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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 1999
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## Thermaspray (Pty) Ltd v Lourens and Another (011160/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1999 (4 December 2023)
Thermaspray (Pty) Ltd v Lourens and Another (011160/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1999 (4 December 2023)
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sino date 4 December 2023
I
N THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 011160/2022
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: NO
DATE: 4 December 2023
In the matter between:
THERMASPRAY (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
DR JAN J
LOURENS
1 st Respondent
ADVANCE MATERIAL SCIENCE
ENGINEERING (PTY)
LTD
2nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BOTHA AJ
1
Introduction
This matter originated as an urgent
application in August 2022. The material relief claimed was an
interdict that the
1
st
respondent be prohibited and
interdicted from:
1.1
Either for his own account, or as a
representative, or an agent for any third party (including the 2
nd
respondent), persuading, inducing, encouraging, procuring or
soliciting:
1.1.1
any customer of the applicant to enter into
a supply and/or other agreement with the 2
nd
Respondent, or any other business that competes with the applicant;
1.1.2
any customer of the applicant to purchase
any product and/or service supplied by the 2
nd
respondent or any other business that competes with the applicant; or
1.2
Either for his own account or as a
representative, or agent for any third party, persuading, inducing,
encouraging, procuring or
soliciting any employee or independent
contractor engaged by the applicant, to become employed by,
contracted by, or have an interest
directly or indirectly in any
manner whatsoever, in the business of the 2
nd
respondent which is a competing business of the applicant.
1.3
Being engaged, interested or concerned,
whether financially or as an employee or either wise or whether
directly or indirectly in
any competing business (which includes 2
nd
respondent);
1.4
Be a member, partner, trustee, director or
shareholder of a close corporation, partnership, trust or company, as
the case may be,
carrying on or concerned directly or indirectly with
any competing business ( which includes 2
nd
respondent);
1.5
Act as a consultant or adviser to any
competing business(which includes 2
nd
respondent);
1.6
The prohibitory interdict will remain
operative until 26 February 2025.
1.7
The prohibitory interdict is limited to the
geographical area of Gauteng.
1.8
On 17 August 2022 an order was granted by
agreement that prohibited and interdicted the 1
st
respondent as per the Notice of Motion pertaining to the applicant’s
list of customers annexed to the order.
1.9
The matter was postponed to the opposed
roll.
2
The parties
2.1 The applicant is a private company
that specializes in providing advanced coating facilities to original
equipment manufacturers
that served to extend, upgrade and restore
the service life of components.
2.2 The 1
st
respondent was
employed by the applicant as its managing director from 2011 until
termination on 28 February 2022.
2.3 The 2
nd
respondent is a
private company registered on 4 January 2022 with the 1
st
respondent as its only director. The main business of the 2
nd
respondent is similar to the business of the applicant. It is to be
noted that the 2nd respondent was registered whilst 1st respondent
was still in the employ of the applicant.
3
Contract of employment
3.1 On 13 May 2011 the applicant and
the 1st respondent entered into a written agreement termed “Service
and Restraint Agreement”
annexed as Annexure “D” to
the founding affidavit.
3.2 Annexure “D” is a
voluminous document containing various definitions and
interpretations of technical terms,
employment conditions, capacity,
functions and duties, confidentiality, cession on ownership of
intellectual property, and, relevant
to this proceedings, clause 12
which covers the Restraint.
3.3 The terms contained in clause 12
is in line with the interdictory provisions captured in the Notice of
Motion and the order
granted by the urgent court in August 2022.
3.4 Of importance is clause 12.5 which
reads as follows:” The executive acknowledges and agrees that
the undertakings given
in terms of clause 12 are:
12.5.1 fair and
reasonable as regards its nature, restraint and period;
12.5.2 necessary to
protect the proprietary interests of the company”
3.5 The existence and validity of
Annexure “D” is common cause and not in dispute.
4
Breach of the Employee restraint
The applicant accuses the 1
st
respondent of breaching the employee restraint by:
Soliciting
the customers of the applicant (customer restraint)
Competing with the applicant (
competing restraint)
Soliciting the employees of the
applicant (employee restraint)
4.1
Customer restraint
4.1.1 It is common cause that the 1
st
respondent was in the employ of the applicant for a number of years
and had therefore acquired intimate knowledge of the customers
that
the applicant had built up over a long time.
4.12 According to the affidavit of Ms
A Glennie, an erstwhile employee of the applicant who took up
employment with the 2
nd
respondent, she, during her tenure
with the 2nd respondent, came across a copy of the complete customer
list of the applicant which
the 1
st
respondent was using
as the 2nd respondent’s primary target when selling and/or
advertising.
