Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 324South Africa
Supercart South Africa (Pty) Limited v Vanesco (Pty) Limited (46975/2018; 2021/30331) [2025] ZAGPJHC 324; [2025] 2 All SA 911 (GJ) (25 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 March 2025
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 324
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Supercart South Africa (Pty) Limited v Vanesco (Pty) Limited (46975/2018; 2021/30331) [2025] ZAGPJHC 324; [2025] 2 All SA 911 (GJ) (25 March 2025)
Supercart South Africa (Pty) Limited v Vanesco (Pty) Limited (46975/2018; 2021/30331) [2025] ZAGPJHC 324; [2025] 2 All SA 911 (GJ) (25 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_324.html
sino date 25 March 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
Date:
25 March 2025
Signature
:
In
the matters between:
Case
Nr: 46975/2018 & 2021/30331
SUPERCART
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
VANESCO
(PTY) LIMITED
Defendant
JUDGMENT
GOEDHART
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff and the defendant are competitors in the design,
manufacture and supply of supermarket trolleys. They are
also the two
market leaders in this field in South Africa. The plaintiff alleges
that it is the proprietor of a design registered
in 2015 under the
Designs Act 195 of 1993 (the Act), which the defendant has unlawfully
copied. The dispute concerns the plaintiff’s
90-litre and
180-litre hybrid trolleys (collectively referred to as “the
plaintiff’s trolleys”). The trolleys
are described as
“hybrid”, because the trolleys have a steel chassis onto
which is a “plastic” basket is
mounted. The “plastic”
is a high-density polyethene, a thermoplastic polymer made from
petroleum.
[2]
There is a
long litigation history, and little love lost between Mr Michael
Wolfe, the founder of the plaintiff, and Mr Kenneth
Case, the
defendant’s sole shareholder and director.
[1]
In this application, the plaintiff seeks an order compelling the
defendant to make further and better discovery in both the 2018
and
2021 actions. The defendant, in turn, seeks an order striking out the
plaintiff’s replying affidavit and dismissing the
compelling
applications on the basis it was rendered moot when the defendant
responded to the plaintiff’s Rule 35(3) and
(6) notices. The
compelling applications in the 2018 and 2021 actions are
substantially similar and the filing of affidavits in
the two actions
followed the same sequence and were thus heard simultaneously. In
this judgment, I refer to both applications as
“the
application”, albeit that the order will apply to both the 2018
and 2021 actions.
[3]
The relevant background to the current application is summarised
below.
The
2018 proceedings
[4]
The 2018
action instituted under case number 46975/2018 concerns the
plaintiff’s 90-litre hybrid trolley, and combines three
causes
of action: an interdict for the statutory infringement of a
registered design; an interdict (at common law) for the unlawful
competitive copying by the defendant of the plaintiff’s
90-litre hybrid trolley; and the statutory remedy of a reasonable
royalty for the infringement. The 2018 action had its genesis in an
enforcement application under section 35 of the Act,
[2]
,
which was then converted into a trial action pursuant to an
application by the plaintiff in terms of Rule 6(5)(g). The plaintiff
also obtained an interim interdict restraining the defendant from
“making and/or disposing of” the hybrid 90-litre
trolley
within South Africa, pending the outcome of the trial.
[5]
The defendant denies the plaintiff’s allegations of design
infringement. It contends that its conduct is not unlawful
because
the plaintiff’s registered design was not novel or original as
at the date of its registration, and that the design
had therefore
not been validly registered. The defendant counterclaims for the
revocation of the registration of the plaintiff’s
design.
The
2021 proceedings
[6]
The 2021 action instituted under case number 2021/30331 pertains to
the defendant’s 180-litre trolley. The plaintiff
alleges that
the defendant’s 180-litre trolley is identical, or
substantially similar to, the plaintiff’s trolleys
and that the
defendant has reverse engineered and/or slavishly copied and/or used
the plaintiff’s trolleys as patterns or
moulds. The plaintiff
claims: a declaration of design infringement, an interdict against
the design infringement, damages for design
infringement, an
interdict against unlawful competition and damages for unlawful
competition.
[7]
The
defendant denies that the design was registerable under section 14 of
the Act,
[3]
because it was not
new at the filing date, and denies that the plaintiff is entitled to
the relief sought in the 2021 action.
Discovery
history
[8]
The defendant served its discovery affidavit in the 2018 proceedings
in December 2021. It discovered its certificate of
registration, six
letters between the attorneys of record and the record of the motion
proceedings. In the 2021 proceedings, the
defendant discovered two
documents, one of which was a letter exchanged between the attorneys
of record.
[9]
The plaintiff served notices in terms of Rule 35(3)&(6) calling
for further and better discovery on 18 March 2022
and 25 August 2022
(“the plaintiff’s discovery notices”). Rule 35(3)
provides that where a party believes that
there are, over and above
what has been discovered by the other party, additional documents
which may be relevant to any matter
in question in the possession of
the other party, it may give notice calling upon that party to make
the documents available for
inspection in accordance with Rule 35(6)
or to state under oath within 10 days that the documents sought are
not in that party’s
possession and state the whereabouts of the
documents, if known.
[10]
The defendant did not respond to the plaintiff’s discovery
notices and on 6 February 2023, the plaintiff launched
its
application to compel the responses.
[11]
The defendant filed an answering affidavit to the plaintiff’s
discovery notices on 10 August 2023. It elected not
to file an
answering affidavit to the application to compel on the basis that
the application was rendered moot by the filing of
its affidavit
responding to the discovery notices, with due regard to the primary
relief sought by the plaintiff in its notice
of motion. For the most
part, its answer was that the documents sought by the plaintiff were
irrelevant, and where it did tender
inspection, it did so subject to
a confidentiality regime to be agreed.
[12]
The plaintiff then served a replying affidavit in the compelling
application on 22 November 2023. It also seeks condonation
for the
late filing of the replying affidavit.
[13]
On 14 December 2023, the defendant served an application to strike
out the replying affidavit. The affidavit in support
of the
application to strike out was served on 20 February 2024.
The
application to strike out
[14]
The defendant seeks to strike out the plaintiff’s
replying affidavit on the basis that it contains entirely
new matter
in reply, alternatively the content of the replying affidavit
is irrelevant because it has no bearing on the relief
sought. The
affidavit filed in support of the application reiterates these
grounds and avers that, once the defendant filed its
response to the
plaintiff’s discovery notices in August 2023, the plaintiff
ought to have launched a fresh application. In
the
de novo
application, the plaintiff ought to have set out that it was
dissatisfied with the defendant’s answer and why the documents
should be discovered, including an explanation as to the relevance
thereof. The defendant asserts prejudice because it has not
had the
opportunity to answer to all the allegations made by the plaintiff in
its replying affidavit.
[15]
In argument, it was submitted that, had the plaintiff followed the
correct course, the court would then have been in
a position to
determine the application for further and better discovery in its
proper sequence. The failure to proceed with a
fresh application in
the correct sequence has resulted in the plaintiff requesting relief
in a draft order, submitted with the
heads of argument in February
2024, which bears no relation to the notice of motion.
[16]
The plaintiff’s replying affidavit answers to the defendant’s
response to the plaintiff’s discovery
notices, albeit that the
defendant did not intend for that answer to be an answer in the
compelling application. The plaintiff
does not agree that its
compelling application has become moot consequent upon the
defendant’s August 2023 answer. It also
disagrees that it was
required to institute a fresh application. The plaintiff argued that,
were a fresh application to be brought,
there was no reason to
believe that the defendant’s approach would be any different to
its August 2023 answer, with due regard
to the defendant’s
limited discovery affidavits filed in December 2021.
[17]
The plaintiff denies that there would by any prejudice to the
defendant if the substance of the Rule 35(7) application
as read with
the defendant’s August 2023 response thereto is dealt with in
this application. A failure to do so would only
serve to further
delay the already proceedings.
[18]
The
defendant’s complaint is that the replying affidavit is
irrelevant, because the relief sought in the notice of motion
has
been complied with. Relevance in Rule 23(2) means relevant to the
issue.
[4]
The issue in these
proceedings relate to discovery. Relevance in discovery proceedings
is determined by the pleadings.
Rule
35(7) is designed to assist a party that is dissatisfied with the
discovery or supplementary discovery that has been made,
and remedies
under rule 35(3) have been exhausted.
[5]
[19]
The plaintiff’s founding affidavit in support of the
application to compel addressed in detail the reasons why
it is
entitled to the documents listed in its Rule 35(3)&(6) notices
served in March and August 2022. The founding affidavit
was thus not
a mere assertion that the documents were called for and not served.
The plaintiff responded to the defendant’s
contentions set out
in the August 2023 reply in its replying affidavit. As the defendant
has already committed itself to an answer
under oath in regard to
each document sought in the plaintiff’s discovery notices, the
plaintiff’s argument that nothing
would change if a fresh
application were to be brought except that it would result in a
further delay, is convincing.
[20]
The
plaintiff’s complaint is that the defendant has failed to make
adequate discovery. The issue is plainly not moot. I do
not agree
that the relief sought by the plaintiff “bears no relation”
to the relief in the notice of motion. The notice
of motion sought
compliance with the plaintiff’s discovery notices. This is
still the relief sought by the plaintiff, albeit
on an itemised basis
together with a proposed confidentiality regime. The parties’
respective contentions are addressed in
the affidavits before me, and
can be adjudicated upon with due regard to the evidence by both
parties, without the plaintiff having
to commence
de
novo
in
the knowledge that the defendant’s stated position under oath
will not change. It is also not a question of the court
impermissibly
raising new issues not traversed in the pleadings.
[6]
[21]
The defendant’s alleges prejudice because it has been deprived
of the opportunity to respond to a fresh application,
and that the
plaintiff has raised entirely new matter in the replying affidavit.
The “new matter”, which was not directly
identified in
the striking out application, arises from the defendant’s
August 2023 response. Mr Marriott, counsel for the
defendant, dealt
with the substance of the defendant’s contention that the
plaintiff was not entitled to the documents sought
in his heads of
argument and in argument with reference to the defendant’s
August 2023 response, albeit with strict reservation
of the
defendant’s rights.
[22]
The defendant is correct that the plaintiff has not followed the
strictly correct procedure. The question is however
whether, on the
facts of this case, form or “standard procedure”, should
take precedence over substance, bearing in
mind that the rules of
court are there to facilitate and expedite the administration of
justice.
[23]
In
Trans-African
Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
[7]
Schreiner JA remarked:
“
(T)echnical
objections to less than perfect procedural steps should not be
permitted, in the absence of prejudice, to interfere
with the
expeditious and, if possible, inexpensive decision of cases on their
real merits.
”
[8]
[24]
In
Federated
Trust Ltd v Botha
[9]
Van Winsen AJA (as he then was) said:
“
The Court does
not encourage formalism in the application of the Rules. The rules
are not an end in themselves to be observed for
their own sake. They
are provided to secure the inexpensive and expeditious completion
of litigation before the courts.
See, eg Hudson v Hudson and
Another
1927 AD 259
at 267; L F Boshoff Investments (Pty)
Ltd v Cape Town Municipality (2)
1971 (4) SA 532
(C) at 535
(last paragraph); Viljoen v Federated Trust Ltd
1971 (1) SA
750
(O) at 754D – E; Vitorakis v Wolf
1973 (3)
SA 928
(W) at 932F – G. Where one or other of the parties
has failed to comply with requirements of the Rules or an order
made
in terms thereof and prejudice has thereby been caused to the
opponent, it should be the court's endeavour to remedy such
prejudice
in a manner appropriate to the circumstances, always bearing in mind
the objects for which the rules were designed. See
in this regard the
remarks of Schreiner JA in Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v
Maluleka
1956 (2) SA 273
(A) at 278F – G.
”
[10]
[25]
In
Khunou
and Others v M Fihrer and Son (Pty) Ltd and Others
[11]
Slomowitz
AJ said:
“
Of course the
Rules of Court, like any set of rules, cannot in their very nature
provide for every procedural situation that arises.
They are
not exhaustive and moreover are sometimes not appropriate
to specific cases. Accordingly the Superior Courts
retain an inherent
power exercisable within certain limits to regulate their own
procedure and adapt it, and, if needs be, the
Rules of Court,
according to the circumstances. This power is enshrined in s 43 of
the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959.
”
[12]
[26]
In
Pangbourne
Properties Ltd v Pulse Moving CC and another
,
[13]
both parties had filed their affidavits late without filing a
condonation application. Wepener J held that, to disregard the
answering
and replying affidavits because they were filed out of time
would be too formalistic and would be an exercise in futility. The
matter was ready to be dealt with and it was in the interests of
justice that the matter be finalised and additional unnecessary
costs
avoided.
[14]
[27]
The
authorities reflect that there is not a universal “one size
fits all” approach to the procedural issue which has
arisen in
this matter. Slomovitz AJ prophetically stated that the rules cannot
provide for every procedural situation that arises.
The court has an
inherent discretion to regulate its own procedure.
[15]
[28]
Litigation
is not a game.
[16]
Judicial
resources are already severely constrained in this division,
resulting in long lead times for the hearing of opposed applications
and trials. I agree with the plaintiff that no useful purpose will be
served to require of it to recommence the entire process
afresh, when
the facts required to determine the issue of further and better
discovery as contemplated by Rule 35(7), is already
before the court,
and where both parties have substantively addressed the issue in
their affidavits and in argument. I have also
taken into account that
the defendant made limited discovery in December 2021 and that it
only filed its answer to the March and
August 2022 notices in August
2023, after the plaintiff brought its application to compel. The duty
to make discovery of all documents
that may be relevant is not to be
taken lightly. Discovery assists the parties and the court in
discovering the truth, and proper
discovery facilitates the orderly
presentation of the case in court.
[29]
For these reasons, I consider that it is in the interests of justice
that the substance of the issues raised in the affidavits
are to be
dealt with. The defendant’s application to strike out the
plaintiff’s replying affidavit is dismissed. Condonation
was
not opposed in the alternative. Condonation for the late filing of
the replying affidavit is granted.
Discovery
principles
[30]
The
applicable principles pertaining to discovery are firmly established.
Relevance is determined by the court with reference to
the pleadings,
and does not depend on the parties’ views of the matter.
[17]
The party calling for the documents need only demonstrate that the
documents
may
be
relevant – not
must
– either directly or indirectly, to enable the party calling
for the documents to advance its own case or to damage the case
of
its adversary. Documents fall into this category if it may fairly
lead to a train of inquiry which may have either of these
two
consequences.
[18]
Issues of
relevance must be approached with common sense.
[19]
[31]
The court
will not go behind a discovery affidavit which is regarded as
conclusive, save where it can be shown either from: (i)
the discovery
affidavit, (ii) the documents referred to in the discovery affidavit,
(iii) the pleadings, (iv) any admission made
by the party making the
discovery, or (v) the nature of the proceedings or the documents in
issue that there are reasonable grounds
for supposing that the party
making discovery has misconstrued the principles relating to
discovery.
[20]
[32]
From the plaintiff’s perspective, the crux of the dispute
between the parties is whether or not the defendant’s
trolley
was copied from the plaintiff’s trolleys. The plaintiff’s
case is that it had started the design of its 90-litre
and 180-litre
trolleys in 2014. If the plaintiff’s design was not copied, the
defendant should be able to demonstrate the
evolution in production
and design of the defendant’s trolley. The plaintiff is
entitled to call for the discovery of documents
which either advances
its case or damages the case of the defendant. That entitlement must
however take into account that the parties
are commercial competitors
with the result that there is an inherent danger of abuse when it
comes to inspection of confidential
documents between trade rivals,
and that there must be adequate protection of the parties’
trade secrets.
The
production process
[33]
The plaintiff explains that, to produce a trolley, plastic pellets
are fed in predetermined quantities into equipment
that melts the
plastic and injects it into a mould to produce a basket. The mould
comprises a number of parts, including moving
parts for shaping the
floor, three side walls and a rear gate. There are also add-ons like
the handle.
[34]
After the plastic injection, chilled water is circulated throughout
the mould to cool it so that the mould can be opened
and the finished
part extracted. The network of tubes and valves comprising the
cooling system is complicated and vast. The cooling
pipes for each of
the parts making up the entire mould are all different. They have to
be designed according to
inter alia
the thermal properties of
the steel involved, the size of the respective parts and the amount
of plastic in the relevant part of
the mould itself.
[35]
The plastic basket is a lattice work of a particular shape and with
several dimensions. Underneath the floor, there must
be points of
formation for purposes of securely mounting the basket onto the steel
chassis.
[36]
The moulded plastic is not of uniform thickness. Variances are
designed in accordance with strength requirements.
[37]
Injection points, where plastic is injected into the mould, cannot be
randomly numbered or located. They must be positioned
accurately to
prevent plastic from curing inside the mould at different speeds and
times, resulting in points of weakness, and
aesthetically unpleasing
weld lines. To ensure a uniform blend, the location of the injection
points is carefully chosen, typically
by means of a computerised
simulation known as a mould flow analysis.
[38]
The mould cannot be manufactured without first having designed the
basket which the mould is intended to make. The entire
mould tool is
dependent on the design. The basket design is embodied in the
drawings.
[39]
The mould is constructed from technical drawings showing the various
components in three dimensions with all the angles,
material
specifications, sizes and dimensions, curvatures, radii, assembly
instructions, heat treatment specifications, machining
details,
tolerances, and steel specifications.
[40]
A design engineer will author the manufacturing drawings on what is
known as a CAD (computer aided drawing) program.
[41]
Against that background, I deal first with the plaintiff’s
March 2022 notice in terms of Rule 35(3) and (6) and
thereafter with
the August 2022 notice. The August 2022 notice in the 2018 and 2021
actions are identical. The March 2022 notice
are substantially
similar, but for one paragraph which was not duplicated in the 2021
action.
The
March 2022 notice
[42]
Ad paragraph 1.1
42.1. The plaintiff
requires discovery of the invoices for the purchase, whether outright
or of a license, in respect of the
“True Tops” computer
program referred to by Mr Case in paragraph 71 in his replying
affidavit in the Counter Application
dated 4 February 2020 and
covering the period January 2013 to December 2018.
42.2. In its August
2023 response, the defendant asserted that it no longer has the
invoices referred to in this paragraph
in its possession and it
referred the plaintiff to Tool Room Maintenance Machine Supplies CC
(“TRM”) and Retecon (Pty)
Ltd.
