Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 24South Africa
Lead HV (Pty) Limited and Another v HV Test (Pty) Limited (34871/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 24 (1 February 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lead HV (Pty) Limited and Another v HV Test (Pty) Limited (34871/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 24 (1 February 2022)
Lead HV (Pty) Limited and Another v HV Test (Pty) Limited (34871/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 24 (1 February 2022)
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sino date 1 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 34871/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
1/2/2022
In
the matter between:
LEAD
HV (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant/First Respondent
BARRY
LOMBARD
Second Applicant/Fourth Respondent
And
HV
TEST (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent/Applicant
JUDGMENT
IN APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
# TERNENT,
AJ:
TERNENT,
AJ
:
[1]
This is an application brought by the
applicants, the first and fourth respondents in the main application,
for leave to appeal
the whole of my judgment and order made on 12
August 2021 with leave being sought to the Supreme Court of Appeal. I
gave a very
detailed judgment and do not intend to repeat my findings
again.
[2]
I will refer to the parties as they are
cited in the main application.
[3]
The first and fourth respondents’
counsel informed me at the outset that he was not pursuing the
grounds set out in paragraphs
1 and 8 of the respondents’
notice of application for leave to appeal dated 2 September 2021. As
such, those grounds were
abandoned by the respondents.
[4]
Respondents’ counsel did not place in
issue that the applicant had established a clear right to protect its
confidential information
which had been pilfered by the respondents.
He also did not seriously pursue the finding that this confidential
information was
found in the possession of the first and fourth
respondents. In this regard, I do not intend to repeat what is stated
in my judgment
in relation to the respondent’s goodwill and the
protection of its confidential information which was unlawfully
pilfered
by all of the respondents and found in their possession.
[5]
In essence the respondents’ counsel
sought to submit, again, that I had erred in finding that the
interdictory requirement
of ongoing harm had been established after
the granting of the urgent interdictory order against the poached
employees, Sheikh
and Ledwaba. The submission is that the applicant
had not demonstrated that the unlawful competition was ongoing or
that there
was a reasonable apprehension that it was ongoing, in the
ordinary course, and at the time of the hearing. As such, the
applicant
was not entitled to interdictory relief, inter alia because
the respondents immediately terminated Sheikh and Ledwaba’s
employ,
and all possible harm had been averted.
[6]
I do not agree with these submissions. My
judgment makes it clear that Lombard, in his capacity as General
Manager of the first
respondent was a material cog in facilitating
the direct unlawful competition with the applicant. This was
initiated when the second
and third respondents were enticed by him
to work for the first respondent. My judgment details the failure by
him to explain their
employment with the first respondent, a direct
competitor and details numerous and damning details of confidential
information
that was shared with him, and which I do not intend to
repeat here. Lombard, having intentionally obtained this confidential
information
personally made contact with the applicant’s
customer base in circumstances where he well knew, that without this
information,
his approaches and those of the two poached employees,
would never have eventuated let alone produced results. I remain of
the
view that the malfeasance and conduct of Lombard and the first
respondent, who having secured the confidential information, used
it
unlawfully, failed to provide their co-operation when the applicant
requested them to do so, or give
bona
fide
undertakings in relation to the
protection of the confidential information received, and/or agree to
disclose and hand it over,
could have easily continued to trade and
solicit custom undeterred and, unlawfully, in the ordinary course.
The applicant, accordingly,
established on the probabilities that
there was a well-grounded and reasonable apprehension that the harm
was ongoing and that
an interdict was the only appropriate relief.
[7]
The
second ground which was raised, again, by the respondents’
counsel was that I was bound by the legal principles in
SAA
SOC v BDFM Publishers and Others
[1]
and
had not properly considered the judgment in finding that it was
distinguishable on the facts. The application for leave to appeal
pointedly focuses my attention on my failure to apply the law. I do
not accept that this case sets out an inflexible legal principle.
It
is clearly evident that the principles applied by Sutherland J are
shaped by the facts/ evidence at hand, and policy considerations,
all
of which must be weighed up in the exercise of my discretion. In this
regard, it was submitted to me that this case is authority
for the
principle that, unless immediately interdicted, once confidential
information in an electronic format is distributed it
loses its
confidentiality and an interdict is futile and ineffective. This
proposition appears to me to be absurd. An interdict
would then to my
mind never serve any purpose because at the moment of distribution
via electronic methods, the information loses
its confidentiality. I
remain of the view that the ambit of the distribution remains crucial
in determining this issue. There was
no suggestion that other than
having found its way into the hands of the perpetrators in this
application, it had made its way
into the public domain, or
“
strangers
”
and could not be protected. Sutherland J’s decision was
underpinned by the evidence that the information found its
way into
various news publications, and as a consequence the imposition of an
interdict would be futile. I reiterate my findings
in my judgment and
remain of the view that the interdict was necessary and useful to the
applicant in the circumstances.
[8]
In
all of the circumstances, and having regard to the more stringent
test now applied in applications for leave to appeal, which
was
common cause between the parties,
[2]
I am of the view that another Court would not come to a different
decision on either of these grounds or at all. I make the following
order:
8.1
The application for leave to appeal by the
applicants/first and fourth respondents in the main application is
dismissed.
8.2
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
# P V TERNENT
P V TERNENT
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 1 February
2022 handed down electronically and uploaded to CaseLines and
e-mailed to the parties.
DATE
OF HEARING
:
14 October 2021.
APPEARANCES
:
For
Applicants/First and
Fourth
Respondents:
Mr F J Labuschagne
Instructed by E Y Stuart
Inc.
Mr
L A Stuart
For
Respondent/Applicant: Ms N Lombard
Instructed by C Van Zyl
Johnson Attorneys
C Johnson
[1]
2016(2)SA561(GJ)
at paragraph 30 – the futility of the relief sought
[2]
Mont
Cheveaux Trust (IT2012/28) v Tina Goosen and 18 Others and the
Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions and 3 Others
v The
Democratic Alliance
,
Case No. 19577/09 (24 June 2016)
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