Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 22South Africa
Apple Bite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Applebite Roadhouse (Pty) Ltd and Others (A2023/058069) [2024] ZAGPJHC 22 (12 January 2024)
Headnotes
as Applebite is not trading and is dormant it had no case. The application was however, granted in favour of Gonbar and Alex Jay against Apple and Simul.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Apple Bite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Applebite Roadhouse (Pty) Ltd and Others (A2023/058069) [2024] ZAGPJHC 22 (12 January 2024)
Apple Bite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Applebite Roadhouse (Pty) Ltd and Others (A2023/058069) [2024] ZAGPJHC 22 (12 January 2024)
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sino date 12 January 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A
2023-058069
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
Date:12
JANUARY 2024
In
the matter between:
APPLE
BITE (PTY) LTD
FIRST
APPELLANT
SIMUL
ENTERPRISES CC
SECOND
APPELLANT
And
APPLEBITE
ROADHOUSE (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
GONBAR
INVESTMENTS CC t/a
SECOND
RESPONDENT
APPLEBITE
ROADHOUSE and PIZZERIA
ALEX
JAY CATERING CC t/a THE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
APPLEBITE
EXPRESS
JUDGMENT
-
FULL COURT
APPEAL
Wright J, Sutherland
DJP and R. Strydom J
Introduction
[1] The first
appellant is Apple Bite (Pty) Ltd. We shall refer to this party as
Apple. The second appellant is Simul
Enterprises CC. We shall refer
to this party as Simul.
[2] The first
respondent is Applebite Roadhouse (Pty) Ltd. We shall refer to this
party as Applebite. The second respondent
is Gonbar Investments CC
trading as “Applebite
Roadhouse and Pizzeria “
. We
shall refer to this party as Gonbar. The third respondent is Alex Jay
Catering CC trading as “
The Applebite Express
.” We
shall refer to this party as Alex Jay.
[3] The
present respondents applied in the court below for an interdict
against the present appellants. They alleged
delictual interference
in their business by the present appellants in the form of passing
off and unlawful competitive trading.
Adams J held that as Applebite
is not trading and is dormant it had no case. The application was
however, granted in favour of
Gonbar and Alex Jay against Apple and
Simul.
[4] Apple and
Simul sought leave to appeal. Adams J refused leave to appeal but the
SCA granted leave to this Court.
There is no cross-appeal by
Applebite.
Chronology
[5] The facts
are largely common cause. This appeal turns essentially on the
inferences to be drawn from the facts.
[6] We set
out below a chronology, from which the picture emerges.
[7]
1972 – The Applebite Roadhouse is opened by the brothers, John
and Jimmy Karantasis with Chris Bantasis
at 95 Van Riebeeck Avenue,
Edenvale. We shall refer to this piece of land as the property. Six
months later, the business is sold
to John Bower.
[8] 1972 to
the present – A large, 4.5-meter-high advertising sign is
erected on the property advertising the
name, Apple Bite. An apple
with a bite taken out of it is the logo. It becomes well known and
attracts customers.
[9] 1978 –
John Bower sells the business to Pavlos Christoforakis.
Christoforakis buys the immovable property
on which the business
operates. Christoforakis trades as “
The Applebite Roadhouse
and Pizzeria
.“
[10] 1987 – Simul
is registered as a Close Corporation. Its members are Pavlos
Christoforakis and his wife, Catherine. Sometime
thereafter, the
property is registered in the name of Simul.
[11] 31 October 2001 –
Gonbar is registered as a Close Corporation. The members are Migel
Goncalves, his father, Juvenal Goncalves
and Luis Barreto.
[12] Presumably, 17 March
2002 - Christoforakis sells the business to Ms Revelas.
[13] 17 March 2002 –
Simul leases the property to Revelas. Under clause 1.5, the leased
premises mean “
The Entire Property and
Improvements Thereon.
“Under clause 5.1
“
The Lessee shall be entitled to carry
on its business as a roadhouse on the leased premises
.
“Under clause 8.1, the lessee, Revelas is entitled to exhibit
advertisements, signboards and the like. Under clause 8.3,
the lessee
shall, on termination of the lease be obliged to remove the
advertisements and signboards and to leave the premises
in the same
good order and condition as “the
same
were in before anything was affixed
by it
thereto
“. Our
emphasis.
[14] 16 March 2007 –
Simul and Revelas extend the lease for four years and eleven months
from 1 April 2007.
[15] 19 June 2008 –
Revelas sells the business “
Apple Bite Road House
“to
Juvenal Goncalves and his son, Migel. We shall refer to these men
together as Goncalves. The agreement records that the
business is
sold as a going concern. Under clause 12, in the event that the
agreement is concluded by the Goncalves for a company
to be formed,
such company “will
be registered within a period of thirty
(30) days from the date of acceptance hereof and that upon
incorporation it will ratify
and adopt the agreement of sale.
“
[16] 29 June 2008 –
Revelas cedes her rights as lessee to the property to Goncalves. The
lessor, Simul consents to the cession.
[17] 7 August 2008 –
Alex Jay is registered as a Close Corporation. Its members are Migel
Goncalves and Raymond Daniels.
[18] Late 2008 –
Goncalves starts an “
Applebite Roadhouse and Pizzeria
“
business in Germiston. This business is still operating. In effect,
it is the business of Gonbar.
[19] 2 March 2012 –
Simul leases the property to Juvenal Goncalves for five years. Clause
1.4 defines the leased premises
as “
The Entire Property and
Improvements Theron
. “Under clause 5, “
The Lessee
shall be entitled to carry on his usual business as a roadhouse on
the leased premises
.” Under clause 8.3, Juvenal Goncalves
shall be obliged to remove advertisements and signage “
affixed
by him
“.
[20] 1 October 2013 –
Goncalves opens a third Applebite roadhouse in Benoni. This roadhouse
closes down after a short time.
[21] 10 April 2015 –
Alex Jay sells the business “
Applebite Roadhouse
“to
Daniels. The sale includes the goodwill. Clause 4.2 records that “
the
business is sold as a going concern
“.
[22] 27 February 2017 –
Simul leases the property to Daniels. Under clause 5.1, Daniels
“
shall be entitled to carry on his usual business as a
roadhouse on the Leased Premises
. Under clause 8.3, Daniels is
obliged, on termination, to remove advertisements and signboards
“affixed
by him
”.
[23] 11 April 2017-
Applebite is registered as a company. The director is Migel
Goncalves.
[24] 27 March 2020 –
Covid lockdown starts.
[25] 27 March 2020 to 30
September 2020 – Gonbar and Alex Jay battle to survive. Their
Germiston and Edenvale businesses suffer.
Alex Jay, in the person of
Daniels can’t pay the monthly rent to Simul. Simul issues a
rent interdict summons. The summons
is against Daniels as Simul
insisted on leases with natural persons.
[26] November 2020
– Alex Jay relocates its Apple Bite business from the property
to a place about 1.5 kilometres away
but still in Edenvale. The new
business opens as “
Applebite Express
“
[27] December 2020 to
April 2021 – the property is vacant. To let signs are displayed
by Simul.
[28] 2 February 2021 –
Simul’s attorney writes to Daniel’s attorney, alleging
that Simul has the right to trade
from the property and demanding
that Daniels “
remove its signage from our client’s
premises at its own cost.
“
[29] 4 February 2021 –
Simul’s attorney writes to Daniel’s attorney, alleging
that the “large
apple sign
“is the property of
Simul and is “
not your client’s intellectual property
.
“The letter goes on to refer to small “
The Apple Bite
“signs which “
can be removed
“or, where
they are painted on a wall, should be painted over by Daniels.
[30] July 2021 –
the large sign is refurbished by Simul.
[31] 21 July 2021 –
Apple is registered. Its director is Peter Christoforakis, the son of
Pavlos and Catherine Christoforakis.
[32] 30 August 2021 –
Letter of demand from the respondents’ attorney to the
appellants’ attorney.
[33] 6 September 2021 –
Letter from appellants’ attorney to respondents’
attorney, alleging that the respondents
do not have the exclusive
right to the Apple Bite name. The letter records that the respondents
operate an “
Apple Bite Express
“. It is alleged
that the appellants intend to name their business “
The Apple
Bite
.”
[34] 11 September 2021 –
Apple opens “
The
Apple Bite
“on the
property.
[35] October 2021 –
Apple starts an extensive advertising campaign, including the setting
up of a website
www.theapplebite.co.za
and
advertising on Facebook and other social media platforms. Food
delivery apps are used. The old Apple Bite sign features prominently
on all advertising and on menus.
[36] October 2021 –
the respondents launch their application in the court below.
The allegations by the
parties
[37] The
respondents claim that their customers are confused by the marketing
by the appellants. The respondents allege that
their turnover has
dropped. They say that in modern times physical distance is not as
important as it used to be, given that a
large part of turnover is
ordered through apps or by phone and then delivered to customers.
[38] The appellants deny
these allegations. They say too, that when the business was sold, it
was sold as a going concern, including
the right to use the name, but
only at the property. They expressly deny that the respondents ever
acquired the right to use the
name at any other place.
[39] The appellants say
that they never objected to the respondents using the name in
Germiston, from 2008 onwards, as that business
was too far away to be
relevant. They allege that the distance from the property to the
Germiston site of the respondents is 20
kilometres and that there is
no possibility of the appellants taking the respondents’
customers.
[40] From November
2020, when Alex Jay opened its “
Applebite Express
“business 1.5 kilometers away from the property, the appellants
never challenged Alex Jay. The appellants say that this is
so because
the name “
Apple Bite Express
“is markedly
different to their own business of a roadhouse. They say that Alex
Jay never acquired the exclusive right to
the name “
Applebite
.”
Findings
[41] The
agreements referred to above clearly have the sensible and business
meaning that the business sold included
the name in the goodwill. The
only real issue is whether or not the name was to remain at the
property or could be moved to different
trading premises.
[42]
Ultimately, the right of the appellants, as recorded in the lease
agreements, to retain the large sign at 95 Van
Riebeeck Avenue cannot
be read so as to render hollow the right to the name as included in
the goodwill, ultimately sold by the
appellants to the respondents.
[43]
The critical issue derives
not from ownership but from action calculated to deceive.
[44]
The respondent came by the
right to use the name ‘
apple bite’
by purchase of a business as a going concern, which merx included the
goodwill. That the goodwill included the right to the use
of the name
of the business, is a conclusion which is axiomatic. It exercised
that right not only at the location where the acquired
business was
situated but also elsewhere without demur. What are the rights
inter se
between the
appellants and the respondents, as inherited from their predecessors?
This case implicates no persons other than these.
[45]
To test this
inter-relationship, we offer the following scenario. Suppose
that at the conclusion of the lease over the property
at 95 van
Riebeeck Avenue, the respondents instead of renewing the lease,
concluded a fresh lease next door or across the street?
Is it
conceivable that the appellants could have started up a business in
the same trade, which is what it has done, styled ‘
applebite
’?
Moreover, could the appellants have legitimately marketed its
‘
applebite
’
business as the
original
‘
applebite
?
The answer is unequivocally no. The fact that the respondents are, in
fact, trading 1.5 kms away does not upset this
analysis.
[46]
In our view, the conscious
and deliberate effort to piggy-back on the reputation of the business
which had been sold by the appellants
to the respondents is well
established. The appellants have passed off their business as being
that with which an existing customer
base was already acquainted by
using an established brand and did so intentionally to solicit that
body of customers.
[47]
Lastly,
it was argued, at least in written heads of argument, for Apple and
Simul that because the 19 June 2008 agreement of sale
from Revelas to
Goncalves contained the suspensive condition that the relevant
company had to be formed within 30 days, namely
by 18 July 2008
whereas in fact the close corporation was formed on 7 August 2008,
the sale never took effect and that no rights
to the business
transferred from Revelas to Goncalves. In our view, there is nothing
to this argument. All concerned acted as if
the relevant party, Alex
Jay had been incorporated within thirty days. The extra three weeks
is not relevant to the matter. The
clause is for the benefit of
Goncalves who by their conduct clearly waived the right to rely on
non-fulfilment of the suspensive
condition.
[48]
It
was Goncalves, not Alex Jay who bought the business from Revelas on
19 June 2008. There is an allegation by Goncalves in the
founding
affidavit that from 7 August 2008, when Alex Jay was incorporated
“
all
trading and business related activities including the opening of bank
accounts now took place under the auspices of AlexJay
Catering CC t/a
AppleBite Roadhouse and Pizzeria.
“
In our view, what tacitly occurred was that the rights of Goncalves
were ceded to Alex Jay, the bare denial by the appellants
notwithstanding. What bolsters this finding is that in the 10 April
2015 agreement of the sale of business it is Alex Jay, not
Goncalves
which sells the business to Daniels.
[49]
The
import of this is that on 10 April 2015 Alex Jay divested itself of
the right to goodwill in the business including the name
and logo.
Daniels acquired the right sought to be enforced in the application.
[50]
According
to the founding affidavit, when Daniels paid off the purchase price
of the business which he had bought on 10 April 2015
from Alex Jay,
Daniels acquired sole membership in Alex Jay. In a confirmatory
affidavit to the founding affidavit Daniels says
that he is the sole
member of Alex Jay. A Windeed Company search document, or part
thereof and dated 2 September 2021 and annexed
to the founding
affidavit indicates that Daniels is currently the sole member of Alex
Jay. Daniels clearly supported the application
from inception and was
of the view, understandably, that the right to claim vested in Alex
Jay, rather than in himself personally.
We draw no inference against
Alex Jay that it has no case on the ground that Daniels had the
enforceable right when the application
was launched. Daniels is not a
lawyer. From a common sense and business like perspective, Daniels,
possibly as late as the launching
of the application, tacitly ceded
his claim to Alex Jay.
ORDER
1.
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
R
SUTHERLAND
DEPUTY
JUDGE PRESIDENT OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I agree
GC
WRIGHT
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I agree
R
STRYDOM J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
15
November 2023
Delivered
on:
12
January 2024
Appearances:
For
the Appellants:
Adv
David Watson
071 260
2390
watson@group621.co.za
Instructed
by:
TWB –
Tugendhaft Wapnick Banchetti and Partners
zoe@twb.co.za
/
johncarlos@twb.co.za
011 291
5110
For
the Respondents:
Adv A
P Allison
abeallison@gmail.com
083 879
2288
Instructed
by:
Tshepo
Mohapi Attorneys
tshepo@tshepomohapilaw.co.za
011 483
1527/8
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