4.1.3 It is admitted by the 1
st
respondent that he contacted at least one of the customers of the
applicant to wit Mr R Botha of “Sulzer” which entity
is
an existing customer of the applicant. The 1
st
respondent
states that the purpose was to “introduce” the business
of the 2
nd
respondent.
4.2
Competing restraint
4.2.1
Whilst still in the employ of the applicant. The
1
st
respondent registered the 2
nd
respondent without the knowledge of the applicant. The 1
st
respondent proceeded to introduce and advertise coating solutions
offered by the 2
nd
respondent to the existing clients of the applicant. This was done in
a clandestine manner under the nose of the applicant.
4.2.2 Both the applicant and 2
nd
respondent specialise in coating solutions although the 1
st
respondent claims that the application method is different and that
the selling DIAMANT products does not constitute a major part
of the
applicant’s business. Needless to say, that can never be a
justification.
4.2.3 The defence put forward by the
1
st
respondent that the 2
nd
respondent is not a
competing business do not hold water. On the evidence, viewed with a
holistic approach, it is clear that the
2
nd
respondent is
indeed a competing entity. Why else would the customer list of the
applicant be in the possession of the respondents?
4.3
Employee restraint
4.3.1 From the affidavit of Mr J
Ngobeni the following emerges:
(i) Mr Ngobeni is a long standing
employee of the applicant;
(ii) He (Ngobeni) was contacted by the
1
st
respondent towards the end of June 2022 and offered
employment with the 2
nd
respondent;
(ii) He attended an interview on the
premises of the 2
nd
respondent where he was interviewed by
the 1
st
respondent and his son;
(iv)At that time he was still in the
employ of the applicant and the 1
st
respondent was aware
of that. He did not inform the 1
st
respondent otherwise;
(v) Immediately after the interview
the 1
st
respondent presented him with a written offer of
employment which is annexed as Annexure “G” to the
founding affidavit.
Ironically this employment offer contains a
restraint clause.
(vi) He did not accept the offer but
instead informed his supervisor and handed the written offer to the
applicant.
4.3.2 The 1
st
respondent
admits that he offered employment to Mr Ngobeni but asserts that he
was led to believe that Ngobeni resigned his employment
with the
applicant. Ngobeni specifically disputes this.
4.3.3 1
st
Respondent failed
to provide any reason why he mistakenly believed that Ngobeni
resigned.
5
Legal framework
5.1 The law and the authority with
regard to the legal principles governing restraint of trade is clear.
5.2 a Party wishing to enforce a
restraint agreement need only allege and prove the agreement and the
breach thereof by the other
party.
5.3 In
Experian South Africa (Pty)
LTD v Haynes and Another
2013 (1) SA 135
(GSJ)
it was held that:
“ For the employer it suffices to show that there was
confidential information or trade connections
to which the
employee had access and which could, in theory, be exploited by the
new employee”
5.4
The general principle in our law is that contracts, if concluded
freely and voluntary , and not
contra
bonis mores
ought to be honoured.
A Restraint of trade is an agreement between the parties that can be
assailable if it damages the public interest
and therefor in conflict
with public policy. It can be unreasonable and contra public
policy if it prevents one party at
the termination of the contractual
relationship from participating freely in the commercial and
professional world
without
a protectable interest of the other party served thereby.
See:
Basson v Chilwan
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993 (3) SA
742
(A)
6
6.1In the instant case it is common
cause that the restraint exists. On the evidence it is clear to me
that the restraint was breached
by the respondents.
6.2 It is not necessary for breaches
to be multiple or continuous. One breach is enough.
6.3 To exacerbate the situation for
the 1
st
respondent, he continued his relationship with the
2
nd
respondent as the sole or managing director despite
the court order of Van der Westhuisen J on 17 August 2022. This
basically amounts
to contempt.
6.4 In my view, the evidence is
conclusive for a finding that the restraint was enforceable, not
contrary to public policy and that
several breaches on the part of
the respondents occurred. Consequently the application must succeed.
6.5 As a punitive measure the
Applicant moved for a cost order on attorney and client scale. Costs
is in the discression of the
court and a punitive cost order is not
warranted.
6.6 The order annexed hereto marked
“X” is the order of court.
GB BOTHA
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 17 October 2023
Judgment
delivered: 4 December 2023
Attorneys
for applicant:Jarvis Jacobs Raubenheimer Inc
Counsel
for applicant:Adv S Maritz
Attorneys
for respondent:Jennings Inc
Counsel
for respondent:Adv N Louw
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