Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 254South Africa
Epic Outdoor Media Sales (Pty) Ltd v Paterson (2024/024081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 254 (18 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 March 2024
Judgment
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## Epic Outdoor Media Sales (Pty) Ltd v Paterson (2024/024081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 254 (18 March 2024)
Epic Outdoor Media Sales (Pty) Ltd v Paterson (2024/024081) [2024] ZAGPJHC 254 (18 March 2024)
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sino date 18 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED.
18
March 2024
#### Case
No.2024-024081
Case
No.
2024-024081
In the matter between:
EPIC
OUTDOOR MEDIA SALES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
TERRANCE
PATERSON
First Respondent
NETWORK
X PTY LTD
Second Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1.
The applicant, Epic Outdoor, applies urgently to enforce two
provisions of its contract with the first respondent, Mr. Paterson.
Mr. Paterson is a former employee of Epic Outdoor. He undertook, in
his contract with Epic Outdoor, not to divulge any of Epic
Outdoor’s
confidential information, imparted to him during his employment, to
anyone else. Mr. Paterson’s contract
makes clear that this
obligation extends beyond the termination of his employment with Epic
Outdoor. Mr. Paterson also undertook
not to accept employment with
any of Epic Outdoor’s partners or competitors for a year after
he leaves Epic Outdoor.
2.
Epic Outdoor says that, contrary to these undertakings, Mr.
Paterson has now accepted employment with the second respondent,
Network
X, which is one of its competitors, and has divulged, or is
shortly to divulge, confidential information conveyed to him during
his employment with Epic Outdoor to Network X. It is not necessary
for me to deal with the nature of that information in any detail,
and
Epic Outdoor would not thank me for doing so. It is commercially
sensitive, and was outlined to me in a confidential affidavit
which
has been excluded from the public record of this case on this court’s
electronic registry. It is enough for me to say
(and this was not
seriously disputed) that the information is such that would allow any
of Epic Outdoor’s direct competitors
to undercut Epic Outdoor
on price, and to extinguish competitive advantages Epic Outdoor has
built up by developing a range of
analytic tools and technologies in
the course of maturing its business.
3.
It is clear from the papers that Mr. Paterson had access to a
wide range of confidential information, and that his access to that
information was the result of Epic Outdoor’s decision to build
him up as a technological expert in the outdoor advertising
industry.
The strategy seems to have been to present Mr. Paterson as a
particularly skilled asset that only Epic Outdoor could
offer to its
clients. The pitfall implicit in this approach is, of course, that an
employee whose status is so elevated may one
day leave and take his
special skills and enhanced reputation to a competitor.
4.
To insure itself against this eventuality, Epic Outdoor had
Mr. Paterson agree to the contractual provisions it now seeks to
enforce.
The question at the centre of this case is whether, and to
what extent, those provisions are enforceable.
5.
Before turning to that question, it is necessary to deal
briefly with two preliminary issues raised on Mr. Paterson’s
and
Network X’s behalf at the hearing. These two issues were
plucked from a range of other points taken
in limine
on the
affidavits, but which were not persisted with in argument.
Urgency
6.
The first issue is that of urgency. Mr. Bester, who appeared
for Mr. Paterson, contended, at some length, that Epic Outdoor’s
application was not urgent and ought to be struck from the roll. The
argument on this score consisted, in the main, of formalistic
criticisms of Epic Outdoor’s non-compliance with this court’s
practice directives on the institution and enrolment
of urgent
matters, and Epic Outdoor’s apparent disregard for the
strictures of Coetzee J in
Luna Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v
Makin
(1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at 137A-F), in which the procedure to
be followed in determining the extent of a departure from the
ordinary rules in cases
of urgency is set out.
7.
However, Mr. Bester’s argument did not engage the
overriding consideration in any urgent application: whether the
applicant
will achieve substantial redress at a hearing in due
course. That question must be answered on the facts as the Epic
Outdoor alleges
them. In this case, those facts plainly sustain a
claim of urgency. Epic Outdoor built Mr. Paterson up as an industry
expert, and
in doing so gave him access to confidential information
he would not otherwise have had. In return, Mr. Paterson signed a
contract
containing a restraint of trade and an undertaking that he
would not share Epic Oudoor’s confidential information if and
when he left employment with it. The restraint of trade endures for a
year. If the restraint is valid and enforceable, then time
is of the
essence. A hearing in the ordinary course, and any time that may be
necessary to consider judgment after that hearing,
may well take up
the whole of the period during which the restraint would otherwise be
enforced. Plainly, that will deny Epic Outdoor
substantial redress.
8.
The question of whether Epic Outdoor has complied with urgent
court practice directions, and the principles set out in case law
dealing the enrolment of urgent applications, is secondary to this
consideration. It may have been different had any non-compliance
been
shown to have so prejudiced Mr. Paterson and Network X as to have
deprived them of a reasonable opportunity to present their
case. But
that was not shown. The matter is clearly urgent.
Standing
9.
The second preliminary issue Mr. Bester raised was Epic
Outdoor’s standing. The applicant in this case is Epic Outdoor
Media
Sales (Pty) Ltd. There is another company, to which the
applicant is related. It is called Epic Outdoor Media (Pty) Ltd. The
founding
affidavit in this case is deposed to by Mr. Darren McKinon.
Mr. McKinon is not a director of the “Media Sales”
company.
He is a director of the “Outdoor Media” company.
The header on the applicant’s founding papers refers to the
“Outdoor Media” company, not the “Media Sales”
company. In the founding affidavit itself, however, Mr. McKinon
confirms that the applicant is in fact the “Media Sales”
company. But he does not claim to be a director of the “Media
Sales” company. He says that he is a director of the “Outdoor
Media” company.
10.
In a Rule 7 notice, Mr. Paterson took the point that Mr.
McKinon was not authorised to bring the application on behalf of the
“Media
Sales” company, no doubt because he is not a
director of it. This was met with a resolution of the “Media
Sales”
company authorising Mr. McKinon to act on behalf of the
“Media Sales” company, notwithstanding the fact that he
is
not a director of it.
11.
Mr. Bester argued that this did not resolve the issue, because
the entity cited in the founding papers was not the “Media
Sales” company, but the “Outdoor Media” company.
But that is plainly not so. Even though the header on the founding
papers appears to refer to the “Outdoor Media” company,
the founding affidavit makes crystal clear that the applicant
is in
fact the “Media Sales” company. Epic Outdoor says that
the incorrect reference to the “Outdoor Media”
company in
the headers was a typing error. That is plainly what it was.
12.
What Mr. Bester sought to make of all of this took some
probing at the hearing. In the end, the point seemed to be that the
wrong
company was in fact before me, and that no relief could be
granted for that reason. As should be abundantly clear by now, that
contention is far-fetched. This application was always brought by and
on behalf of the “Media Sales” company.
The
confidential information
13.
There is no real dispute between the parties that the
confidentiality clauses in Mr. Paterson’s contract are valid
and binding.
Mr. Paterson has in fact given written undertakings to
abide by them. For its part, Network X has undertaken not to ask Mr.
Paterson
to break them.
14.
Ms. Bosman, who appeared for Epic Outdoor, argued that these
undertakings are insufficient. I agree. Network X is now Mr.
Paterson’s
employer. Whether or not Network X asks him to feed
it confidential information, Mr. Paterson has a clear incentive to do
so, and
there are no apparent consequences for Network X if it allows
him to do so without making an explicit request.
15.
At the hearing of the matter, Network X agreed to be bound by
a stronger set of undertakings. These are that Network X will not
keep or use any confidential information Mr. Paterson may offer to
it, and that, if Mr. Paterson does seek to divulge any of the
confidential information referred to in the confidential affidavit,
Network X will inform Epic Outdoor of this. At that point,
Epic
Outdoor will have its remedies. This arrangement provides Epic
Outdoor with more protection that it seeks in its notice of
motion,
and I intend to make an order that strengthens the relief sought in
that respect.
The
restraint of trade
16.
However, the nub of this case is not whether Mr. Paterson
should be restrained from divulging Epic Outdoor’s confidential
information to Network X. It is whether he should be permitted to
stay in Network X’s employment at all. Clause 2.1.4 of Mr.
Paterson’s contract contains the restraint of trade upon which
Epic Outdoor relies. It states that Mr. Paterson will not
“seek
employment from, or become employed by, or associated with or
contracted to” a “Business Partner”
or a
“Competitor” of Epic Outdoor for a year after his
employment comes to an end. Under the contract, a “Business
Partner” is any “natural [or] juristic perso[n]”
that Epic Outdoor “may collaborate with in order to conduct
its
Business and to render . . . services to Clients”. A
“Competitor” is “any company, closed corporation
[sic], firm or entity which engages in the same or similar Business
as” Epic Outdoor. The restraint operates throughout South
Africa.
17.
It was ultimately accepted that Network X is a competitor of
Epic Outdoor. Given the startlingly broad definition given to that
term in the contract, it is hard to see how Network X could be
defined otherwise. Indeed, the effect of the restraint clause is
to
make Mr. Paterson unemployable in the outdoor advertising industry,
and in at least some of its related industries, for a year
after he
leaves Epic Outdoor. Mr. Paterson has been employed in that industry
for 10 years. The effect of enforcing the restraint,
at its widest,
is prevent him from using the untransferable skills and know-how he
would have acquired during that period.
18.
Every restraint of trade embodies a tension between two
principles of public policy. The first is that, where it has been
freely
agreed, a restraint of trade is, just like any other contract,
enforceable even if it results in some unfairness. The second is
that
individuals should generally be free to choose their trade or
occupation. Both these principles enjoy at least some constitutional
recognition. Freedom of contract – and accordingly the
importance of enforcing contracts freely entered into – is an
incident of the right to dignity (see
Brisley v Drotsky
2002
(4) SA 1
(SCA), paragraph 94). The right to choose a trade or
profession is entrenched in section 22 of the Constitution, 1996.
19.
The enforcement of every restraint of trade requires the
reconciliation of these two principles in the context of a particular
case
(
Sunshine Records (Pty) Ltd v Frohling
(“
Sunshine
Records
”)
1990 (4) SA 782
(A) 794C-E). The starting point
is to identify any inequality of bargaining power between the parties
to the restraint, before
moving on to consider the consequences of
enforcing the restraint for the party seeking to escape it, together
with the consequences
of declining to enforce the restraint for the
party that seeks to rely on it. The central question is the extent to
which a restraint
is reasonable in the context in which it is to be
enforced. A court is entitled to enforce the restraint only to the
extent that
it is reasonable to do so, and to ameliorate the
restraint to the extent necessary to render it consistent with public
policy (
Magna Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd
v Ellis
[1984] ZASCA 116
;
1984
(4) SA 874
(A)). Where it is alleged that a restraint will operate
too harshly on the party to whom it applies, that party bears the
onus
of demonstrating this on the facts (
Sunshine Records
,
795G-H).
20.
In this case, the inequality of bargaining power is obvious:
Mr. Paterson was an ordinary employee, and Epic Outdoor is a company
of some substance that contracted him to work for it. It decided to
promote him as an industry expert on terms that he could hardly
refuse. In that context, I cannot accept that it is reasonable to
shut Mr. Paterson out of the industry that he has worked in for
the
last 10 years solely in order to protect Epic Outdoor’s
confidentiality interests, especially if those interests are
separately protected by the interdict I intend to grant.
21.
Ms. Bosman urged me not to look at things this way, since all
that is asked of me in this case is to prevent Mr. Paterson from
working
with Network X, not to exclude him from the whole of the
industry in which Epic Outdoor is embedded. But I do not think I can
take
such a narrow view. Epic Outdoor’s case is that its
confidential information is effectively hardwired into Mr. Paterson.
Notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Paterson will be interdicted from
sharing facts, documents and other specific information about
Epic
Outdoor’s sales strategies, pricing and analytic technologies
with Network X, Ms. Bosman argued that the fact that Mr.
Paterson has
seen and worked with this information is enough to make its
disclosure to Network X inevitable.
22.
In these circumstances, Ms. Bosman submitted, the only way to
protect Epic Outdoor’s confidentially interests is to prevent
Mr. Paterson from working with Network X. But if that is true of Mr.
Paterson’s employment with Network X, then it must also
be true
of Mr. Paterson’s employment with any of Epic Outdoor’s
competitors. In other words, if I enforce the restraint
in this case,
there is no reason why it should not be enforced at its widest. It
seems to me that I cannot blind myself to the
broader effect of the
restraint of trade in considering whether it should be enforced in
this case.
23.
In any event, I think that Ms. Bosman’s submission
elides the distinction between Epic Outdoor’s confidential
information
and the skills and know-how Mr. Paterson has acquired
while working with Epic Outdoor. It is reasonable to restrain Mr.
Paterson
from using or disseminating the confidential information to
which he had access in the course of his employment with Network X.
It is not reasonable, in my view, to prevent Mr. Paterson from
working with any of Epic Outdoor’s competitors simply because
he acquired special skills and know-how during his employment with
Epic Outdoor. I have held elsewhere that a restraint of that
nature
is enforceable where an individual’s particular skills and
know-how are inseparable from the assets being sold as
part of that
individual’s business. In that case, special skills and
knowledge of the techniques of a business form part
of the capital
transaction. It is part of what is bought and sold. The purchaser
may, in those circumstances, enforce a restraint
against the seller
of a business that prevents the seller from competing with the
business sold or from being employed by any of
its competitors, for a
specific, reasonable period (see
ASI Capital (Pty) Ltd v Mann
(2022/059634) [2023] ZAGPJHC 26 (23 January 2023)).
24.
But this case is not of that nature. Mr. Paterson sold his
labour, and nothing more. If Epic Outdoor has any protectable
interest
in the special skills and know-how, or even the enhanced
reputation as an expert with which it equipped Mr. Paterson during
the
course of his employment, the protection of that interest does
not justify excluding Mr. Paterson from employment in an industry
in
which he has worked for 10 years. Mr. Paterson says that he is
unemployable in a similar position outside that industry. He
says
that his efforts to find work outside the industry in October 2023
failed. Epic Outdoor cannot really gainsay this. During
argument, Ms.
Bosman suggested that Mr. Paterson could find employment with
companies of a similar nature to those which employed
him before he
entered the industry. But Mr. Paterson’s entry to the industry
having taken place so long ago, I do not think
that is realistic.
25.
Finally, it weighs with me that, upon learning of Mr.
Paterson’s intention to take up work with Network X, Epic
Outdoor did
not immediately object in principle to Mr. Paterson
moving there. This initial flexibility appears to me to be consistent
with
clause 2.4 of Mr. Paterson’s contract with Epic Outdoor,
which empowers Epic Outdoor to relax the restraint of trade if Mr.
Paterson’s employment with one of its competitors or partners
is deemed to be “of low risk” to its interests.
It
follows that the contract itself envisages that the interests
underpinning the restraint may be protected by something short
of a
total ban on Mr. Paterson being employed with any of Epic Outdoor’s
competitors or partners. If that is so, then enforcing
the restraint
is not intrinsically necessary. It is only necessary insofar as it
protects another of Epic Outdoor’s specific
and identified
interests. It seems clear to me that the interest at stake in this
application is the protection of Epic Outdoor’s
confidential
information. Once that is adequately protected by the interdict I
intend to grant, the terms of the contract themselves,
taken together
with Epic Outdoor’s initial failure to object to Mr. Paterson’s
move to Network X, suggest that there
is little underlying need to
discontinue Mr. Paterson’s employment there.
26.
Epic Outdoor has accordingly identified no basis on which to
restrain his employment with Network X
per se
.
Costs
27.
Mr. Paterson and Network X made common cause in opposing this
application. The undertakings they gave in relation to Epic Outdoor’s
confidential information were objectively insufficient, and a hearing
before me was necessary to delineate the relief to which
Epic Outdoor
is entitled. At that hearing, Mr. Paterson and Network X belaboured
two preliminary contentions that were transparently
without merit,
wasting a great deal of time in a busy urgent court. They must bear
the costs of this application jointly and severally.
Order
28.
For all these reasons –
28.1 The first
respondent is interdicted and restrained from divulging the
applicant's confidential information to the second
respondent or any
third party.
28.2 The second
respondent is interdicted and restrained from seeking, possessing,
using or disseminating any of the applicant’s
confidential
information that may be conveyed to it by the first respondent.
28.3 If the first
respondent offers to disclose, or in fact discloses, any of the
applicant’s confidential information
to the second respondent,
the second respondent will forthwith inform the applicant, setting
out -
28.3.1 the date
and time of the disclosure or the offer to disclose;
28.3.2 the nature
of the information offered or disclosed; and
28.3.3 the steps
the second respondent took thereafter in dealing with that
information or the offer to disclose it.
28.4 The first and
second respondents are directed, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, to pay
the costs of this
application.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 18
March 2024.
HEARD
ON:
12 March 2024
DECIDED
ON:
18 March 2024
For
the Applicant:
P Bosman
Instructed by Christelis
Artemides Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
B C Bester
Instructed
by
Warrener De Agrela and Associates Inc
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