IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Reportable
CASE NO: 49/2003
In the matter between :
INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPERS HOLDINGS LTD First Appellant
RYLAND FISHER Second Appellant
INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPERS CAPE LTD Third Appellant
ALLIED MEDIA DISTRIBUTORS (PTY) LTD Fourth Appellant
and
WALLEED SULIMAN Respondent
___________________________________________________________________________
Coram: MARAIS, SCOTT, MTHIYANE, NUGENT JJA et PONNAN AJA
Heard: 1 MARCH 2004
Delivered: 28 MAY 2004
Summary: Defamation – new spaper reports that plain tiff arrested as suspect in
bombing of restaurant – defamatory but subs tantially true – public ation of plaintiff’s
identity and photograph prior to appearance in court not in public interest in particu lar
circumstances – concurrent cla ims for impairm ent of dignity and violation of privacy –
measure of damages. The order will be found in para [67].
___________________________________________________________________________
J U D G M E N T
___________________________________________________________________________
MARAIS JA/
2
MARAIS JA:
[1] On Tuesday 25 August 1998 the city of Cape Town was, metaphorically
speaking, rocked to the foundations wh en a bomb planted in a recently opened
restaurant, Planet Hollywood, at the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront exploded.
Two lives were lost and many were seriou sly injured. Considerable damage was
done to the building in which the restaura nt was situated. Understandably, there
was immense public outrage and intens e speculation about which persons or
organizations might be responsible for the bombing.
[2] On Friday 28 August 1998 the Ca pe Times newspaper published two
articles, one in its early edition (‘the co untry edition’) intended for delivery to
outlying areas and one in its later edit ion intended for delivery to subscribers
and sale to purchasers in the Cape pe ninsula (‘the peninsula edition’). These
articles gave rise to the successful action for damages for defamation,
impairment of dignity, and invasion of privacy which is before us on appeal with
leave granted by this court. I shall refer to the parties as they were referred to in
the action.
[3] The plaintiff is Mr Walleed Su liman, a Muslim man who lives in
Kenwyn, a suburb of Cape Town. The defendants were Independent
Newspapers Holdings Limited (the propr ietor of the Cape Times); Mr Ryland
Fisher (editor); Independent Newspapers Cape Limite d (publisher); and Allied
Media Distributors (Pty) Limited (the newspaper distributor). I reproduce the
3
text of the articles in the sequence in wh ich the two editions appeared, first the
country edition and then the peninsula ed ition. I shall also append to this
judgment photocopies of the articles as they were published. The plaintiff is the
person who features in the photograph, is referred to in the articles by his name,
and is referred to in the statement as the ‘male suspect’ being held for further
questioning.
[4] The country edition:
‘PULLED OFF PLANE’
Bomb: Pagad trio
Held at airport
DETECTIVES PROBING Tuesday’s horrific Waterfront blast yesterday
arrested three Capetonians about to boar d an Egypt-bound flight at Cape Town
International Airport.
CHRIS BATEMAN, RHODA DAVIDS and WILLEM STEENKAMP
report.
‘POLICE made the arrests af ter receiving an anonymous tip-off. The three were being
held overnight.
It was reliably learnt that the tip-off included information that the trio – Walied
Suleiman ( sic), 32, his wife Gouwa Suleiman ( sic), 31, both of Kenwyn, and their cousin
4
Shanaaz Bayat, 30 of Belgravia – were bound for Egypt and that they might be linked to the
bombing.
Western Cape police spokesperson John Sterre nberg confirmed late last night that the
two women would be charged under the Aliens Control Act in conn ection with passport
offences.
The “male suspect” was being held for further questioning, he added.
The country’s police operations chief, commissioner Andre Pruiss told the Cape
Times: “There is the possibility that they could be involved in the blast, but at this stage there
is no evidence pointing to this.”
People Against Gangsterism and Drugs (Pagad) last night issued a press alert saying:
“Pagad members pulled off the plane from pilgrimage and arrested.”
Furious Pagad lawyer Adiel Theunissen accused the police of blatant harassment and
of “a witch-hunt targeting Muslims”.
Sterrenberg said the trio was stopped by th e Aliens Control Unit at the airport after
fault was found with one of their passports. Th e claim was strongly denied by Freeza Ryland,
the mother of Shanaaz Bayat, who said her da ughter had been oversees “many times before
with no passport problems”.
More than 20 angry family members were seen railing against the arresting police at
the airport, shouting that “this is unfair and against Muslims”.
Pruiss said there was “no que stion of harassment of Muslims” and that police were
merely following all possible leads – which included questioning all possible suspects.
The three were taken to the Parow po lice station by, among others, Waterfront
bombing investigating officer Mike Barkhuizen.
5
Pruiss and national Police Commissioner Geor ge Fivaz have remained in Cape Town
to oversee the latest developments. Early last night they were receiving reports from the
investigating team every 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, two agents from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrived in
here early yesterday from Nairobi at the invitation of Fivaz to assist in the bombing probe.
That brought the number of FBI personnel invo lved in the Waterfront investigation to
four.
The others are an agent stationed in South Africa and a legal expert flown in from the
US.
South African Interpol head David Bruce, who flew to Nair obi in a Lear Jet to fetch
the two agents on Wednesday, said their arri val back in South Africa had been delayed by
overflight problems in Zimbabwe and Botswana.
He had been forced to contact the po lice commissioner in Botswana to arrange
overflight rights, he said.
The FBI agents visited the scene of the bom bing yesterday morning, along with senior
police officers and detectives.
Police refused to name the agents or grant interviews with them, but the locally based
agent told journalists at the Wate rfront that their presence had b een requested in the spirit of
international co-operation – something which would benefit both South Africa and the United
States, and without which “the winners are the bad guys”.
He said also that the South African investigation team was doing “a very fine job”.
Sterrenberg yesterday said po lice were still trying to reconstruct the bomb, but that it
had already been firmly established that it had been a home-made device.
6
Theunissen yesterday claimed that Pagad members being held at Pollsmoor Prison
were being interrogated and tortured by police and the FBI agents.
He said one Pagad member was booked out of the prison on Wednesday and
apparently “interrogated and tortured” before be ing returned to the jail, and that the others
were booked out by Peninsula Murder and Robbery Unit detectives yesterday.
Theunissen, who did not want to name the prisoners, said the fact that their legal
counsel was not informed of the questioning suggested foul play.
“I find it strange that people who have lawyers are being taken out (of jail) without the
lawyers being informed.”
However, Sterrenberg said last night that only two prisoners – Mogomat Anwar
Francis and Yusuf Salie, arrested following a pipe-bomb explosion in a bakkie late last
month, which killed two other Pagad member s – had been booked out yesterday for routine
questioning in connection with that incident.
The prisoners were welcome to lay charges if they had been mistreated, he said.’
[5] The peninsula edition:
DEMO AT OMAR’S HOME
Pagad outrage
over bomb arrest
DETECTIVES PROBING Tuesday’s horrific blast yesterday arrested three
Capetonians about to board an Egypt-bound flight at Cape Town International
Airport.
7
CHRIS BATEMAN, RHODA DAVIDS, WILLIAM STEENKAMP and
JUDY DAMON report.
‘Angry Pagad supporters gathered outside the Rylands home of justice Minister
Dullah Omar late last night to protest against the arrests of three of their members.
“If the community reacts, do not blame us
If there’s going to be a war out there, we are not going to take responsibility”.
“You must take responsibility” one man shouted.
About 100 people, including G-force members, said that Omar had refused “to see
justice done” and that he should stop interrogating innocent people.
A helicopter hovered above, but ther e were no incidents of violence.
Early this morning, Omar told the “ Cape Times” that “I’ve completed my work and I
won’t allow this to bother me.
He said he viewed the Planet Hollywood a ttacks as a “very, very , serious matter” and
said he hoped police would leave no stone unturned in the investigations.
After receiving an anonymous tip-off, police arrested Walied Suleiman ( sic), 32, his
wife Gouwa Suleiman ( sic), 31, both of Kenwyn, and their cousin Shanaaz Bayat, 30, of
Belgravia as they were about to board a flight to Egypt.
The three were held overnight.
Western Cape police spokesperson John Sterre nberg confirmed late last night that the
two women would be charged under the Aliens Control Act in conn ection with passport
offences.
The “male suspect” was being held for further questioning, he added.
8
The country’s police operations chief, commissioner Andre Pruiss told the Cape
Times: “There is the possibility that they could be involved in the blast, but at this stage there
is no evidence pointing to this”.
Furious Pagad lawyer Adiel Theunissen accused the police of blatant harassment and
of “a witch-hunt targeting Muslims”.
Pruiss said there was “no que stion of harassment of Muslims” and that police were
merely following all possible leads – which included questioning all possible suspects.
The three were taken to the Parow po lice station by, among others, Waterfront
bombing investigating officer Mike Barkhuizen.
Pruiss and national Police Commissioner Geor ge Fivaz have remained in Cape Town
to oversee the latest developments. Last night they were receiving reports from the
investigating team every thirty minutes.
Meanwhile, two agents from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrived in
here early yesterday from Nairobi at the invitation of Fivaz to assist in the bombing probe.
South African Interpol head David Bruce, w ho flew to Nairobi in a Lear jet to fetch
the two agents on Wednesday, said their arri val back in South Africa had been delayed by
overflight problems with Zimbabwe and Botswana.
He had been forced to contact the po lice commissioner in Botswana to arrange
overflight rights, he said.
The FBI agents visited the scene of the bom bing yesterday morning, along with senior
police officers and detectives.
Police refused to name the agents or grant interviews with them, but the locally based
agent told journalists at the Wate rfront that their presence had b een requested in the spirit of
9
international co-operation – something wh ich would benefit both South Africa and the
United States, and without which “the winners are the bad guys”.
He said also that the South African investigation team was doing “a very fine job”.
Sterrenberg yesterday said police was still tr ying to reconstruct the bomb, but that it
had already been firmly established that it had been a home-made device.
Theunissen yesterday claimed that Pagad members being held at Pollsmoor Prison
were being interrogated and tortured by police and the FBI agents.
He said one Pagad member was booked out of the prison on Wednesday and
apparently “interrogated and tortured” before being returned to the jail.
Others, he said, were booked out by Peni nsula Murder and Robbery Unit detectives
yesterday.
Theunissen, who did not want to name the prisoners, said the fact that their legal
counsel was not informed of the questioning suggested foul play.
“I find it strange that people who have lawyers are being taken out (of jail) without the
lawyers being informed.”
However, Sterrenberg said last night that only two prisoners – Mogomat Anwar
Francis and Yusuf Salie, arrested following a pipe-bomb explosion in a bakkie late last month
which killed two other Pagad members – ha d been booked out yesterday for routine
questioning in connection with that incident.
The prisoners were welcome to lay charges if they had been mistreated, he said.’
[6] The plaintiff’s particulars of clai m as originally drawn on 9 June 1999
when he was not aware of the publicatio n of the country edition contained the
following allegations:
10
‘7 On 27 August 1998, and at Cape Town In ternational Airport, Plaintiff, who was
about to depart on a holiday to Egypt with his family, was arrested and detained by
members of the South African Police Serv ices, purportedly in connection with the
explosion at the restaurant.
THE REPORT
8. On 28 August 1998, and at Cape Town, wi thin the area of jurisdiction of this
Honourable Court:
8.1 A colour photograph of Plaintiff wa s published prominently and on the front
page of the newspaper (“the photograph”),
8.2 The photograph, which spans four colu mns across and is nine column inches
deep, depicts Plaintiff with his hands cuffed behind his back, and was
accompanied by the following caption:
“ SUSPECT HELD: Walied Suleiman is led away by a policeman at Cape
Town International Airport.” (“the caption”);
8.3 Prominently juxtaposed with the pho tograph on the front page, above the fold,
an article was published as the main lead (“the article”) under the headline:
“Pagad outrage over bomb arrests” (“the headline”);
8.4 The introductory paragraph to the article reads as follows:
“ DETECTIVES PROBING Tuesday’s horrific Waterfront blast yesterday
arrested three Capetonians about to boa rd an Egypt-bound flight at Cape Town
international Airport”;
8.5 Midway through the article, and above the fold, a shaded box (“the box”) was
published containing the following words:
11
“INSIDE
Blast a terrorist attack –Qibla
page 3
Support for bomb victims
page 3
Political parties condemn blast
page 5
Damage that’s difficult to repair
page 19”
9. In addition to the aforegoing, the article contained the following statements:
9.1 “He [the minister of Justice] said he viewed the Planet Hollywood attack as a
‘very, very, serious matter” and said he hoped police would leave no stone
unturned in the investigations.”;
9.2 “After receiving an anonymous tip-off, police arrested Walied Suleiman, 32,
his wife Gouwa Suleiman, 31 both of Kenwyn, and their cousin Shanaaz
Bayat, 30, of Belgravia as they were about to board a flight to Egypt.”;
9.3 “The three were held overnight.”;
9.4 The ‘male suspect’ was being held for further questioning …;
9.5 “[Commissioner Andrè] Pruiss said there was ‘no question of harassment of
Muslims’ and that police were merely following all possible leads – which
included questioning all possible suspects.”;
12
9.6 “The three were taken to the Parow Police Station by, among others,
Waterfront bombing investigating officer Mike Barkhuizen.”`
10. …
11. …
PLAINTIFF’S FIRST CLAIM
12. The report and its various components referred to Pl aintiff and were individually
and/or collectively per se defamatory of Plaintiff, alternatively, were intended by
Defendants and were understood by readers of the newspaper to mean that Plaintiff;
12.1 had been arrested for causing the explosion at the restaurant;
12.2 was being investigated for causi ng the explosion at the restaurant;
12.3 was responsible for a terr orist attack on the restaurant;
12.4 was a suspected criminal and/or te rrorist who may have caused a horrific
blast in a public restaurant;
12.5 was about to flee the country in consequence of his commission of the said
crime;
12.6 was a danger to the public and/or a flight risk, which necessitated him being
handcuffed.
13. Publication and distribution of the repor t as aforesaid was unlawful and was intended
by Defendants to defame Plaintiff and to injure him in his good name and reputation.
13
14. As a consequence of the aforesaid defamation Plaintiff has been injured in his good
name and reputation and has suffered damages in the sum of R1 000 000,00.
PLAINTIFF’S SECOND CLAIM
15. The report, in describing and identifying Plaintiff as a person who had been arrested
by members of the South African Police Serv ices in connection w ith the explosion at
the restaurant and carrying the further im putation that Plaintiff was responsible for
such explosion, as set out hereinabove, has embarrassed, humiliated and degraded
Plaintiff, lowered his self-esteem, impair ed his dignity and mental tranquillity, and
has, in addition, jeopardised Plaintiff’s safety and livelihood and led to plaintiff’s
being socially ostracised by members of his community.
16. The report was published and distributed un lawfully and with the intention so to
injure Plaintiff
17. As a direct consequence of Defendants’ aforesaid conduct and the impairment of his
dignitas, Plaintiff has suffered damages in the sum of R1 000 000,00.
PLAINTIFF’S THIRD CLAIM
18. Publication of the report, and distribution of the newspaper containing it, widely
publicised the following private facts re garding Plaintiff and his private life,
without Plaintiff’s consent.
18.1 The South African Police Services regarded him as a suspect in connection
with the explosion at the restaurant;
18.2 He had been arrested, handcuffed and detained overnight by the police;
14
18.3 The police intended to detain him for further questioning;
18.4 He was about to depart Cape Town for Egypt;
18.5 He was a member of Pagad, an organisation which the newspaper in its articles
and commentaries frequently associated with bomb explosions in the Western
Cape;
18.6 His photographic image.
19. In consequence of the said publication of the report the public became acquainted with
the aforementioned private facts and concerning Plaintiff and was in addition able to
identify Plaintiff by na me as well as by sight.
20. As a result, Plaintiff’s pr ivacy and seclusion in his priv ate life were infringed and his
mental tranquillity was disturbed.
21. In publishing and distributing the report, Defendants acted unlaw fully and with the
intention that publication would have the aforesaid injurious consequences for
Plaintiff.
22. As a direct consequence of Defendant’s aforesaid conduct and the infringement of
Plaintiff’s privacy and seclus ion in his private life and th e disturbance of his mental
tranquillity, Plaintiff has suffered damages in the sum of R1 000 000,00.
23. In the premises, Defendants are liable to pay to plaintiff the sum of R3 000 000,00
which, despite demand, they have failed to do.’
15
[7] To this the defendants pleaded as follows: To the defamation claim,
first a denial that the article was de famatory; (presumably alternatively)
secondly, truth and public interest; thirdly, what has come to be known as the
Bogoshi1 defence; and fourthly, the protection of the right of free speech and the
right to impart information conferre d by s 16 of the Constitution. To the
impairment of dignity claim, there was a general denial. To the invasion of
privacy claim, there was a general denial coupled with an allegation that none of
the facts allegedly wrongly disclosed in th e article were privat e at the time of
their publication.
[8] Trial particulars were sought and furn ished. Of particular relevance is the
plaintiff’s reply to the question whether any particular material portion of the
article was false, and if so, which. Th e answer given was that it was not the
plaintiff’s case that any material portion of the article was false. To the question
whether the defendants are alleged to have negligently and/or recklessly failed
to take any reasonable steps prior to publishing the article and, if so, which, the
reply was that the defendants unreasonabl y published details of and concerning
the plaintiff and which identified him, viz his name, his age, his place of
residence, and his photographic image.
1 National Media Ltd & Others v Bogoshi 1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA).
16
[9] Some two weeks later the plaintiff withdrew his previous answer to the
first question referred to in para [8] and substituted for it the word ‘no’. This was
a somewhat enigmatic response for it was the plaintiff’s answer to two separate
questions. The first was whether any mate rial portion of the article was false,
and if so, which. The second was whethe r it was admitted that any material
portions were true, and if so, which. I can only construe the reply ‘no’ to mean
that the plaintiff was not positively alleging any falsity in the article but that he
was not going so far as to admit its truth because it was for the defendant to
prove the truth of the contents of the arti cle. However, the additional particulars
furnished did acknowledge the truthfulness of some parts of the articles, namely,
‘that he, his wife Gouwa Suleiman a nd their cousin Shanaaz Bayat, were
arrested by the police as they were about to board a flight to Egypt, and that they
were detained in police custody overnight’.
[10] On 10 August 2001, after learning of the existence of the country edition,
the plaintiff gave notice of his intention to amend his particulars of claim. Apart
from the consequential amendments resu lting from the introduction of the
publication of the country edition as a fu rther ground of comp laint, some other
amendments to the particulars of claim were effected. The allegation that the
plaintiff ‘was arrested and detained by members of the South African Police
Services, purportedly in connection with the explosion at the restaurant’ was
17
deleted and substituted for it was the alle gation that the plaintiff ‘was arrested
and detained by a member of the South African Police Services for allegedly
having contravened the Identification Ac t, 72 of 1986, and the Aliens Control
Act, 96 of 1991’. For convenience sake I shall refer to the alleged contravention
of those two Acts as passport contraventions.
[11] Amendments to the plaintiff’s repl y to the defendant’s request for trial
particulars were also effected. The enig matic ‘no’ given in answer to the two
questions referred to in pa ra [9] was delete d and substituted for it were the
following allegations:
“6.1 The first and second articles are fa lse in the following material respects:
6.1.1 Neither Plaintiff nor his wife nor Shanaaz Bayat were arrested by
detectives probing the explosion at ‘Planet Hollywood’;
6.1.2 The three were not arrested in connection with the explosion; and
6.1.3 None of the three were ta ken to the Parow police station by
‘Waterfront bombing investig ating officer Mike Barkhuizen’.
6.2 The true facts are that Plaintiff, his wife, and Shanaaz Bayat, were arrested
by a member of the South African Po lice Services, Border Control Unit, in
respect of alleged passport irregularitie s and the aforementioned Barkhuizen
was not present when the three were taken to Parow police Station.”
18
[12] In their amended plea to the plaint iff’s amended particulars of claim the
defendants ‘admitted that th e reports were defamatory of the plaintiff’ but did
not say in what particular respect.
[13] In further trial particulars provided by the plaintiff, he alleged that he was
not informed at the time of his arrest that the reason for his arrest was his
contravention of the two Acts referred to earlier and was told simply that he was
being arrested for irregularities in his pa ssport. He denied that the police had at
some time prior to his arrest recei ved an anonymous re port that he was
somehow linked to the explosion and that he, his wife, and Shanaaz Bayat were
leaving the country for Egypt. He admitted only that the police had at some time
prior to his arrest received an anonymous report that he might be linked to the
explosion and that he was leaving the country.
[14] After hearing the evid ence adduced by the parties at the trial Selikowitz J
upheld the plaintiff’s clai ms and awarded him damage s of R90 000,00 for the
defamation and impairment of dignity co mbined and R10 00,00 for the invasion
of privacy. The factual conclusions upon which the awards were based were
broadly these. The learned judge was sati sfied that the reasonable reader would
have concluded that the plaintiff was arrested as a suspect in the Planet
Hollywood bombing. He acknowledged that a reasonable reader would have
appreciated that the plaintiff was only a suspect and had not been proved to have
19
been the perpetrator of the crime and that many suspects who become accused
are thereafter acquitted, but considered that “the mere fact of being arrested as a
suspect carries a stigma and the acquittal is often perceived to be for ‘technical
reasons rather than for innocence” and that the more serious the crime, the
heavier the stigma.
[15] As to the truth or untruth of the defamatory allegation, namely, that the
plaintiff was arrested as a suspect in the bombing, he concluded that the
defendants had ‘failed to establish the trut h of the reports that the plaintiff was
arrested as a suspect in the Planet Hollywood bombing’ and that ‘per contra, the
evidence establishes that the objective truth remains that plaintiff was arrested
for passport irregularities and not in connection with the Planet Hollywood
bombing’. Furthermore, he found that the uncontroverted evidence was that the
plaintiff was arrested by members of the border police and not by detectives
probing the bombing. He found too that the plaintiff was not taken to the Parow
Police Station by the bombing investigatio n officer, Mike Barkhuizen, but by
the border police. All three of the allega tions were therefore found to be false.
The ultimate conclusion was that the defendants had ‘fail ed to prove, on a
balance of probability, that the mate rial defamatory allegations were
substantially true’. That obviated, so the learned judge thought, the need to
consider whether publication was in the public interest.
20
[16] Turning to the Bogoshi defence, he found that the defendants did not act
unreasonably in relating the plaintiff’s arrest to the bombing but that neither the
statement that the plaintiff was a suspec t in the bombing, nor that detectives
probing the bombing had arrested the plaintiff, nor the statement that
Barkhuizen had accompanied the plaintiff to the Parow police station were
reasonably justified. Howeve r, he did not regard the use of the word ‘arrest’
rather than ‘detain’ to have been unreas onable. He said, correctly, in my view,
‘when the police are seen to detain a person, handcuff him and remove him then
it seems to me – in the context of the re ports here – to be sp litting hairs to ask
whether he has been properly described as having been detained or arrested’.
[17] Holding that it was inherent in the Bogoshi defence that it would still have
to be shown that publication of the defa matory material, if it had been true,
would have been in the public interest, he concluded that it would not have been
in the public interest to reveal the identity of the plaintiff at a time when he had
not yet been charged or brought before a court. He said: ‘In weighing the harm
which can result from the premature disclo sure of the detainee’s identity in a
case such as this as against a delay in informing the public of the detainee’s
identity until he is brough t before a court, there seems to me to be an
overwhelming tilt in favour of the individual.’ The Bogoshi defence was
therefore rejected.
21
[18] The claim for impairment of dignity was dealt with by holding that
although there was overlapping of the claim with the claim for defamation, the
former claim could be maintained but had to be limited to the harm caused by
the peninsula edition because the plaintif f had never been aware of the country
edition until nearly three year s after the event. The defences of truth and public
benefit and the Bogoshi defence, in so far as they might be applicable to this
claim, were rejected for the same re asons as they were rejected when
considering the claim for defamation. When awarding damages for this
impairment of dignity the learned judge merged the award with his award for
defamation and it is not possible to isolate to what extent the ultimate award was
increased by doing so. The invasion of privacy claim was upheld.
[19] In any defamation suit the logi cal starting point is what the words
complained of mean, more particularly, whether th ey convey the defamatory
meaning which the plaintiff seeks to place upon them. In answering that
question a court discards its judicial robes and the professional habit of
analysing and interpreting statutes and contracts in accordance with long
established principles. Instead it dons the garb and adopts the mindset of the
reasonable lay citizen and interprets the words, and draws the inferences which
they suggest, as such a person would do. It follows that meticulous attention to
detail, an alertness to and awareness of the subtle nuances in meaning of words,
22
a full appreciation of the influence of context, and a reluctance to draw
inferences when they are not soundly ba sed and fully justifiable and amount to
no more than speculation, cannot be exp ected. The law reports are replete with
reminders of the looseness of thought and low level of concentration with which
even an eminently reasonable member of society may read newspaper reports.
[20] Yet there must be a limit to the allowances which a court should make in a
claimant’s favour when engaged in the notional exercise postulated. A
defamatory meaning should not be attribut ed to an isolated part of a newspaper
report if the rest of the report would show that it is not justified. A claimant
should not be permitted to base his case upon the reaction of readers who do not
bother to read the whole of the article even although a part of it has attracted
their attention precisely because of its potential to lower the esteem in which
society holds him. In saying this I am aware that judges have drawn attention to
the propensity of readers to ‘skim’ reports in newspapers but I do not understand
that to mean that they must be taken to have entirely ignored everything in a
report which they skim, other than that part or those parts of it which, if viewed
in isolation, would consti tute defamatory material. Why should the writer or
publisher of an article the whole of which is intended to be read and, if read,
would plainly not be defamatory be he ld liable for defamation because there
may have been lazy or careless r eaders who chose to focus only upon a
23
particular sentence in it. I am also aware that headlines are what attract readers
to an article but that does not mean that one may ignore an accompanying
headline. However, ‘those who print de famatory headlines are playing with
fire’.2
[21] I approach the question of what the articles and the photo and the caption
conveyed having read them in their enti rety. In providing the answer I shall
confine myself to the meaning of those pa rts of the articles which are potentially
defamatory or relevant to the question of whether they are defamatory.
[22] The country edition :
It conveyed:
1. That detectives engaged in inves tigating the bombing arrested the plaintiff,
his wife and his cousin (all of whom were named) on Thursday 27 August 1998
when they were about to board a flight bound for Egypt, a nd they were being
held overnight by the police;
2 So said Lord Nichols in Charleston v News Group Newspapers Ltd [1995] 2 AC 65 at 74C-D. Lord Bridge
said: ‘Whether the text of a newspape r article will, in any particular cas e, be sufficient to neutralize the
defamatory implication of a prominent headline will sometimes be a nicely balanced question for the jury to
decide and will depend not only on the nature of the libel which the headline conveys and the language of the
text which is relied on to neutralize it but also on the manner in which the whole of the relevant material is set
out and presented. But the proposition that the prominent headline, or as here the headlines plus photographs,
may found a claim in libel in isolation from its related te xt, because some readers only read headlines, is to my
mind quite unacceptable in the li ght of the principles discussed above.’ (At 72H-73B). Cf Leon v Edinburgh
Evening News Limited 1909 SC 1014.
24
2. That they were associated with Pagad and that the arrests were made
after an anonymous tip-off to the police that they were bound for Egypt and that
they might be linked to the bombing;
3. That the two women would be charged with passport offences;
4. That the plaintiff (the ‘male suspect’) was being held for further
questioning, as a suspect in the bombing;
5. That all three were taken to Paro w police Station by, inter alia, Mike
Barkhuizen, the Waterfront bombing investigating officer;
6. That South Africa’s police operati ons chief, Commissioner André Pruiss,
told the Cape Times that there was a possibility that they could have been
involved in the blast but that, at that stage, there was no evidence pointing to
that.
7. That the plaintiff and his compan ions had been stopped by the Aliens
Control Unit at the airport after fault was found with one of their passports;
8. That the mother of Shanaaz Bayat (the plaintiff’s cousin) denied that her
daughter’s passport was not in order a nd that she had travelled overseas many
times before without experiencing problems with her passport;
25
9. That a large number (20) of family members at the airport had angrily
protested at the arrests and alleged that it was unfair and discriminating against
Muslims;
10. That Commissioner Pruiss had res ponded by saying that there was no
intention of harassing Muslims and that the police were merely following all
possible leads which included the questioning of all possible suspects.
11. That Commissioner Pruiss and Na tional Police Commissioner George
Fivaz had remained in Cape Town to ove rsee the latest developments and that
since early the previous evening they had been receiving reports from the
investigating team every 30 minutes.
I do not regard the headings to the arti cle, namely, ‘“Pulled off plane”’ and
‘Bomb: Pagad trio held at airport’ as conveying anything different from the
meaning conveyed by the body of the article.
[23] The peninsula edition :
With minor exceptions (the omission of the content of the ‘tip-off’; the
reaction of the 20 family members at the airport; and the denial by the mother of
Shanaaz Bayat that her passport was not in order) the article conveyed the same
information and meaning as that I have attributed to the country edition.
However, there was prominence given to the attitude of Pagad to the arrests and
26
it was made clear that Pagad regarded the trio as innocent and the arrests as
nothing more than blatant harassment and indicative of a witch-hunt targeting
Muslims.
[24] The next question which needs addressi ng is which, if any, aspects of the
articles and photo are defamatory according to the plaintiff, and whether they
are indeed defamatory in the light of the meaning which the court has found has
to be given to the articles. The plaintif f’s first submission is that the articles
convey to the public that he is indeed the bomber or responsible for the
bombing. That submission is, in my view, untenable. It was also correctly so
regarded by the learned judge a quo. The articles make it quite plain that the
plaintiff is no more than a suspect and th at the basis for his status as such was
only an anonymous ‘tip-off’ to the police that he ‘might’ be involved in the
bombing and was on the point of leavi ng the country. Indeed the articles
expressly state that Commissioner Pruiss had said that while the possibility
existed that the plaintiff could have b een involved in the blast, there was no
evidence that he had been involved. A ny suggestion that the possible readiness
of readers to draw inferences of actual guilt because of a belief that the police do
not arrest for questioning people on su spicion of involvement in crime unless
there is evidence sufficient to warrant prosecution and conviction (in itself an
unsustainable proposition which, if true, would always result in the equating of a
27
statement that a person is suspected by the police of committing a crime with
a statement that the person has committed the crime) would be misplaced in the
light of what was actually published in these articles. It was made abundantly
clear that although the plaintiff was view ed as a suspect by the police, there was
no evidence linking him to the blast.
[25] The trial judge found that the reas onable reader would expect and believe
that the police would not have arrested a person whom they did not ‘seriously
and upon reasonable grounds c onsider to have played a part’ in the bombing.
That is of course still not the equivale nt of saying that he had committed the
crime. Moreover, while the existence of su spicion on the part of the police is an
entirely subjective matter, the grounds fo r their suspicion are objective in their
nature and may vary from slender grounds through many gradations to the status
of cast-iron grounds. A ‘t ip-off’ from a source objectiv ely well-placed to have
access to the information supplied and which has proved to be consistently
reliable in the past may be the only gro und for the suspicion but it would still
rank as a reasonable ground for suspici on even although no evidence, or no
admissible evidence, was available to prove guilt. Sight should not be lost of the
fact that the grounds for arrest for quest ioning as a suspect are often less cogent
than grounds for a successful prosecution and a reasonably well-informed reader
should be alive to the distinction. Such a reader is not entitled to assume that the
28
grounds upon which a suspect has been held by the police fo r questioning are
so strong that an inference of guilt is justified. Comparison with the facts and the
approach of the different law lords who participated in the hearing of Lewis and
Another v Daily Telegraph Ltd and Associated Newspapers Ltd3 is instructive.
[26] The issue was whether publication of a statement that officers of the City
of London Fraud Squad were ‘inquiring into the affair s of the [R. Co.] and its
subsidiary companies’ was libellous. The pl aintiff (the chairman of the R. Co.)
pleaded that the statement meant that he had been guilty of fraud or was
suspected by the police of having been guilty of fraud or dishonesty in
connection with R. Co’s affairs. The majority of the le arned law lords held that
the statement was not capable of conveyi ng that the plaintiff was guilty of fraud
or dishonesty but that suspicion could be inferred from the fact of the inquiry
being held. Lord Hodson said: ‘It may be defamatory to say that someone is
suspected of an offence, but it does not carry with it that that person has
committed the offence, for this must surely offend against the ideas of justice,
which reasonable persons are supposed to entertain. 4 Lord Reid, after remarking
that some people are unusually suspicious and some are unusually naïve and that
one has to try to envisage people between those two extremes and see what is
the most damaging meaning that they would put upon the words in question,
3 [1963] 2 All ER 151 (HL).
4 At 167H.
29
said: ‘What the ordinary man, not avid for scandal, would read into the words
complained of must be a matter of impr ession. I can only say that I do not think
he would infer guilt of fraud merely because an inquiry is on foot.’5
[27] Lord Devlin was at pains to emphasise that while it is not correct to say as
a matter of law that a statement of suspic ion imputes guilt, it can be said as a
matter of practice that it very often doe s so because although suspicion of guilt
is something different from proof of gu ilt, it is the broad impression conveyed
by the libel that has to be considered and not the meaning of each word under
analysis.6 Implicit in this is that there can be no rule of law about this and that it
is a question of fact whether the statemen t conveys more than a mere suspicion.
He also said: ‘When an imputation is made in a general way, the ordinary man is
not likely to distinguish between hints an d allegations, suspicion and guilt. It is
the broad effect that counts and it is no use submitting to the judge that he ought
to dissect the statement before he submits it to the jury. But if, on the other hand,
the distinction clearly emerges from the words used, it cannot be ignored. ’7 [My
emphasis] He too held that the statem ent complained of was not capable of
meaning that the plaintiff had been guilt y of fraud or dishon esty. Lord Jenkins
concurred with Lord Reid.8
5 At 155F.
6 At 173 I-174A.
7 At 173H.
8 At 157C.
30
[28] Lord Morris of Borthy-Y-Gest differed. He considered that the
statement was capable of meaning that th e plaintiff had been guilty of fraud or
dishonesty and that the trial judge was ri ght in leaving it to the jury to decide
whether that was indeed the meaning wh ich the ordinary reader would have
attributed to the statement.9 In my respectful view, th e learned law lord took too
indulgent an approach to the question of what possible meanings could
reasonably be placed upon the statement and the justification given by him for
that approach is unsound.
10 Speculation about why a newspaper chooses to
publish a particular statement is of little, if any, help in deciding what the
statement means. To speculate yet again about the reader’s speculations as to
what lay behind the decision to publish th e statement and then to use the results
of that speculation to justify placing a particular meaning upon the words used
is, in my opinion, a futile and impermi ssible approach which is potentially
productive of random and irrational results.
[29] Whether the reasonable reader postu lated by English law is the same kind
of reader which the law of South Af rica postulates remains a question. The
adoption by many South African courts 11over the years of the test propounded
by Lord Atkin in Sim v Stretch, 12 namely, ‘Would the words tend to lower the
9 At 163D-E.
10 At 163E-164B.
11 See the numerous cases cited at p96, note 85 by Burchell, The Law of Defamation in South Africa.
12 [1936] 2 All ER 1237 (HL).
31
plaintiff in the estimation of right-thinking members of society generally’, 13
indicates that he is. Some controversy exists about the attributes of a ‘right-
thinking’ person. Some might regard them as superior to those of the notional
reasonable person so familiar in our jurisprudence.14 For myself, I have no doubt
that sound legal policy should not require a court hearing a defamation suit to
ascertain the meaning and effect of words by reference to the meaning and effect
that would be attributed to them by anyone other than th e well-known notional
reasonable person in the particular circumstances. Anything less would be unfair
to the publisher of the statement who is sought to be held liable; anything more
would be unfair to a plaintiff who bears the onus of establishing both the
meaning of the words used and the defama tory nature of that meaning. In the
former case it would subject the publishe r to liability for less than reasonable
interpretations of published matter; in th e latter case it would require a plaintiff
to establish more than that reasonabl e readers would attribute a particular
meaning of a defamatory nature to the matter. The same considerations apply, so
it seems to me, to the suggestion 15 that one test should be applied when
ascertaining the meaning of the words used and another more intellectually and
ethically rigorous test when deciding whet her the ascertained meaning is indeed
13 At 1240.
14 Burchell, The Law of Defamation in South Africa, p 96.
15 Jansen JA in SA Associated Newspapers Ltd en ‘n ander v Samuels 1980 (1) SA 24 (A) at 30 and Demmers v
Wyllie 1980 (1) SA 835 (A) at 840.
32
defamatory. In my view, neither logi c nor sound legal policy requires the
application of two different criteria to these questions.
[30] Applying that test, the answer seem s plain. The meaning of the articles, in
broad, was that the plaintiff was associated with Pagad; that he was suspected by
the police investigating the bombing of being implicated in the bombing because
of an anonymous tip-off that he might be so implicated and was about to leave
the country; that he had been arrested at the airport for that reason and was
detained overnight for questioning by th e police investigating the bombing after
being taken to the Parow police cells by the investigating officer; that
Commissioner Pruiss had said that while th ere was a possibility that he might be
involved in the bombing, there was no evidence pointing to that; and that he had
been stopped at the airport by the Aliens Control Unit after fault was found with
one of the passports of the trio named in the articles.
[31] As to the sting of the articles or, in other words, their defamatory nature, I
have no doubt that it lies in the allegation that the plaintiff, a Pagad associate,
had been arrested and so prevented fro m flying out of South Africa for Egypt
because, as a result of a tip-off, he was suspected of complicity in the bombing.
To say of a man that he has been arrest ed and detained in custody by the police
for questioning as a suspect in the commis sion of a serious crime is, in my view,
defamatory. It remains so despite an accompanying statement that the police
33
regard him as a suspect only because of an anonymous tip-off that he, an
associate of Pagad, might be involved in the bombing and was about to leave the
country for Egypt, and that there was no evidence pointing to his involvement.
[32] Defamation is of course an injuria to one’s fama or reputation. I think that
it is inevitable that some damage is done to the reputation of a person when the
public is told, before a decision to char ge him with a serious crime has been
taken and before he has appeared in court, that he is under arrest on suspicion of
committing that crime. It is true that in South Africa there is a constitutionally
entrenched presumption of innocence until the contrary is proved. However, the
harsh reality of the situation is that even mere suspicion, to put it at its lowest,
raises doubts in the mind of those to whom it is communicated as to whether the
hitherto unsullied reputation which the pe rson enjoyed continues to be deserved
or whether it should now be regarded as undeserved. To say that which imperils
the continued existence of a person ’s good reputation and causes people
generally to doubt the integrity of that person even though they may not be
certain the doubt is justified, is to adversel y affect to at least some degree his or
her reputation. That the doubt may be temporary and ultimately transient
because of the subsequently establis hed innocence of the person concerned
cannot cure the loss of esteem wh ich that person endures pending the
establishment of his or her innocence.
