Case Law[2024] ZALAC 32South Africa
Venter and Others v Twenty Four Motors CC ta Ford Ermelo (JA34/2024) [2024] ZALAC 32 (28 June 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
28 June 2024
Headnotes
the reasonableness of a restraint could be determined without becoming embroiled in the issue of onus. This could be done if the facts regarding reasonableness have been adequately explored in the evidence and if any disputes of fact are resolved in favour of the party sought to be restrained. If the facts, assessed as aforementioned, disclose that the restraint is reasonable then the party, seeking the restraint
Judgment
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## Venter and Others v Twenty Four Motors CC ta Ford Ermelo (JA34/2024) [2024] ZALAC 32 (28 June 2024)
Venter and Others v Twenty Four Motors CC ta Ford Ermelo (JA34/2024) [2024] ZALAC 32 (28 June 2024)
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sino date 28 June 2024
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: JA34/2024
In
the matter between:
ANDRIES
JOHANNES JACOBUS VENTER
First Appellant
HELGAR
KELDER
Second Appellant
LUSAPHO
ELVIS NQAKWANA
Third Appellant
SHEDRACK
SIPHO NZIMANDE
Fourth Appellant
MLANDENI
NKULULEKO MTHETHWA
Fifth Appellant
and
TWENTY
FOUR MOTORS CC t/a FORD ERMELO Respondent
Heard:
30 May 2024
Delivered:
28 June 2024
Coram:
Savage ADJP, Van Niekerk JA and Nkutha-Nkontwana JA
JUDGMENT
SAVAGE,
ADJP
[1]
This unopposed appeal, with the leave of the Labour Court, is against
the judgment and orders of that Court in terms of
which seven former
employees of the respondent, Twenty Four Motors CC t/a Ford Ermelo,
were found to have breached the provisions
of the restraint of trade
agreements they had entered into with the respondent. The employees
were interdicted by the Labour Court
for a period of 12 months from
being employed by or starting a business that competes with or
undertakes a similar business to
that of the respondent within a
radius of 300 kilometres from the respondent’s business
premises in Ermelo, Mpumalanga. In
addition, they were prevented from
using or divulging any of the respondent’s confidential
information to third parties.
The former employees were ordered to
pay the costs of the respondent’s urgent application.
[2]
The respondent thereafter unsuccessfully sought, in terms of section
18(3) of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
,
to enforce the order of the Labour Court pending finalisation of the
appeal. That application was dismissed by the Court with
no order of
costs.
Background
[3]
The appellants are five of the seven former employees of the
respondent against whom relief was granted by the Labour
Court. The
remaining two employees have since been re-employed by the
respondent. The first appellant, Mr Andries Venter, was employed
by
the respondent as a vehicle sales manager. The second appellant, Ms
Helgar Kelder, was employed as a finance and insurance trainee.
The
third to fifth appellants, Mr Lusapho Nqakwana, Mr Shedreck Nzimande
and Mr Mlandeni Mthethwa were employed as vehicle salespersons
by the
respondent.
[4]
The respondent, which does not oppose the appeal, is one of twenty
motor dealerships in Ermelo that sells second-hand
vehicles and the
only dealership franchised to sell new Ford vehicles in Ermelo. The
appellants’ new employer, which was
the second respondent
before the Labour Court, but is not a party to this appeal, only
sells second-hand vehicles.
[5]
The respondent sought to enforce the restraint agreements against the
appellants on the basis that they had unfettered
access to
confidential information concerning strategic relationships with
clients, banks, service providers and suppliers and
strong profitable
relationships with customers. This information was said to provide
their new employer with a distinct competitive
advantage, enabling it
to predict client needs and agree on discount structures and pricing
models. The respondent sought to prevent
the use by competitors of
this information to gain such a competitive advantage in the market
given that the employees had been
responsible for generating new
business, developing existing business, maintaining and negotiating
deal structures with customers
and buying agreements with sellers of
second-hand vehicles, particularly car rental outlets and car auction
houses.
[6]
The appellants were said to have gained intimate knowledge of the
respondent’s business, its services, the methods
it used to
provide optimal services to customers, deal structures, customers,
stakeholders such as banks and suppliers and commission
structures.
If this information was shared with competitors, the respondent
contended that this would erode its position and competitive
advantage in the market, in circumstances in which there exists stiff
competition between competitors. The appellants’ conduct
was
therefore said to threaten its interests and risk causing severe
financial loss to the respondent, the integrity of its business,
brand, and services, all of which were said to constitute protectable
business interests.
Judgment
of Labour Court
[7]
The Labour Court enforced the restraint agreements against the seven
employees, including the appellants, on the basis
that they had close
contact and influence over the applicant's customers, with
information as to current and future clients and
the service they
received. Their connections with customers were found to risk
business being taken to their new employer given
that they were privy
to confidential information relating to pricing and were uniquely
positioned to use this information for the
benefit of their new
employer in breach of their restraint of trade agreements. It found
that the public interest required that
the appellants should comply
with the terms of such agreements.
Evaluation
[8]
Restraint of trade agreements are valid, binding, and enforceable
unless their enforcement would be unreasonable.
[2]
In determining the reasonableness of a restraint of trade agreement,
a court must make a value judgment keeping in mind the principles
expressed through the maxim pacta servanda sunt on the one hand, and
a party’s interest in engaging freely in their chosen
trade,
occupation or profession, on the other.
[3]
[9]
As stated in Basson v Chilwan and Others,
[4]
the test for determining the reasonableness of a restraint of trade
agreement turns on the following: (a) whether one party has
an
interest that deserves protection after termination of the agreement;
(b) whether that interest is threatened or being prejudiced
by the
other party; (c) if so, whether that interest weighs qualitatively
and quantitatively against the interest of the other
party not to be
economically inactive and unproductive; and (d) whether there is an
aspect of public policy having nothing to do
with the relationship
between the parties that requires that the restraint be maintained or
rejected. A fifth consideration, identified
in Reddy v Siemens
Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd,
[5]
is whether the restraint goes further than necessary to protect that
interest. This consideration has been found to correspond
with s
36(1)(e) of the Constitution. It requires that it be considered
whether less restrictive measures exist which can achieve
the purpose
of the limitation by determining whether the restraint or limitation
is “reasonable and justifiable in an open
and democratic
society based on human dignity, equality and freedom”.
[6]
[10]
It is trite that the party seeking to enforce a restraint of trade
agreement must prove a breach of the contract, with
the party seeking
to avoid enforcement of the contract bearing the onus to demonstrate
that the restraint is unenforceable because
it is unreasonable.
[7]
[11]
The party seeking to enforce a restraint of trade must establish an
interest
worthy
of protection and that the other party is threatening that interest.
The
party
resisting enforcement must prove that it would be unreasonable to do
so.
[8]
[12]
In Ball v Bambalela Bolts (Pty) Ltd and another
[9]
,
this Court stated, in relation to the reasonableness of restraint,
that:
‘
[13] …
Prior to the decision in Magna Alloys and Research SA (Pty) Ltd v
Ellis,10 restraints of trade were only enforceable
if they were
proved to be reasonable. Since then they have been regarded as
enforceable, unless they are proved to be unreasonable.
The effect of
the Magna Alloys’ decision was to place an onus on the party,
sought to be restrained, to prove, on a balance
of probabilities,
that the restraint was unreasonable. However, because the right of a
citizen freely to choose a trade, occupation,
or profession, is
protected in terms of s 22 of the Constitution and a restraint of
trade constitutes a limitation of that right,
the onus may well be on
the party who seeks to enforce the restraint to prove that it is a
reasonable or justifiable limitation
of that right of the party
sought to be restrained.
[14] In Reddy v Siemens
Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd,11 it was held that the reasonableness
of a restraint could be determined without
becoming embroiled in the
issue of onus. This could be done if the facts regarding
reasonableness have been adequately explored
in the evidence and if
any disputes of fact are resolved in favour of the party sought to be
restrained. If the facts, assessed
as aforementioned, disclose that
the restraint is reasonable then the party, seeking the restraint
order, must succeed, but if
those facts show that the restraint is
unreasonable, then the party, sought to be restrained, must succeed.
Resolving the disputes
of fact in favour of the party sought to be
restrained involves an application of the Plascon-Evans rule.’
[13]
The respondent was required to do no more than establish the
existence of the restraint and its breach, neither of which
were
disputed. The appellants bore the onus of showing that the restraint
was unreasonable for lack of any proprietary interest.
For the
reasons that follow we are satisfied that the appellants succeeded in
doing so.
[14]
A protectable interest in the context of a restraint of trade
constitutes confidential information and trade secrets,
trade
connections, or both. The confidential information, whether
information, know-how, technology or a method, must be objectively
worthy of protection and have value in the sense that it concerns
matters such as business opportunities, customer information,
proposals, marketing, price or pricing arrangements, product
specifications, know-how, technology or manufacturing details which
are unique to the business and not generally available to third
parties. It must have actual economic value to the party seeking
to
protect it, in circumstances in which the employee is obliged
contractually to keep it confidential. The information must not
be
public knowledge, public property or be available in the public
domain. To be confidential and therefore worthy of protection,
it
must be shown to be specific or unique to the respondent, with
economic value, and known only to a restricted number of people
or a
closed circle within its business while being capable of use or
application within the same trade or industry.
