| Authority: | Constitutional Court |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction: | South Africa |
| Relevant law: | Legal Provisions Reviewed |
| Type: | 2nd Appeal |
| Outcome: | Partially Succeeded |
| Started: | 10 October 2019 |
| Decided: | 9 October 2024 |
| Published: | Yes |
| Fine: | NA |
| Parties: | Both vs. Smuts & Another |
| Case No.: | [2024] ZACC 22 |
| Appeal: | N/A |
| Original Source: | Law Library ZA |
| Original contributor: | MZIZI Africa |
The case Botha v Smuts concerned a Facebook post about animal trapping on Mr. Botha's farm. The Constitutional Court balanced Mr. Botha's right to privacy (especially regarding his home address) against the respondents' freedom of expression. While finding no reasonable expectation of privacy for public business details, the court upheld the appeal in part, ordering the removal of Mr. Botha's address from the post.
Mr. Smuts, on behalf of the Landmark Leopard and Predator Project, published a Facebook post that included information linking Mr. Botha, his businesses, and his family to animal trapping activities on his farm.
The post condemned Mr. Botha's trapping as "unethical", "barbaric", and "environmentally damaging" and was accompanied by photographs of animal traps.
Mr. Botha asserted that this post was defamatory, intended to harm his reputation and business, and endangered him and his family.
Crucially for the privacy aspect, Mr. Botha also argued that the post published his confidential information, thereby infringing his right to privacy and exposing him and his family to risk. He contended that even though he had published some business details online for attracting clients, this did not extend to re-publication on a broad platform like Facebook, linking him to animal trapping.
<aside> ➡️
Link to the Original Ruling the subject of the Constitutional Reference | Herman Botha v Bool Smuts and Anor (2832/2019) [2020] ZAECPEHC 19
</aside>
Before the Constitutional Court, Mr. Botha, for the first time, disputed that the photographs were lawfully obtained and published, arguing that the permission given to cyclists to traverse his farm did not constitute a waiver of his right to privacy regarding the trapping activities. He also emphasised the personal risk to his family and the potential ruin of his insurance brokerage due to the linkage in the post.
The respondents, Mr. Smuts and the Landmark Leopard and Predator Project, responded by: