Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1160South Africa
Avis Southern Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Porteous and Another (2023/0817898) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1160; 2024 (2) SA 386 (GJ) (16 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Avis Southern Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Porteous and Another (2023/0817898) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1160; 2024 (2) SA 386 (GJ) (16 October 2023)
Avis Southern Africa (Pty) Limited and Others v Porteous and Another (2023/0817898) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1160; 2024 (2) SA 386 (GJ) (16 October 2023)
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sino date 16 October 2023
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Restraint –
Transfer
between businesses
–
Whether
restraint agreement survives transfer of a business is fact
specific enquiry that involves ascertaining if benefit
created by
restraint constituted component of goodwill transferred to
purchaser – Commercial urgency – Commercial
interests
equally worthy of protection to justify reliance on Uniform Rule
6(12) – Confidentiality claim to be supported
by engagement
in the papers with requirements for confidentiality.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023/0817898
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
(3)
REVISED: Yes
17
OCTOBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
AVIS
SOUTHERN AFRICA PTY) LIMITED
First
Applicant
(Registration
No. 1967-01032-07)
ZENITH
CAR RENTAL (PTY)
LTD
Second Applicant
(Registration
No. 2019-420358-07)
ZEDA
CAR RENTAL (PTY)
LTD
Third
Applicant
(Registration
No. 1965-003534-07)
and
DAVID
PORTEOUS
First
Respondent
BELINDA
PORTEOUS
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
C
BESTER AJ:
Summary:
Commercial
urgency - Commercial
interests are
equally worthy of protection to justify reliance on Rule 6(12) as are
matters that concern a threat to liberty, life
or some other basic
essential of everyday life. Whether commercial interests
justify an urgent hearing will always depend
on the facts of each
case with reference to whether substantial redress can be secured at
a hearing in due course. Courts should
not decline to hear matters
that implicate commercial interests simply because judicial resources
may be strained in a particular
week in the urgent Court.
Transmissibility
of Benefit of Restraint of Trade to New Business - determining
whether a restraint agreement survives the transfer
of a business is
a fact specific enquiry that involves ascertaining if the benefit
created by the restraint constituted a component
of the goodwill
transferred to the purchaser. Where senior employees subject to
restraint covenants undergo changes in their
employment over many
years and the business is subjected to one or more changes in
ownership during this time, it is essential
to plead as part of the
cause of action to enforce the restraint obligations, the facts which
establish that the transfer of ownership
of the business included a
cession of the contractual rights created by the restraint in favour
of the new owner of the business.
Establishing
a Confidentiality Claim in Information – Courts should be slow
find that a proprietary interest in a general
body of information has
been established without first scrutinising the papers to establish
if the requirements for confidentiality
have been met.
Introduction
[1]
The first
applicant is Avis Southern Africa (Pty) Limited, traditionally better
known as Avis. It trades as a car rental company
across South
Africa.
[2]
The second and
third applicants are wholly owned subsidiaries of the first applicant
and together with the first applicant, they
approached this Court on
an urgent basis for interim relief to restrain the first and second
respondents from acting in breach
of certain restraint of trade
covenants.
[3]
The first and
second respondents are married to each other. The first
respondent commenced employment with Avis Southern Africa
Limited on
1 October 1988 which was later acquired by Barloworld South Africa
(Pty) Limited.
[4]
By the time of
his resignation on 31 May 2023, which took effect on 31 August 2023,
he held the position of Chief Operations Officer
of the Avis car
rental and leasing business. The business was unbundled from
Barloworld in favour of Zeda Limited with effect
from 13 December
2022 when Zeda listed on the main board of the Johannesburg
Securities Exchange.
[5]
The second
respondent assumed employment with the third applicant in 1999 and on
10 December 2008, she became the Manager: International
Sales for the
Avis Rent a Car business of Barloworld and retained this position
until the transfer of her employment to the second
applicant with
effect from 7 September 2021. She remained in the employ of the
second applicant until her resignation on
26 April 2023 which took
effect on 31 May 2023.
[6]
Although the
matter was brought under one case number, it really concerns two
applications with discrete restraint covenants arising
from the
employment relationship with each respondent based on their own set
of facts and the adjudication of separate heads of
relief.
[7]
The relief
claimed from the first respondent was premised on the enforcement of
a restraint for a period of three months calculated
from 31 August
2023. The applicants seek an order from the second respondent
that
inter
alia
interdicts her from competing in breach of her restraint undertakings
for twelve months from 31 May 2023. She has not sought
employment from a direct competitor of the applicants but has
commenced with the process of registering a company in Mauritius
that
intends to provide consulting services in the mobility and tourism
industry. The first respondent intends to provide
consulting
services through this entity to the likes of Dollar Thrifty on a
contract basis.
[8]
At the hearing
of the application, I found that the application against the first
respondent lacked the requisite urgency to justify
a hearing in the
urgent Court and consequently struck the matter from the roll with
costs. I ordered that the matter
should proceed against
the second respondent since I found the application brought against
her to be sufficiently urgent.
Reasons
for Urgency Ruling – the First Respondent
[9]
The first
respondent did not conceal his intention to render consulting
services to a direct competitor of the applicants upon his
resignation. The applicants had knowledge of this fact from the
end of May 2023 but only brought the application more than
two and a
half months later when this application was issued on 17 August 2023.
[10]
It is not
suggested that they did not know from the outset that this conduct
would implicate his restraint obligations. All
indicators are
that they were cognisant of this fact but took no further steps for
reasons that were not adequately explained in
the founding affidavit.
[11]
The applicants
did not have to wait for the first respondent to commence formal
contractual relations with a new company that provides
services to
Dollar Thrifty. His disclosure of the fact that he would do so
was enough.
[12]
It
is not a legal requirement that an employer seeking to enforce a
protectable interest forming the subject of a restraint covenant
must
wait for evidence of the actual utilisation of confidential
information upon the assumption of employment with the
competition.
[1]
Having protected itself against the risk of a former employee
exploiting trade secrets or employing customer connections for the
benefit of his new employer, the prospect of such employment
commencing immediately after the termination of his employment was
sufficient to justify an approach to this Court long before 17 August
2023.
[13]
As
the Constitutional Court reminded in
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another
(2016
(6) SA 279
(CC), before an interim interdict can be granted, an
applicant must prove a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm
which must
be anticipated or ongoing.
[2]
[14]
The harm the
applicants complained of at the hearing was capable of anticipation
at the end of May 2023 already when the first respondent
made a
candid disclosure of his intentions.
[15]
It should have
triggered the launch of an application on an urgent or even
semi-urgent basis with some expedition at the time to
ensure the
applicants ventilated the dispute concerning the first respondent’s
alleged breach of his restraint obligations
before he assumed a
contractual relationship with a new company. The
obligation to do so with haste was particularly
important in
circumstances where the restraint period would only last for three
months.
[16]
Their failure
to explain the delay from the end of May to 17 August 2023 meant that
any urgency was decidedly self-created by the
time the matter was
heard a week later on severely truncated timeframes that left the
first respondent with hopelessly insufficient
time to prepare a
proper answering affidavit.
The
Case Against the Second Respondent
Urgency
[17]
In
the recent judgment of
Volvo
Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading
CC
(2023/067290)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023), in finding that there is no
category of proceeding that is intrinsically urgent,
the Court
remarked that a crippling commercial loss was likely to be urgent in
the context of commercial matters.
[3]
[18]
The
judgment must not be understood to constitute a departure from the
existing legal position which enjoys a rich tradition in
this
division since at least
Twentieth
Century Fox Film
Corporation
v Anthony Black Films (Pty) Ltd
1982
(3) SA 582
(W)
which
holds that commercial interests are equally worthy of protection to
justify reliance on Rule 6(12) as are matters that concern
a threat
to liberty, life or some other basic essential of everyday life.
[19]
Whether
commercial interests justify an urgent hearing will always depend on
the facts of each case with reference to whether substantial
redress
can be secured at a hearing in due course.
[4]
Volvo
does not signal that the bar has now been heightened to require
evidence of the existence of a crippling commercial loss before
a
commercial matter can be said to be urgent, nor should Courts decline
to hear matters that implicate commercial interests simply
because
judicial resources may be strained in a particular week in the urgent
Court.
[20]
The prospect
of a crippling economic loss may be but one manifestation of
commercial urgency but should not be viewed as the only
iteration
thereof to justify an approach to the urgent Court when important
commercial interests are at stake.
[21]
The precise
outline of what constitutes commercial interests necessary to invoke
Rule 6(12) need not be defined with any degree
of exactness but
remains a matter for the Court to exercise at the hand of its
judicial discretion on a case-by-case basis, with
due regard to the
fact that a litigant with commercial interests at stake enjoys the
same constitutional right of access to Court
enshrined by section 34
of the Constitution as any other category of litigant.
[22]
I previously
found the application to be urgent in the case of the second
respondent.
[23]
On 15 June
2023, the applicants commenced with a forensic investigation
following a discovery that the second respondent had transmitted
work
related documents to her personal email address in the period from 7
February 2023 to 7 May 2023, the full import of which
was not
immediately apparent to the applicants. A preliminary report was
received on 30 July 2023 which the applicants allege suggested
a
breach of the second respondent’s confidentiality obligations
whereafter legal advice was procured and this application
was
launched against the second respondent.
[24]
The
delay in prosecuting the application against the second respondent
was not inordinate, and
I
was persuaded that the applicants established urgency in that
they would not obtain substantial redress at a hearing in due
course
.
[5]
[25]
In the
circumstances, I informed counsel that I was prepared to enrol and
hear the matter against the second respondent as one of
urgency.
The
Merits: General Remarks
[26]
Agreements
in restraint of trade are presumptively valid and enforceable unless
they
impose an unreasonable restriction on a person’s freedom to
trade, in which case they are likely to be unconstitutional,
against
public policy and therefore illegal and unenforceable.
[6]
[27]
After
the seminal decision of
Magna
Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
,
[7]
it became settled law that a party seeking to enforce a contract in
restraint of trade is required to invoke the restraint agreement
and
prove a breach thereof. Thereupon, a respondent who seeks to avoid
the restraint bears an onus to demonstrate on a balance
of
probabilities that the restraint agreement is unenforceable because
it is unreasonable.
[28]
The
decision has survived constitutional scrutiny with the result that
where the terms of a restraint undertaking are found to be
reasonable, public policy requires that the restraint be enforced
which is
consistent
with the constitutional values of dignity and autonomy.
[8]
[29]
The
second respondent does not dispute having entered into an agreement
of restraint of trade with the third applicant on 23 July
2003 (“
the
restraint
”
)
in terms of which she agreed that she would not for a period of
twelve months following the termination of her employment, directly
or indirectly carry on or be interested or engaged or concerned with
any firm, business or company carrying on business in any
part of the
territories of South Africa, Namibia as well as Lesotho and Eswatini.
[9]
[30]
The second
respondent does not challenge the enforceability of the restraint on
the basis that it is not reasonable as it would
render her
economically inactive. There is in the circumstances no need to
address the question of whether the second respondent
has discharged
the onus of demonstrating that the enforcement of the restraint would
be unreasonable.
[31]
The main
issues concern the following two questions, which are entirely
dispositive of the relief claimed against the second respondent:
a.
whether the
benefit of the restraints was transmitted to the second applicant,
being the entity that employed the second respondent
until her
resignation on 31 May 2023;
b.
the
existence of a valid protectable interest since a contract in
restraint of trade must protect some protectable interest of the
person who seeks to enforce it and which may take the form of trade
secrets (confidential information) or trade connections, the
most
important component of goodwill.
[10]
[32]
In view of the
approach that I take, it is not necessary to consider in any detail
whether a breach of the restraint has been established
since the
applicants have not shown the existence of a
prima
facie
right that would entitle them to interim relief against the second
respondent.
The
Transmissibility of the Benefits of the Restraint
[33]
Having
entered into the restraint in favour of the third applicant on 23
July 2003, the second respondent’s employment was
transferred
to Barloworld and she entered into a contract of employment with the
latter on 10 December 2008 to assume the position
of Manager:
International Sales for the Avis Rent a Car business of
Barloworld.
[11]
[34]
Although the
Barloworld contract of employment contained a standard
confidentiality clause which enjoined the second respondent
to keep
confidential her employer’s trade secrets, know-how and the
like, the contract did not include any restraint undertakings.
[35]
Her
employment was subsequently transferred to the second applicant with
effect from 7 September 2021 until her resignation on 31
May 2023
with her new employment contract recording that it superseded all
previous contracts of employment.
[12]
[36]
The
applicants rest their case entirely on the restraint entered into by
the second respondent in favour of the third applicant
on 23 July
2003. They do not contend that it was replaced by a subsequent
document that recorded a fresh covenant in restraint
of trade.
[13]
They
argue that was incorporated into the second respondent’s
contract of employment with Barloworld, and continued to apply
when
she was employed by the second applicant in 2021.
[37]
The
question is whether the benefits associated with the restraint were
transmitted from the third applicant to Barloworld and subsequently
to the second applicant pursuant to the transfer of her employment to
the latter on 7 September 2021. If Barloworld took
no cession
of the contractual rights derived from the restraint, it must follow
that the second applicant could not have acquired
the benefits
associated with the restraint from Barloworld as it could not have
vested the second applicant with more rights than
what it already
had.
[14]
[38]
The answer to
this question requires an examination of certain legal principles
that inform the transfer of restraint benefits from
one business to
another.
[39]
The
advantages conferred by an express undertaking embodied in an
agreement of restraint of trade, like an implied prohibition,
form
part of the goodwill of a business as it is entered into for the
benefit of the business.
[15]
Goodwill
represents the various components of a business undertaking that act
as “the attractive force that brings in custom”.
[16]
[40]
It does not
lend itself to easy characterisation and may mean different things to
accountants and lawyers but as Harms JA noted
in
Caterham
Car Sales and Coach Works Limited v Barkin Cars (Pty) Limited
[1998] ZASCA 44
;
1998 (3) SA 938
(SCA)
at 947G:
“
Goodwill
is the totality of attributes that lure or entice clients or
potential clients to support a particular business (cf.
A
Becker
and Co (Pty) Ltd v Becker and others
1981 (3) SA 406 (A)
417A). The components of goodwill are many and diverse (
O’Kennedy
v Smit
1948 (2) SA 63 (C)
66;
Jacobs
v Minister of Agriculture
1972 (4) SA 608 (W)
624A–625F). Well recognised are the locality and the
personality of the driving
force behind the business (
ibid
),
business licences (
Receiver
of Revenue, Cape v Cavanagh
1912
AD 459)
, agreements such as restraints of trade (
Botha
and another v Carapax Shadeports (Pty) Ltd
1992 (1) SA 202 (A)
211H–I) and reputation. These components are not necessarily
all present in
the goodwill any particular business.”
[41]
The
goodwill of an undertaking is an intangible asset (i.e., an
incorporeal movable)
[17]
of
an established business of considerable value that enjoys legal
recognition as an immaterial property right.
[18]
[42]
It
helps to generate turnover and with that profit for the business, a
feature which has resulted in our Courts often referring
to goodwill
as the “
werfkrag
”
of a business which is in some ways a more apt description
[19]
It
may include the benefits conferred by a restraint undertaking.
[43]
Following
a review of English and South African authorities, the Appellate
Division in
Carapax
concluded
that the benefit of an agreement in restraint of trade, entered into
for the benefit of a business rather than the owner,
is transferred
to the purchaser of that business as part of its goodwill.
[20]
[44]
Goodwill
represents the glue that holds the benefit of a restraint together as
part of the subject of the sale and without goodwill
forming an
ingredient of the
merx
,
the benefit of a restraint does not pass upon the sale of the
business. This accords with the doctrinal principles that
underpin restraints of trade and which hold that the protection of
the proprietary interest of the employer’s business in
its
trade secrets and trade connections contribute to the goodwill of the
business.
[21]
[45]
Where
a business is sold, the subject of the sale is to be determined from
the terms of the agreement of sale and if the goodwill
forms a
component of the sale, what precise elements of the goodwill are
included as part of the sale constitute a factual question.
[22]
Whether
the benefit created by a restraint of trade agreement is acquired by
the purchaser of the business depends largely on the
terms of the
agreement reached between the seller and the purchaser and if it is
included as a component of the goodwill.
[46]
When
a restraint agreement is entered into for the benefit of the
business, the benefit so created is incidental to the business
and
part of its goodwill with the result that the benefit will ordinarily
pass to the purchaser, unless the parties intended the
contrary to be
true.
[23]
The
question however always remains a
factual
one
which the Court in
Carapax
pointed
out is based on a factual inference as to “
the
intention of the parties
”
to the sale of business agreement.
[24]
[47]
Carapax
was
decided twenty years before
Endumeni
,
[25]
and
the task of interpreting contractual documents is today no longer
conducted with reference to the intention of the parties since
this
impermissibly starts with a search for the meaning of words in
isolation, followed by giving context a secondary role whereas
Endumeni
requires
us to embark on a unitary journey of interpretation that involves the
trilogy of text, context and purpose.
[26]
[48]
This does not
alter the fact that the exercise of determining whether the benefits
created by a restraint form part of the goodwill
and consequently
passed to the purchaser must be conducted with reference to the facts
of the case by asking if the composition
of the goodwill component of
the
merx
of
the sale includes those benefits.
[49]
The
benefits created by a restraint are characterised in law as one or
more contractual rights enforceable against an employee and
when
those benefits are transferred as part of the goodwill under a sale
of business agreement, the transfer takes place by way
of a cession
and must meet the common law requirements for a valid cession, which
involve two kinds of agreements: the obligationary
agreement and the
transfer agreement.
[27]
The former entails an agreement whereby the cedent undertakes to cede
the personal rights to the cessionary comprising the goodwill
and as
a component thereof but does effect the transfer according to Scott.
[28]
[50]
Actual
transfer of the rights from the cedent to the cessionary’s
estate is conducted in terms of the transfer agreement.
In practice
they are often embodied in the same document but remain discrete
juristic acts, with the obligationary agreement creating
the duty to
cede and the transfer agreement effecting the discharge of the duty.
[29]
[51]
Carapax
was decided before
the introduction of
section 197
of the
Labour Relations Act 66 of
1995
, but its characterisation of the enquiry as fact specific
remains undisturbed following the enactment of
section 197
which did
not alter the common law position set out in
Carapax
.
[52]
As Froneman J
writing for the full Court in
Securicor
(SA) (Pty) Limited and Others v Lotter and Others
2005 (5) SA 540
(E)
observed in the context of whether a restraint of trade agreement
survived the transfer of a business as “a going concern”
under
section 197:
a.
the effect of
section 197:
i.
is
to result in an automatic substitution of the old employer with a new
employer in respect of all contracts of employment so as
to transfer
all rights and obligations arising from the employment relationship
to the new employer;
[30]
ii.
does
not impact on the substance of the rights and obligations existing at
the time of the transfer of a business but rather the
identity of the
persons or legal entity against whom employees may now look toward to
enforce their rights;
[31]
b.
whether
a restraint agreement survives the transfer of a business under
section 197
must be determined against the backdrop of the facts by
asking whether the restraint formed part of the goodwill of the
business
and whether the goodwill was a component of the business
transferred as a going concern in terms of
section 197
;
[32]
c.
the
enquiry remains an objective factual one to be conducted with
reference to the circumstances of each case;
[33]
and
d.
if
the factual enquiry establishes that the restraint formed part of the
transfer of business, the employee’s obligations
under the
restraint are owed to the new employer who is entitled to enforce the
restraint against the employee.
[34]
[53]
The
introduction of the statutory regime envisaged by
section 197
therefore did not result in an automatic statutory assignment of the
contractual rights created by a restraint agreement that facilitated
their ease of transfer without first satisfying the ordinary
principles of cession set out in
Carapax
.
[54]
They continue
to remain of legal application.
[55]
When these
principles are applied to the facts of this case, the following
emerges.
[56]
The restraint
of trade entered into by the second respondent in favour of the third
applicant in 2003 was entered into for the benefit
of the business
itself as distinct from the personal benefit of the owner.
[57]
The benefit
created thereby was thus incidental to the business as part of its
goodwill.
[58]
The factual
case advanced by the applicants however falls short on at least two
levels:
a.
the papers do
not show that the transfer of the second respondent’s
employment to Barloworld was part of a sale of business
from the
third applicant to Barloworld that included as part of the
merx
,
a cession of the goodwill of the third applicant’s business and
that included the benefits created by the restraint;
b.
the affidavits
do not set out facts to show:
i.
a transfer of
the Avis car rental and leasing business from Barloworld to the
second applicant upon the unbundling of the business
from Barloworld
or how it was implemented;
ii.
that such a
transfer from Barloworld included the cession of the goodwill of the
business inclusive of the restraint benefits to
the second applicant
when it became the second respondent’s new employer with effect
from 7 September 2021.
[59]
These
omissions are fatal for the applicants’ case in my view.
[60]
I
am not prepared, nor can I read the necessary factual allegations
into the papers. I
n
application proceedings the affidavits take the place not only of the
pleadings in an action, but also of the essential evidence
which
would be led at a trial and must therefore be sufficiently fulsome to
detail the
facta
probanda
relevant to the cause of action but also the
facta
probantia
,
being every piece of necessary evidence to prove the material facts.
[35]
[61]
Carapax
and
its progeny make clear that determining whether a restraint agreement
survives the transfer of a business is a
fact
specific enquiry
that involves at the very least, ascertaining if the benefit created
by the restraint constituted a component of the goodwill transferred
to the purchaser.
[36]
Those
facts do not emerge from the applicants’ papers.
[62]
One
would have expected allegations to show that a formal transfer of
business took place and that the composition of the goodwill
included
as one of its elements, the benefit created by the restraint and that
this part of the
merx
was ceded to Barloworld
[37]
There
is no evidence to suggest that in concluding a fresh contract of
employment with the second respondent, Barloworld intended
to persist
with the terms of employment (including a restraint) that governed
the contractual relationship between the third applicant
and the
second respondent.
[63]
Where senior
employees subject to restraint covenants undergo changes in their
employment over many years by virtue them assuming
new positions
higher up the organisation’s corporate hierarchy and the
business is subjected to one or more changes in ownership
during this
time, it is essential to plead as part of the cause of action
designed to enforce the restraint obligations, the facts
which
establish that the transfer of ownership of the business included a
cession of the contractual rights created by the restraint
in favour
of the new owner of the business. It was incumbent on the
applicants to make out a case on this basis.
[64]
The transfer
of employment from the third applicant to Barloworld and years later
from Barloworld to the second applicant does not
cure this deficiency
since the answer to the question of whether the restraint survives
the transfer of employment from one entity
to another does not
concern the transfer of the second respondent’s employment.
It centres on the cession of the intangible
asset comprising the
contractual rights to enforce the restraint against the second
respondent. This asset belongs to the
business and is severable
from an employee’s agreement to work.
[65]
In the absence
of the basic building blocks necessary to link the restraint to her
employment by Barloworld from 10 December 2008,
it must follow that I
am unable to find that the obligations created under the restraint
entered into with the third applicant
during 2003 were ceded to
Barloworld. Arising from this conclusion it follows that Barloworld
did not become entitled to enforce
the restraint obligations against
the second respondent, not having received a cession of the
contractual rights from the third
applicant.
[66]
If the
restraint did not survive the transfer of the second respondent’s
employment to Barloworld, the transfer of her employment
to the
second applicant with effect from 7 September 2021 could not have
vested the second applicant with stronger rights to enforce
the
restraint.
The
maxim
nemo
plus iuris transferre potest quam ipse habet
applies
here and has the consequence that Barloworld could not have
transferred more rights to the second applicant than what it
held.
[67]
The
Labour Appeal Court recently found in
Beedle
v Slo-Jo Innovations Hub (Pty) Limited
[38]
that
where an employee under restraint of trade had her employment
transferred to a newly established company as part of an internal
restructuring of an existing business, this did not alter the terms
of her employment which remained on the same terms and conditions.
On the facts before it, the Court found that there was no sale of the
business to a third party as in
Carapax
and
Securicor
.
There was in the circumstances no need to consider the question of
whether the restraint formed part of the goodwill of
the business as
there was no sale of the goodwill given that it was an internal
transaction only that resulted in the creation
of a new subsidiary
that would employ the appellant.
[68]
While
the applicants allege that Barloworld “is a division under the
Applicant”
[39]
the
organogram setting out the corporate structure of the group does not
include Barloworld as part of the Zeda Group with no reference
made
to the company.
[40]
[69]
I
find for this reason that Barloworld is an external third party.
The reasoning in
Beedle
which carves out an exception to the application of the general
principles in
Carapax
and
Securicor
is
limited to instances where the transfer of employment concerns an
internal transfer within a group. It does not implicate
the
question of whether the restraint survives a transfer of employment
to a third party as part of the goodwill of the sale of
business
which accompanies the transfer of employment.
[70]
The
decision therefore does not assist the applicants since there is no
evidence that the transfer to Barloworld was an internal
one only.
[71]
I
deem it necessary to briefly address certain of the arguments raised
on behalf of the applicants.
[72]
The
applicants submitted that because it was recorded in writing that the
second respondent’s current
terms
and condition would not be impacted but would remain the same upon
her assuming
employment
with the second applicant on 7 September 2021
,
[41]
this
had the consequence that the right to enforce the restraint by
implication continued to apply as part of the terms and conditions
of
her employment. I disagree.
[73]
There is no
evidence to show that the second applicant took cession of the
benefit created by the restraint from Barloworld.
The
fact that the balance of her terms and conditions remained the same
is of no assistance to the applicants. It does not
address this
obvious
lacuna
in their case of how the benefit of the restraint as a component of
the goodwill of the business was ceded to the second applicant
as
part of the bundle of assets forming part of such a transaction
between Barloworld and the second applicant.
[74]
The
status of the first applicant as its holding company is of no
consequence either. This does not vest it with any special
rights to enforce the restraint. A holding company remains a separate
juristic person from its subsidiaries and unless a cession
of the
goodwill which must include the benefit of the restraint was effected
to the first applicant, the first applicant cannot
enforce the
contractual rights forming the subject of the benefit.
[75]
I
know of no principle in law that allows a holding company to do so.
Its status as the holding company does not mean it is
automatically
entitled to exercise the contractual rights of a subsidiary. The
goodwill that attaches to a business remains the
property of the
subsidiary and at best for a holding company, it holds an interest in
the subsidiary through its shareholding.
[76]
The
applicants submit that the restraint must be read to function on an
interdependent basis with the employment contracts the second
respondent entered into over the years on the basis that they would
compliment each other.
[77]
Reliance
was placed on the decision of
National
Health Laboratory Service v Lloyd-Jansen van Vuuren
2015 (5) SA 426
(SCA) in support of the proposition that the failure
of a later contract of employment to make reference to an earlier
employment
contract that contains its own set of obligations does not
invalidate the agreement concluded earlier in time.
[78]
The judgment
is distinguishable in law and on the facts. In
Lloyd-Jansen
van Vuuren
the
parties had entered into two agreement, the first of which was
in 2006 (the 2006 contract) that required the respondent
to
complete
her studies for a medical degree within five years, and that if she
resigned before two years after completion of her training
as a
specialist. she would have to pay the appellant R2 million it paid
towards her training costs.
[79]
She
completed her studies and training within the stipulated five-year
period. In April 2010 the appellant employed her as a specialist
pathologist. The employment contract (the 2010 contract) made no
reference to the two-year period mentioned in the 2006 contract
and
recorded that it constituted the whole agreement between the
parties. When the respondent resigned in July 2010, she
refused
to pay the R2 million on the ground that the 2010 contract had
novated the 2006 contract and hence terminated her obligations
under
it.
[80]
Mhlantla JA
found that on a proper interpretation of the two agreements against
the backdrop of the relevant circumstances of the
case and the
intention of the parties, the two contracts served different purposes
and for this reason could co-exist without the
2010 contract having
novated the 2006 contract which created obligations that remained
binding and enforceable.
[81]
The question
is not whether the restraint was novated by any of the subsequent
employment contracts entered by the second respondent
with Barloworld
and the second applicant thereafter.
[82]
It is indeed
often so that a covenant in restraint of trade operates in
conjunction with an employment agreement, but this is not
the panacea
to the obstacle the applicants face in not having demonstrated that
the contractual rights created by the restraint
were successfully
ceded from the third applicant to Barloworld and then most recently
to the second applicant upon the second respondent
assuming
employment with it on 7 September 2021.
[83]
The judgment
in
Lloyd-Jansen
van Vuuren
is
for this reason of no assistance to the applicants.
[84]
The
rights to enforce the restraint remained vested in the third
applicant. The applicants have not demonstrated that when
the
second respondent assumed employment with Barloworld in 2008, those
rights were carried over to Barloworld.
[85]
As
the restraint was only valid for twelve months from date of
termination of her employment
on
10 December 2008, the contractual rights to restrain the second
respondent from acting in breach of her restraint lapsed on 9
December 2009.
Protectable
Interest
[86]
If I am wrong and the applicants
have established contractual privity with the second respondent that
allows them to assert extant
contractual rights it remains necessary
to briefly deal with the question of whether a protectable interest
has been established.
[87]
The following principles require
mention:
a.
to
be enforceable, a contract in restraint of trade must protect some
proprietary interest of the person who seeks to enforce it
which may
take the form of trade secrets (confidential information) or trade
connections, the most important component of goodwill
[42]
since it is accepted that a bare covenant not to compete cannot be
upheld;
[43]
b.
whether
or not a protectable proprietary interest exists is a question of
fact in each case, and in many, one of degree.
[44]
[88]
As
the Labour Appeal Court recently made clear, it is only once the
party seeking to enforce the restraint of trade
has
established
an interest worthy of protection and that the other party is
threatening that interest, that the onus shifts on the
party
resisting its enforcement to prove that it would be unreasonable.
[45]
[89]
The
existence of a protectable interest is for this reason a
jurisdictional requirement before the breach of the restraint can be
considered since the absence of a protectable interest means that
there is no interest worthy of protecting through the restraint.
The
mere elimination of competition as such is not the kind of interest
which can be protected by a restraint.
[46]
[90]
Not
all customer connections are protected. The enquiry is factual
in nature and examines the extent to which the employee
can take the
customer with her to her new employer as a result of a close
relationship established during the course of her employment.
In
Morris
(Herbert) Ltd v Saxelby
[47]
it was said that the relationship must be such that the employee
acquires “
such
personal knowledge of and influence over the customers of his
employer … as will enable him (the servant or apprentice),
if
competition were allowed, to take advantage of his employer’s
trade connection”
.
[48]
[91]
The papers do
not make out a case to show that the second respondent established
customer connections which she is likely to exploit
in the future.
No protectable interest has therefore been established on this
front.
[92]
Whether information constitutes a
trade secret is similarly a factual question.
C
alling
something secret does not turn it into confidential information.
The enquiry is objective and the facts must be proved
from which it
may be inferred by the Court that the matters alleged to be secret
are indeed secret. In
Telefund
Raisers CC v Isaacs
1998 1 SA 521
(C)
at 528E the following was said:
“
Of
course, it is true that
the mere fact
that a trader chooses to call something secret or confidential does
not per se make it so
. . .
To be confidential, the information concerned must have the necessary
quality of confidence about it, namely it
must not be something which
is public property or public knowledge”.
[93]
The same conclusion was arrived at in
Petre
& Madco Ltd v Sanderson-Kasner
1984 3 SA 850
(W)
at 858E–H where the following was remarked:
“
. . .
it
is trite law that one cannot make
something secret by calling it secret. Facts must be proved from
which it may be inferred that
the matter alleged to be secret are
indeed secret
. In the nature of things
it seems to me that it is unlikely that the applicant will operate in
a way that is markedly different
from the way in which its numerous
competitors operate. There is nothing to show what is so unique about
the product demonstrations
or what is so special about the sales
methods. Nor is there anything to show why the information said to be
confidential can properly
be regarded as confidential.”
(
emphasis
added
)
[94]
For information to be confidential
it must meet three requirements, namely that the information must be:
a.
capable of application in trade or
industry, that is, it must be useful and not be public knowledge;
b.
known only to a restricted number of
people or a closed circle;
c.
of
economic value to the person seeking to protect it.
[49]
[95]
It does not
suffice if only one of the requirements are met. There
are sound reasons why the common law requires an
applicant to
establish the existence of all three requirements.
Courts
should be slow find that a proprietary interest in a general body of
information has been established without first scrutinising
the
papers to establish if the requirements for confidentiality have been
met.
[96]
Evidence
must be led to give content to each of the three requirements.
Lowering
the bar would mean that a competitor is allowed to acquire a
proprietary interest in a body of general information that
it is
objectively not entitled to and that operates at the exclusion of
third-party competitors. This has potentially deleterious
consequences for healthy competition which is the lifeblood of the
free market.
[50]
This
was the position before the new constitutional dispensation and it
remains an important policy consideration today with the
Constitutional Court having emphasised the role of free competition
in preventing parties from acquiring an unlimited monopoly.
[51]
[97]
The applicants
rely on a series of documents that the second respondent transmitted
to her personal email address. The common
denominator in each
instance was the assertion that the information was confidential and
commercially sensitive. The papers
however do not engage with
the three requirements for confidentiality with any degree of
tolerable satisfaction at a factual level.
One is left with the
distinct impression that the claim of confidentiality is at best a
conclusion drawn in the absence of the
facts that underpin the claim
with reference to the three requirements for confidentiality to
subsist. If upheld on such a tenuous
basis, it may give rise to the
stifling of free competition our Courts have guarded against.
[98]
The necessary
degree of confidentiality has in the circumstances not been
established and I am unable to find the existence of a
protectable
interest based on confidential information.
Conclusion
[99]
I
am
mindful of the fact that this is an application for an interim
interdict and that it is not necessary for an applicant to prove
a
clear right in order to obtain relief. It is sufficient for an
applicant, in addition to establishing a well-grounded apprehension
of irreparable injury and the absence of an ordinary remedy, to rely
on a right which though
prima
facie
established,
is open to some doubt.
[52]
[100]
There is in my
judgment no or insufficient foundation to support a possible “right”
to enforce the provisions of the
restraint.
Accordingly,
however one views the other factors relevant to the exercise by the
Court of its discretion, there is no basis upon
which an interim
interdict could be granted at its instance. For this reason, it would
be appropriate for the applicants to bear
the second respondent’s
costs.
[101]
I accordingly make an order in the
following terms:
[1]
The application against the second
respondent is dismissed.
[2]
The applicants are ordered to pay the
second respondent’s costs jointly and severally the one paying
the others to be absolved.
___________________________
C BESTER AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
23 and 25 August 2023
Delivered:
16 October 2023
For
the Applicants:
B
Lekokotla
M
Ramalivha Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
A
Redding SC
Faskens
Attorneys
[1]
Experian
South Africa v Haynes and Another
2013 (1) SA 135
(GSJ) at
paragraphs 21 and 22.
[2]
At
paragraph 55.
[3]
See
paragraph 6 where Wilson J found that there is “no category of
proceeding that enjoys inherent
preference”.
These remarks are supported by the finding of Cameron JA (as he then
was) in
Commissioner
for SARS v Hawker Services (Pty) Limited
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006 (4) SA 292
(SCA) at paragraph
9
where it was explained that urgency “is a reason that may
justify deviation from the times and
forms
the rules prescribe.
It relates to
form
, not substance, and is not a
prerequisite to a claim for
substantive
relief.”
[4]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011) at paragraphs 6 to 7.
[5]
Twentieth
Century Fox Film at 586E-H.
[6]
Saner
Agreements in Restraint of Trade in South African Law 1-5, Nov 2022,
Lexis Nexis.
[7]
Magna
Alloys and Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
[1984] ZASCA 116
;
1984 (4) SA 874
(A) at
892I to 893E.
[8]
Reddy
v Siemens Telecommunications (Pty) Ltd 2007 (2) SA 486
(SCA) at para 21.
[9]
“
FA5.1”,
CaseLines 03-27; see respondent’s heads of argument, para 8.1,
CaseLines 04-35. The
agreement
recorded that she assumed employment with the third applicant on 8
July 2003 as
a
Product Manager in terms of a separate service agreement which was
not included as part of the
papers
filed on behalf of the applicants.
[10]
Sibex
Engineering Services (Pty) Ltd v Van Wyk and Another
1991 (2) SA 482
T; Rawlins &
Another
v Caravantruck (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 204
;
1993 (1) SA 537
(A) at 540J-541I.
[11]
“
FA5”,
CaseLines 03-20.
[12]
CaseLines
03-17.
[13]
RA,
para 18, CaseLines 01-92.
[14]
Glatthaar
v Hussan
1912
TPD 322.
[15]
Botha
& Another v Carapax Shadeports (Pty) Limited
[1991] ZASCA 134
;
1992 (1) SA 202
at
213I; Grainco (Pty)
Limited
v Van der Merwe
2014
(5) SA 444
(WC) at para 42.
[16]
The
Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Muller & Co’s Margarine
Limited
[1901] AC 217
at 224;
see
also Van-Heerden Neetthling, Unlawful Competition, Second Edition,
page 107.
[17]
Slims
(Pty) Limited v Morris
1988 (1) SA 715
(AD) at 272I-J.
[18]
See
the judgment of Mostert J in Universiteit van Pretoria v Tommie
Meyer Films (Edms) Bpk
1977
(4) SA 376
(T) at 386A.
[19]
Rosenbach
& CO (Pty) Limited v Delmonte
1962 (2) SA 155
(N) at 209 to 210;
Tommie Meyer
Films
(Edms) Bpk
at
386A; see also
A
Becker & Co (Pty) Limited v Becker
1981 (3) SA 406
(A)
at
416. see also
Altas
Organic Fertilisers (Pty) Limited v Pikkewyn Ghwano (Pty) Limited
1981
(2)
SA 173 (T) at 182D-E where the Court referred to goodwill as
equivalent to a trader’s “
reg
op
werfkrag
”.
[20]
Carapax
at 212H.
[21]
Carapax
at 211H with refence to English authorities cited therein; Grainco
at para 61.
[22]
Carapax
at 213A.
[23]
Carapax
at 213AI-J.
[24]
Ibid.
[25]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA).
[26]
Endumeni
at para 24.
[27]
Johnson
v Incorporated General Insurances Ltd
1983 (1) SA 318
(A) at 331G-H;
Standard
General
Insurance CO Ltd v SA Brake CC
[1995] ZASCA 46
;
1995 (3) SA 806
(A)
at 814J to 815D.
[28]
Susan
Scott, Scott on Cession, A Treatise on the Law in South Africa,
First Edition, 2018, page
28.
[29]
See
the unreported judgment of Malan JA in Grobbelaar v Shoprite
Checkers 2011 JDR 0197
(SCA)
with reference to MP Nienaber “Cession” 2 LAWSA, Second
Edition, para 8 and
Botha v Fick
[1994] ZASCA 184
;
1995
(2) SA 750
(A) at 765A-B.
[30]
At
546F-G.
[31]
Ibid.
[32]
At
548B. Froneman J made reference to the judgment of Ngcobo J (as he
then was) in Nehawu v
University
of Cape Town and Others
2003
(1) SA (1) (CC) at paragraph 56 where it was held that
in
deciding if a business as a going concern was transferred under
section 197
, the circumstances
of
each transaction had to be examined with the substance and not the
form of the transaction
relevant
including whether the transfer included assets of a tangible and
intangible nature.
Nehawu
was
found to be reconcilable with the principles set out in
Carapax
on the basis that
section 197
did
not
change the scope of the enquiry as a fact specific one.
[33]
Ibid.
[34]
At
548D.
[35]
Mostert
v FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a RMB Private Bank
2018 (4) SA 443
(SCA)
at 448D.
[36]
Carapax
at 213A.
[37]
Branco
and Another t/a Mr Cool v Gale
1996 (1) SA 163
(E) at 168F-I is an
apt illustration of where
the
material facts giving rise to a sale of goodwill inclusive of the
benefit of a restraint was sufficiently
pleaded
to enable the Court to conclude that the applicant acquired the
right to enforce the restraint
by
means of a cession of the right which was incorporated into an
agreement holding that it extended
to
“all the seller’s right, title and interest in and to
all and any restraint of trade agreements with
employees
of former employees”.
[38]
(JA21/23;
JA37/22) [2023] ZALAC (17 August 2023).
[39]
FA,
para 12, CaseLines 01-4.
[40]
FA,03-1.
[41]
CaseLines
03-17.
[42]
Sibex
at 482 T.
Rawlins
at 540J-541I.
[43]
Super
Safes (Pty) Limited v Voulgarides
1975 (2) SA 783
(W) at 785.
[44]
Rawlins
at 626b.
[45]
Sadan
& Another v Workforce Staffing (Pty) Limited
[2023] ZALAC 14
(17
Aug 2023) at para 19.
[46]
Humphreys
v Laser Transport Holdings Ltd and Another
1994 (4) SA 388
C at
402C.
403I-J;
Paragon Business Forms (Pty) Ltd v Du
Preez
1994 (1) SA 434
at 442G.
[47]
Morris
(Herbert) Ltd v Saxelby
[1916] 1 AC 688
(HL) at 709.
[48]
Recycling
Industries (Pty) Ltd v Mohammed & Another
1981 (3) SA 250
(E) at
256 C-F;
Drewtons
(Pty) Ltd v Carlie
1981 (4) SA 305
(C) at
307G-H & 314C-G.
[49]
Townsend
Productions (Pty) Ltd v Leech & Others
2001 (4) SA 33
(C) at
53J-54B; Mossgas
(Pty)
Ltd v Sasol Technology (Pty) Ltd
[1999] 3
All SA 321
(W) at 333F.
[50]
Silver
Crystal Trading (Pty) Limited v Namibia Diamond Corporation (Pty)
Limited 1983 (4) SA
884
(D) at 888.
[51]
Masstores
(Pty) Limited v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Limited
2017 (1) SA 613
(CC) at 628C.
[52]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227.
sino noindex
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