Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 1South Africa
Ashton International College Ballito (PTY) Ltd v Erasmus and Another (D12967/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 1 (23 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
23 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Ashton International College Ballito (PTY) Ltd v Erasmus and Another (D12967/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 1 (23 January 2023)
Ashton International College Ballito (PTY) Ltd v Erasmus and Another (D12967/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 1 (23 January 2023)
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sino date 23 January 2023
FLYNOTES:
RESTRAINT
AND PROTECTABLE INTEREST
LABOUR
– Restraint – Protectable interest – School
attempting to enforce restraint over former headmaster
– To
prevent him taking up position with competitor school – Not
entitled to enforce restraint if sole purpose
is to stifle
competition.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: D12967/2022
In
the matter between:
ASHTON
INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
BALLITO
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
PETRUS
CORNELIUS JOHANNES ERASMUS
First
Respondent
CURRO
SALT ROCK PRIMARY SCHOOL (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Ploos
van Amstel J
[1]
The applicant in this matter is Ashton International College Ballito
(Pty) Ltd. It
functions as an independent private school in Ballito,
not far from Durban, on the north coast. The first respondent is Mr
PCJ
Erasmus, who was previously employed by the applicant, first as
headmaster of its school in Ballito, and later as its managing
director. The second respondent is Curro Salt Rock Primary School
(Pty) Ltd. It too functions as an independent private school,
and has
its school in Salt Rock, a small town some eight kilometres to the
north of Ballito.
[2]
In this application the applicant sought an order interdicting the
first respondent
from breaching a so-called restraint of trade
agreement and taking up employment with the second respondent, for a
period of eight
months, with effect from 15 December 2022. The matter
was argued before me in motion court on 30 December 2022, after which
I made
an order dismissing the application with costs, and said my
reasons would follow before the end of January 2023. I thought it
would
be in the interests of the parties to know the outcome as soon
as possible, as the schools start again early in the new year.
[3]
I refer herein, where it is convenient to do so, to the applicant as
Ashton College
or Ashton, to the first respondent as Mr Erasmus and
to the second respondent as Curro College or Curro.
[4]
The deponent to the founding affidavit, Mr Buys, says Ashton College
provides independent
education and schooling and is an independent
English-medium co-educational school with a Christian ethos, catering
for students
from Grade 0000 to Grade 12. He says it is one of the
biggest private schools on the north coast.
[5]
He says Curro College is a trade rival and offers the same services
as Ashton College.
They compete in the same community for student
attendance and against each other in sporting events. It seems clear
from the papers
that both schools offer quality educational, cultural
and sporting activities and have state-of-the-art facilities.
[6]
Mr Erasmus commenced employment with Ashton College in Ballito as its
headmaster in
January 2010. In May 2010 he purchased 6% of the shares
in the applicant, and in January 2017 he was promoted to managing
director.
He resigned in August 2021, and Ashton announced that he
was taking early retirement.
[7]
For the next 16 months or so Mr Erasmus was effectively retired.
Towards the end of
2022 Curro College announced that he had been
appointed as the head of its primary school, and he says in his
answering affidavit
that he hopes to take up that position at the
beginning of January 2023.
[8]
On 2 December 2022 the applicant’s attorney sent an e-mail to
Mr Erasmus, in
which she contended that he was in breach of
‘Confidentiality and Restraint Undertakings’ contained in
a Mutual Separation
Agreement which he and the applicant had
concluded in August 2021, and demanded that he sign an undertaking
that he would honour
those terms. He declined to sign it, on the
basis of advice from his attorney that he was under no obligation to
do so. The application
for an interdict was launched on 6 December
2022. The matter was opposed by Mr Erasmus, but Curro played no part
in it, save for
the delivery of a notice that it would abide the
outcome.
[9]
The agreement on which the applicant relies was concluded on 17
August 2021. It recorded
that Mr Erasmus wanted to go on early
retirement with immediate effect; it provided for a separation
package, part of which was
the purchase by the applicant of his
shares, with the purchase price payable over a period of 24 months;
and it provided that Mr
Erasmus would not for a period of two years
be employed by any company which carries on business within a radius
of 50 km and renders
‘competing services’.
[10]
The agreement is poorly drafted. It appears to be the product of a
so-called ‘cut and paste
exercise’. It refers, by way of
example, to definitions of ‘prescribed customers’,
‘prescribed services’,
‘competing services’
and ‘prescribed area’. There are no such definitions in
the agreement.
[11]
Some of the clauses are so badly worded that it is not possible to
work out what they were intended
to say. Clause 14.3 is an example.
So is clause 16, which provides as follows:
‘
Notwithstanding
that the clauses themselves do not expressly provide for this, the
expiration or termination of this Mutual Separation
Agreement shall
not affect such provisions of this Mutual Separation Agreement and
they will operate after any such expiration
or termination where
there is a necessity that they must continue to have effect after
such expiration or termination’.
It
is not clear what the expression ‘such provisions’ refers
to, which leaves the clause meaningless.
[12]
Clause 11 provides as follows: ‘A failure to comply with
conditions by either party herein
will with immediate effect force
this Mutual Separation Agreement to be null and void’. This is
a most unusual clause. I
thought perhaps it was borrowed from an
agreement which was subject to suspensive or resolutive conditions.
But in the Separation
Agreement there are no conditions which had to
be fulfilled. And in clause 9 it is recorded: ‘Both parties
completely and
willingly agree to the conditions set out in this
Mutual Separation Agreement…’ The reference in clause 11
to ‘conditions’
therefore means the terms of the
agreement.
[13]
On the applicant’s case Mr Erasmus has breached a material term
of the agreement. In terms
of clause 11 the consequence is that the
agreement became null and void. Mr Erasmus says the applicant
breached the agreement by
cancelling its purchase of his shares in
the company and failing to pay him the balance of the purchase price.
That provides another
reason for the agreement being null and void.
This all appears non-sensical, but that is the result of the wording
of the agreement.
A court is obliged to interpret an agreement with
regard to its wording, purpose and the apparent intention of the
parties, but
where that cannot be ascertained it is not for the court
to fashion an agreement for the parties.
[14]
There is a further difficulty with the applicant’s attempt to
enforce the restraint clause
in the Separation Agreement. I do not
see how it can cancel its purchase of Mr Erasmus’ shares but be
entitled to enforce
the restraint clause. These were reciprocal
obligations, as Mr Buys confirms in the founding affidavit.
[15]
The applicant contended, in the alternative, that it is entitled to
enforce the restraint clause
provided for in the shareholders’
agreement of 11 May 2010. The simple answer to this is that the
applicant was not a party
to that agreement and cannot enforce it.
The papers do not make a case for a
stipulatio
alteri
and counsel did not rely on one.
[16]
Apart from the difficulties to which I have referred, there is
another fundamental shortcoming
in the applicant’s case. It
relates to the requirement of a protectable interest. A restraint
clause such as the one that
the applicant wants to enforce is against
public policy and unenforceable if its sole aim is to stifle
competition. In
Mozart
Ice Cream Franchises (Pty) Ltd v Davidoff and Another
[1]
Davis
J said the following:
‘
In
crisp terms, a restraint of trade raises significant questions
regarding its enforceability when examined through the prism of
public policy. In deciding whether a restraint of trade is contrary
to public policy, regard must be had to two principal considerations;
firstly, 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. For this reason unreasonable
restraint of trade clauses are contrary to public policy.…
An
important guideline in the evaluation process is that a restraint
should, as far as activities, area and duration are concerned,
be
necessary to protect the infringed or threatened interest.
Furthermore, it is trite that goodwill such as trade connections,
trade secrets and confidential information are recognised as
protectable interests’.
[17]
By way of example, where a sales person in a shoe shop is offered a
better salary by a competing
shoe shop he will ordinarily not be
bound by a restraint clause in favour of his previous employer,
because there is nothing to
protect. There is no protectable
interest. The only purpose of the restraint will be to prevent a
competitor from acquiring his
sales person. The fact that the sales
person may be experienced and competent does not justify restraining
him from changing his
employment. Public policy demands that
businesses should be allowed to compete, and individuals to work and
ply their trade freely,
wherever they choose. This is why the law
requires a protectable interest for a restraint clause to be
enforceable. It is to protect
the employer’s confidential
information from falling into the hands of a competitor.
[18]
The founding affidavit deals with confidentiality, trade secrets and
customer and supplier connections
in general and unspecific terms. Mr
Buys refers to the applicant’s own unique and enhanced
curriculum; trade secrets; relationships
and tailor-made deals with
longstanding customers; the relationships that Mr Erasmus has
developed with strategic partners, including
the applicant’s
customers, suppliers, parents and connections with the communities in
general; and access to the names of
customers, students’
parents and suppliers.
[19]
There is no information with regard to the nature of the trade
secrets, or the connections with
customers and suppliers, or indeed
any of the so-called confidential information. There is no evidence
to suggest that the Ashton
curriculum is confidential, or that the
identity of its customers and suppliers is confidential. As a matter
of probability, a
school’s curriculum is available to any
parent who is considering sending a child there. Mr Buys’
say-so with regard
to confidentiality is not enough.
[20]
The description in parts of the founding affidavit of the applicant’s
confidential information
also appears to be the product of ‘cut
and paste’. It is said to include ‘manufacturing
techniques…, structures
and internal moves, designs, circuit
diagrams, instruction manuals, blueprints, electronic artwork,
samples, devices, demonstrations,
formulae, know-how,’ and so
forth. There is no explanation as to how these apply to a school.
[21]
In his answering affidavit Mr Erasmus denies that any of the
information referred to by Mr Buys
is confidential. He says there are
no trade secrets or trade connections. The curriculum is not
confidential. Ashton College offers
the curriculum set by the
Independent Examinations Board as well as the Cambridge curriculum.
Curro offers the IEB curriculum,
as do most private schools. He says
his skill and ability to head a school is a product of his own
experience and expertise developed
over the years in the teaching
profession. He is good at what he does, and that is recognised. He is
a well-known member of the
Salt Rock community and known to be
skilled at running a school.
[22]
Where there is a dispute of fact on the affidavits the court will,
with some exceptions, decide
the matter on
those
facts averred in the applicant's affidavits which have been admitted
by the respondent, together with the facts alleged
by the
respondent
.
[2]
I
see no basis for not accepting the facts averred by Mr Erasmus. On
his evidence the applicant has not shown a protectable interest.
[23]
It must be clearly understood that a school is not entitled to
enforce a restraint of trade agreement
to prevent an employee from
moving to a competing school if its sole purpose is to retain, for
example, a popular or particularly
competent teacher or headmaster,
or to prevent a competitor from acquiring his services. The agreement
will be unenforceable unless
there is a protectable interest as I
have described.
[24]
For these reasons I dismissed the application with costs.
Ploos
Van Amstel J
Case
Information
Date
of Hearing :
30 December 2022
Date
of Reasons : 23
January 2023
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicant : Mr H C van
Zÿl
Instructed
by
Applicant’s
Attorneys :
Dowling Grobler Attorneys
c/o
EVH Inc. Attorneys
Unit
4, 7 Holwood Office Park
5
Canegate Road
La
Lucia Ridge
DURBAN
Tel:
013 492 7971
Email:
sine@evhinc.co.za
gail@dg-law.co.za
Ref:
ASH/GJD
EVH/Sine/D0048/0001
Counsel
for the First
Respondents
: Mr M
Pillemer SC
Instructed
by
First
Respondents Attorneys: Kruger
Attorneys
2
Ncondo Place
Ridgeside
UMHLANGA
RIDGE
Tel:
031 830 5046
Email:
litigation@krugerattorneys.co.za
general@krugerattorneys.co.za
Instructed
by
Second
Respondents Attorneys: Couzyn Hertzhog and Horak Attorneys
Tel:012
0003 2891
Email:
bruyns@couzyn.co.za
wernerB@couzyn.co.za
Ref:
WS Bruyns/bm/C284
[1]
Mozart
Ice Cream Franchises (Pty) Ltd v Davidoff
and
Another
2009 (3) SA 78
(C) at 82H-83C.
[2]
Bailey
v Bailey
1979
(3) SA 128
(A);
Plascon-Evans
Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty)
Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A).
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