Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 633South Africa
Lendtech Investment Holdings Private Limited v IMS Tech Corp Limited and Others (2023-025384) [2023] ZAGPJHC 633 (6 June 2023)
Headnotes
or controlled by Ims Tech directly or through its subsidiaries, agents or customers.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lendtech Investment Holdings Private Limited v IMS Tech Corp Limited and Others (2023-025384) [2023] ZAGPJHC 633 (6 June 2023)
Lendtech Investment Holdings Private Limited v IMS Tech Corp Limited and Others (2023-025384) [2023] ZAGPJHC 633 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023-025384
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
06.06.23
In the matter between:
LENDTECH
INVESTMENT HOLDINGS PRIVATE LIMTED
APPLICANT
And
IMS
TECH CORP LIMITED
FIRST
RESPONDENT
IMS
VENTURES (PTY) LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
IMS
VENTURES DIGITAL (PTY) LTD
THIRD
RESPONDENT
MOBI
SYSTEMS SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
TELKOM
SA SOC LIMITED
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
MTN
GROUP LIMITED
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
MOBILE
TELEPHONE NETWORKS (PTY) LTD
SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation
:
Lendtech Investment Holdings Private Limited v
Ims Tech Corp Limited & 6 Others
(Case
No: 025384/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 633 (6 June 2023)
JUDGMENT
WRIGHT J
1.
The applicant, Lendtech is a company
registered in Singapore.
2.
The first respondent, Ims Tech is a
company registered in Mauritius.
3.
The second respondent, Ims Ventures
is a South African company, as are the third respondent, Ims Ventures
Digital, the fourth respondent,
Mobi, the fifth respondent, Telkom,
the sixth respondent, MTN Group and the seventh respondent, Mobile
Telephone Networks, a cellphone
service provider in South Africa
well-known as MTN.
4.
Lendtech sought and obtained ex parte
an order against the seven respondents. The order was granted on 24
April 2023 by Wanless
AJ.
5.
On 9 May 2023, a variation order was
sought by Lendtech and granted by Wanless AJ, again ex parte. There
seems to have been some
difficulty in executing the first order on 8
May 2023. The orders effectively cover the same subject matter, the
second order apparently
having been sought to tighten up certain
aspects of the first order. I shall refer below simply to the order,
in the singular.
6.
The order was in the form of a rule
nisi, returnable on 30 May 2023.
7.
On 29 May 2023, Lendtech launched an
application for the extension of the rule nisi. The complaint was
raised by the applicant’s
attorney that Lendtech needed time to
prepare replying affidavits. She blamed the respondents for dragging
their feet in filing
the answering affidavits and generally
obstructing the execution of the order. The respondents were
understandably anxious that
the order be discharged as soon as
possible.
8.
On 30 May 2023, the hearing was
postponed to 6 June 2023 and I extended the rule nisi to the same
date after I had heard counsel
for all parties. The applicant wanted
three weeks in which to do a replying affidavit. The respondents’
counsel said that
the matter could wait a week and that the order and
attachments could remain intact until then. With hindsight, the
concession
by the respondents to the extension of the rule nisi by a
week was generous.
9.
The order does not make for easy
reading. It provides, among other things for attachment to confirm or
found jurisdiction against
Ims Tech pending the outcome of dispute
resolution proceedings which have commenced in London between
Lendtech and Ims Tech. It
also operates as an anti-dissipation order
so that Lendtech may enforce any award that it may obtain in due
course.
10.
The affidavits and the order are
lengthy, complex and contain much technical jargon. I shall try to
simplify.
11.
The order permits attachment of:
11.1
Lendtech’s own software
held or controlled by Ims Tech directly or through its subsidiaries,
agents or customers.
11.2
The same software in the hands
of the second to seventh respondents.
11.3
Ims Tech’s right, title and
interest in Ims Ventures and in Ims Ventures Digital.
11.4
Funds in the South African bank
accounts of Ims Tech.
11.5
Funds in bank accounts of the second
to seventh respondents which funds are due to Ims Tech.
12.
The order provides further that:
12.1 The relevant
software may not be used in the meantime.
12.2 The respondents are
to restore and maintain the access of Lendtech to the software and to
grant Lendtech “
line of sight
”, that is visibility
to the software, including to “
transactional data”.
12.3
The respondents are to return to
Lendtech the software so that Lendtech can deliver certain services
to cellphone service providers.
12.4
The respondents are forthwith to
cease all business with cellphone service providers.
13
In my view, to allow the attachment
of a creditor’s own property to confirm or found jurisdiction
over a debtor would render
ineffective the doctrine of effectiveness
which is a cornerstone of the law on jurisdiction.
14
The attachments on the bank accounts
are limited to the amount of USD 1 439 433. The order does
not state the amount to
be attached in respect of each respondent.
There is no provision in the order for how the sheriff is to
determine what amount of
money each of the second to seventh
respondents owes to Ims Tech. The founding affidavit is quite
intricate on the amount or amounts
allegedly owing by Ims Tech to
Lendtech but it does not set out clearly the final amount allegedly
owing. There is no allegation
that any of the second to seventh
respondents owe a sum of money, certain or calculable, to Ims Tech…
15
Sheriffs execute orders which
need to be precise so that the sheriff does not need to interpret
them. The limit of USD 1 439 433
is cold comfort for any of
the respondents.
16
The founding affidavit and the order
seem to assume that the accounts are in credit with the banks. Any
account in debit would constitute
a debt owed by the account holder
to its bank and could not be attached pursuant to the order.
17
Lendtech owns a software tool.
Lendtech licensed the software to Ims Tech in a written contract.
Ultimately, cellphone service providers
like Telkom and MTN use the
software to facilitate the provision of airtime to cellphone users,
particularly in the form of advance
airtime credit services. It would
appear that the software helps businesses like Telkom and MTN, who
have many customers who use
cellphones, to assess the
creditworthiness of customers or potential customers. At least for
the purposes of this case, Telkom
and MTN seem to be referred to
sometimes as “
Contracting
Mobile Network Operators
”
.
18
The deponent to the founding
affidavit says that:
18.1
Lendtech cancelled the contract as
Ims Tech failed to pay invoices.
18.2
Ims Tech has failed to return the
software,
18.3
Ims Tech has stolen the software,
18.4
Ims Tech has blocked Lendtech
from accessing the software, thereby denying Lendtech “
line
of sight
”
visibility
to the software.
18.5
The respondents may dissipate
Lendtech’s right to the software.
18.6
Ims Tech is carrying on its own
business while using the software unlawfully and it continues to
receive money from its customers
while Lendtechech suffers a cash
shortage with concomitant risk to its business.
18.7
After attachment establishing
jurisdiction, the primary objectives of the order are to preserve its
intellectual property in the
form of its software and preserve the
money owed by Ims Tech to Lendtech.
19
In my view, the founding affidavit
contains allegations amounting to conclusions. The factual basis for
the conclusions is as narrow
as the order obtained is broad.
Lendtech’s case is quite bald, namely that because Ims Tech
owes it money and has blocked
Lendtech’s access to the
software, Lendtech fears reasonably that dissipation will follow. No
detail is provided to support
the fear other than the alleged
breaches of contract and the alleged blocking of access.
20
Annexed to the founding affidavit is
a letter dated 15 December 2022 sent by Ims Tech’s attorneys to
Lendtech’s attorneys
and referring to a number of named
disputes between them. Ims Tech demands in the letter that Lendtech
refrain from harming Ims
Tech’s business reputation and from
contacting Ims Tech’s clients including cellphone network
operators.
21
Correspondence between the opposing
attorneys and which is attached to the founding affidavit shows that
there has been considerable
dispute for some time between Lendtech
and Ims Tech.
22
Lendtech goes further than
merely saying that it has cancelled the contract. It says that
because Ims Tech does not consider itself
bound by the agreement,
Lentech is not bound by certain exit clauses in the agreement
designed to effect an orderly separation,
ultimately so that the
service to cellphone users is not disrupted.
23
The answering affidavits of the
respondents are detailed and reveal huge disputes of fact. To a large
extent, the respondents make
common cause with each other. I shall
highlight parts of these affidavits.
24
The deponent to the answering
affidavit of Ims Tech says that:
24.1
The attachment of the software by
Lendtech, of its own property, is bad in law to confirm or found
jurisdiction.
24.2
Ims Tech has no right, title or
interest in Ims Ventures or Ims Ventures Digital.
24.3
Ims Tech has no bank accounts
in South Africa.
24.4
Accordingly, the order can’t
be executed against Ims Tech, a foreign company.
24.5
Ims Tech has no direct contract
with Telkom or MTN. Ims Tech deals with certain entities which in
turn contract with Telkom and
MTN.
24.6
Lendtech is obliged under the written
agreement to render support services relating to the software.
24.7
Mobi renders services to MTN. An
uncited entity, Ims Solutions, renders services to Telkom. Mobi and
Ims Solutions render their
services under licence from Lendtech and
Lendtech is obliged contractually to follow a process before
terminating the access of
Mobi and Ims Solutions to the software.
24.8
The order prevents Ims Tech, Mobi,
Telkom and MTN from utilizing the software and is prejudicial to them
and millions of customers.
24.9
There was never a prospect that Ims
Tech, Mobi, Telkom or MTN would dissipate the software. The software
is integrated into the
networks of Telkom and MTN.
24.10
Ims Tech has not and will not
licence the software to anyone else.
24.11
Ims Tech does not have the
source code so it could not steal the software.
24.12
The order was designed to harm Ims
Tech, in particular its indirect business with Telkom and MTN.
24.13
Ims Tech was anxious to
disengage from Lendtech and find replacement software. Ims Tech needs
the co-operation of Lendtech to remove
the software. Lendtech
refused, effectively holding as hostage Ims Tech, Mobi, Ims
Solutions, Telkom and MTN.
24.14
Ims Tech may not lawfully
provide “
line
of sight
“
or
visibility to the “
transactional
data
”
as this
includes protected information in the form of the records of each
customer of a network operator. At a minimum, the network
operator’s
consent would be needed.
24.15
In any event, Lendtech never had the
access that the order contemplates. All that Lendtech had were no
more than performance reports,
generated through open-source software
called Grafana.
24.16
Ims Tech undertakes to pay any award
which may be made against it in the coming arbitration.
24.17
Ims
Tech gave valid notice of six months to Lentech that the agreement
will end on 15 June 2023.
25
The deponent to the answering
affidavit for Ims Ventures and Ims Ventures Digital says that:
25.1
Ims Ventures has no contract with
Lendtech.
25.2
Ims Ventures is not a subsidiary of
Ims Tech, let alone a wholly owned subsidiary as alleged by Lendtech.
25.3
Ims Ventures Digital was registered
in April 2022. It operates as an independent vendor under contract
with Ims Tech to provide
digital services.
25.4
The allegation by Lendtech, that the
first to fourth respondents share common directors is false.
25.5
Ims Tech has no ownership in or
control over Ims Ventures or Ims Ventures Digital.
25.6
Ims Tech does not receive payments
made into the bank accounts of Ims Ventures or Ims Ventures Digital,
nor does it have entitlement
or access to such funds. Funds which
flow into the bank accounts of Ims Ventures or Ims Ventures Digital
have nothing to do with
the commercial relationship between Lendtech
and Ims Tech.
25.7
Ims Ventures and Ims Ventures Digital
have never made payment of invoices issued by Lendtech to Ims Tech.
Ims Tech has never made
payment to Lendtech from Ims Ventures’
or Ims Ventures Digital’s bank accounts. It could not have done
so, as it has
no control over these bank accounts. Ims Tech has never
paid Lendtech with funds derived from Ims Ventures or Ims Ventures
Digital.
25.8
Ims
Ventures and Ims Ventures Digital are not the agents, representatives
and wholly owned subsidiaries of Ims Tech in South Africa
as alleged
by Lendtech.
26
The deponent to the answering
affidavit for Mobi says that:
26.1
Ims Tech, through Mobi and Ims
Solutions has only ever used a part of the software, namely the
“
lending
platform
”
rather
than this platform and the “
data
services
”
,
“
business
intelligence
”
,
“
operations
”
and “
nano
platforms
”
as
alleged by Lendtech.
26.2
Lendtech never had “
line
of sight
”
visibility
to the “
transactional
data”.
Lendtech
only received certain reports via the open source platform, Grafana.
26.3
Ims
Tech, as required by its agreement with Lendtech, sought to obtain
the consent of the Contracting Mobile Network Operators (like
Telkom
and MTN who in turn have the end user customers) for Lendtech to
access the “
transactional data
”
held by the operators. These operators had certain
requirements before they would consent. Lendtech failed to meet the
operators’
requirements with the consequence that Lendtech
could not access the “
transactional
data
”
. Had Ims Tech allowed Lendtech to
see the transactional data, Ims Tech would have violated data
protection laws. Accordingly, Lendtech
never had “
line
of sight
”
access to the transactional
data.
26.4
Ims
Tech invited Lendtech to disengage so that substitute software could
be installed. Lendtech has failed to agree. Mobi and thus
also MTN
are now compelled to use the software of Lendtech. Ims Tech can’t
replace the software without the co-operation
of Lendtech.
26.5
The
order is highly prejudicial to Mobi. Its bank accounts are attached
and Mobi’s rights and ability to render services to
MTN are
impeded. MTN at present can’t deliver advance airtime credit
services to its millions of customers. MTN won’t
pay Mobi until
the court order is lifted. Mobi needs the money.
27
The deponent to Telkom’s
answering affidavit says that:
27.1
The order is vague and
difficult to implement.
27.2
The sheriff attempted to attach
Telkom’s entire bank account.
27.3
Telkom does not owe any money to the
first to fourth respondents.
27.4
Telkom has no access to the
Grafana platform and accordingly cannot comply with the order.
28
The deponent to the answering
affidavit for MTN Group and MTN says that:
28.1
The allegation by Lendtech that
MTN will dissipate funds is unfounded and defamatory.
28.2
The sheriff wanted to attach
the entire bank accounts of MTN Group and MTN.
28.3
On 8 May 2023, MTN undertook in
writing to Lendtech’s attorneys that MTN would not pay to Mobi
any money which MTN owed to
Mobi. In fact, it was discovered after
that date that
Mobi
owes MTN money and not the other way round. For that reason alone,
there should be no attachment of MTN’s bank account.
28.4
MTN has a contract with Mobi
relating to airtime credit services only and not generally to the
software as described by Lendtech.
28.5
MTN has terminated its contract
with Mobi as from 30 May 2023 and will cease using Mobi’s
airtime credit services and other
services, as from 30 June 2023 at
the latest.
28.6
MTN has only viewing access to
the Grafana platform and is unable to restore or grant complete
access to this platform to Lendtech.
28.7
The order is extremely
prejudicial to MTN and its customers.
28.8
Lendtech was never entitled to
MTN’s transactional data as Lendtech failed to satisfy MTN’s
data protection requirements.
29
The replying affidavit of Lendtech is
long and it is detailed on many different topics. It serves to widen
the substantial area
of dispute of fact and makes any possible
understanding of the order even more difficult. The deponent:
29.1
Admits that his allegation in the
founding affidavit that Ims Ventures and Ims Ventures Digital are
subsidiaries of Ims Tech was
wrong.
29.2
Admits that the allegation in the
founding affidavit that ImsTech has common directors with the second
to fourth respondents is
wrong.
29.3
Says, in paragraph 9.2.1 that it is
now apparent that Ims Tech owes Lendtech over USD 2,2 million.
Curiously, the deponent does
not say how this sum is calculated or
how it could have been calculated, given that on Lendtech’s own
version it has been
denied “
line
of sight
”
to
data necessary to work out how much Ims Tech owes Lendtech.
30
There is a supplementary answering
affidavit by MTN Group and MTN. The deponent sets out the practical
difficulties experienced
by the sheriff and Lendtech’s attorney
in attempting to attach against these respondents on 8 May 2023. The
affidavit confirms
that MTN does not owe money to Mobi.
31
In a short reply thereto, Lendtech’s
attorney underlines the alleged need for confirmation of the rule
nisi.
32
Lendtech
served a notice on 3 June 2023 under Rule 35(12) demanding certain
documentation from some of the respondents. The respondents
did not
reply. Counsel for Lendtech did not press for the documents in
argument.
33
The respondents claim prejudice in
the operation of their businesses as a consequence of the order and
in my view, this is claim
is understandable. The operation of the
respondents’ businesses is substantially impeded by their not
being able to use the
software, directly or indirectly, on a daily
basis, at least until the greater dispute is finalized one way or the
other. Attachments
of bank accounts or parts of them compound the
prejudice. Many cell-phone customers are prejudiced.
34
To entitle Lendtech to its interdict,
it needs to show:
34.1
a prima facie right, even
though open to some doubt, to the main relief sought against Ims
Tech
34.2
harm reasonably apprehended
34.3
no other satisfactory remedy and
34.4
that the balance of convenience
favours it.
35
Regarding the prima facie right, to
put it differently, a respondent need only cast serious doubt on the
alleged right of Lendtech.
The answering affidavit of Ims Tech raises
serious doubt as to Lendtech’s alleged prima facie right. It
may be, that at the
end of the day Ims Tech owes a net amount to
Lendtech. It may be the other way round. I make no finding thereon.
The problem now
for Lendtech is that it is difficult to see what sum
is presently said by Lendtech to be owing to it by Ims Tech, given
the way
the subject is dealt with in both the founding and replying
affidavits. It would be bold of me to attempt to calculate even a
minimum
figure, either way.
36
On the
remaining requirements for an interdict, the harm apprehended by
Lendtech is not supported by the evidence and the balance
of
convenience strongly favours the respondents.
37
These findings make it unnecessary
for me to deal with the allegation by Lendtech that it has no other
satisfactory remedy. Nor
do I need to deal with a range of other
defences raised by the respondents.
38
The learned acting judge who granted
the order did so without the benefit of the respondents’ side
of the story. I have had
the advantage of considering what the
respondents say and the picture I view is wholly different to that
which Wanless AJ viewed.
Lendtech should not have sought the order
without notice. The order is overbroad by a long way, difficult if
not impossible to
execute accurately and is prejudicial to the
respondents. The notice of motion contained no limit on the amounts
to be attached.
At the hearing on 6 June 2023, counsel for Lendtech
informed me, quite candidly that the limit of USD 1 439 433 was
inserted
into the order at the insistence of Wanless AJ. Punitive
costs follow.
ORDER
1.
The orders of 24 April 2023 and 9 May
2023 are set aside.
2.
All attachments made pursuant to
either order are set aside.
3.
The applicant is to pay the costs of
the respondents on the attorney and client scale, including those of
two counsel.
GC Wright
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD
: 30 May and 6 June 2023
DELIVERED
: 6 June 2023
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANT
Adv
Anthonie Jansen Van Vuuren SC
vanv@law.co.za
Instructed
by KapdiTwala Inc t/a Vanessa Jacklin-Levin and Kirith Haria
Vanessa.jacklinlevin@dentons.com
/
Kirith.haria@dentons.com
1
st
to 4
th
RESPONDENTS
Adv
Alfred Cockrell SC
Adv
Luke Kelly
Jeremy@gauntlett.co.za
Luke.kelly@capebar.co.za
Instructed
by CMS Attorney
Kayana@cms-rm.com
Jackson@cms-rm.com
5
th
RESPONDENT
Adv
Nazeer Cassim SC
Adv
Yakoob Alli
Ncassim@law.co.za
Alli@counsel.co.za
Instructed
by
Webber
Wentzel Attorneys
Priyesh.daya@webberwentzel.com
martin.hattingh@webberwentzel.com
6
th
and 7
th
RESPONDENTS
Adv
Dennis Fine SC
Adv
Makhotso Lengane
Dennis@counsel.co.za
Lengane@group621.co.za
Instructed
by
Werksmans
Attorneys
Cmanaka@werksmans.com
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