Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 706South Africa
Applebite Roadhouse (PTY) Limited and Others v Apple Bite (PTY) Limited Another (47010/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 706 (20 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Unlawful competition – passing-off – restaurant and fast food outlet – whether goodwill and reputation of applicants’ business associated with trade name – whether use of name confusing members of the public – application granted.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 706
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Applebite Roadhouse (PTY) Limited and Others v Apple Bite (PTY) Limited Another (47010/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 706 (20 September 2022)
Applebite Roadhouse (PTY) Limited and Others v Apple Bite (PTY) Limited Another (47010/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 706 (20 September 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_706.html
sino date 20 September 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
47010/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
Yes
20
th
September
2022
In the matter between:
APPLEBITE
ROADHOUSE (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant
GONBAR INVESTMENTS CC
t/a
APPLEBITE
ROADHOUSE & PIZZERIA
Second Applicant
ALEX
JAY CATERING CC t/a THE APPLEBITE EXPRESS
Third Applicant
and
APPLE
BITE (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
SIMUL
ENTERPRISES CC
Second Respondent
Heard
:
20 April 2022 – The matter was disposed of without an oral
hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
20 September 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email,
by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:30 on 20
September 2022.
Summary:
Unlawful competition – passing-off –
restaurant and fast food outlet – whether goodwill and
reputation of applicants’
business associated with trade name –
whether use of name confusing members of the public –
application granted.
ORDER
(1)
The first respondent be and is hereby
interdicted and restrained from utilising the trading name ‘AppleBite
Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’, ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’ and/or ‘Original Apple Bite Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’
in respect to its roadhouse business located at 95
Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale.
(2)
The first respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to, within fourteen days from date of this order
to:
(a)
take all steps necessary to take down and
remove its social media pages titled ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse
& Pizzeria’
hosted on its
Facebook
and
Instagram
platforms; and
(b)
terminate,
decommission and/or de-register its hosting package and to deregister
its associated domain name (website)
http://www.theapplebite.co.za
under its domain IP Address 156.38.143.130;
(c)
remove all references to the name and logo
associated with ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’
from all food delivery
applications (‘apps’) including,
but not limited to
Mr D Food
and
Uber Eats
delivery apps;
(d)
refrain from registering or attempting to
register any further internet domains containing the words and/or
names ‘theapplebite’
or ‘The Apple Bite’, in
the future;
(e)
refrain from publishing on any webpage,
website, or any social or printed media forum any false or misleading
allegations regarding
the second applicant and the third applicants’
business practices.
(3)
The First Respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to:
(a)
Immediately refrain from directly or
indirectly engaging in the use of applicants’ identifying logo
image, signs, menus, stationery,
waiters and employees clothing
bearing the insignia and other displays or advertising matter of any
nature whatsoever indicative
of a red apple with a bite taken out of
it – containing the words in white lettering ‘The Apple
Bite’;
(4)
The first respondent and the second
respondent be and is hereby ordered and directed to remove the
following parts of its neon signage
depicting the logo of a red apple
containing the words and lettering ‘The Apple Bite’ from
its property located at
95 Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale:
(a)
neon signage permanently affixed to a
4.5-meter metal pylon structure situate at the entrance to First
Respondent’s roadhouse
business; and
(b)
neon signage affixed to First Respondent’s
roadhouse business at its rear entrance located on 10th Avenue,
Edenvale.
(5)
The first and second respondents, jointly
and severally, to one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
second and third
respondents’ costs of this opposed
application.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
In issue in this opposed application is the
use of a trade name, ‘Applebite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’
or ‘The
Apple Bite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’ or any other
name similar to or resembling those names and the related logos. The
applicants
claim that they have been using this trade name for a
considerable period of time and their businesses are associated with
that
name, which comes with a good reputation and a substantial
amount of goodwill, which the first respondent and the second
respondent
are now taking advantage of by using the said trade name.
