Telimatrix, an advertiser, ran an advertisement campaign that was complained about by a competitor, Netstar. The ASA's Directorate upheld the complaint on the basis that the advertisements capitalised on fear, contrary to clause 3.1 of the ASA's Code of Advertising Practice. The Directorate ordered immediate withdrawal of the advertisements. Telimatrix complied but appealed to the ASA's Advertising Industry Tribunal, which upheld the appeal after the complainant withdrew the particular objection. Telimatrix then sued the ASA for damages of approximately R6.5 million, alleging that the Directorate's incorrect and negligent ruling caused it pure economic loss. The ASA was an independent body sponsored by the advertising industry for self-regulation in the public interest. Telimatrix was indirectly bound to the ASA's code because its advertising agents belonged to a constituent member of the ASA. The ASA filed an exception, arguing that its negligent decision did not constitute wrongfulness in the delictual sense. Snyders J in the court a quo upheld the exception and found no cause of action disclosed.
The appeal was dismissed with costs, including costs of two counsel. The exception was upheld, confirming that the particulars of claim disclosed no cause of action against the ASA.
An incorrect decision made negligently during an adjudicative process that purports to serve the public interest is not wrongful in the delictual sense and does not give rise to liability for damages, provided the decision was made in good faith. Public policy considerations that protect judicial independence—including the need for fearless adjudication and efficient dispute resolution without the chilling effect of damages claims—apply equally to quasi-judicial bodies and adjudicators serving the public interest, whether or not their authority derives from statute or contract. Negligence alone does not constitute wrongfulness; in cases of pure economic loss, public policy must demand that the plaintiff be compensated. The existence of internal appeal mechanisms is relevant to determining whether damages claims should lie for incorrect decisions.
The Court made several obiter observations: (1) The distinction between purely administrative and quasi-judicial decisions may not be determinative in assessing wrongfulness—similar considerations may apply to both. (2) Constitutional values including accountability have not evolved into a general liability for damages for imperfect administrative actions—judicial officers remain accountable only to the law for their decisions. (3) Exceptions should be dealt with sensibly as a useful mechanism to weed out cases without legal merit; an over-technical approach destroys their utility. (4) When deciding exceptions, courts must read pleadings as a whole and not blindfold themselves to annexures and incorporated documents. (5) The statement that there are no general rules determining wrongfulness and it always depends on facts is an overstatement—there are categories fixed by law, though these may evolve with changing policy considerations. (6) Relevant evidence for wrongfulness determinations must be relevant to policy considerations, not merely to factual disputes. (7) The first principle of delict is that everyone bears their own loss unless an exception applies—this is easily forgotten in modern jurisprudence.
This case is a leading authority on the delictual liability (or lack thereof) of adjudicating bodies for incorrect decisions. It establishes that adjudicators performing quasi-judicial functions in the public interest enjoy immunity from damages claims for negligent errors made in good faith, even where they are not judicial officers strictu sensu and even where the relationship is not contractual. The judgment clarifies the distinction between wrongfulness and negligence in South African delict, particularly in the context of pure economic loss. It reinforces that wrongfulness requires consideration of public policy factors beyond mere foreseeability of harm. The case is important for administrative law and the law of delict, setting boundaries on accountability that protect the independence and efficiency of adjudicative processes while confirming that bad faith decisions remain actionable. The judgment also confirms the proper use of exceptions to dispose of claims lacking legal merit on policy grounds.