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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 131
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## Joyco (Pty) Limited v WV Squared (Pty) Limited and Others (2024-137245)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 131 (21 February 2025)
Joyco (Pty) Limited v WV Squared (Pty) Limited and Others (2024-137245)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 131 (21 February 2025)
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sino date 21 February 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
case
NO
:
2024-137245
DATE
:
21
February
2025
In the matter between:
JOYCO
(PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
WV
SQUARED (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
KEVIN
SEAN WHITTAKER
Second Respondent
GARETH
HARVEY
Third Respondent
GAVIN
HOWARD VAREJES
Fourth Respondent
BLACKWAVE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
Fifth Respondent
RICHMARK
HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
Sixth Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Joyco v WV Squared and 5 Others (2024-137245)
[2025]
ZAGPJHC ---
(21 February 2025)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
11 February 2025
Delivered:
21 February 2025 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on
21 February 2025.
Summary:
Civil procedure – urgent application –
for interdictory relief against erstwhile employees of company –
unlawful
competition and unlawful use of confidential information –
to constitute confidential information, such information should:
(a)
involve and be capable of application in trade or industry; (b) must
be useful; (c) must not be public knowledge and public
property, that
is objectively determined, it must be known only to a restricted
number of people or to a closed circle of persons;
and (d)
objectively determined must be of economic value to the person
seeking to protect it – applicant failed to comply
with these
requirements – no protectable interested demonstrates –
application should therefore fail – application
should also
fail due to lack of urgency – any urgency self-created –
Urgent application struck from the
roll for lack of urgency.
ORDER
(1)
The applicant’s urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the urgent court roll for lack of urgency.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the first to sixth
second respondents’ costs of this urgent application, such
costs to include the
costs consequent upon the employment of two
Counsel, one being Senior Counsel, such charges to be taxed on scale
‘C’
of the tariff applicable in terms of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The applicant (Joyco) is in the so called
‘Fast Moving Consumer Goods’ (FMCG) business and provides
the mass retail
market with high quality products that are sourced by
Joyco from around the world. Joyco claims to ‘bridge the gap
between
international suppliers and local retailers, thereby
providing consumers with access to the finest products from
overseas’.
The fifth respondent (Blackwave Investments)
previously owned fifty percent of the shareholding in Joyco. The
second respondent
(Mr Whittaker) was, until May 2024, in the employ
of Joyco essentially as a Key Accounts Manager. The third respondent
(Mr Harvey)
was also previously employed by Joyco as a Sales Manager.
Both of these individuals are closely related to the fourth
respondent
(Mr Varejes), who appears to be the controlling mind
behind and shareholder of Blackwave Investments and the fifth
respondent (Richmark
Holdings).
[2].
Towards the end of May 2024, Blackwave and
Mr Varejes exited Joyco and terminated their involvement in the said
company by selling
its fifty percent shareholding in the said company
back to its previous sole owner. At the same time Messrs Whittaker
and Harvey
resigned as employees of Joyco and immediately thereafter
started trading, together with certain other individuals, as the
first
respondent (WV Squared), which they had registered with CIPC on
7 February 2024. Importantly, WV Squared and Mr Whittaker
started marketing, promoting and selling a fast-moving consumer
product, namely a ‘Caliburn Bar B600’ vape, which,
according to Joyco, is the exact same vape that it had identified and
wanted to sell. WV Squared also holds itself out as ‘a
distinguished entity in the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector,
serving as both a wholesaler and distributor with a broad
reach
across various markets’.
[3].
Joyco therefore alleges that the first to
fourth respondents are unlawfully competing with it in that Mr
Whittaker, in breach of
his fiduciary duty to Joyco, is using its
confidential information and has also stolen its business
opportunity.
[4].
In this opposed urgent application Joyco
applies on an urgent basis for an order in the following terms: -
‘
(1)
…
... …
(2)
The first respondent is finally interdicted
and restrained, whether directly or indirectly through any other
juristic entity or
persona from which it will derive a benefit, from:
(2.1)
pursuing, accepting, or making use of the
corporate opportunity which was misappropriated from the applicant;
namely the marketing
an UWELL Technology co. Ltd ("UWELL"),
Caliburn Bar 86000 white-labelled by the first respondent under the
brand "EXSO"
and
(2.2)
directly or indirectly, competing
unlawfully with the applicant.
(3)
The second to fourth respondents are
finally interdicted and restrained, whether directly or indirectly
through any other juristic
entity or persona from which they (or any
of them) will derive a personal benefit, from:
(3.1)
pursuing, accepting, or making use of the
corporate opportunity which was misappropriated from the applicant;
namely the marketing
and sale of the UWELL, Caliburn Bar B6000 vape
(whether white-labelled by the first respondent under the brand
"EXSO"
or otherwise); and
(3.2)
directly or indirectly, competing
unlawfully with the applicant.
(4)
Alternatively, the interdicts in paragraphs
2 and 3 above are to operate immediately as interim interdicts
pending an action to
be instituted by the applicant within 30 days of
this order for final interdicts.
(5)
The applicant is to institute an action for
damages against the first to fourth respondents within 30 days of
this order.
(6)
The first to fourth respondents are to pay
the costs of this application, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be
absolved. Alternatively, in the event of the fifth
and/or sixth respondents opposing this application, ordering such
respondents
as who oppose the application to pay the costs of this
application, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
(7)
Further and/or alternative relief .’
[5].
In issue in this opposed urgent application
is whether the applicant has demonstrated a sustainable cause of
action based on unlawful
competition and the misappropriation of
confidential information. Crystalised further, the question to be
considered by me is whether
the applicant has proven a protectable
interest worthy of protection by an interdict, whether that be final
or interim. Those issues
are to be decided against the factual
backdrop as set out briefly in the paragraphs which follow.
[6].
As the name suggests, FMCG are products
that sell quickly at relatively low prices, such as perishables like
milk and eggs, household
items like detergents and toilet paper, to
sweets, chewing gum and cigarettes. Vapes also fall in this sector. A
vape is a battery-operated
device that simulates smoking and is
sometimes called an electronic cigarette. Most vapes are manufactured
in China. Two manufacturers
are relevant in this matter: UWELL (which
makes the
Caliburn B6000
,
which is then sold under brands owned by third parties) and
Vozol
(which is its own brand).
[7].
Joyco has been selling
Vozol
vapes, at the instance of Mr Whittaker and Mr Varejes, since 2022.
Joyco got into the vape business only after Mr Whittaker
joined,
and he is the one who brought vapes and
Vozol
to Joyco, which, during 2022, acquired exclusivity over one of the
vapes, a device known as the
Vozol Bar
1200
.
[8].
After a while, Mr Whittaker and Mr Varejes
grew concerned about Joyco becoming beholden to
Vozol
and they suggested that Joyco expand its vape business to import and
sell vapes under a Joyco-owned brand. They therefore proposed
that
Joyco identify vapes to import and sell under a Joyco-owned brand
though a process called ‘white labelling’. White
labelling is when a retailer or distributor sells a product using its
own brand name but the product is manufactured by a third
party. This
is where UWELL came in. That Chinese company makes white label vapes,
including the
Caliburn B6000
,
which could be sold under different brand names.
[9].
During October 2023, Joyco sent to China a
delegation, which included Mr Whittaker, to investigate the
feasibility of extending
its business to ‘white label’
vapes. Mr Whittaker and the delegation met with UWELL, and on their
return from China,
Mr Whittaker proposed to Joyco that it should
venture into the purchase and sale of
Caliburn
B6000
vapes and resell it as ‘white
label’ vapes. The respondents contend that there was nothing
secret about UWELL and the
Caliburn
B6000
– by mid-2023, UWELL
products, including the
Caliburn B6000
,
were already widely available in South Africa. Mr Greenberg, the
co-owner and Chief Executive Officer of Joyco, refused to take
Joyco
down the white label route and so that venture was not pursued
further by the said company.
[10].
Mr Whittaker resigned at the end of May
2024, and Mr Harvey resigned at the end of June 2024. Neither signed
a restraint, so they
were free to start new jobs competing with
Joyco. The only question is whether they, in competing with Joyco,
did so unlawfully
by trading as WV Squared, which then went on to
acquire and sell the
Caliburn B6000
vape under its brand, EXSO. UWELL has since discontinued the
Caliburn B6000
.
WV Squared has about 12 600 Caliburn B6000 vapes left in stock.
[11].
The case on behalf of Joyco is that the
Caliburn B6000
venture is a ‘corporate opportunity’ that Mr Whittaker
misappropriated for WV Squared. It is also alleged by Joyco
that Mr
Whittaker misused the connections he made whilst an employee of Joyco
and its confidential information, to set up the business
of WV
Squared. This, so Joyco contends, amounts to ‘springboarding’,
which is a term of art in unlawful competition.
It is defined as the
process by which someone acquires and uses as a springboard the
confidential information and trade secrets
of his competitor with the
aim of gaining an unfair advantage in the market.
[12].
Mr Subel SC, who appeared on behalf of the
respondents with Mr Mitchell, argued that there are no facts
that fairly support
a case based on protecting confidential
information and no facts that fairly support a case based on
preventing the growth of the
EXSO brand. Neither is a case made out,
so the contention continues, in support of the case that the
respondents stole a corporate
opportunity belonging to Joyco.
[13].
I find myself in agreement with these
contentions on behalf of the respondents. It is so, as submitted by
the respondents, that
Mr Whittaker did not sign a restraint of trade,
which means that nothing stopped him from exercising his
constitutional right to
trade, including in competition with Joyco,
[14].
The
first point to be made about Joyco’s ‘corporate-opportunity’
case is that the corporate-opportunity rule does
not apply after an
employee resigns. Even if an opportunity falls squarely within an
employer’s line of business, a former
employee ‘is at
liberty in the absence of explicit contractual restraints, to exploit
it to the full’.
[1]
An
employee cannot, however, resign to take the opportunity for himself,
but that rule does not apply – and so the employee
is free to
compete with his former employer – if the resignation was for
other reasons.
[2]
In
this case, it cannot be said with any conviction that Mr Whittaker
was prompted or influenced by a wish to acquire for himself
the
alleged corporate opportunity. There is no evidence in support of
such a conclusion.
[15].
In any event, the
Caliburn
B6000
was not a corporate opportunity
for Joyco, which, on the evidence in the matter, had made a conscious
decision not to go the route
of ‘white label’ vapes like
the
Caliburn B6000
.
On the respondents version, which I have to accept, Joyco,
represented by its Chief Executive Officer, disagreed with the white
label proposal and Joyco never took any concrete steps towards that
business operation.
[16].
That, in my view, is the end of the
applicant’s case based on the misappropriation of a corporate
opportunity. The simple
point is that the
Caliburn
B6000
was
not a corporate opportunity for Joyco at all, or, even if it were,
Joyco was never genuinely interested in the
Caliburn
B6000
(or any white label vape).
[17].
As
regards the use of Joyco’s alleged confidential information, it
is so, as contended on behalf of the respondents, that
an employee
must keep his employer’s confidential information confidential
for as long as he remains employed by his employer.
However,
confidential information is inevitably carried away in the employee’s
head after the employment has ended and which
the employee then
remains free to use for the benefit of himself or others provided
that he has not, whilst still employed by that
employer, broken his
duty of good faith by, for example, making or copying a list of that
customers.
[3]
[18].
In my view, the applicant fails to prove
the requirements for a cause of action based on confidential
information and springboarding.
As submitted on behalf the
respondents, information about the
Caliburn
B6000
is not confidential. The
existence of white label vapes and those that make them, including
UWELL and the
Caliburn B6000
,
is not confidential. There is also no dispute that UWELL and the
Caliburn B6000
have been widely available in South Africa for several years –
even before Joyco got into the vape business.
[19].
Moreover,
Joyco’s business process is not confidential. Its process
amounts to finding products, importing products and selling
products.
That information is ‘trivial or easily accessible’, not
unique to Joyco and ‘not confidential at all’.
[4]
Also,
as was held by this court in
Combustion
Technology (Pty) Ltd v Peck
[5]
,
where there is ‘nothing unique about the way an applicant is
doing business or nothing unique about its sales methods, and
its
methods are those generally adopted in a particular trade or
industry, such methods cannot be considered confidential and
therefore protectable’. This, in my view, is apt
in
casu
.
[20].
By the same token, the customers of Joyco
are not confidential. They are the major names in the fast-moving
consumer goods sector.
As for the invoices which Mr Whittaker had in
his possession at the time he resigned, the applicant could simply
have asked for
it to be returned to them. The fact that they did not
must lead to the conclusion that the invoices were not a genuine
concern
for Joyco. They are, in any event, not confidential. The
names and contact details of large retailers like Spar and Pick n Pay
are not confidential. And as for the prices on the invoices, the
invoices relate to sales that Mr Whittaker made before he resigned
from Joyco.
[21].
As
was held in
Alum-Phos
(Pty) Ltd v Spatz and Another
[6]
,
to constitute confidential information, such information should: (a)
involve and be capable of application in trade or industry;
(b) must
be useful; (c) must not be public knowledge and public property, that
is objectively determined, it must be known only
to a restricted
number of people or to a closed circle of persons; and
(d) objectively determined must be of economic value
to the
person seeking to protect it.
[22].
As I have already
indicated, none of these requirements have been proven by Joyco. What
is more is that the invoices alleged to
be confidential by the
applicant would not be useful to a competitor and has no economic
value. They lack any degree of confidentiality
and are of no use to
competitors which use the same or similar methods in their
businesses.
[23].
In my view, the
applicant has not demonstrated that they have protectable proprietary
interest that are being or will be infringed
by the respondents. The
applicants have not presented any evidence of unlawful competition,
and there is no evidence in the papers
of any injury having been
actually committed or reasonably apprehended.
[24].
For all of these
reasons, the applicant’s application should fail.
[25].
There is another reason why the applicant’s
application should fail and that relates to the issue of urgency. The
respondents
also oppose the urgent application on the grounds that
the application is not urgent. In the event that it is determined
that there
is any urgency, then it is submitted on behalf of the
respondents, that the urgency is entirely self-created.
[26].
The applicant, so the respondents contend,
have been aware since as early as June 2024 that Mr Whittaker was
marketing a new vape
– that is five months before Joyco
launched this application at the end of November 2024. The
applicant’s founding
papers leave those five months entirely
unexplained. Joyco does not explain, in detail, what happened between
June 2024 and when
it launched this application during November 2024.
The rhetorical question to be asked is why the applicant took so long
from June
2024 to November 2024 to launch this application, if, in
their view, the matter is so urgent.
[27].
The simple fact of the matter is that
howsoever one views this matter the applicant should have launched
this application much sooner
than they actually did.
[28].
This Court has consistently refused urgent
applications in cases when the urgency relied-upon was clearly
self-created. Consistency
is important in this context as it informs
the public and legal practitioners that Rules of Court and Practice
Directives can only
be ignored at a litigant's peril. Legal certainty
is one of the cornerstones of a legal system based on the Rule of
Law.
[29].
For all of these reasons, I am not
convinced that the applicant has passed the threshold prescribed in
Rule 6(12)(b) and I am of
the view that the application ought to be
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
[30].
The application therefore falls to be
struck from the roll and the costs should follow the suit.
Order
[31].
In the result, I make the following order:
(3)
The applicant’s urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the urgent court roll for lack of urgency.
(4)
The applicant shall pay the first to sixth
second respondents’ costs of this urgent application, such
costs to include the
costs consequent upon the employment of two
Counsel, one being Senior Counsel, such charges to be taxed on scale
‘C’
of the tariff applicable in terms of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
_________________________________
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
11 February 2025
JUDGMENT DATE:
21 February 2025 –
Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPLICANT:
A C Botha SC and C De
Witt
INSTRUCTED BY:
Cox Yeats Attorneys
(JHB), Sandton
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
A Subel SC and J
Mitchell
INSTRUCTED BY:
Stein Scop Attorneys
Incorporated, Morningside, Sandton
[1]
Da
Silva v CH Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 110
;
2008
(6) SA 620
(SCA) at para 21.
[2]
Da
Silva at para 20.
[3]
Knox
D’Arcy Ltd v Jamieson
1992
(3) SA 520
(W) at 527F-I. See also
Waste
Products Utilisation (Pty) Ltd v Wilkes
2003
(2) SA 515
(W) at 576E-H.
[4]
Waste
Products Utilisation
at
576E-F.
[5]
Combustion
Technology (Pty) Ltd v Peck
2020
JDR 1935 (GJ) at para 55.
[6]
Alum-Phos
(Pty) Ltd v Spatz and Another
[1997] 1 All SA 616
(W) at 623A–624A;
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