportable. Please can we try and
act
responsibly in the interest of the community of Ambiance. We don’t
take this virus likely.
”
7.
The Respondent was for some reason irritated by
this message. Her response, directed at the Applicant, was
undoubtedly rude and
could perhaps also be characterized as
provocative:
“
It
is ONLY them. Nobody else is outside. Why don’t you do
something productive with your time instead of monitoring other
ppl
out of your window!”
8.
The Applicant responded to this message, hitting
back in similar tone:
“
It’s
immaterial how many people are outside Norrane. We have to adhere to
the national call to avoid chaos. It is reportable
if not treated
accordingly. I am a professional who has a lot of assignments to do
to make my time productive and I don’t
spend it on the window
monitoring people. That’s a nonsensical way of thinking and
indicative of lawlessness and stupidness.”
9.
The Respondent did not take kindly to the
suggestion that her way of thinking was stupid:
“
So
you think we are all stupid? Thank you Helen for taking it upon
yourself for baby sitting Ambiance in your professional capacity…
I am assuming your services will be attached to our next levies.”
10.
At this juncture another resident intervened with
a message critical of the Respondent:
“
Noranne
this is not necessary honestly.
Helen as a Trustee was
merely sending out a cautionary reminder to all as to how we are to
conduct ourselves including our children
during this lockdown with an
example of a few who are not adhering to the President’s call
to action.”
11.
Not content with this admonition of the
Respondent’s stance, the Applicant followed up herself, this
time with a more hard-hitting
response that directly insulted the
Respondent:
“
Norrane,
it’s very clear that you are not at my level or any of the
majority of owners level of thinking. Something intellectually
casts
doubt each time you address issues on this platform. You are a real
joke, shame.”
12.
The Respondent then responded with the insult that
is the subject of this application:
“
Nice
- you racist.”
13.
This led to another intervention by a different
resident:
“
Really
people.
This is not necessary
during this time. Please just stay within your garden and we can all
be happy and move on.”
14.
The chairman of the body corporate at the time
then also entered the fray. He posted a lengthy message on the group
that was directly
critical of the Respondent:
“
Good
morning Noranne.
Inasmuch as I
encourage robust engagement, I will not, as I would hope many of us
on this platform, condone rudeness. I think your
initial response was
uncalled for in its tone.
Can we engage without
personalizing issues? This pandemic is a serious one and the sooner
we collectively appreciate our responsibility
in preventing its
spread, the better for us and our families. It is indeed a reportable
issue if certain actions are deemed or
seen to compromise the
communities in which we live so let’s avoid creating acrimony
especially in such a small community.
That’s my plea
to all of us. Let’s foster co-existence than point scoring when
all our lives are at risk. Sarcasm won’t
build us up.
Best regards.”
15.
Although the papers do not contain a full record
of the exchanges on the group at the time, after the chairman’s
intervention
other residents posted messages essentially thanking him
for his maturity and guidance.
16.
In her founding affidavit the Applicant contended
that the message labelling her as racist would have been read by many
if not all
of the approximately 42 participants on the Whatsapp
group. The Applicant confirmed that some residents had “condemned”
the Respondent for publishing “an irresponsible and unwarranted
statement”.
The Applicant’s
contentions
17.
The Applicant contends that the publication of the
assertion that she was a racist on a Whatsapp group was wrongful and
defamatory
of her character and reputation. She asserts that the
words were clearly understood by readers of the Whasapp group to
confirm
that she was a racist. Any reasonable person, the Applicant
contended, would have regard to the meaning of the term racist in its
context “
and as such conclude that
my behaviour is that of a racist
”
.
18.
She points to the possibility of some recipients
on the Whatsapp group distributing the defamatory statement to
additional persons
as presenting a risk to her and her reputation,
and continues by asserting that persons labelled as racists are
generally ostracized
in society and are not considered for public
office.
19.
The Applicant further contends that the
publication of the statement infringed her inherent self-worth as a
professional, spouse,
parent and fellow unit holder within the
Ambiance community, and that the Respondent had tarnished her good
name and reputation:
“
I
am a reputable women of note, god fearing Christian respected in my
Christian community and a prominent social figure who by virtue
of my
profession and non-executive directorship roles experiences
considerable public attention of which being labelled as a racist
without any factual basis is extremely scandalous, caused
humiliation, hurt my feelings and damaged my reputation in all roles
and profoundly continues to be worrisome the kind of potential
damages that the defamatory statement carries.”
20.