42.3. Whilst the
plaintiff complains that the answer is evasive and inadequate, I am
unable to go behind the assertion by
the defendant that it is no
longer in possession of the invoices referred to in this paragraph.
[43]
Ad paragraphs 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5 and 1.6
43.1.
The
defendant tendered inspection at the defendant’s attorney’s
offices at a mutually convenient time to be arranged
between the
parties. The defendant asserts that these documents which it has
tendered for inspection contain confidential information
and are to
be made available subject to a confidentiality regime, with specific
reference to the principle established in
Crown
Cork & Seal Co Inc and another v Rheem South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
others
.
[21]
The defendant objects to the plaintiff’s directors or employees
having access to its confidential information.
43.2. In its reply,
the plaintiff’s Mr Wolfe indicated that he had requested his
attorneys of record to arrange for
inspection and copying once the
confidentiality regime had been put in place. He objected to the
condition that neither he, nor
any employee of the plaintiff, was
entitled to inspect the documents tendered.
43.3. By the time
this application was heard, no confidentiality regime had been put in
place or agreed to between the parties.
Counsel for the plaintiff
included in the draft order a confidentiality regime which included
the plaintiff’s directors,
Mr Peter Shorten, a senior
engineer consulting to the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s legal
advisers and its expert witnesses,
and inspection at the plaintiff’s
attorneys’ offices. As the parties were unable to agree a
confidentiality regime,
and as the defendant elected not to put
forward a confidentiality regime despite having tendered certain
documents for inspection
in August 2023, it cannot now be seen to
complain that the issue was not properly ventilated in the papers.
43.4. I intend to
include in this order a confidentiality regime which would entitle Mr
Peter Shorten, the plaintiff’s
experts and its legal advisors
to inspect the documents and recordings tendered for inspection by
the defendant, but not any of
the plaintiff’s directors. The
plaintiff ought not to be prejudiced in its preparation for
litigation if its senior consulting
engineer is granted access to the
tendered documents together with its experts and legal
representatives. The confidentiality regime
would follow the
remainder of the regime proposed by the plaintiff in the draft order,
subject to the changes set out above.
[44]
Ad
paragraphs 1.7 to 1.9
44.1. In paragraph
1.7, the plaintiff requires discovery of the emails and other written
communications between the defendant
(including its employees) and
the said manufacturer of the moulds in China (and including any agent
on behalf of either) relating
to the production of the drawings for
the moulds as referred to by Mr Case in paragraph 73 of his replying
affidavit in the Counter
Application.
44.2. In paragraph
73, Mr Case stated:
“
The production
of a mould requires additional drawing, but the respondent does not
produce the drawings for the moulds. The moulds
are produced in China
and the drawings for the moulds are produced by the Chinese factory
from the drawing of the basket the respondent
prepares.
”
44.3. In paragraph
1.8 the plaintiff requires the quotes for the production of the
drawings and in paragraph 1.9, the emails
and other written
communications between the defendant (including its employees) and
the said manufacturer (including any agent
on behalf of either)
relating to these quotes.
44.4. The defendant
has refused to make the documents available on the basis that the
documents are irrelevant. It was argued
that the request is
overbroad. Given that the request is linked to what is asserted by Mr
Case in paragraph 73, I consider that
there is a limitation provided
for in these paragraphs.
44.5. The plaintiff
argues that the defendant’s trolley bears an uncanny
resemblance to the plaintiff’s trolley,
right down to the
tell-tale Christian cross bag-hook. Mr Wolfe explained the design of
the bag-hook with reference to his Christian
beliefs.
44.6. With due
regard to the pleadings, the issues between the parties and the
specific paragraph referenced, the documents
may be relevant to a
matter in question in these proceedings. These documents are
therefore to be produced for inspection by the
plaintiff, subject to
the confidentiality regime.
[45]
Ad paragraph 1.10
45.1. In this
paragraph the plaintiff sought production and inspection of the
drawings.
45.2. The
defendant’s answer was that the drawings for the mould are not
in the possession or control of the defendant
but in the possession
of the Chinese manufacturer of the mould. The plaintiff complains
that the answer does not disclose where,
if the documents are not in
the defendant’s possession, they may be found.
45.3. The defendant
has not stated that the documents are in control of the Chinese
manufacturer and, having regard to the
reply that the moulds are
produced by the Chinese factory from the drawing of the basket which
the defendant prepares, I consider
that this is an instance where the
court can go behind the answering affidavit by the defendant. I agree
with the plaintiff’s
assertion that, if the defendant has paid
for the drawings for the moulds, it would have control of it for
purposes of discovery
or it can obtain the drawings from the
undisclosed entity which does have control.
45.4. Accordingly,
the defendant is obliged to either obtain the drawings from its
Chinese manufacturer and to make them available
for inspection by the
plaintiff subject to the confidentiality regime.
[46]
Ad paragraphs 1.11 to 1.14
46.1. In these
paragraphs the plaintiff seeks the emails and other written
communication between the defendant and the Chinese
manufacturer (and
including any agent on behalf of either) relating to the drawings,
the invoices in respect of the drawings and
proof of payment of the
invoices as well as emails and other written communications between
the defendant (including its employees)
and the manufacturer (and
including any agent on behalf of either), relating to the production
of the moulds referred to in paragraph
73 of the replying affidavit.
46.2. The documents
have been refused on the basis that they are irrelevant.
46.3. Regard
being had to the pleadings, the issues in dispute nature and the
content of paragraph 73 of Mr Case’s
affidavit quoted above,
these documents may be relevant and must accordingly be produced for
inspection by the plaintiff subject
to the confidentiality regime.
[47]
Ad paragraphs 1.15 and 1.16
47.1. In these
paragraphs the plaintiff seeks the quotes for the production of the
moulds and the emails and other written
communications between the
defendant (including its employees) and the manufacturer (including
any agent on behalf of either) relating
otherwise to the said moulds.
47.2. The defendant
objects to the disclosure of these documents on the basis that it is
irrelevant.
47.3. These
documents may be relevant with due regard to the pleadings and the
nature of the dispute between the parties and
accordingly fall to be
produced for inspection subject to the confidentiality regime.
[48]
Ad paragraphs 1.17 to 1.20
48.1. These
documents relate to the shipping, import, email exchanges relating to
the moulds, the invoices and proof of payment
of the moulds. These
documents are refused on the basis that they are not relevant.
48.2. Relevance is
determined with reference to the pleadings and these documents may be
relevant to the issues between the
parties. Accordingly, the
documents are to be made available for inspection and copying subject
to the confidentiality regime.
[49]
Ad paragraph 1.21
49.1. In this
paragraph the plaintiff seeks the emails and other written
communications with the company or companies and
whether Pimms Group
or otherwise relating to the production of the baskets for the
defendant’s SmartCart hybrid 90-litre
trolley which is in
issue.
49.2. In answer to
this paragraph the defendant has stated that it is not in possession
of any such communications or emails.
49.3. The
defendant’s assertion that it is not in possession of the
documents requested in this paragraph is conclusive,
and there is no
basis to go behind it.
[50]
Ad paragraphs 1.22 to 1.27
50.1. The defendant
has responded that it is in possession of quotations, purchase orders
for the basket of the 180-litre
trolley, invoices from the
manufacturer of the said baskets, proof of payment of the invoices
and delivery notes for the baskets.
It asserts that these documents
are nonetheless not relevant but should the defendant be ordered to
produce the documents, it would
require production subject to the
confidentiality regime.
50.2.
In my view,
the defendant should produce these documents for inspection subject
to the confidentiality regime given the issues on
the pleadings,
which includes a claim for damages based on notional royalties.
[22]
[51]
Ad paragraph 1.28
51.1. In this
paragraph the plaintiff has sought the brief that the defendant
received from Shoprite to design “such
a trolley”. The
answer to this request was that the brief was verbal and that the
documents known as an RFI and an RFQ which
all suppliers of Shoprite,
including the plaintiff, had received from Shoprite is no longer in
its possession and would be in the
possession of the plaintiff and
Shoprite.
51.2. The plaintiff
is dissatisfied with this answer and asserts that Mr Case has
perjured himself.
51.3. This court is
unable to go behind Mr Case’s assertion that his particular
instruction was verbal and that the
documents which were provided to
the defendant are no longer in its possession.
[52]
Ad paragraph 1.29
52.1.
In this
paragraph in the March 2022 notice pertaining to the 2018 action
[23]
the plaintiff sought the email and other written communications with
Shoprite concerning the instruction to brief the defendant
and the
meeting held between its employees and Mr Case when he flew to Cape
Town as alleged in paragraph 41 of the replying affidavit
in the
Counter Application.
52.2. In response,
the defendant has indicated that despite diligent search he was
unable to find any invitations to the meeting
and Cape Town and
accordingly, the defendant is not in possession of such invitation.
52.3. The answer is
conclusive and there is no basis for the court to go behind the
defendant’s answer in this paragraph.
[53]
Ad paragraph 1.30 in the 2018 action and Ad paragraph 1.29 in the
2021 action
53.1. In this
paragraph the plaintiff seeks the emails and other written
communications from and with potential and/or actual
customers or
agents concerning inquiries about, orders for and/or the
manufacturing of the defendant’s SmartCart hybrid 90-litre
trolley.
53.2. The defendant
has refused the documentation on the basis that it is irrelevant.
53.3. Given that
the plaintiff asserts an unlawful copying and that part of the relief
sought is damages arising from the
infringement, the documents sought
in this paragraph may be relevant and should be produced by the
defendant subject to the confidentiality
regime.
[54]
Ad paragraphs 1.31, 1.32, 1.33 and 1.34 in the 2018 action and Ad
paragraphs 1.30 to 1.33 in the 2021 action
54.1. In these
paragraphs the plaintiff seeks documentation relating to the
manufacture of the defendant’s SmartCart
hybrid 90-litre
trolley, the manufacture of the steel chassis for the defendant’s
trolley, the documents referencing or concerning
the sale, supply,
delivery and/or manufacture of the moulds for the basket for the
defendant’s trolley.
54.2. The defendant
refused to make discovery of the documents sought in these paragraphs
on the basis that it is irrelevant
and also vague and broad ranging
so as to constitute an abuse of the process.
54.3. I agree that
the request for “notes, memoranda, messages, letters,
management accounts, WhatsApp messages, sms
messages and voice notes”
is overbroad, but I consider that the internal correspondence,
reports and emails as sought in
paragraphs 1.31 to 1.34 in the 2018
action and in paragraphs 1.30 to 1.33 in the 2021 action may be
relevant to the disputes with
due regard to the pleadings and are to
be made available for inspection subject to the confidentiality
regime.
[55]
Ad paragraph 2
55.1. In respect of
the documents sought in paragraph 2 relative to disposal of the
defendant’s SmartCart hybrid 90-litre
trolley, the defendant
has tendered for inspection redacted invoices for the 180-litre
trolley subject to the confidentiality regime.
55.2. I consider
that the remaining documents sought in this paragraph may be relevant
to the issues in dispute and the documents
in the following
paragraphs are to be included for production and inspection:
paragraphs 2.1, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5.
[56]
In respect of the documents sought in paragraph 2.6 the defendant is
to make available for inspection subject to the
confidentiality
regime the internal correspondence, reports, emails and letters
relating to orders for, the sale and/or delivery
to customers or
agents of the defendant’s SmartCart hybrid 90-litre trolley.
The
August 2022 notice
[57]
In respect of the August 2022 notice, the defendant is to produce the
drawings sought in paragraph 1.3 on the same basis
as applied to the
request to paragraph 1.10 in the March 2022 notice (see paragraph 45
above).
[58]
The drawings as sought in paragraph 1.4 are to be produced.
[59]
The documents sought in paragraphs 1.5 to 1.13 are to be produced for
inspection and copying subject to the confidentiality
regime.
Costs
[60]
The plaintiff has been substantially successful and the costs should
follow the result, with scale C being the appropriate
scale given the
nature and complexity of the matter.
Order
[61]
The order pertains to case numbers 46975/2018 and 2021/30331.
61.1. The
defendant’s application to strike out is dismissed.
61.2. The late
filing of the plaintiff’s replying affidavit is condoned.
61.3. The defendant
is ordered to provide to the plaintiff within 20 (twenty) court days
of the date of service of this order
by email, the following
documents and/or recordings for inspection:
61.3.1.
Ad March 2022
notice in the 2018 action
: paragraphs 1.2 to 1.20, 1.22, 1.27,
130 and in respect of paragraphs 1.31 to 1.34 only the internal
correspondence, reports and
emails as sought in these paragraphs.
61.3.2.
Ad March
2022 notice in the 2021 action
: paragraphs 1.2 to 1.20, 1.22,
1.27, 1.29 and in respect of paragraphs 1.30 to 1.33 only the
internal correspondence, reports and
emails as sought in these
paragraphs.
61.3.3.
Ad
August 2022 notice
: paragraphs 1.3 and1.4 (drawings only), 1.5 to
1.13.
61.4. Only Mr Peter
Shorten, the plaintiff’s legal advisers and its expert
witnesses will be entitled to inspect the
documents set out in
paragraphs 61.3.1 to 61.3.3 of this order.
61.5. The documents
and recordings so disclosed will not be used by the plaintiff for any
purpose other than the litigation
between the parties in the 2018 and
2021 proceedings.
61.6. The documents
or recordings will be retained at the premises of the plaintiff’s
attorneys of record, and will
only be inspected (other than by
counsel) in the presence of an admitted attorney of that firm;
61.7. No copy or
reproduction of such documents and recordings or any part thereof
will be removed from the possession of
the plaintiff’s attorney
of record except to provide to the plaintiff’s counsel for
their purposes in relation to the
litigation between the parties in
the 2018 and 2021 proceedings.
61.8. The defendant
is ordered to pay the costs of this application including the costs
of two counsel on scale C.
GOEDHART
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of hearing: 22 July 2024
Date
of judgment: 25 March 2025
(This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives via email.)
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: Adv O Salmon SC
(Heads
of argument prepared by Adv Salmon SC and Adv KD Iles)
Instructed
by: Werksmans Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv G Marriott
Instructed
by: Martini-Patlansky Attorneys
[1]
See
Supercart
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Vanesco (Pty) Ltd and another
2024
(3) SA 550 (GJ).
[2]
“
35.
Proceedings for infringement.
—
(1) Proceedings
for infringement of a design may be instituted by the registered
proprietor.
(2)
Before the registered proprietor institutes such proceedings, he
shall give notice thereof to every licensee
in respect of the
registered design in question whose name is recorded in the
register, and any such licensee shall be entitled
to intervene as a
co-plaintiff: Provided that no such notice is necessary in the case
of a compulsory licence in terms of section
21.
(3)
A plaintiff in proceedings for infringement shall be entitled to
relief by way of—
(a)
an interdict;
(b)
surrender of any infringing product or any article or product of
which the infringing product forms an inseparable
part;
(c)
damages; and
(d)
in lieu of damages, at the option of the plaintiff, an amount
calculated on the basis of a reasonable royalty
which would have
been payable by a licensee or sub-licensee in respect of the
registered design concerned.
”
[3]
“
14. Application
for registration.
—
(1) The
proprietor of a design which—
(a)
in the case of an aesthetic design, is—
(i)
new;
and
(ii)
original,
(b)
in the case of a functional design, is—
(i)
new;
and
(ii)
not
commonplace in the art in question,
may,
in the prescribed manner and on payment of the prescribed fee, apply
for the registration of such design.
(2)
A design shall be deemed to be new if it is different from or if it
does not form part of the state of the
art immediately before the
date of application for registration thereof or the release date
thereof, whichever is the earlier:
Provided that in the case of the
release date thereof being the earlier, the design shall not be
deemed to be new if an application
for the registration of such
design has not been lodged—
(a)
in the case of an integrated circuit topography, a mask work or a
series of mask works, within two years;
or
(b)
in the case of any other design, within six months,
of
such release date.
”
(i)
[4]
Meintjes
v Wallachs Ltd
1913
TPD 278
at 285.
[5]
MV
Alina II, Transnet Ltd v MV Alina II
2013 (6) SA 556
(WCC) at para 19 citing
Tractor
& Excavator Spares (Pty) ltd v Groenedijk
1976 (4) SA 359
(W) at 363B-F.
[6]
Fischer
and another v Ramahlele and others
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA),
[2014] ZASCA 88
, paras 13-14.
[7]
1956
(2) SA 273 (A).
[8]
At
278F.
[9]
1978
(3) SA 645 (A).
[10]
At
654C-F.
[11]
1982
(3) SA 353
(W) at 355H-356A.
[12]
At
355H-356A.
[13]
2013
(3) SA 140 (GSJ).
[14]
At
paras 17 and 18.
[15]
Section
173 of the Constitution provides: “
The
Constitutional Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and High Courts have
the inherent power to protect and regulate their own process,
and to
develop the common law, taking into account the interests of
justice
.”
[16]
Cadac
(Pty) Ltd v Weber-Stephen Products Co and others
2011 (3) 570 (SCA) at para 10;
HAL
obo MML v MEC for Health, Free State
2022 (3) SA 571
(SCA) at para 197.
[17]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v The Government of the Republic of South
Africa
1999 (2) SA 279
(T) at 316J-317A.
[18]
Rellams
(Pty) Ltd v James Brown and Harner Ltd
1983
(1) SA 556
(N
)
(
Rellams
)
at
564A.
[19]
R
v Matthews and others
1960
(1) SA 752
(A) at 758A-B.
[20]
Rellams,
fn
18 above at 560G.
[21]
1980
(3) SA (WLD) 1093.
[22]
Puma
AG Rudolf Dassler Sport v Global Warming (Pty) Ltd
2010 (2) SA 600
(SCA) at para 12.
[23]
Paragraph
1.29 was not included in identical terms in the March 2022 notice
served in the 2021 action.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Motor City Auto Spares (Pty) Ltd and Another v Sheriff Vanderbijlpark and Others (2021/53966) [2024] ZAGPJHC 25 (17 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 25High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Auto and Truck Tyres (Pty) Ltd v Symes and Others (2019/34782) [2024] ZAGPJHC 425 (2 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 425High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd v Ettienne and Christine Makarios (Pty) Ltd (2024/002133) [2025] ZAGPJHC 676 (16 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 676High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Juscar Metale (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of Police and Another (2022/060800) [2025] ZAGPJHC 596 (11 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 596High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Motor City Auto Spares (Pty) Lt and Another v Sheriff Vanderbijlpark and Others (2021/53966) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1407 (17 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1407High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar