Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 3South Africa
Bruniquel and Associates (PTY) Ltd v Manje General Suppliers (PTY) Ltd and Others (D7091/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
17 February 2022
Headnotes
themselves out to be training specialists in the fields of sales training, project management, employment equity compliance, harassment GBV, bullying, chairing disciplinary (sic), POPI, diversity, transformation and BBBEE, competed with the applicant and actively sought the business of some of its clients.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Bruniquel and Associates (PTY) Ltd v Manje General Suppliers (PTY) Ltd and Others (D7091/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 February 2022)
Bruniquel and Associates (PTY) Ltd v Manje General Suppliers (PTY) Ltd and Others (D7091/2021) [2022] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 February 2022)
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sino date 17 February 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO:
D7091/2021
In the matter between:
BRUNIQUEL AND ASSOCIATES
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MANJE GENERAL SUPPLIERS
(PTY) LTD
First Respondent
MANJE COMPLIANCE AND
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
MUVASHAN
NAGURAN
Third Respondent
ORDER
(a) The application
against the first respondent is dismissed.
(b) The second and third
respondents are interdicted and restrained from making use in any way
of training material and client lists
obtained by the third
respondent from the applicant or any of its employees;
(c) The second and third
respondents are directed to deliver forthwith to the applicant all
training material owned by the applicant,
which is in their
possession or under their control, as well as all written material
(including copies) relating to the applicant’s
training, course
notes, lectures and brochures relating to advertising material;
(d) The second and third
respondents are directed to deliver forthwith to the applicant its
database and client lists, which is
in their possession or under
their control, as well as all copies thereof, in hard and electronic
format;
(e) The second and third
respondents are directed to delete permanently from their computers
or other devices any of the information
or data referred to above
which is thereon in electronic form;
(f) The second and third
respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the application.
JUDGMENT
Delivered
on: 17 February 2022
Ploos van Amstel J
[1] The applicant in this
matter is Bruniquel and Associates (Pty) Ltd. Its business is
training and consulting in what it describes
as ‘Diversity,
Transformation, HR, Shop Steward, Leadership, Conflict Resolution and
Labour Relations’. In the application
before me it seeks orders
interdicting the respondents from making use of its confidential
information, soliciting business from
its clients, making use of its
training material and client lists, and so forth. As against the
third respondent it also seeks
an interdict restraining him from
competing with it for a period of one year.
[2] The first and second
respondents are Manje General Suppliers (Pty) Ltd and Manje
Compliance and Consulting (Pty) Ltd respectively.
The third
respondent, Muvashan Naguran, is the sole shareholder and director of
each of them. He was previously employed by the
applicant, and it
claims that he uses these companies to compete with it.
[3] The applicant relies
on a restraint of trade clause in the employment contract which
existed between it and the third respondent,
and also on the law
relating to unfair competition.
[4] The applicant’s
principal place of business and head office is in Roodepoort,
Gauteng. It has a branch office in Durban,
which is where the third
respondent was employed.
[5] The applicant and the
third respondent entered into a contract of employment on 24 April
2012, in terms of which he was appointed
as a senior sales
consultant. Clause 16.3 of the contract deals with the restraints of
trade. The clause is extensive and I will
refer to its provisions in
more detail when it becomes necessary to do so. Suffice it to say at
this stage that the third respondent
undertook not to use for his own
benefit or the benefit of any other person any trade secrets or
confidential information; and
for a period of one year after ceasing
to be employed, not to compete with the applicant, or to solicit or
induce others to solicit
any clients or customers of the applicant
for the purpose of inducing them to cease doing business with the
applicant.
[6] The applicant says
that on or about 3 August 2021 it became aware that the third
respondent, through the first and second respondents,
was using its
confidential information and client lists for his own personal
benefit. The deponent says the third respondent had
access to the
applicant’s training material and confidential information
stored on its shared drive, as well as ‘hard
copy material’
in the office. He says the first and second respondents advertised
and held themselves out to be training
specialists in the fields of
sales training, project management, employment equity compliance,
harassment GBV, bullying, chairing
disciplinary (sic), POPI,
diversity, transformation and BBBEE, competed with the applicant and
actively sought the business of
some of its clients.
[7] The deponent says the
third respondent removed all data stored on the applicant’s
server ‘and created under his
name which appears to be an
external hard drive’. Presumably the allegation is intended to
be that he copied the data to
an external hard drive. The deponent
says this was the applicant’s confidential and proprietary
information, without any
explanation as to what it was. I should add
that the third respondent denies that he removed or copied any data
for an unlawful
purpose, and whatever he copied was to enable him to
do his work.
[8] The third respondent
was summoned to a disciplinary hearing which was scheduled to take
place on 13 August 2021, but he resigned
on 12 August and the hearing
did not take place.
[9] The first issue
relates to the enforceability of the restraint clause.
[10] In terms of clause
16.3.1 the third respondent undertook not to compete with the
applicant or any of the companies in the group,
while he was employed
by it and for a period of one year thereafter, in any business which
sells any goods which are dealt with
by the group or which renders
any services which are rendered by the group, within the areas of
restraint which were specified
as ‘the Republics of South
Africa, Botswana, Namibia and the Kingdom of Swaziland including each
magisterial district thereof…within
which the employer or
companies in the Group conducts business’.
[11] The area of the
restraint is extremely wide. The order sought does not limit the area
of its operation and merely seeks the
third respondent, for a period
of one year, to be interdicted and restrained from competing with the
applicant in any business
which sells any goods which are dealt with
by the applicant in the ordinary course of business and/or which
renders any services
which are rendered by the applicant as at 12
August 2021.
[12]
The papers do not make out a case for interdicting the third
respondent from competing with the applicant in the whole of South
Africa, Botswana, Namibia and the Kingdom of Swaziland. To enforce
such an agreement in the circumstances of this case will be
against
public policy, and for this reason clause 16.3 of the agreement is
unenforceable.
[1]
Counsel for the applicant did not contend otherwise.
[13] The rest of the
relief sought concerns the use by the respondents of confidential
information in relation to the applicant’s
business; soliciting
the applicant’s customers; and using the applicant’s
written training material and client lists.
[14]
The third respondent does not deny in the papers that while he was
employed by the applicant he used its client lists and training
material in order to compete with it, through the second respondent.
He says because of the circumstances pertaining to his employment
he
had no alternative but to conduct an alternative business to protect
his position.
[2]
[15] There was no dispute
before me that the information contained in the applicant’s
data base and its client lists is confidential.
If the third
respondent is in possession of any such material he is obliged to
return it to the applicant, and if it is in electronic
form he must
delete it from his computer or other devices. The confidentiality of
the applicant’s training material was challenged.
It was
created by the applicant and it stands to reason that it would not
want its competitors to be able to use it. The fact that
it deals
with principles that are in the public domain does not mean that the
training material itself is not confidential. The
third respondent
had no entitlement to the applicant’s training material when he
left its employ, and he was obliged to return
it.
[16] Counsel for the
third respondent submitted that the evidence does not show that the
third respondent came into possession of
the applicant’s
confidential material in a clandestine or dishonest way while he was
employed there. That is beside the point.
The question is what he did
with it when he resigned. He does not say in his answering affidavit
that he returned any of the material
to the applicant or that he
deleted it from his computer.
[17]
Although the applicant’s client lists are confidential, the
same does not necessarily apply to the identity of its customers.
In
Knox
D’Arcy
[3]
Stegmann J referred to an English case, with approval, in which it
was said that there is no general restriction on an ex-employee
canvassing or doing business with customers of his former employer.
The ex-employee can however lose that right if he had made
or copied
a list of the employer’s customers or deliberately memorised
it.
[4]
[18] The point needs to
be made that if the clause prohibiting competition by the third
respondent had been valid, he would have
been prohibited from
competing with the applicant and soliciting its customers.
[19] Counsel for the
third respondent informed me from the bar that the third respondent
says he is no longer in possession of any
of the applicant’s
confidential information. He did not say so in his answering
affidavit and I am not prepared to accept
his say-so from the bar.
[20] Although the third
respondent admits that the second respondent carried on business as a
training specialist in the areas highlighted
by the applicant, he
denies that the first respondent did so, and says it was cited
incorrectly. In the light of the relationship
between the three
respondents there does not seem to me to be a need for a separate
costs order.
[21] By way of summary:
the clause in the agreement that prohibited the third respondent from
competing with the applicant in the
four countries mentioned is
unenforceable; the second and third respondents are obliged to return
the applicant’s confidential
information, including its data
base, client lists and training material; and there will be no order
against the first respondent.
[22] The order is as
follows:
(a) The application
against the first respondent is dismissed.
(b) The second and third
respondents are interdicted and restrained from making use in any way
of training material and client lists
obtained by the third
respondent from the applicant or any of its employees;
(c) The second and third
respondents are directed to deliver forthwith to the applicant all
training material owned by the applicant,
which is in their
possession or under their control, as well as all written material
(including copies) relating to the applicant’s
training, course
notes, lectures and brochures relating to advertising material;
(d) The second and third
respondents are directed to deliver forthwith to the applicant its
database and client lists, which is
in their possession or under
their control, as well as all copies thereof, in hard and electronic
format;
(e) The second and third
respondents are directed to delete permanently from their computers
or other devices any of the information
or data referred to above
which is thereon in electronic form;
(f) The second and third
respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the application.
Ploos
van Amstel J
Appearances:
For
the Applicant
: L
Dixon
Instructed
by
: Phosa
Loots Inc. Attorneys
:
c/o Macgregor Erasmus Attorneys Inc.
:
Durban
For
the Respondents
: C Boden
Instructed
by
:
Garlicke &
Bousfield Inc.
:
Durban
Date
Judgment Reserved
:
15
February 2022
Date
of Judgment
: 17
February 2022
[1]
Mozart
Ice Cream Franchises (Pty) Ltd v Davidoff
2009
(3) SA 78
(C) 82H-J
[2]
The
difficulties described by him relate to the impact of the Covid-19
pandemic on the applicant; its inability to pay its employees
their
full salaries; the downscaling of work; the inability of the
applicant to pay travel and similar expenses; and the consequent
inability of its employees to make ends meet and support their
families.
[3]
Knox
D’Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
1992
(3) SA 520 (W) 526
[4]
Supra,
527H.
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