In other words, so the applicants claim, the defendants, by using the
Applebite name, are passing-off their services and products as being
that of the applicants, thus competing unlawfully with them.
[2].
The questions which need to be answered are
the following: (1) Did the applicants establish a goodwill or
reputation attached to
the goods or services which they supply, in
the mind of the purchasing public by association with the brand name
(AppleBite)? (2)
Does the public recognise the name, AppleBite, as
distinctive specifically of the applicants’ goods or services?
(3) Does
the use of the name, Applebite, and the related logo by the
respondents have the potential for confusion between the services and
goods of the respondents as being that of the applicants? (4) Should
the respondents be interdicted from competing unlawfully with
the
applicants and directed to stop trading under the trade name ‘Apple
Bite Roadhouse and Pizzeria’? And whether or
not, as a result
of alleged passing-off by the respondents, any of the applicants have
suffered a loss of monthly revenue, considering
the various locations
and distances between the various businesses?
[3].
These question should be decided against
the factual backdrop set out in the paragraphs which follow, the
facts in the matter being
by and large common cause.
[4].
The first applicant, which was registered
by Migel Goncalves (‘Goncalves’) on 11 April 2017, is at
present not trading
and is in fact dormant. According to Goncalves,
who is the deponent to the founding affidavit of the applicants, he
registered
the first applicant under the name ‘Applebite
Roadhouse (Pty) Limited’ in an effort to protect the trading
names of
the second and third applicants. I interpose here to note
that from the founding papers it is not altogether clear on what
basis
the first applicant claims to have
locus
standi
to claim the relief sought
against the respondents. If the first applicant is at present not
trading – and has evidently
never done so – then the
rhetorical question to be asked is how then can it be suggested that
the respondents are using the
‘trade name’ of the first
applicant. First applicant’s cause is therefore, in my view,
stillborn.
[5].
The second applicant is Gonbar Investments
CC t/a Applebite Roadhouse & Pizzeria, which, as its trade name
suggests, is a roadhouse
and a pizza / fast food outlet, and which
carries on business at the corner of Russel and Chapman Streets, in
Klippoortjie AH in
Germiston. Goncalves is the managing member of the
second applicant, which previously traded as ‘Burger Land
Roadhouse’
at the same premises in Klippoortjie. This business,
Gonbar Investments CC t/a Burger Land Roadhouse, had been opened
during 2001
by Goncalves and his father. During late 2008, the second
applicant relinquished its franchise agreement with Burger Land and
started
trading as 'The Applebite Roadhouse and Pizzeria' in
Klippoortjie in Germiston. To this day, according to the applicants,
that
business is still flourishing.
[6].
During June 2008, Goncalves and his father,
with a view to expanding their business interests, had purchased and
acquired ownership
of the business of an existing roadhouse
establishment trading as ‘The Applebite Roadhouse’, which
was trading at business
premises situate at 95 Van Riebeeck Street,
Edenvale. This is the business, or rather the trade name which is the
subject of the
dispute in this opposed application. This latter
business was acquired by Goncalves and his father from the previous
owner, one
Mrs Xanthé Revelas, and soon after they had
acquired the said business, the third applicant was registered –
on 7
August 2008 – by Goncalves and his father and the
business, The Applebite Roadhouse and Pizzeria, was taken over by it
(the
third applicant). And so, since August 2008 – for a period
in excess of fourteen years - AlexJay Catering CC (the third
applicant)
traded as the Applebite Roadhouse & Pizzeria, with
Goncalves and his father as the founding members. Prior to that, the
said
business had been carried on under the same trade name for at
least another approximately twenty years by different owners.
[7].
On 10 April 2015 the third applicant was
sold to one Raymond Daniels (‘Daniels’), who acquired the
business of ‘The
Applebite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’ in
Edenvale. Daniels, as the new sole member of the third applicant,
entered into a lease
agreement for the rental of the business
premises with the owner, who was, as explained in more detail below,
the second respondent.
The aforesaid business, under Daniels,
evidently ran into financial difficulties during October 2020 and was
not able to meet its
rental obligations to the second respondent,
which compelled it to vacate the premises in Van Riebeeck Street,
Edenvale, and to
relocate. This downturn in the fortunes of the third
applicant coincided with and probably was attributable to the onset
on the
Covid-19 pandemic. During November 2020, Daniels relocated his
business to 27D Central Avenue, Eastleigh, Edenvale, where he, or
rather the third applicant commenced trading as ‘Applebite
Express’. These premises, so the applicants aver, are
approximately
1.5 kilometres in distance from the Van Riebeeck Street
premises.
[8].
As already indicated, the owner of the
immovable property on which the aforementioned business premises in
Van Riebeeck Street are
situated, is the second respondent, and
Goncalves and his father, as the owners of the business, The
Applebite Roadhouse, let from
the second respondent the said premises
for as long as they owned – via the second applicant –
the said business, as
did Daniels after them and Revelas before that.
[9].
The first respondent, The Apple Bite (Pty)
Limited, was registered by one Peter Christoforakis
(‘Christoforakis’) on
21 July 2021 and it is presently
trading as ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’ at
95 Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale.
Christoforakis is the sole director
of the first respondent.
[10].
By all accounts, ‘
The
Applebite Roadhouse’
was first
and officially opened in 1972 by brothers John and Jimmy Karantasis
and by Chris Batitsas, who later sold the business,
situated at 95
Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale, to a John Bower. During 1978 a Pavlos
Christoforakis (‘Pavlos’), who
is the father of
Christoforakis, bought the business from John Bower as well as the
premises from which the business operated.
As owner of the property
from which the business operated, Pavlos Christoforakis leased out
the premises and allowed his lessees
to carry on the business of the
Applebite Pizzeria and Roadhouse from the leased premises. Therefore,
from about 1978 the business
was run from the said premises by
various lessees who had bought the business from Pavlos, who also
leased the premises to the
business owners.
[11].
These various purchasers of the business
had bought the business from Pavlos and subsequent owners, and they
ran the business, which
traded as ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’, whilst leasing the premises from Pavlos. One such
owner of the
business / lessee was Xanthé Revelas, who at some
point effectively sold the said business to the third applicant,
whose
members at the time were Goncalves and his father, who later
sold their members’ interest to Daniels. He too rented the
business
premises from Pavlos Christoforakis.
[12].
It is instructive to note that the
membership in the third applicant, which had as its main asset, the
business trading as ‘The
Applebite Roadhouse and Pizzeria’,
was sold as a going concern by Goncalves and his father to Daniels
for the purchase price
of R1 500 000, which included an
amount in respect of the goodwill of the business. The same applies
to the purchase
and sale agreement concluded between Goncalves and
his father, as purchasers, and Revelas, as seller, during 2008, in
respect of
which the purchase price included an amount relating to
the goodwill of the business. This, to my mind, is as clear an
indication
as one will ever get that there was goodwill in the
business and that its reputation was closely related to its trade
name.
[13].
There is a big ‘The Applebite
Roadhouse’ sign at the entrance to the premises of the business
and has been there since
1972. This sign was initially hired from
Claude Neon Signs, however thereafter Pavlos purchased same outright.
The sign has therefore
been on the property for about forty-nine
years and is effectively a permanent fixture on the property.
[14].
With that factual background in mind, I now
turn to an analysis of the issues in the matter. And as a starting
point, it may be
apt to refer briefly to the legal principles
applicable to unlawful competition and passing-off as a form of
unlawful competition.
[15].
Nicholas
AJA in
Schultz
v Butt
[1]
had this to say as regards unfair competition:
‘
In
order to succeed in an action based on unfair competition, the
plaintiff must establish all the requisites of aquilian liability,
including proof that the defendant has committed a wrongful act. In
such a case, the unlawfulness which is a requisite of aquilian
liability may fall into a category of clearly recognised illegality,
... namely trading in contravention of an express statutory
prohibition; the making of fraudulent misrepresentations by the rival
trader as to his own business;
the
passing-off by a rival trader of his goods or business as being that
of his competitor
; the publication by
the rival trader of injurious falsehoods concerning his competitor's
business; and the employment of physical
assaults and intimidation
designed to prevent a competitor from pursuing his trade. But it is
not limited to unlawfulness of that
kind.’ (My emphasis).
[16].
As
regard passing-off, in
Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals (Pty) Ltd v The Beauty Box (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation)
[2]
,
the Appellate Division held as follows:
‘
Confusion
per se
does not give rise to an action for passing-off. It does so only
where it is the result of a misrepresentation by the defendant
that
the goods which he offers are those of the plaintiff or are connected
with the plaintiff. That has not been shown. The cause
of any
confusion is probably to be found elsewhere.’
[17].
And
finally, in
Capital
Estate and General Agencies (Pty) Ltd and Others v Holiday Inns Inc
and Others
[3]
,
passing-off was defined by Rabie JA as follows: -
‘
The
wrong known as passing-off consists in a representation by one person
that his business (or merchandise, as the case may be)
is that of
another, or that it is associated with that of another, and, in order
to determine whether a representation amounts
to a passing off, one
enquires whether there is a reasonable likelihood that members of the
public may be confused into believing
that the business of the one
is, or is connected with, that of another.’
[18].
The very first enquiry relates to whether
the second and third applicants can claim that they have established
a reputation for
themselves or the goods and services they supply in
the market, which have been infringed by the respondents. This
enquiry implicates
the reputational element of the goodwill of that
business of the applicants. In other words, proof of passing off
requires proof
of reputation, misrepresentation and damage.
[19].
The
first issue is thus whether the second and third applicants
established that their goods have acquired a particular reputation
among the public. The test, simply put, is ‘whether the
plaintiff has, in a practical and business sense, a sufficient
reputation
amongst a substantial number of persons who are either
clients or potential clients of his business’. (
Caterham
Car Sales & Coachworks Ltd v Birkin Cars (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[4]
).
The cases make it clear that such reputation may be inferred from
extensive sales and marketing. (
Hollywood
Curl (Pty) Ltd and Another v Twins Products (Pty) Ltd
[5]
;
Adidas
AG and Another v Pepkor Retail Limited
[6]
).
[20].
In support of their claim, the second and
third applicants aver in their founding papers that they have
established a significant
goodwill and a valued reputation over many
years of trading under the name ‘AppleBite’. They also
aver that the trading
name ‘Applebite’ has been developed
into a distinguishable and reputable logo image. As already
indicated, this claim
by the applicants appears to be borne out by
the fact the business was sold on more than one occasion for a
purchase price, which
includes a substantial sum in respect of the
goodwill.
[21].
What is more is that the trade name, under
which the business had been conducted over many years by different
proprietors, had stood
the test of time. It therefore stands to
reason that the business has probably built up goodwill, which goes
hand in hand with
a good reputation. As testified to by the second
and third applicants, the goodwill of the applicants has resulted in
the growth
of a large loyal group of customers who frequent the
business establishment of the second and third applicants. This
applies equally
to the business in Edenvale and the one in
Klippoortjie.
[22].
As averred by Goncalves in his founding
affidavit, in relation to the goodwill associated with the
‘Applebite’ brand:
-
‘
When
the respective businesses were sold in 2008 and again in 2015 these
sales implicitly included the goodwill built up over two
decades and
more including the name AppleBite Roadhouse and Pizzeria, its
identifying logo image depicting its associated red apple
image
containing the words written within said apple in white lettering
“The Apple Bite”. One of the largest aforesaid
identifying signs consisted of a 4.5-meter metal electrical signage
structure affixed to the entrance and a smaller electric sign
affixed
at the exit to the Property, located on Van Riebeeck Avenue and 1011
Street, respectively.
