Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 209South Africa
Dunn-Blatch and Another v Parry and Another (A5068/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 209 (8 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dunn-Blatch and Another v Parry and Another (A5068/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 209 (8 April 2022)
Dunn-Blatch and Another v Parry and Another (A5068/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 209 (8 April 2022)
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sino date 8 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appeal
Case No: A5068/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
8/04/2022
In
the appeal between :
ROSALINE
SYBIL DUNN-BLATCH
First Appellant
ITRISA
NPC
Second Appellant
and
ALICE
MARY
PARRY
First Respondent
TRADSA
(PTY)
LIMITED
Second Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and time
for
hand-down is deemed to be ____
2022
JUDGMENT
INGRID
OPPERMAN J
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The appellants appeal the whole of the
judgment and order of Twala J delivered on 4 April 2019. This appeal
is with the leave of
the Supreme Court of Appeal (“
SCA
”
).
The first appellant (“
Ms
Dunn-Blatch
”
) is a director of
the second appellant, ITRISA NPC (“
ITRISA
”
).
ITRISA was established on 30 August 1996 and is a non-profit company
having an educational objective. ITRISA is entirely reliant
on the
revenue it generates from services rendered and
ad
hoc
sponsorships it may receive from
time to time. It receives no government subsidies.
[2]
ITRISA is currently registered with the
Department of Higher Education and Training to offer three
qualifications that are aligned
to the international accreditation
system of the UK registered International Association of Trade
Training Organisation. ITRISA
is the only provider of these
qualifications in South Africa.
[3]
The first respondent (“
Ms
Parry
”
) was an employee and
director of ITRISA. She resigned as an employee on 31 December 2011
and as a director of ITRISA on 30 May
2012.
[4]
The second respondent (“
TRADSA
”)
was cited by Ms Parry as the third respondent in the court
a
quo
. TRADSA is a private company and
both Ms Parry and Ms Dunn-Blatch are directors of TRADSA, each
holding 50% of the shareholding.
[5]
In the Court
a
quo
, Ms Parry sought and was granted
relief in terms of the provisions of
sections 163(1)(a)
,
163
(1)(b)
and
163
(2)(h) of the
Companies Act No. 71 of 2008
, as amended (“
the
Companies Act
”), which provides:
‘
163
Relief from oppressive or prejudicial
conduct or from abuse of separate juristic personality of company
(1) A
shareholder or a director of a company may apply to a court for
relief if -
(a)
any act
or
omission of
the
company,
or
a
related
person,
has
had a result
that
is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to,
or that unfairly disregards the
interests of, the applicant;
(b)
the
business
of
the
company,
or
a
related
person,
is
being
or
has
been
carried on
or
conducted
in
a manner
that
is
oppressive
or
unfairly
prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards the
interests of, the applicant; or
(c)
the powers of a director or prescribed officer of the company, or a
person related to the company, are being
or
have
been
exercised
in
a
manner
that
is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or that unfairly disregards
the interests of, the applicant.
(2)
Upon considering
an
application
in
terms of
subsection
(1),
the court
may
make any
interim or final order it
considers fit, including
……
(h)
an order varying or setting aside a
transaction or an agreement to which the company is a party and
compensating the company or
any other party to the transaction or
agreement…’
[6]
The cornerstone of the judgment of the
Court
a quo
is to be found in paragraph [25] which reads:
“
...
Section 163
empowers the court to make an order it considers fit
including an order to vary or set aside a transaction or an agreement
to which
the company, the third respondent [TRADSA] in this case, is
a party ...”
[7]
The agreement to which the Court
a
quo
applied the provisions of
section
163(2)(h)
, was an agreement concluded on 10 June 2015 between Ms
Dunn-Blatch and Ms Parry. When concluding this agreement, they acted
in
their personal capacities and in their capacities as the sole two
directors of TRADSA (“
the licence
agreement”
).
