Case Law[2023] ZALAC 6South Africa
Wheelwright v CP De Leeuw Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd (JA 81/2022) [2023] ZALAC 6; (2023) 44 ILJ 767 (LAC); [2023] 5 BLLR 393 (LAC) (21 February 2023)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
21 February 2023
Headnotes
before the CCMA, the parties settled the referred dispute in terms of a written settlement agreement concluded between them on 21 October 2021. The settlement agreement was contained in two separate documents. The first was in the form of a standard settlement agreement prepared by the CCMA. In this document, the parties
Judgment
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## Wheelwright v CP De Leeuw Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd (JA 81/2022) [2023] ZALAC 6; (2023) 44 ILJ 767 (LAC); [2023] 5 BLLR 393 (LAC) (21 February 2023)
Wheelwright v CP De Leeuw Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd (JA 81/2022) [2023] ZALAC 6; (2023) 44 ILJ 767 (LAC); [2023] 5 BLLR 393 (LAC) (21 February 2023)
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sino date 21 February 2023
IN THE LABOUR APPEAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case no: JA 81/2022
In the matter between:
WESTON ARTHUR DUDLEY
WHEELWRIGHT
Appellant
And
CP DE LEEUW
JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Heard:
29 November 2022
Delivered:
21 February 2023
Coram:
Davis et Sutherland JJA and Savage
AJA
JUDGMENT
DAVIS JA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal
concerns the interpretation of a settlement agreement concluded by
the parties at the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation
and
Arbitration (CCMA) which the appellant contends extinguished rights
enjoyed by the respondent, pursuant to a restraint of trade
agreement
which the parties had previously concluded.
The
factual background
[2]
On 26 April
2007, the parties entered into an agreement of employment for a fixed
term automatically terminating on 28 February
2010. Annexure A to the
fixed term agreement of employment contained a restraint of trade
agreement which, to the extent relevant,
provided as follows:
‘
1.
In the event of the termination of my employment with the COMPANY for
any reason whatsoever, I shall not be
entitled, for a period of 24
(twenty four) months after date of termination of my employment with
the COMPANY to be or become:
1.1
The proprietor
of or partner in any business or firm;
1.2
A member or
director of any company;
1.3
Connected in
any way with any business, firm, company or other organisation (other
than as an employee); which competes in any way
with the COMPANY or
which carries on the practice of quantity surveyor or project manager
within a radius of one hundred (100)
kilometres from any place of
business of the COMPANY at which I was physically employed during the
course of the 3 (three) year
period which immediately preceded the
termination of my employment with the COMPANY.
2.
Neither shall I, for a period of 24 (twenty four) months following
the date of termination of such employment,
be entitled to conduct
any business of the nature of the business conducted by the COMPANY,
either on my own or as an employee
of another business, with any
person who was a Client of the COMPANY during the period of 3 (three)
years immediately preceding
the termination of my employment with the
COMPANY. This shall include being employed by such Client.’
[3]
Shortly before
the termination of the relevant employment contract on 28 February
2010, the parties verbally agreed that the employment
relationship
between them would continue on a permanent basis and would be subject
to the same terms and conditions as those contained
in the written
employment contract. In September 2010, the appellant, who had now
qualified as a quantity surveyor, was appointed
as an associate
quantity surveyor by the respondent. When he was so appointed as an
associate of the respondent in August 2010,
the appellant was
required to enter into a further restraint of trade agreement with
the respondent which he concluded on 10 September
2010. The terms of
this restraint clause, which was signed on 26 April 2010, essentially
replicated the first restraint agreement;
in particular, clause 2
thereof which is set out in paragraph 2 of the judgment save that the
period of the restraint was extended
to five years.
[4]
In August
2015, the appellant was appointed as a director on the respondent’s
board of directors. Pursuant thereto, he purchased
shares in the
respondent and ultimately became the owner of 20% of the issued share
capital of the respondent.
[5]
In April 2021,
the business of the first respondent experienced financial distress
which resulted in a management decision that
it was financially
unviable to increase the salaries of its directors and employees, the
parlous financial position having been
exacerbated by the Covid-19
pandemic. The respondent thus reduced staff salaries including that
of the appellant and his fellow
directors.
[6]
On 30 April
2021, the appellant generated an email to Mr Gary Andersen, a
director of the first respondent, in which he refused
to accept a
salary reduction and claimed that the first respondent was in breach
of the employment contract into which he had entered.
After a series
of exchanges, Mr Andersen accepted the appellant’s proposal to
“
move
forward with the retrenchment considering that the company can no
longer afford my services and I can no longer stomach your
behaviour
”.
[7]
Further
correspondence was exchanged between the parties, but,
notwithstanding negotiations, the parties failed to reach agreement
in respect of the monetary terms of the retrenchment, in particular,
the calculation of severance pay due to the appellant. However,
the
failure to reach agreement did not deter the respondent which went
ahead with the dismissal of the appellant based on its operational
requirements. It then paid the appellant what it considered to be
owed to him.
[8]
Dissatisfied
with this outcome, the appellant referred a dispute to the CCMA on 30
July 2021, alleging unfair dismissal and failure
to pay the correct
amount of severance pay which he insisted was due to him.
[9]
When
conciliation failed, the matter was referred to arbitration by the
appellant. At the arbitration proceedings held before the
CCMA, the
parties settled the referred dispute in terms of a written settlement
agreement concluded between them on 21 October
2021. The settlement
agreement was contained in two separate documents. The first was in
the form of a standard settlement agreement
prepared by the CCMA. In
this document, the parties
“
record
the settlement of their dispute in the following terms. By signing
this agreement the parties acknowledge that the agreement
was read to
them and interpreted (where necessary) and that they understand the
content hereof. This agreement is in full and final
settlement of the
dispute referred to the CCMA as well as in full settlement of all
statutory payment due to the applicant as reflected
at paragraph 5 of
this agreement
...”
[10]
The monetary
settlement and all other issues were then set out in annexure A to
the standard part of the agreement in which the
following appeared:
‘
1.
Wheelwright referred a dispute to the Commission of Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) under case
number GAJB14739-21, the
primary dispute being the calculation of severance pay due and
payable to Wheelwright arising from his
retrenchment.
2.
The parties have agreed to the full and final settlement of all
matters between them and wish to record
the terms of the settlement
of this agreement.
3.
The parties acknowledge that they have entered into this agreement
freely, voluntarily, without any duress
and/or coercion, and after
having carefully considered their positions and after having sought
and obtained legal advice in respect
hereof.
The
parties agree to and record the rems of settlement as follows:
Withdrawal
of Claim
4.1
Wheelwright withdraws his claims in the CCMA issued under case number
GAJB14739-21 against CPDL. Each party shall
pay their own costs in
respect of the conduct of these matters;
Severance
payment by CPDL to Wheelwright
4.2
CPDL will pay Wheelwright the balance of R600 000.00 in respect
of Wheelwright’s severance pay due and
payable, in addition to
an initial severance payment made pursuant to SARS tax directive
number 30922167 dated 28 July 2021 (Wheelwright’s
tax number
being 2309409144);
5.
This agreement is in full and final settlement of all and any claims
which the parties may have against
each other whether such claim
arise from contract, delict, operation of law, equity, fairness or
otherwise.’
The
appeal
[11]
Why was the
continued existence of the restraint of trade clause of such
importance to the parties in the context of this dispute?
The answer
turns on the so-called Nigerian Brewery project. Anheuser –
Busch In Bev SA / NV, (AB), a multinational drinks
and brewing
company, decided to construct a new brewery in Sagamu in Ogun State,
Nigeria. While the respondent was hired by AB
to undertake certain
quantity surveyor (QS) services which were required in respect of the
construction of the brewery, the idea
was that these were to be
undertaken in two phases, the first commencing in 2015 and which
continued until October 2018. Phase
2 commenced in August 2019 and
continued to completion in January 2021.
[12]
In August
2021, the respondent was appointed to perform further QS services on
a project, which became known as the ‘Gateway
PH123 uplift’
project, which was aimed at increasing the brewing capacity of the
Nigerian Brewery. At that stage, the respondent
was approached by
High-Tech Processing (Pty) Limited acting on behalf of AB to complete
a quotation in respect of these services.
[13]
Pursuant
thereto, the respondent concluded a framework contract on 20 October
2021 in terms of which it would provide a range of
services to AB.
Prior to the conclusion of this framework agreement on 16 August
2021, Mr Richard Barrow of High-Tech Processing
(Pty) Limited
generated an email to the appellant using the latter’s email
address at his erstwhile employer, being the respondent.
He enquired:
“
please
can you advise if you would be interested in the QS services and if
so how would you go about pricing such a thing with such
little
information?
” The following day
on 17 August 2021, Mr Andersen replied to Mr Barrow “
please
be advised that Weston has left the company with a restraint of trade
in place. I have forwarded your queries to Nicolas
in office that was
involved in Nigeria as well as Zaakir will shortly reply to your
questions and advise you [sic]
”.
[14]
Notwithstanding
the framework agreement which had been entered into in October 2021,
Mr Barrow wrote to Mr Andersen on 24 January
2022 in which he said
the following:
“
the
client expressed their desires to continue with the same QS it was
contracted at the time of the Greenfields build and specifically
requested that we make use of Weston on this one. It is a difficult
call for us to make as we had already negotiated and committed
to De
Leeuw, however we respectfully request that we adhere to the client’s
request and cancel the PO which has been issued
to yourself
”.
[15]
Mr Andersen replied
on 2 February 2022 at which time he pointed out to Mr Barrow that the
appellant could not be involved in the
project, given the terms of
the restraint agreement, nor could he have access to any previous
project information belonging to
the first respondent. Mr Barrow
responded that the appellant had adopted the attitude that the
settlement agreement reached at
the CCMA had extinguished the
restraint agreement and he was therefore free to perform the QS
services on the Nigerian Project.
It was in this context that the
dispute about the continued force of the restraint of trade agreement
was heard by the court
a
quo
. In
summary, the respondent claimed the restraint clause was applicable
and thus prevented the appellant from being employed to
perform QS
work for the Nigerian project.
The key dispute
[16]
It follows
that the essential dispute between the parties was the meaning and
implications of clause 2 of the settlement agreement
as set out in
annexure A namely: “
the
parties have agreed to the full and final settlement of all matters
between them and wish to record the terms of the settlement
in this
agreement
”,
which was required to be read with clause 5 which reads thus:
‘
This
agreement is in full and final settlement of all and any claims which
the parties have against each other whether such claims
arise from
contract, delict, operation of law, equality, fairness and
otherwise.’
[17]
The appellant
contends that reference to ‘full and final settlement to all
matters between them’ (clause 2) and the
further reference to
‘full and final settlement of all and any claims which the
parties may have against each other’
(clause 5) included all
claims between the parties arising out of the restraint of trade
agreement which meant that the first respondent
was prohibited from
enforcing any rights which it might have had in terms of that
agreement.
[18]
By contrast,
the respondent contended that it had not waived its rights in terms
of the restraint of trade agreement and that the
settlement agreement
brokered by the CCMA was meant only to cover matters that were
referred specifically to the CCMA, which manifestly
did not, in its
view, include disputes concerning the restraint of trade agreement.
The
judgment of the court
a quo
[19]
Sitting
in the court
a
quo,
Mkwibiso AJ accepted the submissions of the respondent that the claim
based on a breach of the restraint of trade only arose after
the
signing of the settlement agreement and accordingly was not a claim
in existence at the time that the settlement agreement
was concluded.
In the view of the learned judge, the reliance by the appellant on a
judgment in
Toerien
v University of Witwatersrand Johannesburg
[1]
(
Toerien
)
that the phrases employed in the settlement agreement covered any
claim of whatsoever nature made in the future arising from the
employment of the appellant was misplaced and thus inapplicable to
the present case.
[20]
The court held
that in the
Toerien
case, the parties had specifically agreed to settle both current
claims and claims that would arise in the future. By contrast,
in the
present case,
“
the
respondent had not waived its rights in terms of the restraint
agreement. The surrounding circumstances demonstrated that the
respondent wished to enforce its rights in terms of the restraint
agreement by reminding the appellant of his obligations in terms
of
that agreement and that ‘the terms of the CCMA settlement
agreement are not enough to upset this conclusion of the employer’s
intention. Had the parties intended to include such future claims, it
would have said so in the CCMA settlement agreement. Unlike
in
Toerien, they decided not to do so
”.
[21]
As it was not
in dispute that, were the restraint agreement to have remained alive
after the conclusion of a settlement agreement,
the court
a
quo
found
that the appellant had breached clause 2 of the restraint agreement.
It found further that his conduct was prejudicial to
the protectable
interests of the respondent to the extent that the respondent had
lost work on the Nigeria Brewery upgrade project
and the revenue that
flowed therefrom.
[22]
Ms De Witt,
who appeared most ably on behalf of the appellant, referred to the
fact that the settlement agreement included a standard
form as well
as a bespoke annexure. It is clear from the standard form agreement
that the actual dispute which was referred to
the CCMA, namely the
appellant’s claim for unfair dismissal following the fact that
he had been retrenched, in his view,
without consultation and absent
justification and that the severance pay had not been properly
calculated had been fully and finally
settled in terms of the
standard agreement. This provided clearly that “
this
agreement is in full and final settlement of the dispute referred to
the CCMA”
.
[23]
Ms Dewitt went
on to submit that, had this been the only issue which had been
settled, there would have been no need for a further
bespoke
agreement as set out specifically in annexure A. Reading clause 2 and
clause 5 of annexure A together, it was clear that
the intention of
the parties was to conclude an overall settlement agreement to settle
all matters between the parties as well
as
“
all
and any claims which the parties may have against each other whether
such claims arise from contract, delict, operation of law,
equity,
fairness or otherwise
”.
[24]
Ms De Witt
contended that, if clauses 2 and 5 had merely repeated that which was
already provided in the standard form, these clauses
in Annexure A
would have been rendered entirely superfluous and without any
purpose.
[25]
By contrast,
Mr Pincus who appeared on behalf of the respondent, contended that
Annexure A to the settlement agreement could not
be regarded as a
self-standing agreement. It had to be read as an annexure to the
standard formal agreement. Accordingly, clause
2 of annexure A had to
be read with clause 1 thereof which provides
“
the
parties have agreed to the full and final settlement of all matters
between them and wish to record terms of the settlement
in this
agreement
”. In his view, the
reference to a ‘full and final settlement’ of all matters
between them “
could only be a
reference to the two disputes which had been referred to arbitration
and in which the primary dispute was the calculation
of severance pay
due and payable by the respondent to the appellant as specifically
recorded in clause 1 of Annexure A
”.
[26]
Regarding the
email exchange between Mr Andersen and Mr Barrow, Mr Pincus submitted
that it was only at this time, that the respondent
became aware that
the appellant could be employed as a quantity surveyor in terms of
the Nigeria project and would therefore be
in breach of the restraint
of trade agreement. This occurred on 24 January 2022 and was
confirmed on 3 February 2022. Only on the
latter date could the
respondent have been made aware that a dispute might arise in terms
of the restraint of trade agreement;
that is a considerable amount of
time after the relevant settlement agreement had been concluded.
[27]
On the basis
of this reading, Mr Pincus submitted that there was no justification
for the conclusion that the respondent had explicitly
abandoned
rights which it enjoyed in terms of the restraint agreement or that
the respondent had exhibited any intention to waive
such rights
pursuant to an agreement concluded long before being aware of a
potential breach of the restraint agreement.
[28]
As noted, much
was made of the judgment in
Toerien.
In this
case, Coetzee AJ examined the meaning of the phrase
“
payment
had been made in full and final settlement of any claim of whatsoever
nature against the university arising after the above
mentioned
matter and the employment of Marcus Toerien whether now or in the
future
”.
The
learned judge referred to the argument that this phrase meant that
only if and when a claim arose from his employment and the
matter was
referred to conciliation and the determination of his employment had
occurred. To this Coetzee AJ said
[2]
:
‘
This
interpretation does not make sense. If that was the case then there
was no need to refer to anything else but the matter before
the CCMA.
The matter before the CCMA was the termination of the applicant’s
employment. The phrase in 1.4 “and the
employment” would
be superfluous. In order to give any meaning to this phrase, “the
employment” must mean something
else than the matter before the
CCMA or the termination. It cannot mean that only claims that arise
from the termination of the
employment and the employment of the
applicant conjunctively. The wording indicates that claims arising of
the termination of the
employment have been settled. The wording
further can only mean that apart from that, any claim arising from
the employment of
the applicant has been settled.’
[29]
In the present
case, the wording employed in annexure A went beyond a mere
repetition of the words used in the standard form. In
particular, as
set out in clause 5, the wording referred to “
all
and any claims which the parties may have against each other whether
such claims arise from contract, delict, operation of law,
equity,
fairness or otherwise
”.
Manifestly, this clause extends beyond the specific referral to the
CCMA which is expressly covered in the standard clause.
How else can
one explain the reference in annexure A to claims based on delict,
operation of law, equity, fairness or otherwise?
None of these causes
of action were relevant to the specific issues which have been
referred to the CCMA and which were covered
expressly in the standard
form.
[30]
As
Unterhalter AJA reminds us in
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and others,
[3]
the task of judicial interpretation of contract is not to divine a
meaning of a contract which the court considers to be the contract
that the parties might or ought to have entered into or which may be
ethically preferably. The interpretative process cannot eschew
a
careful examination of the words and sentences that have been
employed in the contested provision to determine how these words
lead
to the intended purpose of relevant clauses.
[31]
It is
significant that annexure A was specifically constructed by the
parties and their representatives who chose the express words
which
they considered would represent the purpose they had in mind in
reaching a settlement agreement. That the specific words
chosen in
this agreement (annexure A) were included by the parties provides the
clearest possible indication, when the text is
read in context, of
the purpose for which the agreement was concluded.
[32]
In this case,
an agreement was concluded subsequent to the termination of the
appellant’s employment. On the facts as set
out, it was clear
that the respondent was aware that the appellant may not adhere to
the restraint agreement. There was thus the
possibility that the
respondent’s proprietary interest would be infringed.
Accordingly, clause 5 referred to all and any
claims which the
parties ‘may have’ and whether the source thereof would
be in delict, operation of law, equity and
fairness’. A
sensible interpretation of the meaning of this phrase cannot be
confined to the specific claims which were brought
about the
intervention of the CCMA.
[33]
Aware as it
was of the existence of the restraint agreement; it behoved the
representatives of the respondent, if the latter was
so concerned, to
carve out an exclusion so that the restraint of trade agreement
continued to be operative, notwithstanding the
conclusion of annexure
A. The absence of any attempt in this regard and the use of the words
to which I have made reference, namely
‘all and any claims’
which the parties may have which was sourced in causes of action
extended way beyond the contractual
relationship between the parties.
This conclusion is fatal to the interpretation sought to be placed on
annexure A by Mr Pincus
on behalf of the respondent.
[34]
It must follow
therefor that the court
a
quo
erred
in finding that the settlement agreement did not include a dispute
that might arise out of the restraint of trade agreement.
[35]
For these
reasons, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2.
The order of
court
a quo
of 30 May 2022 is set aside and replaced with the following order:
“
The
application is dismissed. There is no order as to costs.”
Davis JA
Sutherland JA and Savage
AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Adv
C De Witt
Instructed by:
Webber
Wetzel Attorneys
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Adv
S Pincus SC
Instructed by:
Assenmacher
Brandt Attorneys
[1]
(2021)
42 ILJ 2010 (LC).
[2]
Toerien
at
para 26.
[3]
2022
(1) SA 100
(SCA).
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