Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 91South Africa
B & B Plumbing and Building Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Govender and Others (D12620/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 91 (30 November 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## B & B Plumbing and Building Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Govender and Others (D12620/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 91 (30 November 2023)
B & B Plumbing and Building Supplies (Pty) Ltd v Govender and Others (D12620/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 91 (30 November 2023)
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sino date 30 November 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
No: D12620/2023
In
the matter between:
B
& B PLUMBING AND BUILDING SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
VISHNU
GOVENDER
FIRST
RESPONDENT
NAEEM
LOKHAT
SECOND
RESPONDENT
HEMRAJ
RAMNATH
THIRD
RESPONDENT
PLUMBKOR
(PTY) LTD
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
ORDER
1
The first to fourth respondents are interdicted and restrained until
the date in paragraph
2 below, and in the province of KwaZulu-Natal
from:
1.1
soliciting the custom of or dealing with or in any way transacting
with, in competition to the applicant,
any business, company, firm,
undertaking, association or person, which during the last twelve
months preceding the date of termination
of the employment of the
first, second and third respondents had been a competitor or a
customer of the applicant in the province
of KwaZulu Natal;
1.2
directly or indirectly offering employment to or in any way causing
to be employed any person who was
employed by the applicant as at the
termination of the employment of the first, second and third
respondents with the applicant
or at any time within twelve months
preceding such termination.
2
The period of the interdict in paragraph 1 above shall be until:
2.1
15 July 2024 in respect to the first respondent;
2.2
5 August 2024, in respect to the second respondent; and
2.3
11 September 2024 in respect of the third and fourth respondents.
3
The first to third respondents are interdicted and restrained from
directly or indirectly
using or disclosing the confidential
information of the applicant for their own benefit or for the benefit
of any third party,
including the fourth respondent.
4
Each party shall pay their own costs of the application.
JUDGMENT
Shapiro
AJ:
[1]
The applicant is a
family run supplier of plumbing material in KwaZulu-Natal, having
been in business for approximately 38 years.
The first to third
respondents were erstwhile employees of the applicant and have all
been employed by the fourth respondent, which
commenced business on 3
November 2023.
[2]
The fourth
respondent is also a supplier of plumbing materials in KwaZulu-Natal.
There is no dispute that the applicant and the
fourth respondent
trade in the same industry and geographical area. The fourth
respondent also intends to do business with the
same suppliers with
whom the applicant deals.
[3]
Although the first
to third respondents were employed by the applicant before 2021, they
all signed new contracts of employment
in December that year after
the applicant changed from a partnership to a company.
[4]
Given the dispute
between the parties about the nature and enforceability of the
restraint of trade provisions contained in all
the contracts of
employment, it is necessary to quote the relevant clauses in full:
‘
23.
Restraint of Trade
23.1
In this clause, the following words shall have the following meaning:
23.1.1
"Business" shall mean any person, business, company,
association, corporation,
partnership, or undertaking, whether
incorporated or not.
23.1.2
"Interest/Interested" shall mean interested or concerned,
directly or indirectly,
whether as proprietor, partner, shareholder,
employee, agent, financier, or in any other capacity whatsoever,
and/or permitting
his or her name being used in connection with or in
any manner relating thereto.
23.1.3
"The territory" shall mean KwaZulu Natal.
23.2
…
23.3
In terms of the restraint of trade, the employee specifically
undertakes and agrees to:
23.3.1
Not to be interested in any business in the territory which carries
on business, manufactures,
sells or supplies any commodity or goods,
brokers, or acts as an agent in the sale or supply of any commodity
or goods and/or performs
or renders any service in competition with
or identical or similar or comparative to that carried on, sold,
supplied, brokered
or performed by the company during the period of
the employment of the employee up to and including the last day of
the employment
of the employee;
23.3.2
Not to solicit the custom of or deal with or in any way transact
with, in competition to the
company, any business, company, firm,
undertaking, association or person, which during the period of twelve
(12) months preceding
the date of termination of the employment of
the employee has been a competitor, a customer or supplier of the
company and the
territory; and
23.3.3
Not to directly or indirectly offer employment to or in any way cause
to be employed any person
who was employed by the company as at the
termination of the employment of the employee with the company or at
any time within
twelve (12) months immediately preceding such
termination.
23.4
Each restraint in this entire clause shall operate and be valid and
binding for a period of twelve
(12) months, calculated from the date
of termination of the employment of the employee with the company.
23.5
Each restraint in this entire clause shall be construed as being
severable and divisible and applicable
to the employee, with whether
that restraint is in respect of:
23.5.1
Nature of the business or concern.
23.5.2
Area or Territory.
23.5.3
Article, commodities, or goods sold and/or supplied.
23.5.4
Services performed or rendered.
23.5.5
Company or concern entitled to the benefit thereof.’
[5]
The applicant's
affidavits reveal a certain lack of clarity about which clauses of
the restraint applied to its erstwhile employees.
The respondents, in
turn, initially sought to advance an interpretation of the restraint
that it prohibited "moonlighting"
during employment with
the applicant and not employment with a competitor because clause
23.3.1 prohibits employees from being
interested in competing
businesses or undertakings "during the period of the employment
of the employee up to and including
the last day of the employment of
the employee".
[6]
I
will not repeat the oft-cited method of interpretation set out by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
.
[1]
In summary, I must consider the language used, the context in which
the restraint appears and the apparent purpose to which it
is
directed, as well as the material known to those responsible for its
production. A sensible meaning must be preferred to one
that leads to
insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent
purpose of the document.
[7]
The restraint of
trade must be read in context. The reference to the period of
employment of the employee and/or the period of twelve
months
preceding the date of termination of the employment is not to
prohibit moonlighting but instead to identify the time period
in
which the company itself rendered services, supplied goods to its
customers, did business with its suppliers, etc.
[8]
The restraint clause
seeks to identify and protect current relationships between the
applicant and its customers on the one hand,
and with its suppliers
on the other. There is no other common sense or businesslike
interpretation that I can apply to the restraint,
especially given
the specific wording of clause 23.4, which refers to "each
restraint in this entire clause" that will
be binding for twelve
months after the date of termination of employment. The restraints
"in this entire clause" must
then mean the restraints set
out in clause 23.3 because these are the only restraints contained in
the agreement. The respondents'
interpretation ignores the express
wording and purpose of clause 23.4 or seeks to read words into that
clause to limit its application,
contrary to the express words "this
entire
clause". (My emphasis.)
[9]
The applicant sought
to rely on the whole of clause 23. The relief sought in the Notice of
Motion also make this clear. Therefore,
and if I find that the
applicant has made out a case, I will have no difficulty in applying
the provisions of clause 23 in the
way that it was both intended and
expressly stated to apply.
[10]
The
respondents have not levelled any meaningful challenge either to the
duration of the restraint or its geographical area and
the core
question (as always) is then whether the applicant has established
protectable interests that justify the enforcement
of the restraint.
In assessing whether the applicant has made out a case for the relief
it seeks, I must answer the four questions
set out by the Appellate
Division in
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
[2]
namely, (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 that the restraint be maintained or rejected?
[11]
The first respondent
was employed by the applicant in September 2017 as a buyer and
resigned on 14 June 2023. The second respondent
was employed as an
estimator in January 2014 and resigned on 4 July 2023. The third
respondent was initially employed as a driver
in 2013 and was
promoted to salesperson in 2018. He resigned on 10 August 2023.
[12]
The applicant
described its business, and why it asserted the need to protect trade
connections and trade secrets. The applicant
alleged that there is an
integral link between its relationship to its suppliers and its
contract customers and employed the example
of a tender being
advertised by a government department, which would include a quantity
surveyor drawing up a bill of quantities,
which will then be sent to
contractors and subcontractors to tender for the items contained on
the bill. Those contractors and
subcontractors would, in turn,
approach the applicant to provide a quotation and the
applicant's estimator (the second respondent)
would consider the bill
specific to the materials that the applicant sold and provide a
quote.
[13]
To make that quote
competitive, the applicant would contact its suppliers with whom it
had spent many years building relationships
and would request the
best price based on a discount structure, which in turn was based on
the relationship between the applicant
and the supplier, the size of
the bill, the spread of the material, the distance to the
construction site and so on. Once that
discount had been agreed, the
applicant would negotiate and apply a discount structure between
itself and its contract customer,
being the contractor or
subcontractor. Alleging that there were different categories of
discount structures, the purpose of the
exercise was to provide the
most competitive quotation to the contract customer who would compare
it to other quotes and, if accepted,
would include it in its tender
application. When the discount structures are properly negotiated
between the applicant, its suppliers
and customers, this ensures the
continuation of the applicant's customer relationships and secures
repeat business from that customer.
Therefore, according to the
applicant, its trade connections and trade secrets in the form of the
discount structures and pricing
structures (which are confidential)
constituted a protectable interest.
[14]
According to the
applicant, the first to third respondents had direct access to this
information which was necessary for them properly
to service the
applicant's customers. The first to third respondents' connections
with customers and suppliers is set out in seven
paragraphs of the
founding affidavit. Essentially, the applicant alleged that the first
to third respondents were very competent
at their jobs and building
relationships with its customers and suppliers over a period of many
years as well as having access
to confidential information that I
have described above. That was as far as the allegations went.
[15]
None of this was
really in dispute. The first to third respondents admitted that they
had relationships with suppliers and customers
but denied that the
relationship was as personal as the applicant suggested. They argued
that customer connections were really
between the customer and the
applicant, in that the customers were choosing to do business with
the applicant itself regardless
of the sales representatives because
of the applicant’s reputation and decades in the industry. As
far as suppliers were
concerned, the same applied: the discounts that
suppliers offered to the applicant were based on the applicant's
record and good
credit and had nothing to do with the identity of the
buyer or his personal relationship with anyone at the supplier.
[16]
The first to third
respondents admitted that they had previously had access to
confidential information about the applicant's customers
but alleged
they no longer had this access and had not taken any of the records
with them. They accepted that out of 500 customers
on the list, there
were only 100 active customers and, at least, by implication,
acknowledged that they knew who the active or
"elite"
customers were.
[17]
As far as their own
attempt, directly and through the fourth respondent, to contact
suppliers of the applicant and establish new
business relationships
with them were concerned, the first to third respondents stated that
suppliers were not prepared to offer
the fourth respondent anywhere
near the discounts offered to the applicant because the fourth
respondent was new in the market
and had neither order nor credit
history. Therefore, regardless of the relationships that individual
respondents may have with
representatives of these suppliers, those
connections were of no benefit to the fourth respondent as the scale
of discount had
no relationship to the intimacy of the relationship
between the representatives.
[18]
Mr
Ploos
Van Amstel
,
who appeared for the applicant, argued that I should ignore the
allegations about discounts offered to the fourth respondent because
these allegations were not supported by any objective evidence.
Whilst that criticism has some merit, the respondents' version
does
appear to be logical commercially and is not so implausible or
uncreditworthy that I can summarily reject it on the papers.
[3]
[19]
Although they denied
that the applicant established any protectable interests, or that
there was an enforceable restraint, the first
to third respondents
offered conditional undertakings in the answering affidavit to the
effect that the three of them would not
contact, solicit or do
business with the applicant's customers for the duration of the
restraints. I will return to this presently.
[20]
The respondents have
argued that the question of protectable interests does not really
arise because they are not bound by any restraint
of trade agreement
in the first place. They allege that they were handed the documents
in December 2021 and forced to sign them
without having had an
opportunity to read or consider them and that they had not expected
to see restraint of trade provisions
in the agreement as their
previous contracts of employment had not contained a restraint.
[21]
In reply, the
applicant put up the second respondent's contract of employment that
he signed in 2016, which contained a restraint
of trade that would
have operated for two years and not one year, as contemplated in the
2021 restraint. In a fourth affidavit,
the second respondent
acknowledged that he had signed the 2016 contract and sought to
explain the failure to disclose this as being
at the result of his
confusion as a lay person, together with the pressurised time periods
under which the answering affidavit
had been prepared.
[22]
Whilst the second
respondent's explanation stretches credulity somewhat, I cannot
reject it outright and I do not do so. What is
material is that the
2016 contract (and another example of a contract put up from the same
period for a different employee) contained
a restraint of trade
covenant. The second respondent alleged that he did not think the
2016 restraint was binding because it had
not been enforced when
other employees had left the applicant. Again, I have some difficulty
with this explanation, but either
way, what is clear is that
restraint of trade covenants were contained in the applicant's
previous iterations of its contract of
employment, and therefore it
would have come as no surprise to the respondents to see the same
covenants (with a shorter restraint
period) contained in the 2021
employment contract.
[23]
Whilst the
bargaining relationship between the applicant and its employees was
not perhaps equal, the respondents do not establish
at any level that
they concluded their contracts of employment under duress or agreed
to terms to which they had not expected to
agree. In my view, the
first to third respondents were being opportunistic in attacking not
only the applicability of the restraint
but its very existence. To my
mind, the first to third respondents were not forthright in this
regard and this has weighed on the
conclusion to which I have come in
this matter.
[24]
I have no difficulty
in concluding that the first to third respondents were aware of the
restraint of trade contained in the contracts
of employment.
[25]
I therefore conclude
that the restraints of trade are valid and binding on the first to
third respondents, who resigned from their
employment with the
applicant to take up employment with a competitor. The first to third
respondents therefore are all in breach
of their respective covenants
in restraint of trade.
[26]
The fact of the
breach is not in itself sufficient reason to enforce the restraint of
trade, and there must still exist protectable
interests sufficient to
justify the enforcement of the restraint.
[27]
It is convenient to
deal separately with the applicant's relationships with its suppliers
and whether those constitute a protectable
interest, before
considering the applicant's customer connections.
[28]
The applicant's
suppliers will grant discounts when it is in their interests to do
so, and the scale of that discount will be informed
by the supplier's
own calculation of the value of the client, the potential scale of
the orders that will be secured and the ability
of that client to pay
what is due. In this regard, I accept what the respondents say about
their attempt to open accounts with
suppliers who also supply the
applicant, and what the results of those attempts have been. On the
papers before me, there is nothing
to controvert the at least
plausible allegation that the fourth respondent will need not only
time but success before it can create
the kind of confidence in
suppliers that will unlock more generous discounts.
[29]
It therefore seems
to me that whatever relationship the first to third respondents might
have with representatives of the applicant's
suppliers, those
relationships have not been demonstrated to be so powerful or so
intimate that they could overcome a supplier's
own credit policies
and practices and reticence to deal with the newcomer in the market.
[30]
In my view, the
applicant has not established that its relationships with its
suppliers constitute a legitimate protectable interest
and I decline
to enforce the provisions of the restraint in this regard.
[31]
In
support of his argument that the applicant had established that its
customer connections required protection, Mr
Ploos
Van Amstel
referred me to
Den
Braven SA (Pty) Ltd v Pillay and Another
.
[4]
The
difficulty for the applicant is that
Den
Braven
highlights the difference between the kind of customer connections
that justifies the full enforcement of a restraint and one that
does
not do so. In
Den
Braven
,
the ex-employee, Mr Pillay, was an excellent sales representative who
was responsible for nearly half of the applicant's turnover
for
KwaZulu-Natal in the financial year before he resigned. In that case,
the applicant established that Mr Pillay had sufficiently
close
personal connections with customers that he would have been able to
take those customers with him to a new employer.
[32]
That
level of intimacy and connection has not been established on the
papers before me. It was not shown that the first to third
respondents were able to build up such a relationship with the
applicant's customers that they could easily induce those customers
to follow them to the fourth respondent
[5]
.
[33]
Having said that, I
am troubled by the approach that the respondents took in this case,
and what that approach portends. They did
not act in good faith when
seeking to avoid the applicability of the restraint for the reasons
of that I have set out above. Instead
of acknowledging that the
applicant had legitimate concerns and offering the undertakings that
were belatedly offered in the answering
affidavit, the approach in
the correspondence sent by the respondents' attorneys prior to the
launch of the application was again
to deny that the restraint was
either applicable or enforceable. The second and third respondents
were unstinting in the criticism
of the applicant in the answering
affidavit but did not explain why they were complimentary in their
letters of resignation.
[34]
Furthermore, the
first to third respondents acknowledged that they did have
connections with the applicant's customers. Whilst those
connections
are not as intimate as the applicant has asserted, I conclude that
they are not as removed as the respondents allege
either. In my view,
this is why the qualified undertakings were given in the answering
affidavit that the first to third respondents
would not approach or
solicit the applicant's customers for the periods of the restraints.
[35]
These undertakings
were given to avoid the enforcement of the restraint and, by
implication, concede that there must have been connections
worthy and
capable of protection. In the absence of this, the undertakings would
have been worthless.
[36]
In argument, Ms
Nicholson
,
who appeared for the respondents, was constrained to agree that, to
be effective, the content of the undertakings had to bind
the fourth
respondent as well or there would be nothing to stop the fourth
respondent evading the undertakings by deploying other
sales
representatives as the client-facing representative but armed with
the knowledge and perhaps the introductions of the first
to third
respondents. In my view, this concession was wisely made and a
reluctance to have done so may well have tipped the scales
in favour
of enforcing the restraint in the manner sought by the applicant.
[37]
If in fact the first
to third respondents have no intention of approaching the applicant's
customers, there can be no legitimate
objection to any restraint
binding the fourth respondent as well. The fourth respondent was
incorporated in 2023 and has just started
trading – and it
required the services of the first to third respondents before it did
so. This is not a company that has
independent relationships with
either suppliers or customers such that a real distinction can be
drawn between its operations,
and the activities of the first to
third respondents. To exclude the fourth respondent from the ambit of
the interdict would essentially
render the order to be meaningless,
and would give a license for its abuse.
[38]
Whilst such an
interdict might not be convenient to the fourth respondent, it would
still have the benefit of the employment of
the first to third
respondents, who, ultimately, it employed knowing that they were
bound by restraints in favour of its direct
competitor.
[39]
I agree with Mr
Ploos Van Amstel
that the applicant should not be required to rely on undertakings,
especially in the face of a binding restraint. I do not propose
to
record that undertakings were given but instead to make orders
interdicting commerce with the applicant’s customers during
the
restraint periods.
[40]
In the exercise of
my discretion, a tailored enforcement of the restraint that prohibits
the respondents from doing business with
the applicant's customers
for the periods of the restraints is sufficient and reasonable
protection of the applicant's customer
connections. This narrower
order will also mean that any confidential information still in the
hands of the first to third respondents
in respect of those customers
will be of no use to it or the fourth respondent for the periods of
the restraint. This will also
allow the applicant "breathing
room" to establish a relationship between its new sales
representative and its customers.
[41]
On a conspectus of
the facts, it would be contrary to public policy and unreasonable to
restrain the first to third respondents
from employment with the
fourth respondent and I decline to do so.
[42]
In
my view, this approach is consistent with the answers to the
questions set out in
Basson
v Chilwan
.
[6]
Whilst there is an interest that is deserving of some protection,
that interest does not weigh up so qualitatively and quantitatively
that the first to third respondents should not be economically active
or productive at all.
[43]
The last issue to
deal with is the alleged solicitation of the applicant's employees by
the first to third respondents. In terms
of the restraints, the first
to third respondents agreed that they would not solicit any of the
applicant's employees. On the papers,
there is evidence that they
have attempted to do so, even if they attempt to put an innocuous
spin on the conversation with Mr
Naidoo of the applicant and the
first respondent. The first respondent solicited the employment of
the second and third respondents,
in breach of his restraint and,
prima facie
,
attempted the same with Mr Naidoo. I can think of no reason, and the
respondents have not advanced one, why the agreement that
they
concluded with the applicant should not be enforced in this regard.
If the fourth respondent requires employees, it will have
to look
elsewhere until the periods of the restraints in this regard expire.
[44]
Both parties have
sought orders directing the other to pay the costs. In my view, this
is not a matter where either party has been
overwhelmingly
successful, such that they should be entitled to their costs. The
applicant successfully has established the existence
and
enforceability of a restraint of trade but has failed in obtaining
the full enforcement of the restraint on the terms sought
in the
Notice of Motion. Conversely, the respondents' attempt to avoid the
enforcement of the restraints was unsuccessful, as was
the challenge
to the restraints' validity. Protectable customer connections were
established by the applicant that require some
protection.
[45]
I do not consider
that the respondents acted in good faith and the giving of
undertakings in the answering affidavit and not in
the correspondence
that preceded it was born of a strategic calculation and not a good
faith attempt to resolve the dispute between
the parties.
[46]
In all of these
circumstances, the fairest outcome would be for each party to pay
their own costs.
[47]
I make the following
orders:
1
The first to fourth respondents are interdicted and restrained until
the date in paragraph
2 below, and in the province of KwaZulu-Natal
from:
1.1
soliciting the custom of or dealing with or in any way transacting
with, in competition to the applicant,
any business, company, firm,
undertaking, association or person, which during the last twelve
months preceding the date of termination
of the employment of the
first, second and third respondents had been a competitor or a
customer of the applicant in the province
of KwaZulu Natal;
1.2
directly or indirectly offering employment to or in any way causing
to be employed any person who was
employed by the applicant as at the
termination of the employment of the first, second and third
respondents with the applicant
or at any time within twelve months
preceding such termination.
2
The period of the interdict in paragraph 1 above shall be until:
2.1
15 July 2024 in respect to the first respondent;
2.2
5 August 2024, in respect to the second respondent; and
2.3
11 September 2024 in respect of the third and fourth respondents.
3
The first to third respondents are interdicted and restrained from
directly or indirectly
using or disclosing the confidential
information of the applicant for their own benefit or for the benefit
of any third party,
including the fourth respondent.
4
Each party shall pay their own costs of the application.
SHAPIRO
AJ
JUDGMENT
RESERVED:
23
NOVEMBER 2023
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN:
30
NOVEMBER 2023
Appearances:
For
plaintiff:
Mr
J A Ploos van Amstel
Instructed
by:
Anand-nepaul
9
th
Floor, Royal Towers
30
Gardiner Street
Durban
Ref:
AN:B330:JS
Email:
anapaul@law.co.za
Tel:
031 327 4600
For
defendant:
Ms
J F Nicholson
Instructed
by:
Adams
& Adams
Suite
2, level 3
Ridgeside
OfficePark
21
Richefond circle
Umhlanga
Ridge
Durban
Ref:
JSM/ML/LT5437
Email:
mail@adams.africa
Tel:
012 432 6000
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) S A 593 (SCA).
[2]
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993 (3) SA 742
(A) at 767G-H.
[3]
The applicant seeks final relief on motion, and therefore the
Plascon
Evans
rule applies.
[4]
Den
Braven SA (Pty) Ltd Pillay and Another
2008
(6) SA 229 (D).
[5]
Rawlins
and Another v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 204
;
1993 (1) SA 537
(A) at 541C-E
[6]
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993 (3) SA 742
(A).
sino noindex
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