Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 97South Africa
Easigas (Pty) Ltd v Penguin Gas (Pty) Ltd and Another (9415/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 97 (16 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Easigas (Pty) Ltd v Penguin Gas (Pty) Ltd and Another (9415/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 97 (16 May 2022)
Easigas (Pty) Ltd v Penguin Gas (Pty) Ltd and Another (9415/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 97 (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 9415/2021
In
the matter between:
EASIGAS
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
PENGUIN
GAS (PTY)
LTD
First respondent
CHRISTIAAN
JOHANNES BOSMAN
Second respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 16 MAY 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
An interim interdict
was granted against the respondents on 13 August 2021, pending the
hearing and determination of the relief
set out in Part B of the
applicant’s notice of motion.
2.
In terms of that order,
the applicant was granted an interim interdict restraining the
respondents from unlawfully filling liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG”)
in the applicant’s branded cylinders that bear the applicant’s
brand names “Easigas”,
Reatile” and “Reatile
Gas”. The respondents were also prohibited from unlawfully
distributing LPG in the applicant’s
cylinders. The applicant
was, in addition, granted an attachment order to uplift and retrieve
its LPG cylinders from the first
respondent’s premises.
3.
The applicant now seeks
the relief set out in Part B of hte notice of motion.
The
applicant seeks final interdictory relief by means of motion
proceedings
4.
The applicant seeks final relief on motion,
and thus the principle enunciated in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at
634-635
applies: see
Tolgaz SA v Solgas (Pty)
Ltd; Easigas (Pty) Ltd v Solgas (Pty) Ltd
2009
(4) SA 37
(W) at para [21].
5.
A final interdict may only be granted if
the facts averred in the applicant’s affidavits which have been
admitted by the respondent,
together with the facts alleged by the
respondent, justify such order (
Afriforum
and Another v Pienaar
2017 (1) SA
388
(WCC) at para [20]).
6.
An applicant for such an order must show a
clear right; an injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended;
and the absence
of satisfactory protection by any other ordinary
remedy ((
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227)
. Once the applicant has
established the three requisite elements for the grant of a final
interdict, the scope, if any, for refusing
relief is limi3ted. There
is no general discretion to refuse relief (
Hotz
v University of Cape Town
2017 (2) SA
485
(SCA) at para [29]).
7.
Importantly for the purposes of the present
matter, the respondents accept that the applicant has made out a case
as far as the
requirements of a clear right and no suitable
alternative remedy are concerned. (This notwithstanding, the
respondents emphasise
that the applicant has instituted criminal
proceedings against the respondents pertaining to their conduct prior
to September 2020,
and contend that those proceedings constitute a
satisfactory alternative remedy in respect of the respondents’
admitted past
transgressions during September 2020.)
8.
The respondents contend, however, for the
purposes of the relief sought in Part B, that the applicant has
failed to prove the requirement
of the infringement of its rights
and/or a reasonable apprehension of such infringement.
9.
I shall accordingly concentrate on this
issue in the course of the discussion that follows.
The
factual background
10.
The applicant’s allegations of
unlawful conduct against the respondents arise from an inspection
executed at Gordon’s
Camp and Gas in Beaufort-West in October
2020, in respect of the respondents’ unlawful filling and
distribution of applicant’s’
cylinders on 1 and 3
September 2020. The
ex parte
application was brought as a result.
11.
It is to be noted that, prior to the
investigation, on 3 July 2020, the applicant had sent a letter to the
respondents demanding
that they desist from filling, and distributing
the applicant’s cylinders. The letter fell on deaf ears.
12.
It is common cause that the first
respondent is not, and has never been, an appointed distributor for
the applicant.
13.
The applicant’s private investigators
discovered that the first respondent was unlawfully filling the
applicant’s branded
cylinders with LPG gas and distributing the
cylinders on a mass industrial scale while holding itself out as the
applicant’s
distributor for the Southern Cape region.
14.
Mr Esterhuyse, who is the owner of an
outlet called Gordon’s Camp and Gas in Beaufort West, confirmed
in an affidavit that
the first respondent has supplied his business
with numerous LPG cylinders since 2018. He confirms that, since June
2019, the first
respondent has supplied his business with branded LPG
product cylinders of various sizes. The first respondent supplied him
with
340 cylinders of various sizes bearing the applicant’s
brand name and logo during September 2020. He produced copies of the
first respondent’s invoices as proof of delivery of the
cylinders.
15.
Mr Nel, who is one of the applicant’s
licensed distributors in George, took 45 photographs evidencing
hundreds of the applicant’s
branded LPG cylinders that were
unlawfully filled, sealed and distributed by the first respondent and
delivered to Gordon’s
Camp and Gas. Another of the applicant’s
licensed distributors in George, Mr Nagel, said that he accompanied
Mr Nel when
the latter took the photographs.
16.
The investigators involved, Mr Myburgh and
Mr Moolman, indicated that they had met with Mr Esterhuyse, Mr Nell
and Mr Nagel in respect
of the first respondent unlawful filling
distributing of the applicant’s cylinders, and obtained
relevant information from
them.
17.
In November 2020 the applicant laid
criminal charges with the South African Police Service against the
respondents. These charges
relate not only to the unlawful use of the
applicant’s property but also to various transgressions of the
Pressure Equipment Regulations promulgated
under the Occupational
Health and Safety Act 85 of 1993. The criminal matter is currently
pending. Insofar as the unlawful use
of its property is concerned,
the applicant’s case in the criminal court is based upon the
respondents’ contravention
of section 1(1) of the General Law
Amendment Act 50 of 1956, which provides as follows:
“
Any
person who, without a bona fide claim of right and without
the consent of the owner or the person having the control
thereof,
removes any property from the control of the owner or such person
with intent to use it for his own purposes without the
consent of the
owner or any other person competent to give such consent, whether or
not he intends throughout to return the property
to the owner or
person from whose control he removes it, shall, unless it is proved
that such person, at the time of the removal,
had reasonable grounds
for believing that the owner or such other person would have
consented to such use if he had known about
it, be guilty of an
offence and the court convicting him may impose upon him any penalty
which may lawfully be imposed for theft.”
18.
The respondents effectively admit the
contents of Mr Esterhuyse’s affidavit (or, where they do not
expressly admit material
allegations, they do not deny them). It
follows that they admit to unlawfully filling the applicant’s
cylinders with LPG,
unlawfully sealing the applicant’s
cylinders, unlawfully distributing, possessing, and handling the
applicant’s cylinders,
unlawfully profiting at the applicant’s
expense and competing with the applicant in the LPG market, and
unlawfully passing
itself off as the applicant’s distributor.
19.
The allegations of the private
investigators and the applicant’s distributors are met with
bare denials.
20.
The respondents also admit to failing to
adhere to the trade practices and customs in the LPG industry. They
admit further that
they have only conducted themselves lawfully after
3 September 2020. They admit that only from that date onwards they
have been
acting in strict compliance with the trade practices and
customs prevalent in the LPG industry.
21.
In terms of the interdict granted on 13
August 2021, the applicant was entitled to enter upon the
respondents’ premises with
the assistance of the Sheriff, and
inventory, attach and remove any cylinders belonging to the
applicant. The order was executed
on 7 September 2021, but no
cylinders belonging to the applicant were found on the premises.
Issues
of safety
22.
The applicant has set in its founding
affidavit a detailed explanation of the LPG industry in South Africa,
the deposit system,
reservation of ownership in cylinders, and the
trade custom and practice regarding the exchange of cylinders.
23.
The applicant also explains that the LPG
industry is highly regulated by,
inter
alia
, the
Petroleum Products Act 120 of
1977
and the
Pressure Equipment Regulations promulgated
on 15 July
2009 in Government Notice R734 under section 43 of the
Occupational
Health and Safety Act 85 of 1993
.
24.
On the same day, under Government Notice
R735, Health and Safety Standards were incorporated into the
Pressure
Equipment Regulations in
terms of
section 44
of the
Occupational
Health and Safety Act, regulating
transportable metal containers for
compressed gas.
25.
In 2008 the legislator introduced Safety
Standard 9.5 of SANS 10019, setting regulations related to the
persons competent to fill
LPG containers as follows:
“
9.5
Persons competent to fill containers
No person shall fill a
portable container with gas unless he is competent to fill containers
with the gases he handles, and unless:
(a)
he is fully
conversant with the relevant requirements of this standard;
(b)
he is satisfied
that the container is fit for the intended purpose;
(c)
the container is
not due for periodic inspection or testing: and
(d)
permission to fill
the container has been granted by the owner of the container, in
writing, except where the cylinder is owned
by the end user. This
requirement is for safety reasons since the cylinder containment
history is an essential record reference
for correct filling.
”
26.
In this requirement in
SANS 10019 was amended in September 2011 to refer to cylinders as
“pressure receptacles”. Clause
9.1.1 of the 2011 version
of SANS 10019 now provides that “
permission
to fill shall be obtained from the owner of the pressure receptacle
in writing, except where the pressure receptacle
is privately owned
by the end user. This requirement is for safety reasons. The pressure
receptacle containment history is an essential
reference preference
for safe filling
”.
27.
The
Pressure Equipment
Regulations and
Safety Standards make provision for different types
of inspections and safety tests of cylinders, including routine
inspection,
testing and repair, the changing of valves, restoring the
external appearance of cylinders, and prohibiting the refilling of
cylinders
that are overdue for inspection and testing.
28.
These measures are for obvious reasons of
the utmost importance in the proper regulation of the industry in the
interests of not
only manufacturers and distributors but also the
general public, and they have been recognised in various decisions of
courts in
this country.
29.
In
Tolgaz
(SA) (Pty) (Ltd) v Solgas (Pty) (Ltd) and another; Easigas (Pty) Ltd
v Solgas (Pty) Ltd
2009 (4) SA 37
(W) at paragraph [28] it was accepted that major
suppliers did not sell their cylinders to others, and that it was the
practice
that empty cylinders, once received by a supplier or
distributor, was returned to the owner. This means that ownership of
the cylinders
was retained by entities such as the applicant.
30.
In
Easigas
(Pty) Ltd v Gas Giant CC
2016 JDR 0780 (GJ) the court recognised at, paragraph [20], the
importance of these regulations in the interests of safety: they
ensure protection from teh dangeres inherent in the use thereof and
places teh duty legaaly upon owners of cylinders, specifically
distinguising between ownership by a primary supplier and an end
user.
31.
In paragraph [29] the
Court held as follows: “
Above
all the LPG market operates in a manner in which a deposit system and
reservation of ownership in the cylinders subsists.
It is evident
that there is a visible notification on the cylinder that the
applicant is the owner of its LPG cylinders and it
has a clear right
to prevent unauthorised filling and dealing with its cylinders. The
applicant has a well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable harm by
losing incalculable revenue. No satisfactory remedy is available to
the applicant.
”
32.
In
Oryx Oil
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mo Than Gas Corporation (Pty) Ltd
2014 JDR 2462 (ECG) the Court considered the various applicable
regulations and safety measures. It remarked as follows at paragraph
[8]: “
If
end users were to refill cylinders without the permission of the
owner, that owner would have no way of monitoring the history
of its
cylinders
.”
33.
At paragraph [10], the Court discussed the
exchange practice: “…
a
supplier or distributor which receives cylinders belonging to another
supplier, returns them to that supplier, and receives in
exchange its
own cylinders which the other supplier may have. … A
distributor who provides an end user with a full cylinder
belonging
to a supplier on exchange is only permitted to do so with the
authorisation of such supplier. The exchange system ensures
that all
cylinders and their fittings are on return to the owners inspected
for damage or corrosion. If they are defective, they
are repaired or
discarded. The rotation of an owner's cylinders in the market allows
owners to conduct the compulsory inspections
.”
34.
And at paragraph [11]: “
One
of the negative consequences of the exchange system is that an
unauthorised distributor or filler can obtain the applicants'
cylinders and unlawfully use them to supply LPG to the customers of
that unauthorised distributor or filler. The unauthorised
distributors do not incur the costs of providing their own cylinders
and are able to undercut suppliers and distributors who operate
legitimately
.”
35.
Issues of safety accordingly play a
material role in the determination of these proceedings.
An
injury reasonably apprehended
36.
It is an oft-repeated refrain that an
interdict serves to prevent present or future harm, and is not
concerned with past invasions
(
NCSPCA v
Openshaw
[2008] ZASCA 78
;
2008 (5) SA 339
(SCA) at para
[20]
).
37.
In
Minister of
Law and Order and others v Nordien and another
1987
(2) SA 894
(A) at 896G the Appellate Division, as it then was, stated
that “
a reasonable apprehension of
injury has been held to be one which a reasonable man might entertain
on being faced with certain facts.
… The applicant for an
interdict is not required to establish that, on a balance of
probabilities following from the undisputed
facts, injury will follow
he has only to show that it is reasonable to apprehend that injury
will result. … However, the
test for apprehension is an
objective one. … This means that, on the basis of the facts
presented to him, the Judge must
decide whether there is any basis
for the entertainment of a reasonable apprehension by the applicant.
”
38.
The apprehension of irreparable loss or
infringement of rights must thus be proved as an objective fact based
on substantial grounds
(
Airoadexpress
(Pty) Ltd v Chairman, Local Road Transportation Board, Durban, and
Others
[1986] ZASCA 6
;
1986 (2) SA 663
(A) at
673H-I, 680H, 682H-I). The facts grounding the applicant’s
apprehension must be set out to enable the court to judge
for itself
whether the fears are indeed well-grounded (
Mears
v African Platinum Mines Ltd (1)
1922
WLD 48).
39.
If the infringement complained of is one
that
prima facie
appears to have occurred once and for all, and is finished and done
with, then the applicant should allege facts justifying a reasonable
apprehension that the harm is likely to be repeated (
National
Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v
Openshaw supra at
para [22]).
40.
The question is thus whether from the facts
deposed to in the applicant’s founding affidavit there is,
objectively viewed,
a reasonable apprehension of ongoing or future
infringement of the applicant’s rights that it seeks to
protect.
41.
The respondents contend as follows: The
purpose of the
ex parte
application (Part A of the notice of motion) was stated by the
applicant to be “…
to
obtain permission to attach and preserve evidence which will
serve
as proof
of the First
Respondent’s unlawful conduct regarding the filling and
distribution of LPG cylinders belonging to the Applicant.”
The
ex parte
application was thus premised on the basis that, at the time of its
launch, the applicant had no real or even
prima
facie
evidence of any wrongdoing on the
respondents’ part since 3 September 2020.
42.
This is correct insofar as the respondents’
conduct after 3 September 2020 is concerned, but does not assist the
respondents
in their denial that the
ex
parte
application was necessary. At the
time of the launch of the
ex parte
application, the applicant had the evidence of Mr Esterhuyse and of
the private investigators, who indicated that the respondents
had
been conducting themselves unlawfully in relation to the applicant’s
LPG cylinders as discussed earlier in this judgment.
43.
As the order had been granted
ex
parte
, the respondents’ version
of events (largely an admission of their unlawful conduct) was not
before the Court at the time
and there was no indication that the
respondents would undertake to cease their conduct in the future
between being caught red-handed
in September 2020 and the issue of
the application in June 2021. In any event, in their answering
affidavit the respondents are
careful to concentrate on the fact that
no evidence of wrong-doing after 3 September 2020 has been
discovered. They do not dwell
on their conduct prior to that date.
44.
The respondents contend, however, that Part
B of the application is premised solely on applicant’s alleged
“
strong grounds for fearing
that the First Respondent, acting under the control of the Second
Respondent”
was hoarding large
quantities of the applicant’s cylinders, and its
“
strong
grounds to believe
that it was
unlawfully filling and distributing of such cylinders”.
45.
The respondents say that, because it turned
out that the applicant’s “
strong
grounds for fearing”
that the
first respondent was hoarding large quantities of the applicant’s
cylinders, and its “
strong grounds
to believe that it was unlawfully filling and distributing of such
cylinders”
were unwarranted, as
nothing untoward had been discovered prior or pursuant to the
execution of the Part A order and the inspection
of the first
respondent’s premises, it follows that the respondents have not
been engaged in any infringement of the applicant’s
rights
since 3 September 2020.
46.
For this reason, the applicant is unable to
provide any evidence of future unlawful conduct on the respondents’
part vis-à-vis
the applicant, and that should be dispositive
of the relief that the applicant claims. The applicant cannot
objectively have a
reasonable apprehension of any ongoing or future
infringement of the applicant’s rights on the part of the
respondents.
47.
The respondents have undertaken in their
answering affidavit not to repeat their past unlawful conduct: “
The
company and I have since 3 September 2020 being (sic) acting in
strict compliance with the trade practice and custom and shall
keep
doing so
”.
Is
the respondents’ undertaking sufficient?
48.
It has been stated that an undertaking not
to commit a breach again may not be enough to prevent the grant of an
interdict (
IRR SA BV v Tarita
2004
4 SA 156
(W) 166H–167C). That case dealt with a restraint of
trade, the breach of which had been proven already. The Court was of
the view that an ex-employee’s undertaking after the fact to
say that that she would not breach the restraint further than
she had
already done, did not prevent the grant of a final interdict.
49.
In
Mcilongo NO
v Minister of Law and Order and Others
1990
(4) SA 181
(E) the Court held, at 186E-D, that each case would depend
on its own facts and where the issue before the Court is as to
whether an infringement of rights may again occur, the fact of an
undertaking or assurance to the contrary may well be relevant,
although not decisive. In that case an interim interdict was sought
to prevent the appellant from being assaulted by the police.
Despite
strict instructions from within the police force to stop the abuse,
the appellant received further threats thereafter.
In the
circumstances, the Court held that an undertaking from the police
would probably be of little value, and would not provide
the
appellant with sufficient protection against the execution of those
threats.
50.
In
Condé
Nast Publications Ltd v Jaffe
1951
(1) SA 81
(C) at 86G-H, the Court held, in relation to a feared
copyright infringement, that
“
the
applicant … has placed nothing before the Court from which the
Court can conclude that the respondent's assurances are
not bona
fide and that he intends in the future again to infringe this
copyright of the applicant. As stated in Maeder
v Perm-Us (Pty.)
Ltd.,
1938 CPD 208
and by van der Linde in his Institutes 3.4.7,
an interdict is not the proper remedy where there is no fear that the
wrong
formerly committed will be repeated. In this case I can see no
grounds upon which there can be any apprehension that the
infringement
complained of will be repeated
.”
51.
In
Performing Right Society Ltd v Berman and Another
1966
(2) SA 355
(R) at 357F-G the Court, in dealing with the copyright
infringement of musical works where the defendant had given no
undertaking not
to repeat the infringement, stated that
“
it
seems to me that … if, in addition, the defendant has gi
v
en
a
bona
fide
undertaking
not to repeat the infringement, that is an important factor which
will influence the Court in refusing an interdict
.”
52.
In the
present matter, the applicant bases it fears on historical
interactions with the respondents, who say that the
incidents pertaining to September 2020 were
isolated occurrences and were explained by the respondents.
Notwithstanding the absence
of evidence implicating the respondents
after 3 September 2020, the respondents have stated that they have
since 3 September 2020
acted in strict compliance with, and have
undertaken in their answering affidavit to continue to comply with,
the trade practice
and custom.
53.
The respondents say that their denial of
any unlawful and illegal conduct pertaining to the filling or
distribution of the applicant’s
cylinders after 3 September
2020 in the absence of any evidence to the contrary adduced by the
applicant, cannot on the application
of the
Plascon
Evans Paints
-principle be rejected but
is to be accepted for the purposes of the adjudication of this
application.
Plascon Evans
,
however, is aimed at where there are genuine disputes of fact which
cannot be resolved on the papers. Given the manner in which
the
respondents’ have answered the applicant’s allegations, I
do not think that genuine disputes of fact exist in the
present case.
54.
Upon a consideration of the papers as a
whole and the relevant case law, I am not convinced that the
undertaking given by the respondents
prevent the grant of an
interdict against them.
55.
Firstly, the respondents have conceded the
unlawfulness of their conduct prior to 3 September 2020, which
included, apart from their
infringement of the applicant’s
rights, the breaching of numerous provisions in respect of the
Pressure Equipment Regulations as
promulgated in terms of the
Occupational Health and Safety Act, and
well as other applicable
standards and regulations. Their conduct put the lives of the
consumers who purchased LPG products from
them at risk.
56.
Their conduct also exposed the applicant,
as owner of the cylinders, to the risk of being held liable under the
various safety regulations
and measures referred to earlier in the
event of damage being caused by faulty cylinders or errors in the
filling, sealing, handling
and distribution of cylinders.
57.
Secondly, there are many qualified
allegations in the respondents’ answering affidavit, namely
that they have only acted lawfully
since September 2020, or adhered
to industry customs or practices from that date. On their own
version, the respondents admit acting
unlawfully prior to September
2020 in respect of the applicant’s LPG cylinders. The applicant
has evidence that the respondent
had traded unlawfully since 2019.
The first respondent has been trading since 2015.
58.
Thirdly, the applicant issued the
respondents with a so-called “cease and desist” letter as
long ago is 3 July 2020
in respect of the unlawful use of the
applicant’s cylinders. The letter was sent long before the
private investigations into
the respondents’ conduct in
September and October 2020. Despite being warned by the applicant to
refrain from their unlawful
conduct in July 2020 already, still
caught
in flagrante delicto
in September 2020. This necessitated the launch of the
ex
parte
application.
59.
Fourthly, Mr Esterhuyse states under oath
that the respondents, who are based in George, started supplying his
business based in
Beaufort West with very sizes of the applicant’s
branded cylinders in 2019. As mentioned earlier, it is common cause
that
the first respondent has never been a distributor for that the
applicant. In other words, the respondents have been conducting their
unlawful business since at least June 2019. In answering Mr
Esterhuyse’s allegations, the respondents do not deny them.
Instead, they sidestep the issue, saying that "
as
far as Mr Estherhuysen’s (sic) allegation that the company had
previously delivered applicant’s gas cylinders, such
allegation
is unsubstantiated, and one would have expected some documentary
proof in this regard
." Clearly,
they do not deny these allegations and they do not take the court
into their confidence by disclosing the source
of supply of their LPG
gas and cylinders.
60.
Firstly, it is immaterial that the
execution of the attachment order granted on 7 September 2020 did not
result in additional evidence.
That does not mean that the
respondents have in fact stop unlawfully filling and distributing the
applicant’s cylinders.
It only means that the applicant did not
again catch them in the act (see
Oryx
Oil South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mo Than Gas Corporation (Pty) Ltd supra
at paragraph [38]).
61.
In any event, the purpose of the attached
order was not to obtain evidence: it was to secure the applicant’s
stock from the
first respondent’s premises.
62.
In the sixth place, the respondents are
based in George. The admit delivering 340 cylinders to Gordons Camp
and Gas in Beaufort
West on 1 and 3 September 2020. This evidence
indicates an operation on a regional basis and indicates further hat
the respondents
have the necessary facilities and infrastructure to
fill, seal and distribute large amounts of cylinders in two
deliveries over
a large area.t
63.
in the seventh place, it appears that the
respondents did not care that they made money at the expense of and
to the prejudice of
the applicant. They saw nothing wrong in
travelling from George to Beaufort West when making the two
deliveries referred to. They
do not explain why they did not refer
the orders to the applicant, given that it has licensed distributors
in George. They also
did not make any attempt to notify the applicant
of the orders. This is especially in concerning, given that the
applicant reprimanded
the respondents and warned them in July 2020
already to stop the unlawful filling and distributing of the
applicant’s LPG
cylinders.
64.
As to a reasonable apprehension of harm, in
Duncan v Minister of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) the Court dealt with the nature of a “suspicion”
(albeit in a criminal procedure context) at 814D-E: “ …
the
test is not whether a policeman believes that he has reason
to suspect, but whether, on an objective approach, he in fact
has reasonable grounds for his suspicion ….
”
65.
Inferences may reasonably be drawn from the
facts of a matter and an objective assessment of the facts as a whole
(
Hülse-Reutter and Others v Gödde
2001 (4) SA 1336
(SCA) at paragraph [14]:
“
What
is clear is that the 'evidence' on which an applicant relies, save in
exceptional cases, must consist of allegations of fact
as opposed to
mere assertions. It is only when the assertion amounts to an
inference which may reasonably be drawn from the facts
alleged that
it can have any relevance. … The inquiry in civil cases
is, of course, whether the inference sought to
be drawn from the
facts proved is one which by balancing probabilities is the one which
seems to be the more natural or acceptable
from several conceivable
ones. … While there need not be rigid compliance with this
standard, the inference sought to be
drawn, as I have said, must at
least be one which may reasonably be drawn from the facts alleged.”
66.
It seems to me that on the basis of what
has been stated above, including the respondents’ admitted past
unlawful conduct,
their bare denials or evasive answers of material
allegations made against them (including the failure to disclose the
source of
their cylinders when presented with the allegation that
they had been using the applicant’s cylinders since 2019), a
pattern
of behaviour has been established, and the applicant is
objectively reasonable in harbouring the fear – reasonably
inferred
from those facts - that the respondents may again infringe
its rights in the future.
67.
In these circumstances, the respondents’
undertaking is not sufficient to prevent the grant of interdictory
relief against
them.
Conclusion
68.
I agree with the applicant’s counsel
that the remainder of the respondents’ defences are without
merit. They complain
that the
ex parte
application was not urgent, despite the fact that it is clear from
the notice of motion it had not been brought on an urgent basis.
The
applicant explained the events leading to the launch of the
application and that it experienced difficulties with its
correspondence
attorney in enrolling the matter which was eventually
only heard on 13 August 2021.
69.
In the circumstances, the applicant is
entitled to the relief sought.
70.
In relation to paragraphs 5 and 6 of the
notice of motion, it has been stated as follows in
Cerebos
Food Corporation Ltd v Diverse Foods SA (Pty) Ltd and another
1984 (4) SA 149
(T) at 164D-E:
“
I deal
first with the order for interim attachment of property in which a
real or personal right is claimed. By this is meant rights
under the
common law, for example ownership or a right to delivery flowing
from a contract, and statutory rights, …
This is not a
true Anton Piller remedy. For many years, the Courts have
granted interim attachment orders where the plaintiff
alleged an
existing right in a thing and the only way in which that thing could
be preserved or irreparable harm be prevented would
be by the
attachment thereof pendente lite. Morrison v African Guarantee
and Indemnity Co Ltd 1936 (1) PH M35 (T); Loader
v De
Beer
1947
(1) SA 87
(W); Van Rhyn v Reef Developments A (Pty) Ltd
1973
(1) SA 488
(W) at 492.”
71.
It appears, from the case law involving
interdictory relief between entities such as the present parties,
that relief of this nature
is frequently given so as to safeguard a
successful party’s interests (see, for example,
Oryx
Oil supra
and
Tolgaz
supra
). Given the background to this
matter, I intend to follow suit.
Costs
72.
Costs fall to be decided judicially in the
exercise by the Court of a broad discretion in the strict sense of
the concept.
This is a matter where, in my
view, the respondents’ conduct and the manner in which they
approached their opposition to these
proceedings justify the grant of
an order of costs on the scale of attorney and client.
73.
This view is formed with reference to the
extended meaning of “vexatious” referred to
Johannesburg
City Council v Television and Electrical Distributors (Pty) Ltd and
another
1997 (1) SA 157
(A) at 177D: “
…
in appropriate circumstances
the conduct of a litigant may be adjudged ‘vexatious’
within the extended meaning that
has been placed upon this terms in a
number of decisions, that is, when such conduct has resulted in
‘unnecessary trouble
and expense which the other side ought not
to bear (In re Alluvial Creek
1929 CPD 532
at 535)
.”
Order
In
all of these circumstances, it is ordered as follows:
74.
The respondents or any
one of them, and any servant or employee or other person purporting
to act on their behalf, are interdicted
and restrained from receiving
or being in possession of more than 10 (ten) of any of the
applicant’s cyplinders at any point
in time.
75.
The respondents or any
one of them, and any servant or employee or other person purporting
to act on their behalf, are interdicted
and restrained from from
filling and distributing any of the applicant’s cylinders.
76.
Representatives of the
applicant are permitted to attend at and to enter upon the premises
of the first respondent or any other
premises within the jurisdiction
of this Court from which the respondents conduct business, on a
weekly basis during normal business
hours, and the respondents are
directed to surrender and hand over to the applicant or any person
duly authorised thereto by the
applicant, any of the applicant’s
cylinders which can be identified as such and/or which carry the
applicant branding, which
are in the position of the respondents.
77.
Failing compliance by
the respondents with the terms of paragraph 76 above, the relevant
sheriff (whomay be accompanied by a representative
of the applicant)
is directed to take possession of any of the applicant’s
cylinders which are found by the Sheriff in the
possession of the
respondents at any premises where the rspondents may be trading, or
which are found by the Sheriff on any vehicle
identified as that of
the respondents or any one of them, or which is being used to convey
any such cylinders for or on behalf
of the respondents, either
presently or in the future, and whether such cylinders contain liquid
petroluem gas or not, and the
Sheriff is authorised forthwith to hand
these over to the applicant or the applicant’s duly authorised
representatives.
78.
The respondents are
ordered to return to the applicant all of the applicant’s
cylinders in their possession from time time.
79.
The costs of this
application, as well as the
ex
parte
application
brought on 13 August 2021, shall be borne by the first and second
respondents jointly and severally, the one paying,
the other to be
absolved.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
HEARING
DATE:
7 March 2022
Appearances
:
For
the applicant
:
W. H. Pocock, instructed by Yammin
Hammond Attorneys
For
the respondents
:
D. van der Merwe, instructed by Bailey Haynes Inc.
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