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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 183
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## Evrigard (Pty) Ltd Another v Select PPE (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-22743)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 183 (26 February 2024)
Evrigard (Pty) Ltd Another v Select PPE (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-22743)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 183 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
--FLYNOTES:
-INTELLECTUAL – Passing off – Colour get-up –
Claim
based on passing off of plaintiff’s gloves in colour green
and unlawful competition – Misappropriation of
plaintiff’s
formula for fluorescent green coloured polymer applied to gloves –
Various grounds of exception raised
by defendants –
Requirements for colour green and distinctive reputation –
Misuse of confidential information
– No correlation between
the alleged passing off and damages claimed – Unclear on
what precise basis such claims
can be quantified – Exception
is upheld.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.REPORTABLE: NO
2.OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED: NO
26/02/2024
Case
No:
2022/22743
In
the matter between:
EVRIGARD
(PTY) LTD
First Plaintiff
RONDO
(PTY) LTD
Second Plaintiff
and
SELECT
PPE (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
NLG
GLOVES (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
PETRUS
PIETERSE
Third Defendant
SIBANYE
RUSTENBURG PLATINUM
Fourth Defendant
MINES
(PTY) LTD
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This Judgment and Order was prepared and authored by the Judge
whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically by
circulation
to Parties / their legal representatives by email and by
uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines. The
date of the order is deemed to be the 26
th
of February
2024.
CORAM:
NOWITZ AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
This
is an Exception together with an Application to have the Plaintiffs’
Particulars of Claim set aside as an irregular step
in terms of
Uniform Rule 30. The First to Third Defendants (“
the
Defendants
”
)
served a formal Notice in terms of Rule 23(1) read with Rule 30(2)(b)
prior to the service of a Notice of Exception and Application
to
strike out in terms of Rule 30.
[1]
2.
This
evoked no response from the Plaintiffs and the Particulars of Claim
are attacked on eight separate grounds, as identified in
the Notice
of Exception.
[2]
LEGAL
PRINCIPLES
3.
In
Tembani v President of the Republic of South Africa and
another
2023 (1) SA 432
(SCA) para 14
, the Supreme
Court of Appeal summarised the general principles relating to, and
the approach to be adopted regarding, adjudicating
Exceptions as
follows:
“
Whilst
exceptions provide a useful mechanism 'to weed out cases without
legal merit', it is nonetheless necessary that they be dealt
with
sensibly. It is where pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to
determine the nature of the claim or where pleadings
are bad in law,
in that their contents do not support a discernible and legally
recognised cause of action, that an exception is
competent.
The
burden rests on an
excipient,
who must establish that on every interpretation that can
reasonably
be attached to it, the pleading is excipiable
.
The test is whether on
all
possible readings
of the
facts no cause of action may be made out, it being for the excipient
to satisfy the court that the conclusion of law for
which the
plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every interpretation that
can be put upon the facts.” (Footnotes
omitted, emphasis
added)
4.
It is trite that when
pleading a cause of action, the pleading must contain every fact
which would be necessary for the plaintiff
to prove, if traversed, in
order to support his right to judgment. The
facta
probanda
necessary
for a complete and properly pleaded cause of action importantly does
not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary
to prove each
fact (being the
facta
probantia
)
but every fact which is necessary to be proved.
[3]
5.
The Plaintiffs’ claims are based on unlawful competition and
the Defendants submit that
on every interpretation that can
reasonably be attached to it, the pleading, same is excipiable.
6.
The
Defendants aver that in
seeking
to find a cause of action in unlawful competition, the Plaintiffs
have done precisely what Schutz JA cautioned against
in
Payen
Components SA Ltd v Bovic Gaskets CC and Others
[4]
where he warned that:
“
Unlawful
competition should not be added as a ragbag and often forlorn final
alternative to every trademark, copyright, design or
passing off
action. In most such cases it is one of the established
categories
or
nothing
.”
[
Emphases
added
]
7.
Schutz JA
repeated this warning in
Blue
Lion Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd v National Brands Ltd
[5]
,
where he again cautioned litigants and practitioners against:
“…
using some general
notion of unlawful competition to create an ersatz passing off with
requirements (in the alternative) less exacting
than those required
by the common law.
Some
of the restraints that the common law places on the passing off
action
(the one
relative to this case is the need to be proved the likelihood of
deception and confusion)
are
important in preventing the creation of impermissible monopolies
.
”
[
Emphases
added
]
8.
The
Defendants contend that the Plaintiffs seek to rely on a
concerted
scheme
devised
by the Defendants to engage in unlawful competition and to cause the
Plaintiffs harm. In this regard, the Plaintiffs seek
to contend for
i)
injurious
falsehoods (“Section E1”
[6]
);
ii)
a
direct
substitution of the plaintiffs’ products (“Section
E2”
[7]
);
iii)
passing
off of the plaintiffs’ gloves (“Section E3”
[8]
);
and
iv)
misappropriation
of trade secrets (“Section E4”
[9]
)
9.
The
Defendants submit that the Plaintiffs have conflated the elements of
delict which relate to pecuniary loss and damages –
damnum
iniuria datum
–
and
the requirements which accompany such a claim based on the Aquilian
action, with the principles applicable to the
actio
iniuriarum
.
[10]
On
the basis of the aforegoing, the Defendants submit that the
Plaintiffs’
causes
of action do not meet a case for Aquilian liability which is
necessary when damages are claimed because of injurious falsehoods.
[11]
10.
The
Defendants’ principal cause of complaint is that the Plaintiffs
do not seek to plead one cause of action and then the
damages which
arise from that cause of action, but rather conflate all their causes
of action into one single “
scheme
”
and
thereby contend for unlawful competition giving rise to damages. The
Plaintiffs plead that it is difficult to quantify their
damages at
this juncture and that same will be amended in due course. However,
as set forth hereunder, in my view, this is not
a satisfactory
answer, notwithstanding that an Exception should be dealt sensibly
and not in an overly technical manner.
[12]
11.
The Defendants contend that the
facta
probanda
(material facts) which have
been pleaded are not sufficient to sustain a cause of action and
where vital
facta probanda
have been omitted.
12.
In
respect of Particulars of Claim having to disclose a cause of action,
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank and Another and Two Other Cases
[13]
(“
Trope
”
)
held that:
“
It
is trite that a party has to plead - with sufficient clarity and
particularity - the material facts upon which he relied
for
the conclusion of law he wishes the Court to draw from those facts
(Mabaso v Felix
1981 (3) SA 865
(A) at 875A-H; Rule 18(4)).
It
is not sufficient, therefore, to plead a conclusion of law without
pleading the material facts giving rise to it
.
(Radebe and Others v Eastern Transvaal Development Board
1988 (2) SA
785
(A) at 792J-793G.)”
[14]
(Emphasis
added.)
13.
The
Appellate Division in
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
[15]
(“
McKenzie
”
)
at page 23 defined “
cause
of action
”
as
follows:
“…
every
fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove
,
if traversed
,
in order to support his right to the judgment of the Court.
It
does not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove
each fact, but
every
fact which is necessary to be proved.
”
[16]
(Emphasis
added.).
14.
A
plaintiff is required to plead its cause of action in an intelligible
and lucid manner that identifies the issues relied on and
in respect
of which evidence will be led.
[17]
Thus,
in a claim based on delict, the plaintiff is required to plead all
the elements of a delict – conduct, negligence, wrongfulness
and causation and the loss suffered. A particulars of claim
that does not disclose a cause of action is excipiable.
15.
In
relation to pleadings that are vague and embarrassing, the Court in
Giant
Leap Workspace Specialists (Pty) Ltd v Scoin Trading (Pty) Ltd T/A
The South African Gold Coin Exchange
[18]
(“
Giant
Leap
”
)
said the following:
“
[32]
An
exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing can only be taken
when the vagueness and embarrassment strikes at the root
of the cause
of action as pleaded
.
See Jowell v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at 905
H-I. If the defendant knows which claim it must meet, the particulars
of claim cannot be vague and embarrassing, and
the exception cannot
be upheld
.
[33]
This exception covers the
instance where, although there is a cause of action, it is incomplete
or defective in the way it is set
out, resulting in embarrassment to
the defendant. At issue is the formulation of the cause of action,
not its validity
. See Trope v
South African Reserve Bank
1993 (3) SA 164
(A) at 269I.
”
16.
In
determining whether a pleading is vague and embarrassing the question
turns on a twofold enquiry.
[19]
17.
The
first is whether the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that
it is vague. The second is whether the vagueness causes
embarrassment
of such a nature that the excipient is prejudiced.
[20]
In the Rules, there is no room for further particulars for purposes
of pleading. It is therefore incumbent upon the
pleader to provide
the necessary particularity as part of the original pleading.
[21]
The exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing, is intended
to cover the case where, although a cause of action
appears in the
summons there is some defect or incompleteness in the manner in which
it is set out, which results in embarrassment
to the defendant.
[22]
18.
An
Exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing strikes at the
formulation of the cause of action and not its legal validity.
[23]
Particulars of claim have been held to be vague and embarrassing
where: i) it is not clear whether the plaintiff sues in contract
or
in delict;
[24]
ii) the
admission of one of two sets of contradictory allegations in the
plaintiffs’ particulars of claim or declaration
would destroy
the plaintiffs’ cause of action;
[25]
iii) a pleading contains averments which are contradictory, and which
are not pleaded in the alternative.
[26]
19.
In addition, guidance
may be obtained as to what may be considered vague and embarrassing
from the provisions of Rule 18(6)
which provides that:
"
A
party who in his pleading relies upon a contract shall state whether
the contract is written or oral and when, where and by who
it was
concluded, and if the contract is written a true copy thereof or the
part relied on in the pleadings shall be annexed to
the pleading
."
20.
It is trite that the
purpose of the above rule, and of pleadings in general, is:
20.1.
to
bring clearly to the notice of the court and the parties to an action
the issues upon which reliance is to be placed
[27]
on the basis that:
“
The
object of pleading is to ascertain definitely what is the question at
issue between the parties; and this object can only be
attained when
each party states his case with precision
”
[28]
20.2.
to
ensure a party's claim or ground of defence is stated with sufficient
precision and in sufficient detail to enable the other
party to know
what case such party has to meet.
[29]
21.
Where
a pleader would be seriously embarrassed if the offending allegations
were not expunged, an exception should be taken. Prejudice
must
ultimately lie in an inability to prepare to meet the opponent’s
case.
[30]
Where
it is clear that no cause of action or defence has been pleaded, it
is the duty of a litigant to take the most expeditious
course to
bring the litigation to a conclusion so as to dispose of the dispute
or to bring the proceedings instituted to a conclusion.
[31]
22.
In
the case of pleadings that do not meet the requirements set out in
Rule 18, the complaint addresses deficiencies in relation
to
particular allegations or paragraphs that fail to comply with the
Rules
[32]
whereas
an exception speaks to vagueness and embarrassment that goes to the
root of the cause of action encapsulated by the relevant
allegations.
23.
The
pleading must contain “
a
clear and concise statement of the material facts upon which the
pleader relies for his claim”
and
set them out “
with
sufficient particularity to enable the opposite party to reply
thereto
”
.
[33]
A
party’s non-compliance with the requirements of Rule 18 may
give rise to a successful exception where such non-compliance
results
in a pleading being vague and embarrassing.
[34]
With
regard to “the material facts relied upon”, the pleader
must set out the
facta
probanda
upon
which it relies for its cause of action.
[35]
There
is no exhaustive test of what constitutes “sufficient
particularity”, and the question will be answered in relation
to the circumstances of each case.
[36]
24.
It
is incumbent on a party to plead a complete cause of action which
identifies the issues upon which he seeks to rely, and on which
evidence will be led, in an intelligible and lucid form and which
allows the defendant to plead to it.
[37]
25.
A
pleading is excipiable on the basis that no possible admissible
evidence led on the pleadings can disclose a cause of action.
[38]
26.
An
Exception on the basis that that a pleading is vague and embarrassing
is intended to cover the case where, although a case might
appear
from the claim, there is some defect or incompleteness in the manner
in which it is set out (i.e. its formulation) which
results in
embarrassment to the defendant. This kind of exception is not
directed at a particular paragraph within a cause of action
but goes
to the whole cause of action.
[39]
27.
The
mere fact that it may be possible to plead to the particulars of
claim that may be read in a number of ways by simply denying
the
allegations does not mean that it is not excipiable as being vague
and embarrassing.
[40]
28.
Where
an Exception is successfully taken to an initial pleading that it
discloses no cause of action, it is appropriate to order
that the
pleading be set aside and that the plaintiff be given leave, if so
advised, to file an amended pleading within a certain
period of
time.
[41]
THE
FIRST GROUND:
29.
The Plaintiffs have
instituted a claim in delict for a final interdict and damages
against the Defendants jointly and severally
in the amount of
R10
646 486.50
arising
from the following four categories of conduct which they allege give
rise to unlawful competition, each in its own right:
29.1.
the First Defendant’s injurious falsehoods of and concerning
the Plaintiffs (
Section E1, paragraph
25 to paragraph 32
);
29.2.
the direct substitution of the First Plaintiffs’ masks and
gloves with the Second Defendant’s gloves and
masks,
alternatively
gloves and masks distributed by third parties
(Section
E2, paragraphs 33 to 34
);
29.3.
the passing-off of the First Plaintiff’s gloves in the colour
green, said to have become distinctive of the First
Plaintiff and its
gloves (
Section E3, paragraphs
35 to 39);
29.4.
the misappropriation of:
29.4.1.
the First Plaintiff’s formula for the manufacture of a
fluorescent green coloured polymer applied to the First
Plaintiff’s
gloves;
29.4.2.
the First Plaintiff’s price list, said to constitute
confidential information and a trade secret belonging to
the First
Plaintiff (
Section E4, paragraphs 40
to 52).
29.4.3.
30.
The Defendants submit
that in order to succeed with a claim for injurious falsehoods, a
Plaintiff has to allege and prove the following:
30.1.
the Defendant has by
word
or conduct,
alternatively
both, made a false representation;
30.2.
the
Defendant knew the representation to be false;
30.3.
the
Plaintiff has lost or will lose customers;
30.4.
the
false representation is the cause of the loss;
30.5.
the
Defendant intended to cause the Plaintiff that loss by the false
representation.
31.
The Plaintiffs rely
on a series of representations pleaded in the following paragraphs in
support of the cause of action based on
injurious falsehoods:
31.1.
paragraphs 25.1 read
with paragraph 26;
31.2.
paragraphs 25.2 read
with paragraph 27;
31.3.
paragraphs 28 to 30
of the Particulars of Claim.
32.
Having regard to the
allegations pleaded in paragraphs 25.1 read with 26 and paragraphs
25.2 read with 27, the Defendants submit
that the Plaintiffs have
failed to allege that:
32.1.
the representations
were the cause of the loss;
32.2.
in making the
representations complained of, the Defendants intended to cause the
Plaintiffs to suffer the loss.
33.
The Defendants
further submit that the allegations pleaded in paragraphs 28 to 30
are incapable of supporting a claim based on injurious
falsehoods in
that the Plaintiffs have failed to allege the following:
33.1.
the Defendants by
words
or conduct or both, made a false representation;
33.2.
the identity of the recipient of the false representation;
33.3.
the
Defendants knew the representation to be false;
33.4.
the
false representation is the cause of the loss;
33.5.
the
Defendants intended to cause the Plaintiff to suffer the loss by
making the false representation.
34.
In the circumstances the Defendants contend that the Particulars of
Claim omit allegations necessary to sustain a cause
of action based
on injurious falsehoods,
alternatively
the Particulars of Claim are vague and embarrassing in that it is
unclear on what precise basis such a claim can be justified in
the
absence of material allegations required to support the cause of
action.
35.
The Plaintiffs’ response is that there is no merit to the First
Ground because:
35.1.
the
Plaintiffs have pleaded that the representations relied upon by the
Plaintiffs are clearly pleaded in paragraphs
25
to
29
of the Particulars of Claim and are the cause of the Plaintiffs'
loss. Further, the Plaintiffs plead precisely that in paragraph
32
of the Particulars of Claim (the making of the injurious falsehoods
"has caused harm to the Plaintiffs").
The
amount of harm is quantified in the Damages section of the
Particulars of Claim (Section F)
(
my
emphasis
);
35.2.
the Plaintiffs plead expressly in paragraph
31
of the Particulars of Claim that
the
representations were intended to benefit the Plaintiffs' competitors
(
my emphasis
)
(whose products are substitutable with those of the Plaintiffs and
the sale of which will therefore harm the Plaintiffs) and intended
to
damage their reputation; and
35.3.
finally, with regard to the
facta
probanda
in support of its pleading
of intention and causation, the Plaintiffs have clearly pleaded that
a variety of representations were
made (detailed in paragraphs
26
to
29
)
the essence of which was that the mines should not or could not buy
the Plaintiffs' products, that these representations were
intended to
cause harm to the Plaintiffs because competitors' products would be
sold in place of the Plaintiffs' products; and
that the Plaintiffs
have suffered harm as a result.
36.
Even if I were to apply the test enunciated in
Tembani
supra
in the most benevolent way and find that a cause of action in respect
of injurious falsehoods has been established, the Particulars
of
Claim remain excipiable in that::
36.1.
the “
scheme
”
is not properly articulated in paragraphs
21,
22
and
23
of the Particulars of Claim;
36.2.
the role of the Second and Third Defendants is not identified
therein;
36.3.
paragraph
23
of the Particulars of Claim make it clear that the objective of the
“
scheme
”
is not designed to benefit only the Defendants, but is designed to
benefit other unnamed PPE Manufacturers and Distributors
(who have
not been joined) including the Second Defendant;
36.4.
all of the alleged injurious falsehoods in paragraphs
25
to
31
are attributable to the First Defendant and no case is made out
against the Second and Third Defendants in respect thereof;
36.5.
the Second Plaintiff was only appointed as the First Plaintiff’s
Distributor in
July 2020
,
as per paragraph
4
of the Particulars of Claim;
36.6.
no damages claim has been established in paragraphs
25
to
31
viz a vis
the Second Plaintiff;
36.7.
the formulation of the damages claimed as per paragraphs
53
to
62
of the Particulars of Claim cannot be reconciled with each of the
alleged incidents referred to in paragraphs
25
to
31
and paragraph
63
is no answer to the Plaintiffs’ failure to properly plead the
damages suffered
; (
my
emphasis
)
36.8.
further, no case has been established in support of the relief
claimed in prayer 3, which provides for the First and
Second
Defendants to make payment jointly and severally to the Plaintiffs,
nor why the Second Plaintiff should share such amount
with the First
Plaintiff and if so, in what ratio. Similarly, no case has been made
out in respect of the amount claimed in prayer
6;
36.9.
the First Defendant is not alleged to be a competitor of the
Plaintiffs;
36.10.
no case has been made out which reflects that the Second Defendant
has been unlawfully competing with the Plaintiffs;
36.11.
no case has been made out against the Third Defendant and no relief
is sought against him.
37.
In the light of the aforegoing, I find that the First Ground of
Exception is well taken and should be upheld, in that
the Particulars
of Claim omit allegations necessary to sustain a cause of action
based on injurious falsehoods. If I am incorrect
in this regard, the
First Ground of Exception should nonetheless be upheld, since having
regard
inter alia
to
the difficulties highlighted in paragraph
36
above, the Particulars of Claim are vague and embarrassing in that it
is unclear on what precise basis such a claim can be justified.
THE
SECOND GROUND:
38.
The Plaintiffs allege
in paragraph
6
read with paragraph
21
of the Particulars of
Claim that the First Defendant:
38.1.
was appointed as a
vendor management industry (“
VMI
”
)
operator by several mining companies including the Fourth Defendant
to manage the acquisition, inventory and distribution of personal
protective equipment (“
PPE
”
)
products used by the mining company at a particular time;
38.2.
controls the
Plaintiffs’ access to a significant portion of the ultimate
purchasers of the Plaintiffs’ products (i.e.
the mining
companies) and to the end users of the products (i.e. the miners).
39.
In paragraphs
22
and
23
read with paragraph
54
,
the Plaintiffs make the following allegations:
39.1.
the object of the
scheme of the Defendants to compete unlawfully with the Plaintiffs
has been to occasion harm to their business
by diverting sales that
would otherwise have been made by them;
39.2.
the Second Plaintiff would have expected to sell 68 246 pairs of
gloves per annum to the First Defendant and ultimately
to the mines
where the First Defendant is the VMI operator.
40.
The Defendants contend that the Particulars of Claim fail to disclose
a cause of action in that the Plaintiffs have failed
to plead:
40.1.
the sales contract upon which sales were predicted as alleged in
paragraph
23
;
40.2.
the right upon which the Second Plaintiff relies in order to give
rise to the expectation of realising the sale of 68
246 pairs of
gloves per annum to the First Defendant;
40.3.
the basis upon which the mining companies were obliged to purchase 68
246 or any lesser amount of gloves from the Second
Plaintiff per
annum.
41.
The Defendants further contend that the Particulars of Claim in
failing to plead any of the aforegoing rights and obligations,
accordingly:
41.1.
lacks averments to sustain a cause of action;
41.2.
alternatively
are vague and embarrassing as the First to Third Defendants are
unable to determine the basis of:
41.2.1.
the right to make sales that were otherwise diverted as alleged in
paragraph
23
;
41.2.2.
the Second Plaintiff’s expectation of realising sales of 68 246
pairs of gloves pleaded in paragraph
54
.
41.3.
further
alternatively
the Particulars of Claim constitute an irregular step in that the
Plaintiffs have not
pleaded the material facts relied upon in support of the cause of
action with the consequence that the Particulars
of Claim constitute
an irregular step within the meaning of Rule 18(12).
42.
The Plaintiffs contend that they
do not
plead a claim in contract. They allege, that the Defendants have made
injurious falsehoods, substituted products, engaged
in passing off
and stolen confidential information from the Plaintiffs; and a result
of that conduct they have generated R4.1m
less in revenue from the
sale of gloves per annum than they otherwise would have done so. All
of these causes of action, the Plaintiffs
contend, are recognized
categories of unlawful competition; and the trite principle that a
Plaintiff is entitled to protect its
goodwill. It is the right to
goodwill that is being enforced.
43.
Mindful of the facts and my findings as set out in paragraph
36
above, it is to be noted that the Plaintiffs’ contentions as
summarised in paragraph
42
above constitute a total disconnect and do not satisfactorily address
the complaints set forth in paragraphs
40
and
41
above.
Accordingly, I find that the
Second
Ground
is well founded and should be
upheld,
since having regard
inter
alia
to the difficulties highlighted
in paragraph
36
above, the Particulars of Claim don’t disclose a cause of
action and in the alternative, at the very least, are vague and
embarrassing in that it is unclear on what precise basis such a claim
can be justified.
THE
THIRD GROUND:
44.
The Plaintiffs allege
that the First Defendant has without knowledge of the mines or mine
employees, unlawfully substituted the
Plaintiffs’ masks and
gloves with the Second Defendant’s gloves and masks,
alternatively,
those distributed
by
third parties
(
my
emphasis
)
at mines.
45.
The basis for
protection against unlawful competition under the common law is the
actio legis
Aquiliae
which
requires a Plaintiff to allege and prove the following elements:
45.1.
a
wrongful act or omission;
45.2.
fault
in the form of either
dolus
or
culpa
;
45.3.
causation
and;
45.4.
patrimonial
loss.
46.
The Defendants submit
that the substitution of the Plaintiffs’ masks and gloves with
the Second Defendant’s gloves and
masks,
alternatively
those distributed by
third parties at mines is not wrongful
per
se
, at
least not in the absence of the Plaintiffs having:
46.1.
identified
the existence of a subjective right which:
46.1.1.
the
First Defendant is alleged to have interfered with in a legally
unacceptable way by substituting the
Plaintiffs’
masks and gloves;
46.1.2.
precluded the First
Defendant from substituting the Plaintiffs’ masks and gloves as
alleged with the competing products of
its competitors;
46.2.
in the
alternative
to paragraph
46.1
,
alleged the breach of a legal duty owed by the First Defendant to the
Plaintiffs recognised in law for purposes of attracting
liability and
which required the Plaintiffs to plead the facts in support of the
existence of such a legal duty that obliged the
First Defendant not
to substitute the
Plaintiffs’
masks and gloves.
47.
Consequently, the
Defendants contend that the
direct
substitution of the Plaintiffs’ masks and gloves with the
Second Defendant’s gloves and masks,
alternatively
gloves and masks distributed by third parties does not result in the
automatic imposition of
Aquilian
liability for unlawful competition without more.
48.
In the result, the Defendants contend that the Particulars of Claim
fail to disclose a cause of action on the basis of the substitution
of the Plaintiffs’ products,
alternatively
the Particulars of Claim are vague and embarrassing as it remains
uncertain on what basis the substitution attracts liability in
delict.
49.
The Plaintiffs respond by contending that
with most unlawful
competition claims, the right being enforced is the right to
goodwill; and the cause of action is one under the
action legis
Aquiliae
(which recognizes the right of traders to the free
exercise of their trade). The principles which underpin causes of
action of this
sort are trite. They were set out by the
Constitutional Court in
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v
Pick
n Pay
Retailers
(Pty)
Ltd
[2017] 1 CPLR 1
(CC)
.
50.
To succeed in their claim based on the direct substitution of their
gloves
for
those of competitors by Select, therefore, the Plaintiffs were
required to plead conduct on the part of the Defendants which
exceeded the bounds of lawful competition and offended against the
boni mores,
as contemplated in
Massstores
. The
Plaintiffs submit that they have done so in paragraphs
33
and
34
of the Particulars of Claim. For example, paragraph
34.2
reflects conduct that, if established, is dishonest and unfair. The
use of gloves not approved by the mine (the ultimate customer),
as
alleged in paragraph
34.1
, for purposes of achieving the
objective in paragraph
23
of the Particulars of Claim also
plainly offends against the
boni mores
.
51.
Mindful of the facts and findings set out in
paragraph
36
above, coupled with the fact that
firstly
,
if anyone had a complaint, or claim, it would be the Fourth Defendant
and
secondly
,
that it allegedly involved the substitution and distribution of
unnamed third parties’ gloves as well, I find that the
Third
Ground
is well founded and should be
upheld. Further, on the Pleadings as they stand, it is impossible to
establish what amount of the
damages allegedly suffered and claimed,
is attributable to the First Defendant, the Second Defendant, or the
unnamed third parties
for that matter.
THE
FOURTH GROUND:
52.
The Plaintiffs allege
in paragraph
35
read with paragraph
36
that the First
Plaintiff has:
52.1.
made continuous and
extensive use of “
its
proprietary fluorescent green colour for Evrigard Gloves
”
;
52.2.
acquired a
substantial reputation and goodwill in respect of gloves bearing that
colour such that purchasers of protective gloves
associate the colour
green as designating that the gloves originate from the First
Plaintiff with the result that the colour green
has become
distinctive of the First Plaintiff and its gloves.
53.
The Plaintiffs allege
that:
53.1.
the application of
the colour green is conducted using a production process and is
confidential and proprietary to the First Plaintiff
(paragraph
17
);
53.2.
the Second Defendant
has since
2017
committed unlawful
passing-off in that it has manufactured and sold gloves in the First
Plaintiff’s proprietary fluorescent
green colour which is
likely to confuse or deceive purchasers into believing that the
Second Defendant’s gloves are connected
in the trade with those
of the First Plaintiff (paragraphs
37
and
39
).
54.
A claim for
passing-off requires a Plaintiff to show that the name, mark or
get-up used has become distinctive of its goods or services
in that
the public associate the name, mark or get-up with the Plaintiff’s
goods or services.
55.
The Plaintiffs are
therefore required to show that the get-up of the First Plaintiff’s
gloves, alleged to constitute the colour
green (see paragraph
36
),
acquired a reputation in connection with its gloves and consequently
became distinctive thereof.
56.
Where the get-up is
alleged to consist of a shape or a colour, a trader does not acquire
a right to the get-up on the basis that
it has become distinctive,
unless and only if it can prove that through the arrangement and
composition thereof, the trader has
added features to the shape or
colour that constitute capricious additions such as
inter
alia
distinctive
labelling or a combination of colours.
57.
The Defendants submit
that the description of the get-up as comprising a fluorescent green
colour on its own is insufficient to
become distinctive with the
common law:
57.1.
not permitting a
monopoly in respect of a single colour
per
se
;
57.2.
only affording
protection to those parts of the get-up said to constitute capricious
additions or features to an article that serve
as a badge of origin.
58.
Accordingly, the
Defendants submit that allegations in support of a passing-off claim
on the basis that the colour green has become
distinctive of the
First Plaintiff’s gloves are insufficient to sustain a cause of
action under the common law by virtue
of the fact that:
58.1.
the common law does
not countenance the acquisition of a get-up in a single colour
per
se
;
58.2.
the Plaintiffs have
not alleged the existence of any capricious additions capable of
rendering the get-up of the gloves distinctive
in character with the
colour green on its own not capable of acquiring a distinctive
character, nor indicative of any capricious
addition.
59.
The Defendants accordingly submit that the Particulars of Claim are
accordingly bad in law for purposes of sustaining
a passing-off cause
of action.
60.
The Plaintiffs submit that the authorities which the Defendants cite,
find to
the
contrary and are destructive of the Exception taken. The
Agriplaas
decision makes it clear that the colour of an article may
constitute the capricious addition to the article allegedly required
in
our law. The judgment of Couzens Hardy MR in the same matter
refers only to the (trite) principle that a reputation will not vest
in
common colours
because those colours are not
distinctive of a single trader; and consumers will not be deceived or
confused by the use of those
common colours by different traders. The
Plaintiffs' case is not based on a common colour. Its case is that
its colours for its
gloves (red and a distinctive green for one set
of gloves and distinctive green for the other) are distinctive of it
- the very
antithesis of a common colour.
61.
Finally, the Plaintiffs submit that the English authority relied upon
the Defendants is again destructive of their Exception.
The cases say
only that proving a reputation in a colour applied to an article is
difficult. That may be so. The point, however,
is that the
authorities recognize that it is possible to prove a reputation in a
colour applied to an article (the reputation does
not vest in a
colour per se as suggested by the Defendants but in the colour
applied to gloves). Indeed, the quotation in paragraph
90 of the
Defendants’ Heads of Argument says so in terms ("not
impossible"). Once it is recognized that a colour
applied to
particular goods may be distinctive, even if difficult to prove, a
cause of action is disclosed where a plaintiff pleads
that a colour,
applied to a particular article, is distinctive of it.
62.
Even if I am to apply the test enunciated in
Tembani
supra
in the most benevolent way and find that the Plaintiffs have pleaded
the requirements for a Passing Off, having regard
inter
alia
to the difficulties highlighted
in paragraph
36
above, it is unclear on what precise basis such a claim can be
quantified, ie there is no correlation between the alleged Passing
Off and the damages claimed. For these reasons, the
Fourth
Ground
is upheld.
THE
FIFTH GROUND:
63.
The Plaintiffs allege
in paragraphs 17 and 41 read with paragraph 46 and 47 that:
63.1.
the First Plaintiff
manufactures its gloves using a fluorescent green-coloured polymer
according to a confidential formula and process
which:
63.1.1.
the First Plaintiff
developed through considerable
effort,
time, cost and money;
63.1.2.
has considerable
value according to the First
Plaintiff;
63.1.3.
is confidential and
not available to the general
public.
63.2.
the application of
the colour green is conducted using a production process and is
confidential and “
proprietary
”
to the First
Plaintiff;
63.3.
the formula was
provided to the First and Second Defendants who have misappropriated
it to manufacture the Second Defendant’s
gloves.
64.
The Defendants submit
that South African law does not recognise an intellectual product in
which there can be ownership of an immaterial
property right, save to
the extent catered for under the relevant statutory forms of
recognised immaterial property for which legislative
recognition is
given as follows:
64.1.
patents (i.e. the
Patents Act 57 of 1978
);
64.2.
designs (i.e. the
Designs Act 195 of 1993
);
64.3.
copyright (i.e. the
Copyright Act 98 of 1978
) and;
64.4.
trade marks (i.e. the
Trade Marks Act 192 of 1993
).
65.
The Defendants
further submit that the Plaintiffs have not alleged:
65.1.
the existence of
statutory rights that would vest the First Plaintiff with any
proprietary right or interest in the fluorescent
green coloured
polymer or the production process or formula that produces the
polymer in a fluorescent green colour;
65.2.
sufficient facts to
justify legal recognition and protection to a proprietary right or
confidentiality interest at common law in
the fluorescent green
coloured polymer or the production process and formula giving rise
thereto in that:
65.2.1.
the Plaintiffs have
only alleged that the formula
and
process “
has considerable value
” to the first
Plaintiff as a subjective matter (paragraph 41.2 of the Particulars
of Claim);
65.2.2.
it was necessary for
the Plaintiffs to allege that the
information
forming the subject of the trade secret is when
objectively
viewed
, of economic or business value with the result that its
protection under the common law is not dependent on the First
Plaintiff’s
own evaluation which is insufficient to vest with
it legal protection.
66.
Accordingly, in the
absence of statutory protection or allegations which justify the
recognition of common law protection, the Defendants
submit that any
person or entity is free to copy a competitor’s product which
does not
per
se
constitute
an actionable wrong. Thus, they submit that the Particulars of Claim
in the circumstances do not disclose a cause of
action insofar as the
Plaintiffs seek to protect a manufacturing formula and process in
relation to a fluorescent green coloured
polymer,
alternatively
are vague and
embarrassing in that the Defendants are left in the dark concerning
the precise basis the Plaintiffs claim that the
production process
and formula is “
proprietary
”
to the First
Plaintiff.
67.
The Plaintiffs in response submit that our law has, for more than 60
years, recognized that the misuse of the confidential information
of
another trader is wrongful. As made clear by Corbett J in
Dunn
&
Bradstreet (Pty) Ltd v SA
Merchants Combined Credit Bureau (Cape) (Pty) Ltd
1968 (1) SA
209
(C) p. 221 -
222
a rival trader who
"...
in some manner obtains this [confidential] information and, well
knowing its nature and the basis upon which it was distributed,
uses
it in his competitive business and thereby injures the
first-mentioned trader in his business, commits a wrongful act
vis-a-vis
the latter and will be liable to him in damages ... in such
circumstances the conduct of a rival trader who obtains and, well
knowing
the position, uses the information to advance his own
business interests and activities amounts to a deliberate
misappropriation
and filching of the products of another's skill and
labour."
68.
Seemingly recognizing this, the Defendants go on to argue that the
Plaintiffs have not pleaded the
facta probanda
in support of a
common law claim for damages arising from the misuse of confidential
information. They place particular emphasis
on the fact that
Plaintiffs are said not to have pleaded that the information in
question was useful to a competitor or has value
when "objectively
viewed".
69.
The argument is misplaced. For information to qualify as confidential
it must have "the necessary quality of confidentiality"
about it. This quality will be inferred where the information in
question is:
69.1.
useful, in the sense that is capable of application in trade or
industry;
69.2.
not public knowledge or public property but is known only to a
restricted number of persons; and
69.3.
of economic value to the plaintiff.
70.
The Plaintiffs submit that they have clearly pleaded these
requirements in paragraph
41
of their Particulars of Claim. In
any event, the fact that the colour can be applied to gloves to
render them distinctive of a
particular trader clearly evidences the
usefulness of the colour, including to the Defendants. "Viewed
objectively",
the proprietary information (relating to the
formula and process) which enables the colour to be applied to the
gloves in question
is clearly valuable to the Defendants. That is why
they took the information and used it to compete with the Plaintiffs.
71.
Even if I am to apply the test enunciated in
Tembani
supra
in the most benevolent way and find that the Plaintiffs have pleaded
sufficient facts,
which if proved, would justify legal recognition and protection
of a proprietary right or confidentiality
interest at common law in
the fluorescent green coloured polymer or the production process and
formula giving rise thereto,
having
regard
inter alia
to
the difficulties highlighted in paragraph
36
above, it is unclear on what precise basis such a claim can be
quantified. For these reasons, the
Fifth
Ground
is upheld.
THE
SIXTH GROUND:
72.
The Plaintiffs allege
in paragraph 43 read with paragraphs 44 to 46 and paragraph 50 that:
72.1.
the First Plaintiff
maintains a price list which it created over the course of many
years, that has considerable value to the First
Plaintiff and is
confidential in that it is only disclosed to customers in confidence
and not available to the general public;
72.2.
the price list
constitutes confidential information belonging to the First
Plaintiff;
72.3.
a former employee and
director of the First Plaintiff, provided the price list to the First
and Second Defendants;
72.4.
the Second Defendant
is making use of the price list to compete with the Plaintiffs.
73.
The Defendants
contend that the Plaintiffs have not alleged sufficient facts to give
legal recognition and protection to a confidentiality
claim at common
law in respect of the price list in that:
73.1.
the Plaintiffs have
only alleged that the price list “
has
considerable value
”
to
the First Plaintiff as a subjective matter (paragraph 43.2 of the
Particulars of Claim);
73.2.
it was necessary for
the Plaintiffs to show that the information forming the subject of
the trade secret is when
objectively
viewed
, of
economic or business value with the result that its protection under
the common law is not dependent on the First Plaintiff’s
own
evaluation which is insufficient to vest the price list with it legal
protection.
74.
Accordingly, the
Defendants submit that the Particulars of Claim do not disclose a
cause of action insofar as the Plaintiffs seek
to allege that the
First to Third Defendants committed an actionable wrong
ex
delicto
arising
from a breach of confidentiality in relation to the price list.
75.
The Plaintiffs submit that
t
he Sixth Ground is very similar to the Fifth, the only
difference being that the Defendants now contend that the Plaintiffs
have
not pleaded that the Plaintiffs' price list qualifies as
confidential information when "viewed objectively". Aside
from
the fact that that is not the test, the Exception fails because
the Plaintiffs do indeed plead that the price list has the necessary
qualities of confidential information in paragraph
43
of the
Particulars of Claim.
76.
Applying the test enunciated in
Tembani
supra
in the most benevolent way, I find that the Plaintiffs have pleaded
sufficient facts,
which if proved, would justify legal recognition and protection
of a proprietary right or confidentiality
interest at common law in
the price list. However,
having
regard
inter alia
to
the difficulties highlighted in paragraph
36
above, it is unclear on what precise basis such a claim can be
quantified. For these reasons, the
Sixth
Ground
is upheld.
THE
SEVENTH GROUND:
77.
The Plaintiffs allege
in paragraph
53
to
63
that they have
suffered damages.
78.
The Plaintiffs have
sought to base their claim for
damages on a loss of profits.
79.
The Defendants submit that the allegations in paragraphs
56,
57, 58 and 59
(including
the reference to annexure “A”)
do not sustain a claim for a loss of profits in that the averments
fail to plead:
79.1.
the
costs
of manufacture;
79.2.
the costs of goods sold;
79.3.
the Plaintiffs’ fixed costs;
79.4.
the difference between the total cost of manufacturing and the
total sales.
80.
The Defendants
further submit that the
Particulars
of Claim do not comply with:
80.1.
Rule 18(4)
, in that they omit material facts upon
which the Plaintiffs rely in support of the damages claim for a loss
of profit;
80.2.
Rule 18(10)
, in that the Plaintiffs have not set
out their damages in such a manner as will enable the first to third
Defendants to reasonably
assess the
quantum
thereof.
81.
In the circumstances, the Defendants submit that
the Plaintiffs’ Particulars of Claim constitute an irregular
step within
the meaning of
Rule 18(12)
,
alternatively
,
are vague and embarrassing.
82.
The P
laintiffs respond by contending that
they have pleaded the (i) quantum of sales lost; (ii) the margin that
they would have made
on such sales; and (iii) the profits lost as a
result of the conduct of the Defendants. They accordingly submit that
the pleading
therefore complies with
rule 18(10)
and is not otherwise
excipiable in that the Defendants have all the information they need
to assess the quantum of the damages,
to plead thereto and to make a
tender.
83.
I do not agree with the Plaintiffs’
contentions, firstly, for the reasons set forth in paragraph
36
above; secondly, because there is a total
disconnect between the alleged causes of action relied upon and the
globular and arbitrary
manner in which the Plaintiffs’ alleged
damages have been computed and thirdly because the globular amounts
cannot be linked
to the separate causes of action relied upon. Thus,
at the very least, the Particulars of Claim are vague and
embarrassing.
Accordingly, this
Seventh
Ground
is upheld.
THE
EIGHTH GROUND:
84.
In paragraphs
57
to
61
,
the Plaintiffs allege that they have jointly suffered damages in the
form of a loss of profit in the amount of:
84.1.
R4 108 026.62 in respect of the sale of the First
Plaintiff’s gloves between 2019 and 2021;
84.2.
R6 538 459.91 in relation to the sale of the First
Plaintiff’s masks from 2019 to 2021.
85.
Having regard to the fact that:
85.1.
the Second Plaintiff is alleged in paragraph 4 to have been appointed
at the First Plaintiff’s distributor from
July
2020,
only from which date it
purchased from the First Plaintiff products for on-sale to customers
including mining companies and companies
appointed by mining
companies to manage the acquisition, inventory and distribution of
products at their mines;
85.2.
no allegations have been made of and concerning the Second
Plaintiff’s involvement in the purchase and sale of products
during the period
2019
to
July 2020
,
the
Defendants submit that no cognisable claim lies in the name of the
Second Plaintiff for damages during the period
2019
to
July
2020
.
86.
While the Plaintiffs have pleaded that they have jointly suffered
damages, the Defendants further submit that the Particulars of
Claim
do not identify the amount of damages suffered by each party.
87.
In the circumstances,
the Defendants submit that:
87.1.
the Particulars of Claim fail to disclose any damages in respect of
either Plaintiff with sufficient particularity to give rise
to a
cognisable cause of action for either one or both of them;
87.2.
alternatively,
the
Plaintiffs have not set out their
damages in such a manner as will enable the First to Third Defendants
to reasonably assess the
quantum
thereof for purposes of
Rule 18(10)
with the
result that the Plaintiffs’ Particulars of Claim constitute an
irregular step within the meaning of
Rule 18(12)
;
0cm; line-height: 150%">
87.3.
further
alternatively
,
the Particulars of Claim are vague and embarrassing.
88.
The Plaintiffs submit that the S
econd
Plaintiff is the distributor of the First Plaintiff's products. They
are both therefore harmed by the Defendants’ conduct,
not least
because sales lost by the First Plaintiff are also lost by the Second
Plaintiff.
89.
In any event, the Plaintiffs contend that there is no suggestion that
the Second Plaintiff is not entitled to the interdictory
and
declaratory relief sought by the Plaintiffs. This argument cannot be
accepted, since the Eighth Ground does not address interdictory
and
declaratory relief. The Plaintiff further contend that whether
or not
the Second Plaintiff has a separate
claim for damages is of not appropriate subject matter for an
Exception. I disagree with this
contention, for the reasons set forth
in paragraphs
36
and
81
above.
Accordingly, this
Eighth
Ground
is upheld
.
CONCLUSION
90.
In the circumstances,
the Exception is upheld and the Plaintiffs’ Particulars of
Claim are struck out.
ORDER
1.
The Exception is
upheld and the Plaintiffs’ Particulars of Claim are struck out.
2. The
Plaintiffs are granted leave to amend their Particulars of Claim
within
15
[FIFTEEN]
days
from the date of this Order.
3.
The Plaintiffs are
ordered to pay the costs of the Exception and Application to strike
out, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved,
including costs of two counsel.
M NOWITZ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
26 FEBRUARY 2024
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE PLAINTIFFS:
Adv. G Marriot
082
824 0616
marriott@counsel.co.za
Adv.
M C Scheepers
082
788 0729
scheepers@group621.co.za
FOR THE DEFENDANTS:
Adv. Subel, SC
082
450 4055
subel@group621.co.za
Adv.
C C Bester
079
191 3890
chrisbester@group621.co.za
[1]
CaseLines 004-1.
[2]
CaseLines 005-1.
[3]
McKenzie v Farmers’ Co-Operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD
16
at 23.
[4]
[1995] ZASCA 57
;
1995 (4) SA 441
(AD) at 453G-H.
[5]
2001 (3) SA 884
(SCA) at para [1].
[6]
CaseLines;
Particulars of Claim (“POC”); 001-12 to 001-15; para 25
to 32.
[7]
CaseLines;
POC; 001-15 to 001-16; para 33 to 34.
[8]
CaseLines;
POC; 001-16 to 001-17; para 35 to 39.
[9]
CaseLines;
POC; 001-17 to 001-19; para 40 to 52.
[10]
See
Van Heerden-Neethling,
Unlawful
Competition
,
Second Ed, page 268 to page 271 for a general discussion regarding
the uncertainty as to which delictual principles are applicable
to
the cause of action of injurious falsehoods.
[11]
See
Bredell
v Pienaar
1924
CPD 203
and Universiteit van
Pretoria
v Tommie Meyer Films (Edms) Bpk
1977
(4) SA 376
(T) 385.
12
For a general discussion on these principles, see
De Ribeira v
Woudberg
2021 (1) SA 530
(WCC) at paras [15] to [20], as
well as what is set out in Erasmus Superior Court Practice at D1-297
and the authorities
cited at FF1. See also
Telematrix (Pty)
Ltd ta Matrix Vehicle Tracking v The Advertising Standards Authority
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at 465.
[13]
Trope v
South African Reserve Bank and Another and Two Other Cases
1993 (3) SA 264 (A).
[14]
At
p 273A-B.
[15]
1922 AD 16 (AD).
[16]
The SCA in
Blue
Chip 2 (Pty) Ltd t/a Blue Chip 49 v Ryneveldt and Others
2016 (6) SA 102
(SCA)
endorsed this definition
at § 14.
[17]
Koth
Property Consultants CC v Lepelle-Nkumpi Local Municipality Ltd
2006 (2) SA 25
(T)
(“
Koth
”
)
§ 18.
[18]
(2014/37464)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 321.
[19]
See
Trope
supra
at
221A-E.
[20]
Quinlan
v MacGregor
1960
(4) SA 383
(D) at 393E-H.
[21]
See
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones
1998
(1) SA 836
(W) at 901 E-F where Heher J (as he then was) said:
“
It
is also highly unlikely, in my opinion, that the Legislature, in
abolishing the Rules relating to further particulars, intended
to
substitute a procedure which was more lax than that in force at the
time of abolition. Where
Rule 18(4)
relates to material facts,
it continues, in my view, to require that a plaintiff shall furnish
only those particulars which are
strictly necessary to enable the
defendant to plead, the only difference being that such particulars
are now required to be incorporated
in the statement of the
plaintiff's cause of action from the outset.
"
[22]
Liquidators
Wapejo Shipping Co Ltd v Lurie Bros
1924
AD 69
at 74;
Lockhat
v Minister of the Interior
1960
(3) SA 765
(D) at 777E;
Trope
at 268F.
[23]
Trope
at 269 I;
Venter
and Others NNO v Barritt; Venter and Others
NNO
v Wolfsberg Arch
Investments 2 (Pty) Ltd
2008
(4) SA 639
(C) at 643I-644A
[24]
Dunn
and Bradstreet (Pty) Ltd v SA Merchants Combined Credit Bureau
(Cape) (Pty) Ltd
1968
(1) SA 209
(C);
Gerber
v Naude
1971
(3) SA 55
(T);
Pocket
Holdings (Pvt) Ltd v Lobel's Holdings (Pvt) Ltd
1966 (4) SA 238 (R).
[25]
Levitan
v Newhaven Holiday Enterprises CC
1991
(2) SA 297
(C) at 298J and 300G.
[26]
Trope
at 211 E.
[27]
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993
(3) SA 94
(A) adopting the dictum from
Durbach
v Fairway Hotel Ltd
1949
(3) SA 1081
(SR) at 1082.
[28]
lmprefed
citing with approval
Odgers'
Pleading
and Practice in Civil Actions in the High Court of Justice
22
nd
Ed at 113.
[29]
Neugebauer
& Co Ltd v Bodiker & Co (SA)
1925
AD 316.
[30]
Francis
v Sharp
2004
(3) SA 230
(C) at 240.
[31]
Allen &
Others NNO v Gibbs & Others
1977
(3) SA 212
(SECLD) at 215H to 216C and see
also
Scheepers
and Nolte v Pate
1909 TS 353
at 360 per Wessels J (as he then was).
[32]
See
the comprehensive treatment in
Nel
& Others v McArthur & Others
2003
(4) SA 142
(T) at 146B-
149G,
with reference to the important authorities in this regard, and in
particular the seminal
decision
in
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones & Others
1998
(1) SA 836 (W).
[33]
Uniform Rules, Rule 18(4).
[34]
Sasol
Industries (Pty) Ltd t/a Sasol 1 v Electrical Repair Engineering
(Pty) Ltd t/a LH
Marthinusen
1992
(4) SA 466
(W)
at
469J;
Jowell
(supra)
at 902E.
[35]
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23;
Makgae
v
Sentraboer
(Koöperatief) Bpk
1981 (4) SA 239
(T) at 245D-E.
[36]
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993
(3) SA 94
(A) at 107C-H.
[37]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones
supra
at 902H-I;
McArthur
supra at 146 –
148.
[38]
McKelvey
v Cowan NO
1980
(4) SA 525
(Z) at 526D.
[39]
Trope v
South African Reserve Bank
at
269H;
Lockhat
v Minister of
Interior
1960 (3) SA 765
(T) at 777E;
Jowell
supra
at 899G.
[40]
Trope v
SA Reserve Bank
at
211A-D.
[41]
Group
Five Building Ltd v Government of the Republic of South Africa
(Minister of Public
Works and Land
Affairs)
[1993] ZASCA 4
;
1993
(2) SA 593
(A)
at
602-603.
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