Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 148South Africa
True North Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others v Sky Gecko Software Lab (Pty) Limited and Another (23149/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 148 (29 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## True North Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others v Sky Gecko Software Lab (Pty) Limited and Another (23149/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 148 (29 May 2024)
True North Holdings (Pty) Limited and Others v Sky Gecko Software Lab (Pty) Limited and Another (23149/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 148 (29 May 2024)
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sino date 29 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Referral for oral evidence –
Restraint
of trade
–
Issue
of whether applicants enjoy protectable interest –
Applicants elected to proceed by way of motion – Claimed
that application was urgent – Referral to oral evidence will
slow matter down rather than speed up resolution of main
application – Referral to oral evidence would not conduce to
effective and speedy resolution – Referral application
dismissed – Application for interim relief pending
application for leave to appeal dismissal of referral application
also dismissed – Uniform Rule 6(5)(g).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 23149/23
TRUE
NORTH HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
First
Applicant
CASH
CONVERTERS SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Applicant
TRUE
NORTH FRANCHISING (PTY) LIMITED
Third
Applicant
and
SKY
GECKO SOFTWARE LAB (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
GLYNN-ROBERT
HENDRICKS
Second
Respondent
Reasons for the
Dismissal of the Application for Referral to Oral Evidence and
Judgment in the Application for Interim Relief
KATZ
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
In this matter important and unusual procedural
issues have arisen. Certain aspects of the conduct of the
applicants in these
proceedings are not only intriguing and
inexplicable, but unfortunate. And some of their conduct may
constitute an abuse
of process.
[2]
In simple terms, the applicants brought what they
regard as an urgent or semi urgent application, and then have done
what they can
to delay the finalisation of the application.
[3]
Dare I say that the certain of the steps adopted
by the applicants is a model of how not to litigate. To
appreciate the serious
difficulties, it will be necessary to detail
the course of the litigation.
[4]
In
saying this I accept that litigation is tough. Its
results can have a long-lasting impact on the lives of the
parties
and often the general population. Hard choices by the
parties often need to be made between numerous possible
routes.
And the choices may involve decisions if, and when to take certain
steps. The choices often need to be made under
time pressure and
other constraints.
[1]
And
each of the courses can have serious consequences for the prospects
of success and the nature and parameters of any order that
may be
made.
[2]
[5]
This
application comprises urgent or semi-urgent relief seeking a
restraint of trade
[3]
and
the interdicting the respondents from disclosing confidential
information
[4]
by
three separate companies playing different roles in the Cash
Converters franchise business.
[5]
An
alternative prayer seeking interim relief pending the determination
of any issues that may be referred to oral evidence or to
trial was
included in the notice of motion.
[6]
The business comprises the buying and selling of
second-hand goods, limited new wholesale goods and the provision of
short-term
credit, and in particular pawn loans.
[7]
It is said that the business requires
sophisticated information technology related services to comply with
a suite of legislative
requirements, such as the National Credit Act
and taxation associated laws.
[8]
The respondents are Glynn-Robert Hendricks (an
individual) and his alter ego, a company called Sky Gecko Software
Lab. They
entered into various contractual arrangements with
Cash Converters as consultants. Their services were for the
provision
of the information technology related services required by
Cash Converters, or at least certain of the applicants.
[9]
In mid-October 2023 it came to the attention of
Cash Converters that the respondents were working with other
businesses competing
in the marketplace with Cash Converters.
[10]
After brief interaction, including a meeting and
an exchange of correspondence between the parties the contractual
relationship
between the parties ended on 23 October 2023.
[11]
Thereafter further correspondence flowed between
them. The essence was that the applicants claimed that the
respondents were in
breach of a restraint of trade and were in
violation of confidentiality provisions. The respondents in
effect denied the
claims.
The
parties and the franchise agreement
[12]
The first applicant, True North Holdings (Pty)
Limited is the holding company of the “Cash Converters Group”
of companies
and holds one hundred percent of the issued share
capital in the second and third applicants.
[13]
The second applicant, Cash Converters Southern
Africa (Pty) Limited, is the operational arm of the franchise
business and holds
the franchise rights in respect of the franchised
group of Cash Converters stores throughout Southern Africa.
At present there are a
total of ninety stores – in Southern Africa (eighty-six stores)
and Namibia (four stores). The
second applicant stands in a
direct contractual relationship with each franchisee in terms of a
written franchise agreement that
delineates the rights and
obligations of the parties. It receives a royalty based on the
percentage of retail turnover charged
to the franchisees and a fixed
percentage royalty on the pawn fees generated by the franchisees.
[14]
The third applicant, True North Franchising (Pty)
Limited, plays an operational support role to each franchisee by
licensing a bouquet
of software applications including the computer
programs while it charges the franchisees a monthly software license
fee for use
of the bouquet of software applications.
[15]
The first respondent is Sky Gecko (Pty) Limited,
and the second respondent is Glynn Roberts – Hendricks, who
is a director
of the first respondent, and the sole shareholder of
the first respondent.
[16]
Numbering about 90 stores owned by 78 separate
legal entities, the heart of the franchised system is that the Cash
Converters franchisees
operate their business within the second-hand
goods sector, pawnbroking industry, and unsecured short-terms loans
industry.
[17]
The franchises employ the operational and
technological platform granted to them under the auspices of the
second and third applicants.
[18]
Unlike a pawnbroker or micro-lender that start a
business operation
de novo
,
franchisees are immediately allowed the benefit of the accumulation
of years of intellectual capital and unique technology that
they
would not otherwise have been exposed to, but for the fact that they
enjoy the status of franchisee under a franchise agreement.
This is
the unique benefit arises from the franchise relationship.
[19]
In terms of the standard franchise agreement:
(i)
the franchisor (the second applicant) granted the
franchisee the right to operate the Franchised Business (defined as
the business
of a franchised pawnbroker and/or second-hand dealer
and/or money lender to be conducted in terms of the franchise
agreement) for
the terms of the agreement under the Franchise System
(defined to mean the franchisor’s specialised system for the
operation,
management and promotion of a business incorporating the
use and application of the Intellectual Property (defined to include
know-how,
all confidential, technical and commercial information
relating to the operation of the Franchise System and the Franchise
Business),
copyright, goodwill (defined as the goodwill arising out
of the Franchise System and the Intellectual property by the
franchisor
and/or franchisee, trade dress, trademarks and trade
secrets);
(ii)
the franchisee undertook not to engage or become
concerned in the promotion, organisation or similar business to the
Franchise Business;
and
(iii)
the franchisee undertook not to be party to
any act or omission whereby the goodwill or trade of the Franchise
Business, the Franchisor
or the Intellectual Property may be
endangered, jeopardised or prejudicially affected.
The litigation
[20]
On 19 December 2023 this application was launched.
[21]
The notice of motion does not include a date for
the hearing of the matter, despite the inclusion of the usual prayer
seeking condonation
for non-compliance regarding service and the time
limits prescribed by the Rules, and permitting the application to be
heard on
a “semi-urgent basis” in terms of rule 6(12).
The respondents were given 5 days for the delivery of a notice of
intention to oppose and to file answering affidavits within 15 days
of filing the notice of intention to oppose. If those
dates
were not complied with then the matter would be placed on the third
division roll - that is the unopposed roll in this Division
- for
hearing on 31 January 2024.
[22]
The
matter somehow, despite it being opposed, came before Kusevitsky J in
the urgent court on 31 January 2024.
[6]
By
agreement the application was postponed for hearing to 17 May 2024 on
the semi-urgent roll. The applicants did not
apply for
interim relief on 31 January 2024, and they appeared satisfied for
the application to be postponed for nearly five months
with no
protection by way of interim interdict. A time- table was agreed to
which required,
inter
alia
,
the respondents to file their answering affidavits by 23 February
2024 and the applicants, their replying affidavits by 28 March
2024
with dates for the filing of heads of argument and practice notes,
viz
.
the applicants by 26 April 2024 and the respondents by 3 May 2024.
[23]
The founding affidavit consisted of 225 paragraphs
in 99 pages with approximately 450 pages of annexures.
[24]
To motivate the obtaining of a date on the urgent
or semi-urgent roll the applicants’ deponent in the founding
affidavit averred:
“
217.
Most businesses shut down now over the Christmas and New Year period
and the applicants do not think that the respondents
will do much
harm to their business during this time. The resultant effect is that
there is no such urgency that requires the intervention
of this Court
before the New Year. Having said that, the applicants cannot await a
hearing in the ordinary course since the respondents
would by then
have effectively harmed the Cash Converters business.
218. In
this regard, I am advised that if the matter is brought in the
ordinary course the first hearing date
on the opposed roll is likely
to only be in late 2024 which will largely render the relief academic
if the application is only
heard then.”
[25]
The
answering affidavit of 40 pages (121 paragraphs) was signed on
27
February 2024,
and
a replying affidavit of
119
pages
[7]
(259
paragraphs) was signed on 26 April 2024.
[8]
[26]
Significantly, the lengthy replying affidavit made
no mention of any
bona fide
disputes
of fact raised in the answering affidavit.
[27]
The applicants filed their heads of argument and a
practice note in accordance with this Division’s Practice
Directives on
26 April 2024.
[28]
Once again there was no suggestion of any
disputes,
bona fide
or
otherwise by the applicants.
[29]
The applicants in their practice note effectively
requested the Acting Judge President to make an early allocation of a
judge to
hear the application because the matter would be ready for
argument on 17 May 2024, there were remote prospects of the matter
settling
and the pleadings exceeded 500 pages (the full papers
consisted of more than 900 pages including annexures)
[30]
The respondents filed heads of argument and a
practice note a week before the hearing scheduled for 17 May 2024.
[31]
Two days before the hearing of the application I
sent the parties an email, i
nter alia
,
stating.
