Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1243South Africa
Arcfyre International (Pty) Ltd and Others v Govender and Another (2023-098452) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1243 (31 October 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent application – Uniform Rule of Court 6 (12) – the applicant should set forth explicitly the reasons why the matter is urgent – why is it claimed that substantial redress would not be afforded at a hearing in due course – Rules of Court and Practice Directives can only be ignored at a litigant's peril – application struck from the roll for lack of urgency –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Arcfyre International (Pty) Ltd and Others v Govender and Another (2023-098452) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1243 (31 October 2023)
Arcfyre International (Pty) Ltd and Others v Govender and Another (2023-098452) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1243 (31 October 2023)
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sino date 31 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
2023-098452
DATE
:
31
st
October 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
ARCFYRE
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LIMITED
First
Applicant
ARCFYRE
SECURE DRIVE (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Applicant
SECURE
EXPRESS (PTY) LIMITED
Third
Applicant
ALTOR
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LIMITED
Fourth
Applicant
And
GOVENDER
,
VANESHREE
First
Respondent
NSA
SECURITY CONSULTANTS
(PTY)
LIMITED
Second
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Arcfyre International and 3 Others v Govender and Another
(098500/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ---
(31 October 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
: 24 October
2023
Delivered:
31
October 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 31 October 2023.
Summary:
Urgent
application – Uniform Rule of Court 6 (12) – the
applicant should set forth explicitly the reasons why the matter
is
urgent – why is it claimed that substantial redress would not
be afforded at a hearing in due course
– Rules of Court
and Practice Directives can only be ignored at a litigant's peril –
application struck from the roll
for lack of urgency –
ORDER
(1)
The applicants’ urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
(2)
The first to fourth applicants, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
first and the second
respondents’ costs of the urgent
application, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the
utilisation of two Counsel,
where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
This is an
opposed urgent application by the first to the fourth applicants, who
are all related companies, for interim interdictory
relief against
the first respondent (Ms Govender), an ex-employee of the first
applicant, and the second respondent (NSA Security),
her present
employer. Pending the determination of final relief sought in part B
of the notice of motion, the applicants seek an
order, on an urgent
basis, interdicting and restraining Ms Govender
inter
alia
from
being interested or engaged in any entity, which directly or
indirectly competes with the business of applicants within a
prescribed area. Ancillary relief is also applied for on an interim
basis, such as for orders interdicting Ms Govender from rendering
any
of the services of the applicants to any of the customers of the
applicants and interdicting her from encouraging, enticing,
inciting,
persuading or inducing any employee or independent contractor of the
applicants to terminate the contract of employment
or independent
contractor relationship with the applicants.
[2].
Further relief
sought is for an order for the return to the applicants of all
assets, records, documents, accounts, letters, notes,
memoranda and
papers of every description, including all copies of same, in her
possession or under her control, relating to the
affairs and the
business of the applicants. So, in a nutshell, the applicants apply
for interim interdictory relief based on a
restraint of trade and a
non-disclosure of confidential agreement. As regards NSA Security,
the applicants apply for relief against
it based on unlawful
competition. So, for example, an order is applied for interdicting
the second respondent from employing the
first respondent for the
duration of the restraint of trade agreement, which is set to expire
during February 2024.
[3].
In part B, the
applicants apply for relief similar to the relief claimed in part A,
except that final relief would be sought during
the hearing of part
B.
[4].
The question
to be considered in this application is whether a case has been made
out on behalf of the applicants for the interim
relief claimed. In
particular, the issue to be decided is whether the applicant has
demonstrated the existence of a
prima
facie
right, worthy of protection by an interim interdict. The aforesaid
issue can and should be decided on the basis of the case presented
by
the applicants.
[5].
The applicants
base their application against the first respondent on her alleged
breaches of a restraint of trade, a confidentiality
agreement and a
non-disclosure agreement, signed by Ms Govender on 20 December 2021
in favour of the first applicant. The applicants’
case against
NSA Security, as I have already indicated, is based alleged on
unlawful competition. The unlawful competition complained
of is the
alleged use by the respondents of the applicants’ confidential
information and allegedly interfering with the applicants’
contractual relationships.
[6].
It is the case
of the applicants that Ms Govender is in possession of confidential
information comprising of information concerning
the applicants’
pricing, salary structures and client preferences and requirements.
They also assert that she is in possession
of information comprising
the attachments to her resignation email allegedly being the
applicants’ documents. The applicants
also aver that the
respondents have acted unlawfully in attempting to interfere with the
employment of the first and second applicants’
senior
associate, a Mr Mufamadi, that they have approached one of the
applicants’ largest clients and that they requested
a quote
from one of the applicants’ vendors.
[7].
I am not
persuaded that the applicants have made out a case that they have
protectable interests that is worthy of protection and
which
necessitates the enforcement of the restraint of trade. Ms Govender’s
case is that she has not appropriated any confidential
information of
the applicants. In any event, so the case on behalf of the
respondents continues, the applicants do not have an
interest that is
worthy or requiring of protection through the enforcement of the
restraint of trade.
[8].
The evidence
before confirms the case on behalf of the respondents.
[9].
In casu
,
Ms Govender admits to taking up employment with a competitor contrary
to her restraint of trade undertakings in favour of the
first
applicant. She accordingly bears the onus to show that the restraint
agreement is unenforceable because it is unreasonable.
[10].
In
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
[1]
,
the Appellate Division held that in determining the reasonableness or
otherwise of the restraint of trade provisions the Court
must ask the
following questions: (a) is there an interest of the one party, which
is deserving of protection at the termination
of the agreement? (b)
Is such interest being prejudiced by the other party? (c) If so, does
such interest so weigh up qualitatively
and quantitatively against
the interest of the latter party that the latter should not be
economically inactive and unproductive?
(d) Is there another facet of
public policy having nothing to do with the relationship between the
parties but which requires that
the restraint should either be
maintained or rejected?
[11].
A restraint of
trade will generally be considered unreasonable if it does not
protect some legally recognisable interest of the
party in whose
favour it is granted, but merely seeks to eliminate competition. In
that regard, it is well established that the
proprietary interests
that can be protected by a restraint agreement are essentially of two
kinds, namely: (a) the relationships
with customers, potential
customers, suppliers and others that go to make up what is
compendiously referred to as the 'trade connections'
of the business,
being an important aspect of its incorporeal property known as
goodwill; and (b) all confidential matter which
is useful for the
carrying on of the business and which could therefore be used by a
competitor, if disclosed to him, to gain a
relative competitive
advantage. Such confidential material is sometimes compendiously
referred to as 'trade secrets'.
[12].
The applicants
allege in this regard that the first applicant has a protectable
interest in that it seeks to protect both its trade
connections and
its confidential information. Neither of these interests are worthy
of protection and I say so for the reasons
set out in the paragraphs
which follow.
[13].
Apart from the
allegation purportedly made by an unidentified individual that he was
approached by the first respondent, who supposedly
attempted to
solicit his patronage, there is no other evidence that the first
respondent interfered with the applicants’
clients. Ms Govender
denies this allegation in any event and it cannot be said, without
more, that her denial should be rejected
out of hand. She also
explains that all the role-players in the industry share the same
clients and if one or more of the role-players
fails timeously to
respond to a request for a security service, the client simply moves
on to another competitor in the industry.
[14].
Furthermore,
owing to her demotion as a team leader, Ms Govender explains,
reasonably so, that she has not had any personal relationships
with
clients especially not after September 2022 and that she has been
sterilised from the applicants’ trade connections
for a
substantial period of time. She therefore contends that there is no
risk whatsoever that a client would move their business
from the
first applicant to the second respondent for the reason that the
first respondent is now employed by the second respondent.
She has no
influence over any customer of the first applicant and none have
followed her or will follow her to the second respondent.
[15].
I agree with
this contention. The point is simply that customers in the security
industry, not unlike vendors, often move from service
provider to
service provider. The applicants have, in my view, failed to show
that Ms Govender is soliciting their clients who
in all likelihood
already are clients of the second respondent. The applicants also
have not shown that the first respondent is
soliciting its staff. Mr
Mufamadi plainly approached the first and second respondents on his
own accord because of his dissatisfaction
with the applicants.
[16].
It is so, as
submitted on behalf of the respondents, that the applicants have not
demonstrated that the first respondent has any
customer connections
that will potentially harm them through her employment with the
second respondent. The only purpose that the
enforcement of the
restraint would serve would be to stifle competition. This is
impermissible.
[17].
As
for the claim relating to confidential information which the
applicants seek to protect, such information, as was held in
Alum-Phos
(Pty) Ltd v Spatz and Another
[2]
,
to constitute confidential information, should: (a) involve and be
capable of application in trade or industry; (b) must be useful;
(c)
must not be public knowledge and public property, that is objectively
determined, it must be known only to a restricted number
of people or
to a closed circle of persons; and (d) objectively determined must be
of economic value to the person seeking to protect
it.
[18].
None of these
requirements have been proven by the applicants. As correctly
contended by Ms Govender, the pricing in the industry
is known by all
service providers in that the costs are the same across the board,
the differences being on the mark-up that is
added. The mark-ups
differ from service provider to service provider and are also known
throughout the industry. Moreover, the
documentation alleged to be
confidential would not be useful to a competitor and has no economic
value. They lack any degree of
confidentiality and are of no use to
competitors which use the same or similar methods in their
businesses. In any event,
no allegation is made that the first
applicant was exposed to these documents or as to why they purport to
be confidential in nature.
[19].
In my view,
the applicants have not demonstrated that they have protectable
proprietary interest that will be infringed by the respondents.
The
applicants have not presented any evidence of unlawful competition,
and there is no evidence in the papers of any injury having
been
actually committed or reasonably apprehended.
[20].
For all of
these reasons, the applicants’ application should fail.
[21].
There is
another reason why the applicant’s Urgent Application should
fail and that relates to urgency.
Ms
Govender and NSA Security oppose the urgent application
inter
alia
on the grounds that the
application is not urgent. In the event that it is determined that
there is any urgency, then it is submitted,
on behalf of the
respondents, that the urgency is entirely self-created.
The
case on behalf of the respondents is that the applicants do not make
out a case for urgency as envisaged by the Uniform Rules
of Court and
the case authorities.
[22].
In
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[3]
,
Notshe AJ commented on the rule regulating urgent applications and
held as follows:
‘
[6]
The import thereof is that the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not
there for the taking. An applicant has to set forth
explicitly the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent. More
importantly, the applicant must state the reasons why
he claims that
he cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
The question of whether a matter is sufficiently
urgent to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the
issue of absence of substantial redress in an application
in due
course. The rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a
litigant because if the latter were to wait for the normal
course
laid down by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress.
[7]
It is important to note that the rules require absence of substantial
redress. This is not equivalent to the irreparable
harm that is
required before the granting of an interim relief. It is something
less. He may still obtain redress in an application
in due course but
it may not be substantial. Whether an applicant will not be able
obtain substantial redress in an application
in due course will be
determined by the facts of each case. An applicant must make out his
case in that regard.’
[23].
A
party seeking to approach the Court on an urgent basis needs to
justify why his matter is so urgent as to warrant other litigants
being shifted further down the queue. As was held by Plaskett J in
Mlezana
and Others v South African Civic Organisation
[4]
:
‘
The
judicial system, not unlike the private individual, does not take
kindly to people who push to the front of the queue. The doctrine
of
urgency was developed and encapsulated in the rules of court in order
to allow those for whom the wait in the queue would not
be worth it
unless they push in front, to do just that without attracting dirty
looks from those behind them.’
[24].
Moreover,
the applicant must justify the invasion of the respondent’s
rights to proper notice and an adequate opportunity
to prepare. (
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin & another t/a Makin
Furniture Manufacturers
[5]
).
The applicant must fully set out the facts supporting the conclusion
advanced; mere lip service will not do. If there is some
delay in
instituting the proceedings an applicant has to explain the reasons
for the delay and must also explain why, despite the
delay, it claims
that it cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due
course. This however does not mean that an
applicant can create its
own urgency by simply waiting until the normal rules of court can no
longer be applied and a delay in
bringing the application, or
self-created urgency, is a basis for a court to refuse to hear a
matter on an urgent basis.
[25].
In this
matter, the applicants’ attorneys alleged that information was
deleted from the first respondent’s work laptop
and cell phone
as far back as 3 March 2023, being two days after the first
respondent resigned from her employment with the
first respondent. On
10 March 2023 the said attorneys even asserted that they had proof
that the first respondent deleted work
e-mails and
WhatsApp
messages.
[26].
Thereafter on
20 July 2023 the attorneys asserted that the first respondent was
competing unlawfully with the applicants by approaching
an
unidentified client of the applicants in contravention of her
restraint of trade, the confidentiality and the non-disclosure
agreements with the first applicant. At that time – on 20 July
2023 – an undertaking was demanded from the first respondent
to
refrain from breaching the restraint of trade agreement, failing
which, so the first respondent was advised, an application
would be
launched against her to have her interdicted. Subsequently, further
breaches were alleged and further demands for undertakings
made, none
of which were heeded by the respondents.
[27].
Strangely,
despite the previous threats to institute urgent proceedings against
the respondents, the applicants only proceeded to
institute the
present urgent application on 28 September 2023. This is at least
four months after the applicants would have known
about the alleged
breaches of the restraint of trade covenant and the first
respondent’s employment with a competitor.
[28].
I am therefore
of the view that the applicants’ urgency is self-created. It
waited many months from the time it was realised
that it should
institute proceedings against the first respondent, before it
actually took action.
[29].
In my view,
there has been non-compliance with the provisions of Uniform Rule of
Court 6(12)(b), which reads as follows:
‘
(b)
In every affidavit or petition filed in support of the application
under para (a) of this sub-rule, the applicant shall
set forth
explicitly the circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent
and the reasons why he claims that he would not
be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course.’
[30].
The
salient facts in this matter are no different from those in
Afrisake
NPC and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
[6]
,
where Fabricius J held as follows at para 12:
‘
[12]
It is my view that Applicant could have launched a review application
calling for documents, amongst others in terms
of the Rules of Court,
in February 2016. On its own version, it was also ready to launch an
urgent application by then, even without
the so-called critical
documents. The threatened internal appeal also did not materialize.
[13]
In the meantime, First Respondent has been in possession of the site
since 28 January 2016. Third Respondent's Contract
Manager made
an affidavit stating that offices, toilets, septic tanks, electricity
facilities, generators, storage facilities,
bore-holes and access
roads have all been established. By 16 May 2016, Third Respondent had
done about 500 000 cubic metres of
excavation, had surveyed the
pipe-line and had procured about 70km of pipe at a cost of about R
188 million. Personnel have been
employed.
[14]
I do take into account that the whole project will take 24 months to
complete. I do not however agree with Applicant's Counsel,
who
submitted in this context, that for those reasons the needs of the
community played no significant role. Having regard to the
whole
history of the matter, which is set out in great detail in
Esorfranki
Pipelines (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mopani District Municipality and
Others
ZASCA 21 (28103/2014), the interest of the particular
community that requires the supply of water, remains a relevant
consideration,
both in the context of self-created urgency and the
balance of convenience, which does not favour the Applicant at this
stage at
all.
[15]
This Court has consistently refused urgent applications in cases when
the urgency relied-upon was clearly self-created.
Consistency is
important in this context as it informs the public and legal
practitioners that Rules of Court and Practice Directives
can only be
ignored at a litigant's peril
. Legal certainty is one of the
cornerstones of a legal system based on the Rule of Law.’
(Emphasis added)
[31].
For all of
these reasons, I am not convinced that the applicants have passed the
threshold prescribed in Rule 6(12)(b) and I am
of the view that the
application ought to be struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
Costs
[32].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[7]
.
[33].
I can think of no reason why I
should deviate from this general rule.
[34].
Accordingly, I intend awarding costs
in favour of the first and the second respondents against the
applicants.
Order
[35].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The applicants’ urgent application be
and is hereby struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
(2)
The first to fourth applicants, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall pay the
first and the second
respondents’ costs of the urgent
application, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the
utilisation of two Counsel,
where so employed.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
24
th
October 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
31
st
October 2023 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE FIRST TO THE
FOURTH APPLICANTS:
Adv C Van der Merwe
INSTRUCTED BY:
Mark-Anthony Beyl
Attorneys, Cresta, Randburg
FOR THE FIRST AND THE
SECOND RESPONDENTS:
Adv I Miltz SC,
together with Adv D Block
INSTRUCTED BY:
Webber Wentzel,
Sandton
[1]
Basson
v Chilwan and Others
1993
(3) 742 (A);
[2]
Alum-Phos
(Pty) Ltd v Spatz and Another
[1997] 1 All SA 616
(W) at 623A–624A;
[3]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011);
[4]
Mlezana
and Others v South African Civic Organisation
(3208/18)
[2018] ZAECGHC 114 (12 November 2018) at para [5], quoting from
Norman Manoim ‘
Principles
Regarding Urgent Applications’
in Nicholas Haysom and Laura Mangan (Eds)
Emergency
Law
at 79;
[5]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin & another (t/a Makin
Furniture Manufacturers)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at 114B;
[6]
Afrisake
NPC and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
(74192/2013) [2014] ZAGPPHC 191 (14 March 2014);
[7]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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