Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 322South Africa
Betterlife Origination Service (Pty) Ltd t/a Betterbond v Letlhaku and Another (B560/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 322 (2 April 2024)
Headnotes
it is in itself contrary to public policy if a restraint operates to prevent a person from conducting
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Betterlife Origination Service (Pty) Ltd t/a Betterbond v Letlhaku and Another (B560/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 322 (2 April 2024)
Betterlife Origination Service (Pty) Ltd t/a Betterbond v Letlhaku and Another (B560/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 322 (2 April 2024)
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sino date 2 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: B560/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
2 APRIL 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BETTERLIFE
ORIGINATION SERVICE (PTY) LTD
T/A
BETTERBOND
Applicant
and
LEBOHANG
LETLHAKU
First
Respondent
MORTGAGEMARKET
(PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1.
The applicant, Betterlife Origination
Service (Pty) Ltd (Betterbond), is in the business of bond
origination, bond consulting and
financial intermediation services.
Betterbond has approached this Court urgently to enforce a restraint
of trade agreement
against the first respondent, Lebohang Letlhaku.
Ms Letlhaku is currently working with a direct competitor, the second
respondent,
MortgageMarket (Pty) Ltd. The first respondent
opposes the application.
2.
As
the applicant is seeking final relief, the facts fall to be
determined in accordance with the principles of
Plascon
Evans
and
Wightman
.
[1]
3.
It is common cause that Betterbond and Ms
Letlhaku concluded a written contract of employment on 3 October 2022
(the employment
agreement). The restraint clause that
Betterbond seeks to enforce is contained in Clause 19. I return
to its terms
below, but the relief claimed seeks to restrain three
activities:
3.1.
The conduct of any business with the second
respondent or any other direct competitor of Betterbond in regard to
any restricted
lead sources (as defined in the employment agreement)
within Gauteng, for a period of 6 (six) months from the date of the
order.
3.2.
The enticement of restricted parties (as
defined in the employment agreement) to terminate their business
relationships with Betterbond
or to provide their business to the
second respondent or any other third party who operates in direct
competition with the applicant
for the restraint period.
3.3.
The further dissemination of confidential
information of Betterbond to the second respondent or any other third
party.
4.
The
general principles relating to enforcement of restraints of trade
agreements are now well-established. In the pre-constitutional
era, the then Appellate Division confirmed, in
Magna
Alloys
,
[2]
that restraint of trade agreements are
prima
facie
valid
and enforceable in accordance with the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda.
However,
this is subject to its reasonableness, and resultant accordance with
public policy.
5.
In
Basson
v Chilwan
,
the Appellate Division held that it is in itself contrary to public
policy if a restraint operates to prevent a person from conducting
commerce or pursuing a profession in the absence of a protectable
interest asserted by the restraining party. A restriction
that
is reasonable between the parties may nevertheless harm the public
interest and
vice
versa
.
The following considerations would need to be determined:
[3]
5.1.
Does the applicant have a protectable
interest that deserves protection.
5.2.
Is so, is that interested threatened or
breached by the other party.
5.3.
Does such interest weigh qualitatively and
quantitatively against the interest of the other party not to be
economically inactive
and unproductive.
5.4.
Is
there an aspect of public policy unrelated to the relationship that
requires the restraint to be maintained or rejected;
[4]
5.5.
Does
the restraint go further than necessary to protect the relevant
interest.
[5]
6.
In
Reddy v
Siemens Telecommunications,
the SCA
affirmed the consistency of the common law approach with
constitutional values, holding specifically that the considerations
set out in
Basson
‘comprehend’
the considerations in section 36(1) of the Constitution, the
limitations clause.
7.
This
approach is subject to the Constitutional Court’s holdings in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[6]
and more recently
Beadica
v Trustees, Oregon Trust.
[7]
In brief, the determination of public policy is now
‘rooted in the Constitution and the objective, normative
value
system it embodies.’
[8]
What is required is a careful balancing exercise to determine whether
the enforcement of a contractual term would be contrary
to public
policy, balancing any ‘unacceptable excesses of “freedom
of contract” while permitting individuals
the dignity and
autonomy to regulate their own lives.
[9]
Importantly, ‘public policy imports values of fairness,
reasonableness and justice’, and ‘Ubuntu, which
encompasses these values, is now also recognized as a constitutional
value, inspiring our constitutional compact.’