“
At
the hearing of the above application on Friday 17 May 2024, it would
be appreciated if counsel could address me on at least the
following
two aspects:
(i) The
applicability of paragraph [80 of Minister of Environmental Affairs
and Tourism and Others v Phambili Fisheries (Pty)
Ltd and Another
(32/2003, 40/2003)
[2003] ZASCA 46
;
[2003] 2 All SA 616
(SCA) (16 May
2003), which reads:
“
Replying
affidavits
[80] There is one
other matter that I am compelled to mention – replying
affidavits. In the great majority of cases the replying
affidavit
should be by far the shortest. But in practice it is very often by
far the longest – and the most valueless. It
was so in these
reviews. The respondents, who were the applicants below, filed
replying affidavits of inordinate length. Being
forced to wade
through their almost endless repetition when the pleading of the case
is all but over brings about irritation, not
persuasion. It is time
that the courts declare war on unnecessarily prolix replying
affidavits and upon those who inflate them.
“
I request this,
bearing in in mind that, as I have it, the answering affidavit
consists of 40 pages, and 121 paragraphs (record,
598 - 637) and the
replying affidavit consists of 119 pages, and 259 paragraphs (record
687 – 805) together with a further
100 pages of annexures.
Also,
the founding affidavit consists of 99 pages, and 22 paragraphs.
(record 9 – 107) with annexures running from record
108 -
to effectively 575, taking into account the applicants’
supplementary affidavit beginning at 576 -597]).”
[9]
[32]
The hearing was scheduled to commence at 10h00 on
Friday 17 May 2024.
[33]
At 08h36 on that morning (less than an hour and a
half before the hearing was to commence) I received an email from the
applicants’
Cape Town correspondent attorneys attaching an
application in terms of Rule 6(5)(g) read with Rule 11 (the referral
application)
by the applicants.
[34]
The referral application was for the issue of
whether the applicants enjoy a protectable interest for the purposes
of the enforcement
of contractual rights provable by the applicants
to be referred to oral evidence at a date and at a time to be
arranged with the
Registrar.
[35]
The
referral notice included provisions concerning discovery and the
filing of notices regarding the tendering of expert evidence.
[10]
Discovery
was to be made within 21 days of the making of the referral order and
the Registrar was to direct that the hearing of
oral evidence be
heard on the semi urgent roll, alternatively a date as directed by
the Court.
[36]
Notably the applicants’ referral application
was not coupled with an application for interim urgent relief of any
kind at
all. Although as I have mentioned interim relief in the
alternative was contemplated in the notice of motion.
[37]
So: were the referral application to succeed it is
difficult to conceive of the main application being heard, let alone
decided
before the end of 2024, the date by when the applicants
averred the relief would have become largely academic.
[38]
The basis for the application was set out in a
short supporting affidavit.
[39]
The motivation for the referral application was
the affidavits “raised
bona fide
disputes of fact which cannot be properly decided
on affidavit.”
[40]
The following averment was the high-water mark of
why the referral application was filed at such an extraordinarily
late stage:
“During the final preparation of the hearing and on
the advice of senior counsel, the applicants were advised that the
nature
of the disputes which are the subject of this interlocutory
application are such that they cannot be decided on affidavit.”
[41]
At the commencement of the hearing the applicants
moved for the referral application. No written argument was
provided to
the Court.
[42]
During the engagement several concerns were
debated.
[43]
The applicants could not assist the Court as to
when the oral evidence they sought to adduce could and would be
heard. They
did not know the next available date that could be
allocated for the hearing of the oral evidence. When I put it to
counsel that
it was unlikely to be within the next few months they
could not disagree. In other words, the application could and
would
only be argued well into the second half of 2024 at best for
them. And even this is doubtful.
[44]
When I asked for an explanation for the lengthy
and prolix replying affidavit, the answer seemed to be: “Well
there was bald
denial by the respondents in the answering affidavits,
so it was necessary to explain in detail the relevant issues in the
replying
affidavit.”
But if that were indeed
so why would there be the need for oral evidence? That question
was not satisfactorily answered.
[45]
I questioned whether exceptional circumstances
were required for a referral at this late stage. Again, no
satisfactory response
was forthcoming. It was not clear
whether exceptional circumstances were required, and if so, what they
were.
[46]
Throughout the debate I gained the impression that
the applicants took the view that referral to oral evidence was there
for the
taking.
[47]
When I asked what should the Court do if it took
the view that there was no
bona fide
dispute to justify the referral to oral evidence,
I recall the answer effectively being that the Court should be guided
by the applicants’
view.
[48]
The
respondents’ stance to the application was instructive.
Their attitude was that a part of the main case should proceed
to
argument immediately, and only were the applicants to be successful
in that part should the application for referral be considered.
If the respondents succeeded in that first part of the case that
would be the end of the main application and the referral issue
would
not arise.
[11]
[49]
Thus, it was not immediately apparent whether the
respondents opposed the referral application. Understandably
so.
[50]
While the case dragged on their impugned conduct
could continue. A referral to oral evidence would have
suited their
purpose. The main application would be drawn out, and
the issue of mootness would raise its head. And the respondents could
and
would, if so minded, continue to operate in what the applicants
considered an unlawful manner. But by the nature of
things the respondents could not be seen to be supporting the
referral because they said they had a strong (unanswerable) case
on
the merits.
[51]
I suggested in argument they were “hedging
their bets,” and that their suggested course was a classic case
of undesirable
piece meal litigation. The response was that
they opposed the referral application.
[52]
I should mention that the applicants curiously had
no difficulty with their main application only being heard in 2025.
They
suggested that despite them saying on oath that the application
needed to be resolved before late 2024 there would still be some
benefit to them were the restraint and confidentiality relief be
granted in 2025.
[53]
I stood the matter down for approximately forty
minutes to consider the referral application.
[54]
I dismissed the referral application with costs of
two counsel. I indicated that I would give my reasons when
delivering the
judgment in the main case.
[55]
Counsel for the applicants immediately asked for
the matter to stand down so they could take instructions, bearing in
mind my ruling
dismissing the referral application. The matter stood
down for approximately half an hour.
[56]
At the resumed hearing the applicants indicated
they intended to apply for leave to appeal against my referral ruling
and that because
I hadn’t yet given the reasons for the
dismissal, they could not file the application for leave to appeal at
that stage.
And they then sought an
interim interdict pending the application for leave to appeal the
referral ruling.
[57]
I indicated that I would hear argument on the
interim interdict and give reasons for my refusal of the referral
application and
my judgment on the interim application together.
[58]
The respondents opposed the interim relief
application. Argument on the interim application proceeded.
No written argument
was provided.
[59]
During argument, I pointed out that the relief in
the main application was not geared strictly speaking in its
formulation for interim
relief and there were issues and cases
referred to in oral argument which were not contained in any of the
written arguments.
Both parties undertook to provide me with
written heads of argument and draft orders concerning the interim
relief a week later,
that is by 24 May 2024. Counsel for both
parties complied and submitted useful heads.
[60]
I turn to give a summary of applications for
referral to oral evidence and the reasons for my refusal.
[61]
I will then deal with the application for interim
relief.
Applications for
referral to oral evidence - Rule 6(5)(g)
[62]
Motion proceedings concern the resolution of legal
issues based on common cause facts.
[63]
Unless it is interim relief that is sought or the
circumstances are special, motions cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because,
inter alia
,
they are not designed to determine probabilities.
[64]
If the material facts are in dispute and there is
no request for the hearing of oral evidence, a final order will only
be granted
if the facts as stated by the respondent together with the
facts alleged by the applicant that are admitted by the respondent,
justify such an order.
[65]
That is unless the court is satisfied that the
respondent’s version consists of bald or uncreditworthy
denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, is so farfetched or so
clearly untenable or so palpably implausible as to warrant its
rejection merely on the
papers.
[66]
If the court is satisfied as to the inherent
credibility of the applicant’s factual averments, it may
proceed based on the
correctness thereof and include this fact among
those upon which it determines whether the applicant is entitled to
the final relief
sought.
[67]
But in certain instances a court may refer a
motion for the hearing of oral evidence.
[68]
The Rules provide for the referral to oral
evidence.
Rule 6(5)(g) states:
“Where an application cannot properly be decided on affidavit
the court may dismiss the application or
make such order as it
deems fit
with a view to
ensuring a just and expeditious
decision
. In particular, but without affecting the generality of
the aforegoing, it may direct that oral evidence be heard on
specified
issues with a view to resolving any dispute of fact and to
that end may order any deponent to appear personally or grant leave
for such deponent or any other person to be subpoenaed to appear and
be examined and cross-examined as a witness or it may refer
the
matter to trial with appropriate directions as to pleadings or
definition of issues, or otherwise.” (emphasis added)
[69]
A court, where an application cannot properly be
decided on affidavit, may make such order as it deems fit with a view
to ensuring
a
just and expeditious
decision.
[70]
Erasmus’ commentary on Rule 6(5)(g) includes
the following:
“
In
resolving to refer a matter to evidence a court has a wide
discretion. In every case the court must examine an alleged dispute
of fact and see whether in truth there is a real dispute of fact
which cannot be satisfactorily determined without the aid of oral
evidence; if this is not done a respondent might be able to
raise fictitious issues of fact and thus delay the hearing of
the
matter to the prejudice of the applicant. The test is a stringent one
that is not easily satisfied. Vague and insubstantial
allegations are
insufficient to raise the kind of dispute of fact that should be
referred for oral evidence.
A bare denial of the
applicant’s allegations in his affidavits will not in general
be sufficient to generate a genuine or
real dispute of fact. It has
been said that the court must take ‘a robust, commonsense
approach’ to a dispute on motion
and not hesitate to decide an
issue on affidavit merely because it may be difficult to do so. This
approach must, however, be adopted
with caution and the court should
not be tempted to settle disputes of fact solely on the probabilities
emerging from the affidavits
without giving due consideration to the
advantages of viva voce evidence.”
[71]
In
Lombaard v Droprop
CC and Others
(377/09)
[2010] ZASCA 86
;
2010 (5) SA 1
(SCA);
[2010] 4 All SA 229
(SCA) (31 May 2010) the SCA
had occasion to consider some of the issues arising in motions when
oral evidence may be called for
to resolve material disputes of fact.
[72]
Heher
and Shongwe JJA (dissenting
[12]
)
stated:
“
[29]
It has long been recognised that a discretion resides in a high
court, derived from the rules of court, to
refer a disputed issue of
fact which cannot be decided on affidavit for the hearing of oral
evidence regardless of whether the
parties request it.
The
present uniform rule is 6(5)(g). The overriding consideration
in the exercise of the discretion is ensuring a just and
expeditious
decision. In short, in the case of a dispute of fact, the court must
be persuaded that the hearing of evidence will
be fair to the parties
and will conduce to an
effective
and speedy resolution
of
the dispute and the overall application.
”
(emphasis
added)
[73]
A full
bench of this Court (Binns-Ward, Samela and Francis JJ) upheld in
Repas
v Repas
(A151/2022)
[2023] ZAWCHC 24
(13 February 2023) an appeal against the dismissal
by Hockey AJ an application for the dissolution and winding up of a
partnership.
The dismissal was based on the fact that a
material dispute of fact which could not be resolved on the papers
had arisen, and the
applicant had failed to satisfy his onus.
Hockey AJ had refused to refer the matter to oral evidence because,
in his view,
the dispute of fact was foreseeable prior to the
institution of the application proceedings.
[13]
[74]
Francis J in upholding the appeal accepted:
“
[32]
Counsel for the respondent also argued that the appellant ought to
have applied for a referral to oral evidence as soon as
a dispute was
evident on the papers and before full argument was heard by the court
below in respect of the application. It is
indeed so that an
application for a referral to oral evidence or trial, where
warranted, should be applied for by a litigant as
soon as the
affidavits have been exchanged and not after argument on the merits.
Whilst this is a salutary rule, it is by no means
an inflexible one.
In any event, in the matter at hand,
the
appellant raised the issue of a possible material dispute of fact in
reply to the respondent’s answering affidavit
.
This
was the
earliest
opportunity
to
do so because it was only in her answering affidavit that the
respondent for the first time really nailed her colours to the
mast.”
(emphasis added,
footnotes omitted)
[75]
Binns-Ward J agreed with the upholding of the
appeal. He explained his understanding of a court’s
discretion to refer
to oral evidence.
[39] It is not altogether
clear to me that a court faced with deciding an appropriate order in
terms of rule 6(5)(g) has a choice
of the relatively unfettered
nature that characterises well recognised truly discretionary
decisions such as in matters of sentencing,
general damages and costs
etc. A court has to have regard to a number of disparate and
incommensurable features in coming to an
appropriate decision in
terms of rule 6(5)(g): (i) the foreseeability of the dispute, (ii)
the degree of blameworthiness, if any,
in the circumstances of the
given case of the applicant having proceeded in the face of a
foreseeable dispute, (iii) the nature
and ambit of the dispute in
question, (iv) its amenability to
convenient
determination by a reference to oral evidence on defined issues, as
distinct from in action proceedings to be commenced de novo,
(v) the
probabilities as they appear on the papers (if those are against the
applicant, the court will be less inclined to send
the dispute for
oral evidence) (vi) the interests of justice, and (vii) the effect of
any other feature that might be relevant
in the circumstances of the
given case.
and
[41] It seems to me, on
the face of matters, that the decision that a court has to make under
rule 6(5)(g) involves what EM Grosskkopf
JA referred to in
Media
Workers Association as ‘a determination ... [to be] made by the
court in the light of all relevant considerations
'. The
appropriate decision has to be informed by those considerations.
[76]
My approach in considering the referral
application was to have regard to all the relevant considerations.
In particular,
I had regard to whether referral would have in the
words of
Lombaard
conduced
to “an effective and speedy resolution of the dispute and the
overall application.”
[77]
I concluded that referral to oral evidence would
not conduce to an effective and speedy resolution.
[78]
My reasons were that the applicants elected to
proceed by way of motion. That may have been, and probably was,
in the circumstances,
a reasonable choice.
[79]
They claimed their application was urgent and
requested condonation for non-compliance with the Rules relating to
service and time
periods.
[80]
But
inexplicably they did not, as they were entitled to, enrol the matter
on any particular nominated date, truncating the time
periods for the
filing of papers.
[14]
[81]
As it was put in
Arvrum
(see below) “almost all requirements of
urgency can be managed by using Form 2(a) with
shortened
time periods
, or by mere adaptation of
an aspect of the form,
for example
advance nomination of a date for hearing
or
omitting notice to the Registrar,
accompanied
by changed wording when necessary
.”
[82]
If the
applicants were of the view that the matter was urgent, they could
and should have set the application down on a nominated
date with a
timetable, commensurate with that urgency, for the filing of papers
and the respondents would have ignored the applicants’
chosen
timetable at their peril.
[15]
They
could have sought to set the matter down on the urgent roll at the
outset.
[16]
[83]
And if
it is a complex or voluminous application, immediately after
launching the application, the applicants’ attorneys or
counsel
could address a practice note to the Acting Judge President. In the
practice note a short explanation is given as to the
nature and
urgency of the matter and the Acting Judge President may in her
discretion make an early allocation of the Judge to
be seized with
the matter.
[17]
The
allocated judge then manages the case.
[84]
This useful practice serves the administration of
justice and works well. The Court’s experience as to this
custom and
how successfully it operates is well -known and
established in this Division.
[85]
When the answering affidavit was served in late
February 2024 the applicants should have been immediately considered
whether a material
bona fide
dispute of fact was raised.
[86]
They could have immediately launched an urgent
interlocutory referral (Rule 6(5)(g)) application. But they did
not.
[87]
In their lengthy replying affidavit filed nearly
two months after receipt of the answering affidavit no mention is
made of any such
dispute. Compare
Repas
where the applicant raised the issue of a possible
material dispute of fact in the reply to the respondent’s
answering affidavit.
In the present case no mention of a
dispute was made in the replying affidavit.
[88]
The applicants did not mention the apparent
dispute in their heads of argument. Indeed, they were content
to proceed with
the application in the absence of a referral to oral
evidence.
[89]
The respondents’ heads of argument elicited
no “dispute of fact complaint” from the applicants.
[90]
At literally the eleventh hour the referral
application was made on the basis that senior counsel in final
preparation for the hearing
advised that a dispute of fact required
referral to oral evidence.
[91]
I considered whether oral evidence would result in
the
effective
and
speedy
resolution
of the application on a conspectus of all relevant considerations.
[92]
Could the hearing of oral evidence result in an
effective remedy? The hearing of oral evidence would inevitably
have resulted
in the application only being finalised in 2025.
But for any relief arising from the application to be effective it
would
need - on applicants’ version - to be granted (well)
before late 2024.
[93]
The hearing of oral evidence would have rendered
any orders that may be granted ineffective. There were no exceptional
circumstances
at all to justify a referral to oral evidence.
[94]
A referral to oral evidence will slow the matter
down rather than speed up resolution of the main application.
[95]
And I also took into account as part of the
conspectus of all the circumstances that the answering affidavit
allegedly raising the
dispute was served at the end of February 2024,
and yet the referral was only launched nearly three months later on
17 May 2024
at the last possible moment.
[96]
Those were my reasons for dismissing the referral
application.
The
Interim relief sought
[97]
It is not in issue the first respondent was paid
over R8 164 562.50 (8 million rand) from April 2019 to the end of
September 2023
by the applicants for consultancy services relating to
the secondhand goods, pawn broking and the micro-lending industries.
[98]
Common and business sense dictates that the
applicants would not have engaged and continued to use the
respondents’ services
and allowed them to perform information
technology work exposing them to the full spectrum of confidential
information if they
did not believe they had the benefit of restraint
and confidentiality agreements in place during this time.
[99]
And so, when they believed (from mid - October
2023) that their contractual rights had been and were being violated
they launched
the main application in late December 2023.
[100]
After my refusal of the referral application, they
sought interim relief. Oddly the interim relief was not pending
finalisation
of the main application. It was pending the
outcome of an application for leave to appeal my dismissal of the
referral application.
[101]
The applicants seek interim relief in the
following terms together with a punitive costs award;
“
Pending
the outcome of an application for leave to appeal against the Court’s
order of 17 May 2024 in terms of which the Court
dismissed an
application for a referral to oral evidence brought on behalf of the
applicants:
1
The first and second respondents are interdicted and restrained from:
1.1
having any involvement in an operation which deals with second hand
goods, pawn broking
and the micro-lending industries directly or
indirectly either solely or jointly or as employee, manager, agent
for any person,
firm, partnership, joint venture or body corporate;
1.2
carrying on, assisting or being engaged, concerned or interested in,
either financially
or otherwise as director, shareholder or as
consultant or advisor in respect of any business which is similar to
an operation which
deals with second hand goods, pawn broking and the
micro-lending industries;
1.3
accepting instructions whether directly or indirectly for purposes of
rendering information
technology related services comprising inter
alia the design and development of software systems for the benefit
of any entity,
member or person associated therewith conducting
business in the second hand goods, pawn broking and the micro-lending
industries
regardless of whether they act as franchisee or in any
like capacity.
2
The first and second respondents are interdicted and restrained from
disclosing
whether directly or indirectly any confidential
information:
2.1
acquired from the applicants which shall include but not be limited
to all calculations,
strategy documents, spreadsheets, computer
programs, papers, drawings, models, samples and other materials;
2.2
concerning the business methods, operations, business relationships,
products, commercial,
financial, marketing information and trade
secrets of the third applicant
.”
[102]
I shall refer to the relief sought in paragraph 1
as the restraint relief and that in paragraph 2 as the
confidentiality relief.
[103]
It seems to me the respondents should have had no
difficulty with being restrained and interdicted from disclosing
“confidential
information” as a matter of principle.
And the details of that information which would be covered included
in 2.1 and
2.2 should also be of no moment to them.
[104]
How can they complain about being prohibited from
disclosing confidential information acquired from the applicants
concerning the
business and the trade secrets of the third applicant?
[105]
For information to be confidential and subject to
prohibition it must satisfy three requirements.
The information must be
(i) capable of application in trade or industry, that is, it must be
useful and not be public knowledge;
(ii) known only to a
restricted number of people or a closed circle;
(iii)
of economic value to the person seeking to protect it.
[18]
[106]
The question arises as to what information is
constituted as part of confidential information.
[107]
The uncontested evidence shows that the first
respondent was paid over R8 164 562.50 from April 2019 to the end of
September 2023
by the applicants.
[108]
The applicants suggest that were an interim
interdict to be granted: “No prejudice will be suffered by the
respondents who
are free to pursue their trade, even in the
development of point-of-sale software provided they do not do so with
reference to
the pawn industry, second hand goods and micro-lending.
Their capacity to trade up and down the wholesale and retail value
chain accordingly remains undisturbed.”
[109]
I tend to agree.
[110]
They also argue that “As the relief is
therefore of shorter duration for present purposes, the relief is
only temporary and
not finally decisive of the parties’ rights
with the result that a degree of proof less exacting than that
required for the
grant of a final interdict will suffice.”
[111]
The respondents on the other hand point to the
sorry tale of the applicants’ curious litigation mishaps. And
so they argue,
inter alia
,
that the applicants must show they have
prima
facie
prospects of success in the
further proceedings. They correctly point out that by late 2024
the relief the applicants seek
will probably have become moot, and
there are no prospects of success in their application for leave to
appeal my refusal of the
referral application.
[112]
I must be guided by what the Supreme Court of
Appeal stated in
Fischer and Another v
Ramahlele and Others
(203/2014)
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA) (4 June
2014):
“
[13]
Turning then to the nature of civil litigation in our adversarial
system it is for the parties, either in the pleadings or
affidavits,
which serve the function of both pleadings and evidence, to set out
and define the nature of their dispute and it is
for the court to
adjudicate upon those issues. That is so even where the dispute
involves an issue pertaining to the basic human
rights guaranteed by
our Constitution, for ‘it is impermissible for a party to rely
on a constitutional complaint that was
not pleaded’. There are
cases where the parties may expand those issues by the way in which
they conduct the proceedings.
There may also be instances where the
court may mero motu raise a question of law that emerges fully from
the evidence and is necessary
for the decision of the case. That is
subject to the proviso that no prejudice will be caused to any party
by its being decided.
Beyond that it is for the parties to identify
the dispute and for the court to determine that dispute and that
dispute alone.
[14] It is not for the
court to raise new issues not traversed in the pleadings or
affidavits, however interesting or important
they may seem to it, and
to insist that the parties deal with them. The parties may have their
own reasons for not raising those
issues. A court may sometimes
suggest a line of argument or an approach to a case that has not
previously occurred to the parties.
However, it is then for the
parties to determine whether they wish to adopt the new point. They
may choose not to do so because
of its implications for the further
conduct of the proceedings, such as an adjournment or the need to
amend pleadings or call additional
evidence. They may feel that their
case is sufficiently strong as it stands to require no
supplementation. They may simply wish
the issues already identified
to be determined because they are relevant to future matters and the
relationship between the parties.
That is for them to decide and not
the court. If they wish to stand by the issues they have formulated,
the court may not raise
new ones or compel them to deal with matters
other than those they have formulated in the pleadings or
affidavits.”
[113]
Were I to be of the view that on the papers the
applicants are entitled to the main relief or an interim interdict
pending the finalization
of the main application that is irrelevant.
I am constrained to
consider the interim relief as in fact sought by the applicants and
nothing else.
[114]
And the serious and ultimately insurmountable
difficulty I have is that the interim relief sought is
pending
the application for leave to appeal
my
dismissal ruling. It is
not
sought pending the finalisation of the main
application.
[115]
The
applicants in their well-crafted heads of argument do not point to
any authority where an interdict was granted pending any
event other
than that inextricably linked to the substance of the interim
interdict, that is the further or main proceedings. This
is perhaps
for good reason. A court considering interim relief will invariably
take into account the prospects of success in the
main case.
[19]
If the prospects are strong, a court will be more likely to grant the
interim relief. Where it is weak, a court will be less likely
to do
so.
[20]
The main case is
crucial to how the court hearing the interim relief balances the
competing considerations.
[116]
Interim interdicts are usually and almost always
sought and granted pending an action or a constitutional challenge or
review or
other application. But not in relation to an
interlocutory to a main application. Surely the interdict
in
casu
could and should have been pending
the main application.
But
it is not, and as
Fischer
[21]
requires, it is not for me to raise and compel the parties to argue
and seek relief they have not chosen, for whatever reason.
That
would be inappropriate and wrong. As it was put by the SCA this
calls for judicial restraint on my part.
[117]
This
approach does not elevate form over substance. It gives effect to
fairness in litigation between the parties, which is an essential
component of the right to have disputes determined through the
application of law. The respondents were called upon to meet a case
concerning an interim interdict pending an application for leave to
appeal. They were not called upon to meet a case for an interim
interdict pending the main proceedings. A court is not entitled to
refashion the relief sought by the applicants because it would
be
unfair to do so in an adversarial system such as ours.
[22]
[118]
The applicants in their heads in the application
for interim relief suggest the
prima
facie
right asserted is the contractual
right. They say: “The applicants have therefore
established the existence of a prima
facie right rooted in contract
that entitles them to relief. “
[119]
But the problem is the interdict is sought pending
the application for leave to appeal the dismissal ruling. And
the leave
to appeal application has not yet been filed because I have
not delivered my reasons in the referral application.
[120]
The future possibilities the route chosen by the
applicants are endless in number. Were I to grant leave to
appeal then what
would happen next? A relatively long appeal
process would ensue. If the appeal succeeds then all that would
happen
would be for the application to be referred back to this Court
for the hearing of oral evidence and the merits? How long would that
process take? At least a year or more. And what would happen to
the interim interdict? It would have come to an end
when I
granted leave to appeal, with the possibility of an application for
an extension. And that would clearly result in
the granting of
final relief without the merits being decided. That cannot be
right.
