Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 292South Africa
Power Guarantees (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fusion Guarantees (Pty) Ltd (A5015/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 292 (6 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 May 2022
Headnotes
STRIKE OUT APPLICATION, CONTEMPT OF COURT APPLICATION
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Power Guarantees (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fusion Guarantees (Pty) Ltd (A5015/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 292 (6 May 2022)
Power Guarantees (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fusion Guarantees (Pty) Ltd (A5015/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 292 (6 May 2022)
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sino date 6 May 2022
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: A5015/2021
REPORTABLE: No
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
REVISED.
6 MAY 2022
In the matter between:
POWER GUARANTEES (PTY)
LTD
First appellant
NICHOLSON,
BENITA
Second appellant
NICHOLSON, RAY
VINCENT
Third appellant
and
FUSION GUARANTEES
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
Case
Summary
: STRIKE OUT APPLICATION,
CONTEMPT OF COURT APPLICATION
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J
[1]
The appeal before this court concerns certain orders made by Lapan AJ
(“court
a quo”) in terms of which Appellants’
answering affidavit dated 9 April 2019, being, paragraphs 10 and 12
to 18 thereof
were struck out; Appellants were held to be in contempt
of the order of Adams J dated 29 June 2018; Second and Third
Appellants
were committed to prison for a period of 30 days,
suspended indefinitely on condition that during the period of
suspension, Appellants
return to Respondent its confidential and
proprietary information and Appellants were ordered to pay the costs
of application.
[2]
Appellants are not appealing the order by Adams J (“main
order”) which
led to court a quo’s contempt order. The
main order found in favour of Respondent on illegal competition
against Respondent
remains unchallenged.
[3]
The basis of appeal against the contempt order granted by court a quo
is that the
main order could not be complied with as the confidential
information referred to therein, are not in the custody of Appellants
and that the return thereof to the Respondent was impossible.
Appellants contend that court a quo erred in issuing a contempt order
against them.
[4]
The issue that requires determination is whether or not the appeal
has factual or
legal merit based on the contentions made by
Appellants.
[5]
The brief background concerning the litigation in the main action
deserves a mention.
Respondent had sued Appellants for unlawful
competition alleging that the latter unlawfully appropriated
confidential and proprietary
information to themselves.
[6]
Respondent conducts its business as a guarantor of building
construction contractors
in the building services sector. The
guarantees are issued for those building construction contractors
performing building and
related services for various departments of
local and national governments.
[7]
When a contractor gets a contract to build a building for the various
departments,
an application would be made to Respondent for a
guarantee. The application will be assessed by Respondent before a
guarantee is
issued and if all requirements are met, a guarantee will
be issued up to R5 million.
[8]
The guarantee would be provided at the lowest cost to the applicant.
Over the period,
Respondent built a database of contractors to whom
it marketed its products. The database was built using information
obtained
from the Construction Industry Development Board (“the
CIDB”) website as a starting point. Significant amount was
invested
by Respondent in collecting the data over a period of time.
[9]
The database contains information relating to the contract details of
a contractor;
the amount of the credit facility granted to a
particular contractor; the rate payable by a contractor for a
guarantee and the
history of previous guarantees granted to each
contractor.
[10]
If the information was placed in the hands of a competitor, the
latter would have a significant
benefit. Any competitor who takes and
uses the Respondent’s confidential information without consent
as contained in the
database, would commit an unlawful competition.
[11]
Appellants resisted the relief sought in the main application on the
basis that the information
on the contractors was not confidential as
it was freely obtainable from the public domain. Appellants denied
that they obtained
or utilized information belonging to Respondent.
[12]
Evidence of electronic communications by way of WhatsApp messages
between Mr. Randall Fransman
(“Fransman”) and Third
Appellant were presented to Adams J in terms of which Fransman
confirmed that Third Appellant
had utilized his cellular telephone to
take 15 to 20 photographs of Respondent’s client information as
it appeared on Third
Appellant’s computer screen. Third
Appellant sent the photographs to Fransman who then onward sent the
WhatsApp messages
to an unknown telephone number.
[13]
Appellants did not object to the evidence of Fransman and did not
provide an answer thereto.
Consequently, Adams J accepted Fransman’s
evidence and issued and the main order ordering the confidential
database to be
returned to Respondent.
[14]
Appellants contend that court a quo erred in holding them to be in
contempt of the main court
order. They state that they were not in
possession of the material which were ordered to be returned to
Respondent and that court
a quo ought not to have issued the contempt
order. They further argue that the court a quo ought to have allowed
them to lead evidence
by introduction the pleadings of the main
application to prove the absence of willful intent to disregard the
main court order.
[15]
Appellants argue furthermore that the court a quo erred in denying
them the opportunity to answer
to the new evidence of Fransman, which
was unchallenged in the main action, and by striking out the
paragraphs that dealt with
that aspect.
[16]
In this appeal we are concerned with whether on the facts and the
record before us, the court
a quo erred in concluding that the
Appellants were in contempt of the main order.
[17]
We are also required to determine whether court a quo erred in
striking out certain paragraphs
of the opposing affidavit from the
Appellants. I shall deal with the principles on striking out and
later the contempt of court
applications.
[18]
Striking out in an affidavit is regulated by Rule 6(15) of the
Uniform Rules of Court which provides
that the court may on
application order to be struck out from any affidavit any matter
which is scandalous, vexatious or irrelevant,
with an appropriate
order as to costs, including costs as between attorney and client.
The court may not grant the application
unless it is satisfied that
the applicant will be prejudiced if the application is not granted.
[19]
The test of irrelevance of the allegations forming the subject of the
application is whether
such allegations do not apply to the matter
before court or do not contribute in any way to a decision of the
matter. The evidence
must relate to the cause of action or merits of
the case.
[20]
In dealing with the approach as set out in above, the court in
Beinash
v Wixley
[1]
held that two requirements must be satisfied before an application to
strike out matter from any affidavit can succeed. First the
matter
sought to be struck out must be scandalous, vexatious or irrelevant.
In the second place the court must be satisfied that
if such matter
was not struck out the parties seeking such relief would be
prejudiced.
[21]
The basis of the application to strike out the impugned allegations
before the court a quo related
to the attachment of the notice of
motion and all affidavits related to the main application that had
been finalized by Adams J
in the main application. Respondent’s
contention was that Appellants were seeking to re-hear the main
application despite
them not having sought leave to appeal the main
order and despite their repeated assurances that they abide by the
judgment. I
do not find that court a quo erred when it ordered that
those paragraphs of the affidavit be struck out. The main action had
clearly
been finalized and there was therefore no basis to re-hear
the main application before the court a quo. More importantly,
Appellants
had indicated that they would abide by the court order in
the main action. Court a quo therefore correctly struck out the
impugned
allegations because if it had not done so, that would have
amounted to the re-hearing the main application on which Adams J had
already given a judgment.
[22]
Appellants contend that the impugned allegations were not amounting
to re-hearing the application
in court a quo, but simply to introduce
evidence which explains why they failed to comply with the court
order granted by Adams
J. They contend that court a quo ought not to
have struck out the very evidence sought to be introduced to explain
why they could
not comply with the court order. This contention is
without merit because Appellants themselves had stated in the
proceedings before
Adams J that they would abide by the court order.
There was no new evidence of events after the order granted by Adams
J which
might explain why the order could not be complied with.
Anything that happened before the order was granted by Adams J would
only
be relevant to challenging that order itself. This contention
therefore must fail.
[23]
The second issue is whether court a quo correctly found the
Appellants to be in contempt of Adams
J order. The leading case on
the principle and requirements of contempt of court is
Fakie
N.O v CC11 Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2]
where the court summarized the principles and the elements as
follows
:
“
To
sum up:
(a)
The civil contempt procedure is a
valuable and important mechanism for securing compliance with court
orders, and survives constitutional
security in the form of a motion
court, court application adapted to constitutional requirements.
(b)
The respondent in such proceedings
is not an ‘accused person’, but is entitled to analogous
protections as are appropriate
to motion proceedings.
(c)
In particular, the applicant must
prove the requirement of contempt (the order; service or notice;
non-compliance; and willfulness
and mala fides) beyond reasonable
doubt.
(d)
But once the applicant has proved
the order, service or notice, and non-compliance the respondent bears
an evidential burden in
relation to willfulness and mala fides;
should the respondent to advance evidence that establishes reasonable
doubt as to whether
non-compliance was willful and mala fide,
contempt will have been established beyond reasonable doubt.
(e)
A declarator and other appropriate
remedies remain available to a civil applicant on proof on a balance
of probabilities
”
.
[24]
As regards common facts in this appeal, it is not in issue that Adams
J had issued an order which
Appellants were aware of. It was not
disputed that Appellants had failed to deliver any of the
Respondent’s confidential
and proprietary information to
Respondent as required by the Adams J order. What is disputed is that
Appellants were in position
to deliver the said confidential and
proprietary information in their possession to Respondent. Appellants
contend that they do
not have confidential and proprietary
information in their possession which belong to Respondent. They did
not lead evidence before
Adams J on what happened to the database.
They elected to resort to a bare denial as their defence.
[25]
The claim by Appellants that they do not have the database of
Respondent containing confidential
and proprietary information in
their possession was not supported by evidence and is therefore
without merit. They did not challenge
the correctness of such finding
by Adams J that such confidential and proprietary information of
Respondent had to be returned
to the Respondent. It follows in my
view that Respondent had discharged the burden of prove in court a
quo that non-compliance
with Adams J order was intentional and mala
fides. I say this because, nowhere in the record did Appellant lead
any evidence for
instance to say that the Adams J order could not be
complied with because the confidential or proprietary information of
Respondent
had for instance been deleted or destroyed.
[26]
It is trite that the order of Adams J upon which court a quo based
its decision to hold Appellants
in contempt stands unchallenged until
set aside by the court. It is a principle of order law that until set
aside, the court order
must be obeyed even if it may be found to be
wrong.
[3]
This is so because as
observed in
Kotze
v Kotze
[4]
public policy requires that “…there shall be obedience
to orders of Court and that people should not be allowed to
take law
into their own hands.”
[27]
Respondent would without doubt be prejudiced if the hearing of
evidence already led in the Adams
J order was to be allowed by court
aquo. This would lead to the subversion of the Adams J order, which
as already stated, remains
unchallenged. It follows, in my considered
view, that the appeal must fail.
ORDER
[28]
The following order is made:
(a)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
M.L. SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
agree
:
S. YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree
J. FRANCIS
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard:
20 October 2021
Judgment:
06 May 2022
Counsel for
Applellants: Adv R
Stockwell SC
Adv WC Carstens
wiancarstens@hotmail.com
Instructed
by:
Larry Landen Attorneys
Counsel for
Respondents: Adv D van Niekerk
Instructed by:
K & B Attorneys Mr H Korsten
[1]
1997
(3) SA 721 (SCA)
[2]
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA) at para
[42]
[3]
See
Bezuidenhout v Patensie Sitrus Beherend BPK
2001 (2) SA 224
(ECD) at
229 A- D, Culverwell v Beira
1992 (4) SA 490
(W) at 494 A-C, Zerga &
Others v TT Empowerment CC
[2012] 4 All SA 472
(GSJ) at [5] and [6]
[4]
1953
(2) SA 184
(C) at 187F
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