[10]
The Constitutional Court emphasized in
Beadica
that:
‘It is only where a contractual term, or its enforcement, is so
unfair, unreasonable or unjust that it is contrary to
public policy
that a court may refuse to enforce it.’
[11]
The Court continued by emphasising that the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
‘plays
a crucial role in the judicial control of contracts through the
instrument of public policy, as it gives expression
to central
constitutional values.’ However:
‘
In our
new constitutional era,
pacta sunt
servanda
is not the only, nor the most
important principle informing the judicial control of contracts.
The requirements of public
policy are informed by a wide range of
constitutional values. There is no basis for privileging
pacta
sunt servanda
over other constitutional
rights and values. Where a number of constitutional rights and
values are implicated, a careful
balancing exercise is required to
determine whether enforcement of the contractual terms would be
contrary to public policy in
the circumstances.’
8.
Finally,
the Constitutional Court in
Beadica
elucidated the principle of ‘perceptive restraint’, which
a Court must exercise when approaching the task of refusing
to
enforce a contractual term. What this means is that while
Courts must nor shrink from their constitutional duty to infuse
public policy with constitutional values, the power is to be
exercised sparingly, in the clearest of, or worthy, cases.
[12]
The events giving rise
to the application
9.
It is common cause that before joining
Betterbond, Ms Letlakhu worked for some seventeen years in the bond
origination or related
businesses.
10.
According to the applicant, Ms Letlakhu
resigned unexpectedly and without proper notice on or about 22
February 2024. The
letter of resignation serves as a formal
notification of resignation and records that it is motivated not by
any unhappiness but
by a ‘strategic career move’.
According to Ms Letlakhu, whose evidence I accept, there were prior
engagements
on 17 February 2022, between herself and Ms Rosita Garde,
Betterbond’s regional manager and Ms Letlakhu’s superior.
During this engagement, Ms Letlakhu informed Ms Garde of her
intention to leave Betterbond and her intention to take up an
engagement with the second respondent as a partner with a
significantly improved payment package.
11.
On Monday 26 February 2024, Ms Garde sent
Ms Letlakhu an e-mail relating to the restraint and requested an
undertaking that she
will not breach it. The letter records
that Ms Letlakhu has, during her employment with Betterbond ‘had
access to extensive
confidential and proprietary information,
belonging to Betterbond, which possesses commercial value to
Betterbond’s competitors.’
It records that it has
come to Betterbond’s intention that she has taken up employment
with the second respondent, a direct
competitor.
12.
The letter then records, in paragraph 4:
‘
While
your employment with Mortgage Market amounts to a direct violation of
your restraint of trade undertaking and accordingly
amounts to a
breach thereof, it is not our intention to prevent you from taking up
your new position at Mortgage Market, provided
that you do not engage
(whether directly or indirectly) any restricted lead sources,
restricted parties and restricted transactions,
nor are you to
solicit any of Betterbond’s staff or disclose any confidential
or proprietary information of Betterbond. Attached
hereto as
Annexure “B” is an undertaking which you are required to
sign immediately and return to us by no later than
17h00 on Tuesday
27 February 2024.’
[13]
13.
Ms Letlakhu did not take up the offer and
did not supply the undertaking sought. According to the
applicant, Ms Letlhaku
in fact advised repeatedly that she would sign
the undertaking, including by way of a voice note sent to Ms Garde on
27 February
2024. This did not happen and Ms Garde confirms the
evidence in the founding affidavit. By 1 March 2024, there were
numerous queries from clients.
14.
Between 1 and 3 March 2024, the IT
department of Betterbond conducted investigations and discovered
that:
14.1.
On 15 February 2024, Ms Letlhaku received
her employment contract with MortgageMarket which she signed and
returned on 16 February
2024.
14.2.
During the period 16 February 2024 and 26
February 2024, Ms Letlhaku was engaging with both Betterbond and
MortgageMarket and referring
Betterbond’s clients to
MortgageMarket.
14.3.
Both prior to and during the period 16 to
26 February 2024, Ms Letlhaku redirected lead providers and clients
to MortgageMarket.
The lead providers are property
practitioners that work for real estate agencies which have concluded
agreements (some exclusive)
to send leads to Betterbond.
14.4.
During the same period, Ms Letlhaku sent a
vast amount of BetterBond client information to her personal gmail
account.
14.5.
At least two customers were pre-approved by
BetterBond with Ms Letlhaku as their consultant but were redirected
by Ms Letlhalu to
MortgageMarket.
15.
At that point, the applicant arranged an
urgent consultation with its attorneys and on Monday 4 March 2024,
the applicant’s
attorneys wrote to the applicant to demand that
she terminate her business relationship with MortgageMarket,
undertake not to contact
or solicit BetterBond’s lead providers
and customers and confirm under oath what confidential information
has been misappropriated.
A letter of demand was also sent to
MortgageMarket. Betterbond requested responses to the letters
on 6 March 2024.
Ms Letlhaku elected not to respond.
Mortgage Market declined to accede to any demands and I return to
what they say below.
16.
The application was sent to the first
respondent (first in draft and later filed) on 8 March 2024.
In the notice of
motion, she was meant to deliver her answering
affidavit a mere three days later, on 11 March 2024. She did
not manage that
in circumstances where she initially sought to access
legal representation of her own and thereafter was able to secure
legal representation
with the assistance of the second respondent. A
consultation was held on Monday 11 March 2024, consultations
continued on 12 March
2024 and a comprehensive answering affidavit
was then delivered on 16 March 2024. The applicant replied the
following day,
on 17 March 2024. The parties then delivered
heads of argument
Urgency
17.
I am satisfied that the application must be
heard on an urgent basis. These are restraint proceedings,
which as a general
rule, have an inherent quality of urgency, and the
usual requirements for an urgent application are met. The
applicant
will lose its right to enforce the restraint clause unless
it can do so urgently.
18.
I do not consider any urgency to have been
self-created in this case as it was not unreasonable for the
applicant to act as it did
after the discussions of 17 February
2022. Moreover, the first respondent did not share all relevant
information at that
time with the applicant, which only came to learn
of material relevant information about what was ensuing and her
alleged breaches
in early March 2024. The first respondent also
sought to resolve the matter without litigation on 26 March 2024
ultimately
to no avail.
19.
The time frames for respondent in this case
were unduly truncated. However, the affidavits and heads of
argument were ultimately
delivered within extended time-frames that
enabled the first respondent to deliver her answering affidavit and
enabled the application
to be argued before me on Friday 22 March
2024 as allocated. This ensued in circumstances where the
second respondent
facilitated the first respondent’s access to
legal representation.
20.
Against this background, I am grateful for
the assistance provided to me by counsel for both the applicant and
first respondent,
not least in the heavily burdened context of the
urgent roll. I would have preferred to have had more time to
prepare my
reasons for decision but the circumstances are such that
warrant a speedy judgment and accordingly I am not in a position to
detail
every submission or aspect considered.
Issues
for decision
21.
The
issue for decision in this matter is whether the restraint agreement
is enforceable in light of the principles articulated above.
The onus
of proving that the restraint is unreasonable and against public
policy lies with the first respondent herself.
[14]
22.
The
central contention advanced by the first respondent in this regard is
that the applicant has no protectable interest, is merely
seeking to
stifle legitimate competition
[15]
and in consequence, to enforce the agreement would amount to an
unlawful limitation of the first respondent’s constitutionally
protected rights. Specifically, section 22 of the Constitution,
which gives every citizen the right to choose their trade
occupation
or profession freely, and her right to dignity, protected in section
10.
23.
Most centrally, the first respondent relies
on the fact that when she joined Betterbond, she had seventeen years
of experience in
the area, during which she had built up an extensive
pre-existing client base and acquired leads that she then maintained
whilst
at Betterbond. She explains that before she joined
Betterbond, she disclosed her extensive network of leads in the
Johannesburg
area and that she was employed precisely because she was
bringing these relationships to Betterbond. Before joining
Betterbond,
she worked with Absa Homeloans (for eight years), SA
Homeloans (for four years) and with Multinet (for four years). She
only worked
with Betterbond for eighteen months, from October 2022 to
February 2024, in the Pretoria region.
24.
She explains that Gauteng outperforms other
regions of the country in terms of the number of homeloans granted,
with more than 50%
of the total number of home loans for the twelve
months to July 2023. Betterbond operates in regions, including
Johannesburg
North West, Johannesburg South East, Western Cape,
Greater Pretoria, KwaZulu-Natal, North West, Eastern Cape, Free State
&
Northern Cape and Mpumalanga. It claims to have a market
share of approximately 45% of originated home loans in South Africa
and owns Private Property, PayProf, Remax, Chas Everit and Cell
Captive for the insurance business.
25.
She explains that high value employees and
agents of Betterbond convert approximately R40 million per month, on
which they earn
commission. The value of the first respondent’s
intake was on average R15 million, of which she converted about R7
million monthly. She earned a basic salary of R 12 000 a
month, with deductions R10 891. After commission
her
salary ranged from between her basic salary to R22 754.
26.
Contending for the unreasonableness of the
restraint, the first respondent refers to South Africa’s
employment market, marked
by unemployment, drops in employment levels
and fluctuations in available jobs. She avers that the
applicant is effectively
seeking to ‘throw (her) into the
unemployment market.’ As against this, she avers that the
applicant is not protecting
any protectable interest, emphasizing
that the applicant does not own her network of contacts which she did
not acquire as a consequence
of her employment with it. She
refers to three deals that she initiated while running e-Bond, where
she worked before she
joined Betterbond. Moreover, she tenders
to relinquish trade relationships she created in Pretoria and Tembisa
which she
accepts may arguably be said to have been secured while
working at Betterbond.
27.
In
reply, the applicant points out that when enforcing restraints such
as those in issue in this case, it is important to ensure
that each
consultant is held to their restraint otherwise there would be a
cumulative harmful effect on the business of BetterBond.
It
points out that the applicant appears to have understated her
earnings. On the terms of the restraint, Betterbond emphasizes
that it is of limited duration, only 6 months, whereafter it accepts
that it should be ‘fair game’ in the interests
of
competition. However, during the restraint period, it contends
that it can legitimately protect its business dealings
with its lead
providers and continue with its current business. The Court’s
attention is then drawn to two recent cases,
in which BetterBond has
successfully enforced its restraint clause, to which I will refer as
the
Smit
case
[16]
and the
Maluleke
case.
[17]
In respect of the three leads she brought to Betterbond, the
applicant points out that she appears to have been working for
her
own account shortly before joining BetterBond and thus caused no harm
in doing so. The applicant contends that the first
respondent
has failed to demonstrate that the leads referred to are her
pre-existing clients and contend that in any event, the
restraint
does not differentiate.
The agreement
28.
Clause 19 of the agreement is entitled
‘Restraint of Trade and Restriction Against Soliciting
Employees. I only repeat
the core parts, being Clauses 19.3 and
19.4. By definition, the Restraint Period is limited to a
six-month period from the
Terminate Date, being the date on which the
employee ceases to be a full time employee of the applicant, in this
case 22 February
2024. Clause 19.3 and Clause 19.4 read:
‘
19.3
The Employee warrants and undertakes that he/she shall not during the
Restraint Period, in any capacity whatsoever, (including
that of
principal or proprietor, agent, broker, partner, representative,
assistant, trustee or beneficiary of a trust, manager,
member of a
close corporation, member of a voluntary association, shareholder,
director, employee, consultant, contractor, advisor,
financier,
demonstrator)-
19.3.1 directly or
indirectly be associated or concerned with or interested or engaged
in any Restricted Business or entity carrying
on any restricted
Business in the Territory or;
19.3.2
conduct any Business, the same or similar to, or in competition with
the Business of the employer
[18]
and/or the Group in regard to any Restricted Lead Source.
[19]
The
Employee shall not, either for his/her own account or as a
representative or agent for any third party, while he/she is employed
by the Employer and for a period of 6 (six) months after the
Termination date, conduct any business, the same as, similar to, or
in any competition with the Business of the Employer and/or the Group
in regard to any Restricted Lead Source, nor shall the Employee
be
interested in any legal entity that conducts business with the
Restricted Lead Source. The Employee shall not, either for his/her
account or a representative or agent for any third party while he/she
is employed by the Employer and for a period of 6 (six) months
after
the Termination date, persuade, induce, procure, solicit, entice or
attempt to entice away a Restricted Party
[20]
from the Business of the Employer and/or the Group and/or from
concluding a Restricted Transaction.
[21]
19.4 Without limiting the
generality of clause 19.3, the Employee shall not, during the period
mentioned, in any capacity deal in
any way with a Restricted Party in
respect of any services and/or products which are substantially the
same the same as those services
and/or products which are offered by
the Employer and/or the Group to the Restricted Party in question.
Analysis
29.
I am unable to agree with the first
respondent that the applicant does not have a protectable interest
that is not susceptible to
protection under a restraint clause.
In context, what is being protected is the applicant’s trade
connections, current
business dealings and client base which it
obtains through its lead sources and who comprise parties with whom
the applicant interacts
for purposes of its business.
30.
Moreover, there can be no real debate that,
on the evidence before me, the interest has been breached by the
first respondent in
her business relationship with the second
respondent, and that is threatened in her pursuing restricted
transactions and by her
conduct. Furthermore, while her legal
representatives have done their best to assist her, the first
respondent has –
in her conduct - demonstrated an apparent
disregard for her contractual obligations, which fortifies this
conclusion.
31.
In considering whether the restraint goes
further than necessary to protect the interest, I am of the view that
the restraint probably
does, both due to its duration and its broadly
framed terms. However, having regard to the circumstances and
the relief sought
in this case, this can be practically and sensibly
addressed by following the approach in
Maluleka,
which limits the duration of the
restraint clause. In
Maluleka,
the
duration was limited to a period of 4 (four) months from the
termination date. In this case, and given the evidence and
the
first respondent’s history in the industry, a 3 (three) month
period is reasonable. As regards the
geographical
constraint, I am satisfied that restricting the restraint to Gauteng
for this short time period is reasonable.
Although the second
respondent says that she worked in the Pretoria region, she later
says that she did work in the Johannesburg
area using her historical
trade networks. It is true that Gauteng is the economic hub but
on the second respondent’s
own evidence there is substantial
work available in other provinces and she has sufficient experience
to work in various related
roles in Gauteng.
32.
Regarding
prior relationships, Mr Lennox submitted that this argument was
rejected in the
Maluleka
case.
That is indeed so, but in circumstances where the direct
evidence showed that those relationships were enhanced or reinforced
during the respondent’s employment with BetterBond. There
is no direct evidence in this case to that effect.
33.
Notably,
however, in
Rawlins,
[22]
referred
to in
Smit,
the
then AD stated:
‘
In
summary then, what Rawlins says is that during his employment with
the respondent he largely dealt, not with its existing customers,
but
with his own pre-existing following or buyers whom he later found.
Does this establish that the respondent did not have
a proprietary
interest of the kind under consideration? It is, of course, a
factor in his favour; but not conclusively so
(see
Cansa
(Pty) Ltd v Van der Nest
1974(2) SA 64
(C) at 69E-H and
M&S Drapers (a
firm) v Reynolds
[1956] 3 All ER 814
(CA) at 820E; compare, however,
the views of Denning LJ at 821A-E).
Even
though the persons to whom an employee sells and whom he canvasses
were previously known to him and in this sense “his
customers’,
he may nevertheless during his employment, and because of it, form an
attachment to and acquire an influence
over them which he never had
before. Where this occurs, what I call the customer goodwill
which is created or enhanced, is
at least in part an asset of the
employer. As such it becomes a trade connection of the employer
which is capable of protection
by means of a restraint of trade
clause.
The onus being on Rawlins
to prove the unreasonableness of the restraint, it was for him to
show that he never acquired any significant
personal knowledge of or
influence over the persons he dealt with as a salesman of the
respondent over and above that which previously
existed. In my
opinion he did not do so. No allegation that he did not acquire
such knowledge or influence is made
by Rawlins. Nor do I think
that it can be inferred. On the contrary, it would appear to be
no less probable that Rawlins’
relationship with the customers
he dealt with as a salesman of the respondent were such as to make it
reasonable for the respondent
to protect itself. Rawlins worked
for the respondent for some fifteen months. During this time,
he received training
in the use and marketing of products sold by the
respondent. He was obviously a successful salesman.
Taking account
of the realities of commerce, it is a fair inference
in these circumstances that it was Rawlins’ employment with the
respondent
that gave him the opportunity to consolidate or even
strengthen the prior rapport which he had with his customers.’
34.
The
first respondent relied upon
Digicore
Fleet Management v Steyn
[23]
to avoid the restraint. In that case, the employee worked for
some 8 (eight) months as a ‘sales executive’ for
a
company that sold vehicle tracking systems to fleet owner, corporate
and individual clients. She had come with useful contacts
valuable to the appellant, both from previously selling tracking
systems and from working in the insurance industry. The
evidence in that case showed that she was not trained by Digicore,
was given no support save for a computer, phone and brochures
describing the products. She was given no confidential client
information save for details of 20 (twenty) clients from a
previous
sales executive. Moreover, Digicore had previously concentrated
on corporate and fleet management clients whereas
she concentrated on
cultivating her insurance contacts. In this context, it was
held:
‘
When
she left Digicore she took with her no more than she had brought to
the business in the first place: experience in the
field and
contacts with insurance brokers in the Durban area. It can
hardly be said, in the circumstances, that Digicore
had any
proprietary right that was in jeopardy when she left to work for a
competitor’.
35.
It would have been an easy matter for the
first respondent to provide more information regarding her alleged
historical contacts
and her work at BetterBond, if it existed, so as
to bring herself into the
ratio
of
Digicor.
In
my view, the evidence and circumstances in this case is more aligned
with
Rawlins.
In
other words, the first respondent has not gone far enough to counter
a common sense inference on the evidence that any historical
trade
connections she had were probably consolidated and strengthened as a
result of her employment with Betterbond, a leading
player in the
industry. Moreover, she has failed, save in one instance, to
prove adequately that she did bring in clients
based on her prior
relationships. It does appear that she brought in three
imminent deals when she joined BetterBond, but
beyond that the
evidence merely suggests that she may have had historical contacts
from working in the industry. Moreover,
she worked at
BetterBond for some 18 (eighteen months) and the restraint clause is
designed specifically to target contacts for
a confined period, both
backwards and forwards in time, thereby targeting current business.
36.
If the restraint is limited in time, I am
satisfied that the parties’ respective interests are duly
balanced in accordance
with the Constitution. The applicant’s
interests are protected. The first respondent is only precluded
from working
with the second respondent, or another competitor, in
Gauteng for this three-month period and is not disabled from working
per se
even
during this brief period. She can, thereafter, pursue the work
of her choosing wherever she may choose.
37.
I am satisfied that the requirements for an
interdict are met, in context of a restraint of trade dispute.
A party cannot
be expected to forego its entitlement to claim
specific performance of a restraint clause merely because it might
have a claim
for damages in due course. Damages for a claim in
this case would, moreover, be difficult to prove. The harm
flows
from the nature of the right protected.
38.
There
is a further matter which concerns a prayer sought to restrain the
first respondent’s ongoing distribution of ‘confidential’
information. What has been shown to have happened is the
distribution of information germane to restrained activities, indeed
entailing the appropriation of specific clients and business
opportunities. The first respondent submits that it has not
been shown that the information is confidential.
[24]
However, it is not necessary to deal with that characterisation as an
alternative narrower remedy suffices. The order that
I make is to
restrain the ongoing distribution of material that furthers the
pursuit of any restrained activity or concerns business
dealings of
the applicant.
39.
As to costs, they should follow the result.
40.
I make the following order:
40.1.
The forms and time limits prescribed by the
Rules of this Court are dispensed with and the application is heard
as one of urgency.
40.2.
The First Respondent is interdicted and
restrained from further breaching her restraint of trade undertakings
in the following manner:
40.2.1.
The First Respondent is restrained, either
from being employed by or for her own account or as an agent for a
third party, from
conducting any business with the Second Respondent,
or any other direct competitor of the Applicant, in regard to any
restricted
lead sources (as defined in the First Respondent’s
contract of employment) within Gauteng, for a period of 3 (three)
months
from the date of termination of the employment contract being
22 February 2024.
40.2.2.
The First Respondent is restrained, either
for her own account or as an agent for a third party, from
contacting, inducing, pursuing,
soliciting, enticing or attempting to
entice away any restricted party (as defined in the first
respondent’s contract of
employment) of the applicant to
terminate their business relationships with the applicant and / or to
provide their business to
the second respondent or any other third
party for the restraint period.
40.3.
The first respondent is restrained from
further disseminating information of the Applicant to the second
respondent or any other
third party that furthers the pursuit of any
of the restrained activities or concerns business dealings of the
applicant.
40.4.
The first respondent must pay the costs of
the application on a party and party scale.
S
J COWEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
Date of hearing:
22
March 2024
Date of decision:
2 April 2024
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv
MA Lennox instructed by Hinrichsen Attorneys
First
Respondent:
Adv
S Ogunronbi instructed by DOA Attorneys Inc
Second Respondent:
Adv
M Madi (watching brief) instructed by Mtshabe Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
1984(3) 623 (A) at 634H-635C;
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and ano
2008(3) SA 371 (SCA), para 13.
[2]
Magna
Alloys and Research (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
1984(4)
SA 874 (A).
[3]
[1993]
2 All SA 373
, 1993(3) SA 742 (A) 767E-I. These findings
were affirmed in
Reddy
v Siemens Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd
2007(2) SA 486 (SCA) at para 16.
[4]
Basson
v Chilwan and others
1993(3)
SA 742 (A) at 767G-H;
[1993] 2 All SA 373
(A);
[1993] ZASCA 61.
[5]
This latter consideration was added in
Kwik
Kopy (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Van Haarlem and another
1999(1)
SA 472 (W) at 484E.
[6]
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007(5)
SA 323 (CC); 2007(7) BCLR 691 (CC) at paras 28 to 30.
[7]
2020(5)
SA 247 (CC) especially at paras 71 to 90.
[8]
Beadica
at
para 71. I do not separately reference the many cases referred
to in
Beadica.
[9]
Id.
[10]
Id
at para 72.
[11]
Id
at para 80.
[12]
Id
at paras 88 to 90, where this principle is elaborated upon.
[13]
The
letter expressly records that the proposed undertaking does not
constitute a novation or waiver.
[14]
Magna
Alloys. BHT Water Treatment (Pty) Ltd v Leslie
[1993]
3 All SA 126
; 1993(1) SA 47 (W) 52F-54I.
[15]
Cf
Pam
Golding Franchise Services (Pty) Ltd v Douglas
1996(4)
SA 1217 (D)
[16]
Betterbond
(Pty) Ltd and another v Alister Smit and another
(Case
No: J2898/18) delivered in the Labour Court on 5 October 2018
(
Smit
).
[17]
Betterlife
Origination Services (Pty) Ltd t/a Betterbond v Karabo Maluleke and
others
Case
no 2024-013771 delivered in the High Court, Johannesburg on 22
February 2024 (
Maluleke)
.
[18]
“
Business”
means the business of the Employer, such business consisting of
mortgage origination and related services conducted
by the by the
Employer and or the Group, including but not limited to:
- mortgage origination
and aggregation;
- insurance and
insurance systems and products relating to mortgage origination;
- related value added
products;
and including all other
processes and methods employed by the employer in conducting its
business.’
[19]
“
Restricted
Lead Sources” means each and every entity that continues to
be, or has been in the last 12 (twelve) months prior
to the
Termination Date, a business lead source for the Employer and/or the
Group in regard to the Business within the Territory,
including, but
not limited to, any estate agency, estate agent, attorney firm,
auctioneer, aggregation franchise, that has received
or is entitled
to receive remuneration from the Employer or the Group for the
referral of the Business.
[20]
“
Restricted
Party” means each and every entity with whom the Employee has
interacted with, in the course and scope of his/her
employment
and/or on behalf of the Employee or the Group and all other entities
with which the Business or Group participates
or proposes to
participate in a Restricted Transaction, to the reasonable knowledge
of the Employee;
[21]
“
Restricted
Transaction” means any business transaction or proposed
transaction between the Employer or the Group and any
other entity
in regards to the Business within the Territory, undertaken or under
consideration as at or during the preceding
12 (twelve) months of
the Termination Date including but not limited to, any transaction
pursuant to which the Restricted
Party will participate in the
conduct of the Business with the Employer and /or the Group, whether
as a lead source or otherwise;
[22]
Rawlins
and another v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
1993(1)
SA 537 (A) at 542G-H.
[23]
[2009] 1 All SA 442 (SCA).
[24]
I was referred to
Recycling
Industries (Pty) Ltd v Mohammed and another
1981(3)
SA 250 (SE) at 258H-259F and
Premier
Medical and Industrial Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Winkler and another
1971(3)
SA 866 (W).
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