Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 163South Africa
Crazy Splash Swim (Pty) Ltd v Nortje and Others (20743/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 163; (2023) 44 ILJ 2538 (WCC) (13 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
13 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Crazy Splash Swim (Pty) Ltd v Nortje and Others (20743/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 163; (2023) 44 ILJ 2538 (WCC) (13 July 2023)
Crazy Splash Swim (Pty) Ltd v Nortje and Others (20743/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 163; (2023) 44 ILJ 2538 (WCC) (13 July 2023)
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sino date 13 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Restraint –
Oral agreement
–
Enforceability – No
restraint of trade agreed to in writing – Whether there was
a restraint of trade clause, explicitly
or implied –
Employer sought to impose restraint clause during employment –
Failed to produce written contract
of employment with restraint
clause under previous employer to confirm allegations –
Employee disputes reasonableness
of restraint of trade –
Contends restraint provision was a unilateral change of terms of
employment – Employer
does not have a protectable interest
worthy of protection – Restraint provision sought seemingly
aimed at stifling
competition with respondents –
Labour
Relations Act 66 of 1995
,
s 197.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 20743/2022
In
the matter between:
CRAZY
SPLASH SWIM SCHOOL (PTY) LTD
Applicant
REGISTRATION
NUMBER 201[…]
And
TALITHA
NORTJE
First
Respondent
WORCESTER
AQUATICS
Second
Respondent
LANE
LEADER TEAM STELLENBOSCH
Third
Respondent
Heard: 19 May 2023
Delivered: 13 July 2023
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via email and released to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 13 July 2023 at 10h00.
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI J
[1]
This is an opposed application in which the applicant seeks to
enforce an alleged restraint of
trade agreement against the first,
second, and third respondents (jointly referred to as “the
respondents”). The applicant
seeks an interdict against the
respondents restraining the first respondent from rendering swimming
services within the Worcester
area, Western Cape Province, within a
radius of 50km thereof for two years. The applicant contends that the
restraint of trade
was expressly agreed orally in the employment
contract concluded between the applicant and the first respondent.
[2]
The first respondent opposed the relief sought and averred that there
was no restraint of trade
applicable to her employment with the
applicant. In the event that this court finds that there was a
restraint of trade in place,
the first respondent denied that same is
reasonable and enforceable. The second and third respondents did not
oppose the applicant’s
application, and they did not file any
opposing papers.
[3]
The matter served before this court in the urgent court on 15
December 2022.
However, the application did not
proceed on the said day. Instead, the parties agreed on a timetable
that regulated further filing
of papers, and the hearing was
postponed to 23 May 2023 on the opposed roll.
The Parties
[4]
The applicant is a company duly incorporated in terms of the Company
law of South Africa. It has
its registered place of business at
Langeruskool, Distillery Street, Worcester. The applicant is
doing business as a swim
school in Worcester and the surrounding area
as far as Ceres.
[5]
The first respondent is Talitha Nortje, an adult female swimming
instructor residing in Worcester,
Western Cape Province. The
applicant employed the first respondent as a swimming instructor in
March 2016, and the latter resigned
from her employment on 08
November 2022.
[6]
The second respondent is Worcester Aquatics, a competitive swimming
club in Worcester.
[7]
The third respondent is Lane Leader Team Stellenbosch, a competitive
swimming club offering services
of professional swim coaching to its
members, situated at HMS Bloemhof, Koch Krigeville, Stellenbosch,
also rendering services
in Worcester as of 1 December 2022.
The Factual Background
[8]
The first respondent took up employment with the applicant as a
swimming instructor in March 2016.
At that time, Ms Ingrid Van der
Westhuizen (“Ms Van der Westhuizen”) was the sole
director of the applicant. At that
time, the first respondent only
had a verbal contract of employment with the applicant. In August
2020, Ms Carla Kock (“Ms
Kock”), who was also an employee
of the applicant, bought 100 percent of the shares in the applicant
as a going concern from
Ms Van der Westhuizen. Before she
bought the business, the applicant also employed Ms Kock as a
swimming instructor.
[9]
In her founding affidavit deposed to on behalf of the applicant, Ms
Kock avers that during her
employment with the applicant, before she
became the sole owner, the previous owner Ms Van der Westhuizen, on
numerous business
gatherings, informed the applicant’s group of
employees, which included the first respondent, of the restraint of
trade existing
in the employment relationship between the applicant
and its employees. Ms Van der Westhuizen also explained the
consequences of
this restraint of trade provision to the applicant’s
employees. According to Ms Kock, the first respondent never objected
to this term being part of her verbal employment agreement with the
applicant. In terms of that restrain covenant, the respondent
and all
other employees of the applicant agreed that they would not compete
directly or indirectly with the applicant as employees
or in any
other position for the next two years in a radius of 50 Kilometres.
[10]
All employees that were employed with the applicant at the time Ms
Kock obtained ownership of the applicant
continued their employment
after she took over the business. She subsequently took over their
employment contracts, either it being
in writing or verbal agreements
in terms of section 197 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (“the
LRA”). After she
took over the company, Ms Kock avers that she
noticed that the employment contracts of the employees were not
comprehensive enough
and some of the employees, such as the first
respondent, did not have a written employment contract.
[11] Ms
Kock asserted that the applicant’s labour broker, Ms Elizabeth
Verwoerd (“Ms Verwoerd”),
sent a written employment
contract to the first respondent in April 2021. However, the latter
objected to the content of the contract
before signing it. The first
respondent emailed the applicant’s labour broker, Ms Verwoerd,
and questioned the content of
the contract; in particular, the first
respondent objected to the inclusion of the restraint of trade clause
in the contract. The
first respondent refused to sign the contract
and averred that the inclusion of the restraint of trade in the
employment contract
she was furnished with was a unilateral change to
the terms of her employment contract. In response, the applicant’s
labour
broker informed the first respondent that the inclusion of the
restraint of trade was not a unilateral insertion as the first
respondent’s
employment contract with the previous owner also
had a restraint of trade clause.
[12] On
07 November 2022, the first respondent informed Ms Kock in a WhatsApp
correspondence that she was willing
to sign an employment contract on
the same terms and conditions she had with the previous owner Mr Van
der Westhuizen. Ms Kock
informed the first respondent that a
restraint of trade existed in the terms and conditions of the first
respondent's employment
contract with the previous employer.
Subsequent to that, the first respondent resigned from the applicant
the following day, 08
November 2022.
[13]
The applicant contends that on 08 November 2022, the first respondent
proceeded to copy the contents of her
written resignation and sent it
by WhatsApp to the clients /parents of the database of the applicant,
confirming that she resigned
and that she would now continue to coach
swimming privately on her own. The first respondent also proceeded to
advertise her coaching
on social media as
Let’s Swim
in
conjunction with Worcester Aquatics, the second respondent. The
applicant then approached an attorney who addressed a letter
of
demand to the first respondent to refrain from breaching the terms of
the employment contract (restraint of trade) and to remove
all the
advertisement posted on social media.
[14]
The first respondent acknowledged receipt and did not adhere to nor
comply with the demand. She still proceeded
to coach swimming at the
swimming pool of Drotsky, which is not the pool where the applicant’s
swimmers swim. The first respondent
did not remove the advertisement
of her coaching from social media - Facebook.
[15]
Thereafter, the applicant proceeded to launch an
Ex parte
application on an urgent basis on 13 November 2022 at Worcester
Magistrates Court in terms of section 30 of the Magistrates Court
32
of 1944 for an order prohibiting the first respondent from breaching
the implied restraint of trade. As it happened, the court
subsequently granted an interim order. However, the order was
anticipated, and the applicant withdrew her application as the
applicant’s
legal representative after reading articles,
discovered that a Magistrates Court did not have jurisdiction to have
granted the
interdict the applicant applied for on 13 November 2022.
Thereafter, the parties engaged in settlement negotiations, but the
matter
remained unresolved.
[16]
The applicant then approached this court for an order that the first
respondent complies with the alleged
explicit restraint of trade
contained in the verbal employment agreement between herself and the
applicant by terminating all swim
coaching, either in the swimming
pool or on land, by herself or within a radius of 50 km from
Worcester. The applicant also seeks
an order that the first
respondent refrains from advertising her swim school, being
Let’s
Swim,
in conjunction with the second respondent, alternatively,
any other swim coaching by herself, on social media, albeit WhatsApp,
Facebook, or Instagram. In addition, the applicant seeks an order
that the second respondent refrains from allowing the first
respondent
to exercise coaching in conjunction with it and that the
third respondent refrains from allowing the first respondent to coach
any swimming in breach of the existing restraint of trade provisions.
[17]
The applicant also filed the affidavit of Ms Van der Westhuizen (the
previous owner) in which she confirms
that although the first
respondent did not sign a written employment contract, she had a
proper knowledge of the contents and terms
of the employment
agreement, more specifically, the restraint of trade clause. She also
confirmed that she discussed, informed,
and explained the contents
and consequences of the restraint of trade clause to the applicant's
employees at numerous gatherings/meetings
where the first respondent
was also present.
[18] On
the other hand, the first respondent avers that she cannot
specifically recall whether the erstwhile owner
of the applicant (Ms
Van der Westhuizen) mentioned restraint of trade provisions during
any meeting with other employees. As this
was not a term of her
employment, and as she never agreed to be bound by a restraint of
trade, any discussion in respect thereof
could not apply to her. The
first respondent contends that she never signed a written contract of
employment with the erstwhile
employer. However, the basic terms of
her employment were agreed upon, such as working hours, leave,
remuneration, and the employment
conditions contained in the relevant
legislation.
[19]
The first respondent asserted that her verbal contract of employment
with her erstwhile employer did not
contain a restraint of trade
clause. She averred that she never agreed to any restraint of trade
during the entire duration of
her employment with the applicant, nor
was she specifically requested to agree to it prior to Ms Kock
becoming the owner of the
applicant. She would not agree to such a
clause, as she is a swimming instructor, and this is her only means
to generate an income.
[20]
When she started working for the applicant in March 2016, she
simultaneously worked under the second respondent.
The clients (being
children) of the applicant would pay a monthly fee to it, and she
would coach them. As soon as a child showed
progress, they would be
registered to start swimming galas under the second respondent. The
first respondent asseverated that the
applicant was at all times
aware of this and, in fact, orchestrated it. The first respondent
also contends that it is entirely
unclear to her on what basis the
applicant seeks to enforce a non-existent restraint of trade against
her and interdict the second
respondent from continuing to work with
her.
[21] In
her view, when Ms Kock bought the applicant as a going concern, the
existing contracts of employment had
to remain in place in terms of
section 197 of the LRA. With the advice of her legal representatives,
she refused to sign the contract
that the labour broker Ms Verwoerd
sent her as it introduced a restraint of trade clause which was not
previously contained in
her employment terms with the applicant. In
this regard, she emailed the labour broker that she did galas under
the second respondent
and private lessons, which would not be
possible with a restraint to trade.
[22]
The respondent further stated that Ms Verwoerd confirmed in writing
to her that the restraint of trade was
a new inclusion that needed to
be negotiated. Ms Verwoerd mentioned to her that the erstwhile
employment contract contained a restraint
of trade clause which was
not as defined as the new one, but that there was no written
employment contract of the first respondent.
The first respondent
then informed the applicant – Ms Kock, that she was only
willing to agree to the same terms of employment
and that she will
not agree to additional terms, specifically the restraint of trade.
She further stated that she informed the
applicant that if the
applicant could not offer her employment on the same terms, it could
rather offer her a separation package.
[23] Ms
Kock, in response, delivered a message to the first respondent in
which she stated that there was never
consensus about the first
respondent’s employment terms with the erstwhile owner, but
that she knew for a fact that there
was a restraint of trade in
place. As there was no consensus, Ms Kock informed the first
respondent that a new contract of employment
was required. The first
respondent further stated that due to the pressure, threats, and
harassment that was caused by her refusal
to agree to the restraint
of trade provisions, she resigned from the applicant with immediate
effect on 8 November 2022. She sent
her resignation letter to Ms
Kock, to another employee of the applicant, and to three parents that
had scheduled lessons on the
day of her resignation. She denied that
she enticed or solicited any of the applicant’s clients to join
her and to cancel
their contracts with the applicant. She simply
stated that if they so elect, they are welcome to.
[24]
The first respondent further alluded that since 2016, swimming has
been her sole source of income and is
her only way of being
economically active and productive. According to her, the applicant
has no goodwill or confidential business
information that requires
protection. She cultivated her relationship with certain parents of
the children she taught, did not
retain or take any list of the
applicant's clients, and is advertising her services on her social
media without reference to the
applicant. Furthermore, many of the
children that are clients of the applicant were already clients of
the second respondent, and
many more will move over once they
progress and start swimming galas.
Submissions by the
Parties
[25] Mr
Van Loggerenburg, who appeared for the applicant, argued that the
first respondent expressly agreed to
a restraint of trade in the oral
contract of employment she had with the applicant. Counsel submitted
that the material facts that
are determinative of this entire
application are hinged in paragraph 9 of the applicant’s
founding affidavit in which Ms
Kock averred that during her
employment with the applicant and before she became the sole owner of
the applicant, the previous
owner Ms Van der Westhuizen, on numerous
business gatherings informed the group of employees, which included
the first respondent
of a restraint of trade existing in the
employment relationship between the applicant and its employees. In
response to this averment,
Counsel argued, the respondent stated that
she could not recall any meeting in which the erstwhile owner
discussed restraint of
trade clauses regarding their employment with
the applicant.
[26] To
this end, Counsel submitted that the first respondent does not deny
that a restraint of trade covenant
was discussed or mentioned during
the meetings with other employees of the applicant. Counsel further
contended that the first
respondent’s failure to deny the
submissions made by both Ms Kock and Ms Van der Westhuizen that a
restraint of trade provision
was mentioned, amounts to a concession
on the first respondent’s part of her inability to refute the
evidence presented by
the applicant and Ms Van der Westhuizen.
Counsel further submitted that a failure on the part of the
respondent to object to the
discussed or mentioned restraint of trade
covenant, created an implied restraint of trade according to the
terms that were discussed
with other employees present during the
meeting.
[27]
Counsel further submitted that the first respondent, for the first
time from the inception of her employment
with the applicant, took
issue with the existing restraint of trade provision after Ms Kock
wanted to have this term recorded in
writing. Notwithstanding, the
first respondent remained employed by the applicant from 31 March
2020 to 08 November 2022. At that
time, the applicant already had
written contracts of employment incorporating restraint of trade
agreement in respect of all other
employees, save for the first
respondent, who, due to oversight, only had an oral employment
agreement. It was submitted that this
renders the first respondent’s
version inherently improbable.
[28] In
addition, Mr Van Loggerennberg argued that the first respondent had
access to confidential information
that was only disclosed to her in
confidence as a potential purchaser of the applicant, as a going
concern. The first respondent,
however, never ended up purchasing the
applicant. Instead, she remained employed and eventually resigned and
immediately started
to compete with the applicant. Therefore,
pursuant to what the courts have referred to as ‘spring-boarding,’
the applicant
is entitled to restrain the first respondent for a
reasonable period of 24 months within a trade and designation
geographical area
to put the first respondent in the position she
would have been in had it not been for her spring-boarding her
business from the
goodwill, database of the applicant.
[29]
Meanwhile, Ms Bosch, on the other hand, who appeared on behalf of the
first respondent, submitted that the
first respondent disputes that
her oral contract of employment with the applicant contained a
restraint of trade agreement or that
she was requested to agree
whether expressly or through her conduct, to the provision of a
restraint of trade covenant. The restraint
of trade was introduced to
her contract of employment for the first time in April 2021, when she
received the written contract
from Ms Kock. The restraint of trade
clause did not form part of the first respondent’s employment
contract before Ms Kock
bought the business; hence, the first
respondent objected to the inclusion thereof.
[30] Ms
Bosch submitted that the first respondent refutes that she was ever
requested to agree to a restraint
of trade, and any discussion with
other employees, who may have consented thereto, did not apply to her
terms of employment with
the applicant. In light of the fact that the
first respondent did not have a restraint of trade in place, Counsel
argued that her
failure to object thereto during meetings with other
employees is of no consequence. Ms Bosch further submitted that there
would
be no reason for an employee to object to an employment term
that is not applicable to her.
[31] In
expanding her argument, Ms Bosch contended that the first respondent
was working under the second respondent
since the outset of her
employment with the applicant and offering private lessons. As a
result, a restraint of trade could not
apply to her contract of
employment. In addition, Counsel argued that in support of this, the
applicant’s labour broker confirmed
in writing that the first
respondent works for and receives an income from the second
respondent, which is totally separate from
the applicant.
[32] Ms
Bosch argued that the submission by the applicant’s Counsel
that the first respondent remained employed
by the applicant from 31
March 2020 to 08 November 2022, despite the impasse, rendered the
first respondents’ version improbable,
as meritless. This is
so, Counsel argued, because when Ms Kock delivered the written
contract of employment to the first respondent
in April 2021, the
respondent had some questions before she was willing to sign.
Thereafter, the respondent emailed the applicant’s
labour
broker and explicitly objected to the inclusion of the restraint of
trade clause.
[33] Ms
Bosch contended that the first respondent considered the restraint of
trade clause as a unilateral change
to the terms of her employment.
Furthermore, the first respondent objected to the inclusion of the
restraint of trade clause from
the outset because it was not
contained in her previous employment contract. Counsel implored the
court to dismiss the applicant’s
application with costs.
ISSUES TO BE DECIDED
[34]
Pursuant to the discussion set out above, this court, in my view, is
enjoined to determine the following
two disputed issues:
34.1
Whether there was a restraint of trade clause, explicitly or implied,
to the respondent’s contract
of employment with the applicant;
34.2 If
such a restraint of trade was in place, whether or not such a
restraint of trade covenant was reasonable
and enforceable.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
[35]
For convenience, I will consider the disputed issues cited above
sequentially.
Was there a trade
restraint, explicitly or implied, to the first respondent's contract
of employment with the applicant?
[36] It
is common cause that the first respondent is a swimming instructor
and that she took up employment with
the applicant in March 2016. It
is also not in dispute that the first respondent never had a written
employment contract with the
erstwhile employer, Ms Van der
Westhuizen. According to the first respondent, swimming has been her
sole source of income since
2016. This is her only way of being
economically active and her only passion. It is also not in dispute
that when she started working
for the applicant, she worked
simultaneously for the second respondent with the applicant’s
blessings. The first respondent’s
version is that her verbal
contract of employment did not contain a restraint of trade clause
and that she never agreed to any
restraint of trade during the entire
duration of her employment with the applicant, nor was she
specifically requested to agree
thereto prior to Ms Kock becoming the
owner of the applicant.
[37]
While on the other hand, the applicant, in particular, Ms Kock
asserts that during her employment with the
applicant and before she
became the sole owner of the applicant, the previous owner, Ms Van
der Westhuizen, on numerous business
gatherings, informed the group
of employees which included the first respondent of the restraint of
trade existing in the employment
relationship between the applicant
and its employees. The applicant further asserted that Ms Van der
Westhuizen explicitly stated
the consequences of this restraint of
trade to the employees.
[38]
From the notice of motion, it is common cause that the applicant is
seeking a final interdict to enforce
the alleged restraint of trade
against the first respondent for 24 months and within a 50km radius
of Worcester. In my view, from
the versions presented above, there is
a material dispute of facts on whether the first respondent’s
employment contract
prior to Ms Kock buying the business contained a
restraint of trade clause or not.
[39]
In a case like this, a final order will only be granted on notice of
motion if the facts, as stated by the
respondent together with the
facts alleged by the applicant that the respondent admits, justify
such an order. See
Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery Ltd v
Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) at 235. If the
first respondent fails to raise a real, genuine, or
bona fide
dispute of fact and the court is satisfied as to the inherent
credibility of the applicant’s factual averments, it may
proceed
on the basis of the correctness thereof and include this fact
among those upon which it determines whether the applicant is
entitled
to the relief it seeks.
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van
Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 635. In recent
times, the correct approach to the assessment of evidence in motion
proceedings was described in
National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Zuma
2009 (1) SACR 361
(SCA) para 26, by Harms JA,
as follows:
“
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities.
It
is well established under the
Plascon-Evans
rule that where in motion proceedings disputes of fact arise on the
affidavits, a final order can be granted only if the facts
averred in
the applicant's (Mr Zuma’s) affidavits, which have been
admitted by the respondent (the NDPP), together with the
facts
alleged by the latter, justify such order. It may be different if the
respondent’s version consists of bald or uncreditworthy
denials, raises fictitious disputes of fact, is palpably implausible,
far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the court is justified
in
rejecting them merely on the papers.”
[40]
From the above authorities, it is evident that in an application for
a final relief, save for disputes of
facts that are not real, genuine
or bona fide, the respondent's version must prevail. In the present
matter, the applicant relies
on a verbal restraint of trade clause
that the previous employer, (Ms Van der Westhuizen) allegedly made to
a group of employees
of the applicant when Ms Van der Westhuizen
still owned the business. The applicant contends that the other
employees had written
contracts and the restraint of trade clause was
enshrined in their contracts of employment.
[41] I
have some serious difficulty with this version. The applicant has
failed to produce or attach any such
written contract of employment
with a restraint of trade clause under the previous employer to
confirm its allegations. These contracts
in my view, should have been
readily available at the disposal of the applicant as the sole
director of the applicant.
[42] To
this end, I share the views expressed by Ms Bosch that as a result of
the applicant’s failure to
attach a contract of employment to
its application or even to its replying affidavit, this court has no
document before it to demonstrate
the extent and nature, or the
existence of the restraint of trade provisions applicable to other
employees before the business
was sold as a going concern.
[43]
In addition, a more fundamental hurdle lay in the pathway of the
applicant. Ms Kock asserted that when she
took over the applicant's
business she noticed that the employees' employment contracts were
not comprehensive. Employees such
as the first respondent did not
have a written employment contract. An employment contract was then
sent to the first respondent
in April 2021. The first respondent
explicitly objected to the inclusion of the restraint of trade
provisions and was only willing
to sign the written contract on the
same terms as under the previous employer. The first respondent
objected to the inclusion of
the restraint of trade and contended
that the restraint of trade clause was a new term to her employment
agreement. She asserted
that such a term could not be unilaterally
added to the terms of her employment contract. In addition, the first
respondent contended
that she has often done private marketing, and
learn to swim squad training. Consequently, if a restraint of trade
was included,
the respondent’s retainer fee would have to be
renegotiated.
[44]
In response to these assertions, the applicant’s labour broker,
who acted on behalf of the applicant
and negotiated a written
employment contract with the first respondent, confirmed that the
restraint of trade provision in the
written agreement is a new
inclusion to the contract and must be negotiated between the parties.
The broker also stated that although
the contract of employment under
the erstwhile owner contained a restraint of trade provision, such
provisions were not as defined
as in the new contracts. Nonetheless,
she stated that the first respondent did not have a written contract
of employment with the
erstwhile owner.
[45]
Furthermore, in a WhatsApp communication between the applicant and
the first respondent to cause the first
respondent to sign a contract
with a restraint of trade provision, the first respondent informed Ms
Kock that she had no problem
signing a new contract with the
applicant to the same terms as per her previous contract of
employment, which did not include restraint
of trade provisions. In
her WhatsApp response to these assertions, Ms Kock stated that there
was no consensus about the first respondent’s
terms of
employment between the applicant’s previous owner and the first
respondent, but that she somehow knew for a fact
that there was a
restraint of trade in place. She further stated that as there was no
consensus, a new contract of employment was
required. It is apposite,
in my view, to quote verbatim Ms Kock’s response. She stated in
Afrikaans as follows:
“
2. Daar was nooit
consensus oor wat die termes and voorwaardes was tussen jou en Ingrid
nie. Wat ek wel weet is dat die ooreenkoms
was dat jy by die
gym sowel as Crazy Splash moet afrig end dat jy nie dieselfde
afriging as my swemskool mag anbied binne ‘n
radius van 50km
nie. Om die rede dat daar geen consensus was nie wou ons ‘n
nuwe kontrak in plek sit sodat…Ek is nie
‘n onredelik
mens nie maar wel regverdig.”
[46]
It is important to note that the first respondent did not have any
objection to the proposed written agreements
except for the restraint
of trade provision. I have little doubt in my mind that the reference
to the lack of consensus that the
applicant was referring to in her
WhatsApp correspondence, was about the restraint of trade, which the
applicant sought to address
in the written contract. The applicant
believed that the first respondent’s verbal contract of
employment was not comprehensive
enough and therefore wanted to
include a restraint of trade in a new contract of employment which
the first respondent did not
sign and did not agree to.
[47]
To my mind, the asseveration of the applicant and her labour broker
lends credence to the first respondent’s
denial that her
contract of employment had no restraint of trade provisions.
Furthermore, the labour broker’s version that
the restraint of
trade provision is a new clause in the employment contract supports
the first respondent’s version in all
material respect. In
light of these averments, the overwhelming probabilities indicate
that there was no restraint of trade provision
in the first
respondent's employment contract. Had there been such a clause, in my
view, there would have been no need for the
applicant to attempt to
negotiate its employment terms with the first respondent.
[48]
It was contended that at numerous business gatherings/meetings, the
previous owner, Mr Van der Westhuizen,
informed the group of
employees, including the first respondent of the restraint of trade
in the employment contract / relationship.
Ms Van der Westhuizen
filed a supporting affidavit confirming these allegations. I have
some difficulty with these averments. It
is not clear on the papers
what prompted Ms Van der Westhuizen to make these statements in those
meetings especially bearing in
mind that all other employees had
written contracts and the restraint of trade clause was included in
their agreements. It was
part of their agreement, and they knew of
this clause.
[49]
More importantly, the applicant and the previous owner – Ms Van
der Westhuizen, do not allege in their
affidavits that the previous
owner had a single and direct discussion with the first respondent
regarding the restraint of trade
or requested the first respondent to
agree to it. The version of the first respondent is that the
applicant never requested her
to agree to a restraint of trade before
Ms Kock became the owner of the applicant. The first respondent
asserted that she would
never have agreed to such a clause as
swimming is her passion, her only means to generate an income, and is
her only way of being
economically active and productive.
[50]
The applicant contended that to the extent that the first respondent
cannot recall if a restraint of trade
was ever discussed during
meetings with other employees, she could not refute the evidence of
the applicant that Ms Van der Westhuizen
addressed the restraint of
trade clauses with the employees at their various meetings. In my
view, this argument is fundamentally
flawed and cannot be sustained.
It must be emphasised that the previous owner did not assert that she
specifically discussed the
restraint of trade provision with the
first respondent personally when the first respondent took employment
with the applicant.
She neither said she addressed this issue with
the first respondent at a personal level during the course of the
first respondent's
employment with the applicant.
[51]
Even on the applicant's version, the first respondent was never
requested directly or personally to agree
to a restraint of trade
during her employment with the applicant. Her alleged failure to
object to the inclusion of the restraint
of trade provision during
the alleged meetings or gatherings with employees present who did
have written contracts of employment
and may have agreed to the
restraint of trade provisions cannot be equated to her acceptance of
such a term in her contract of
employment. In my view, to hold
otherwise would be to add a term in the first respondent's employment
contract that was not agreed
upon and that would restrict her freedom
to earn a living in her chosen occupation.
[52]
The respondent distinctly refuted that she was ever requested to
agree to a restraint of trade. In addition,
the respondent contended
that any discussion in respect thereof with other employees, who may
have agreed thereto, did not apply
to her terms of employment with
the applicant. To this end, I agree with the first respondent's
Counsel that because the first
respondent did not have a restraint of
trade in place, her failure to object to that during the meetings
with other employees is
of no consequence. There is no reason for an
employee to object to an employment term that is not relevant or not
applicable to
her.
[53]
Notably, the first respondent worked for the second respondent from
the outset of her employment with the
applicant. This was done with
the blessing of the applicant. In 2018, the first respondent decided
to get qualified as a level
1 swimming instructor. As such, she
enrolled for the 2019 academic year and paid a fee of R3500. When the
owner of the second respondent
became aware of this, she directed an
email on 14 November 2019, to Ms Van der Westhuizen, the erstwhile
owner of the applicant.
She indicated that the second respondent
would reimburse the first respondent half of the enrolment fee and
requested that the
applicant pay the other half.
[54]
Indeed, the applicant and the second respondent reimbursed the first
respondent for the enrolment fees in
equal shares as the first
respondent worked for the two entities. In my view, in these
circumstances, a restraint of trade could
not apply to her employment
contract. This, in my opinion, lends credence to her assertion that
there was no restraint of trade
to her employment agreement with the
applicant. The applicant's labour broker also confirmed in writing
that the first respondent
worked for and received an income from the
second respondent totally separate from the applicant's. The
suggestion that the first
respondent was moonlighting without the
knowledge or consent of the applicant is false and must be rejected.
[55]
Lastly, on this disputed issue, the applicant submitted that the
first respondent’s failure to object
to the restraint of trade
agreement when same was discussed during meetings with other
employees present created an implied restraint
of trade. In expanding
this argument, Counsel submitted that the first time the first
respondent took issue with the alleged restraint
of trade was after
Ms Kock wanted to record their term in writing. It was further
submitted that despite this, the first respondent
remained employed
by the applicant from 31 March 2020 to 08 November 2022. Her stay in
employment despite the impasses created
an implied restraint of trade
and rendered the first respondent’s version improbable. I
disagree with this proposition.
[56] It
must be borne in mind that after the applicant delivered the written
employment contract to the first
respondent in April 2021, the latter
contested the restraint of trade clause and raised specific questions
before she could sign
it. The first respondent emailed the
applicant’s labour broker and objected to the inclusion of the
restraint of trade clause.
The first respondent contended that the
restraint of trade provision was a unilateral change of the terms of
her employment. From
April 2021 until her resignation in 2022, she
accordingly objected to the inclusion of the restraint of trade
agreement. She made
her views known to the applicant and to the
applicant’s labour broker. In my view, during the contested
period, the first
respondent continued to work in line with the
provisions of section 197 of the LRA. She continued to work on the
same terms as
before Ms Kock took over the business.
[57]
The upshot is that, on a conspectus of all the evidential material
placed before this court and on the objective
facts, the applicant
has not succeeded in proving that there was a restraint of trade
provision in the employment contract of the
first respondent with her
erstwhile employer.
[58]
Ordinarily, this finding would lead to the end of the dispute;
however, for the sake of completeness, I deem
it prudent to briefly
consider the second question, assuming there was a restraint of trade
as suggested by the applicant, whether
such restraint of trade
provision is reasonable. Simply put, whether the applicant on the
version proffered satisfied the requirements
in respect of such a
provision.
[59]
For a restraint of trade to be enforceable, it has to be reasonable.
Thus, the applicant cannot enforce an
alleged restraint of trade if
it would be unreasonable.
Lifeguards Africa (Pty) Ltd v
Raubenheimer
2006 (5) SA 364
(D) at para 35. In
Basson v
Chilwan
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993 (3) SA 742
at 767G-I, the Appellate Division, as it
then was, formulated the requirements to determine if a restraint of
trade is reasonable.
The court set the following requirements:
·
Is there an interest of one party that needs
protection?
·
If so, is that interest being threatened by the
other party?
·
Does such interest weigh up qualitatively and
quantitatively against the interest of the other party to be
economically active and
productive?
·
If so, is there any aspect of public policy having
nothing to do with the relationship between the parties that require
that the
restraint of trade should either be maintained or rejected?
·
Does the restraint go further than necessary to
protect the interest of the applicant?
[60] In
the present matter, the applicant contended that numerous parents of
swimmers have, up to date, cancelled
their contracts with the
applicant and that certainly more terminations and cancellations will
occur pending the finalisation of
the dispute concerning the
restraint of trade as the first respondent will continue to use the
database of the applicant to encourage
swimmers to terminate their
contracts with the applicant. The applicant alleges further that the
first respondent urged the applicant's
clients to cancel their
contracts with the applicant, which has caused the applicant
astronomical financial loss.
[61]
Meanwhile, the first respondent admitted sending the termination
notice to the applicant and to another employee
and only to three
parents that had swimming lessons schedules with her for that day.
The first respondent denied ever enticing
the applicant’s
clients to cancel their contracts with the applicant. She only stated
that they are free to continue swimming
with her if they elect to.
[62] In
my view, the applicant’s contention does not find support from
all the documents file of record.
Nothing was placed before this
court to confirm the applicant's allegations that the first
respondent uses the applicant's database
to advance her business.
Evidently, the respondent informed the three parents of her
resignation out of courtesy because they had
scheduled training with
her that day. It would have been a different case if the first
respondent sent her resignation to all the
clients of the applicant
and informed them that she had resigned and enticed them to follow
her to her new employer. Instead, the
first respondent independently
advertised her services on social media platforms and had nothing to
do with the database of the
applicant.
[63] In
any event, I am of the view that the applicant does not have a
protectable interest worthy of protection.
The first respondent has
been working for the second respondent since she commenced work with
the applicant in March 2016. Many
clients of the applicant were
already clients of the second respondent, as the children swim galas
under the second respondent.
The first respondent asserted that as
soon as a child that swims at the applicant shows progress, such a
child starts participating
in galas under the second respondent. In
the premise, the applicant could not explicitly identify what
specific information was,
or the reasons it considers confidential
for the restraint clause to be invoked assuming it existed.
[64]
Undoubtedly, it cannot be said that there are trade secrets,
confidential information or connections that
the first respondent
took from the applicant or used to the prejudice of the applicant.
The first respondent is using her skill
and training to practice her
profession. The first respondent cannot be prevented from using her
stock of general knowledge, skill,
and experience to earn a living.
Bonnet v Schofield
1989 (2) SA 156
AD. Significantly, no
person can be unreasonably prevented from earning a living in the
public domain. The right to trade and practice
a profession is highly
prized.
Strike Productions (Pty) Ltd
v
Bon View Trading
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2011] JOL 26664
(GSJ) para 1. In my view,
restraining the first respondent to practice her profession under
these circumstances, would conflict
with section 22 of the
Constitution, which guarantees her right to freedom of trade,
occupation, and profession.
[65]
Crucially, in
Hirt and Carter (Pty) Ltd v Mansfiled and Another
[2007] 4 AII SA 1423 (D), para 55, the following was stated:
“
In
my view, for an employer to succeed in establishing that trade
secrets and confidential information is an interest justifying
protection by the restraint, it should demonstrate in a reasonably
clear terms, that the information, know how, technology or method,
as
the case may be,
is
something which is unique and peculiar to the employer and which is
not public property or public knowledge, and is more than
just
trivial”
(my
emphasis).
[66]
Overall, the restraint provision the applicant seeks in this matter
seems to be aimed at stifling competition
with the second and the
third respondent. Having considered all the documents filed, it seems
to me, that the only objective of
the restraint that the applicant
seeks is to prevent its competitor, the second and the third
respondent, from acquiring the services
of the first respondent. A
restraint of trade provision with the sole aim of stifling
competition is against public policy and
is unenforceable.
Aston
International College Ballito (Pty) Ltd v Petrus Erasmus and Another
(Unreported case Number: D12967/2002) (KZN) at para 16.
[67] In
Ice Cream Franchise (Pty) Ltd v Davidoff and Another
2009 (3)
Sa 78
(C), at 82H, Davis J, as he then was, observed that in deciding
whether a restraint of trade is contrary to public policy, regard
must be had to two considerations;
first
, agreements freely
concluded should be honoured;
secondly,
each person should be
free to enter into business, a profession or trade in the manner they
deem fit. The learned justice concluded
that for this reasons,
unreasonable restraint of trade clauses are contrary to public
policy.
[68] In
view of all these considerations, I am of the opinion that the
applicants’ s application for an
interdict must fail.
Furthermore, nothing was presented to warrant a departure from the
norm that costs follow the event.
ORDER
[69] In
the result, the following order is granted:
69.1
The applicant’s application is hereby dismissed. The applicant
is ordered to pay the costs of this
application,
including
any reserved costs orders
, as well as the
costs of Counsel.
LEKHULENI JD
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
van Loggerenberg
Instructed
by:
Wilna
Roux Attorneys
For
the first Respondent:
Adv
Bosch
Instructed
by:
Steyn
Attorneys
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