Liebenberg v Van der Merwe (4762/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 287 (24 October 2022)

82 Reportability
Defamation Law

Brief Summary

Defamation — Urgent application for interdict — Applicant sought to remove defamatory statements posted by respondent on social media — Respondent published derogatory statements about applicant, alleging criminality and immorality — Applicant argued statements were unlawful and injurious to his reputation — Respondent opposed, claiming applicant was attempting to silence him regarding applicant's business dealings — Court held that the respondent's statements were defamatory and granted the interdict as sought by the applicant.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an urgent application brought in the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, in which the applicant sought interdictory relief arising from a series of allegedly defamatory and privacy-infringing social media publications made by the respondent.


The applicant was Louis Petrus Liebenberg, a businessman described as a diamond broker and investor. The respondent was Schalk Willem van der Merwe, a self-employed business and labour consultant, who appeared in person.


Procedurally, the application was issued on 29 September 2022 and enrolled as urgent. Argument commenced on 7 October 2022, but the hearing could not be finalised due to a power outage, and the matter was postponed to 20 October 2022 to allow the respondent an opportunity to obtain legal representation and to file further papers if so advised. On 20 October 2022 the respondent initially failed to appear, an order was granted in the applicant’s favour, and that order was then rescinded shortly thereafter when the respondent arrived and was afforded an opportunity to address the court. The matter was then adjudicated with the respondent having been given that opportunity, but without any supplementary affidavit or heads having been filed.


The dispute’s subject-matter concerned the alleged wrongful publication of defamatory statements about the applicant on Facebook and other electronic media, and whether urgent, final interdictory relief should be granted to compel removal of existing publications and to restrain further publications.


2. Material Facts


The parties had known each other since August 2021. During March 2022 the applicant became aware of criminal charges against the respondent and his wife and assisted by paying their bail deposits. The relationship subsequently deteriorated substantially.


The court treated as undisputed that the respondent was the author of the Facebook postings and associated publications that gave rise to the litigation, and that the material had been disseminated on social media platforms in a manner that was publicly accessible and capable of wide circulation. The court further accepted that the publications were globally accessible to persons with internet access.


Chronologically, prior to 24 August 2022, the respondent allegedly published numerous derogatory and defamatory statements about the applicant on a Facebook page administered by the respondent. On 24 August 2022, the applicant’s attorney sent a demand (via WhatsApp) requiring removal of the postings and an undertaking not to repeat such conduct. The respondent initially refused but thereafter removed those earlier publications.


The dispute then escalated again with new publications. On 22 September 2022, the respondent posted on Facebook content referring to the applicant as “Mal soos ‘n haas”. On 24 September 2022, the respondent published a further post stating an intention to speak about the applicant and describing him as “die psigopaat vals Christen Ponzi–skema baas”, together with an expressed intention to close down the applicant’s business. Also on 24 September 2022, the respondent published a live video (about 27 minutes long) containing multiple allegations and insults about the applicant; a transcript and English translation were attached to the founding papers. On 25 September 2022, the respondent posted another video aimed at dissuading the applicant from taking action, and on 26 September 2022 posted further content asking followers whether to work with the applicant or “knock him over”.


The court recorded examples of the respondent’s statements (translated) contained in the video publications, including assertions that the applicant was a “fake Christian” and a “Ponzi scheme fraudster”, and various additional insults and allegations impugning the applicant’s character and mental stability.


The respondent opposed the relief, disputing urgency and contending in substance that the applicant approached court with “dirty hands” and was attempting to “gag” the respondent from exposing allegedly questionable business dealings and warning the public about a purported “Ponzi scheme”. The respondent did not, however, advance evidence establishing the truth of the factual allegations made about the applicant in the publications, nor did he substantiate that the publications were protected as fair comment, privilege, or otherwise justified.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, first, whether the matter should be entertained as urgent under Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court, given the dates of publication and the timing of the application.


Secondly, the court had to determine whether the impugned publications were defamatory in law, applying the objective test for defamatory meaning and considering the consequences that flow from a finding of defamation, including the presumptions of unlawfulness and intention.


Thirdly, the court had to decide whether the applicant met the requirements for a final interdict, including whether the applicant had a clear right, whether an injury had occurred (or was reasonably apprehended), and whether there was an absence of an adequate alternative remedy.


Finally, the court had to decide the appropriate scope of interdictory relief, in particular whether the court should grant an order restraining the respondent from publishing any future defamatory material not yet before the court (as sought in the notice of motion), bearing in mind the respondent’s freedom of expression.


These issues involved a mixture of legal questions (the tests for defamation, urgency, and final interdicts), and the application of law to fact (assessing the content and effect of publications, and whether the respondent had established a lawful justification). The scope of relief and costs required evaluative and discretionary determinations.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On urgency, the court considered the sequence of publications between 22 and 26 September 2022, the letter of demand on 26 September 2022, and the issuing of the application on 29 September 2022. It further considered that the matter was enrolled for 7 October 2022 and could not be finalised on that date due to an unforeseen power outage, followed by a postponement requested by the respondent. In light of these circumstances, the court was satisfied that the matter warranted treatment as urgent and that condonation for non-compliance with ordinary forms and time periods should be granted under Rule 6(12).


On defamation, the court applied the approach articulated in Le Roux and Others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and Restorative Justice Centre as amicus curiae) 2011 (3) SA 274 (CC), namely that the court must determine the ordinary meaning of the statement as understood by the reasonable reader of ordinary intelligence within its context, and then decide whether that meaning is defamatory. The court accepted that the respondent’s posts and video statements, assessed objectively, were clearly defamatory.


The court further accepted the orthodox consequence that, once defamation is established, presumptions arise that the publication was unlawful and made with animus iniuriandi, placing a full onus on the respondent to rebut wrongfulness by establishing a recognised justification such as truth and public benefit/public interest, privilege, or fair comment. The court found that the respondent’s answering affidavit did not set out facts proving the truth of the allegations, nor did it properly advance a defence grounded in privilege, fair comment, or a substantiated public-interest justification. The respondent’s contention that he and his wife had been slandered and threatened by the applicant was not supported by appended proof, and in any event did not, on the court’s assessment, justify the respondent’s publications. The court was also not persuaded that it was to the public benefit or public interest to read or listen to what the respondent had published about the applicant.


Turning to the requirements for a final interdict, the court applied Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221, and accepted that the applicant had established a clear right to privacy and protection of reputation, and that the applicant had indeed been defamed. On the element of the absence of an alternative remedy, the court accepted the applicant’s explanation that damages proceedings were not intended, due to the respondent’s alleged financial difficulties, and that attempts to obtain relief by complaining to Facebook had not succeeded. On this basis, the court concluded that interdictory relief was justified.


However, the court distinguished between interdicting existing material and granting a broad prohibition against future publications of any allegedly defamatory material. In considering the relief sought in prayer 3 (a wide restraint against future dissemination), the court held that such an order would amount to a drastic limitation on the respondent’s freedom of expression. The court reasoned that future postings might not all necessarily be actionable, as actionability would depend on content and any defence that might be raised. The court therefore declined to grant the wide forward-looking prohibition and noted that the applicant could approach the court again should further actionable publications occur. In this context, the court referred to authority concerning the restraint of publication and freedom of expression.


On costs, the court exercised its discretion with reference to the general principle that costs indemnify a successful litigant for expense incurred in being unjustly compelled to litigate. The court considered the respondent’s conduct, including the effect of the respondent’s indicated address for service, the potential that the matter could have been litigated in Pretoria given both parties’ apparent presence there, the respondent’s insistence on a postponement after the power outage, and the absence of any supplementary papers despite being afforded an opportunity. The court further took into account that the respondent had been warned in the letter of demand of the risk of urgent proceedings and costs if the publications were not removed. In these circumstances, the court concluded that the respondent’s conduct warranted censure and constituted exceptional circumstances justifying punitive costs on an attorney-and-client scale, including travel costs.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for non-compliance with the prescribed rules as to form and time and directed that the matter be heard as an urgent application under Rule 6(12).


The court granted a mandatory interdict ordering the respondent to remove defamatory, derogatory, or privacy-protected postings concerning the applicant that were already on electronic media and had been created, distributed, or published by the respondent.


The court ordered the respondent to pay the applicant’s costs on an attorney and client scale, expressly including the travelling costs of the applicant’s attorney and counsel. The broader forward-looking relief aimed at restraining all future defamatory publications (prayer 3) was not included in the final order and, on the court’s reasoning, was refused as overly drastic.


Cases Cited


Le Roux and Others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and Restorative Justice Centre as amicus curiae) 2011 (3) SA 274 (CC).


H v W [2013] 2 All SA 218 (GSJ).


Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221.


M v B (10175/2013) [2014] ZAKZPHC 49.


Erasmus v Grunow 1980 (2) SA 793 (O).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12).


Held


The court held that the matter warranted enrolment and determination as urgent under Rule 6(12), given the timing and nature of the social media publications and the procedural history following the initial hearing disruption.


It held that the respondent’s publications, assessed objectively in context, were defamatory of the applicant. The respondent failed to advance and substantiate any recognised defence sufficient to rebut the presumptions of unlawfulness and intention that arise once defamation is shown.


It held further that the applicant satisfied the requirements for a final interdict to compel removal of existing defamatory or privacy-infringing electronic publications. The court declined to grant an overly broad interdict restraining unknown future publications on the basis that it would constitute a drastic limitation of freedom of expression and that future actionability would depend on content and any defence raised.


The court granted a mandatory removal order and awarded punitive costs against the respondent on an attorney-and-client scale, including travel costs, due to the respondent’s conduct in the litigation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Defamation is determined by an objective test assessing the ordinary meaning of the published statement as understood by the reasonable reader of ordinary intelligence within context, and then whether that meaning is defamatory, as articulated in Le Roux and Others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and Restorative Justice Centre as amicus curiae) 2011 (3) SA 274 (CC).


Once a plaintiff/applicant proves that a statement is defamatory, rebuttable presumptions arise that the publication was unlawful and made with animus iniuriandi. The respondent/defendant bears a full onus to rebut wrongfulness by alleging and proving facts establishing a lawful justification, including (where relied upon) truth and public interest/public benefit, privilege, or fair comment.


The requirements for a final interdict are those set out in Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221, including a clear right, an injury committed or reasonably apprehended, and the absence of an adequate alternative remedy. In assessing alternative remedy, the court may consider practical realities such as the efficacy of damages and the effectiveness of platform-based complaints.


Urgent relief may be granted with condonation for non-compliance with ordinary time periods and forms under Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court, where the circumstances justify departure from the ordinary process.


In considering interdictory relief aimed at restraining publication, courts must evaluate the scope of the restraint against competing constitutional interests, including the potential impact on freedom of expression, and may refuse relief framed so broadly that it restrains unknown future speech irrespective of context and possible defences.


Costs lie within the court’s discretion. A punitive costs order on the attorney and client scale may be justified where a party’s conduct is regarded as unreasonable and deserving of censure, assessed in light of all the circumstances, including avoidable escalation of costs and failure to act cooperatively after warnings of cost consequences.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 287
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Liebenberg v Van der Merwe (4762/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 287 (24 October 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
No.:
4762/2022
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
LOUIS
PETRUS
LIEBENBERG
Applicant
and
SCHALK
WILLEM VAN DER
MERWE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BY:
VAN
RHYN, J
HEARD
ON:
7
OCTOBER 2022 AND 20 OCTOBER 2022
DELIVERED
ON:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
applicant’s legal representative and the respondent by
email
and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down deemed to be
at 14h00 on 24 OCTOBER 2022.
[1]
This is an urgent application issued on 29 September 2022 in which
the applicant seeks
the following relief:

1.
That this matter be heard as one of urgency, and that the time
limits, forms and service provided for
in the Rules of this
Honourable Court, be dispensed with in terms of the provisions of
Rule 6(12)
2.
That the respondent be mandatory interdicted and ordered to remove
any defamatory, derogatory
or postings protected by privacy
concerning and in respect of the Applicant which are already on
electronic media, which were created
and/or distributed and/or
published by the respondent;
3.
That
the respondent be
prohibitory interdicted, interdicting the respondent from continuing
to disseminate, create, distribute and/or
publish, directly or
indirectly, false and/or defamatory and/or derogatory allegations,
posts, and publications in respect of and
concerning the applicant on
electronic media and the internet as a whole (
inter
alia
but not limited to Facebook,
WhatsApp, YouTube, or any other social media platform of whatsoever
nature), or to any legal person
(individual or entity) albeit verbal,
in writing or through any possible medium;
4.
That the respondent pays the cost of this application on an attorney
and client scale.
[2]
The applicant, Louis Petrus Liebenberg is an adult male businessman,
a diamond broker
and investor of Bronkhorstspruit, Gauteng Province.
The respondent, Schalk Willem van der Merwe is an adult self-
employed business-
and labour consultant with residential address at
Henneman in the Free State Province.
[3]
The applicant and the respondent have known each other since August
2021. The applicant
became aware of criminal charges preferred
against the respondent and his wife during March 2022 and decided to
assist them by
paying their bail deposits. Thereafter the
relationship between the applicant and the respondent disintegrated
to such a degree
that, according to the applicant, the respondent
then embarked upon a malicious social media campaign against him.
[4]
The applicant contends that prior to 24 August 2022 the respondent
published a host
of derogatory and defamatory statements about him on
a Facebook page, created and administered by the respondent. On 24
August
the applicant’s attorney of record sent a letter per
WhatsApp message to the respondent’s cellular phone demanding
the removal of the derogatory postings and to furnish a written
undertaking not to make any derogatory and defamatory statements
in
future.
[5]
Initially the respondent refused to remove the publications about the
applicant, but
shortly thereafter removed the publications about the
applicant. However, on Thursday 22 September 2022, the respondent
published
a post on his Facebook page which is available to the
public as a whole, stating the following about the applicant: “Mal
soos ‘n haas” which post received 85 reactions, 35
comments and 1 share at the time the founding affidavit was drafted.
[6]
On Saturday 24 September 2022 the respondent published a further post
on his Facebook
page that he intends to chat about the applicant and
described him as “die psigopaat vals Christen Ponzi–skema
baas”
and added his intention to close down the applicant’s
business within a month. The publication received 216 reactions, 200

comments and 17 shares at the time of the drafting of the founding
affidavit.
[7]
The next publication by the respondent was also on 24 September 2022
when the respondent
published a live video with a total broadcasting
time of 27:01 minutes which allegedly contains a host of defamatory
allegations
against the applicant. This video, which was also open to
the public as a whole received 196 reactions, 115 comments, 48 shares

and more than 5 500 views.  A transcript of the video is
attached to the founding affidavit. At the hearing of the matter
on 7
October 2022 Mr Coetsee, counsel on behalf of the applicant indicated
that the video is available for viewing if the court
so wishes. A
translation of the transcript in English is also appended to the
founding affidavit.  The video was shared by
the respondent on 6
different Facebook pages of which the respondent is the
administrator. Consequently, the video received more
reactions.
[8]
On Sunday 25 September 2022 the respondent made a further video
posting on his personal
Facebook page to dissuade the applicant from
taking any action against him. This video received 154 reactions, 177
comments, 6
shares and more than 3 900 views. A transcript of
the said video and a translation thereof in English are attached to
the
founding affidavit. Later the same evening the respondent
requested the applicant to discuss a settlement which was followed by

a further publication on Monday, 26 September 2022 wherein he asked
his followers whether he should work with the applicant or
‘knock
him over”. The post also received reactions and comments from
the public.
[9]
The respondent filed a notice to oppose, answering affidavit and
concise heads of
argument on Friday, 6 October 2022, shortly prior to
the hearing of the urgent application. Mr Coetsee, then presented
arguments
where after the respondent, who appeared in person
presented his arguments.  A power failure necessitated an
adjournment of
the court proceedings.  In chambers, Mr Coetsee
requested the court to adjudicate the matter on the papers to avoid
incurring
any further costs as the legal representatives on behalf of
the applicant are from Pretoria. The respondent too travelled from
Pretoria for the hearing of the matter.
[10]
The respondent requested a postponement for the further hearing of
arguments on the basis that
it will provide him with an opportunity
to obtain legal representation and to file a supplementary affidavit
or further heads of
argument, if so advised. The matter was postponed
to 20 October 2022 for further hearing.
[11]
On 20 October 2022, when the matter was called there was no
appearance by the respondent. I was
informed by Mr Coetsee that his
attorney did not receive any indication that the respondent in the
meanwhile obtained legal representation.
The respondent did not file
a supplementary affidavit or supplementary heads of argument. The
matter proceeded on an unopposed
basis after a diligent search for
the whereabouts of the respondent was conducted in the passages of
the court building. An order
in favour of the applicant was granted.
Approximately 15 minutes later the respondent arrived at the court
and requested the matter
to be called again. Since the applicant did
not object, the order granted approximately 20 minutes earlier was
rescinded to avail
the respondent an opportunity to address the
court.
[12]
It is not in dispute that the respondent i
s
the author of the posting on his Facebook page which has given rise
to this litigation. The publications on Facebook and other
social
media have been and can still be widely viewed and circulated. The
publications are globally accessible by anybody with
internet
connections. On behalf of the applicant it is argued that the
statements and publications made by the respondent on his
social
media platforms are, in every conceivable context unlawful,
defamatory, wrongful and injurious of the applicant and intended
by
the respondent to injure him in his dignity and reputation.
[13]
The following are some of the statements (translated from Afrikaans
to English) concerning the
applicant in the video posted by the
respondent;
13.1
that the applicant is a “… fake Christian and
a Ponzi
scheme fraudster”
13.2
that the applicant is hanging around on Facebook “…
to
masturbate pretending to be a man”
13.3
the applicant is a “...fucking farce and a “fucking

arsehole”
13.4
the applicant is a “…crook, hypocrite trash walking
with
a bible under his arm, a liar and a ridiculous fool, a whore and a
scamster”
13.5
the applicant is a “… psychopath, crazy and stupid”.
[14]
The respondent opposes the application, firstly on the basis that the
application is not urgent
and secondly on the basis that the
applicant brought this application with dirty hands in an attempt to
stop the respondent from
exposing the applicant’s questionable
business dealings and making same known to the general public.
[15]
The respondent prays for the application to be dismissed with a
punitive cost order on the grounds
that the application is “by
its very nature frivolous, vexatious and even malicious”.
According to the respondent the
applicant is involved in so called
“high risk business ventures” where the public is invited
to become partners without
any guarantees in respect of capital input
into such ventures. The respondent contends that investigations by
the media and law
enforcement agencies are ongoing against the
applicant regarding such business ventures and this application is an
attempt by the
applicant to “gag” or prevent the
respondent from warning the public about the applicant’s
“Ponzi-skema”
[16]
The applicant complains that the postings by the respondent publishes
information which portrays
him as:
(16.1)
a dishonest, greedy businessman involved in criminal activity;
(16.2)
an immoral person who cannot be trusted;
(16.3)
a person who has a problem with his previous business partners,
that
he has been in prison and bribes government officials.
(16.4)
a person known for his manic, crazy rants on social media,

insinuating that he is mentally unstable.
[17]
The applicant regards the publications as defamatory since it has the
effect of tarnishing his
status, good name and reputation. Defamation
is defined as the intentional infringement of another’s right
to his good name,
or more comprehensively, the wrongful, intentional
publication of words or behaviour concerning another which has the
tendency
to undermined his status, good name or reputation.
[1]
Its focus is the protection of the constitutional rights to dignity
and privacy of any person.
[18]
In
Le
Roux and Others v Dey (Freedom of Expression Institute and
Restorative Justice Centre as amicus curiae)
[2]
the Constitutional Court dealt with whether a statement is defamatory
as follows:

Where
the plaintiff is content to rely on the proposition that the
published statement is defamatory per se, a two-stage enquiry
is
brought to bear. The first is to establish the ordinary meaning of
the statement. The second is whether that meaning is defamatory.
In
establishing the ordinary meaning, the court is not concerned with
the meaning which the maker of the statement intended to
convey. Nor
is it concerned with the meaning given to it by the person to whom it
was published, whether or not they believed it
to be true, or whether
or not they then thought less of the plaintiff. The test to be
applied is an objective one. In accordance
with this objective test,
the criterion is what meaning the reasonable reader of ordinary
intelligence would attribute to the statement.
In applying this test,
it is acceptable that the reasonable reader would understand the
statement in its context and that he or
she would have had regard not
only to what is expressly stated but also to what is implied”
[3]
[19]
On proof by the applicant that a statement is indeed defamatory two
rebuttable presumptions arise:
first that the publication was
unlawful and second, that the statement was made
animo
iniuriandi
,
i.e. with a deliberate intention to inflict injury. The onus rests on
the respondent/defendant to dispel this
prima
facie
case. This is a full onus and requires the defendant to allege and
prove facts that dispel wrongfulness such as truth and public

interest.
[4]
[20]
Mr Coetsee argued that the respondent fails to make out any accepting
defence in his answering
affidavit in that he does not enjoy any
privilege entitling him to make the allegations in question, nor does
he state that his
allegations are true. The respondent does not state
that the allegations, which are stated as facts in the publications,
are merely
his opinion or that his allegations amount to fair comment
or were published in the public interest.
[21]
The posts are, on an application of the relevant test, clearly
defamatory. The respondent’s
defence is that he and his wife
have been slandered, threatened, belittled and bad mouthed by the
applicant which somehow affords
him the right to publish defamatory
statements regarding the applicant. The respondent failed to append
any proof of postings or
threats made by the applicant and indicated
that he intends taking legal action against the applicant. The
respondent, in his answering
affidavit makes no allegation to
substantiate the truth of the allegations regarding the applicant. I
am satisfied that it is neither
to the public benefit or in the
public interest to listen or read what the respondent published
regarding the applicant.
[5]
[22]
A further issue for consideration by this Court is whether this
matter is indeed urgent.
The alleged defamatory publications
were made on 22, 24, 25 and 26 September 2022. The letter of demand
to remove the publications
was delivered to the respondent on 26
September 2022. The application was issued on 29 September 2022 and
the respondent acknowledged
receipt of the application on his
Facebook page on the 30
th
of September 2022.
[23]
Even though the application was enrolled as an urgent matter on 7
October 2022, it was not finalized
on the particular day due to an
emergency outage (electricity) from 11h00 to 16h00 due to vandalism.
At the request of the respondent,
the application was postponed for 2
weeks to the opposed roll of 20 October 2022. I am satisfied that
this matter is urgent and
that condonation be granted as prayed for
by the applicant.
[24]
The applicant is seeking a final mandatory and prohibitory interdict.
Mr Coetsee argued
that the applicant has satisfied the
requirements for a final interdict against the respondent.  To
my mind the first two
requirements for an interdict set out in
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
[6]
have been satisfied.  Insofar as an interdict is
concerned, the applicant has a clear right to his privacy and the
protection of his reputation. The applicant has indeed been defamed.
[25]
The third requirement, namely the question whether there is the
absence of similar protection
by any other ordinary remedy has been
addressed by Mr Coetsee by explaining that the applicant does not
intend to institute a claim
for damages against the respondent simply
because the respondent will not be able to comply with such an order
due to financial
difficulties experienced by the respondent. The
applicant furthermore contend that he has tried, without any success
to complain
to Facebook about the respondent’s conduct.
[26]
I am satisfied that interdictory relief is justified. The further
question is whether the court
may restrain the respondent to publish
any material not yet known to the court in future, as per prayer 3 of
the Notice of Motion.
I am of the view that, despite the
possibility of further defamatory postings on the internet posing a
risk to the reputational
integrity of the applicant, the relief
claimed in prayer 3 of the Notice of Motion would be a drastic
limitation and restraint
on the respondent’s freedom of
expression.
[7]
Even if further
postings by the respondent might seem defamatory to the applicant,
not all such postings by the respondent would
be actionable as it
depends on the contents thereof and the potential   defense
relied upon by the respondent in future.
In any event, the applicant
could always approach the court for relief in the future.
[27]
The awarding of costs is in the discretion of the court. The
applicant in this matter is successful
and I see no reason why the
respondent should not be ordered to pay costs. The purpose of an
award of costs to a successful litigant
is to indemnify him for the
expense to which he has been put through having been unjustly
compelled to initiate or defend litigation,
as the case may be
[8]
.
The court should take into account all the circumstances before
exercising its discretion as to costs. It must also strive to
achieve
fairness to both parties.
[28]
The respondent indicated his address for service of the application
at Henneman in the Free State
Province. However, the respondent
subsequently indicated that he is actually residing at Pretoria where
he also conducts his business.
This matter could have been dealt with
in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria seeing that both parties are
residing at Pretoria, which
would have resulted in a substantial
costs reduction. Furthermore, the respondent insisted that the matter
be postponed and not
adjudicated upon the papers already filed
subsequent to the power failure that occurred on 7 October 2022,
which resulted in further
costs, including travelling costs for the
applicant’s legal representatives. Even though the respondent
was granted leave
to file a supplementary affidavit and/or
supplementary heads of argument before resuming with the application
on 20 October 2022,
no further documents were filed by or on behalf
of the respondent.
[29]
The applicant, in the letter of demand sent an ultimatum to the
respondent which clearly indicated
that the respondent was afforded
an opportunity to remove the defamatory postings on Facebook, failing
which the applicant will
launch an urgent application with
concomitant cost implications.
[30]
I therefore agree with the contention on behalf of the applicant that
the respondent’s
uncooperative and unreasonable conduct is
deserving of censure by this court and constitutes exceptional
circumstances justifying
a punitive cost award.
ORDER:
[31]
The following order is made:
1.
Condonation is
granted to the Applicant for the non-compliance with the prescribed
rules pertaining to form, process and times and
that the application
be heard as an urgent application in terms of the provision of Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
2.
The respondent
is mandatory interdicted and ordered to remove any defamatory,
derogatory or postings protected by privacy concerning
and in respect
of the applicant which are already on electronic media, which were
created and/or distributed and/or published by
the Respondent.
3.
The Respondent
shall pay the costs of this application on an attorney and client
scale, including the travelling costs of the applicant’s

attorney and counsel.
VAN
RHYN, J
On
behalf of the Applicant:
AV M
COETSEE
Instructed
by:                                           F

J SD
ENEKAL ATTORNEYS
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of the Respondent:
In
Person
[1]
Neethling’s Law of Personality, Neethling, Potgieter &
Visser, Second Edition, at p 131, para 2.1.
[2]
2011 (3) SA 274
(CC).
[3]
At [89].
[4]
Le Roux v Dey (supra) at [85].
[5]
H v W [2013] 2 All SA 218 (GSJ).
[6]
1914 AD 221
at 227.
[7]
M v B (10175/2013) [2014] ZAKZPHC 49 at [22] – [25].
[8]
Erasmus v Grunow
1980 (2) SA 793
(O) at 798 B-C.