Zambia: Supreme Court
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PIUS KAKUNGU (1982) Z.R. 167 (S.C.)
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SUPREME COURT (S.C.Z. JUDGMENT NO. 9 OF
1982) |
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Flynote
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Civil procedure - Appeal - Assessment of damages - Right of appellate court to interfere with findings of trial court. Damages - Assessment of in libel cases - Mitigatory factors - Reliability of source of information. Damages - Libel - Character of plaintiff - When relevant - Influence of extraneous matter in assessing amount of damages. |
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Headnote
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The defendants
appealed against an award of K10,000 damages for libel, by the
High Court. The libel arose out of an article
published by the
defendants which was found to be defamatory of the plaintiff. The
defendants pleaded that the damages awarded
were in excess of what
the plaintiff was entitled to and should be reduced since the
plaintiff was not of good character
and the information contained
in the defamatory article was from a responsible source. Further
in obsessing damages extraneous matter was taken into
consideration. Held:
p168
Cases cited:
For the respondent: S. S. Zulu, Zulu and Co. |
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Judgment
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NGULUBE, D.C.J.:
This is an appeal against an award by the High Court of the sum of K10,000 damages for libel. The appellant who was the defendant the court below, and to whom I shall continue to refer as the defendant, is the proprietor of the Zambia Daily Mail newspaper. The respondent the plaintiff in the court below and to whom I shall continue to refer as the plaintiff) was at all material times a professional boxing and wrestling promoter at national and international level, and as such was a fairly well-known personality in the country. The action arose out of an article which appeared in the issue of the Zambia Daily Mail on 7th February, 1977, under the heading "Kakungu Stranded In Germany". The relevant paragraphs of the article complained of read:
The plaintiff,
who had in fact arrived in Zambia on the date that
the offending article appeared,
demanded a retraction and apology but none was offered. In the
ensuing litigation arising
out of the said article which is
clearly defamatory the defendant set up an ill-fated plea of
justification. On the evidence
the learned trial judge found as a
fact that the plaintiff was not stranded in Germany as he had a
valid visa p169
and a valid
return air ticket and was able to pay his hotel bills. He further
found that the plaintiff was not at the material
time a destitute
but had merely asked the Zambian Embassy in West Germany to assist
him in obtaining additional funds from
his friends in Zambia for
the purpose of doing some shopping for his expected new baby, and
that in order to obtain quick
results the Embassy official
concerned, as he himself freely admitted at the trial, sent a
telex message to the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in which he
deliberately distorted and misrepresented the plaintiff's
situation. The learned trial judge
he also found as a fact that
the Government had in fact not bid a single ngwee towards the
plaintiff's hotel bills. In the
event this appeal is limited to
the quantum of damages awarded. On behalf of
the defendant, Mr Muzyamba has asked this court to find that the
damages awarded were far in excess of what the
plaintiff was
entitled to and should be reduced. Mr Muzyamba's first submission
was that since the plaintiff had not adduced
evidence to show that
he enjoyed a very good reputation the damages ought to have been
considerably less. He cited Zambia
Publishing Co. Ltd v Mwanza (1)
as authority for the proposition that plaintiff is obliged to
adduce such evidence. With greatest respect to learned
counsel
that case lays down no
such proposition nor is such a proposition valid in this case. The
established principle which has been followed from time
immemorial
is that, as a general rule, evidence of the plaintiff's good
character is irrelevant and unnecessary for the law
presumes that
his character is good until the contrary is proved. The plaintiff
can safely rest on that presumption unless
the defendant has
specifically imputed that the general character of the plaintiff
is bad. This not having been the case
the defendant's first
argument must fail. Mr Muzyamba's second submission was that the damages ought to have been reduced having regard to the undisputed evidence that the plaintiff owed some money to the Professional Boxing and Wrestling Control Board which, he argued, positively established that the plaintiff did not in fact have a good reputation as a promoter. On behalf of the plaintiff Mr Zulu asked us to find that such a conclusion could not be supported since no evidence had been adduced to suggest that the debt to the Board had arisen other than in the normal course of business between promoter and the responsible Board. I find Mr Zulu's argument to be entirely valid, more especially that the only specific suggestion put to the plaintiff at the trial concerned an alleged non-payment to a boxer called McClusky. The plaintiff's assertion that the Board had subsequently discovered that he did not owe any money to this boxer was not challenged, and since no other transaction was referred to and no detailed evidence was adduced with regard to the unspecified amount owed to the Board it would be unreasonable to assume that the debt arose in disreputable circumstances. Mr Muzyamba's second submission therefore cannot succeed.
The third
submission made by Mr Muzyamba was that assessing the damages the
learned trial judge must have been influenced
by p170
extraneous matter, namely, the deportation of the plaintiff's wife prior to the publication complained of, which deportation must have been taken into account as an aggravating feature. The relevant extract from the judgment of the High Court reads:
There is force in Mr Muzyamba's submission on this point. The extract I have just quoted from the judgment of the High Court plainly reveals that the deportation of the plaintiffs wife was not discounted as irrelevant to this case. It must therefore have influenced the trial court when it was not and could not conceivably have been a consequence of the subsequent publication. There is not even the remotest connection in the chain of causation between the actions of the authorities and the publication complained of. That this extraneous consideration influenced the trial court is confirmed by the learned trial judge's finding immediately after the extract that I have quoted in the following terms:
The plaintiff
was listing the consequences of the publication and as can be
seen the allegation that the father collapsed
was discounted while
that concerning the deportation of the wife was as not. Quite
clearly the defendant can only be liable
for his own publication
and the results of it. Mr Muzyamba's fourth and final submission was that the learned trial judge ought to have considered as mitigatory the fact that the defendant's source of information had been a responsible Government minister. Once again, I would find that there is substance in this submission. Mr Zulu's reply to the third and fourth submissions made by his learned brother was that the aggravating features such as the attempt to justify and the absence of an apology far outweighed any such considerations. This argument is demonstrably untenable. In assessing the damages and in arriving at the sum of K10,000 the learned trial judge did take into consideration all the aggravating features and indeed must have included the extraneous fact of the deportation of the plaintiff's wife. On the other hand, it is quite clear that the aspect raised in Mr Muzyamba's submission was not so considered. In Times Newspapers Zambia Ltd v Kapwepwe (2), Baron, D.C.J., said at p. 296:
The other
members of the court in that case did not disagree, and I p171
would
respectfully concur with those sentiments and hold that it is a
factor to be taken into consideration in mitigation
of damages for
a defendant to show that he had reported a story from an otherwise
impeccable source. In the instant case
the source was a minister
of Government respect of whom it is reasonable to assume an
absence of irresponsibility and deliberate
falsehood. We have been asked to reduce the damages and in considering whether or not to do so I have borne in mind the well-established principle which was so aptly stated by Greer, L.J., in the oft-quoted case of Flint v Lovell (3), in which he said at p. 202:
This statement of principle has been followed with full approval in a number of cases decided by this court. For instance, in Kawimbe v The Attorney-General (4), where Baron, D.C.J., said at p. 247:
It is trite
law that a defendant in any action in tort can be held accountable
only for the consequences which flow directly
or naturally out of
the act or omission complained of. Quite obviously the deportation
of the plaintiff's wife did not flow
from the publication so as to
have entitled the learned trial judge to be influenced by it, as I
find he was. I consider
that the finding that the deportation and
the publication were linked together so as to attach
responsibility to the defendant
for the purpose of assessing
damages in this case amounted to a misapprehension of the facts
entitling this court to interfere
with the amount awarded. There
is also the additional mitigatory factor arising from the fact
that the defendant had published
a correct version of a story
given to the defendant by minister of Government. The defendant's
carelessness in not investigating
the truth of the story did not,
in my view, negative the absence of recklessness or malice, nor
was it proof of the absence
of honest belief, all of which are
relevant in mitigation or otherwise. In my view and
proceeding on the footing that the learned trial judge had taken
all the aggravating factors into consideration,
the p172
two submissions that have been upheld entitle the defendant to a reduction. In all the circumstances I would set aside the award of K10,000 and in its place I would award K8,000 compensatory damages. The appeal should be allowed in those terms.
The advocates for the parties have indicated that they consent to an order that costs follow the event. Accordingly and by consent the successful appellant will have his costs of this appeal while the respondent who was the successful party in the court below will have his costs of the proceedings in the court below, such costs to be taxed in default of agreement.
Damages reduced |
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WILSON MASAUSO ZULU v

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