[15]
To find that trade connections exist as an interest worthy of
protection, the employee must be found to have had access
to
customers and customer relationships which could be used by the
employee to induce customers to follow the employee to the new
business. Whether the employee has the ability to exert this kind of
influence, depends on the seniority, position and duties of
the
employee, the nature and extent of the employee’s contact with
customers, and knowledge of the particular requirements
of the
customer in contrast to rival businesses.
[16]
The respondent only sought enforcement of the restraint agreements in
respect of its second-hand vehicle business and
not its new vehicle
business. The facts advanced did not, however, prove that the
respondent held a protectable interest in respect
of its second-hand
vehicle business. It proved no evidence of confidential information,
trade secrets or trade connections held
by the former employees that
warranted protection. There was also no evidence advanced that repeat
customers formed the backbone
of the business, nor any dispute that
all second-hand vehicle deals rely on the “book value” of
a vehicle as a guide
for determining its value. It was not proved
that the appellants were aware of trade secrets or had trade
connections, even the
first appellant given his managerial role, that
could be used by the employee to induce customers to follow the
employee to the
new business. Nothing proved that any of the
appellants were in a position to exert influence on customers, on the
basis of specific
and unique knowledge held by them, to the prejudice
of the respondent. Far from being unique to the respondent’s
business,
the information and connections it sought to protect were
available widely in the industry. There was no evidence that
relationships
with repeat customers existed or that the appellants
held unique access to customer relationships which could be used by
the employee
to induce customers to follow the employee to the new
business. This was even more so in the case of the second appellant
who was
a trainee and not exposed to customers, with no confidential
information to disclose to her new employer, and the third to fifth
appellants who were vehicle salesmen.
[17]
It follows that in deciding that it was reasonable to enforce the
restraint of trade agreements, the Labour Court erred.
The appeal
must therefore succeed.
[18]
Given that the application concerns a civil matter between the
parties there is no reason why the ordinary rule that
costs follow
the result should not be applied in relation to the substituted order
of the Labour Court. We are not persuaded, given
that the respondent
elected not to oppose the appeal, that a costs order on appeal is
appropriate.
[19]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1. The appeal
succeeds with no order of costs.
2. The order of the
Labour Court is set aside and substituted as follows:
‘
1. The application
is dismissed with costs.’
SAVAGE
ADJP
Van
Niekerk JA and Nkutha-Nkontwana JA agree.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANTS: G Ebersöhn
of Gerrie Ebersöhn Attorneys Inc.
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: No appearance
[1]
[1809] EngR 306
;
1 Act 10
of 2013.
[2]
Magna Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
[1984] ZASCA 116
;
1984 (4) SA 874
(A) (Magna Alloys).
[3]
Esquire System Technology (Pty) Ltd t/a Esquire Technologies v
Cronjé and another
[2010] ZALC 198
; (2011) 32 ILJ 601 (LC)
(Esquire) at para 36.
[4]
[1993] ZASCA 61
;
1993 (3) SA 742
(A) at 767G-H.
[5]
Reddy v Siemens Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd [2006] ZASCA 135; 2007
(2) SA (SCA) (Reddy).
[6]
Id at para 17. See also Beedle v Slo-Jo Innovations Hub (Pty) Ltd
[2023] ZALAC 17
; (2023) 44 ILJ 2493 (LAC) at para 23 - 25.
[7]
Magna
Alloys supra
at
891B-C;
Reddy
supra
at
para 14;
Labournet
(Pty) Ltd v Jankielsohn and another
[2017]
ZALAC 7
; (2017) 38 ILJ 1302 (LAC) at para 39;
Esquire
supra
at
para 26;
SPP
Pumps (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Stoop and another
[2014]
ZALCJHB 453; (2015) 36 ILJ 1134 (LC) at para 26;
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Jordaan and Another
[2013]
ZALCJHB 333; (2013) 34 ILJ 2105 (LC) at para 20;
Waco
Africa (Pty) Ltd t/a Form-Scaff v Sack and Others
[2019]
ZALCJHB 360; (2020) 41 ILJ 1771 (LC) at paras 17 - 18.
[8]
Sadan and another v Workforce Staffing (Pty) Ltd
[2023] ZALAC 23
;
(2023) 44 ILJ 2506 (LAC) at
para
19.
[9]
(2013) 34 ILJ 2821 (LAC) at paras 13 - 14.
sino noindex
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