If I were to refuse leave
to appeal what would happen? The interdict would come to an end and
there could be an application for
its extension pending a petition to
the SCA.
[121]
The mind boggles at the various weird and
wonderful permutations that could arise.
[122]
But that is because of how the applicants in
exercising their rights have chosen to litigate and the strategic
different routes
they adopted.
[123]
The applicants have not shown they have a
prima
facie
right in respect of their
application for leave to appeal and they are not entitled to an
interim interdict.
Concluding remarks
[124]
I am by no means convinced that the applicants
have not made out a case for the restraint and confidentiality relief
in the main
application. But I cannot and do not make any
finding on that issue – it is not before me.
[125]
I am constrained to decide the case on the papers,
and particularly the relief as sought. The applicants have not moved
for final
relief before me, and I am not persuaded that the
alternative relief couched in the manner it has been should be
granted.
[126]
In the circumstances the application for interim
relief pending the application for leave to appeal my dismissal of
the referral
application is dismissed with costs of two counsel on
the C Scale.
ANTON KATZ AJ
Counsel
for the applicants
:
L
Kuschke SC
CC
Bester
Counsel
for the respondents
:
A
R Sholto Douglas SC
R
Patrick SC
[1]
Examples
include whether to engage senior counsel, and if so at what stage.
And whether to only engage out of town counsel.
[2]
See
the comments of the Constitutional court in
S
v Dlamini, S v Dladla and Others; S v Joubert; S v Schietekat
(CCT21/98, CCT22/98 ,
CCT2/99 , CCT4/99)
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999 (4) SA 623
;
1999 (7) BCLR 771
(3 June 1999) at paras [93] – [94].
[3]
For
twenty-four months from the date of any order the Court makes.
[4]
The
confidentiality relief was final and included a prayer for the
return of the confidential information.
[5]
A
further prayer concerning the infringement of copyright of one of
the applicants was abandoned.
[6]
None
of the counsel who appeared before the Court on 17 May 2024 could
explain how it came about that the matter came before Kusevitsky
J
on 31 January 2024. The closest the Court received as to an
explanation was that it was a mistake or that it was on the
applicants’ insistence.
[7]
The
replying affidavit was three times longer than the answering
affidavit.
[8]
The applicants filed a few days out of time, whereas the respondents
filed a month later without any formal application for condonation,
although the reasons for the lateness were fully set out in the
replying affidavit.
[9]
I
sent a further email to the parties thereafter requesting
submissions on certain cases, which are not relevant for purposes
of
this judgment.
[10]
The notice of application was in line with the customary order of
this nature developed in Metallurgical and Commercial Consultants
(Pty) Limited v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Limited
1971 (2) SA 3
88 (W).
[11]
Such an approach would result in the application being managed and
dealt with in a piece meal manner. This was clearly
undesirable.
[12]
T
he
majority (Navsa and Malan JJA, Mhlantla JA concurring) did not
disagree with the minority on this aspect.
[13]
Repas
at para [2]
[14]
The
common and generally accepted practice in this Division, unlike
other Divisions, is for an applicant to follow that route.
[15]
See generally
Republikeinse
Publikasies (Edms) Bpk v Afrikaanse Pers Publikasies (Edms) Bpk
1972 (1) SA 773
(A), and
more recently Magashule v Ramaphosa and Others
[2021] 3 All SA 887
(GJ)
and
Phalatse and Another v Speaker of the City of Johannesburg &
Others
[2022]
ZAGPJHC 1054 (25 October 2022).
[16]
T
he
Practice Directives of this Division dated 12 September 2023 issued
by Acting Judge President Goliath, and
Arvum
Exports (Pty) Ltd and Others v Costa NO
(18979/2013)
[2013] ZAWCHC 176
(20 November 2013) reflect a somewhat different
approach. Binns Ward J in A
rvum
endorsed
the approach of Flemming DJP in Gallagher v Norman's Transport Lines
(Pty) Ltd 1992 (3) SA 500 (W).
[17]
The
respondent may still argue that application lacks urgency and should
be struck from the roll. That is the risk an applicant
takes
in setting the matter down on this “urgent” basis.
[18]
Townsend Productions (Pty) Ltd v Leech & Others
2001 (4) SA 33
(C) at 53J-54B; Mossgas (Pty) Ltd v Sasol Technology (Pty) Ltd
[1999] 3 All SA 321
(W) at 333F; see also Avis Southern Africa
(Pty) Limited v Porteous and Another
2024 2 SA 386
(GJ) at para 87.
[19]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan and Others
2020
(6) SA 325
(CC) at para [42] where the Constitutional Court held
“
Before
a court may grant an interim interdict, it must be satisfied that
the applicant for an interdict has good prospects of
success in the
main review”.
[20]
Olympic
Passenger Services v Ramlagan
1957
(2) SA 382
(D) at 383E-F.
[21]
At
para [15].
[22]
National
Commissioner of Police and Another v Gun Owners of South
Africa
2020
(6) SA 69
(SCA) at para [25 – 27].
sino noindex
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