Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 242South Africa
Construction Education and Training Authority (CETA) v V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd and Another (2025/024691) [2025] ZAGPPHC 242 (6 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 March 2025
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: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 242
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Construction Education and Training Authority (CETA) v V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd and Another (2025/024691) [2025] ZAGPPHC 242 (6 March 2025)
Construction Education and Training Authority (CETA) v V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd and Another (2025/024691) [2025] ZAGPPHC 242 (6 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_242.html
sino date 6 March 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2025-024691
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED.
06/03/2025
In
the matter between:
THE
CONSTRUCTION EDUCATION AND
TRAINING
AUTHORITY (CETA)
Applicant
and
V2
DIGITAL (PTY)
LTD
First Respondent
(Registration
Number: 2017/535298/07)
KYXIS
TECHNOLOGIES CC
Second Respondent
(Registration Number:
2010/135500/23)
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
J
[1]
The applicant is the Construction Education and
Training Authority, an organ of state which applies on an urgent
basis for relief
for the restitution and return of its cloud-hosted
property after expiry of its contract with V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd (the
first respondent).
[2]
The applicant accuses the first respondent of
holding the applicant to ransom and raising and justifying invoices
after termination
of the contract. The second respondent is the new
service provider appointed by the applicant in December 2024.
[3]
The applicant was in a contractual relationship
with V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd during 2023. At that time Mr Otto Nel
was employed
as the Chief Operating Officer of V2 Tech Holdings. The
applicant required a service provider that had a Level 1 BEE
compliant
service provider classification and who had to be on the
Central Supply Database of the Government. V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd
was a Level 4 BEE service provider but was not on the Central Supply
Database of the Government.This information was only disclosed
after
the hearing in the circumstances set out below.
RELIEF
SOUGHT IN PART A
[4]
The applicant has brought its application in Part
A and Part B. Part A serves before this Court on the basis of
urgency. In terms
thereof, the applicant seeks on the basis of
urgency an order for the following relief:
4.1
Ordering the first respondent to immediately take
all necessary steps to restore and reinstate to the applicant the
full and effective
functionality of all CETA systems and data that
are currently being hosted, managed, controlled and/or retained by
the first respondent.
4.2
Ordering that the said restoration and
reinstatement of functionality of all CETA systems and data include
that the respondent is
obliged and compelled:
4.2.1
To perform a full handover of the CETA systems
and data in its possession or under its control to Kyxis, acting as
agent on behalf
of the (probably -my insertion- applicant);
4.2.2
To grant all administrative access to the Meraki
Infrastructure to the second respondent, to remove all third-party
service provider
access and to provide complete control of C-channel
for the CETA’s website domains, which are ceta.org.za and
ceta.co.za;
4.2.3
To provide the applicant and the second
respondent with the correct encryption keys in order to enable the
second respondent to
perform a backup restoration of the data
belonging to the applicant;
4.2.4
To provide the second respondent with Virtual
Machines, to enable it to restore the applicant’s four
operating systems, to
provide thorough infrastructure testing, to
perform network configuration and optimisation and security
protocols;
4.2.5
To implement and fully comply with the handing
over procedure as set out in the “
CETA
ICT handover document signed by the parties on 24 January 2025
.”
4.3
The CETA handover document referred to is a
17-page document, which ostensibly already existed at the end of
December 2024.That
was the date of the first handover meeting. At
that time, paragraph 11 of the document read differently as to what
it read on 24
January 2025, the second handover meeting.On the
disputed issues befor me the document of 24 January 2025 reads:
“
11.
POPIA compliance
and data governance
In alignment with the
Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) and the CETA’s
data governance policies, the CETA requires
V2 Ditigal to adhere to
strict data protection and confidentiality standards.
As V2 Digital’s
contract with the CETA concluded on 31 December 2024, the CETA
formally requests that V2 Digital purge all
copies of trade secrets,
confidential information, and any other data or electronic media –
including backups and archived
files – that may reside within
its systems.
This data purge must
be completed by the end of the Azure migration of the CETA
infrastructure, with final sign-off from CETA, V2
Digital and Kyxis.
Further, V2 Ditigal
must provide written confirmation of the date destruction to ensure
compliance with POPIA regulations and the
CETA’s data
governance framework. This confirmation is essential to safeguarding
the CETA’s sensitive information,
prevent unauthorised access,
and upholding the principles of data privacy, integrity and
accountability.”
[5]
The applicant entered into a separate contract
with V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd (the first respondent) for the provision of
ICT services
at management.
[6]
The service level agreement of the applicant with
V2 Digital was signed on 23 February 2024 and was envisaged to last
for only 3
months, up to 13 May 2024. However, it was through a
number of extensions extended until the last day of December 2024
when the
contract came to an end.
[7]
The scope of the work included managed security
services and infrastructure monitoring with offsite backups of
critical data.
[8]
The contract does not provide for subcontracting
and the obligation to host the critical data of the applicant,
including its personal
information was the contractual obligation of
the first respondent.
[9]
Clause 22 of the service level agreement sets out
termination conditions. As will appear from the terms set out below,
the contract
envisaged a seamless handover on date of termination of
the contract. The contract reads in part:
“
22.1
Upon termination of this agreement for any reason whatsoever, whether
pursuant to the provisions
of clause 21.2 above or otherwise (and
without prejudice to any other rights or remedies of CETA under this
agreement or in law)
the company shall:
22.1.1
Forthwith cease to provide the services;
22.1.2
During the notice period referred to in item 4 of annexure A;
22.1.3
Return to CETA all keys and other means of access to any CETA
premises;
22.1.4
Return all other of CETA’s property which may be in the
possession of the company to
CETA;
22.1.5
Immediately remove all property belonging to it from any premises;
and
22.1.6
Shall deliver a certificate to CETA within 5 days of termination of
this agreement in terms
of which the company certifies that it has
complied with its obligations in terms of clause 22.1.”
[10]
At the time of the hearing of this application it
was common cause that a new service provider (Kyxis), appointed
during December
2024,was in possession of most of the listed property
in the Notice of Motion and the handover document of 24 January 2025.
The
only outstanding issue related to the migration of the
applicant’s data and information stored on the internet . Kyxis
is
in possession of the backup records which it retrieved from a
third-party service provider, Redstor. Such backups are currently
in
the possession, by arrangement of Kyxis, of DataPro.
[11]
The issue of migration of data was raised by the
first respondent in the middle of 2024 and the applicant was advised
that such
migration takes three to four months. At that stage it was
suggested that the applicant acquire the Azure program to facilitate
the migration of data from one host to the next.
[12]
On 30 December 2024 a handover meeting took
place. It was recorded by Mr Nel on behalf of V2 Digital and
Molebogeng Taje, Executive
Manager Strategic Support of CETA that the
following had been handed over:
12.1
A “
USB stick
enclosed in an envelope containing the service account details,
passwords and the handover document as discussed and presented
during
the meeting between Kyxis, CETA and V2”
.
The applicant contends
that the first respondent has been holding over on the issue of
migration and has been raising invoices in
respect of hosting costs
incurred by it.
12.2
The first respondent contents that the applicant
did not heed its warning of timeously acquiring the Azure program,
which was only
ordered during December or January 2025.
12.3
The applicant complains that the first respondent
has appointed itself as an overseer of the migration process to Kyxis
and is using
its control over the applicant’s management
systems to extort payments which are not due as the contract has come
to an end.
[13]
The first respondent denies the aforesaid. The
first invoice about which is the complaint, is an invoice that was
delivered on 15
December 2024 for 1 month’s services, i.e.
until 15 January 2025. This was conceded as being a mistake as the
contract expired
at the end of December 2024.
[14]
The first respondent contends that, because the
applicant did not timeously make arrangements for the migration of
the information
being stored on the internet, it has been held liable
for hosting services by a third party in an amount of R75 000.00
per
month.
[15]
Upon an enquiry by the Court, counsel for the
applicant disclosed that the services for hosting are being rendered
by V2 Tech Holdings
(Pty) Ltd. Upon further instructions being
obtained, he conveyed to me that V2 Tech Holdings is a third-party
company unrelated
to the first respondent and that the similarity in
names was not significant.
[16]
As a result of the aforesaid interaction the
applicant did a company search and uploaded the results of the search
onto CaseLines.
I also requested the the first respondent to respond
to the contentions advanced by the first respondent.
[17]
In a letter of 19 February 2025, the same
attorney who is on resord for the first respondent wrote a letter on
behalf of V2 Tech
Holdings (Pty) Ltd. The letter contains the
following:
“
We hereby
confirm that all services managed by V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd,
including those within its infrastructure that CETA has
utilised,
will be enabled and fully operational without interruptions once
payment has been received and cleared in our trust bank
account, as
per the attached bank confirmation letter. Kindly also find attached
the pro forma invoice for your reference, as requested
and
communicated extensively between you and Mr Nel.”
[18]
Mr Otto Nel is the deponent for the first
respondent. He is the Chief Operating Officer of the first
respondent.The letter indicates
that he also represents V2Tech
Holdings.
[19]
In the supplementary affidavit filed by Mr Nel,
in response to the CIPRO records uploaded by the applicant after the
interaction
and disclosures referred to above, he contends that he is
neither an employee of the first respondent nor of V2 Tech Holdings.
[20]
In his affidavit he states the following:
“
6.4
I further confirm that I have never held any shareholding in V2
Digital (Pty) Ltd
and/or in V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd, or have
directly or indirectly exercised control over V2 Tech Holdings (Pty)
Ltd.
6.5
Further, I confirm that neither of the two companies directly or
indirectly
control the other, or the business of the other, as being
a subsidiary of the other or that either party have the ability to
materially
influence the currency or management or decision making of
either company, specifically V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd.”
[21]
The aforesaid statements are made to confirm that
the invoice for hosting by V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd and payable by
V2 Digital
(Pty) Ltd is an arm’s length transaction.
[22]
I have difficulties accepting the aforesaid
contention by Mr Nel. The reasons are the following:
22.1
In a letter of 22 August 2023 (i.e. in the period
before the applicant entered into a contract with V2 Digital (Pty)
Ltd), Mr Nel
wrote a letter to H Shangase of the applicant, which
bears the heading: “
Confirmation of
divisional relationship – V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd, a division of
V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd”
.
22.2
In the letter Mr Nel states:
“
I trust this
message finds you well. I am writing to formally confirm the existing
divisional relationship between V2 Digital (Pty)
Ltd and V2 Tech
Holdings (Pty) Ltd, as well as to provide the relevant identifying
details for our records.
I, Mr Otto Nel, hold
the position of COO at V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd. My Identification
Number is: 7[…]. I would like to
confirm that V2 Digital (Pty)
Ltd is indeed a division of V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd. The
registration number for V2 Digital (Pty)
Ltd is 2017/535298/07, and
for V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd it is 2018/041070/07.
Furthermore, we kindly
request that CETA facilitate the cession of all existing agreements
and appointment letters from V2 Tech
Holdings (Pty) Ltd to V2 Digital
(Pty) Ltd.”
22.3
Mr Nel is much more in control of V2 Digital and
V2 Tech Holdings than he is willing to disclose. This is apparent
from the claim
for payment by V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd on 19
February 2025 for payment, in exchange for which V2 Tech Holdings
would provide
the applicant with access to the information hosted by
V2 Tech Holdings. It is this claim to payment that is the basis for
the
first respondent’s defence that it is compelled to continue
hosting and to pay for such hosting during the migration process.
[23]
As Chief Operating Officer, Mr Nel is acting in
an authoritative capacity in respect of both V2 Digital (Pty) Ltd and
V2 Tech Holdings
(Pty) Ltd.
[24]
However, the records of the CIPC reflect that V2
Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd is in final deregistration for failure to
submit annual
returns. As a deregistered company, it is effectively
non-existent. Mr Nel, in his affidavit filed on 28 February 2025,
contends
that V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd was unaware of its own
deregistration and blames the auditors who have emigrated to New
Zealand.
V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd is apparently taking steps to be
reinstated on the register. The fact is, however, that at the present
the company is deregistered. Insofar as it has a residual interest or
a business, Mr Nel speaks for it.
[25]
Clause 22.1 of the agreement between the
applicant and the first respondent provided that the first respondent
would cease providing
services upon termination (see clause 22.1).
[26]
Further, during the notice period the first
respondent was obliged to return to CETA all CETA’s property
and to retrieve its
own property from the premises of CETA. The term
“property” is not defined, but it would include the
applicant’s
property rights to private information and data
hosted in terms of its agreement with the first respondent.
[27]
As the first respondent was contractually obliged
to provide all the services pertaining to ICT to the applicant,
including hosting,
its alleged current difficulties in returning the
private information and to restore access for purposes of migration
is contrived.
In this instance, Mr Nel is ostensibly directing the
actions of both the first respondent and V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
To suggest
that V2 Digital is powerless to do anything about the
relief sought by the applicant is not accepted. Insofar as Mr Nel
purports
to act on behalf of a company not existing on the register
at the moment, he, in his capacity as Chief Operation Officer of the
first respondent and a directing mind of V2 Tech Holdings, is in a
position to give effect to the obligations of the first respondent
in
terms of clause 22 of the agreement between the applicant and the
first respondent. I accept the submission by counsel for the
applicant that V2 Tech Holdings is ostensibly the alter ego of V2
Digital.
[28]
In its founding affidavit the applicant contends
that the applicant has already compensated the first respondent for
the migration
and reconfiguration into CETA Cloud Environment, which
it made available to the first respondent from 6 January 2025. That
notwithstanding,
the CETA Cloud Environment remains empty as the
first respondent continues to host all of the applicant’s data
and charges
the applicant for it.
[29]
As the obligation to return the applicant’s
property lay on the first respondent, it cannot avoid its obligations
in this
regard.
[30]
In the premises the applicant’s contention
that it has been rendered dysfunctional due to its inability to
access its own
management systems and information, constitutes
sufficient grounds for urgency.
[31]
Further, the applicant has established a clear
right to return of its property in terms of clause 22 of its service
level agreement
with the first respondent upon termination on 30
December 2024.
[32]
It has a reasonable apprehension of irreparable
harm. The chaos created by the applicant’s inability to access
its managements
systems and data, has resulted in the applicant being
unable to pay even salaries. The first respondent, save for its
contrived
liability for the hosting by V2 Tech Holdings (Pty) Ltd,
will suffer no apparent harm if directed to comply with its contract.
[33]
There is clearly no alternative remedy available
to the applicant. Attempts to negotiate a solution to this matter has
not resulted
in resolution of the dispute.
[34]
In the premises the applicant has established the
elements for interim relief as sought in Part A.
[35]
In light of the second respondent being in
possession of all relevant data, access keys etc., and in light
thereof that only the
cloud function (storage of data on the
internet) is outstanding, and subject to migration, the applicant has
limited the relief
it seeks to paragraph 2 of the notice of motion.
[36]
In the premises I make an order in the following
terms
1.
The matter is heard on the basis of urgency.
2.
The first respondent is ordered to immediately
take all necessary steps to restore and reinstate to the applicant
the full and effective
functionality of all CETA systems and data
that are currently being hosted, managed, controlled and/or retained
by the first respondent.
3.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of the application, including the costs of senior counsel, on Scale
C.
LABUSCHAGNE
J
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Builda Construction Cape Proprietary Limited v Verveen and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 178; 018498/13 (22 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 178High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Educor Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Director-General of Higher Education and Another (043233/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 556 (20 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 556High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Education and Training Unit NPC v Mwanandimai (38645/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 829 (21 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 829High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Education and Training Unit NPC v Mwanandimai (38645/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1102 (28 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1102High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Inscape Education Group (Pty) Ltd v Campus of Performing Arts (Pty) Ltd (2025/027539) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1226 (17 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1226High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar