Case Law[2024] ZALAC 49South Africa
Jones v Compendium Group Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd (DA20/2023; DA11/2024) [2024] ZALAC 49 (11 October 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
11 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Restraint of trade – interpretation - context and purpose may be used to elucidate the text and not make a better contract – definite intentions of the parties must prevail.
Judgment
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## Jones v Compendium Group Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd (DA20/2023; DA11/2024) [2024] ZALAC 49 (11 October 2024)
Jones v Compendium Group Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd (DA20/2023; DA11/2024) [2024] ZALAC 49 (11 October 2024)
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sino date 11 October 2024
THE LABOUR APPEAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
No: DA20/2023
DA11/2024
In
the matter between:
ROWAN
JONES
Appellant
and
COMPENDIUM
GROUP INVESTMENT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
COMPENDIUM
INSURANCE BROKERS (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
Heard:
26 September 2024
Delivered:
11 October 2024
Coram:
Savage ADJP, Van Niekerk
et
Nkutha-Nkontwana JJA
Summary:
Restraint of trade – interpretation - context and purpose may
be used to elucidate the text and not make a
better contract –
definite intentions of the parties must prevail.
JUDGMENT
NKUTHA-NKONTWANA,
JA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, which is by leave of this Court,
pertains to the confidentiality and restraint agreement concluded
between the appellant
(Mr Jones) and the first respondent (Compendium
Group) on 20 February 2015 (2015 restraint agreement). Mr Jones was
employed as
the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Compendium Group and
the second respondent (Compendium Insurance), collectively referred
to
hereafter as Compendium. He was involved in the business of
Compendium for about 29 years as the founder and majority
shareholder.
[2]
In 2014, Mr Jones sold his shares in Compendium
to Bidvest Insurance Group (Pty) Ltd (Bidvest) for R120 million and
was paid R60
million in October 2019. He continued in his capacity as
the CEO and signed the 2015 restraint agreement with Compendium
wherein
he undertook,
inter alia
,
that:
‘
4.1
he shall not during the period of his employment with the
Company or at any time thereafter utilise for himself or for
any
other person, or disclose to any other person, any information or
trade secrets relating to the business of the Company.
4.2
he shall surrender to the company on demand, and in any event on
termination of his employment with the Company, any documents
or
records (Including written instructions, notes or memoranda) and any
copies thereof which relate to the business of the Company,
irrespective of who the author was of any such document or record.
4.3
he shall not during the currency of his employment with the Company
and for a period of 36 (thirty-six) months after the
termination of
his employment with the Company for any reason whatsoever (including
summary dismissal or notice duly given to the
Company) be:
4.3.1
directly or indirectly engaged or employed in or associated in
any way with any business which is similar to any of
the various
businesses of the Company in which he was engaged either at the date
of termination of his employment with the Company
or at any time
during the twelve-month period preceding the termination of his
employment ("the competitive business").
4.3.2
he shall not solicit orders from or do business with any customers or
suppliers of the Company where such orders
or business are in
competition with any of the Company's activities as at the date of
termination of this agreement; and or.
4.3.3
he shall not encourage or entice to (sic) incite or persuade
or induce any employee of the Company to terminate his
or her
employment whether or not in breach of any agreement.
4.4
The area to which
the restraint referred to in this agreement is applicable shall be
each of the provinces of the Republic of South
Africa as constituted
in terms of the relevant Act as amended from time to time and in
which he has rendered services to the Company
at the date of
termination of his employment and at any time during the twelve-month
period preceding the termination of his employment.’
[3]
In 2021, Mr Jones suffered ill health which led
to the termination of his employment with Compendium. Following
protracted negotiations
on the terms of future engagement, the
parties agreed that Mr Jones would continue to render services on a
consultancy basis. The
initial draft of the consultancy agreement
cited Mr Jones as a contracting party and service provider in his
personal capacity.
That did not go well with Mr Jones. He was
insistent that he would rather be contracted through a company called
iRisk Underwriting
Managers (Pty) Ltd (iRisk) because of tax
benefits. Several drafts of the consultancy agreement were exchanged
between the parties.
Pertinently, Mr Jones was removed as a party to
the agreement and replaced by iRisk, the service provider. He
was cited as
the service provider representative. The following
clause was consequently deleted:
‘
3.5
The Parties agree that this Agreement serves as
revocation or cancellation or substitution of all previous
agreements
and/or mandates concluded between the parties, including any previous
agreements concluded by Mr Jones in his personal
capacity.’
[4]
Pertinently, clause 3.5 was replaced by clause
3.4 which states that:
‘
3.4
The agreement served as revocation or cancellation, or substitution
of all previous agreements and/or mandates concluded
between the
parties.’
[5]
The final draft of the consultancy agreement,
dated 2 November 2022, was ultimately signed by Mr Jones on behalf of
iRisk and Ms
Hannah Sidiki (Ms Sidiki), Sidiki, the CEO of Bidvest
Financial Services, on behalf of Compendium. Having been through some
major
revisions, it contains the following restraint clauses:
'Restraint
and non-Solicitation
13.1
The Service Provider agrees that for the duration of this agreement
and for a period of three months after
termination, the Service
Provider and Mr Rowan Andrew Jones in his personal capacity will not,
within the geographical area of
the RSA, directly or indirectly:
13.1.1
entice or solicit, or attempt to entice or solicit, any employee of
the Company to terminate his or her employment with the
Company, or
any subsidiary or associate entity of the Company unless agreed in
writing by the Company. (SEE ANNEXURE A
[1]
)
13.1.2
entice or solicit, or attempt to entice or solicit, any existing
client or the Company, or any subsidiary or associate entity
of the
Company away from it, unless agreed in writing by the Company.
13.1.
3 use any confidential information pertaining to the Company, or any
subsidiary or associate entity of the Company to generate
rewards for
the Service Provider or any other person.’
[6]
Mr Jones by way of the manuscript, deleted
clause 13.1.4 which prevented him and iRisk from participating or
being involved in any
business activity which directly or indirectly
competes with Compendium or its subsidiary or associate entity (the
non-competition
clause). The duration of the consultancy agreement
was two years, due to terminate in September 2024.
[7]
In April 2023, Mr Jones gave notice to
terminate the consultancy agreement. In June 2023, Compendium
discovered that Mr Jones was
registered as the representative of a
company called Tuttle Insurance Brokers (Pty) Ltd (now called TIB
Insurance Brokers Dbn (Pty)
Ltd) (TIB). It is common cause that TIB
is a direct competitor of Compendium.
In
the
court a quo
[8]
Compendium approached the court
a
quo
to enforce the 2015 restraint
agreement. Mr Jones did not seriously refute that, having founded and
reigned over Compendium for
almost three decades, he developed strong
customer connections and had access to confidential information. Yet,
Mr Jones’
main defence was that the consultancy agreement
novated or superseded the 2015 restraint agreement.
[9]
In a detailed and well-reasoned judgment, the
court
a quo
,
per Allen-Yaman AJ, as she then was, rejected Mr Jones’
novation defence, stating,
inter
alia
, that:
‘
[53]
As has been mentioned, a party alleging novation is required to
establish that the parties to the contract
unequivocally intended by
the conclusion thereof to replace a prior contract. For the reasons
which follow, Mr Jones has been unable
to discharge such an onus.
[54]
Mr Jones first placed reliance on the statement made by Ms Sadiki to
him in her email of 29 June 2022, in
which she expressed her view
that the parties' future obligations could be reduced to a single
agreement, to which proposition
he had readily agreed. That
statement, however, was made at a time when it had been Compendium's
intention to contract with Mr
Jones in his personal capacity as a
consultant, and not through the mechanism of a juristic person,
iRisk. By removing himself
from the contract in his personal
capacity, no statements made by Ms Sadiki which were made in
contemplation of Compendium contracting
with him in his personal
capacity, can be found to have reflected her continued, unchanging
intention when the circumstances were
materially altered by the
subsequent substitution of iRisk for himself as the Service Provider.
…
[57]
It is also difficult to find, on Mr Jones' own expressed version and
the undisputed facts relating to his
own actions, that both parties
intended to novate the Restraint Agreement.
[58]
On his version, he was of the view that the conduct of both Ms Sadiki
and Ms Jones demonstrated that neither
thought there had been a
restraint in place. If Mr Jones’ assumption was indeed correct
then this in and of itself negated
any possibility that either one,
or both of them, by concluding the Consultancy Agreement, intended to
novate the Restraint Agreement,
as such intent could not possibly
have been formed in ignorance of the existence of the prior
agreement.
[59]
The same may be said of Mr Jones himself. At all
times during the course of the negotiations which preceded
the
signing of the Consultancy Agreement, Mr Jones appeared to have been
labouring under the impression that he was not bound by
any restraint
at all.’
[10]
The court
a quo
further upheld Compendium’s contention that the consultancy
agreement could not have novated the restraint covenant based
on the
Shifren
principle.
That is so, it was further opined, because:
‘
Although
the Consultancy Agreement was one in writing, and was in fact signed
by Mr Jones, it was signed by him only in his capacity
as the
representative of iRisk and accordingly could not have met the
requirement of signature which had previously been agreed
between
Compendium and Mr Jones at the time when the Restraint Agreement was
entered into.’
On
appeal
[11]
The
argument on behalf of Mr Jones in this Court is similar to that
advanced in the court
a
quo
and is quintessentially that the consultancy agreement
superseded or novated the 2015 restraint agreement. Mr Shapiro SC,
for Mr Jones, decried the interpretative frame espoused by the court
a
quo
which, it is contended, showed undue allegiance to terminology
instead of probing the context and the intent of the parties when
they concluded the consultancy agreement.
[2]
[12]
The proper construction of the consultancy
agreement, so it is further contended, should have been that Mr
Jones’ signature
to the consultancy agreement constitutes a
dual signature, binding him in his personal capacity and as the
representative of iRisk.
To the extent that it contains restraint
obligations that apply to Mr Jones personally, it effectively
replaced the 2015 restraint
agreement.
[13]
Compendium, conversely, contends that the
construction mooted by Mr Jones is untenable as it is oblivious to
two important facts.
First, the separate juristic personality of
iRisk, being the party to the consultancy agreement. Second, Mr
Jones' stated intention,
as pleaded in his answering affidavit, that
he did not wish to be a party to the consultancy agreement and that
he specifically
asked to be removed as a party to the agreement and
for it to be concluded in the name of iRisk.
[14]
Mr Whitcutt SC, for Compendium, is correct in
his submission that the interpretation contended for by Mr Jones,
namely that the
consultancy agreement must be interpreted to be in
substance between himself and Compendium, is one which is wholly
divorced from
the gravitational pull of the text of the consultancy
agreement itself. Moreover, this interpretation of the consultancy
agreement
is contrary to Mr Jones' intention at the time that he
concluded the consultancy agreement as he insisted on removing
himself as
a party from it largely so that he could gain tax
benefits.
[15]
The
tenets of statutory interpretation have crystalised and need not be
regurgitated. In
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon Investments
[3]
(
Capitec
)
,
the
unanimous judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal penned by
Unterhalter AJA, endorsed the principles articulated in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[4]
and added that
:
‘
[25]
…the triad of text, context and purpose should not be used in
a mechanical fashion. It is the relationship
between the words used,
the concepts expressed by those words and the place of the contested
provision within the scheme of the
agreement (or instrument) as a
whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to which a coherent
and salient interpretation
is determined. As
Endumeni
emphasised, citing well-known cases, ‘
[t]he inevitable point
of departure is the language of the provision itself
’.
[26]
…
Endumeni
is not a charter for judicial
constructs premised upon what a contract should be taken to mean from
a vantage point that is not
located in the text of what the parties
in fact agreed. Nor does
Endumeni
license
judicial interpretation that imports meanings into a contract so as
to make it a better contract, or one that is ethically
preferable
.’
[Own emphasis]
[16]
The court further stated that:
‘
Most
contracts, and particularly commercial contracts, are constructed
with a design in mind, and their architects choose words
and concepts
to give effect to that design. For this reason, interpretation begins
with the text and its structure. They have a
gravitational pull that
is important. The proposition that context is everything is not a
licence to contend for meanings unmoored
in the text and its
structure. Rather, context and purpose may be used to elucidate the
text.’
[5]
[17]
What is clear from
Capitec
is that the text used in a contract is central to the analysis
because this is how the parties chose to capture and convey their
contractual intentions. The meaning of the words of a contract can be
derived from reference to various contextual factors, which
include
the purpose of the agreement and the nature of the relationship
created by the agreement. Still, context and purpose may
be used only
to elucidate the text and not to make a better contract.
[18]
I accordingly commence the probe with clause
1.1.9 of the consultancy agreement which defines a “
party
”
as the “C
ompany, or “Service
Provider” and “Parties”
to
mean both of them. Looking at the words the parties chose to define
themselves by in the consultancy agreement, there are only
two
parties, “
Company
”
referring to Compendium and “
Service
Provider
” referring to iRisk.
Therefore, Mr Jones’ contention that the consultancy agreement
is a tripartite document is untenable.
It follows that the term
“
parties
”
referred to in clause 3.4.4 of the consultancy agreement, which
states that “
the agreement
served as a revocation or cancellation, or substitution of all
previous agreements concluded between the parties
”,
must be understood to refer to Compendium and iRisk.
[19]
This construction is also consistent with the
surrounding circumstances which were known to the parties at the time
when the consultancy
agreement was concluded. It is common cause that
clause 3.5, which appeared in the first draft of the consultancy
Agreement, specifically
mentioned that all previous agreements Mr
Jones had concluded in his personal capacity would be revoked.
However, that clause was
deleted consequent to Mr Jones’
insistence that he be removed as a party to the consultancy agreement
because he preferred
to trade through iRisk, which provided him
operational and taxation benefits. Clause 3.4.5 was replaced by
clause 3.4.
[20]
Notwithstanding
Mr Jones’ declared intention that he did not want to be cited
as a party to the consultancy agreement, on
the strength of
Steenkamp
v Webster
[6]
(
Steenkamp
),
the high-water mark of his contention before us is that his dual
signature bound him personally as a party. Consequently, the
3-month
restraint (contained in the consultancy agreement) replaced the
36-month restraint in the restraint covenant, so it was
contended.
[21]
The consultancy agreement is not the model of
clarity, a fact conceded by counsel for both parties. For example,
the restraint provision
contained in clause 13.1 expressly binds Mr
Jones in his personal capacity; clause 5.6 imposed a personal
financial penalty on
him for terminating the agreement before the
agreed termination date; and had conferred personal benefits such as
medical aid.
Hence Mr Shapiro beguilingly implored us not to be
hoodwinked by the form of the commercial transaction at stake
because, to all
intents and purposes and in truth, Mr Jones was
intended to be a party to the consultancy agreement and as such, it
constitutes
a written agreement that varied the 2015 restraint
agreement.
[22]
As put by Mr Whitcutt, which I accept, these
discrepancies are the “scars” that could only be
attributed to the negotiation
process and resulting amendments in
various drafts that birthed the consultancy agreement. Even so, the
parties’ stated intention
and the context leading to the
conclusion of the consultancy agreement strongly support the
conclusion that Mr Jones’ role
was limited to being a
representative of iRisk in line with his wishes not to be a party in
his personal capacity. The meaning
of the word “parties”
cannot be expanded to include Mr Jones. So, his insistence that he
was a party to the consultancy
agreement is untenable. Likewise,
his reliance on
Steenkamp
is
misplaced. Mr Jones has made his bed and must now lie in it.
[23]
The court
a quo
exhaustively considered the clauses of the consulting agreement in
light of its purposes, the intention of the parties and the
historical and commercial context and correctly observed that:
‘…
the
Consultancy Agreement, Compendium and iRisk did so for no purpose
other than to enable Mr Jones to continue to render services
to
Compendium as an independent contractor rather than an employee. When
he caused iRisk to be substituted as the Service Provider,
exclusively represented by himself, the restraint in relation to Mr
Jones contained in the Consultancy Agreement was not intended
to
supplant the [2015] Restraint Agreement, which remained wholly
unaffected by the Consultancy Agreement.’
[24]
If follows that the decision of the court
a
quo
to enforce the 2015 restraint
agreement is unassailable and must stand.
Section
18 appeal
[25]
Mr
Jones brought an urgent appeal in terms of section 18(4)(ii) of the
Superior Courts Act
[7]
(SCA)
against an order granted by Whitcher J on 12 April 2024 in terms of
section 18(3) of the SCA enforcing the judgment and order
of
Allen-Yaman J granted on 10 October 2023 pending appeal.
[8]
[26]
Given
the turn of events in the main appeal, much need not be said in this
appeal other than to make a few observations. The
judgment of
Whitcher J is well-reasoned and beyond reproach. The impugned
restraint order is due to expire on 31 December 2024,
less than two
months from now. The enforcement order was aimed at obviating the
evaporation of the restraint order and in turn,
insulating Compendium
from irreparable harm.
[9]
It was
cold comfort to Compendium that Mr Jones is not a man of straw and
could be sued for damages. It is well accepted that the
success in
enforcing the restraint agreement is predicated on the
impracticability of damages as an adequate remedy.
[10]
While Mr Jones, a self-proclaimed man of means, would not have
suffered irreparable harm as a result of the enforcement order.
Conclusion
[27]
In all the circumstances, both appeals stand to
be dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
[28]
In the result,
the following order is
made:
Order
1.
The main appeal against the order of Allen-Yaman J under DA20/2023 is
dismissed.
2.
The appeal in terms of section 18(4)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act
against the order of Whitcher J under DA11/2024 is dismissed.
3.
The appellant, Mr Jones, is also ordered to pay the costs incurred by
the respondents, Compendium, in respect of both appeals,
including
the costs of two counsel.
Nkutha-Nkontwana JA
Savage ADJP
et
Van
Niekerk JA concur
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by
Adv
W N Shapiro SC
Macgregor
Erasmus Attorneys Inc
For
the Respondent:
Instructed
by
Adv
C Whitcutt SC
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
[1]
This
is an annotation by Mr Jones which refers to
two
Compendium employees, Messes Debbie Crafts and Corlana Cooper, who
would be allowed to join iRisk to assist Mr Jones with
some more
difficult customers without offending this clause (anti-soliciting
clause).
[2]
See:
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(
Endumeni
)
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at
para 18
;
Capitec Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments
194 (Pty) Ltd and others
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA);
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA)
(
Capitec
)
at paras 25 and 26.
[3]
Capitec
supra
fn
2.
[4]
Endumeni
supra
fn
2.
[5]
Capitec
supra
at para 51.
[6]
1955 (1) SA 524
(A) (
Steenkamp
)
at 530C-534A. See also:
Glen
Comeragh (Pty) Ltd v Colibri (Pty) Ltd and another
1979 (3) SA 210
(T) at 214H-I;
Fourlamel
(Pty) Ltd v Maddison
1977 (1) SA 333
(AD) at 345E.
[7]
Act
10
of 2013.
[8]
Section 18 of the SCA reads as follows:
‘
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under
exceptional circumstances orders otherwise, the operation
and
execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended pending
the decision
of the application or appeal.
(2) Subject to
subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional circumstances
orders otherwise, the operation and execution
of a decision that is
an interlocutory order not having the effect of a final judgment,
which is the subject of an application
for leave to appeal or of an
appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the application or
appeal.
(3)
A court
may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2) if
the party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition,
proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer
irreparable harm if the court does not so order
and that the other
party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders
.
(4) If a
court order otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1) –
(i) the
court must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii)
the
aggrieved party has an automatic right of appeal to the next highest
court;
(iii) the court
hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of extreme
urgency; and
(iv) such order
will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of such
appeal.’ [own emphasis]
[9]
See:
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and another v Ellis and another
[2013] ZAGPJHC 274;
[2014] 3 SA 189
(GSJ) at para 24;
L’Oréal
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Kilpatrick and Another
[2014] ZALCJHB 365; (2015) 36 ILJ 2617 (LC) at 50.
[10]
Id.
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