AEGROTAT TEST #1
Dear students,
Please be informed that the aegrotat test for ALL those who missed test number 1 will be written on Friday, 9:30, LAW BOARDROOM
Date: 30 September 2016.
PS
Please spread the word.
Regards
MC
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
Law of Delict - notes/guide
Dear students,
The strike has taken a toll on all of us and we are not sure for how long it will continue. Hence I have decided to give you this guide with relevant case law that support the general principles (in respect of defamation and the defences). I hope this will assist you.
However, this does not exonerate you from using your textbook to study the module.
Rergards
MC

Module Credits Value: 16 Credits
The strike has taken a toll on all of us and we are not sure for how long it will continue. Hence I have decided to give you this guide with relevant case law that support the general principles (in respect of defamation and the defences). I hope this will assist you.
However, this does not exonerate you from using your textbook to study the module.
Rergards
MC
_____________________

UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND
Faculty
of Commerce, Administration & Law
Department
of Public Law
Main
Campus
KwaDlangezwa
LAW OF DELICT B
– LPLD 301
Course Codes: LPLD 302
Year: 2016
Lecturer: MC
BUTHELEZI
FACULTY OF COMMERCE ADMINISTRATION AND LAW
Department: Public Law
STUDY/LEARNING GUIDE (LG)
YEAR: 2016
Module / Course Titles: Law of Delict B
Module Code: LPLD
302
Module Credits Value: 16 Credits
National Qualifications Framework (NQF) Level: 6
Date of Approval of Module / Course by Faculty:
Name of Lecturer: MC
Buthelezi
Prescribed Text book: Law of Delict in South Africa by Max
Loubser,
Rob Midgley et al.
Oxford University Press
9. TEXT BOOKS AND
RESOURCES
9.1 Prescribed Textbook
Loubser, M and Midgley,
R (eds) The Law of Delict in South Africa 2nd ed (2012)
9.2
RECOMMENDED TEXTs
Neethling et al Law of Delict 6TH
ed (2010)
Van der Walt and Midgley
Principles of Delict 3RD ed (2005).
Neethling et al
Neethling’s Law of
Personality 2ND ed (2005
Students
need not take copious notes at the lectures as all the relevant information is
found in the text. Reference to the
relevant sections and rules will be made during the course of the lectures and
in this document.
The
following will be lectured on in this term:
ACTIO INIURIARUM
1. INTRODUCTION
2. Infringement
of bodily integrity
a.
Infringement’s of one’s
corpus
3. Infringements
of Dignity, Privacy and Identity
i. Introduction
ii. Insult
iii. Privacy
iv.
Identity
4. Infringements
of reputation
Introduction
Who can sue for defamation?
4.1 Elements for defamation
·
Publication
·
Defamatory Matter
·
Reference to Plaintiff
The Presumptions
Wrongfulness
Animus Iniuriandi
4.2 Defences
associated with Infringements of personality interests
General principles
·
Truth for public benefit
·
Fair Comment
·
Privileged Association
·
Defence of Reasonable Publication
5. SPECIAL
FORMS OF LIABILLITY
5.1 Strict Liability
Introduction
Why Strict liability?
a. Liability for harm
caused by animals
·
The actio
de pastu for harm caused by grazing animals
·
The actio
de effuses vel deiectis and the actio
positis vel suspensis
·
Statutory instances of strict liability
b. Vicarious Liability
Introduction
·
General rule and Justification for Vicarious
Liability
·
Who qualifies as an employee?
·
An employment or akin-to-employment relationship
must exist
·
employee of two employers
·
Independent contractors
·
The delict must be committed by the employee
while acting within the course and scope of employment.
SECTION B: ACTIO
INIURIARUM
INJURIES TO REPUTATION
INTRODUCTION
1. The Constitutional Right to Freedom of Expression / Communication
- Introduction
- Section 16(1)(a): Right to freedom of expression
- The Scope of the Right to freedom of
expression (which includes freedom of the Press)
- The Scope of the Right to freedom of
expression re: The press
- Is the institutional independence of the
press guaranteed by S16?
National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA)
The Citizen 1978 (Pty) ltd v McBride (CCT 23/10 [2011]
ZACC 11 (CC)
Midi Television (Pty) Ltd v Director of Public Prosecutions (Western Cape)
(100/06) [2007] 3 All SA 318 (SCA)
______________
Khumalo v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC)
Mthembi-Mahanyele v Mail & Guardian 2004 (6) SA 329 (SCA)
The Citizen 1978 (Pty) ltd v McBride 2010 (4) SA 148 (SCA)
2. Constitutional Limitations to Freedom of Expression/ Communication
2.1 The general limitation clause
- The meaning of the term “by law of general application”
(Section 36 (1)) – the limitation clause.
Cf Section 205 of Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
2.2 Internal (Constitutional) Limitations
- S 16(2)(a) – propaganda for war
- S 16(2)(b) – incitement of imminent
violence
- S 16 (2)(c ) – hate speech
3. The
Law of Defamation
3.1
Introduction
- The Right to Reputation
- The Definition of defamation
3.2
THE ELEMENTS OF LIABILITY FOR DEFAMATION
National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA)
3.2.1
Publication
Moolman v Slovo 1964 (1) SA 760 (W)
Vermaak v Van Der Merwe
1981 (3) SA 78 (N)
3.2.2 Defamatory matter
Proof of Defamatory Matter:
- A two stage inquiry can be used:
o
What is the meaning of the words or conduct?
o
Is the meaning defamatory?
A) The
meaning of words or conduct
o
Words or conduct may have a primary or
ordinary (per se) meaning or a secondary
meaning or innuendo.
i). Ordinary meaning
o
If words are alleged to be a prima facie
defamatory the court must determine the ordinary meaning of the words.
o
The ordinary meaning of the words is not
necessarily the dictionary meaning.
Cf: Ciliza v Minister of Police
1976 (4) SA 243 (N) 247
o
The ordinary meaning is the meaning an ordinary
or reasonable reader or listener would give to the words.
o
The court must take into account not only what
the words expressly say but also what they imply.
Argus Printing & Publishing Company v Esselen’s Estate 1994 (2) SA 1 (A) 20
Sindani v van der
Merwe 2000 (3) SA 494 (W) 497
o
Ordinary readers are not perfect – they may skim
articles or jump to conclusions.
Demmers v Wyllie 1980 (1) SA 835
(A) 848
o
Reasonable listeners (eg on the radio or tv)
should be treated differently from reasonable readers because the printed or
written words can be re-read again and again.
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394
(A) 408
o
The ordinary meaning of words must be decided by
the court –unless there is an innuendo – without evidence from listeners or
readers.
Sindani v van der Merwe 2000
(3) SA 494 (W) 497
o
However, evidence of facts relevant to the trial
is admissible (eg how a reasonable reader would probably understand the words).
Mangope v Asmal 1997 (4) SA 286
(T) 286
o
The fact that South Africa has 11 official
languages means that judges will sometimes need evidence to explain what
defamatory words in different languages mean.
o
Where words or conduct are capable of more than
one meaning the test is: On a balance of
probabilities would the ordinary reader give the words a defamatory meaning?
o
The plaintiff will succeed even if there could
be a non-defamatory meaning.
Demmers v Wylie supra 842-3
ii). Secondary meaning of words (innuendo)
- A secondary meaning or innuendo is an
unusual meaning which can only be given to the words by a hearer or reader
who has knowledge or special circumstances.
National Union of Distributive Workers v Cleghorn & Harris 1946 AD 984, 997
- Where words are prima facie innocent
the plaintiff must allege and prove the defamatory innuendo.
Cf Jackson v NICRO 1976 (3) SA 1 (A) 4-5
- The plaintiff must expressly set out the
innuendo attached to the words and must prove that it was understood in
that way.
Sutter v Brown 1926 AD 155, 164
- Where a plaintiff alleges a particular
innuendo he or she is bound by it and cannot lead evidence to establish a
different one.
National Union of Distributive Workers v Cleghorn and Harris supra 987
- Where words are prima facie
defamatory but the plaintiff wishes to prove an additional sting to them
the latter must be alleged and proved (quasi-innuendo).
Sutter
v Brown supra 162-3
- If the plaintiff alleges an innuendo to
point to the sting of words that are prima facie defamatory he or
she cannot fall back on their primary meaning if the innuendo is not
proved – unless it is pleaded in the alternative.
B.
Are the Words or Conduct Defamatory?
·
The test for determining whether words or
conduct are defamatory is whether the imputation lowers the plaintiff in the
estimation of right–thinking persons, generally.
Botha v Marais
1974 (1) SA 44 (A) 49
- The test has been criticized as
inappropriate for South Africa’s multi- cultural society.
Burchell (1974) 91
SALJ 178
- It has been suggested that a better test is
to consider the view of a substantial and respectable sections of South
African society provided their views are not contrary to good morals
(applied in some cases).
Omarjee v Post
Newspapers LTD 1962 (2) PH J 33 (D)
(Muslim girls
criticized for wearing mini-skirts)
Mahomed v Jassiem
1996 (1) SA 693 (A)
(Right thinking members of society would not regard calling a Muslim
person an Ahmadi sympatiser as defamatory, but Muslims would).
- The expression lowering a person in the
estimation of others usually means that the statement either:
o
Reflects upon the plaintiff’s moral character;
or
o
Subjects the plaintiff to hatred, contempt or
ridicule.
i). Reflections
on Moral Character
- Imputing criminal conduct
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394
(A) (Attending an illegal meeting)
- Imputing dishonest conduct
Penn v Fiddel 1954 (4) SA 498 (C) (saying: you’re the biggest liar I know!)
- Immorality
Tothill v Foster 1925 TPD 857
(saying a person suffers from venereal disease).
- Police Informer?
Prinsloo v SAAN 1959 (2) SA 693
(W) (Student accused of being a blond spy)
- Morality changes with the times
Sokhulu v New Africa
Publications LTD 2001 (4) SA 1357 (W) 1359 (Not defamatory or an
impairment of dignity to say that a woman had a child out of wedlock and lived
with the child’s father for two years without marrying him)
ii). Arousing hatred, contempt or ridicule:
- Hatred
Pont v Geyser 1968 (2) SA 545
(A) 558 (calling a person heretic or traitor)
NB: Hate speech is not protected in the
Constitution.
- Contempt
Gayre v SAAN 1963 (3) SA 376
(T) (calling a scientist a fascist geneticist)
- Ridicule
Rutland v Jordan 1953 (3) SA 806
(C) 814 (calling a person insane)
Muller v SAAN 1972 (2) SA 589
(C) 591 (minister using un-ministerial language)
Mangope v Asmal 1997 (4) SA 277
(T) (calling a politician a baboon)
iii).
Words or conduct damaging trade,
business or official position:
- Defamatory words that damage a person’s
trade, business or official position are also actionable.
Examples
of defamatory matter:
- Derogatory remarks regarding a person’s
physical /mental disposition.
Pitout
v Rosenstein 1930 OPD 112
- Allegations placing a person’s moral
character or lifestyle in a bad light.
Sutter
V Brown 1926 AD 155
Hassen
v Post Newspapers (Pty) Ltd 1965 (3) SA 562
(W)
- Contemptuous remarks regarding a person’s
race / racial views
Botha v Mthiyane 2002 (1) SA 289
(W)
Sindani v VD Merwe
2000 (3) SA 494 (W)
Argus Printing and Publishing Co Ltd v Esselen’s Estate 1994 (2) SA (1)(A)
- Words/behavour reflecting negatively on a
person’s character and public life as a politician.
Mthembi-Mahanyele v
Mail & Guardian 2004 (6) SA 329 (SCA)
- statements casting suspicion on a person’s
vocational or professional capabilities or competence
Johnson v Beckett 1992 (1) SA 762 (A)
Lieberthal v Primedia Broadcasting (Pty) Ltd 2003 (5) SA 39 (W)
o
Business person
Borkum v Cline
1959 (2) SA 670 (N) 674
o
Attorney-general or director of public
prosecutions
SAAN Ltd &
another v Yutar 1969 (2) SA 442 (A) 458
o
Clergyman
Buthelezi v
Poorter 1975 (4) SA 608 (W) 614
o
Dishonouring a cheque
NB. It has been held not to be defamatory to say that a
person:
- Is a member of a particular political party
religious group or nationality?
SAAN v Schoeman 1962 (2)
SA 613 (A) 617
- Lives in a slum or has not been properly
educated;
Jonker v Davis 1953 (2) SA
726 (GW) 731
- Simply because a person has been shunned or
avoided does not mean that the statement is defamatory.
SAAN v Schoeman supra
616-7
- Where the defamatory statement forms part
of an article or book the whole article or book must be examined.
Chesteron v Gill 1970 (2)
SA 242 (T) 246
- Recently, to say that a person committed adultery
J v J and another (4918/2012) [2016] ZAKZDHC 33 (22 July 2016)
________
·
Where the statement is part of a series of
articles each individual article must be considered.
Geyser v Pont 1968 (4) SA
67 (W) 69
- A newspaper poster is read separately from
the newspaper it advertises.
SAAN v Yutar 1969 (2) SA 442
(A) 453 (poster reading how Dr. Yutar misled the court)
- Evidence in mitigation may be led to show
that plaintiff is of general bad character or reputation.
Sutter v Brown supra 172
- Mere meaningless abuse is not defamatory,
but may be an iniuria
Wood NO v Branson 1952
(3) SA 369 (T) 371
(Court
messenger calling a ‘woman cheap South Hills cows’)
3.2.3
Reference to the
plaintiff
- The plaintiff must prove that the
defamatory words or conduct referred to him or her.
SAAN v Estate Pelser 1975
(4) SA 797 (A) 810
- The test is whether the ordinary reasonable
reader would have understood the words complained of as referring to the
plaintiff.
Williams v Van Der Merwe 1994
(2) SA 60 (E) 63
- Where the plaintiff is not referred to by
name he or she must allege and prove the facts which show reference to him
or her (like innuendo).
- There is no group or class defamation in
South African Law – individual plaintiffs must emerge and show reference
to themselves e.g.
SA Associated Newspapers LTD v Estate Pelser 1975 (4) SA 797 (A) 810
o
Board of Directors
Bane v Colvin 1959
(1) SA 863 (C)
o
A class of business people
Neumann CC v Beauty without Cruelty International 1986 (4) SA 675 (C) (Seller of Furs)
- Dead people cannot be defamed.
Spendiff v East London Daily
Despatch 1929 EDL 113, 131
3.3
Causation
- Causation is not often raised in defamation
actions because once the action is proved damage to reputation is
presumed.
- It could be argued in mitigation of
damages, however, that there was no loss caused to reputation because:
o
The plaintiff had a very low reputation anyway.
Cf Viviers v Kilian 1927
AD 449, 456, 459
o
The plaintiff had a very high reputation so
nobody believed the statement.
Cf
Dikoko v Mokhatla 2006 (6) SA 235 (CC); par 78
- A poor reputation may also be a mitigating factor.
3.4
PRESUMED
(OTHER) ELEMENTS FOR LIABILITY
3.4.1
Fault
A. Intention or animus iniuriandi
- When a defamatory statement is made it is
presumed that the person publishing it had animus injuriandi.
Jackson v NICRO 1976 (3) SA (A) 12
- Animus injuriandi generally means the subjective intention to injure the
reputation of the plaintiff with knowledge of the unlawfulness of the
act.
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394 (A) 407
- Intention may take the same form as in the criminal law, viz:
- Dolus directus: The defendant’s aim
and objective is to defame the plaintiff.
- Dolus indirectus: The defendant’s aim
and objective is not to defame the plaintiff, but he or she foresees the
possibility of defaming the plaintiff as substantially certain.
- Dolus eventualis: The defendant
subjectively foresees the possibility of defaming the plaintiff but still
goes ahead and publishes the defamatory matter.
- Knowledge of the unlawfulness of the act: The defendant knew that
his or her act was wrongful.
Maisel v Van Nairen 1960 (4) SA 836 (C)
(Defamatory letter sent to the chairperson of the Rent Board by
mistake).
- Once a defamatory statement is published
animus injuriandi is presumed.
Neethling v Preez: Neethling v
The Weekly Mail 1994 (1) SA 708 (A) 767-9
(Disclosures concerning persons to kill
activists)
- However, animus injuriandi should be
alleged in the pleadings.
- Moaki v Reckitt & Colman (Africa) Ltd 1968 (3) SA 98 (A) 105
- Once animus injuriandi is alleged
the burden of rebutting the presumption is placed on the defendant who can
lead evidence to show absence of:
- Subjective intention
- Consciousness of wrongfulness; or
- Both
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394 (A) 403, 409
- Burchell points out that the onus on the
defendant is only to adduce evidence rather than to prove on a balance
of probabilities that there is a defence.
Burchell 182
- Malice must be distinguished from animus
injuriandi.
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394 (A) 405
- Motive or malice is the reason why somebody
does something.
A motive is the actuating impulse preceding intentions.
Gluckman v Schneider
1936 AD 151, 159
B. Unreasonableness or negligence (media)
- Until 1998 the traditional approach to
liability by the mass media was that strict liability was imposed on them.
Pakendorf v De Flamingh 1982 (3) SA 146 (A)
- Previous cases were decided before there
was a Bill of Rights and at a time when the common law was being
undermined in terms of freedom of speech.
- In 1998 the Supreme Court of Appeal
rejected the concept of strict liability for the media and introduced the
criterion of reasonableness as the test for liability.
National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA)
The Bogoshi case held the following:
o
Unlawfulness should be measured by the criterion
of reasonableness;
o
The test for reasonableness includes
(time-manner; status or public concern; political importance; tone; reliability
of source; steps to verify; opportunity for plaintiff to verify or comment;
o
The reasonableness test is wider than negligence
·
Burchell suggests that the judgment should be
interpreted as follows:
o
It reaffirms the role of unlawfulness as an
element of defamation;
o
It emphasizes fault in the form of negligence
for the media; and
o
Reasonable lack of consciousness of wrongfulness
should also be a defence.
·
It has now been held that the principle in the Bogoshi
case should be extended to all forms of defamation and lack of consciousness of
wrongfulness due to negligence should not be a defence.
Marasi v Groenewald
2001 (1) SA 634 (T) 636
3.4.2
Unlawfulness or wrongfulness
- Once a defamatory statement is made it is
presumed to be unlawful.
Neethling v du Prez, Neethling v The Weekly Mail 1994 (1) SA 708 (A) 767-9
- Unlawfulness in defamation is the
infringement of a person’s right to reputation which cannot be legally
justified.
- The criteria for unlawfulness have been
described as:
- Reasonableness;
National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA)
OR
- Legal convictions of the community,
including constitutional norms and values
Van Eeden v Minister of Safety and Security 2003 (1) SA 389 (SCA)
396-397
- Public policy
SAUK v O’Malley 1977 (3) SA 394 (A) 402-3
- The criteria for unlawfulness are flexible
and mean that the law of delict (and defamation) can be changed to meet
the changing needs of society.
- Thus freedom of expression in terms of the
Constitution operates horizontally and can be accommodated under the
concept of unlawfulness.
National Media v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1195 (SCA)
See also Khumalo v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC)
NB: Hate speech is excluded in terms of s 16(2)
of the Constitution.
- Once unlawfulness is presumed the onus
shifts to the defendant to prove on a balance of probabilities that he or
she has a defence that excludes such unlawfulness.
National Media v Bogoshi supra.
3.5
DEFENCES/ GROUNDS OF JUSTIFICATION
3.5.1
DEFENCES
REBUTTING INTENTION (ANIMUS
INIURIANDI)
3.5.1.1
Mistake
3.5.1.2
Jest
3.5.1.3
Negligence (non-media defendants)
3.5.2
DEFENCES REBUTTING UNLAWFULNESS
3.5.2.1
Truth for the
public benefit
- It is a good defence for a defendant to show that the defamatory
statement was true and for the public benefit.
NB: The onus of proof remains
on the defendant – the plaintiff is not required to plead the falsity of the
defamatory statements regardless of the circumstances.
Khumalo
v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC)
i).
Truth
The statement need not be true in all respects –
provided it is substantially true (i.e. material allegations are true).
Johnson
v Rand Daily Mails 1928 AD 190, 204
o Truth alone is not a defence, but may be used in mitigation of
damages.
Geyser
v Pont 1968 (4) SA 67 (W) 68
o It has been suggested that in the area of “free and fair political
activity” there must be “some protection for erroneous statement of defamatory
fact”.
Holomisa
v Argus Newspaper Ltd 1996 (2) SA 588
(W) 616-7
ii).
Public benefit
The publication of the truth must be for the
public benefit.
o “Public benefit” means the same as “public interest” and has been
described as: “Material in which the public has an interest” – not “what the
public finds interesting”.
National
Media Ltd v Bogoshi 1998 (4) SA 1995 (SCA)
o The court will look at the time manner and place of publication to
determine if it is for the public benefit.
Lyon
v Steyn 1931 TPD 247, 251
(Reference
to incident 30 years after end of Anglo-Boer war)
o People should be allowed to live down their past.
NB: If it is proved
that the defendant was actuated by spit or malice the defence of truth for the
public benefit will fail.
Coetzee
v Nel 1972 (1) SA 353 (A) 374
3.5.2.2
FAIR COMMENT
- For the defence of fair comment to succeed the defendant must
prove:
o The statement must be a comment (opinion) not a
statement of fact.
o The comment must be “fair” (relevant, honest and free
from malice).
o The facts commented on must be true.
o The comment must be on a matter of public interest.
Crawford
v Albu 1917 AD 102
Marais
v Richard 1981 (1) SA 1157 (A)
i) Comment
A comment is an opinion not a statement of fact.
o
The test for a comment is whether a reasonable
person would regard the statement as a comment or a statement of fact.
Crawford
v Albu supra 127
(“All this strife has been caused by fanatics – no they are not
fanatics – they are criminals in the fullest sense of the word”).
ii)
Fairness
A comment is fair if it is relevant, honest and
free from malice.
Crawford
v Albu supra 115
o
The fact that a comment is extravagant,
exaggerated or prejudiced does not make it “unfair”.
Johnson
v Beckett 1992 (1) SA 762 (A) 780, 783
NB: If malice is
shown the comment will no longer be fair.
Johnson
v Beckett supra 780, 783
iii) The facts commented upon must be true
As in the case of truth for public benefit the
facts commended upon need not be true in every minute detail.
Buthelezi
v Poorter 1974 (2) SA 831 (W) 833
o There can be no fair comment on facts not known to the defendant at
the time of publication.
Davies
v Lombard 1966 (1) SA 585 (W) 588
iv) In the public interest
The term “public interest” includes matters
involving the administration of justice, public figures, public matters (govt,
politics), books, films artwork etc.
- As has been mentioned the defence of fair comment can be
defeated by proof of malice.
3.5.2.3
ABSOLUTE PRIVILEGE
- In the interests of democracy certain
statements are accorded absolute protection against actions for
defamation.
- These include statements:
o
Made during parliamentary proceedings;
Constitution s 58(1) (including parliament committees).
o
Made during provincial parliamentary
proceedings.
s 117(1), the Constitution
- Provincial legislatures may grant similar
immunity in respect of municipal councils
s161, the Constitution
- The privilege is absolute because it
cannot be defeated by proof of malice.
·
In all cases the occasion is privileged.
Dikoko v Mokhatla 2006 (6) SA 235 (CC);
Swartbooi and others v Brink and another 2006 (1) SA 203 CC; 2003 (5) BCLR
502;
Poovalingam
v Rajbansi 1992 (1) SA 283 AD
NB: See also s 116 of the Constitution; s28 of Municipal Structures Act
117 of 1998.
3.5.2.4 QUALIFIED PRIVILEGE
- A defendant will not be liable for a
defamatory statement made on a privileged occasion, where:
- The statement is made in discharge of a
duty to a person who has a reciprocal interest in receiving it.
- The statement was published during
judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings.
- The statement was published in a report of
proceedings of courts, parliament or public bodies.
- The statement was relevant to the occasion
to which it related.
Van der Berg v Coopers & Lybrandt Trust (Pty) Ltd 2001 (2) SA 242 (SCA) 252-253
Cf Dikoko v Mokhatla,
supra par 48
A) Discharge
of a duty:
- The occasion will give rise to a qualified
privileged where the person making the statement is discharging a moral,
social or legal duty by communicating it to a person with a legitimate
interest or duty to receive it.
De Waal v Ziervogel 1938
AD 112 (complaint to church elders about
clergyman)
O v O 1995 (4) SA 482 (W) 492 (disclosure made to priest)
- The test is whether an ordinary, reasonable
person, having regard to the relationship of the parties and surrounding
circumstances would have made the disclosure.
Borgin v de Villiers
1980 (3) SA 556 (A) 577
B). Judicial and
quasi-judicial proceedings:
- Judges and magistrates are presumed to have
acted lawfully within the limits of their authority.
May v Udwin 1981 (1) SA 1 (A)
19
- Witnesses, litigants, advocates and
attorneys are accorded a qualified privilege as long as the defamatory
statement is relevant to the case and is founded on some reasonable
cause.
Pogrund v Yutar 1967 (2) SA 564
(A) 570
Joubert v Venter 1985 (1) SA 654
(A) 697
C). Reports of court
proceedings, parliament and public bodies:
- The defence of qualified privilege applies
to fair and substantially accurate reports of judicial or parliamentary
proceedings.
Benson v Robinson & Co 1967
(1) SA 420 (A) 428
D). Reports by the mass media
It has been suggested that the mass media have a duty to inform the
public of newsworthy events, characters and conduct and that the public have a
corresponding interest to be so informed.
Cf National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1195 (4) (A) 1195 1200
- Relevance cannot be precisely defined but
means that the statement was related to the occasion and not irrelevant to
it.
Cf van der Berg v Coopers & Lybrandt Trust
(Pty) Ltd 2001 (2) SA 242 (SCA) 253 para 22
(allegations that advocate had manipulated attorneys to withdraw their
statement).
- The courts apply a more generous approach
to relevant when a witness gives verbal evidence than if the statement id
made in a written deposition where there is time to read and correct the
document.
Cf van der Berg v Coopers & Lybrandt Trust (Pty) Ltd supra 254 par 24.
- The defendant must prove on a balance of
probability that the defamatory statements were (i) made on a privileged
occasion and (ii) that the communication was relevant to the matters under
discussion.
Botha v Mthiyane 2002 (1) SA 289
(W) 313
NB: The
defence of qualified privilege can be defeated by proof of malice (eg that the
defendant did not believe in the truth of the statement). Borgin v De
Villiers 1980 (3) SA 556 (A) 578-579
3.5.2.5 REASONABLENESS
- The defendant can show that his or her
conduct was reasonable.
National Media Ltd v Bogoshi
1998 (4) SA 1195 (4) (A)
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