Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 1South Africa
Umhlanga Rehabilitation Centre v Sewram (D3438/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 1; (2025) 46 ILJ 1044 (KZD) (14 January 2025)
Headnotes
the commencement date for the restrain would be the date of termination of the Respondent’s employment. [13] Further, the Applicant seeks sizable relief in paragraph two of the notice of motion, which also appears to have no origin in the papers. In argument, the Applicant’s counsel submitted that the relief sought in paragraph two of the notice of motion was incidental to that sought in paragraph one. I cannot agree with this submission.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Umhlanga Rehabilitation Centre v Sewram (D3438/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 1; (2025) 46 ILJ 1044 (KZD) (14 January 2025)
Umhlanga Rehabilitation Centre v Sewram (D3438/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 1; (2025) 46 ILJ 1044 (KZD) (14 January 2025)
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sino date 14 January 2025
# Latest amended version 15
January 2025.
Latest amended version 15
January 2025.
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Restraint –
Interpretation of clause –
Whether a protectable
interest has been established and is worthy of protection –
Clause 15 of employment agreement
is so vague and lacking
definition that it cannot support applicant’s relief as
claimed – Respondent had not
even made it halfway through
period required to become acquainted with applicant’s
clientele – Protectable interest
not established –
Application dismissed.
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NUMBER:
D3438/2024
In the matter between:
# UMHLANGAREHABILITATIONCENTREAPPLICANT
UMHLANGA
REHABILITATION
CENTRE
APPLICANT
and
# BHAVNA
SEWRAM
RESPONDENT
BHAVNA
SEWRAM
RESPONDENT
ORDER
## The following order is
made:
The following order is
made:
1.
The late delivery of the Respondent’s heads
of argument is condoned, with no order as to costs.
2.
The application is dismissed with costs, such to
be taxed on Scale A.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
BOND AJ
[1]
At the outset, I must thank both counsel for their
thorough heads of argument. Although the Respondent’s heads
were late,
both sets were clearly well researched and of great
assistance in this matter.
[2]
The current matter concerns itself with the
enforcement of a ‘restraint clause’ in an employment
contract. The Applicant
is a Close Corporation which carries on
business providing physiotherapy services in two major hospitals in
the Umhlanga area of
KwaZulu-Natal. The Applicant cites itself as a
well-established physiotherapy practice with further specialisation
into rehabilitative
physiotherapy.
[3]
The contract of employment concluded between the
parties in and during November 2022, is common cause. Its terms are
as may be expressly
provided for in the contract. There are no
averments relating to any amendment, rectification or variation of
the agreement.
[4]
It is further common cause that the Respondent, a
senior physiotherapist was in the employ of the Applicant from 7
January 2023
until she resigned on or about 28 September 2023. Her
term of employment was therefore approximately eight full months
prior to
her resignation.
[5]
There are three issues which need to be addressed
in this matter and were, with gratitude of the court, succinctly
canvased in oral
argument. These are:
(a)
the relief being sought;
(b)
the interpretation of the ‘restraint
clause’; and
(c)
whether
or
not
a
protectable
interest
has
been
established
and
is
worthy
of
protection.
[6]
In oral argument I had raised with the Applicant’s
counsel, elements pertaining to reasonableness of the restraint.
Rightfully
so, it was highlighted that the Respondent did not lay any
factual opposition on the grounds of reasonableness.
##
## Condonation
Condonation
[7]
The Respondent’s heads of argument were
delivered out of time, only reaching the court at about 13h00 on
Monday 09 December
with the matter set down for hearing on 10
December 2024. A substantive application for condonation was
delivered. The Applicant’s
counsel correctly indicated that he
did not oppose the later delivery of the heads and would rather
proceed with the matter. The
Applicant’s counsel also indicated
that he did not persist with the late delivery of the answering
affidavit.
[8]
Accordingly, the late delivery of the Respondent’s
heads of argument falls to be condoned, with no order as to costs.
## Relief sought
Relief sought
[9]
One of the first aspects addressed by counsel for
the Applicant was in relation to the order sought in the notice of
motion.
[10]
Relevant here, is that the Applicant seeks, at
paragraph one of the notice of motion, the enforcement of a restraint
for a period
of two years from the date of the order.
[11]
When questioned, counsel for the Applicant was
unable to suggest what may support the order directing a restraint,
from the date
which the order was made as opposed to it commencing
from the date of the termination of the agreement.
[12]
I was not given authority for the proposition.
Logic dictates, that if the ‘restraint clause’ is to be
upheld, the commencement
date for the restrain would be the date of
termination of the Respondent’s employment.
[13]
Further, the Applicant seeks sizable relief in
paragraph two of the notice of motion, which also appears to have no
origin in the
papers. In argument, the Applicant’s counsel
submitted that the relief sought in paragraph two of the notice of
motion was
incidental to that sought in paragraph one. I cannot agree
with this submission.
## The ‘restraint
clause’
The ‘restraint
clause’
[14]
The starting point of any contractual dispute is
an examination of the clause giving rise to the right or remedy. In
the current
case the ‘restraint clause’ is found at
paragraph 15 of the employment agreement and reads as follows:
‘
15.
Trade Restriction
2 year 8km restriction in
event of termination / expiry of Contract’
[15]
It appears plain to me that this clause is lacking
in substance. There is no indication as to, at least:
(a)
a definite date as to when the two-year period
commences;
(b)
what ‘8km restriction’ refers to;
(c)
what is restricted for which ever period may be
applicable;
(d)
what interests are sought to be protected; or
(e)
any suggestion in wording that the Respondent
cannot practise her trade at
Gateway or
Umhlanga private hospitals.
[16]
When I asked the Applicant’s counsel to
address me on how the provisions of the ‘restraint clause’
can equate
to the relief being sought, the suggestion was that I had
the power to read into the clause that which was contended for by the
Applicant.
[17]
While
I accept that this is true, the clause itself is so scant for detail,
that I would be required to read in detail to such a
degree that I
may be accused of contracting for the parties. In the well-known
decision of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
it was
held that:
‘…
Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between interpretation
and
legislation; in a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact made…’
[18]
In my view the Applicant bears the onus to prove
the contractual terms upon which
it
bases
its
relief.
Another
aspect
worth
mentioning,
is
that
in
its
papers,
the
Applicant seems to indicate the importance of the ‘restraint
clause’. If this is so, it begs the question why so
little
effort was put into drafting this clause.
[19]
Regard
must also be had to the types of individuals who may enter into such
restraints. As Wallis AJ stated in
Den
Braven SA (Pty) Ltd v Pillay and Another
:
[2]
‘…spanning the spectrum from the hugely successful
businessperson who sells the business that he or she has built
up for
massive amounts of money and is required to sign a restraint of trade
agreement in order that the purchaser may protect
its investment, to
relatively humble employees who may be required to sign such an
agreement as a matter of rote and possibly
in
terrorem
to
deter them from seeking a more advantageous position …’
[20]
The Respondent in the current instance clearly
falls into the latter category.
[21]
I find
a strong parallel with Daffue J in
Correia
Spares CC t/a Omega Motor Spares v Croucamp
[3]
where
he stated:
‘…
I
am not prepared to read into the contract a term that the applicant
failed to put in writing. The applicant insisted on the agreement
and
either drafted the document or instructed someone to draft it. In the
event that the agreement - particularly clause 28 - is
incurably
ambiguous or lacking certainty …’
[22]
While
I accept the Applicant’s submission that I am able both to read
into the clause to a certain limited degree and to restrict
certain
of its terms (should they be proven, such as duration of a
restraint), if the full extent of such terms conflict with the
demands of public policy, I find myself in agreement with what was
stated by Sutherland DJP:
[4]
‘…
the
legal principles, as I understand them, do not confer on me the
powers of Father Christmas. I cannot rescue the un-rescuable.’
[23]
It is common that SMME businesses are reluctant to
seek advice from attorneys, and less so to employ attorneys to
prepare important
legal agreements. This pattern, fuelled undoubtedly
by the rising cost of legal charges, often results in unforeseen
circumstances
by the time the matter reaches a litigious stage. That
being said, once the matter has reached a litigious stage, it is then
too
late to cure the challenges which have arisen, and the court
cannot then, at that late stage, return to the contractual drawing
board.
[24]
I find that clause 15 of the employment agreement
is so vague and lacking of definition that it cannot support the
Applicant’s
relief as claimed.
[25]
For the purposes of this judgment, I will still
consider the other aspects of the matter as was dealt with during the
oral address
and in both parties’ insightful heads of argument.
## Approach to be taken
Approach to be taken
[26]
A
court adjudicating a dispute relating to restraint of trade should
follow the approach adopted in
Basson
v Chilwan
[5]
where
the following four questions were identified in determining the
reasonableness of restraint of trade agreements:
(a)
Does the one party have an interest that deserves
protection after termination of the agreement?
(b)
If so, is that interest threatened by the other
party?
(c)
In that case, does such interest weigh
qualitatively and quantitatively against the interest of the other
party not to be economically
inactive and unproductive?
(d)
Is there an aspect of public policy having nothing
to do with the relationship between the parties that requires the
restraint to
be maintained or rejected?
[27]
The balancing act is required where although the
public interest requires parties to comply with their contractual
undertakings,
it is also in the public interest that all persons
shall be granted an opportunity to remain economically productive to
enable
them to earn a living and to support their families.
[28]
In
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
[6]
the
Constitutional Court quoted with approval, the dictum of
Automotive
Tooling Systems (Pty) Ltd v Wilkins
[7]
where
it was held that a restraint will be considered unreasonable,
contrary to the public interest and unenforceable “if
it does
not protect some legally recognisable interest of the employer, but
merely seeks to exclude or eliminate competition.”
[29]
There can be no justifiable submission that any
particular industry or trade has an inherently protectable interest.
A court must
analyse each case on its presented facts to determine
whether a protectable interest has been established.
[30]
In the current instance, in argument it was
submitted that the doctors which refer patients to the Applicant’s
practice are
trade connections, which constitute a protectable
interest. Trade connections are, in many cases found to be
protectable interests,
but as stated above, no particular trade
connection is inherently protectable. A case must be made out in the
founding affidavit
as to why any element of the Applicant’s
business may constitute a protectable interest. Whether the necessary
criteria are
satisfied is a question of fact in each case, and in
many, one of degree.
[31]
As was submitted in argument, the Applicant relies
on the provisions of paragraphs 11.3, 11.4 and 12.2 of the founding
affidavit.
These provisions however set out very few facts upon which
I am able to make any finding.
(a)
Paragraph 11.3, indicates, at a high level, that
the Respondent had access to ‘relevant internal systems’,
but there
is no actual indication as to what internal systems a
physiotherapist’s practice may have, which are ‘confidential’
as averred by the deponent earlier in the same paragraph.
(b)
Paragraph 11.3 does mention the word trade
connections, but also does not go any further to suggest what those
actually are.
(c)
Paragraph 11.4 suggests that the Respondent
‘acquired knowledge of confidential strategy and pricing
processes belong to the
applicant’. I struggle to accept that
any pricing process can reasonably be held to be a protectable
interest in a service
industry open to the public at large, where
objectively any member of the public can call the Applicant’s
offices and enquire
as to the costs of treatment.
(d)
The remainder of paragraph 11 contains generic
allegations which ask for inferences to be drawn from the averments
discussed above,
which also contain no primary facts of their own.
(e)
Paragraph 12 continues along a similar fashion of
calling on the court to draw inferences, without disclosing any
primary facts
from which such inferences can be drawn. Interestingly,
at paragraph 12.3 the Applicant’s deponent avers that ‘The
period of restrain is necessary allow (sic) the applicant to appoint
a new employee, train them in the relevant processes, and to
enable
the employee to become acquainted to the applicant’s clientele
to such an extent that it becomes plain to the applicant’s
clientele that the new person is the one with whom they must
interact.’
(f)
To my mind, this is demonstrative that no
protectable interest has been established. The Applicant’s own
averments suggest
that the period is required to train a new staff
member. That is nothing more than an internal procedure and a course
of conduct
which flows naturally from an existing staff member
leaving the Applicant’s employ.
(g)
For the avoidance of any doubt, I have considered
the other allegations set out in the founding affidavit and find no
other primary
facts upon which I can make a finding that a
protectable interest has been established.
[32]
In its
heads of argument, the Applicant relied heavily on the case of
Van
Veijeren v Kruger
,
[8]
a decision of Seegobin J in the Pietermaritzburg High Court. This
case is however distinguishable on the facts. I say this because
in
Van
Veijeren
:
(a)
the employee had been employed for nine years,
whereas in the current instance the Respondent was employed during
January and resigned
during September of the same year. This period
of approximately 9 months is therefore far shorter in comparison;
(b)
the Applicant’s business was situated in
three small centres, being Dundee, Newcastle and Vryheid, whereas in
the current
instance, the places of trade of the Applicant are major
private hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal’s busy commercial district
of
Umhlanga; and
(c)
the employee was the practice manager, and as
found by Seegobin J, ‘the face of the practice’. In the
current matter,
the Respondent does not hold such positions and can
never have been said to be the ‘face of the practice’
after being
employed for approximately 9 months.
[33]
In
Rawlins
and Another v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
,
[9]
Nestadt JA quoted from an earlier decision, with approval,
stating:
[10]
‘
such
personal knowledge of and influence over the customers of his
employer . . . as would enable him (the servant or apprentice),
if
competition were allowed, to take advantage of his employer’s
trade connection…’
[34]
Being guided by the Appellant Division in this
matter, I was unable to determine any primary facts set out which
would lead me to
the draw an inference that the Respondent had such
‘such personal knowledge of and influence over the customers of
his employer’
as was restated in
Rawlins
.
[35]
I am supported in this view given that the
Applicant makes the averment at paragraph 12.3 of its founding
affidavit that a ‘two
year restraint period’ is required
to ‘enable the employee to become acquainted to the Applicant’s
clientele…’.
It then follows that the Respondent had not
even made it halfway through the period required to become acquainted
with the Applicant’s
clientele.
[36]
I therefore cannot find that the Respondent has
the sufficiency of personal knowledge of and influence over the
customers of the
Applicant which would be required to establish a
protectable interest in this case.
## Order
Order
[37]
In the result, the order which I make is as
follows:
1.
The late delivery of the Respondent’s heads
of argument is condoned, with no order as to costs.
2.
The application is dismissed with costs, such to
be taxed on Scale A.
# BOND AJ
BOND AJ
## Case information
Case information
Date
of Hearing:
10
December 2024
Date
of Judgment:
14
January 2025
For
Applicant:
KR
ELLIOTT
Instructed
by:
Elliott
Attorneys INC.
Applicant’s
attorneys
Garsfontein
Office Park
645
Jacqueline Drive
Pretoria
keegan@elliottattornyes.co.za
Ref:
KRE/IB/KS0100
C\O
Thorp and Hands
DURBAN
caitlin@thorpeandhands.co.za
For
Respondent:
Z
PLOOS VAN AMSTEL
Instructed
by:
Moolla
Attorneys Inc
Respondent’s
Attorney
Suite
323 Richefond Circle
Umhlanga
asanda@legal-leaders.co.za
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[2]
Den
Braven SA (Pty) Ltd v Pillay and Another
2008
(6) SA 229
(D) para 35.
[3]
Correia
Spares CC t/a Omega Motor Spares v Croucamp
[2021]
ZAFSHC 99
para 19
.
[4]
Robert
v MEC for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng
Department
2023
JDR
2878
(GJ) para 25.
[5]
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993
(3) SA 742
(A) at 767F-H.
[6]
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
2017
(1) SA 613
(CC) para 35.
[7]
Automotive
Tooling Systems (Pty) Ltd v Wilkins
2007
(2) SA 271
(SCA)
para
8.
[8]
Van
Veijeren v Kruger
2016
JDR 1346 (KZP).
[9]
Rawlins
and Another v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
1993
(1) SA 537 (A).
[10]
Ibid
at 541F-G.
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