She continues:
“
In
relation to the high esteem in which I am held, it has always been to
my advantage to at all times maintain a standard of professionalism,
integrity, humility and fairness. Any malicious interference to my
reputation that casts doubt to my professionalism and integrity
imply
severe financial and reputational damage that grossly serve to my
detriment, which I clearly will not allow.”
21.
In her founding papers the Applicant elaborated
further on the harm that the accusation had caused or was likely to
cause her, including
reputational damage in the eyes of the
community, within the Ambiance scheme; reputational damage when she
serves in public roles;
tarnishing of the name and reputation of the
legal practice of which she is the founder; diminishing her good name
in the eyes
of an objective and reasonable person; diminishing her
public esteem; subjectively wounding her or injuring her feelings;
causing
great hurt to her dignity and reputation; and causing her to
feel belittled and humiliated. It would also, she asserted, undermine
her legitimacy and authority as a well-respected legal professional,
neighbour, mother and wife.
22.
On the strength of these assertions the Applicant
states that an amount of R500,000 would compensate her for the harm
caused to
her good name, her wounded feelings and her loss of
reputation.
23.
The Applicant also sought an interdict that would
preclude the Respondent from making similar statements in the future.
24.
The Applicant separately pursued a criminal charge
of defamation which she laid at the Douglasdale police station. The
charge was
dismissed without her knowledge and she sought reasons
from the prosecutor assigned to the case as to why this had occurred.
The Respondent’s
contentions
25.
The Respondent’s answer to the application
was somewhat perplexing. At the outset, when a letter of demand was
first sent,
her then attorneys referred to the fact that the
Applicant had herself launched an unwarranted and defamatory attack
on the Respondent’s
intelligence, but otherwise admitted that
the Respondent had referred to the Applicant as a racist, denied that
this was defamatory,
but offered an apology.
26.
This was communicated in a letter from her then
attorneys as follows:
“
Our
client admits having referred to your client as being “racist”,
however, based on our client’s instructions
such reference
occurred without the intention of defaming your client and
furthermore without knowledge of it being wrongful. …however,
for the sake of peace and with a view of resolving the matter, our
client without admitting liability, hereby extends an apology
to your
client to the extent that your client perceived our client’s
response to her unwarranted and a defamatory attack
on our client’s
intelligence as being defamatory of her character.”
27.
In her answering papers, after taking a series of
technical points about the pleadings, the Respondent pleaded that the
statement
complained of constituted a comment or opinion and not a
statement of fact, and that it would have been understood in that way
by a reasonable reader.
28.
The Respondent went on to assert that the comment
was fair, and she set out details of certain previous interactions
with the Applicant
which led her to the conclusion that the Applicant
could in fact fairly be described as racist.
Summary of applicable
legal principles
29.
For a statement to defame it must in the eyes of a
reasonable observer undermine the status, good name or reputation of
that person.
Because the standard of proof is probability of injury,
the plaintiff must prove that a reasonable person would have thought
less
of the plaintiff because of the statement.
30.
It
follows that determining whether or not a statement is defamatory
involves a two-stage inquiry. The first stage is to establish
the
natural ordinary meaning of the statement in its localized factual
context. The second is to establish whether that meaning
is
defamatory.
[1]
31.
The
usual test for determining whether or not the meaning of a statement
is defamatory is by asking whether the statement would
probably lower
the Plaintiff in the estimation of right thinking members of society
generally. The applicable principles are explained
as follows by the
Constitutional Court in
Le
Roux v Dey
:
[2]
“
[168] The
conventional test for determining whether a statement is defamatory
is if it would probably lower the plaintiff in the
estimation of
right-thinking members of society generally. This test has been
widely applied in our courts, subject to the qualification
that the
reference to “right-thinking persons” is no more than a
convenient description of a reasonable person of normal
understanding
and development, and that the reference to the views of society
“generally” includes views held by a
substantial section
of the community.
[169] This test is
useful and practically expedient if it is understood properly as an
objective test to determine whether the reputation
of a person has
been objectively infringed, on a balance of probabilities. The
Supreme Court of Appeal appears to have taken this
test to mean that
likelihood is not a requirement, but that it is sufficient if a
statement merely has the “tendency”
to undermine the
status, good name or reputation of a person, to qualify as
defamatory. In our view this approach does not take
sufficient
account of constitutional values and norms, nor the practice in our
courts even before the advent of the Constitution.
[170] The suggestion
that a person may be defamed without probable impairment of his right
to reputation is inconsistent with the
decisions in Botha v Marais
and Demmers v Wyllie. These state that the determination of
impairment of the right to reputation should
be done objectively and
should be proven on a balance of probabilities. It is also
inconsistent with the requirement of publication
of a defamatory
statement and the concomitant requirement that the ordinary or
reasonable reader of the published statement must
have understood the
statement as defamatory.”
(footnotes omitted)
32.
In summary, the test is
whether it is more likely, more probable than not, that the statement
will harm the plaintiff.
A
statement calculated or having the tendency or propensity to defame
is only defamatory if it objectively and as a matter of probability
causes the impairment of a plaintiff’s good name.
[3]
Evaluation
33.
Turning to the present matter I accept that the
statement made by the Respondent was intended to insult and offend
the Applicant.
The natural and ordinary meaning of the word racist
describes a person who unjustifiably and improperly views others
through the
lens of their race, and applies differential treatment to
persons depending on their race.
34.
It does not follow, however, that the statement
used in the context in which it was used in fact lowered the
Applicant in the estimation
of right-thinking members of the Whatsapp
group, or that its use would probably lower the Applicant in the
estimation of right
thinking members of society generally.
35.
In fact, it seems to me to be very unlikely that
reasonable or “right thinking” members of the Whatsapp
group or of
society generally who read the statement in the context
of the Whatsapp group conversation within which it was made would
think
less of the Applicant in consequence of the statement having
been made. Certainly no right-thinking member of society would have
reached the conclusion, based on the statement, that the Applicant
was in fact a racist.
36.
It seems to me that the average reasonable person
on the Whatsapp group, and right thinking members of society more
generally, would
have considered the Respondent to have been entirely
unjustified in making the statement, and would have thought less of
the Respondent
for making it rather than of the Applicant as the
person at whom the statement was directed.
37.
It is more probable, in my view, that the
Applicant’s own insulting statements, which she directed at the
Respondent immediately
beforehand, would have lowered her in the
estimation of right thinking members of society than that the
Respondent’s insult
would have had that effect.
38.
The average reasonable person reading the
statement would read it in the context in which it was made. That
context includes the
statements that immediately preceded it and also
the further statements that followed. These including statements by
other members
of the group and the chairman of the body corporate
that were critical of the Respondent. The chairman reprimanded the
Respondent
in very clear terms for her approach.
39.
The average reasonable person would not have read
or given consideration to the Respondent’s statement in
isolation, would
have read the exchange as a whole, and would not
have taken one statement in isolation out of that context.
40.
In summary – the statement that a person is
a racist has a meaning that is capable of defaming; but the statement
made by
the Respondent in the particular context in which it was made
would not, on the probabilities, have served to lower the Applicant
in the estimation of right thinking members of society.
41.
It would have been available to the Applicant to
plead, as an alternative to the defamation cause of action, an
iniuria
arising
from the insult. In
Le Roux v Dey
(supra) the court set out the applicable legal
principles in the following passages:
“
[141]
Traditional learning generally defines iniuria as the wrongful and
intentional impairment of a person’s
physical integrity
(corpus), dignity (dignitas), or reputation (fama). Academic authors
are in agreement, however, that although
the time-honoured three-fold
distinction is a useful classificatory device to highlight the
different interests involved, these
interests often overlap. Thus,
for example, although assault is classified as an infringement of
physical integrity it will also
often infringe the victim’s
sense of dignity; malicious attachment of property will frequently
carry with it an infringement
of the plaintiff’s reputation or
dignity or both while the infringement of reputation will almost
always be accompanied by
an affront to dignity.” (footnotes
omitted)
…
“
[154]
Our common law recognises that people have different claims for
injuries to their reputation (fama) and
to their own sense of
self-worth (dignitas). Both are affronts to the rights of
personality, and although the Bill of Rights does
not always draw
sharp lines between the two, the distinction is important to our new
constitutional order. It illuminates the tolerance
and respect for
other people’s dignity expected of us by the Constitution in
our public and private encounters with one another.
We may be deeply
hurt and insulted by the actions of others, in calling or portraying
us as what we have chosen, freely, not to
be, or to keep private,
even though we are not defamed. It may be that the personal insult or
injury may not be considered, in
the public eye, as something that
harmed our reputation. But within limits our common law, and the
Constitution, still value and
protect our subjective feelings about
our dignity.”
[4]
(footnotes omitted)
42.
A claim for impairment of
dignity comprises both a subjective and an objective element. The
subjective element requires that the
plaintiff must in fact feel
insulted. To satisfy the objective element our law requires that a
reasonable person would feel insulted
by the same conduct.
[5]
43.
A claim of this kind must, however, be pleaded. It
was not pleaded by the Applicant nor advanced in argument.
44.
Had such a claim been pleaded, it seems to me that
there may have been sufficient evidence on the papers to establish
both the subjective
and objective elements referred to above.
Although the Applicant’s assertions about the degree of hurt
that she had experienced
from the insult appeared in certain respects
to be exaggerated, and her assertions in the founding papers
suggested that she may
have been somewhat oversensitive, I would have
accepted that a reasonable person would feel insulted by being
labelled a racist.
45.
Having said that, the quantum of damages that I
might have been inclined to award in the circumstances, in particular
in the context
of an exchange in which the Applicant herself had
clearly insulted the Respondent as well, would have been minimal. In
Le Roux v Dey
the
Constitutional Court ordered the payment of compensation in an amount
of R25,000 and that an apology be issued. Had I been presented
with a
pleaded case for
injuria
the
damages likely to have been awarded would have been significantly
less than that amount, and perhaps nominal only.
46.
The
Applicant also sought an interdict. The underlying cause of action
relied upon in seeking that relief appears, from the formulation
of
the Applicant’s case, to have been defamation, which I have
found not to have occurred. Even if this finding were not
correct, or
if I were at liberty to consider granting an interdict on grounds
that the offending words constituted
iniuria
,
I am not satisfied that any grounds exist on which to grant an
interdict of the kind sought. As explained in Prest
[6]
,
one of the requisites for the grant of a final interdict is that the
injury should be a continuing one. A court will not grant
an
interdict restraining an act already committed, because it is not a
remedy for a past invasions of rights. A past infringement
of rights
may constitute evidence from which a court implies an intention to
continue along the same course, but no case of this
kind has been
made out in the present matter. In addition, I would not have granted
an interdict in circumstances in which a claim
for damages would
produce adequate redress for any future infringement.
47.
If follows from what I have stated above that the
application stands to be dismissed. On the question of costs, both
parties sought
an order for costs if they were successful. On behalf
of the Respondent it was submitted that even if the application was
successful
no costs should be awarded. In my view the Respondent’s
conduct in the course of the events that triggered the litigation,
and the manner in which she conducted her defence, do her no credit.
She should expect, if she casts similar insults in the future,
that
she might face more severe adverse consequences in law. At the same
time the Applicant has been unsuccessful in this litigation
and her
own conduct, in the course of the initial Whatsapp exchange and in
seeking unrealistic compensation for exaggerated harm,
does her
little credit either. In the circumstances, this seems to me to be a
case in which it is appropriate to make no order
for costs.
Order
48.
In the circumstances, the application is
dismissed. There is no order as to costs.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
REFERENCES
For
the Applicant:
Adv. Collin Shongwe
Instructed
by:
Phaleng-Podile Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv. M Mudimeli
Instructed
by:
Benjamin Schmulian Attorneys
Judgment
reserved:
18 August 2022
Judgment
delivered:
6 September 2022
[1]
See
le
Roux v Dey
2011
(3) SA 274
(CC) at paragraphs [89] to [91];
Sindani
v van der Merwe and others
2002
(2) SA 32
(SCA) at paragraph [10] and
SA
Associated Newspapers Ltd v Samuels
1980
(1) SA 24
(A) at 30 F-G
[2]
At paras [168] to [170]; and
see
Independent
Newspaper Holdings Ltd v Suliman
2004
(3) ALLSA 137
(SCA) at paras 29 – 30;
Ntembi
Mahanyele v Mail and Guardian Limited and another
2004
(6) SA 329
(SCA) at para 25;
Delta
Motor Corporation (Pty) Limited v van der Merwe
2004
(6) SA 185
(SCA) at para 10.
[3]
Le
Roux v Dey
at
paras [91] and [173]
[4]
Referring also to
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
[2002] ZACC 12
;
2002
(5) SA 401
(CC) at para 27.
[5]
Le
Roux v Dey at para [143], referring to
Delange
v Costa
1989
(2) SA 857
(A) at 862A-I .
[6]
The
Law and Practice of Interdicts
,
Juta, 1996 at p44
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Phaleng-Podile vs Dovey (28223/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1038 (13 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1038High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Phaleng-Podile v Compeg Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (22/19883) [2024] ZAGPJHC 481 (6 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 481High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Phaleng-Podile v Dovey (A2023-005228) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1475 (27 December 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1475High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Phalatse and Another v Speaker of the City of Johannesburg and Others (2022/26790) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1054 (25 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1054High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Phaladi v S (A74/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 899 (11 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 899High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar