Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1014South Africa
Evrigard (Pty) Ltd v ENB Import And Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (57565/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1014 (11 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Evrigard (Pty) Ltd v ENB Import And Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (57565/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1014 (11 September 2023)
Evrigard (Pty) Ltd v ENB Import And Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (57565/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1014 (11 September 2023)
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sino date 11 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
57565/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the matter between:
EVRIGARD
(PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
ENB
IMPORT AND EXPORT (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
SELECT
PPE (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This judgment has been
delivered by being uploaded to the CaseLines profile on and
communicated to the parties by email.
Wepener
J
[1] The applicant
is Evirgard (Pty) Limited (“Evrigard”), a supplier of
personal protective equipment including
a respirator branded as the
R402P Phuza Moya Get-up mask and sold in distinctive packaging (“the
Phuza Moya Get-Up”).
[2]
Evrigard seeks declaratory and interdictory relief as well as
ancillary relief, but the decision on the declaratory and
interdictory relief is a prerequisite for any further litigation.
[3] The first
respondent is ENB Import and Export (Pty) Ltd (“ENB”), an
entity that manufactures and sells a competing
respirator brand as
the AZ110 ASZORB in its packaging which Evrigard alleges is both
similar and a substantial reproduction or
adaptation of the Phuza
Moya Get-up. It is claimed that ENB’s conduct amounts to
passing off under the common law and copyright
infringement in terms
of section 23(2) of the Copyright Act.
[1]
[4] The second
respondent is Select PPE (Pty) Ltd (“Select”) an entity
that it sold and distributed Aszorb masks
and it is alleged that its
conduct amounts to passing off both under the common law and which is
an infringement in terms of section
23(2) of the Copyright Act.
[5] Disputes
developed regarding the admissibility of evidence and the value of
certain paragraphs in the heads of argument.
At the outset Select
objected to the evidence contained in an email from one Jacques Malan
(“Malan”), who attached
a spreadsheet of information
regarding alleged sales of masks. Initially, I was uncertain whether
the deponent had personal knowledge
of the facts and did not rule the
evidence inadmissible.
[6] However, as
argument proceeded, it became clear that the witness had no personal
knowledge of the facts stated in the
email and annexure and based his
evidence on that unproven hearsay evidence. As indicated to the
parties, the first ruling was
provisional and after the argument by
the parties, I concluded that the email emanating from Malan and its
annexure, are inadmissible
due to the fact that it is unproven
hearsay evidence and it falls to be struck out.
[7] A further issue
regarding the affidavits of a certain Mr Williams, which affidavits
were filed by Evrigard and ENB and
which contradicted each other, was
not pursued as all the parties accepted not to rely on the Williams
affidavits, after it was
conceded that the Williams affidavit filed
by the ENB, could be admitted into evidence.
[8] During argument, ENB
applied that an email emanating from a person in China be admitted as
evidence under section 3(1)(c) of
the Law of Evidence Amendment Act
(“Evidence Act”) which provides:
[2]
“
Subject to the
provisions of any other law, hearsay evidence shall not be admitted
as evidence at criminal or civil proceedings,
unless-
(a) . . .
(b) . . .
(c) the court, having
regard to-
(i) the nature of
the proceedings;
(ii) the nature of the
evidence;
(iii) the purpose
for which the evidence is tendered;
(iv) the probative
value of the evidence;
(v) the reason why the
evidence is not given by the person upon whose credibility the
probative value of such evidence depends;
(vi) any prejudice
to a party which the admissions of such evidence might entail; and
(vii) any other
factor which should in the opinion of the court be taken into
account,
Is of the opinion
that such evidence should be admitted in the interest of justice.”
[9] The reason why
the writer of the email did not furnish an affidavit is said to be
that ENB would attempt to source a confirmatory
affidavit from the
writer and that it was doubtful whether the writer would provide an
affidavit due to a breakdown of relations
between ENB and the
supplier of masks.
[10] There is no
evidence of any attempts that were made to procure such an affidavit
and ENB failed to satisfy, at the very
least, the provisions of
section 3(1)(c)(v) of the Evidence Act. I am not satisfied that ENB
placed sufficient evidence before
me to place me in a position to
receive the hearsay evidence. It is disallowed.
[11] An application
to strike out paragraphs in Evirgard’s heads of argument as
being evidence with no basis in the
papers, was abandoned due to
Evrigard not persisting with any submissions contained in these
portions of its heads of argument.
Evrigard also conceded that the
contents of para 19 of its replying affidavit may be struck out.
[12] It may be
prudent to deal with the Select’s arguments first. It was
submitted that Evrigard had no locus standi
to institute litigation
of this nature against the Select.
[13] It is common
cause that the Select is a distributor of the Aszorb masks to certain
mines. The allegations concerning
Select are that, since 2 November
2021, Evrigard was assigned the copyright in the works identified in
attachments to the deed
of assignment. The deed of assignment assigns
the subject matter in specific words referring to all future
copyright authored by
the assignees. There is no reference to
historical infringements nor any accrued rights. On the contrary, the
parties specifically
contracted for future rights. At the date of the
assignment on 2 November 2021, Evrigard received no accrued rights
prior to that
date. The affidavits make it clear that the Evrigard’s
complaint does not refer to conduct by Select on dates preceding the
date of assignment. The application based on copyright resting in the
assignment cannot succeed as no accrued rights, should they
exist,
were assigned by November 2021. Evrigard relied on section 24 of the
Copyright Act.
[3]
In my view,
section 24 states the obvious but does not refer to or include rights
which were accrued prior to an owner receiving
rights in terms of
that section. It does not clothe Evrigard with a cause of action for
past infractions of copyright.
[14] A second leg
of Select’s submission was that the assignment of goodwill in
trademarks does not result in a case
against it. No case has been
made out that Select misappropriated the Phuza Moya mask, which was
assigned to Evrigard. That argument
is correct.
[15] It is also so
that Evrigard failed to make a case against Select for an interdict.
The absence of a reasonable apprehension
of harm becomes fatal to
Evrigard’s case against Select. The examples relied on by
Evrigard are based on historical facts
going back to 2018. The
evidence of Select is that, upon receipt of a cease and desist letter
from Evrigard in November 2019, it,
admittedly, returned all the
alleged offending products to ENB. In instances where it could not
return masks, it secured the removal
of all outer cardboard casing
from the masks, leaving them without any packaging, whilst it
tendered the delivery of the packaging
to the Evrigard. Subsequent
thereto, there is no evidence to suggest that Select continued to
utilise any of the offending packaging.
Indeed, it placed no further
orders for Aszorb masks with ENB. This conduct controverts any
suggestion that there can be an apprehension
of further harm which
can justify interdictory relief. This is also borne out by the
letters written on behalf of Evrigard to ENB.
The principles to apply
is that, unless the version of a respondent can be found to be
palpably untrue, a court is constrained
to decide a matter on motion,
with reference to the version of a respondent where disputes arise.
Select set out evidence that
miners do not choose masks on the basis
of packaging but based on their sense of comfort and protection. This
version is met by
Evrigard with a photograph taken in 2018 of boxes
of masks. The problem is that the photograph does not depict
competing goods.
On the face of it, it looks like one set of
products. In the absence of competing goods, there is no substantive
case of passing
off. Evrigard’s deponents simply do not have
evidence to implicate Select in any passing off conduct. Evrigard
has, consequently,
failed to make any case against Select, also prior
to the assignment of rights.
[16] I now turn to
the case against ENB. Evrigard submitted that ENB remains guilty of
passing off Evrigard’s Phuza
Moya mask which it has been
marketing since 2001 with the current Get-up, having been introduced
in 2009. Again, ENB was unaware
of the Get-up claimed by Evrigard to
be its property and it too undertook to wind down the acquisition and
stock with the comparable
Get-up. To get past this, Evrigard relied
on the hearsay evidence regarding purchases of admitted stock by ENB,
which evidence
I have struck out and which can take the matter no
further. Much of the argument by Evrigard turned on the hearsay
evidence which
is to be disregarded. ENB attacked the rights of
Evrigard based on section 2(1) of the Copyright Act.
[4]
The requirement, before a claimant can establish a contravention, is
that its own product must be original. ENB showed that another
international manufacturer (Port West) uses similar, if not the exact
same packaging, as Evrigard. ENB has, consequently, produced
evidence
to the contrary of the allegations by Evrigard. The patent similarity
between the Port West packaging and that of Evrigard
is on record and
shows that it is strikingly similar. There is no explanation from
Evrigard why the Get-up of Evrigard and Port
West is so similar. This
must impact on the originality of Evrigard’s product. Evrigard
failed to show that its product is
original as required in section 2
of the Copyright Act. The question is whether the allegations
regarding the Port West Get-up
raised a dispute of fact, and if so,
what the consequences are. In my view, ENB indeed raised the dispute
of fact regarding the
originality of the Get-up of Evrigard. There is
nothing to show that Mr Berger (the creator of the Get-up) has
historical prototypes
or any of the evidence which predates the Port
West packaging. All that he says is that it did not copy Port West.
That, in my
view, does not overcome the disputes raised by ENB.
[17] In addition,
ENB submitted that Evrigard failed to establish a sufficient
reputation amongst a substantial number of
persons to prove the
distinctiveness of its goods as explained in
Caterham
Car Sales & Coachworks Ltd v Birkin Cars (Pty) Ltd and
Another.
[5]
The
evidence regarding the supply of the masks to mines shows a very
limited market, and I am of the view that Evrigard also failed
to
establish a sufficient reputation in the Get-up in order to succeed
in this matter. Having regard to the aforesaid, Evrigard
cannot
succeed in its application.
[18] The
submissions regarding the striking out of matter contained in the
affidavits did not materially lengthen the application.
I am of the
view that it does not warrant a special order for costs.
Order
1. The affidavit of
Mr Williams filed by the first respondent, is allowed.
2. The evidence of
Mr Malan, and the annexure to his email, are struck out.
3. Paragraph 19 of
the replying affidavit is struck out.
4. The application
against the respondents is dismissed with costs.
Wepener J
Heard:
28 August
2023
Delivered:
11
September 2023
For the Evrigard:
Adv G. Marriot
Instructed by
Kantor Myers Paslovsky
Attorneys
For the ENB:
Adv F.J. Labuschagne
With him Adv R. Orr
Instructed by
Vos Viljoen Bekker
Attorneys
For the Select:
Adv. C. Bester
Instructed by
Mc Naughton and Company
Incorporated
[1]
Act 98 of 1978.
[2]
Act 45 of 1988.
[3]
“(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act, infringements of copyright
shall be actionable at the suit of the owner of the
copyright, and
in any action for such an infringement all such relief by way of
damages, interdict, accounts, delivery of infringing
copies or
plates used or intended to be used for infringing copies or
otherwise shall be available to the plaintiff as is available
in any
corresponding proceedings in respect of infringements of other
proprietary rights.”
[4]
“(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the following
works, if they are original, shall be eligible for copyright.
. . .”
[5]
[1998] ZASCA 44
;
1998 (3) SA 938
(SCA) para 20-21.
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