Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 535South Africa
CRS Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Mckerrel and Others (A308/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 535 (19 July 2022)
Headnotes
in contempt of an order
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## CRS Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Mckerrel and Others (A308/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 535 (19 July 2022)
CRS Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Mckerrel and Others (A308/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 535 (19 July 2022)
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sino date 19 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case no: A308/19
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
19 July 2022
In the matter between:
CRS
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LTD
Appellant
and
JAMES
MCKERRELL
1
st
Respondent
FRANCESCO
ARICO
2
nd
Respondent
MARK
ANDREW
SCHORN
3
rd
Respondent
FLASH
CLOUD (PTY) LTD
t/a
THE
PEOPLE
SOLUTIONS
COMPANY
4
th
Respondent
Coram
:
Mngqibisa-Thusi; Mali and Millar JJ
JUDGMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
J
:
[1]
This is an appeal with the leave of the
court
a quo
against the judgment and order dated 20 July 2019, dismissing an
application for the respondents to be held in contempt of an order
dated 18 April 2017.
[2]
The appellant, CRS Technologies (Pty) Ltd,
conducts a business as a service provider of human resources and
payroll integrated software
solutions. The first respondent, Mr
James Mckerrell, was in the employ of the appellant since March 2000
as its chief executive
officer until his resignation in February
2016. Currently, the first respondent is the CEO and one of the
directors of the
fourth respondent, Flash Cloud (Pty) Ltd, trading as
‘The People Solutions Company’, which conducts a similar
business
as that of the appellant.
[3]
It is common cause that in 1985 the
appellant developed two software programmes, the “CRS HR and
Payroll Software Solution”
(the software) and a secondary
programme known as the “CRS Support and Licensing Programme”
(licensing programme).
The secondary programme was intended to
protect and provide security for the software programme and was
designed for use with the
software programme. It permits the
logging of technical support issues for resolution and generates
licence keys to give
access to the software programme to the
appellant’s customers.
[4]
After resigning from the appellant, the
first respondent allegedly set up a company in the UK which provided
the same services as
those of the appellant.
[5]
During March 2017 the appellant launched an
urgent application to prohibit and prevent the respondents from using
its programmes.
On 18 April 2017, the respondents consented to
a draft order being made an order in terms of which the respondents
were interdicted
from,
inter alia
,:
5.1
reproducing the appellant’s
programmes;
5.2
using or publishing the appellant’s
programmes;
5.3
adapting the appellant’s programmes;
5.4
reproducing or copying the appellant’s
system’s manual; and
5.5
inviting or procuring the appellant’s
existing customers.
[6]
In 2018 and after becoming aware that a UK
company, Transact HR, was marketing a software programme similar to
its own, a director
of the appellant and a certain potential business
partner, Mr Anthony de Richelieu (Mr de Richelieu), hatched a plan
for Mr de
Richelieu to contact the first respondent under the ruse
that he wanted to do business with the fourth respondent. It is
common cause that during a skype internet call between the first
respondent and Mr de Richelieu, the first respondent gave a
demonstration
of the appellant’s software programme which he
claimed was the fourth respondent’s. Further, the
software demonstrated
bore the logo of the fourth respondent.
[7]
As a result the appellant launched an
urgent application in terms of which Part A of the relief was, by
agreement, granted pending
the determination of Part B in which the
appellant sought,
inter alia
:
7.1
a declaratory order that the respondents are in contempt of the order
dated 18 April 2017;
and
7.2
that the first respondent be committed to imprisonment for a period
of six months.
[8]
The primary
objectives of contempt proceedings are to vindicate the authority of
the court and to force litigants into complying
with court orders.
[9]
In
contempt proceedings, the applicant bears the onus of proving, beyond
reasonable doubt that the respondent is in contempt of
court order.
The test for whether disobedience of a court order amounts to
contempt is whether the breach was committed deliberately
and
mala
fide
.
In
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[1]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that whenever committal to prison is
sought, the criminal standard of proof applies. A declaratory
of contempt (without imprisonment) and a mandatory order can,
however, be made on the civil standard. The applicant for a
committal order must establish:
8.1
there is an underlying court order;
8.2
service of the court order has been
effected or that the order has come to the notice of the Respondent;
8.3
despite it knowing about the order, there
is non-compliance with the terms of the order; and
8.4
wilfulness
and
mala
fides
,
beyond a reasonable doubt
[2]
.
[10]
However, once the applicant has proven the
first three above-mentioned requirements, the respondent bears the
evidentiary burden
in relation to prove absence of wilfulness and
mala fides
.
[11]
No relief was sought against the second and
third respondents as it was apparent that they were not aware of the
order dated 18
April 2017.
[12]
Part B of the application was opposed by
the first and second respondents. In the answering affidavit
the first respondent
alleged that in 2016 and through the company he
had set up in the UK, he had commissioned a software developer to
create a software
programme for use in the UK. Further, the
first respondent admitted to being in possession of the appellant’s
evaluation
copy. It is common cause that the evaluation copy
was used by the appellant to demonstrate to its potential clients the
capabilities
of its software programme. The first respondent
alleged that in the demonstration he made to Mr de Richelieu, he used
the
evaluation copy and not the appellant’s software
programmes. First respondent did not deny that the copy he
allegedly
demonstrated to Mr de Richelieu had the logo of the fourth
respondent.
[13]
Inasmuch as the court
a
quo
found that the first respondent’s
explanation for using the appellant’s programmes defied logic,
it dismissed the contempt
application by concluding that the
evaluation copy was not covered by the order dated 18 April 2017.
The court
a quo
further held that the appellant had not shown sufficient cause, even
if the respondents were in contempt of the order, justifying
the
committal of the first respondent to prison and stated that:
“
[25]
The Court Order prohibiting the respondent from using the applicant’s
software is couched in
such a way that the respondents are prohibited
from using the applicant’s specified software programmes.
The evaluation
copy is not specifically mentioned as one of the
prohibited software. The evidence of use of the evaluation copy
means the
respondents have discharged their evidentiary burden of
disproving any required wilfulness and mala fides.
…
[29]
The finding of this application does not mean that the applicant has
failed in the civil claim
he has instituted against the respondents
but only signifies that the applicant does not meet the required
standard of proof for
the court to conclude that there is contempt
which justifies committal to civil imprisonment.”
[14]
The appellant is appealing against the
judgment and order of the court
a quo
on various grounds including but not limited to the following:
13.1
that the court
a quo
erred in coming to a finding that the
evaluation copy was not covered by the terms of the order of 18 April
2017;
13.2
that the court
a quo
erred in finding that there were material
contradictions in the appellant’s founding and replying
affidavits with regard
to the changes or modifications made by the
respondents to the appellant’s software programmes; and
13.3
that the court
a quo
erred in finding that there was no
wilfulness and
mala fides
on the part of the fourth respondent
in servicing the appellant’s clients.
[15]
On behalf of the appellant it was submitted
that should the court make a finding that the court
a
quo
misdirected itself in concluding
that the appellant’s evaluation report was not covered by
the terms of the order of
18 April 2017, the court should make a
finding that the respondents, in particular the first respondent, not
only deliberately
but also wilfully and with mala fides failed to
comply with the terms of the 18 April 2017 court order and that he
was therefore
in contempt of the court order. The appellant
further sought the committal of the first respondent to prison for a
period
of six months.
[16]
On the day of the hearing of the appeal
there was no legal representation on behalf of the respondents.
However, the first
respondent did join the hearing and submitted that
he was there to represent himself and the fourth respondent as he did
not have
funds to engage a legal representative.
[17]
The first respondent conceded that he did
not comply with the court order dated 18 April 2017. He
justified his non-compliance
with the said order on the ground that
he was entrapped by Mr de Richelieu. Further, the first
respondent conceded that the
appellant’s evaluation copy could
not be used without reference to the appellant’s software
programme. The first
respondent further admitted that when he
showed the appellant’s evaluation copy to Mr de Richelieu, it
reflected the logo
of the fourth respondent.
[18]
It is common cause that the first and
fourth respondents were aware of the court order of 18 April 2017 and
that, as conceded by
Mr Mckerrell that despite the existence of the
court order, the first and fourth respondents did use the appellants’
software
programme in contravention of the court order.
[19]
I am satisfied that the respondents have
not rebutted the inference of deliberate and mala fide non-compliance
with the court order
of 18 April 2017 in that they have failed to
give a plausible explanation for the use of the appellant’s
software programme
despite having knowledge of the court order.
I am of the view that the court a quo erred in concluding that the
3first and
fourth respondents did not deliberately and with mala
fides contravene the order of 17 August 2018.
[20]
In line with the suggestion by Mr Stoop.
Counsel for the appellant, this matter ought to be referred back to
the court
a quo
,
in light of the conclusion reached by this court, to consider the
committal of the first respondent to imprisonment.
[21]
With regard to costs, the general rule is
that a successful litigant is entitled to his or her costs.
However, this court
is of the view that costs of two counsel is not
justified under the circumstances.
[22]
Accordingly the following orders are made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court a quo is set aside
and substituted by the following order:
‘
1.
It is declared that the first and fourth respondents are in contempt
of paragraphs 1 and 3 of the
court order granted on 18 April 2017 by
the Honourable Mr Justice Mothle.
2.
The matter is referred back to the court a
quo for consideration of a sanction for the contempt of the court
order.
3.
The respondents to pay the costs of the
application.’
NP MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge of the High
Court
I agree
N MALI
Judge of the High
Court
I agree
A MILLAR
Judge of the High
Court
Date of hearing
:04 May 2022
Date of judgment
:19 July 2022
Appearances
For Appellant:
Adv Stoop SC (instructed by Wiese and Wiese Inc)
For 1
st
and
2
nd
Respondents: Mr
J Mckerrell (personal appearance)
[1]
2006
(4) SA 326 (SCA).
[2]
In
Tasima
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Department of Transport and Others
[2016] 1 All SA 465
(SCA), the court held that: “[18] Civil
contempt is the wilful and
mala
fide
refusal or failure to comply with an order of court. This was
confirmed in
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) para 9.
Fakie
also held that whenever committal to prison is sought, the criminal
standard of proof applies (para 19). A declarator of
contempt
(without imprisonment) and a mandatory order can however be made on
the civil standard (see
Fakie
para 42). The applicant for a committal order must establish
(a) the order; (b) service or notice of the order; (c)
non-compliance with the terms of the order and (d) wilfulness and
mala
fides
,
beyond a reasonable doubt. But, once the applicant has proved
(a), (b) and (c), the respondent bears the evidentiary burden
in
relation to (d) (
Fakie
para 42). Should the respondent therefore fail to advance
evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as to whether his
or
her non-compliance was wilful and
mala
fide
,
the applicant would have proved contempt beyond a reasonable doubt
(
Fakie
paras 22-24)”.
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