34
[33] In the case of Lewis 16 the House of Lords appears to have accepted that
it is defamatory to say that a pers on is suspected by the police of fraud and
dishonesty. In the same case in the Court of Appeal it was explicitly so
held by Holroyd Pearce L J.17
[34] Truth and public benefit :
The plaintiff’s approach to the question of truth was to isolate certain of the
statements made in the articles and to argue that, because the evidence showed
them to be false, it followed that th e defendants had failed to prove that the
defamatory statements published by the de fendants were true or substantially
true. The approach would have been unde rstandable if each of the isolated
statements said to be false constitute d a separate, distinct, and different
defamatory allegation against the plainti ff. But I fail to understand how that
approach can be appropriate when the is olated statements are not separate and
distinct defamatory statements each c onveying a different defamatory meaning,
but simply elaborations of fact de signed to bring home the one and only
defamatory meaning of which the articles read as a whole are capable.
[35] To illustrate: If it is said in a le tter to the press that a person committed
rape in 2003, murder in 1975 and thef t in 1970, and when sued, the publisher
16 [1963] 2 All ER 151 (HL). See too the observations of Colman J in Hassen v Post Newspapers (Pty) Ltd and
others 1965 (3) SA 562 (W) at 564 D-565H.
17 [1962] 2 All ER 698 (CA) at 713.
35
fails to prove that murder and rape were committed but does prove that theft
was committed, the plaintiff is entitled to say that while the allegation that he
committed theft is true, the allegation that he committed the other two crimes of
violence is untrue and he should be compensated for those unjustifiable
defamatory allegations. But where the comp laint is that it was falsely alleged
that the plaintiff had been arrested upon a charge of murder and that the
arresting officer was a member of the mu rder and robbery unit of the police it
cannot avail the plaintiff, if it is established that he was arrested for murder, to
say that the evidence shows that he was not arrested by a member of that squad
but by a member of the dog unit; that the report is therefore false in that respect;
and that therefore the defendant has failed to prove the truth or substantial truth
of the report of which the plaintiff complains.
[36] It seems quite obvious in the latt er example that whoever arrested the
plaintiff is irrelevant to the defamatory sti ng of the article. It is a peripheral fact
which, even if it had been left out, or ev en if it had been corrected, would have
made no difference whatever to the defamatory import of that part of the article
which was true.
[37] In the present case, as I have alr eady said, the defamatory aspect of the
articles is that the plaintiff was rega rded by the police as a suspect in the
bombing, was prevented from leaving South Africa and was held for questioning
36
in that regard by police investigat ing the bombing. The answers to such
questions as whether he was formally arrested initially on passport charges;
whether, if he was, that was merely a pret ext resorted to to ensure that he would
not be able to complain if questioning of him as a suspect in the bombing led to
a conclusion that he was innocent and should be released; and whether it was
Barkhuizen, the officer investigating the bombing, who took him to Parow
Police cells, add nothing to nor subt ract anything from the defamatory
allegations which exist in the articles. The truth or falsity of these statements is
wholly peripheral to the question whether or not the defamatory allegations were
true or untrue.
[38] I have no hesitation in finding that the defamatory aspects of the articles
were true. The following facts are subs tantiated by overwhelming evidence. The
police investigating the bombing set out to apprehend the plaintiff as a suspect
as a result of a ‘tip-off’ from a source who had proved to be reliable in the past.
The suspicion was genuine and not fei gned. The border police at the airport
were advised of the desire of the police investigating the bombing to apprehend
the plaintiff and prevent him from leav ing South Africa for Egypt. They were
prepared to assist in achieving that obje ctive. They did in fact do so, first, by
detaining him and secondly, by taking advantage of a subsequently appearing
ground (passport irregularities) for arre sting him. Despite Barkhuizen’s own
37
doubts about the existence of sufficient evidence to justify an arrest, he
continued to regard him as a suspect on the strength of the ‘tip-off’
communicated to him by Director Knip e. Indeed, Barkhuizen procured his
removal from Parow Police cells to the Bellville South Police cells for the
express purpose of questioning him as a suspect in the bombing. He exploited
the arrest of the plaintiff by the borde r police by using their detention of the
plaintiff to achieve the very purpose which those investigating the bombing had
set out to achieve, namely, to prevent the plaintiff from leaving South Africa and
to detain him in custody for interrogation as a suspect in the bombing.
[39] It is equally clear that the whole aim of the police was to let it be known
to the public, first, that they were not sleeping on the job and were making
progress in the investigation; secondly, that they had apprehended a suspect in
the bombing and prevented his departure from South Africa on a flight to Egypt;
and, thirdly, that he was being held in custody for interrogation as a suspect in
the bombing. To that end, the police advised the media of an imminent arrest for
that specific purpose so that publicity would be given to the arrest.
They subsequently confirmed, when asked for confirmation, that the
plaintiff was being held and interrogated as a suspect in the bombing. They
released his name and downplayed the passport offences.
38
[40] The arrests for alleged passport offences were quite adventitious
and were obviously intended to achieve two purposes: first, to enable the
border police to check the passports; secondly, to enable the police
investigating the bombing to question the plaintiff while he was in custody
in his capacity as a suspect in the bombing. It is quite plain that the arrest
in the sense of taking him into police custody was as much for the one
purpose as the other. That is borne out by the failure of the border police to
use immediately their computer link in order to check the passports (as
they could have done) and by the utterance of one of the border policemen,
‘Ons het hom’ when the plaintiff was arrested. He was arrested before
anything was known about possible passport irregularities.
[41] The plaintiff too regarded himsel f as having been detained (arrested)
for the bombing and continued to believe it right up to the amendment of
his pleadings shortly before the trial commenced. Director Knipe’s
evidence was unequivocal: if Barkhuizen had not seen to it that the
plaintiff was prevented from leaving South Africa that night he (Knipe)
would have proceeded to the airport a nd, come what may, arrested him on
suspicion of involvement in the bombing. In the light of all this it cannot
be said that the defamatory aspect of the articles was untrue. It was proved
39
on a balance of probability to be true and the learned trial judge was
wrong in coming to a contrary conclusion. Reliance on the Bogoshi
defence is therefore in relation to this particular aspect of the case
unnecessary.
[42] That brings me to the question of public benefit or interest – a
troublesome aspect of the case. The criterion allows for considerable
elasticity in its application and is wo efully unhelpful in failing to provide
any indication of what is meant by public benefit or interest. It is true that
what is interesting to the public is not necessarily the same as what it is in
the public interest for the public to know but that leaves unanswered how
to distinguish the two. It seems obvious that what it is in the public interest
for the public to know may not in fact be interesting to the public and that
what the public finds interesting it may not be in the public interest for the
public to know.
[43] Prurient or morbid public curi osity, no matter how widespread, about
things which are ordinarily regarded as private or do not really concern the
public cannot be the test. Nor can the f act that there is a legitimate public
interest in a particular topic such as the prevention of crime and the
40
apprehension of offenders mean that any information of any kind which
is relevant to that topic may be published with impunity.
[44] In considering the question of public benefit or interest there is
obviously a potential clash between cons titutionally entrenched rights: the
rights to dignity and privacy on the one hand and, on the other, the right of
freedom of the press, of expression, and of receiving or imparting
information. None of these rights should be regarded as permanently
trumping the others in the sense that there is a pre-ordained and never
shifting order of priority to be assigne d to each of them. The weight to be
assigned to each of them in a given situation will vary according to the
circumstances attending the situation. It is not a question of ‘balancing’ the
conflicting rights in order to achieve equilibrium between them; it is a
matter of ad hoc assessment of what weight should be assigned to the
respective rights in the particular circumstances of the case and giving
precedence and effect to the right whic h weighs most heavily in such a
manner as will impair the countervaili ng right as little as reasonably
possible. It is important to appreciate the distinction between a case such as
this in which the two rights under consideration are both equally
constitutionally entrenched rights and a case in which only one of the two
41
rights is so entrenched. It is in the latter class of case, not the former, in
which s 36(1) of the constitution becomes relevant. However, in the former
class of case difficult questions of proportionality arise.18
[45] I doubt that it can never be in the public interest or for the public
benefit for the media to name a suspect and publish a photograph of him or
her before any court appearance. The crime or offence of which the person
is suspected may be of such a kind that the public may be entitled to be
informed of his or her identity even before any appearance in court so that
they can steer clear immediately of the person until guilt or innocence has
been established, or so that the person’s continued discharge of a high
profile public office which requires the encumbent to be, like Caesar’s
wife, above even suspicion, may be temporarily suspended pending the
outcome of an investigation.
[46] Some examples of offences I have in mind are a person who
practises as a medical doctor but who is suspected of not being qualified or
registered to do so as the law requires or a judicial officer who is suspected
of serious crime. There is danger to th e public at large inherent in the first
example and persons who consult that person or who may be minded to do
18 Cf Campbell v MGN Limited [2004] UKHL 22, a decision (as yet unreported) of the Appellate Committee of
the House of Lords rendered on 6 May 2004. See, in particular, paras 12, 20, 55, 84-86, 103-126, 138-142 and
167. See too Khumalo and others v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC) at 417-419 and Professor J Neethling’s
article, ‘Indringing in privaatheid en die openbare inligtingsbelang’, TSAR 2003 3 568 at 572.
42
so should perhaps be alerted to that so that they can make up their own
minds whether or not they wish to steer clear of the person until the
question is resolved. In the second example there may be no more danger
to the public than exists in the case of any other person suspected of a
similar crime but the nature of the public office which the person is
required to discharge is such that publ ic confidence in its discharge will be
undermined if the person continues to discharge it while under a cloud of
suspicion of having done that which the State has empowered him or her to
punish others for doing. I wish to ma ke it quite clear that in posing these
examples I am not deciding that it woul d be in the public interest to name
the suspects in these examples before a formal charge has been laid and an
appearance in court has occurred. I me ntion them only to point to some
distinctions which differentiate one type of case from another and may (I
put it no higher) result in different c onclusions as to whether or not an
early disclosure of the identity of the suspect is in the public interest. There
are also of course cases in which the police specifically enlist the aid of the
media in tracking down a suspect whose whereabouts are unknown.
[47] That said, I think that the consequences of a premature disclosure of
the identity of a suspect can be so traumatic for and detrimental to the
43
person concerned when he or she ma y never be charged or appear in
court and is, in fact, innocent, that gr eater weight should be assigned to the
protection of the constitutional right to dignity and privacy and the
common law right of reputation, than to the right of the press to freely
impart information to the public. It is not as if the press will be
permanently deprived of the right to identify the suspect. Once he or she
appears in court his or her identity may be disclosed with impunity. In the
meantime the press are at liberty to inform the public of what it is clearly
in the public interest to know, name ly, that an unnamed suspect has been
arrested and questioned by the police in connection with the commission of
a crime. But, generally speaking, and subject to the considerations I have
mentioned in paras [45] and [46], I do not believe it is in the public interest
or for the public benefit that the identity of a suspect be made known
prematurely.
[48] It is so that in this partic ular case a horrendous crime which created
huge public alarm had been committed. But the seriousness of the crime
alone cannot be the touchstone as to whether or not it is in the public
interest to prematurely name a suspect . Nor is there anything in the nature
of the crime other than the apparent unconcern of the perpetrators about
44
who might be killed or injured by the bombing which takes the matter
any further. It is true that these factors certainly heighten the legitimate
public interest which will exist in knowing whether progress has been
made in the investigation by the police and whether any arrests have been
made. But they do not create or heighten a need for the public to know the
identity of any suspects whom the police may decide to question.
[49] The plaintiff was not a person with a high public profile. He did not
hold a public office of any kind. He was merely another citizen. There was
no evidence linking him with the blast. He was only being questioned
about the matter and no decision had been taken to charge him with the
bombing. As a fact, the decision to reveal his identity was not made
because those responsible for the decision considered it to be in the public
interest in the legal sense but because his identity had already been
disclosed in television news reports an d was therefore thought to be in the
public domain. However, that subjective belief is not relevant. The test of
public interest or benefit is objective.
[50] The photograph of the plaintiff requires special consideration in this
context. It is a criminal offence under s 69 of the South African Police
Services Act 68 of 1995 for any person to publish, without the written
45
permission of the National or Provi ncial Commissioner, a photograph of
any person who, inter alia, is suspected of committing an offence and who
is in custody pending a decision to inst itute criminal proceedings against
him or her. The object of the prohib ition is manifest: it is to avoid any
subsequent trial of that person being compromised or prejudiced by a
premature photographic disclosure of the identity of the suspect. If that is
regarded as an important enough interest to warrant parliament providing
statutory protection of it, it leaves little, if any, room for the conclusion that
it is in the public interest to publish su ch a picture without such permission
and at a time when the person concerned is no more than a suspect and has
neither been charged nor appeared before a court.
[51] It is not necessary to consider whether there is any scope for the
application of the principles laid down in the case of Bogoshi to the
requirement that public interest or benefit exist. A bona fide subjective
belief in the existence of public inte rest or benefit without reasonable
grounds for the belief could obviously not avail a defendant. But what the
position would be if there was much to be said for a conclusion that
publication would be in the public inte rest but not quite enough to justify
the conclusion, it is not necessary to decide because the decision to publish
46
the plaintiff’s identity was not based on a belief that it was in the public
interest to do so. In any event, I am not convinced that the Bogoshi
principles are of any application to the public interest or benefit aspect of
the defence of truth and public benefit. Prima facie, they are not. None of
the defences to the claim for damages for defamation have been made out
and the plaintiff is entitled to appropria te damages. To that subject I shall
return.
[52] Impairment of dignity :
Whatever doubt may have existed in the past as to whether dignitas was a
separate and distinct right of personality which merited independent
recognition and protection, there is no longer any doubt. The matter is now
placed beyond contention by virtue of th e constitutional entrenchment of a
right to dignity which inheres in every person.
19 Overlapping is bound to
occur whenever a defamatory statement is made which is at one and the
same time an affront to the person’s dignity. Some maintain that every
injuria (including those relating to corpus and fama) adversely affects
dignitas. It is not necessary to decide whether that is always so; it is
sufficient to acknowledge that it will often be so.
19 S 10 of the Constitution 1996.
47
[53] In many ways the problems which arise in deciding whether
separate awards of compensation for defamation and affront to dignity
should be made are similar to those which arise in the criminal law in
relation to the splitting of charges. In the present case it is inappropriate to
attempt to assess in monetary terms what solatium should be given for the
affront to dignitas and what should be given for the damage to fama. The
learned judge exercised a proper discretion in awarding a lump sum to
cover both. The infractions of those two rights were so intertwined that any
attempt to compensate for each of them separately would have been
attended by a substantial risk of compensating twice for what was
essentially one delictual act, name ly, the unlawful publication of the
plaintiff’s identity in articles defamatory of him. To the appropriateness of
the quantum of the award I shall revert.
[54] It is necessary to correct an ob servation made by the learned judge in
dealing with the claim for impairment of dignity. He said that publication
of the country edition had to be ignored because the plaintiff never knew of
its publication until three years later. That does not derogate from the fact
that he ultimately came to know that three years before a large number of
people who read that edition suspected him of being the sort of person who
48
had no claim to any dignity, namely, a common murderer. That he did
not know that at the time does not mean that, objectively regarded, he was
not subjected to indignity in the eyes of the public. He was. That he only
learnt of it ex post facto and suffered from the knowledge then does not
deprive him of a remedy.
[55] Invasion of privacy :
It is also no longer open to doubt that an action for damages for invasion of
privacy exists in our law. Whether it is really an independently existing
injuria in its own right or whether it is a species of affront to dignitas is of
little importance. The point is that invasions of privacy are forbidden by
the Constitution and the common law and are actionable.20
[56] Here again there may be overlapping of injuriae. Invasion of privacy can
take many forms. Some may involve no publication of defamatory statements or
material, such as, for instance, ‘peeping Tom’ cases. Others may be part and
parcel of a defamatory publication as, fo r example, a statement that a person has
blackmailed a medical practitioner because he failed to diagnose timeously that
the person was suffering from cancer. The allegation of blackmail is destructive
of fama; the allegation that the person suffe rs from cancer is not but it is an
20 S 14 of the Constitution 1996. The circumstances of this case do not nece ssitate an enquiry into the question
‘whether there are now two potential delictual actions for invasions of privacy – a common law action and a
constitutional action – or whether the common law action should subsume the constitutional action without
creating a new delict’. The question is debated by Professor David McQuoid-Mason in his article, ‘Invasion of
privacy: common law v constitutional delict – does it make a difference?’, 2000 Acta Juridica 227.
49
intrusion upon the right of privacy. In this example, there is no overlapping of
the two injuriae . But where a published statement accuses a person of being
addicted to pornography (a defamatory statement) the invasion of privacy is so
inextricably enmeshed with the assault upon fama that the assessment of
compensation for the assault upon fama will necessarily entail an evaluation of
the impact upon both the public and the plai ntiff of the publication of the fact (if
it is true) that the person is addicted to pornography. To tr eat the invasion of
privacy as a separately actionable delict in such a situation is akin to what would
be an impermissible splitting of charges in the criminal law.
[57] It is not necessary to decide whet her the very institution of a separate
claim for damages for invasion of privacy in circumstances such as those in the
last-mentioned example is permissible. It is sufficient to say that where such a
situation arises, it will seldom, if ever , be possible to quantify separately from
the damages which ought to be awarded for the defamation, the damages which
ought to be awarded for the concomitant invasion of privacy and, generally
speaking, no such attempt should be made. Just as in the case of a concomitant
affront to dignity, the damages (if any) should be merged into one globular
amount.
[58] In the present case th e most serious invasion of privacy complained of is
the publication of the facts and circumstances of the plaintiff’s arrest as a
suspect. Those are not, in my opinion, private matters. It was a publicly
50
performed arrest in a crowded airport. The fact that he was suspected by the
police of involvement in the explosion a nd was detained for questioning in that
connection is not information which was intrinsically private to him.
[59] The remaining disclosures of al legedly private matters of which the
plaintiff complains are the publication of his name and photograph, that he was a
member of Pagad, and that he was about to depart from Cape Town to Egypt.
The publication of his name and photograph and that he was a member of Pagad
is so inextricably part of the facts wh ich are relied upon to support the claim for
defamation that no additional actionable br each of the plaintiff’s rights can be
said to have occurred. The same applies to the disclosu re of the intended flight
to Egypt, if it is to be given a sinister co nnotation. If it is not , then it is not, in
my opinion, private information of a kind which the law should regard as worthy
of protection. As Prosser puts it: ‘The ordinary reasonable man does not take
offence at mention in a newspaper of th e fact that he has returned home from a
visit or gone camping in the woods, or given a party at his house for his
friends.’
21 In my view, this claim should have failed.
[60] To sum up on the merits of the cl aims, defamation was established in the
sense set out in para [30] of this judgme nt, so was the affront to dignity inherent
in the defamation; the claim for invasion of privacy was not made out. Contrary
to the finding of the learned trial judge, th e truth of the defamatory aspect of the
21 Prosser, Law of Torts, 4 ed (1971) at 811.
51
articles was proved and th ere was no recklessness on the part of those
responsible for the publication.
[61] Damages :
In the light of these findings the dama ges awarded require reassessment. The
trial judge’s finding that aspects of the defamatory parts of the articles were not
true and were recklessly made, would obviously have influenced his assessment
of the damages. Moreover the third cl aim should not have been upheld. This
court is therefore at large to reasse ss the damages to be awarded for the
defamation and accompanying affront to dignity.
[62] That it was a serious case of defamation and affront to dignity I have no
doubt. But the case is complicated by the fact that by the time the articles
appeared the plaintiff had already been named in national television broadcasts
as having been arrested as a suspect in the bombing. While that does not render
lawful the repeated publication of that defamatory statement by the defendants,
one must bear in mind that publication took place only to the readers of the Cape
Times and that many of them are likely to have already been aware of the
television broadcasts. The additional dama ge done to the plaintiff’s reputation
by the republication is what must be co mpensated for. To quantify the damages
as if the Cape Times had been the first offender and therefore responsible for all
the harm caused countrywide to the plai ntiff’s reputation would be unrealistic
and amount to making it pay for the sins of others. Nor can one ignore the fact
52
that many readers of the Cape Times were probably already aware of the facts
published by it. Some allowance, however difficult its quantification may be,
has to be made for that.
[63] I think it is also relevant that the context in which that part of the articles
which has been found to be defamatory appears is strongly sympathetic to the
plaintiff, expresses the outrage at his arrest of a significant sector of the public
and, most importantly, reveals that, obj ectively regarded, there was no evidence
linking him to the bombing. These are mitigating factors.
[64] Having regard to the general level of awards of damages for defamation
and associated injuriae in South Africa over the years and taking into account
the concomitant diminution in the value of money, I consider that an award of
R50 000,00 as combined compensation for the claims for defamation and affront
to dignity would be appropriate.
[65] Costs :
The defendants have achieved some success on appeal. It cannot be described as
insubstantial. The plaintiff could have abandoned a part of the award for claims
1 and 2 and the whole of the award for claim 3. It did not and that obliged the
defendants to appeal even if only to ach ieve that partial success. On the other
hand, the defendants sought on appeal to deprive the plaintiff of the whole of the
judgment in its favour including the fav ourable costs order. The plaintiff was
obliged to oppose the appeal to prevent that happening and has succeeded to a
53
substantial extent in doing so. In these circumstances it would not be fair to
dub either the plaintiff or the defendants as the losers in the appeal. They have
all achieved substantial success. To order one side to pay the costs of the other
would not be appropriate. It would be fairer to order th em each to pay their own
costs of appeal.
[66] There is no reason to interfere with the order made in respect of the trial
costs. The costs of the applications for leave to appeal are another matter. There
is no good reason why the plaintiff, having unsuccessfully resisted the
applications, should not bear the costs of the applications.
[67] It is ordered:
(a) That the appeal is upheld and that the order of the court a quo is set aside
and substituted by the following order:
‘Judgment for the Plaintiff against Second, Third and Fourth Defendants jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, on claims 1 and 2 in the
sum of R50 000,00 with mora interest on such sum at the rate of 15,5 per
centum per annum from 15 June 1999 to date of payment, and costs of suit
which shall include the costs of two c ounsel but shall exclude the costs of
counsels’ appearance and the attorneys’ attendance at court on one day of the
trial. Each of the parties shall bear his/its own costs of such day. Claim 3 is
dismissed. No order as to costs is made in respect of Claim 3.’
54
(b) That the court a quo’s order that the appellants pay the costs of the
application made to it for leave to appeal is set aside and that the respondent pay
the costs of both the application for leave to appeal in the court a quo including
the costs of two counsel and the application to this court for leave to appeal.
(c) That each of the parties pa y his/its own costs of appeal.
____________________
R M MARAIS
J U D G E O F A P P E A L
SCOTT JA )
MTHIYANE JA ) CONCUR
NUGENT JA:
[68] I agree with the order that is proposed by Marais JA but I regret that I do
not agree with all the reasons for his conclusion.
[69] The freedom of the press is protect ed by s 16(a) of the Bill of Rights,
which comes against the back ground of a considerable history in this country of
the suppression of the truth. Consistent with venerable democratic traditions the
protection of press freedom recognises that society is generally best served by
having access to information rather than by having it concealed. 22 Any inroad
22 National Media Ltd & Others v Bogoshi 1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA) 1207I-1208G; 1210G-H.
55
upon that protection will be countenanced by law only if, and to the extent
that, the inroad is both reasonable a nd justifiable in an open and democratic
society based upon human dignity, equa lity, and freedom, values that are
themselves protected, 23 taking into account the factors that are referred to in s
36(1) of the Bill of Rights.
[70] The traditional requirement of our law that the publication of substantially
true defamatory matter is lawful only if its publication is in the public interest
falls to be applied in that context fo r the Bill of Rights embodies a system of
objective, normative values for legal purposes.
24 In my view the protection that
is afforded to press freedom must mean that it will generally be in the public
interest for truthful ma tter to be published except where its suppression is
justified by the considerations referred to in s 36(1).
[71] That also accords with the a pproach that has been taken under the
common law. In Graham v Ker (1892) 9 SC 185 at 187 De Villiers CJ said that
‘[a]s a general principle, I take it to be for the public benefit that the truth as to the
character or conduct of individuals should be known.’
The learned chief justice went on to qualify that general statement by
excluding from its ambit the publication of material that serves no purpose but
23 Sections 9, 10 and 12 of the Bill of Rights.
24 Carmichele v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (Centre for Applied Legal Studies
Intervening 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC) para 54
56
to rake up old scandals, 25 and it has also been quali fied to exclude material
that is essentially private. 26 I have little doubt that those limitations receive
further support today from the protection that is accorded to dignity and to
privacy – though we are reminded by s 36(1) that any limitation must be
confined to what is reasonable and justifiable for the protection of other
protected rights – but in my view the ge neral principle that he enunciated is a
salutary starting point for the enquiry.
[72] If the defamatory material that is in issue in this appeal was indeed
substantially true then I can see no pr oper grounds upon which the appellants
were precluded from publishing a part of it, namely, the respondent’s identity. (I
am not referring to the publication of the respondent’s image, which is
prohibited by s 69 of the South African Police Services Act 68 of 1995, but to
the identification of the respondent by name). The arrest of a person,
particularly on a serious charge, is always a matter of public concern, and in my
view that applies no less to the identity of the person who is the subject of the
arrest. No doubt a person who is placed under arrest might feel that his or her
dignity and privacy has been invaded wh en the arrest is made known but that
occurs whenever an unsavory truth concer ning a person is pu blished. I do not
think that the protection that is afford ed to dignity or privacy – which are
25 See too Lyon v Steyn 1931 TPD 247; Patterson v Engelenburg & Wallach’s Limited 1917 TPD 350
356-7.
26 Groenewald v Homsby 1917 TPD 81.
57
themselves capable of being limited – constitutes reasonable and justifiable
grounds for suppressing the truth in su ch circumstances. As pointed out by
Wessels JA in Johnson v Rand Daily Mails:27
‘Why do we allow a defendant to justify at all, “Because,” in the words of
LITTLEDALE, J., in McPherson v Daniels (10 B. & C. p. 272), “it shows that the plaintiff is
not entitled to recover damages; for the la w will not permit a man to recover damages in
respect of an injury to a character which he either does not or ought not to possess.”’
To say of a person that he or she has been arrested does not generally
amount to an imputation of guilt, and I do not see that the doubt that is thereby
cast upon his or her reputation is prematur e: the statement does no more than to
reflect the temporary but contemporaneous state of that reputation. 28 And while
it is true that a newspaper may with impu nity disclose the identity of an arrested
person once that person has appeared in court (because it is then protected by the
privilege that attaches to reports of court proceedings) I do not think that assists
to resolve the anterior question whether it is in the public interest to make the
disclosure in the absence of that special protection.
[73] The position is quite different where the defamatory material is not true.
As pointed out by Cory J in Hill v Church of Scientology of Toronto (1995) 126
27 1928 AD 190 at 206.
28 Cf Mirror Newspapers v Harrison (1982) 42 ALR 487 (HC of A) 494 in which Mason J said that it was
‘unquestionably … in the public interest’ to publish the mere fact that someone has been arrested and charged
for an offence (in contradistinction to the imputation that the person is guilty).
58
DLR 4 th 129 (SCC) 159-60 (cited with approval in National Media Ltd &
Others v Bogoshi29 and Khumalo v Holomisa:30
‘False and injurious statements cannot enhance self-development. Nor can it ever be
said that they lead to the healthy participation in the affairs of the community. Indeed they
are detrimental to the advancemen t of these values and harmful to the interests of a free and
democratic society. . .’
That is also consistent with the co mmon law in this country. There are
nevertheless circumstances in which even untrue defamatory matter is protected
but in my view none of those circumstances arise in the present case.
[74] In my view the defamatory matter that is in issue in this case was indeed
untrue and it is for that reason that its publication was unlawful. The material
was published the morning after the respon dent was arrested. The article that
was published in the early (country) edition concerned the circumstances of the
arrest. By the time the later (penin sula) edition was published the story had
moved on: the arrest of the respondent provided the foundation for an article that
was directed to the reaction to the respon dent’s arrest. What was central to both
articles, however, was the statement that the respondent had been arrested.
[75] The cause of the respondent’s arrest was not expre ssly stated in either of
the articles. However, the juxtaposition of the photograph of the respondent
being led away in handcuffs with the caption ‘SUSPECT HELD’, the byline
29 Footnote 1 at 1209G.
30 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC) 421C-D.
59
reading ‘DETECTIVES PROBING Tues day’s horrific Waterfront blast
yesterday arrested three Capetonians about to board an Egypt-bound flight at
Cape Town International Airport’, the box referring to other stories relating to
the bombing, and the headlines (in the country edition the headline was ‘BOMB:
PAGAD TRIO HELD AT AIRPORT’ wh ile in the peninsula edition the
headline was ‘PAGAD OUTR AGE OVER BOMB ARRE STS’), when read
together with the text in each case, w ould have left the reasonable reader of
ordinary intelligence in no doubt that th e respondent was arrested in connection
with the bombing.
[76] When it is said of a person that he or she has been arrested in connection
with a particularly odious bombing I do not think that the statement is justified
by proof that the person was indeed arrested, but only in connection with a
passport irregularity, and that the poli ce then exploited the opportunity to
question the person because they suspected that he or she might possibly have
been involved in the bombing (which is wh at the truth was in the present case).
Proof of those facts, whether viewed separately or together, does not seem to me
to meet the sting of the defamatory allegation. The ordinary meaning of the
language that is used in a publication in cludes what the reader would infer from
it. In Argus Printing & Publishing Co Lt d and Others v Esselen’s Estate 1994
(2) SA 1 (A) 20F-J Corbett CJ said the following:
60
‘… [T]he reasonable person of ordinary intelligence is taken to understand the
words alleged to be defamatory in their natura l and ordinary meaning. In determining this
natural and ordinary meaning the Court must take account not only of what the words
expressly say, but also of what they imply. As it was put by Lord Reid in Lewis and Another
v Daily Telegraph Ltd; Same v Associated Newspapers Ltd [1963] 2 All ER 151 (HL) at
154E-F:
‘What the ordinary man would infer wit hout special knowledge has generally been
called the natural and ordinary meaning of the words. But that expression is rather misleading
in that it conceals the fact that there are two el ements in it. Sometimes it is not necessary to
go beyond the words themselves as where the plaint iff has been called a thief or a murderer.
But more often the sting is not so much in the words themselves as in what the ordinary man
will infer from them and that is also regarded as part of their natural and ordinary meaning.’
And in Jones v Skelton [1963] 3 All ER 952 (PC) Lord Mo rris of Borth-y-Gest, citing
Lewis’s case, stated (at 958F-G):
‘The ordinary and natural meaning of word s may be either the literal meaning or it
may be an implied or inferred or an indirect meaning: any m eaning that does not require the
support of extrinsic facts pa ssing beyond general knowledge but is a meaning which is
capable of being detect ed in the language used can be a part of the ordi nary and natural
meaning of words. . . .’”
[77] The inference that a reasonable reader would draw from the statement that
a person has been arrested in connection with an offence will necessarily depend
upon the context in which it is made. 31 I agree with Marais JA (and the learned
31 Cf Ross McConnel Kitchen & Co (Pty) Ltd v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd (1980) 2 NSWLR 845 paras 25
and 26;
61
judge in the court a quo) that such a statement, without more, does not
ordinarily carry the imputation that the a rrested person is guilty of the offence.
As pointed out by Mason J in the High Court of Australia in Mirror Newspapers
Ltd v Harrison (1982) 42 ALR 487 (HC of A) 492:
‘As we have seen, there is now a strong current of authority supporting the view that a
report which does no more than state that a person has been arrested and has been charged
with a criminal offence is incapable of beari ng the imputation that he is guilty or probably
guilty of that offence. The decisions are, I think, soundly based, even if we put aside the
emphasis that has been given to the process of inference on in ference that is involved in
reaching a contrary conclusion. The ordinary reasonable reader is mindful of the principle
that a person charged with a crime is presumed innocent until it is proved that he is guilty.
Although he knows that many persons charged with a criminal offence are ultimately
convicted, he is also aware that guilt or innocence is a question to be determined by a court,
generally by a jury, and that not infrequently the person charged is acquitted.’
32
But I agree with the learned judge in the court a quo that the reasonable
reader would infer at least that the po lice believe that reasonable grounds exist
for suspecting that the arrested person committed the offence for which he or
she was arrested. Not since the repeal of s 29 of the Internal Security Act 74 of
1982 in 1993 33 has it been the law in this c ountry that the police may arrest a
person for no reason but to question him or her in connection with an offence. A
person may ordinarily be arrested by the police only if he or she is suspected, on
32 See too: Lewis v Daily Telegraph Ltd [1964] AC 234 (HL)
33 That section, amongst others, was repealed by Act 206 of 1993.
62
reasonable grounds, to ha ve committed an offence, 34 and a person’s freedom
from arrest without just cause is also protected by s 12(1) of the Bill of Rights. I
think that the reasonable read er can be taken to know that, and will construe the
statement accordingly. 35 The assertion in the body of each of the articles (the
fifth paragraph of the country edition and the thirteenth paragraph of the
peninsula edition) that Commissioner Pr uiss had said that ‘[t]here is the
possibility that they could be involved in the blast, but at this stage there is no
evidence pointing to this’ does not seem to me to negate the effect of what was
proclaimed so loudly in the material that preceded it. The absence of actual
evidence is not inconsistent with the existence of reasonable grounds for
suspecting that a person has committed an offence. 36 But in any event I do not
think that the average r eader would have understood the statement by Pruiss
(assuming that the reader ever reached it) to negate the unambiguous inference
in the introductory portions of the articles, for they would surely have asked why
the respondent was then arrested if the police did not believe that reasonable
grounds existed for doing so. I do not think that liability for a defamatory
assertion can ordinarily be escaped merely by also making a contradicting
assertion (if it was contradicting in this case) somewhere else in the publication.
Naturally, a newspaper article must be read as a whole, but that is because words
34 See, for example, Duncan v Minister of Law and Order 1986 (2) SA 805 (A) 818G-H.
35 See Mason J’s view, obiter, to that effect in Harrison’s case, above, at 493.
36 Duncan v Minister of Law and Order, above, 819G-821E.
63
often take their meaning from the context. I do not think that means that a
defamatory statement that requires no cont extual setting to be given its proper
meaning is necessarily negated by also a sserting the contrary. In my view the
dominant impression that readers would have been left with after reading both
articles, notwithstanding what was reported to have been said by Pruiss, was that
the respondent was arrested in connect ion with the bombing, and that carried
with it the natural inference that th e police believed that reasonable grounds
existed for suspecting that the respondent was implicated in the bombing.
[78] To make that statement of a person is in my view defamatory for in the
eyes of ordinary right thinking people his or her hitherto unblemished character
will at least be placed in doubt by such an assertion albeit that the diminution in
reputation might only be temporary. 37 A statement to that effect seems to me to
be analogous (though perhaps less serious) to a statement that a person has been
charged with a serious offence, of wh ich Colman J said the following in Hassen
v Post Newspapers (Pty) Ltd & Others 1965 (3) SA 562 (W) 562 at 565D-E:
‘In my view the reasonable, normally intell igent, right thinking member of society,
when he hears that a man known to him has been charged with a crime, will withhold final
judgment on that man. But, temporarily at any rate, the news will tend to lower that man in
his estimation, and diminish his willingness to associate with him.’
37 Even to say no more than that there is suspicion that a person might have committed an offence has
been said in other jurisdictions to be capable of giving rise to a defamatory imputation: Lewis v Daily Telegraph
Ltd,above; Ainsworth Nominess (Pty) Ltd v Hanrahan [1982] 2 NSWLR 823; Sergi v Australian Broadcasting
Commission [1983] 2 NSWLR 670; Whelan v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd [1988] 12 NSWLR 148.
64
But to say of a person that he or she has been arrested in connection
with an offence is in my view also more damaging than to say merely that the
police questioned him or her in connect ion with the offence because they
believed that he or she mi ght possibly be implicated, for no doubt the police
question many people when they are investigating the commission of an offence.
It is all a question of degree.
[79] The defamatory statement in the present case was that the respondent was
arrested in connection with the bombing, which carried the natural inference that
the police believed that reasonable grounds existed for suspecting that he was
implicated in the commission of the offence, and that was what was required to
be justified. Whether it was capable of being justified merely by proof that the
respondent was arrested in connection with the bombing, or whether it was
necessary to establish in addition that th e police indeed believed that reasonable
grounds existed for suspicion, is not necessary to decide.
38 In both respects the
appellants failed. The res pondent was not arrested in connection with the
bombing: he was arrested because his pa ssport was suspected to be irregular.
Moreover, reasonable grounds did not ex ist for suspecting that the respondent
was implicated in the bombing (I do not th ink that undisclosed information from
an anonymous source can be said to cons titute reasonable grounds justifying an
arrest) nor did the police believe they did, which is precisely why they refrained
38 Cf Cadam & Others v Beaverbrook Newspapers Ltd [1959] 1 QB 413 (CA) 422; Stern v Piper [1997]
QB 123 (CA) 134F; Shah v Standard Chartered Bank [1999] QB 240 (CA); Gatley, above, para 11.6.
65
from arresting him on those grounds. Pe rhaps the respondent would not have
been arrested for the passport irregular ity if the police had not wanted to
question him in connection with the bombing but in my view that does not meet
the sting of the defamatory statement. If that was the truth then no doubt the
appellants were free to publish those fact s but it did not justify the truth being
distorted. The fact that Inspector Knip e was willing to resort to an unlawful
arrest if that had been necessary to enable the respondent to be questioned
before he left the country also does not seem to me to take the matter further
when that is not what occurred.
[80] The appellants also sought – albeit tentatively – to re ly upon the defence
that is foreshadowed in Bogoshi’s case. I am not at all sure that the nature of the
statement in the present cas e is such that its publication is required to be
protected even if it is untrue (see Bogoshi, 1211D-1212J) but in any event the
appellants, who bear the onus, have not established that reasonable steps were
taken to avoid publishing what was in fact untruthful.
[81] For those reasons I agree with the learned judge in the court a quo that the
publications were defamatory of the resp ondent and were unlawful. But I agree
with Marais JA that the damages that were awarded were excessive. I have
already pointed out that the defamato ry statement did not impute that the
respondent was guilty but merely cast te mporary doubt upon his hitherto good
character. Moreover, the respondent was released from arrest that very afternoon
66
and he took the opportunity to announce th at fact at a press conference. I also
agree with Marais JA that the respondent’s privacy was not invaded, and that the
harm to his dignity is properly to be ta ken into account in the assessment of the
damages for defamation, gene rally for the reasons that he has given, subject to
what I have said earlier in this judgmen t, and I agree with his approach to the
question of costs.
[82] For those reasons I agree with the order that is proposed.
_______________________
R W NUGENT
J U D G E O F A P P E A L
PONNAN AJA ) CONCURS