[8]
In
terms of the licence agreement, Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms Parry agreed
that they were the joint authors of the copyright works,
[1]
confirmed and assigned the ownership of the copyright in the
copyright works to TRADSA and simultaneously confirmed the existence
of the exclusive licence that ITRISA had to use the copyright
works,
[2]
confirmed that since 2009 all the copyright works used by ITRISA has
borne a notice reflecting TRADSA as the copyright owner of
the
copyright works pursuant to the intention at all relevant times that
the ownership of the copyright in the copyright works
jointly
authored by Ms Parry and Ms Dunn-Blatch was to vest in TRADSA and
that TRADSA in turn would licence to ITRISA the right
to use the
copyright works,
[3]
confirmed the transfer, cession and assignment of all copyright in
the copyright works to TRADSA from the date each item of work
was
created and to the extent that the retrospective assignment may not
be competent, then with effect from the date of the licence
agreement,
[4]
and confirmed the exclusive licence granted by TRADSA to ITRISA.
[5]
[9]
The
copyright works referred to in the licence agreement were
identified
[6]
and essentially constitute literary works.
# THE RELIEF SOUGHT BY MS
PARRY IN THE COURTA QUO
THE RELIEF SOUGHT BY MS
PARRY IN THE COURT
A QUO
[10]
Ms Parry sought the following relief:
“
(1)
That the following inferred terms of the licence agreement between
the Third Respondent [TRADSA] and the Second
Respondent [ITRISA] be
deleted:
(a)
that the Second Respondent [ITRISA] does not need to account to the
Third Respondent [TRADSA] for the
use of the intellectual property;
(b)
that no consideration is payable to the Third Respondent [TRADSA] for
the use of the intellectual property;
and
(c)
that compensation for the use of the intellectual property would be
payable to the Third Respondent
[TRADSA] if the Second Respondent
[ITRISA] were disposed of to a third party and this third party would
continue to use the intellectual
property.
(2)
That the following terms are included in the licence agreement
between the Third Respondent [TRADSA]
and the Second Respondent
[ITRISA]
(a)
that the Second Respondent [ITRISA] accounts to the Third Respondent
[TRADSA] for all use of the intellectual
property, including all
revenue derived from the use of the intellectual property whether
directly or indirectly;
(b)
that compensation is payable by the Second Respondent [ITRISA] to the
Third Respondent [TRADSA] for
the use of the intellectual property by
the Second Respondent [ITRISA] from a date of not less than 3 years
from the date of this
application and for all future use of the
intellectual property as follows:
(i)
15% of gross revenue accruing to the Second Respondent [ITRISA] from
the use of the intellectual
property in the Second Respondent’s
[ITRISA]:
·
Distance learning programme;
·
Training courses and workshops; and
·
Project-based consultancy;
(ii)
80% of gross revenue accruing to the Second Respondent [ITRISA] from
the use of the intellectual
property in:
·
Sub-licence agreements with third parties,
which generate royalty payments or other revenue to the second
respondent [ITRISA];
·
Manuals, examination papers and other
materials, which are sold to or via third parties in hard copy or
electronic format and do
not form part of the sub-licence agreement.
(3)
That a record system is established to ascertain the gross revenues
as categories in (2)(b), and that
the revenue amounts are verified by
an independent auditor;
(4)
That if the Second Respondent [ITRISA] is disposed of to a third
party, the licence agreement for the
continued use of the
intellectual property will be renegotiated between the Second
Respondent [ITRISA] the Third Respondent [TRADSA]
and the third
party;
(5)
That the Second Respondent [ITRISA] obtains the Third Respondent’s
[TRADSA] prior written consent
before sub-licensing the intellectual
property to any third parties or selling manuals, examination papers
and other materials
which allow the use of the intellectual property
by any third party;
(6)
That the Applicant [Ms Parry] and the First Respondent [Ms
Dunn-Blatch] as equal shareholders in the
Third Respondent [TRADSA],
enter into an agreement regarding the payment of dividends from
revenue received from the compensation
paid by the Second Respondent
[ITRISA];
(7)
That the Third Respondent [TRADSA] is compensated for use of the
intellectual property by the Second
Respondent [ITRISA] from a date
of not less than three years preceding the date of this application
on the same terms as set out
in paragraph (2) above;
(8)
That the First Respondent [Ms Dunn-Blatch] and the Second Respondent
[ITRISA] bear the costs of this
application if opposed.”
[11]
The Court
a
quo
granted Ms Parry all the relief,
which she sought except for her request that the royalty rate be
fixed at 15% and 80%. The Court
a quo
referred the question of the royalty rate that is to be paid by
ITRISA to TRADSA, to trial.
[12]
What is immediately apparent is that the
court granted the relief sought in paragraph 2 of the notice of
motion ie it effectively
concluded a new licence agreement for the
parties by including certain terms into the licence agreement. In our
view,
section 163(2)(h)
only authorises the setting aside or
variation of a transaction or agreement or that compensation be paid
and not also the redrafting
of the agreement. By virtue of the other
findings we make herein, we do not deem it necessary to pronounce
definitively on this
issue ie the scope of the relief a court is
entitled to grant in terms of
section 163(2)(h).
[13]
Another curious feature of the relief
sought in paragraph 1 of the notice of motion is that it is totally
ineffectual. This is so
as there is already a licence agreement which
is royalty free and which is an exclusive licence agreement between
TRADSA and ITRISA.
[14]
With those preliminary remarks having been
made, we summarise the common cause facts hereinafter.
# COMMON CAUSE FACTS (OR
LARGELY UNDISPUTED)
COMMON CAUSE FACTS (OR
LARGELY UNDISPUTED)
[15]
TRADSA was incorporated on 19 August 1996.
ITRISA was incorporated on 30 August 1996. Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms
Parry established and
formed ITRISA and TRADSA. Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms
Parry were both directors of ITRISA from 30 August 1996 to 31 May
2012 when Ms
Parry resigned as an employee on 31 December 2011 and as
a director on 31 May 2012.
[16]
Ms Dunn-Blatch remains a director of
ITRISA. Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms Parry are both directors of TRADSA and
each hold 50% of the shareholding
in TRADSA.
[17]
During the period 1996 to May 2012, Ms
Dunn-Blatch and Ms Parry created the intellectual property, that is
the educational course
material (the literary works) which ITRISA
used in the educational services it provides. TRADSA was established
for the purpose
of being the holder of the ownership of the copyright
in the copyright works. When Ms Parry resigned as a director of
ITRISA, which
she did in order to pursue other interests, she stopped
receiving a salary from ITRISA.
[18]
On 10 June 2015, Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms
Parry concluded the licence agreement. The use by ITRISA of the
copyright works was and is
royalty-free because ITRISA could not and
cannot afford to pay a royalty fee for the use of the copyright
works. ITRISA does not
generate profits.
[19]
In Ms Dunn-Blatch’s answering
affidavit she invited Ms Parry to once again take up employment with
ITRISA to make a contribution
to the business of ITRISA and in so
doing to be remunerated with a salary. This offer was not accepted.
[20]
The aforegoing common cause facts reveal
that Ms Dunn-Blatch and Ms Parry concluded the licence agreement some
three years after
Ms Parry resigned as a director of ITRISA, thus, in
circumstances where she had not been receiving a salary from ITRISA
for a period
of three years.
# AN ANALYSIS OF THE
REASONS UNDERPINNING THE RELIEF GRANTED IN THE COURTA QUO
AN ANALYSIS OF THE
REASONS UNDERPINNING THE RELIEF GRANTED IN THE COURT
A QUO
### First Reason
First Reason
[21]
Ms Parry argued that because she resigned
as a director of ITRISA in May 2012, she no longer received a salary
from ITRISA and no
longer derived a benefit from ITRISA’s use
of the copyright works. She expressed this as follows:
“
The
first respondent [Ms Dunn-Blatch] was aware that upon my resignation
as a director I would no longer derive a benefit from the
second
respondent’s [ITRISA’s] use of the intellectual property
and despite my numerous attempts to reach an agreement
which would
rectify the prevailing situation, she refused in the capacity as a
director and shareholder of the third respondent
[TRADSA], and
through the medium of the second respondent [ITRISA], to vary the
inferred terms and as a result, unfairly disregards
the interests of
the third respondent [TRADSA] and thus, my interests.”
[22]
Ms Parry bases her
locus
standi
to seek relief under
section 163
of the
Companies Act on
her position as a director and shareholder of
TRADSA. Ms Parry thus had to show that the business of TRADSA is
being or has been
carried on or conducted in a manner that is
oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards her
interests or
that any act or omission of TRADSA has had a result that
is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards
her
interests.
[23]
TRADSA, from its inception, never received
a royalty fee from ITRISA for the use of the copyright works. Ms
Parry consented, and
was a party, to this royalty fee arrangement
from inception. In February 2012 (after her resignation from ITRISA),
she proposed
that a formal agreement be concluded between TRADSA and
ITRISA. In a draft licensing agreement she proposed a clause that
provided
that TRADSA waived the right to claim a royalty fee from
ITRISA until such time as ITRISA was in a financial position to do
so.
In other words, she always envisaged a licensing relationship
where TRADSA was not paid a royalty.
[24]
On 10 June 2015, three years after she
resigned as a director of ITRISA, and three years after she stopped
receiving a salary from
ITRISA, Ms Parry freely and voluntarily
concluded the licence agreement in which she agreed in her personal
capacity to assign
her joint ownership of the copyright in the
copyright works to TRADSA and in her capacity as a director of
TRADSA, that ITRISA
could use the copyright rights royalty-free. In
other words, she agreed to and concluded a royalty-free licence
agreement for TRADSA.
[25]
Ms Parry’s case is that because she
is no longer employed by ITRISA and because she no longer receives a
salary from ITRISA,
she is unduly prejudiced by the royalty-free
licence agreement given to ITRISA. However, the royalty-free licence
agreement was
concluded with her consent and authority three years
after she stopped receiving a salary from ITRISA.
[26]
It
goes without saying the fact that she no longer receives a salary
from ITRISA is not attributable to TRADSA and does not constitute
conduct in TRADSA. The reason she does not receive a salary from
ITRISA is because she freely and voluntarily resigned as a director.
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Grancy
Property Ltd v Manala and others
[7]
dealt
with the ambit of
section 163
of the
Companies Act in
the following
terms:
'Despite
the wide ambit of
s 163
, it must be borne in mind that the
conduct of the majority shareholders must be
evaluated in light of
the fundamental
corporate law principle that, by becoming a
shareholder,
one
undertakes
to
be
bound
by
the
decisions
of
the
majority
shareholders.
.
.
.
Thus
not
all
acts
which
prejudicially
affect
shareholders or
directors,
or which disregard their
interests, will entitle them to relief –
it must be shown that the conduct is not
only
prejudicial
or
disregardful
but
also
that
it
is
unfairly
so.' (emphasis provided)
[27]
In paragraph [26] of the same judgment it
was held that the section should be construed in a manner that will
advance the remedy
that it provides for rather than limit it.
[28]
In
our view, the fact that ITRISA does not pay TRADSA a royalty fee
cannot on any interpretation constitute conduct that unfairly
disregards Ms Parry’s interests or is unfairly prejudicial to
Ms Parry as a director and shareholder of TRADSA. Ms Parry
consented
to, and was party to, this royalty-free arrangement from inception.
Ms Parry, as a director and shareholder of TRADSA,
cannot complain of
conduct that was carried out with her acquiescence or agreement and
still less of something done with her cooperation
or
collaboration.
[8]
In our view, the Court
a
quo
erred in not considering the fact of Ms Parry’s conduct of
participation, consent and acquiescence sufficiently. The Court
a
quo
found that there was:
“
...
an agreement between the parties for the second respondent [ITRISA]
to pay the applicant [Ms Parry] and the first respondent
[Ms
Dunn-Blatch], as part of their salaries, for the copyright which they
held with the third respondent [TRADSA].”
[9]
[29]
This finding is incorrect. Ms Parry did not
allege such an agreement between the parties. She contended that
whilst she and Ms Dunn-Blatch
were directors of ITRISA, they both
received a salary. Ms Parry alleged that because no payments were
made by ITRISA to TRADSA
for use of the intellectual property, part
of the salary they received from ITRISA was in lieu of the
compensation which would
otherwise have been payable by ITRISA to
TRADSA for use of the intellectual property. More importantly,
however, is that as from
10 June 2015, neither Ms Parry nor Ms
Dunn-Blatch owned the copyright in the copyright works. They assigned
ownership of the copyright
in the copyright works to TRADSA in the
licence agreement. Thus, the salary that is paid to Ms Dunn-Blatch by
ITRISA, since 10
June 2015, cannot on any interpretation constitute
some form of compensation for the use of the copyright works.
[30]
Ms Jackson, representing Ms Parry, argued
that the signed affidavit dated 10 June 2015 does not include a
clause relating to a royalty-free
agreement and that Ms Parry never
consented to a royalty-free agreement. This submission flies in the
face of the inferred terms
Ms Parry listed in her founding affidavit
and which she sought be varied by the court. The terms include that
ITRISA may utilise
the intellectual property which vests in TRADSA,
ITRISA need not account to TRADSA for the use and no consideration is
payable
to TRADSA for such use. Ms Parry in fact approached the court
to ‘vary’ the royalty-free term – she requested
that it be deleted from the licence agreement. This court accepts
that the affidavit attached to the founding affidavit is not
the
licensing agreement but rather an affidavit dated 10 June 2015, in
terms of
section 26(12)(a)
of the
Copyright Act 98 of 1978
which was
brought into existence as a result of a possible sale of ITRISA to a
third party. In our view, very little turns on this
as Ms Parry
premised her relief on this document alleging that it confirmed the
assignment of the copyright works and that of an
exclusive licensing
agreement.
[31]
Ms Jackson drew attention to the fact that
the Appellants failed to draw attention to the chain of e-mails that
Ms Parry and Ms
Dunn-Blatch exchanged between 5 April 2012 and 10
January 2013 in which they discussed the issue of compensation for
the copyright
material and matters ancillary thereto. The line in the
sand was of course drawn on 10 June 2015 when the ownership in and to
the
copyright was transferred to TRADSA. Ms Parry thereafter had no
right to claim any royalties and Ms Dunn-Blatch, none to give.
[32]
Ms Dunn-Blatch had invited Ms Parry to take
up employment with ITRISA so that Ms Parry could again receive a
salary. This invitation
was extended in the answering affidavit. In
paragraph 15 of the judgment of the Court
a
quo
, the Court
found
that this offer by Ms Parry to return to work was “
suspicious
since it is clear that the relationship between the parties has
broken down irretrievably
”.
[33]
We find that there is no factual foundation
for this conclusion. The evidence which did serve before the Court
a quo
points to a
different conclusion because Ms Parry had offered to work and assist
with course updates to the copyright works during
November 2012. More
importantly, though, Ms Parry did not in the papers before the Court
respond to Ms Dunn-Blatch’s offer to take up
employment. There does not, therefore, appear to be any factual
foundation for
the Court
to have concluded
that the offer was suspicious or that the relationship had broken
down irretrievably.
[34]
We thus conclude that Ms Parry failed to
establish oppressive or unfairly prejudicial conduct of the kind
contemplated in
section 163(1)
of the Companies Act.
### Second Reason
Second Reason
[35]
Ms
Parry contended that as a shareholder of TRADSA she is unduly
prejudiced by the fact that TRADSA does not receive any compensation
from ITRISA for use of the copyright works. Her grievance is
formulated as follows in her founding affidavit:
[10]
“
I
thus submit that as a result of the first respondent’s [Ms
Dunn-Blatch’s] conduct in refusing to vary the inferred
terms,
the third respondent’s [TRADSA] interests, and my interests in
the third respondent [TRADSA] are being disregarded
and as a result I
am being prejudiced.”
[36]
Ms Cirone, representing Ms Dunn-Blatch,
contended that Ms Parry has no
locus
standi
to advance the relief she seeks
on this basis. She argued that, the fact that TRADSA is not getting
paid a royalty fee, insofar
as it may cause harm, is a harm that
would be inflicted on TRADSA and not on Ms Parry as TRADSA is the
proprietor of the copyright
works. The Learned Judge
a
quo
dealt with this difficulty in the
judgment as follows:
“
There
is no merit in the argument that, if any harm is caused by the
conduct of the respondents, it is only caused in relation to
the
third respondent [TRADSA] and not the applicant [Ms Parry]. The
respondents are related persons to the third respondent [TRADSA]
in
that the first respondent [Ms Dunn-Blatch] is a director and
shareholder and intellectual property of the third respondent
[TRADSA] is the cornerstone of the business of the second respondent
[ITRISA]. When the conduct of the related persons is such that
it has
the result that it is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to and
unfairly disregards the interests of the applicant [Ms Parry],
the
applicant is entitled to invoke the provisions of
section 163.
I hold
the view that the harm caused to the third respondent [TRADSA]
filters through to its directors and shareholders.”
[11]
[37]
The fact that Ms Dunn-Blatch is a director
and shareholder of TRADSA does not overcome the fact that the proper
applicant in the
claim in respect of a wrong alleged to be done to
TRADSA is
prima facie
TRADSA.
[38]
Section
163
of the
Companies Act should
not be interpreted so as to
unjustifiably circumvent the
Foss
v Harbottle
doctrine
and its purpose. This doctrine provides that the proper plaintiff in
an action in respect of a wrong alleged to be done
to a company is,
prima
facie
,
the company.
[12]
[39]
It is of course open to a shareholder to
force a company to take steps to deal with any wrongful conduct on
the part of the directors.
If such shareholder finds herself in the
position that the company will not assist her, and the wrongdoers are
in control of the
company and protecting themselves, she can bring a
derivative action.
[40]
Thus, we conclude that insofar as a cause
of action might exist (which we do not find), it vests in TRADSA and
not in Ms Parry and
is not premised on
section 163.
We conclude that
the Court
a quo
ought to have dismissed the application by virtue of Ms Parry’s
lack of
locus standi.
### Third Reason
Third Reason
[41]
It was contended on behalf of Ms Parry that
because ITRISA is a not-for-profit company, it is not entitled to
make a profit. This
statement is conceptually flawed. A non-profit
making concern does not have shareholders and the profits it does
make, is accordingly
not distributed to its shareholders but utilised
by the company to pursue its objectives and pay its running costs.
[42]
ITRISA
NPC is however, not profitable and as presently capitalised is
unlikely to ever become profitable. If ITRISA was forced to
pay
royalty fees to TRADSA it would result in its demise. This is not
purely speculative as argued on behalf of Ms Parry as ITRISA
made
full disclosure of its financial position to the Court
a
quo
.
Copies of ITRISA’s annual financial statements for the years
2010 to 2017 form part of the record. These annual financial
statements disclose that ITRISA does not generate profits, a fact
which is undisputed by Ms Parry.
[13]
There is accordingly no money available for it to pay a royalty fee
to TRADSA.
[43]
The demise of ITRISA would result in the
end of a useful and valuable educational service offered to South
Africans. All the students
who have registered and paid course fees
would be severely prejudiced. These students would lose their
registration and course
fees because the relief that Ms Parry seeks
will ultimately result in the winding-up of ITRISA. The South African
educational system
would lose the only service provider that offers
three qualifications that are aligned to the international
accreditation system
of the UK registered International Association
of Trade Training Organisation. The Court
a
quo
found that it would be just and
equitable to elevate the interests of Ms Parry (through TRADSA) above
the continued existence of
ITRISA and the students who have paid
their course fees. The basis for doing so was however not identified.
[44]
The
Court
a
quo
could only grant the relief if it found that it was just and
equitable to do so.
[14]
To grant Ms Parry her relief would result in the killing of the
proverbial goose that lays the golden egg. If ITRISA shut down,
nobody would benefit. Such a situation can never be considered just
and equitable. We thus conclude that in the circumstances of
this
case, the Court
ought
to have concluded that it is not just and equitable to grant the
relief Ms Parry sought.
### Fourth Reason
Fourth Reason
[45]
A period of more than six years lapsed
since the co-authorship of the copyright works ceased. The copyright
works have been substantially
updated twice annually since 31
December 2011 by Ms Dunn-Blatch in her capacity as an employee of
ITRISA. The copyright works are
only useful at this point in time in
their updated form.
[46]
In some instances, the material has been
changed, enhanced and updated by
ad hoc
contractors working for ITRISA on contracts of service. Constant
ongoing changes in the international trading environment require
the
material to be updated in order for it to be relevant.
[47]
In
these circumstances, the copyright works that form the subject of the
licence agreement are no longer in the same form and substance
as
when the agreement was concluded in 2015. Each one of the items of
the work listed in the licence agreement has been updated,
enhanced
and modified into new substantive works in which copyright vests and
in which the ownership of the copyright in the new
aspects of the
works belongs to ITRISA. In other words, the copyright works now used
by ITRISA are not the same works that Ms Parry
and Ms Dunn-Blatch
co-authored and assigned to TRADSA many years ago
[15]
.
[48]
The
original works, in the form they existed at the time the licence
agreement was concluded have no use without the updated enhancements
and modifications. The relief granted by the Court
a
quo
will result in severe oppression and prejudice to ITRISA. This is so
because ITRISA now has to pay a royalty fee to TRADSA for
the use of
copyright rights, which it is in fact not using. The consequence of
the order granted by the Court
a
quo
is that ITRISA would be compelled to pay a royalty fee for something
that it does not use in circumstances when the copyright in
the works
that it does use, actually belongs to ITRISA. In this regard, the
Court
a
quo
erred in making a contradictory factual finding. On the one hand, the
Court
found
that Ms Parry and Ms Dunn-Blatch had assigned ownership of the
copyright in the copyright works to TRADSA
[16]
and, on the other hand, the Court
a
quo
found that Ms Parry and Ms Dunn-Blatch had not divested themselves of
the right of ownership of the works and that ITRISA was obliged
to
obtain the consent of TRADSA for any updates and adaptations of its
works.
[17]
In our view, whether or not ITRISA had to obtain TRADSA’s
consent to make adaptations to the copyright works, is irrelevant.
The position was that changes had been made and new substantive
copyright works had been created which belonged to ITRISA and at
worst, because of the absence of consent, jointly by TRADSA and
ITRISA in which event TRADSA should pursue the claim
[18]
.
This fact ought to have been taken into account by the Court
a
quo
and was not.
### Fifth Reason
Fifth Reason
[49]
The relief that the Court
a
quo
conflicts with and breaches the
provisions of
section 1(3)
of schedule 1 of the
Companies Act which
provides that a non-profit company:
“
must
not, directly or indirectly, pay any portion of its income or
transfer any of its assets, regardless how the income or asset
was
derived, to any person who is or was an incorporator of the company
...”
[50]
Ms
Parry was an incorporator of ITRISA.
Section 1(3)
of schedule 1 of
the
Companies Act therefore
precludes her from receiving a dividend
from TRADSA where the origin of the dividend is derived from a
payment made by ITRISA to
TRADSA. Ms Parry, through her counsel Ms
Jackson, submitted that this reason was never raised by any of the
parties in the Court
a
quo
and
accordingly could not be raised on appeal for the first time. In this
regard, she referred us to the
locus
classicus
on
this issue being
Swissborough.
[19]
Ms
Jackson readily conceded and indeed drew the Court’s attention
very properly to the appropriate principle, being that a
party could
advance legal argument in support of the relief or defence claimed by
it even where such arguments were not specifically
mentioned in the
papers, provided they arose from the facts alleged and provided there
was no prejudice to the other party.
[20]
We hold the view that the argument arises from the facts and that the
adjudication of the matter on this basis will not result
in any
prejudice to Ms Parry (or Ms Dunn-Blatch, ITRISA or TRADSA).
[51]
Ms Jackson argued that there was no facts
set out by Ms Dunn-Blatch in her answering affidavit regarding any
alleged transfer of
income or assets from ITRISA to Ms Parry. The
point of Ms Cirone’s argument is that the effect of the order
granted by the
Court
a quo
would be to transfer income to Ms Parry who was an
incorporator of ITRISA and that is what is prohibited in terms of
section 1(3)
of schedule 1 of the
Companies Act.
[52
]
Ms Jackson further argued that the
exceptions provided for in the prohibition set out in
section 1(3)
of
schedule 1 of the
Companies Act have
application and therefore the
prohibition does not have application. The first such exception is to
be found in subsection (b)
and provides:
“
As
a payment of an amount due and payable by the company in terms of a
bona fide
agreement
between the company and that person or another”.
[53]
Ms Jackson argued that the order granted by
the Court
a quo
embodies
such a “
bona fide
agreement”. Ms Cirone countered, in our view
correctly, that the original agreement concluded in June of 2015 did
not make
provision for any royalty fees to be paid. The
bona
fide
agreement contended for is the one
which the Court
a quo
concluded on behalf of the parties and is the one
which is the subject matter of this hearing, as such, the exception
cannot be
found to have application. This reasoning appears to be
sound.
[54]
The exception in subsection (c) provides:
“
as
payment in respect of any rights of that person, to the extent that
such rights are administered by the company in order to advance
a
stated object of the company.”
[55]
Ms Jackson argued that the licensed rights
to the intellectual property are administered by ITRISA and are used
to advance the stated
object of ITRISA. The intellectual property she
contended forms the very cornerstone of ITRISA’s business. In
our view, Ms
Parry has no rights that could fall within the scope of
this exception. None of Ms Parry’s rights are administered by
ITRISA
and this exception does not qualify to assist Ms Parry.
[56]
The exception in subsection (d) provides:
“
in
respect of any legal obligation binding on the company
”
.
[57]
Ms Jackson submitted that a legal
obligation such as the payment of a royalty fee in terms of a licence
agreement would be included
as such an exception. But that is the
very point of this hearing. No legal obligation exists because Ms
Parry voluntarily relinquished
the rights.
[58]
We therefore find that none of the
exceptions to the application of
section 1(3)
of schedule 1 to the
Companies Act has
application and that the dismissing of the appeal
would countenance the contravention of this section of the
Companies
Act.
[59
]
For all these reasons we conclude that the
appeal should be upheld.
# ORDER
ORDER
[60]
We accordingly grant the following order:
(a)
The appeal is upheld with the First
Respondent to pay the costs of the appeal including those ordered by
the Supreme Court of Appeal
to be costs in the appeal.
(b)
The Order of the Court
a
quo
is set aside and replaced with the
following:
“
The
application is dismissed with costs.”
I
OPPERMAN
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
MMP
MDALANA-MAYISELA
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
S
MEERSINGH
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Counsel for the
appellants: Adv P Cirone
Instructed by: DM Kisch
Inc
Counsel for the
respondent: Adv BM Jackson
Instructed by: Rademeyer
Attorneys
Date of hearing: 11
October 2021
Date of Judgment: 8 April
2022
[1]
Clause
4.1 of the licence agreement.
[2]
Clause
4.2 of the licence agreement.
[3]
Clause
5.6 of the licence agreement.
[4]
Clause
6 of the licence agreement.
[5]
Clause
7 of the licence agreement.
[6]
Clauses
4.1 to 4.4.5 of the licence agreement.
[7]
2015
(3) SA 313
(SCA) at [32]
[8]
Irvin
and Johnson Ltd v Oelofse Fisheries Ltd
1954(1)
SA 231 (E) at 243.
[9]
Para
[26] of the judgment.
[10]
Para
7.14.
[11]
Para
[13] of the judgment.
[12]
The
doctrine is fully explained in
London
v Department of Transport, Roads and Public Works, Norther Cape
2019
JDR 2137 (SCA) at [31].
[13]
Ms
Parry has limited personal knowledge of the financial position of
ITRISA, having resigned as a director on 31 May 2012. In
any event,
the
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
,
1984(3) SA 623 (A) at 634E – 635C principle, obliges this
court to accept Ms Dunn-Blatch’s version on this issue.
[14]
Applying
the SCA dicta in
Louw
& Others v Nel
2011
(2) SA 172
(SCA) at [23]
[15]
The
court
a
quo
ought to have accepted Ms Dunn-Blatch’s version on this issue
applying the
Plascon
Evans
priniciple.
[16]
Para
[18] of the judgment.
[17]
Para
[20] of the judgment.
[18]
For
the reasons advanced under ‘Second Reason’ herein.
[19]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and others
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 323 I – 324F.
[20]
Swissborough
(supra)
at 324 H – 324A.
sino noindex
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