Further, said goodwill
included the two telephone landlines intended for pickup and delivery
orders, being 011-452-6225 and 011-452-2939.
A copy of a photograph
of the 4.5-meter electric sign affixed to the Property is attached
hereto and marked "MG-16".’
[23].
In my view, therefore, the first and second
applicants have clearly proven that the their reputation and goodwill
have been built
up on their association of their businesses with the
name ‘Applebite’. This then takes care of the first
enquiry.
[24].
The next issue relates to whether or not
the use by the first respondent of the name ‘Applebite
Roadhouse & Pizzeria’
is likely to cause confusion in the
minds of members of the public that their services and food are that
of the second and third
applicants. The name used by the first
respondent is the exact same name used by the second and third
applicants. They are all
involved in the business of fast food and
fast food delivery. It therefore stands to reason that confusion is
bound to follow.
As correctly pointed out by the second and third
applicants, there can be no doubt that customers using the latest
ubiquitous restaurant
apps to place orders will easily confuse first
respondent's business with that of the second and third applicants.
The logic in
this conclusion cannot be faulted.
[25].
Additionally, the case of the second and
third applicants is bolstered by confirmatory affidavits by a number
of their customers,
who all confirm that the use of the Applebite
logo and the wording ‘The Original Applebite’ have lulled
them into falsely
believing that they were ordering from the second
or third applicants, when in fact and in truth, they were ordering
from the first
respondent. In that regard, the applicants were able
to procure affidavits from no less than six of the customers who
confirmed
actual confusion on their part.
[26].
Moreover,
the business managers of the second and the third applicants both
confirm under oath that after the first respondent commenced
trading
during September 2021, there has been a sudden increase in
competition emanating from first respondents’ social media
campaign in the past three months. So, for example, they relate how
traditional customers mistakenly order on line or via the food
delivery apps, believing that they were ordering from the second
applicant and/or the third applicant, only to receive food deliveries
from first respondent. The managers also testify to the fact that
often customers attend at second or third applicants’ outlets
to collect take-out food orders, having mistakenly placed their
orders via online or telephonic or WhatsApp numbers and/or on the
website
www.theapulebite.co.za
and thereafter discovering that the food ordered was not being
prepared or available from the applicants.
[27].
Also, some time phone-in food orders would
be placed by customers of the second applicant or the third
applicant, who would then
proceed to prepare the orders, only for
those orders never to be collected. When this is enquired about, the
applicants would establish
that the customers would have attended on
the business of the first respondent to collect the orders they had
placed with the second
applicant or the third applicant.
[28].
The aforegoing therefore satisfies me that
the second and third applicants have, as against the first and second
respondents, proven
a case of unlawful competition in the form of
passing-off, which has resulted in them encountering a slowdown in
business as a
direct result of first respondent’s aggressive
internet marketing drive.
[29].
One of the main grounds of the respondents’
opposition to the application is to the effect that the applicants,
when they
acquired the business of ‘Apple Bite Roadhouse and
Pizzeria’, did not acquire the right to use the name and the
logo.
This, so the respondents contend, was retained by the owner of
the property, that being the second respondent. This claim is belied
by the provisions of the sale agreements, including the one concluded
between Revelas and Pavlos, which sold the business as a
going
concern. There is therefore no merit in that defence, which, to me,
seems like an afterthought.
[30].
For all of these reasons, the application
by the second applicant and the third applicant should succeed. I
have, at the outset,
indicated my view that the first applicant lacks
the necessary
locus standi
to claim the relief claimed from the respondents. No costs order
should therefore be made in its favour. Otherwise, costs should
follow the suit and the first and second respondents should pay the
costs of the second and third applicants.
Order
[31].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first respondent be and is hereby
interdicted and restrained from utilising the trading name ‘AppleBite
Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’, ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’ and/or ‘Original Apple Bite Roadhouse &
Pizzeria’
in respect to its roadhouse business located at 95
Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale.
(2)
The first respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to, within fourteen days from date of this order
to:
(a)
take all steps necessary to take down and
remove its social media pages titled ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse
& Pizzeria’
hosted on its
Facebook
and
Instagram
platforms; and
(b)
terminate,
decommission and/or de-register its hosting package and to deregister
its associated domain name (website)
http://www.theapplebite.co.za
under its domain IP Address 156.38.143.130;
(c)
remove all references to the name and logo
associated with ‘The Apple Bite Roadhouse & Pizzeria’
from all food delivery
applications (‘apps’) including,
but not limited to
Mr D Food
and
Uber Eats
delivery apps;
(d)
refrain from registering or attempting to
register any further internet domains containing the words and/or
names ‘theapplebite’
or ‘The Apple Bite’, in
the future;
(e)
refrain from publishing on any webpage,
website, or any social or printed media forum any false or misleading
allegations regarding
the second applicant and the third applicants’
business practices.
(3)
The First Respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to:
(a)
Immediately refrain from directly or
indirectly engaging in the use of applicants’ identifying logo
image, signs, menus, stationery,
waiters and employees clothing
bearing the insignia and other displays or advertising matter of any
nature whatsoever indicative
of a red apple with a bite taken out of
it – containing the words in white lettering ‘The Apple
Bite’;
(4)
The first respondent and the second
respondent be and is hereby ordered and directed to remove the
following parts of its neon signage
depicting the logo of a red apple
containing the words and lettering ‘The Apple Bite’ from
its property located at
95 Van Riebeeck Avenue, Edenvale:
(a)
neon signage permanently affixed to a
4.5-meter metal pylon structure situate at the entrance to First
Respondent’s roadhouse
business; and
(b)
neon signage affixed to First Respondent’s
roadhouse business at its rear entrance located on 10th Avenue,
Edenvale.
(5)
The first and second respondents, jointly
and severally, to one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
second and third
respondents’ costs of this opposed
application.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
20
th
April 2022
– the matter was disposed of
without an oral hearing
in terms of
s 19(a)
of
the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
20
th
September 2022
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND
AND THIRD
APPLICANTS:
Advocate A P Allison
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Tshepo Mohapi Attorneys,
Norwood, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND
RESPONDENTS:
Advocate B D Stevens
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Thompson Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
Schultz
v Butt
1986 (3) SA 667 (A);
[2]
Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals (Pty) Ltd v The Beauty Box (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation)
1987 (2) SA 600 (A);
[3]
Capital
Estate and General Agencies (Pty) Ltd and Others v Holiday Inns Inc
and Others
1977 (2) SA 916 (A);
[4]
Caterham
Car Sales & Coachworks Ltd v Birkin Cars (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1998] ZASCA 44
;
1998
(3) SA 938
(A) para 20;
[5]
Hollywood
Curl (Pty) Ltd and Another v Twins Products (Pty) Ltd
1989 (1) SA 236
(A) at 249J;
[6]
Adidas
AG and Another v Pepkor Retail Limited
[2013] ZASCA 3
para 29;
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Applebite Roadhouse (PTY) Limited and Others v Apple Bite (PTY) Limited Another (47010/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 866 (2 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 866High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Apple Bite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Applebite Roadhouse (Pty) Ltd and Others (A2023/058069) [2024] ZAGPJHC 22 (12 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 22High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bitline SA 951 CC TA Sasol Roodepoort West v Sasol Oil (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/052612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 390 (2 April 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 390High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Macdonalds Transport Upington (Pty) Ltd v Umkhumbi Wabasebenzi Movement and Others (2025/141072) [2025] ZAGPJHC 881 (28 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 881High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Macnam v Road Accident Fund (33875/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 378 (25 April 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 378High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar