Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1280South Africa
Colgate-Palmolive (Pty) Ltd and Another v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd and Another (095598/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1280 (13 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 December 2024
Headnotes
Bliss was in contempt of the Manoim J order. However, he later gave leave to appeal that order to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA). Colgate subsequently brought an application in terms of section 18(3) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, to enforce the Vally J order. At the time I heard this matter neither of those cases have been heard.
Judgment
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## Colgate-Palmolive (Pty) Ltd and Another v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd and Another (095598/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1280 (13 December 2024)
Colgate-Palmolive (Pty) Ltd and Another v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd and Another (095598/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1280 (13 December 2024)
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sino date 13 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
095598/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
13/12/2024
In
the matter between:
COLGATE-PALMOLIVE
(PTY) LTD
FIRST
APPLICANT
COLGATE-PALMOLIVE
COMPANY
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
BLISS
BRANDS (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
ADVERTISING
REGULATORY BOARD NPC
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Manoim
J:
[1]
This is an urgent application in which the applicants seek to place
the first respondent in contempt. Colgate-Palmolive
(Pty) Ltd and
Colgate-Palmolive company are the first and second applicants, but
for convenience I will refer to them both as Colgate,
and in the
singular. The first respondent is Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd (“Bliss”).
The second respondent is the Advertising
Regulatory Board NPC
(“ARB”). The second respondent did not participate in the
application.
[2]
This application is yet another chapter in an ongoing saga between
these two firms. Both produce a product that is functionally
similar.
A bar of soap for everyday use, considered distinctive from other
soaps and known as a hygiene soap.
[3]
Colgate the applicant in this matter and the market leader produces a
soap known as Protex. Bliss, the first respondent,
is a rival
manufacturer that produces a hygiene soap known as Securex. These
soaps also come divided into a number of varieties
although still
under the main brand name.
[4]
Colgate brought a successful complaint to the ARB that Bliss had
contravened two provisions of the ARB code. They are
clause 8 which
deals with exploiting the advertising goodwill of a member’s
product and clause 9, which deals with imitation
of another’s
packaging. Since the interpretation of these provisions is not at
issue in this application, I do not need to
consider them further.
[5]
The ARB’s highest organ, the Final Appeal Committee (“FAC”),
in a split decision, resolved the dispute
in favour of Colgate, and
made an order that Bliss withdraw the offending product and gave it a
time period by which it had to
comply. Bliss then brought a review of
that decision in the High Court. I heard that case and decided in
favour of Colgate. In
dismissing the review, I gave the following
order as paragraph 3 of that order.
“
(3) Bliss must
comply with the FAC decision within three months of date of this
order
([. e. 21 May 2024
]. This applies to dissemination of
new packaging, and does not require on-shelf removal”
[6]
Bliss never appealed this order. (I will from now on refer to this
order in the third person as the Manoim J order as
it has been
referred to in this litigation and in ongoing litigation still
serving before the courts.) Bliss had to comply with
the Manoim J
order by no later than 21 May 2024. Bliss duly introduced new
packaging in May 2024 which for convenience both parties
refer to as
the May packaging. Colgate contends that this packaging had
insufficiently modified the original Securex packaging
from 2018,
which was the subject of the ARB hearing and the Manoim J order,
hence Colgate refer to this as the Offending packaging.
Bliss in turn
contended that the May packaging did not offend the Manoim J order.
[7]
Colgate then brought the May packaging again before the ARB’s
FAC where the matter served before the chairperson
Ngoepe JP. Ngoepe
JP handed down a breach ruling. He concluded that the new packaging
was a “
continuation of, and part and parcel of, the
Offending Packaging”
that involved
"minor
alterations”
and the mere “
shifting of some words
from one side to the other”.
He directed that Bliss Brands
remove the 2018 Packaging and the May packaging from all “
mediums
in which it appeared
.”
[8]
Colgate then brought an urgent application to place Bliss in contempt
of the Manoim J order. Bliss on the same day brought
an urgent
application to suspend the breach ruling pending a review. The
parties then agreed both should be heard at the same time.
Vally J,
who heard the applications, then held that Bliss was in contempt of
the Manoim J order. However, he later gave leave to
appeal that order
to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA). Colgate subsequently brought an
application in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
, to enforce the Vally J order. At the time I heard this
matter neither of those cases have been heard.
[9]
In the meantime, in October 2024, subsequent to the order of Vally J,
Bliss brought into the market another variation
of the Securex
packaging referred to as the October packaging.
[10]
On 21 October, Colgate brought a further application to the High
Court alleging that the October packaging was in contempt
of the
Manoim J order. This then is the application that I heard and is the
subject matter of this judgment.
[11]
It is common cause amongst counsel that what I have to decide is
whether the October packaging, which was not before
Vally J,
contravenes the Manoim J order.
Urgency
[12]
The first issue I have to decide is whether the application is
urgent. Colgate initially argued that given this was a
contempt
application it was for that reason urgent by nature. Bliss argued
that there have been cases in this division where courts
have taken
the view that the mere fact an application is for contempt does not
make it, for that reason alone, urgent.
[1]
But these cases do not reference the Constitutional Court decision in
the
Zuma
case
[2]
where the Constitutional court held that:
“
The element of
urgency would be satisfied if in fact it was shown that [the]
respondents were continuing to disregard the order....
If this be so,
the applicant is entitled as a matter of urgency to attempt to get
the respondents to desist...”;
[3]
[13]
But even if there might be some category of contempt application that
might not be regarded as urgent, this is not the
case here.
[14]
This is the second time that Colgate has brought an application
alleging contempt of the order. Moreover, as was pointed
out in oral
argument, Bliss has benefited from the infringement since the
commencement of this dispute four years ago. Contempt
of a court
order in these circumstances is urgent.
[15]
Moreover, Colgate argued that in addition to the contempt issue this
was a case of commercial urgency. Bliss sought to
meet this argument
by contending that the original Colgate product is no longer in the
market with the same get up. This fact has
not been refuted by
Colgate so I will accept it as correct. However, this does not
detract from the issue of urgency. Even if the
original product is no
longer in the market that does not mean that Colgate suffers no
further ongoing harm in the market if a
rival is taking advantage of
its advertising goodwill.
[16]
This type of commercial urgency is the same as envisaged in
Twentieth
Century Fox Firm Corporation and another v Anthony Black Films Pty
Ltd
[4]
where Goldstone J held:
“
In
my opinion the urgency of commercial interests may justify the
invocation of Uniform Rule of Court 6 (12) no less than any
other interests.
Each case must depend upon its own
circumstances. For the purpose of deciding upon the urgency of this
matter I assumed, as I have
to do, that the applicants' case was a
good one and that the respondent was unlawfully infringing the
applicants' copyright in
the films in question.
Having
regard to the obviously substantial value of the rights in question,
I formed the firm view that an unlawful infringer, if
the respondent
is one, should not be entitled to a windfall only because the Court
happened to be in recess for a period of two
months.”
[17]
The same holds true in the present application. If Bliss is still
infringing and the matter has to wait until it is heard
on the
ordinary roll, then Bliss will have gained a ‘windfall’
on the profits it makes on the sales of the soap it
enjoys during the
period it takes to get the matter heard. Put differently Colgate will
not get substantial relief in due course.
[18]
I am satisfied that on both separate grounds – the fact that
the matter deals with a possible ongoing contempt
and commercial
urgency, the matter is urgent.
Merits
.
[19]
Bliss’ contends that this is not a classic case of contempt of
court. The classic case is when despite a court
order to do something
or to desist from doing something, the infringing party persists.
Here Bliss maintains it was obliged to
change the wrapping on its
soap, and it did so in October 2024, pursuant to Vally J order.
[20]
Bliss’ initial argument is that the Manoim J order does not
indicate how the packaging must be changed. This is
correct - the
order which simply repeats what the ARB had ordered – does not
lay down guidelines. Perhaps in future it should.
That of course does
not absolve Bliss. It is aware of the finding and has the benefit, as
is clear from the papers, of marketing
and legal advice. Bliss could
choose to tread a careful path to avoid the risk of contempt or walk
close to the edge of the red
line separating infringement from
compliance. It is clear it chose the latter.
[21]
The main debate on the merits was what I will term the measurement
issue. Bliss argues that in determining whether it
has infringed, the
correct comparison is between the Colgate packaging which its
packaging was found to have infringed and the
packaging that Bliss
now has in the market, and which was changed in response to the Vally
order, the so-called October 2024 packaging.
Using metaphorical terms
of measurement Bliss argues that the test is then the visual distance
between the 2019 Protex (“Colgate”)
packaging and the
October 2024 Securex (“Bliss”) packaging. Applying that
metric, it argues it would be clear that
the October packaging has a
number of features now that differentiate it from the 2019 Protex
packaging.
[22]
They make mention of the following features. The October packaging
makes much less use of white; the layout is different,
while symbol
usage differs in terms of size and placing.
[23]
Hence applying the correct metric on this argument there has been no
infringement. Nevertheless, Bliss as I understand
its approach also
does not concede that even if the correct metric was a comparison of
its May packaging with its October packaging,
there would still be no
infringement as there is still sufficient visual distance between the
two.
[24]
Colgate take the opposite view. The correct metric for them is
between October 2024 and May 2024 Protex versions. Recall
it is the
May version which is the subject of the Manoim J Order. Here it
argues the visual distance is minimal. Confusion between
the packages
remains. It too details important features of similarity and goes
further to contend for some regression by Bliss,
with the revival of
certain aspects of the 2018 version absent in the May version but
returned to October’s.
[5]
[25]
There is a large aspect to this case which has to do with what art
critic John Berger once termed ‘ways of seeing.’
[6]
The viewer sees what he/she has been conditioned to see. Bliss
marketing people are conditioned to see difference and minimize
similarity whilst Colgate’s people take the opposite approach.
But the court does not have the luxury of abstaining from
the debate.
A court order has been made and must be complied with. If there is a
dispute over this issue as there is here, which
requires the court to
move from its usual comfort zone – the disputed interpretation
of the written or spoken word - to the
image, then that is what is
required of it, albeit unfamiliar. When I compare the May packaging,
which was the subject of the Manoim
J order, and the current October
2024 packaging, their resemblance is so close that only careful
scrutiny would detect the differences.
They are as the industry
describes it, not visually distant in any manner detectable to the
ordinary shopper who does not engage
in a detailed exercise of
scrutiny.
[26]
This assumes of course that this is the correct comparator. Sight
must be lost of the fact that this case concerns non-compliance
with
the Code of the ARB. It is to the Code that I must look for guidance
on this issue. The Code has a clear guideline here. Rule
3.6 of the
Code reads:
“
When
objections in respect of advertisements that were amended resulting
from an ARB ruling are received, both the original and
amended
version will be taken into consideration.”
[27]
That is the exercise I undertook. Granted as Colgate concedes the
Code does not rule out the possibility of comparing
the original
infringed
upon
article with the present amended version of the
infringer, but the fact that this comparison with the amended version
gets specific
mention, is probative. It suggests that the authors of
the Code anticipated that contravening advertisers would be
incentivised
to make incremental changes and not break substantially
with the past.
[28]
This approach in the Code is perfectly rational. The consumer is most
likely to remember a product from its most recent
incarnation. If the
current version retains key features of the one last purchased any
minor tweaks are likely to go unobserved.
Thus, comparing October
Securex to May Securex to see if there is a significant change is a
rational exercise. On this basis the
visual distance is slight.
[29]
The approach taken in the Code is also not inconsistent with the
approach taken to visual distance in trademark cases.
In the seminal
US case of
Broderick
which has been favourably considered by
our courts the court indicated that once a firm had infringed more
was required of it:
“
The
defendant there, and Manoff here, had organized and built up a
business based upon a fraudulent appropriation of what belonged
to
the plaintiff. To permit them to continue without interruption, and
to the full scope of identity permitted to an honest competitor,
would be to preserve for them a good will acquired through fraud. The
due protection of trade-mark and similar rights requires
that a
competitive business, once convicted of unfair competition in a given
particular, should thereafter be required to keep
a safe distance
away from the margin line even if that requirement involves a
handicap as compared with those who have not disqualified
themselves”.
[7]
[30]
This approach was followed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
PPI
Makelaars v PPS Provident Society of South Africa
“which held that once a party has been found to be in breach,
they must keep a “safe distance” from the margin
line,
even if it involves a “handicap”.
[8]
[31]
In
Milestone Beverage CC and Others v the Scotch Whiskey Association and
Others.
,
the question was whether advertising material for whisky still
infringed. The SCA made use of the metaphor of the ‘shadow
being cast backward.’ What the court held was that the memory
and impression created in the mind of the public was not erased
and
hence the advertising material “cast its shadow backwards”
[9]
[32]
Bliss does not dispute that these are the relevant authorities.
Rather it argued that going down into the detail of those
cases there
was a much more detailed examination of the contending products than
what Colgate has achieved in this matter. But
this approach is to
identify minor details of difference and then to aggregate them, to
come to a conclusion, that when viewed
cumulatively there is no
material risk of confusion. But this is artificial and does not
accord with human experience when acting
as consumers.
[33]
We must not lose sight of what the product is. It is a cheap product
brought by the consumer for its function –
a soap – and
not for the aesthetics of its packaging. Nor does the packaging serve
an informative function on which the consumer
eye might linger. It is
a hastily bought product, requiring no more of the consumer than to
identify it as the one it is usually
looking for, located as it is in
the shelf where it would be regularly housed, and without much
further reflection to remove it
from shelf to shopping basket. The
backward shadow remains cast.
[34]
I consider that Bliss has continued to operate too close to the
margin line. It clearly has been reluctant to introduce
the kind of
change the law requires of it. It does not want to suffer the
handicap of making a more substantial change. I find
therefore that
the October packaging infringes the Manoim J order.
Facebook
[35]
A further dispute between the parties concerned the Bliss Facebook
page. This issue does not involve the merits of the
October
packaging. At issue here is that Bliss continued to advertise the
offending packaging on its website which was the subject
of the
Manoim J order. It is alleged that the offending product was still on
the website as late as 4 November 2024. This on the
face of it is a
violation of the order. However, Bliss offers an innocent explanation
for this breach which gets rather technical.
It amounts to the
distinction between deactivating a page as opposed to deleting a
page, on Facebook. Bliss claims that on 4 September
2024, it
deactivated the relevant page. It chose deactivation as opposed to
deletion as the page had established a community of
followers.
[36]
Thinking this had removed the problem, no further attention was given
to the issue until service of the application.
It was then that Bliss
personnel discovered that the page had been reactivated. Bliss claims
that it was not responsible for this
reappearance and that this is a
Facebook technical problem. They have since deleted it, as opposed to
the milder de-activation
solution, and it is now common cause that
the offending page is no longer on Facebook.
[37]
Colgate is not able to rebut the deactivation / deletion theory.
Sceptical it might be of another example of Bliss walking
close to
the edge of the cliff. But I cannot on these facts which have not
been rebutted find that there has been wilful contempt.
Terms
of the order
.
[38]
Bliss argued that even if I were to find that there had been
contempt, the order proposed in the notice of motion is
too wide as
it prevents Bliss from distributing the offending product in
non-member outlets. I agree. The jurisdiction of the ARB
is limited
to members. I also had to decide whether this was contempt or a
breach. The notice of motion is formulated in the alternative.
Given
that Bliss had taken some steps in October to vary the packaging
although in my view not adequate, I find that there has
been a
breach, but I do not have sufficient evidence on the papers to find
contempt. Colgate had initially inserted a prayer that
the products
with the offending be returned to its lawyers. It appropriately no
longer persists with this prayer.
[39]
I have amended the order accordingly. As far as costs are concerned
given that this is the second contempt application,
I consider that
an award of attorney client costs is appropriate. Both sides made use
of two counsel including senior counsel.
ORDER: -
[40] In the result
the following order is made:
1.
The
ordinary forms and service provided for in the Uniform Rules of Court
be dispensed with and that this application be heard and
determined
on an urgent basis in terms of the provisions of Rule 6(12)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court.
2.
The
First Respondent is declared to be in breach of paragraph 3 of the
order of Manoim J, in case no 2020/22061, handed down on
21 February
2024.
3.
The
First Respondent is directed to comply with paragraph 3 of the Manoim
J order, forthwith, and no later than 15 working days
from the date
of this order, by withdrawing the Offending Packaging and the Latest
Offending Packaging, depicted in Annexures B
and C annexed to the
Notice of motion, from every medium in which they appear, over which
the second respondent has jurisdiction,
by virtue of them being
member.
4.
In the event that the First Respondent
fails to comply with this order, the Applicants are authorised to
approach the Court on the
same papers, duly supplemented, for further
relief.
5.
The
First Respondent is to pay the costs of this application on the scale
as between attorney and client, such costs to include
the costs
consequent upon the employment of two counsel, one being senior
counsel, on Scale C.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 14
November 2024
Date of Reasons: 13
December 2024
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
R
Michau SC
L.
Harilal
Kisch
Africa Inc
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
Instructed
by:
C.
Loxton SC
I.
Learmonth
Eversheds
Sutherland SA Inc
[1]
Fraser
Solar GMBH v Trans-Caledon Tunnel Authority
2022 JDR 0035 (GJ) (Fraser Solar);
Trans
Asia Minerals SA (Pty) Ltd v Kunene
2023
JDR 1003 (GP) (Trans Asia)]
[2]
Secretary
of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State
Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector including
Organs
of State v Zuma and Others
[2021] ZACC 18; 2021 (5) SA 327 (CC);
[3]
Zuma
,
supra, paragraphs 31 — 33.
[4]
1982(3) SA 582(W) at 586 E to G.
[5]
Thus, a red ribbon has been moved back to its original placement,
variant names have been restored, images have been moved back
to
where originally placed.
[6]
John Berger,
Ways
of Seeing
,
Penguin 2008.
[7]
Broderick
& Bascomb Rope Co v Manoff
41 F (2d) 353 (1030)l pp 18-1071 —18-1072.
[8]
1998 (1) SA 595 (SCA).]
[9]
(1037/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 105
(18 September 2020) Paragraph 27
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