R40 000 awarded for a defamatory Facebook post

4th December 2013

In a judgment handed down on 4 September 2013, in Isparta v Richter and Another, the North Gauteng High Court provided some important guidance about defamatory material published on Facebook.

The plaintiff sued her ex-husband (the second defendant) and his new wife (the first defendant) for defamation on the basis of comments that were posted about her on the first defendant's Facebook wall.

A series of comments were posted by the first defendant on her own Facebook wall concerning the plaintiff. The second defendant was tagged in the comments but did not post any comments himself. Two of the posts were alleged to be defamatory. In one of the posts the first defendant posed the following question: "[t]o all mothers and fathers - what do you think about people who allow their teenage step-sons to bathe their younger step-sisters every night just because it makes the mother's life easier?". This question was alleged to be defamatory of the plaintiff because it suggested that she was a bad mother and had permitted an inappropriate relationship between her step-son and her daughter.

Four significant features of the judgment include:

In the context of social media websites such as Facebook there are important points to bear in mind to minimise the risk of being held liable for defamation. These include: