Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 346South Africa
NSR Sports and Education (Pty) Ltd t/a IAM 360 v Van Heerden and Another (2023-075730) [2024] ZAGPJHC 346 (3 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## NSR Sports and Education (Pty) Ltd t/a IAM 360 v Van Heerden and Another (2023-075730) [2024] ZAGPJHC 346 (3 April 2024)
NSR Sports and Education (Pty) Ltd t/a IAM 360 v Van Heerden and Another (2023-075730) [2024] ZAGPJHC 346 (3 April 2024)
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sino date 3 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-075730
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:02/04/2024
SIGNATURE
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN
NSR
SPORTS AND EDUCATION (PTY) LTD
t/a
IAM 360
APPLICANT
AND
GARY
VAN HEERDEN
1
ST
RESPONDENT
NATASHA
JACOBS
2
ND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
LOXTON AJ
1.
On 22 August 2023 the applicant, NSR Sports And
Education (Pty) t/a IAM360 brought an urgent application against the
respondents
for the following relief:
“
2.
The respondents are interdicted, for a period of 12 months, from
directly or indirectly:
2.1
using for any purpose whatsoever the applicant’s confidential
information including
its list/s of current and prospective customers
and clients, customer leads, customer information, pricing of
contracts (“the
confidential information”);
2.2
approaching, canvassing, contacting, soliciting or doing business
(directly or indirectly)
with the applicant’s customers as set
out in the list (to be handed to the court and which will be marked
“A”
and which will be attached
to this order) or any customers dealt with through the respondents’
involvement with the applicant
(“the customers”);
2.3
directly or indirectly divulging to third parties any of the
confidential information or
customers;
2.4
using the confidential information to advance the respondents’
own competing business
interests or the completing business interests
of a third party;
2.5
discouraging any of the customers (directly or indirectly) from doing
business with the
applicant.
3.
Ordering the respondents to deliver, within seven (7) days of this
Order, to the applicant all copies of the confidential information
in
respondents’ possession or under their control in all formats
(soft and hard copies) alternatively a written undertaking
by all the
respondents, within seven (7) days of this Order, that the
respondents have destroyed, are not in possession of and
do not have
access to any of the confidential information.
4.
Ordering the respondents to disclose and deliver to, within seven (7)
days of
this Order, the records of all communications between the
respondents and the customers.”
5.
In the alternative, the applicant sought certain interim relief
“
pending the determination of an action to be instituted by
the applicant against the respondents for the relief set forth in
paragraphs
2 to 4 above, the provisions of the said paragraphs 2-4 to
operate as an interim interdict”
(I have, in quoting the
relief sought, corrected obvious grammatical errors.)
6.
The second respondent played no part in these proceedings which, were
defended
only by the first respondent.
7.
At the outset of his argument counsel for the applicant, Mr Viljoen,
indicated
that the applicant was not proceeding with the alternative
interim relief. In the circumstances of this case, the interim relief
was not appropriate because it would result in an interdict far
exceeding the 12
month period for which the permanent
interdict was sought.
8.
The application for an urgent interdict was heard by Bezuidenhout AJ
on 5 September
2023, who struck the application off the roll for lack
of urgency.
9.
The first respondent denied that he had or has engaged in the conduct
which is
the subject matter of the interdict and denied in particular
that he was, or is, in possession of any confidential information of
the applicant, including customer lists. The application of the
Plascon-Evans rule means that the applicant is unable to establish,
on the uncontroverted evidence that, save for the event described
below, the first respondent has engaged in the conduct sought
to be
interdicted.
10.
What emerges clearly from the papers is that the respondents, who
both rendered services
to the applicant either as employees or
independent contractors, had a close relationship with each other.
The services of both
respondents were terminated in mid-June 2023.
The first respondent, on his own version, started to operate on his
own account in
the same industry as that engaged in by the applicant.
He admits to having carried on business with Green Room Futures, a
competitor
of the applicant. The second respondent was also
associated with Green Room Futures and received a payment of
R40,000.00 for her
services to that entity.
11.
In an email dated 19 June 2023, the second respondent indicated to
one Reese Adriaanse,
a client of the applicant, that she had asked
the first respondent to contact him “
about something amazing
that might work out better for you going forwards … when the
dust has settled.”
The email suggests strongly that the
second respondent was signalling to a customer of the applicant that
she would be contacting
him about a business proposition once the
“dust” created by the termination of her employment with
the applicant had
settled.
12.
For his part, the first respondent does not deny that he shared an
encrypted spreadsheet,
entitled “
Leads GRF Current”
with Jacobs on 8 June 2023 and invited her to edit it. The first
respondent denied that the document had anything to do with the
applicant but declined to explain what the document was. Given the
first respondent’s refusal to explain what the document
was,
the probabilities are that the letters “
GRF”
refer
to Green Room Futures and the encrypted spreadsheet contained
information about the business of the applicant which the first
respondent intended to share with Green Room Futures.
13.
Importantly, the encrypted spreadsheet was shared by the first
respondent with the second
respondent at a time when both were
employed by the applicant and both owed the applicant a duty of good
faith and were obliged
not to take any action designed to promote
their own interests at the expense of the applicant or to promote the
interests of a
competitor of the applicant.
14.
In the circumstances I am persuaded that whilst he was an employee of
the applicant, the
first respondent acted unlawfully by failing to
keep the confidentiality of the applicant and by misusing that
confidential information
for his own gain.
15.
That is however not the end of the matter. It is settled law that in
order to succeed in
obtaining a final interdict, an applicant must
establish:
15.1 a
clear right;
15.2 an
injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended; and
15.3
the absence of similar protection by any other ordinary remedy.
16.
In this case the difficulty which the applicant faces is that the
uncontested evidence does
not demonstrate that there is a reasonable
apprehension that the applicant will suffer harm if the interdict is
not granted.
17.
In those circumstances I am of the view that the applicant has not
established its right
to the relief which it seeks and its
application must therefore be dismissed.
18.
Before turning to the question of costs, I must make it clear that in
my view the contention
advanced by Mr De Wit on behalf of the first
respondent in his heads of argument to the effect that the
application is an abuse
of process, and that the applicant is not
entitled to relief because it has come to court with unclean hands,
has no merit. In
my view the applicant was entitled to come to court
and may well have succeeded, had its application not been struck off
the roll
in August 2023.
19.
I have found that the first respondent acted unlawfully when he
compiled the encrypted spreadsheet
entitled “
Leads GRF
Current”
and invited the second respondent to edit it.
Having regard to that finding, and the basis upon which I have
decided to refuse
the relief sought by the applicant, I am of the
view that it is in the interests of justice that there be no order as
to costs.
20.
In the circumstances I make the following order:
20.1
The application is dismissed.
20.2
There shall be no order as to costs.
CDA
LOXTON
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
Date
of hearing:
12
March 2024
Date
of Judgment:
03
April 2024
For
the Applicant:
Adv
H M Viljoen
Instructed
by:
Brittan
Law
For
Respondent:
Adv
V de Wit
Instructed
by:
K
Jordaan and Associates Inc
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