Munthali v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (23083/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 252; [2022] 8 BLLR 769 (GP) (13 April 2022)

80 Reportability
Defamation Law

Brief Summary

Defamation — Exception to particulars of claim — Plaintiff claiming punitive damages for alleged defamation arising from internal notice and media statement issued by Defendant — Defendant raising exception on grounds of lack of cause of action — Court considering whether publications were wrongful and defamatory — Internal notice announcing Plaintiff's suspension deemed to imply misconduct, thus potentially defamatory — Exception dismissed as Defendant failed to establish that particulars of claim lacked necessary averments to sustain a cause of action.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an opposed exception brought by the defendant, the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA), to the plaintiff’s particulars of claim. The defendant contended that the particulars of claim lacked the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action, principally because the publications relied on by the plaintiff were said to be not wrongful and not defamatory.


The plaintiff, Ms Nqobile Pearl Munthali, is a senior employee of PRASA. She instituted action claiming punitive damages framed in delict, alternatively constitutional punitive damages, and in a further alternative loss of earnings, arising from two published statements which she alleged were unlawful, wrongful, and intended to injure her dignity and reputation.


The procedural posture was that, at exception stage, the court was required to determine whether the particulars of claim, on their pleaded averments accepted as correct, disclosed a legally recognisable claim. The hearing occurred via MS Teams under divisional directives, and the judgment (written) was distributed electronically.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was defamation / injury to personality (fama) arising from an internal notice circulated within PRASA and a subsequent media statement issued publicly and to employees, both of which referenced the plaintiff’s suspension and employment status.


2. Material Facts


The plaintiff was a high-ranking employee of PRASA. She commenced employment as Chief Information Officer in May 2009 and later held other senior and acting executive roles. From August 2014 she occupied the position of Chief Executive Officer at PRASA Development Foundation, a position which the Labour Court had declared extant (as pleaded).


On 11 June 2019, the plaintiff’s employment contract was suspended. On 12 June 2019, PRASA published an internal notice announcing her suspension to approximately 15 000 employees. The internal notice stated that the suspension was with immediate effect, that it was “in line with the commitment to good corporate governance and the eradication of irregularities with the organisation,” and that PRASA “presumes innocence until due process have been completed.”


It was further pleaded that, following the suspension, no disciplinary proceedings were initiated against the plaintiff. On 31 July 2020, the plaintiff was notified that her suspension had been lifted, that disciplinary charges were withdrawn, and that she would remain on paid leave pending a resolution between the parties. PRASA did not circulate an internal notice communicating the withdrawal of the suspension to employees as it had done when announcing the suspension.


On 29 January 2021, the plaintiff was notified that her employment contract was terminated with immediate effect. On 30 January 2021, PRASA issued a media statement, published to the public and to employees, stating (in substance) that PRASA’s Board had reviewed executives’ contracts and concluded that some executives “ought to have left PRASA years ago,” that they had capitalised on board instability culminating in an extended and “unlawful stay”, and that their contracts were terminated. The media statement further stated in relation to the plaintiff that she had been on suspension for “alleged misconduct” and that, upon perusal of records, her contract should have terminated upon expiry of a five-year term.


Subsequently, on 24 February 2021, the Labour Court ordered PRASA to reinstate the plaintiff’s employment contract retrospectively from 29 January 2021.


The court approached the matter on the basis that, for purposes of exception, the pleaded facts were accepted as correct. The dispute, as framed by the parties for the exception, was confined to wrongfulness in the defamation sense, which in turn depended on whether the publications were defamatory on a reasonable-reader interpretation.


A further procedural fact addressed by the court was that the defendant’s counsel sought to expand the exception during argument by raising a complaint that the internal notice had not been attached as an annexure. The court treated this as not forming part of the pleaded grounds of exception and declined to entertain it.


3. Legal Issues


The central question was whether the plaintiff’s particulars of claim disclosed a cause of action for defamation (and related pleaded claims), which depended on whether the internal notice and the media statement were capable of bearing a defamatory meaning and thus were prima facie wrongful.


The court was required to determine, applying established defamation methodology, the meaning of each publication as it would be understood by a reasonable reader in context, and whether that meaning had the tendency to undermine the plaintiff’s reputation or esteem. Although the defendant argued the publications were not defamatory, the adjudicative task was primarily one of application of law to the pleaded facts, with a strong component of interpretation (what the words would reasonably convey), assessed on the standard appropriate to exception proceedings (i.e., whether the words might be defamatory).


A subsidiary procedural issue was whether the defendant could rely, in argument, on a ground (relating to the non-attachment of annexure “C”) that was not articulated in the notice of exception, and whether the court’s enquiry could be enlarged beyond the exception’s stated grounds.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court first dealt with the attempted expansion of the exception beyond its pleaded grounds. It characterised an exception as a pleading and held that the excipient is bound by the case made out in the exception as framed. Although counsel attempted to introduce a new complaint regarding the internal notice not being attached as annexure “C”, the court found that no distinct ground to that effect appeared in the notice of exception and no amendment was sought. The court therefore confined itself to the grounds actually advanced in the exception.


On the merits, the court accepted that the enquiry (as the parties had framed it) was confined to wrongfulness, and treated wrongfulness as turning on whether the publications were defamatory. It applied the established two-stage enquiry for defamation: first, determine the meaning of the publication as a matter of interpretation; second, determine whether that meaning is defamatory (that is, whether it has the tendency or is calculated to injure reputation).


In determining meaning, the court emphasised the objective standard of the reasonable person of ordinary intelligence, and that meaning must be assessed in context, including the nature of the audience. For the internal notice, context included that it was communicated internally to approximately 15 000 employees, including persons over whom the plaintiff exercised authority.


Internal notice


In relation to the internal notice, the court noted that the plaintiff’s pleaded case was that the publication was false, malicious, and defamatory, including because PRASA allegedly had no legal or factual foundation and thereafter took no disciplinary steps. The defendant’s case, as argued, was that the notice was merely to communicate a precautionary suspension and that it preserved the presumption of innocence.


The court rejected the defendant’s approach to meaning for two related reasons. First, the defendant effectively inserted a qualifier (“precautionary”) into the notice that was not published. Secondly, the defendant sought to rely on PRASA’s intent in publishing the notice to dictate meaning, whereas the court held that meaning is determined by the ordinary meaning of the words used, read in context, as understood by the reasonable reader.


On the court’s interpretation, the internal notice’s reference to suspension “with immediate effect” and its stated linkage to “good corporate governance” and “eradication of irregularities” was capable of conveying, by implication, that the plaintiff’s conduct was associated with impropriety of sufficient seriousness to warrant immediate suspension. The court accepted that, objectively viewed, such a notice might not leave the plaintiff’s esteem among employees in an advantageous position.


Turning to defamatory tendency, the court endorsed the approach that defamation does not require proof that reputation was actually injured; rather, the question is the probability or tendency of injury assessed objectively, and at exception stage the question is whether the statement may have that tendency. Given the wide internal circulation and the content’s implication of irregularity, the court concluded that the internal notice could possess the tendency to undermine the plaintiff’s status and reputation. The exception in respect of the internal notice therefore could not succeed.


Media statement


The court applied the same two-stage enquiry to the media statement. PRASA contended, broadly, that the statement was not defamatory because the plaintiff knew of and implemented a policy providing for fixed terms for executives, that the board believed her contract lapsed by operation of law, and that it was factually correct that she had been on suspension for allegations of misconduct.


The court held that the first two contentions did not advance the exception because the media statement, read as published, did not refer to the policy upon which PRASA relied, and the legal test was not the plaintiff’s knowledge of the underlying contractual or policy framework but rather the meaning conveyed by the publication and whether it tended to injure her reputation.


The court insisted that the media statement had to be read as a whole. It placed weight on the heading (“PRASA Terminates Contracts of Executives”), which signalled that the statement would explain which executives’ contracts were terminated and why. The body of the statement asserted that some executives should have left years earlier, that they had capitalised on board instability, and that their extended stay was “unlawful”. The statement then named three executives whose contracts were terminated, including the plaintiff, and stated that she had been on suspension for alleged misconduct, while also asserting that her contract ought to have terminated upon expiry of a five-year term.


On this structure and content, the court found that the ordinary meaning was that the plaintiff was one of the executives who knowingly and unlawfully overstayed her term, and the added reference to alleged misconduct contributed to an unfavourable impression. This, on an objective reasonable-reader assessment, was capable of undermining her reputation and was therefore defamatory. Accordingly, the exception in respect of the media statement also failed.


Having concluded that both publications were capable of defamatory meaning and therefore that the particulars of claim were not excipiable on the asserted basis, the court held that the exception as a whole could not succeed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the defendant’s exception in its entirety.


The order granted was that the defendant’s exception is dismissed with costs.


Cases Cited


Khumalo and Others v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 1 (CC).


Haarhoff v Wakefield 1955 (2) SA 425E.


Inkin v Borehole Drillers 1994 (2) SA 366.


Jowell v Bramwell-Jones and Others 1988 (1) SA 836 (W).


Makgae v Sentraboer Kooperatief (Bpk) 1981 (4) SA 239 (T).


Argus Printing and Publishers Company Limited v Esselen’s Estate [1993] ZSA 205; 1994 (2) SA 1 (A).


Mthembi-Mahanyele v Mail & Guardian Limited [2004] ZASCA 64.


Le Roux v Dey 2011 (3) SA 274 (CC).


Sutter v Brown 1926 AD 155.


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the defendant’s exception could not succeed because, accepting the pleaded facts as correct (as required on exception), the plaintiff’s particulars of claim disclosed a cause of action. Applying the objective reasonable-reader test and a two-stage defamation enquiry, the court held that both the internal notice and the media statement were each capable of bearing meanings that might be defamatory and therefore prima facie wrongful. The defendant was also held to the grounds advanced in its notice of exception and was not permitted to broaden the case in argument without amendment. The exception was dismissed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A pleading is excipiable only if it lacks averments necessary to sustain a cause of action; for this purpose, the court accepts the factual averments in the particulars of claim as correct.


An exception is a pleading, and the excipient is bound by the grounds expressly pleaded in the notice of exception. A party cannot expand the exception’s grounds in heads of argument or oral argument without properly amending the pleading.


Whether a publication is defamatory (and thus prima facie wrongful) is determined by a two-stage enquiry. The court first determines the publication’s meaning through interpretation, and then determines whether that meaning is defamatory.


Meaning is assessed objectively: the question is how a reasonable person of ordinary intelligence might understand the publication in its natural and ordinary sense, including what is conveyed by implication. The reasonable reader must be contextualised, including with reference to the nature of the audience.


In assessing defamation at exception stage, the focus is on whether the statement may have a tendency to harm reputation, rather than proof of actual harm. The publisher’s asserted intent does not determine meaning; meaning is derived from the words used, read in context.

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Munthali v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (23083/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 252; [2022] 8 BLLR 769 (GP) (13 April 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
13
APRIL 2022
CASE NO:
23083/2021
In
the matter between:
NQOBILE
PEARL
MUNTHALI
Plaintiff
and
PASSENGER RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Defendant
JUDGMENT
This matter has been heard via
MS Teams and disposed of in terms of the directives of the Judge
President of this Division. The order
has been handed down via MS
Teams and the written Judgment is now distributed electronically.
RETIEF
AJ
:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an opposed application in which the
Defendant has raised an
exception to the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim on the ground
that the particulars of claim lack the
necessary averments to sustain
a cause of action as against the Defendant.
[2]
The Plaintiff claims punitive damages framed
in delict alternatively
constitutional punitive damages, further in the alternative loss of
earnings arising from two published statements
which, according to
the Plaintiff are unlawful and wrongful intending to injure the
Plaintiff’s dignity and reputation.
[3]
The first statement concerns the publication
of an internal notice
dated the 12 June 2019 (“
internal notice
”) and the second
statement, the publication of a media statement dated 30 January 2021
(“
media statement
”).
[4]
The Defendant took
exception to the Plaintiff’s claim based on both the publications
stating that they were not wrongful and defamatory.
Both the parties
agreed that the Court’s enquiry
vis-à-vis
the publications is confined to the element of wrongfulness as
reiterated in
Holomisa
.
[1]
[5]
The Defendant’s Counsel however in his heads
of argument and in
argument, expanded the complaint and thus the Court’s enquiry, to
include the  publication of the internal
notice as the
Plaintiff, although referring to the internal notice in the
particulars of claim as annexure “C”, failed to attach
it. The
Defendant’s exception however failed to deal with it specifically
as a ground.
[6]
Accepting that an
exception is a pleading
[2]
and that the Defendant is free to frame the exception in any way it
chooses, the Defendant is bound by the manner in which the case
is
made out. The Defendant’s Counsel was asked to direct the Court to
the distinct cause relating to annexure “C” in its exception.
None existed. The Defendant’s Counsel did not move for an
amendment.
[7]
The Plaintiff in turn did
attach a copy of annexure “C”, being the internal notice itself
to its particulars of claim. Admittedly
it was a very unclear and
poor copy. Nonetheless, the Plaintiff too incorporated the entire
content of annexure “C” itself into
the body of the particulars.
The Defendant’s notice of exception did not attack the publication
“C” nor the terms of the internal
notice. Having regard to all
the circumstances I therefore declined to entertain a contention that
was not covered by the grounds
of the exception
[3]
and I proceed on the basis of the causes raised in the notice of
exception only.
[8]
Before dealing with the Defendant’s exception
it is important to
deal saliently with the background facts of the matter.
Background on the pleaded
facts
[9]
The Plaintiff is a high-ranking employee of
the Defendant. She
commenced her employment with the Defendant as a Chief Information
Officer with effect from  May 2009. Throughout
the tenure of the
Plaintiff’s employment with the Defendant, the Plaintiff occupied
various other senior and acting executive positions.
With effect from
August 2014, the Plaintiff assumed the position of Chief Executive
Officer at PRASA Development Foundation. This
position was declared
extant by the Labour Court of South Africa.
[10]
However, on 11 June 2019, the Plaintiff’s contract of employment
was suspended and on 12 June 2019, the Defendant announced her
suspension to approximately 15 000 of her fellow employees by
publishing the internal notice. The internal notice announced the
following:
“
The suspension is made with
immediate effect. The suspension is in line with the commitment to
good corporate governance and the eradication
of irregularities with
the organisation.
PRASA presumes innocence until
due process have been completed.”
[11]
This is the content of the internal notice being the subject
matter
referred to in the Defendant’s exception.
[12]
Subsequent to the immediate suspension in June 2019 no disciplinary
proceedings were initiated against the Plaintiff.
[13]
On 31 July 2020 the Plaintiff received notification that her
suspension had been lifted, that disciplinary charges had been
withdrawn and that she was to remain on paid leave pending a
resolution
between the parties.
[14]
The Defendant did not circulate an internal notice of withdrawal
of
suspension to inform its employees as it had done with the immediate
suspension nor was a resolution between the parties forthcoming.
[15]
Instead, and on 29 January 2021, the Plaintiff was notified
that her
employment contract was terminated with immediate effect and as a
direct result thereof and on 30 January 2021, the Defendant
now
issued the media notice.
[16]
The Defendant published a media statement to the public as
well as
its employees announcing,
inter alia
that:
“
PRASA Board of Control has
embarked on a review of contract of executives and other senior
managers. Pursuant to the review process,
it transpired upon analysis
of employment contracts of executors that some of them (executives)
ought to have left PRASA years ago.”
[17]
The Board also observed that the certain executives had been
aware at
all material times that their employment contracts were for a term
not exceeding 5 (five) years. The Board stated that the
executives
capitalised on the instability of the Board  culminating in
their extended and unlawful stay with the Defendant.
[18]
The Plaintiff’s employment was terminated with immediate
effect and the media notice stated further that:
“
Ms Pearl Munthali, Chief
executive Officer of PRASA Foundation, has been on suspension for
alleged misconduct
(own emphasis)
.
Upon perusal of records, it transpired that Ms Munthali’s
contract ought to have been terminated upon the expiry of a five year
term
.”
[19]
The media statement being the subject matter raised in the
Defendant’s exception.
[20]
Subsequent to the media statement and on 24 February 2021 the
Labour
Court ordered the Defendant to reinstate the Plaintiff’s employment
contract retrospectively from 29 January 2021.
Grounds raised in the
exception
[21]
The thrust of the
Defendant’s exception was that the Plaintiff’s particulars of
claim did not disclose a cause of action. On grounds
that no cause of
action is disclosed the Court must accept that all the averments in
the particulars of claim are correct.
[4]
[22]
Against this backdrop I now deal with the grounds raised by
the
Defendant in relation to the internal notice.
[23]
The Defendant’s complaint relating to the internal notice
was that
the internal notice was merely notifying the Defendant’s employees
that the Plaintiff had been put on “precautionary”
suspension and
to announce that the Plaintiff remained innocent until due process
had been completed.
[24]
The Defendant contends that the Defendant’s employees could
not
have understood from the content of the internal notice that the
Plaintiff was guilty of misconduct nor understood by Defendant’s
employees to defame her.
[25]
In argument, Defendant’s
Counsel, relying on the test of a reasonable reader, objectively
speaking, argued that the reasonable reader
could not have understood
the words in the internal notice in the ordinary sense or by
implication thereof, to be defamatory of the
Plaintiff, because at
the time, the Plaintiff was indeed facing unverified allegations and
had not been found guilty of misconduct
yet (i.e., at the time that
the internal notice was publicised). Therefore, the argument went,
that the reasonable reader could have
understood  that the
Plaintiff was simply placed on precautionary suspension
[5]
which might have not been understood by the Defendant’s employees
to undermine, subvert, or impair the Plaintiff’s good name,
reputation, or esteem.
[6]
[26]
Conversely, the Plaintiff in paragraph 6 of her Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim  alleges that the internal notice was
false, malicious, and defamatory in that at the time of the internal
notice the Defendant had no legal or factual foundation for the
complaint against the Plaintiff and after the fact took no further
steps of disciplinary procedures against the Defendant. In
consequence, the announcement without due process was defamatory and
wrongful.
[27]
In amplification, the Plaintiff deals with a factual foundation
and
reasons,
supra
, at paragraphs 6.2 to 6.7 of her particulars of
claim and relying on the suspension announced in the internal notice
of 12 June 2019
being lifted on 31 July 2020 without any disciplinary
steps being taken by the Defendant.
[28]
I now deal with the enquiry into whether the internal notice
is
defamatory.
[29]
It is well established
that to determine whether a publication is defamatory and therefore
prima facie
wrongful is a two-stage enquiry. The first enquiry is to determine
the meaning of the publication as a matter of interpretation and
the
second is whether the meaning is defamatory.
[7]
[30]
To answer the first
question the Court must determine the natural and ordinary meaning of
the publication:
[8]
how
might
[9]
a reasonable person of ordinary intelligence have understood it? The
test is objective. In determining its meaning the Court must
take
account not only of what the publication expressly conveys, but also
of what it implies, i.e., what a reasonable person may
infer from it.
[31]
Of importance it may also
be accepted that the reasonable person must be contextualised and
that one is not concerned with a purely
abstract exercise.
[10]
In other words, one might have regard to the nature of the audience,
and in this case in relation to the internal notice, have regard
to
the fact that it was an internal notice in which 15 000 other
employees, some her subordinates who were informed.
[32]
Applying the first
stage, the Plaintiff relying on
Le
Roux v Dey
[11]
stated that because the test is objective and an employee is the
legal construct of the “reasonable”, “average” or “ordinary”
person, the question is whether the statement was calculated (in the
sense of likelihood) to expose a person to hatred, contempt,
or
ridicule.
[33]
Applying the objective
guide in
Le Roux v Dey
and on the proper interpretation of the language used in the
Sutter
[12]
matter, the Plaintiff contends as to meaning that because the
internal notice uses the word “suspended” and that the use of the
word is in line with the Defendant’s objective to eradicate
“irregularities”, the normal meaning of the words
[13]
charges the Plaintiff with dishonest and improper conduct of such a
nature as to warrant suspension.
[34]
The Plaintiff contended further the fact that because the words
“immediate effect” are used in relation to the suspension, the
Defendant by implication conveyed that the suspension was necessary
to prevent further harm.
[35]
The Defendant in argument did not deal with the meaning of
the
internal notice as a matter of interpretation by dealing with the
ordinary meaning of the words used in context, but:
35.1
rather imported a new word namely “precautionary” before the word
suspension,
thereby creating its own narrative other than what
de
facto
was published. The narrative was used to support the
argument that the reasonable person could  view the suspension
in the light
of an anticipated misconduct. However, no qualification
to describe the type of suspension is published other than to state
that
the suspension is in line with the commitment to good corporate
governance
and
the eradication of irregularities within the
organisation. The inference being that the suspension is in line with
something improper.
35.2
In argument the Defendant failed to argue that the ordinary meaning
contextually
assigned to the words “irregularity” and
“suspension” could not possess the ordinary meaning assigned to
it as argued by
the Plaintiff.
[36]
Instead, the Defendant relies on its intent when publishing
the
internal notice to dictate the meaning thereof which is misplaced, as
the ordinary meaning of the words in context as contained
in the
internal notice itself is what determines how it may be interpreted
by the reasonable person. I accept the Plaintiff’s argument
in this
regard.
[37]
I now turn to the second enquiry of defamation of the publication.
In
other words, whether it might have “the tendency” or is
calculated to undermine the status, good name, or reputation of the
Plaintiff.
[38]
Neethling explains what
this means with the reference to ‘authority’:
[14]
“
It is notable that
the question of a factual injury to personality, that is, whether the
good name of the person concerned was actually
injured, is almost
completely ignored in the evaluation of wrongfulness or defamation.
In fact, generally
[15]
the witness may not even be asked how to understand the words or
behaviour
…”. In
consequence, it is
the
probability of injury rather than actual injury
as the issue. Objectively speaking, whether in the opinion of the
reasonable man, the esteem which the person enjoyed may be (in
the
case of an exception) or may have the tendency to adversely affected
the person’s esteem.
[39]
The Defendant essentially contends that because the internal
notice
was intended to be a precautionary suspension and that the Defendant
acted on the presumption of the Plaintiff’s innocence
until due
process had been completed, the internal notice could not have been
understood by the Defendant’s employees that the
Plaintiff was
guilty of any misconduct nor understood to defame her.
[40]
The Plaintiff however contended that because the internal notice
was
not publicised in the strictest of confidence, but rather to
approximately 15 000 employees over which the Plaintiff exercised
a
position of authority for a substantial number of years, it was the
intention by the Defendant to minimise the Plaintiff’s standing
with her subordinates. I too, can’t imagine that in the
circumstances to announce the suspension of a high-ranking official
within
an organisation, without first verifying the allegations, as
contended by the Defendant’s Counsel, could serve to the advantage
of the Plaintiff.
[41]
Furthermore, that because the suspension operated with immediate
effect, it inferred that the Plaintiff’s conduct was of such a
serious nature that the suspension was necessary to prevent further
harm.
[42]
Having regard to the arguments presented, the internal notice
announces to the ordinary employees that, in line with, alternatively
in terms of its commitment to corporate governance and the
eradication of irregularities, the suspension of a high-ranking
executive with immediate effect objectively viewed might not  leave
the esteem which the Plaintiff once  enjoyed as the executive in
the eyes of the reader in a more advantageous position.
[43]
In consequence, the internal notice could possess the tendency
to
undermine the Plaintiff’s status, good name and reputation with the
organisation.
[44]
The Defendant’s exception with regard to the internal notice
not
being defamatory must fail.
[45]
I now turn to the media statement applying the exact two-stage
enquiry.
[46]
The Defendant contends that the content of the media statement
is not
defamatory and in doing so essentially relies on the three main
reasons, namely:
46.1
That the Plaintiff was aware of, drafted, and during her position as
Group
Executive: Human Capital Management in 2015, was responsible
for implementing and monitoring the recruitment and selection policy
of 2018 (“
Policy
”) adopted by the Defendant’s Board. The
Policy stated that the appointment of senior and general management
and executive positions,
was for a fixed term (a period not exceeding
5 (five) years).
46.2
The Board was under the impression that the Plaintiff’s contract
had
lapsed by the operation of law as contemplated in the Policy.
46.3
The statement that the Plaintiff has been on suspension due to
allegations
of misconduct levelled against her is factually correct.
[47]
The first two reasons relied upon by the Defendant in no way
advances
the Defendant’s complaint as the media statement refers to the
Board of Control of the Defendant ascertaining knowledge
via
a
review of executive and other senior manager’s contracts. The media
statement makes no reference to the Policy relied upon by
the
Defendant in its exception. In any event, absent the reference to the
Policy, knowledge of a set of facts by the Plaintiff in
not the test,
but the meaning and/or inferred meaning of media statement and
whether the publication might have the tendency to is
calculated to
undermine the status, good name, or reputation of the Plaintiff.
[48]
In dealing with what was published and the ordinary meaning
it is
imperative to deal with the media statement as a whole. Of
significance is that it is headed  “PRASA Terminates Contracts
of Executives”. The heading immediately creates the impression that
the media statement deals with the reasons ‘why’ and ‘which’
executives’ contracts were terminated.
[49]
The content of the media statement does not disappoint and
contains
the ‘why’ and which’ facts. The content deals with the factual
position, namely: that all executives of the Defendant
are employed
for a period not exceeding 5 (five) years. It then deals with the
Board’s observations as applied to the executives
under contract of
employment. The Board’s observations are recorded, namely: certain
executives “unlawfully’ overstayed their
welcome by “capitalising
on the instability of the Board” and inferred that
as a direct
result thereof the “following executives” employment contracts
were terminated with immediate effect (as at 29 January 2021).
Following the statement aforesaid, and with the use of a semi colon,
as to commence with the a list, three names of executives were
named,
including the Plaintiff.
[50]
The ordinary meaning of the words and the structure of the
content of
the media statement includes the Plaintiff as one of the executives
who knowingly and unlawfully overstayed her welcome.
The meaning
under the circumstances of and including the reference to her
suspension due to alleged misconduct may leave the reasonable
reader
with a unfavourable view of the Plaintiff. As a consequence it is
defamatory.
[51]
In the premises the Defendant’s second ground of exception
must
fail.
[52]
The inescapable consequence is that the Defendant’s exception
must
fail with costs and I therefore make the following order:
1.
The Defendant’s exception is dismissed
with costs.
L.A. RETIEF
Acting Judge, High Court
Pretoria
Appearances
:
Plaintiff’s
Counsel:
Advocate A.
Foster
Email: law@afoster.co.za
Mobile: 084 471 6686
Plaintiff’s
Attorney:
Eliott Attorneys
Plaintiff’s
Ref:
Alex Eliott
Defendant’s
Counsel:
Advocate J. Hlongwane
Email:
jhlongwane@duma.nokwe.co.za
Mobile: 066 455 8411
Defendant’s
Attorney:
De Swart Myambo Hlahla Attorneys
Defendant’s
Ref:
Mt T HLAHLA/QS/P1023
Date
of Hearing:
22 February 2022
Date
of Judgment:
25 February
2022
Date
of Written Judgment:     13 April 2022
[1]
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
2002 (5) SA 1
(CC) at 413G.
[2]
Haarhoff
v Wakefield
1955 (2)
SA 425E.
[3]
Inkin
v Borehole Drillers
1994 (2) SA 366
at 373;
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1988 (1) SA 836 (W).
[4]
Makgae
v Sentraboer Kooperatief (Bpk)
1981 (4) SA 239
(T) at 244H-245C.
[5]
Reason 2.2 of First Ground of
Exception, Notice of Exception, Caselines 003-4.
[6]
Reason 2.7 of First Ground of
Exception, Notice of Exception, Caselines 003-4.
[7]
FDJ Brandt “Defamation” in
7
Lawsa
2Ed,
par 237, although on exception – “may be” .
[8]
Argus
Printing and Publishers Company Limited v Esselen’s Estate
[1993] ZSA 205: [194]
2 All SA 160
(SCA);
1994 (2) SA 1
(A) at
20E-21B.
[9]
The word ‘might’ is used
because we are dealing with an exception. At the trial stage
the
test is different.
[10]
Mthembi-Mahanyele
v Mail & Guardian Limited
[2004] ZASCA 64.
[11]
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC) at para 90-91
(A).
[12]
Sutter
v Brown
1926 AD 155
at 163.
[13]
Definitions
as defined by Merriam-Webster: “Irregularity” meaning “something
that is irregular (such as improper or dishonest”),
“suspension”
meaning temporarily withhold, as of belief or decision, remove as
from office or privileges or suspend.
[14]
J Burchell ‘
The
Law of Defamation in South Africa’
(1985), pg 136.
[15]
Unlike an innuendo.