Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 332South Africa
Investec Bank Limited v Pillay (2024/018005) [2024] ZAGPJHC 332 (5 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 April 2024
Headnotes
on Anchor’s server. Mr. South submitted that this discovery created the reasonable fear that Ms. Pillay was about to disseminate the documents further, and that the only way to stop her was an ex parte approach to this court for an order to seize and preserve the documents.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Investec Bank Limited v Pillay (2024/018005) [2024] ZAGPJHC 332 (5 April 2024)
Investec Bank Limited v Pillay (2024/018005) [2024] ZAGPJHC 332 (5 April 2024)
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sino date 5 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED.
5
April 2024
Case
No.
2024-018005
In the
ex parte
application of –
INVESTEC
BANK
LIMITED
in
re
: the matter between:
INVESTEC
BANK LIMITED
Applicant
and
PRITHIE
PILLAY
First Respondent
ANCHOR
TECHNICAL TAPES CC
Second Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
On 21 February 2024, the
applicant, Investec, approached my brother Cassim AJ
ex parte
and without notice to the respondents. Investec asked for an order
permitting the sheriff to seek out, seize and preserve a range
of
confidential documents said to be in the respondents’
possession. Investec also sought an order interdicting and
restraining
the respondents, together with “their affiliates
and/or related persons” from “using, distributing,
copying [or]
publishing” the information pending the outcome of
an application for final relief on the same terms. The first
respondent,
Ms. Pillay, is a former employee of Investec. The second
respondent, Anchor, is a close corporation of which Ms. Pillay’s
husband is the sole member.
2
Cassim AJ granted the
order as prayed for, and it was executed shortly thereafter. The
respondents, on becoming aware of the order
when it was executed
against them, then enrolled the matter for reconsideration in my
urgent court on 13 March 2024. On 15 March
2024, I set aside Cassim
AJ’s order and replaced it with an order, the details of which
were agreed between the parties,
that preserved the information
seized at the sheriff’s office, granted Ms. Pillay’s
counsel access to that information
to the extent necessary to draft a
statement of claim shortly to be issued in the Labour Court, and
contained various other directions
meant to preserve the
confidentiality of the information. The order I made will operate
pending the outcome of Investec’s
application for final relief.
I ordered Investec to pay the respondents’ costs on the
attorney and client scale.
3
I indicated at the time I
gave the order that my reasons would follow in due course. These are
my reasons.
4
Investec retained Ms.
Pillay for several years as an in-house lawyer. Her employment was
terminated, after a disciplinary hearing,
on 31 January 2024. Before
she left Investec, Ms. Pillay preserved and removed a large number of
Investec’s documents. She
did so by emailing 199 of the
documents from her Investec account to her private email address. She
also printed-out around 120
documents. The email address to which the
documents were transmitted bore Anchor’s domain name. The
emailed documents accordingly
passed through, or were stored on,
servers owned or used by Anchor for its own purposes.
5
Investec says that the
documents contain highly sensitive and confidential information about
its clients, but it was accepted before
me that the documents are not
exclusively of that nature. A cursory examination of the annexures to
Investec’s founding affidavit
in which the documents are
identified reveals that three of the documents had the title “Detox
Diet”. One was a notice
of a Discovery Insure Annual General
Meeting. Another appears to be a direct marketing e-mail with the
subject line “Save
on your first trip of the year”. While
I have no reason to doubt that Investec sought to recover sensitive,
confidential
information – access to which it had a right to
restrict – Investec cast a far broader net than that.
6
Ms. Pillay says that most
of the documents in her possession were used at her disciplinary
hearing, and she intends to use them
again to challenge her dismissal
before the Labour Court. It is not necessary for me to set out her
defence, or the basis on which
Ms. Pillay now seeks to challenge her
dismissal as unfair, in any detail. It is sufficient to say that Ms.
Pillay claims that she
was dismissed in contravention of the
Protected Disclosures Act 26 of 2000
. If she is correct, then her
dismissal was automatically unfair under
section 187
(1) (h) of the
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
7
Investec knew well before
it approached Cassim AJ that Ms. Pillay had the documents, and that
most of them had been emailed to her
personal email account. Investec
was attempting to negotiate with Ms. Pillay for their return. Those
talks were part of a broader
set of negotiations aimed at settling
Ms. Pillay’s unfair dismissal claim. Investec freely admits at
paragraph 91 of its
founding affidavit that there was, throughout
those negotiations “an understanding between the parties'
attorneys of record
to bring any proceedings regarding the documents
on notice
to [Ms. Pillay]” (my emphasis).
8
Mr. South, who appeared
with Ms. Maharaj-Pillay for Investec before me, quite properly
accepted that there was no reason to doubt,
for the bulk of the
parties’ settlement discussions, that Ms. Pillay intended to
use only those documents relevant to her
claim, and only for the
purposes of pursuing her unfair dismissal claim. What triggered
Investec’s approach, Mr. South submitted,
was the discovery
that the personal email address to which Ms. Pillay had transmitted
the documents was in fact held on Anchor’s
server. Mr. South
submitted that this discovery created the reasonable fear that Ms.
Pillay was about to disseminate the documents
further, and that the
only way to stop her was an
ex parte
approach to this court
for an order to seize and preserve the documents.
9
This
court has often been required to reiterate the very high bar an
applicant must meet if they wish to secure relief which affects
another person’s rights without giving that person notice (for
two recent examples see
Mazetti
Management Services (Pty) Ltd v Amabhungane Centre for Investigative
Journalism NPC
2023 (6) SA 578
(GJ) (“
Mazetti
”)
and
Le
Grellier v Kamionsky
(2023-058876) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1286 (13 November 2023) (“
Le
Grellier
”).
The power to grant relief
ex
parte
“should be exercised with great caution and only in exceptional
circumstances” (
Recycling
and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Minister of
Environmental Affairs
2019 (3) SA 251
(SCA), paragraph 80 (“
Recycling
Initiative
”)).
Those
who seek
ex
parte
relief
must show that giving notice of their application to the person
against whom they seek relief would defeat the purpose of
that
relief, and that without the relief being granted
ex
parte
,
the applicant would suffer irreparable harm (see
Shoba,
Officer Commanding Temporary Police Camp, Wagendrift Dam
1995
(4) SA 1
(A),
p 15H-I;
South
African Airways SOC v BDFM Publishers
2016
(2) SA 561
(GJ),
paragraph 22 “
SAA
”);
and
Mazetti
,
paragraph 1). The requirement to give notice to all parties
interested in the relief sought is otherwise “sacrosanct”
(
SAA
,
paragraph 22).
10
In this case, Investec’s
reasons for approaching Cassim AJ
ex parte
were woefully
inadequate. It already knew that Ms. Pillay had the documents. It
must have known why she claimed the right to use
them. There was no
indication on the papers that she intended to use them for any other
purpose injurious to Investec’s interests,
or those of its
clients. The very fact that Investec was negotiating for their
return, and that there was an “understanding”
that an
application for their return would be brought on notice, ought, in
the absence of some dramatic new development that demonstrated
Ms.
Pillay’s bad faith, to have excluded the possibility of relief
being sought or granted
ex parte
. The mere fact that her email
account was housed on a server owned and controlled by someone else
could not have been the new development
that Investec claimed it was.
Virtually everyone’s email account is housed on a server
provided by someone else. In this
case, Ms. Pillay’s email
account was housed on her husband’s company’s server.
That might reasonably have been
thought to make the documents less
vulnerable to further transmission than if they were housed on a
server controlled by an unconnected
third party.
11
None of this means that
Investec ought not to have been concerned about the security of at
least some of the documents, or that
it ought not to have approached
this court urgently to take steps to secure them. It means only that
there was no basis for Investec
to have done so
ex parte
,
because there was no case made out at all that giving notice would
defeat the purpose of the relief, or that Investec or its clients
would suffer irreparable harm if notice was given. That might have
been established had Investec asked for, and been refused, an
undertaking that the documents would not be disseminated or used
pending an application for interdictory relief brought urgently
and
on notice. But that did not happen. The understanding between the
parties’ attorneys that notice would be given in fact
shows
that Investec knew it had no genuine reason to fear that Ms. Pillay
would disseminate the documents if she was informed of
an urgent
approach to this court.
12
Ordinarily, sound judicial
policy requires that a party who has obtained relief
ex parte
when they should have given notice ought to forfeit that relief. That
is also generally the approach in cases where an applicant
for
ex
parte
relief is later found not to have disclosed a fact material
to the relief sought. In those cases, a court is justified in setting
aside a wrongly granted
ex parte
order “unless there are
very cogent practical reasons why an order should not be rescinded”
(see
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979
(3) SA 521
(W) at 348E–349B and 350B, and
Recycling
Initiative
paragraphs 45 to 52).
The cost to the administration of justice in preserving an order
wrongly granted
ex parte
will in many cases be too high. That
cost lies in encouraging a proliferation of inappropriate
ex parte
approaches in the hope or expectation that the relief granted
ex
parte
will not later be reconsidered, or, if it is, that it will
be preserved at least in part (see
Le Grellier
, paragraph 45).
13
Nonetheless, I think that
this case is an exception to the general rule. There are, in other
words, “very cogent practical
reasons” why Cassim AJ’s
order should not be completely undone. There was no dispute between
the parties that the information
seized and preserved under Cassim
AJ’s order included information of a confidential nature
concerning Investec’s clients,
access to which ought properly
to be restricted. That information is also probably irrelevant to the
Labour Court claim Ms. Pillay
intends to pursue. While there is no
foundation laid on the papers for the suggestion that Ms. Pillay
would maliciously disclose
that information to third parties, I
accept that Investec is justified in seeking to restrict access to
that information insofar
as the restriction does not impede the
preparation of Ms. Pillay’s Labour Court claim. The order I
granted manages the documents
to that end.
14
I cannot say at this stage
whether Ms. Pillay has a clear right to possess and use those of the
documents that are relevant to her
Labour Court claim. But the claim
she intends to bring in the Labour Court is not obviously frivolous.
While Investec does not
accept that Ms. Pillay has been dismissed
unfairly, it has not sought to suggest that her grievances are
vexatious. Nor does it
deny that at least some of the documents are
relevant to her claim. It seems to me that, in those circumstances,
allowing Ms. Pillay’s
counsel access to the documents for the
purposes of preparing a Labour Court claim which is to be filed under
seal of confidentiality
strikes the appropriate balance between the
parties’ interests. It also has appropriate regard to the
interests of Investec’s
clients, which, though those clients
are not before me, I have weighed in my decision-making.
15
Investec must bear the
costs of the reconsideration application on the attorney and client
scale because, as it ought to have known,
there was no justification
for approaching Cassim AJ without notice to the respondents.
16
It was for these reasons
that I made my order of 15 March 2024.
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 5 April
2024.
HEARD
ON:
13 and 15 March 2024
DECIDED
ON:
5 April 2024
For
the Applicant:
A South SC
P Maharaj-Pillay
Instructed by Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
For
the Respondents:
S Swartz
Instructed
by Crawford and Associates Inc
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