Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1074South Africa
Diamond Panel Beaters and Towing CC v Moks Towing and Recovery CC and Another (25018/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1074 (28 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Diamond Panel Beaters and Towing CC v Moks Towing and Recovery CC and Another (25018/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1074 (28 October 2024)
Diamond Panel Beaters and Towing CC v Moks Towing and Recovery CC and Another (25018/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1074 (28 October 2024)
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sino date 28 October 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER:
25018/2022
1. REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2. OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3. REVISED
DATE: 28 October 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
DIAMOND
PANEL BEATERS AND TOWING CC
APPLICANT
and
MOKS
TOWING AND RECOVERY CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
DIJO, SIMON
MOEKETSI
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
COERTZEN AJ:
[1]
The applicant applies
for a final order on motion proceedings, to restrain and interdict
the first and second respondents, or any
other third party acting on
their instructions, from preventing the applicant from rendering
roadside assistance, towing and storage
services to its customers,
including but not limited to the Temba and Hammanskraal areas.
[2]
The first and second
respondents (‘the respondents’) oppose the application.
[3]
The second respondent
is the sole member of the first respondent.
JURISDICTION:
[4]
The respondents dispute
that this court has jurisdiction, the contention being that the
allegations in the founding affidavit do
not prove that this court
has jurisdiction to hear the matter.
[5]
It is alleged in the
founding affidavit that the first respondent has its registered
address at 2[...] U[...] [...], Temba and that
this address is also
the ‘
employment
address’
of
the second respondent. These allegations are admitted in the
answering affidavit.
[6]
The applicant alleges
that the aforementioned registered address of the first respondent
falls within the jurisdiction of this court.
This is disputed by the
respondents.
[7]
The applicant relies in
the founding affidavit on incidents which occurred in the
Hammanskraal area.
[8]
The respondents dispute
that the Temba and Hammanskraal areas fall within the jurisdiction of
this court.
[9]
However, the second
respondent discloses in the answering affidavit that he is resident
in Soshanguve. There is no dispute that
Soshanguve falls within the
jurisdictional area of this division. On the evidence, the second
respondent resides within the jurisdiction
of this court.
[10]
In terms
s 21
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
:
‘
(1)
A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in,
and in relation to all causes arising and all
offences triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it
may according to law take cognisance…
(2)
A Division also has jurisdiction over any person residing or being
outside its area of jurisdiction who is
joined as a party to any
cause in relation to which such court has jurisdiction or who in
terms of a third party notice becomes
a party to such a cause, if the
said person resides or is within the area of jurisdiction of any
other Division.’
[11]
I will assume in favour
of the applicant that this court has jurisdiction over the first and
second respondents.
THE MERITS:
[12]
It is common cause that
the applicant and the first respondent compete in the same industry,
which includes towing and roadside
assistance.
[13]
Both the applicant and
the first respondent make use of a platform provided to them by
Firstassist
,
a company in the insurance industry, with whom they both have service
level agreements.
[14]
The
Firstassist
call centre dispatches tow truck companies to accident scenes,
through an application installed on the tow truck drivers’
phones.
[15]
The deponent to the
applicant’s affidavit is the sole member of the applicant.
[16]
It is alleged in the
founding affidavit that ‘
[d]uring
or about January 2022’
,
the first and/or second respondents, together with the employees of
the first respondent, acting on the instructions of, or on
behalf of
the first and/or second respondents, ‘
embarked
on a continuous unlawful conduct of taking the law into their hands
by blocking the applicant from rendering the services
in the affected
areas
[Temba and
Hammanskraal]
and
thereby infringing on the applicant's constitutional right to trade
freely’.
[17]
The founding affidavit
however lacks particularity of the respondents’ alleged
unlawful conduct ‘
during
or about January 2022’
.
[18]
The applicant relies in
the main on an incident that occurred ‘
[o]n
or about 27 January 2022’
.
It is alleged that two of the applicant’s drivers received a
job allocation from
Firstassist
to attend to a scene ‘
located
in the Hammanskraal area.’
The applicant alleges that on their arrival at the scene, the
applicant’s drivers ‘
were
prevented by the first respondent's employees’
(presumably from rendering services). It is not alleged in the
founding affidavit in what manner the applicant’s employees
were ‘
prevented’
from rendering services.
[19]
It is alleged in the
founding affidavit that as a result of the unlawful conduct of the
first respondent’s employees,
Firstassist
had to intervene. The applicant does not provide any particularity of
how exactly
Firstassist
intervened.
[20]
It is alleged in the
founding affidavit that after a prolonged wait, the applicant's
employees eventually left the scene without
rendering any services,
resulting in loss of revenue for the applicant.
[21]
The applicant alleges
that it is unable to exercise its right to trade freely and to fulfil
its obligations in terms of the
Firstassist
agreement.
[22]
The applicant relies on
a further incident which occurred ‘
on
or about March 2022’
,
where ‘
the
respondents’
and unknown accomplices, approached and threatened one of the
applicant’s drivers ‘
at
Hammanskraal’
.
They (presumably the respondents and their accomplices), warned the
applicant’s driver not to operate in the area, failing
which
‘
they will
burn the applicant's towing truck’
.
According to the allegations, the second respondent stated the area
to be the territory of the first respondent.
[23]
It is by no means clear
from the applicant’s papers whether it is the applicant’s
case that the second respondent was
actually physically present when
the alleged incident occurred.
[24]
In the answering
affidavit, the respondents deny the allegations in the founding
affidavit.
[25]
As for the incident
which occurred on 27 January 2022, the respondents allege that a
driver of the first respondent, on his way
back from a delivery to
the Dinokeng Reserve, came across the scene of an accident where a
KIA vehicle has lost control and overturned.
[26]
The first respondent’s
driver stopped at the scene and called the emergency services. Upon
their arrival, the emergency services
took the driver of the KIA
vehicle, a lady, and a child who was with her, to hospital, while the
first respondent’s driver
waited at the scene for the injured
lady’s husband.
[27]
The first respondent’s
driver alerted the
Firstassist
call centre and forwarded the vehicle details to the call centre for
authorisation to tow the vehicle.
[28]
After approximately two
hours, two towing vehicles, one of which was that of the applicant,
arrived at the scene, claiming to have
authority from
Firstassist
to tow the damaged vehicle.
[29]
The first respondent’s
driver disputed their authority, indicating that he was first at the
scene, and that he provided the
necessary particulars to the
Firstassist
call centre to authorise the first respondent to tow the vehicle.
[30]
The first respondent’s
driver also informed the second respondent of the incident.
[31]
The second respondent
called the
Firstassist
call centre and spoke to the call centre manager to resolve the
issue.
[32]
A supervisor intervened
after realising that the authority to tow the vehicle ought to have
been given to the first respondent.
Firstassist
,
withdrew the applicant’s authority and gave the first
respondent authority to tow the vehicle.
[33]
The other tow truck
drivers refused to leave and demanded to tow the vehicle.
[34]
The call centre
insisted that the first respondent’s driver was first on the
scene and that the first respondent ought to
have been appointed.
[35]
The other towing
vehicles left the scene after their authority was withdrawn.
[36]
The first respondent’s
driver then towed the vehicle.
[37]
The first respondent
subsequently submitted an invoice and was paid for its services by
Firstassist
.
[38]
As for the incident
alleged to have occurred during March 2022, the respondents deny any
such incident. The respondents point out
that the driver of the
applicant who was allegedly threatened by the respondents and their
accomplices (whose names are not known
to the applicant), was
previously employed by the first respondent, but left his employment
to join the applicant in November 2021.
[39]
The applicant sought
leave to file a supplementary founding affidavit dealing with an
alleged incident which occurred, according
to the affidavit, ‘
between
December 2022 to 29 December 2022’
.
[40]
According to the
applicant, two of the applicant’s employees stationed at
Hammanskraal, were threatened ‘
by
the applicant’s brother’
(presumably intended to be a reference to the second respondent’s
brother), who introduced himself as Teffo Dijo and as an
employee of
the first respondent.
[41]
The said Teffo Dijo
allegedly informed the applicant’s employees that they must
stop rendering services in the Hammanskraal
area. If they did not,
‘
he
[the said Teffo Dijo]
would
assault and kill them.’
[42]
According to the
affidavit, the employees of the applicant continue to receive phone
calls from Teffo Dijo and other ‘
unknown
persons associated with him’
,
threatening them about rendering services in the Hammanskraal area.
[43]
The respondents filed a
supplementary answering affidavit (and applied for condonation for
the late filing thereof).
[44]
In the supplementary
answering affidavit, the averments in the applicant’s
supplementary founding affidavit, are denied.
[45]
To bring finality to
the matter, I am inclined to allow the supplementary affidavits, and
to the extent necessary, to grant condonation
for the late filing of
such affidavits.
EVALUATION:
[46]
The requirements for
the granting of a final interdict are settled, i.e. a clear right; an
injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended; and the absence
of similar protection by any other remedy -
Liberty
Group Limited and Others v Mall Space Management CC t/a Mall Space
Management
(644/18)
[2019] ZASCA 142
;
2020 (1) SA 30
(SCA) (1 October 2019), 22.
[47]
I have already alluded
to the fact that in my view the allegations in the applicant’s
founding affidavit, and in the applicant’s
supplementary
affidavit, lack particularity. The applicant is vague about dates and
places, and as to what exactly transpired.
The respondents deny the
applicant’s allegations. The applicant’s main gripe
appears to be the incident which occurred
on 27 January 2022. The
respondents do go to some length to explain what occurred at the
scene on the date in question.
[48]
The applicant’s
allegations against the second respondent and about his particular
involvement in the incidents complained
of, appears to me to be
rather doubtful and argumentative.
[49]
Upon a proper
evaluation of the affidavits, I am unable to find justification for
the rejection of the respondents’ version,
merely on the papers
-
African National
Congress v Ezulweni Investments (Pty) Ltd
(Case no 979/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 159
(24 November 2023), 20.
[50]
I am not persuaded that
the applicant has satisfied the requirements for the grant of a final
interdict against the first and second
respondents on the papers.
[51]
As for the incident
that occurred on 27 January 2022, I am not even convinced on the
applicant’s own version on the papers,
that the employees of
the first respondent acted unlawfully. Nothing in the respondents’
version on the papers, which I am
in any event unable to reject,
suggests otherwise.
[52]
The application
therefore stands to be dismissed.
[53]
I am left with a
certain sense of unease in deciding whether I should make any order
for costs in this matter.
[54]
It is rather
unfortunate that the parties have become embroiled in protracted
litigation. I am ultimately left with the distinct
impression that
neither the applicant nor the respondents were completely forthcoming
in the affidavits.
[55]
As things stand, both
the applicant and the first respondent are competitors in the same
industry. They have the same agreement
with
Firstassist
.
It is inevitable that their paths will continue to cross. I do not
propose to add unnecessary fuel to the fire by making an order
for
costs.
[56]
In the result I make
the following order:
1.
The respective
supplementary affidavits filed by the parties are allowed, and to the
extent necessary, condonation is granted for
the late filing thereof;
2.
The application is
dismissed;
3.
Each party will pay its
own costs.
Y COERTZEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date of hearing:
19 March 2024
Date of judgment:
28 October 2024
The judgment was provided
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by uploading the
judgment to the
electronic case file on Caselines. The date and time for
delivery of the judgment is deemed to be at 10h00
on 28 October 2024.
Appearances:
Counsel
for the applicant:
NS
Nxumalo
Instructed
by:
Tshabalala
Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondents:
IN
Krűger
Instructed
by:
HJ
Groenewald Inc. Attorneys
sino noindex
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