High Court The suit was heard in the
High Court of South Africa, and the
Pretoria High Court upheld both of Dey's claims, finding that the publication of the doctored image inflicted both humiliation and defamation. The court awarded damages in a composite amount of
R45,000. The three students appealed the judgment to the
Supreme Court of Appeal, and the judgment was additionally
cross-appealed by Dey, who sought damages in a higher amount and a
costs order on a more stringent scale.
Supreme Court of Appeal On 30 March 2010, the appellate court dismissed the students' appeal and upheld Dey's cross-appeal. Writing for the majority, Deputy Judge President
Louis Harms agreed with the lower court that the picture was defamatory and its publication wrongful. He held that the requirement of
animus iniuriandi for delictual liability did not generally require "consciousness of wrongfulness". Moreover, he dismissed the students' argument that "jest excludes the intention to injure". The students' counsel had correctly conceded that the students' intent was to ridicule Dey, and that was sufficient to establish their liability. The majority also found in Dey's favour on costs, though it did not increase the High Court's R45,000 award. However, the Supreme Court of Appeal diverged from the High Court in dismissing Dey's second claim, that based on an asserted affront to dignity. Harms wrote that a single defamatory act could not give rise to two
causes of actions on the
actio iniuriarum; the cause of action based on defamation itself encompassed the second cause of action, because "any defamation is in the first instance an affront to a person’s dignity which is aggravated by publication. Someone who is not affronted by a publication and who does not feel humiliated will not sue for defamation." Acting Judge of Appeal
Bennie Griesel was the only dissenting vote in the Supreme Court of Appeal: he agreed with the majority's order but dissented on the finding of defamation. Griesel held that the court was obliged to consider the natural meaning of the picture to its intended audience, the defendants and their classmates; to this audience, he argued, the picture would be immediately recognisable as an "attempt at humour". Citing Justice
Albie Sachs's concurrence in
Laugh It Off Promotions v South African Breweries, Griesel held that the tastelessness of a joke did not "transform a bad joke into a defamatory statement". However, Griesel agreed with the majority that it is not open to the defendants to rely on jest as a defence against the claim based on iniuria. It does not protect them in these circumstances where they foresaw the possibility that their attempts at humour might be perceived as insulting, offensive or degrading by the plaintiff.In this regard, Griesel held that the defendants' conduct did amount to an actionable impairment of the plaintiff's dignity. He therefore supported the majority's order. == Constitutional Court judgments ==