De Villiers Van Zyl and Another v Oelofse and Others (31878/2013) [2013] ZAGPPHC 204 (21 June 2013)

80 Reportability
Intellectual Property

Brief Summary

Interdict — Interim interdict — Confidential information — Applicants sought an interim interdict to prevent Respondents from using confidential client information of the Applicants' business, RUBYCO, for soliciting business and issuing invoices — Applicants alleged that Respondents unlawfully solicited existing clients and misrepresented their association with RUBYCO following the death of the first Applicant's brother, who previously managed the business — Court held that the Applicants established a prima facie case for the interim relief sought, as the misuse of confidential information could cause irreparable harm to the business and its clients.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This was an urgent motion application in the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, for interim interdictory relief (with ancillary accounting relief) aimed at restraining alleged ongoing unlawful competition and misuse of client-related information. The matter was heard and determined by Khumalo AJ on 21 June 2013 under case number 31878/2013.


The first applicant, Eugene Andrew De Villiers Van Zyl, conducted and managed the day-to-day operations in Gauteng of a medico-legal facilitation business known as RUBYCO, following the death of his brother, the late Jan Hendrik Stadler van Zyl. The second applicant, Rezanne Oenie Louw N.O., was the executrix of the deceased estate and brought the application in that capacity because the deceased’s minor children were beneficiaries with an interest in the business. The respondents included medical practitioners and personnel associated with them, and a company trading as FUNDAMEDICAL, namely Vic Oelofse (first respondent), Louise Oelofse (second respondent), Miki Hegyi (third respondent), Anna-Lise Janse van Rensburg (fourth respondent), Caren Brink (fifth respondent), and Top Coat Property Investments 10 (Pty) Ltd t/a Fundamedical (sixth respondent).


The procedural history relevant to the court’s determination was that the applicants launched the matter as urgent, seeking interim restraints pending the institution (within 30 days) and finalisation of an intended damages action. The respondents opposed the relief on multiple grounds, including lack of urgency, non-joinder, the sufficiency of an undertaking, and contentions that the relief sought was effectively final.


The subject matter concerned the alleged misuse of confidential client information, alleged unlawful solicitation of RUBYCO’s attorney-client base, alleged passing off / misrepresentation that the sixth respondent was associated with or had taken over RUBYCO, and the issuing of invoices to RUBYCO’s attorney clients for matters allegedly facilitated through RUBYCO.


Material Facts


RUBYCO was conducted by the first applicant’s late brother, Jan Hendrik Stadler van Zyl, a general medical practitioner who passed away on 8 January 2013. The business operated in Gauteng and the Western Cape, with the deceased having conducted it in partnership with the first applicant in Gauteng and with Johan Huisamen in the Western Cape. On the deceased’s death, the partnership was legally dissolved; the first applicant continued managing the Gauteng operations, while the deceased estate retained an interest relevant to the executrix and the minor beneficiaries.


RUBYCO’s business model, as accepted by the court for purposes of the interim relief, was to facilitate and coordinate medico-legal consultations and reports for attorneys, particularly for matters involving the Road Accident Fund, medical negligence, and risk assessment. RUBYCO coordinated appointments with medical practitioners and specialists, procured reports, invoiced attorneys, and paid service providers involved in generating the reports.


The first and second respondents, husband and wife orthopaedic surgeons, were part of the panel of specialists used by RUBYCO in Gauteng, and were described as the only orthopaedic specialists in Gauteng utilised by the business. The fourth and fifth respondents, nurses at Arwyp Hospital where certain respondents practised, assisted in arranging and coordinating appointments and completed pre-assessment documentation, and they were involved in the appointment administration that fed into RUBYCO’s invoicing process.


After the deceased’s death, the second respondent met the first applicant and his parents and offered to take a 50% interest in the business. Subsequent discussions evolved into a proposal that a new business be operated under the name FUNDAMEDICAL, within a company identified in the papers as the sixth respondent. A business plan was presented in April 2013 with proposed shareholding and operational arrangements, including that software used by RUBYCO (developed by Huisamen) would be incorporated. Negotiations continued, and on 1 May 2013 the first applicant made a counterproposal regarding shareholding and remuneration, with the third respondent undertaking to reconsider. A letter to existing clients informing them of the new business was discussed in principle.


In the period following these negotiations, the first applicant provided certain operational documents (including a service level agreement template and examples of invoices) to an employee associated with the sixth respondent. The first applicant then withdrew his counteroffer after he could not obtain clarity on acceptance of the proposed terms. He informed certain respondents of his withdrawal on 13 May 2013 and subsequently purchased Huisamen’s interest, becoming the sole owner of the business as asserted on the papers (supported by a confirmatory affidavit from Huisamen).


On 14 May 2013, Risaba Attorneys (an existing RUBYCO client) informed the first applicant that it had received invoices from the sixth respondent for matters that RUBYCO had already billed. The invoices were sent on the evening of 13 May 2013 together with a letter that, on the applicants’ version, created the impression that the sixth respondent was associated with or had taken over RUBYCO. The court treated it as significant that the sixth respondent issued invoices to an attorney client for work that, on the applicants’ version accepted for interim purposes, had been facilitated through RUBYCO, and that payments were received.


The applicants further alleged that appointment worksheets typically sent by the fourth and fifth respondents to RUBYCO stopped, and that appointments extended into June 2013 remained to be invoiced by RUBYCO. The applicants also relied on an incident involving a set of appointments scheduled for 17 May 2013 (involving Honey Attorneys), which the applicants said were cancelled and rescheduled, but which the second respondent nevertheless proceeded with as originally scheduled. These events were placed in the context of alleged direct competition and diversion of work.


While the respondents advanced a wide-ranging denial and alternative narrative, the court considered that on the material aspects there was no genuine dispute of fact, because admissions in the answering affidavit aligned with key allegations needed for interim relief. Notably, the respondents conceded that invoices and a letter were sent to attorney clients, and the court treated the invoicing by the sixth respondent for work it had not done (on the court’s accepted version) as central to establishing harm and the need for restraint.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions requiring determination were whether the applicants had met the requirements for an interim interdict restraining the respondents from using alleged confidential information, unlawfully soliciting RUBYCO’s clients, representing that FUNDAMEDICAL was associated with or had taken over RUBYCO, and issuing invoices relating to appointments made for RUBYCO clients; and whether a direction to keep an account of invoices issued should be ordered ancillary to the interdict.


Several issues were of a mixed nature involving law, the application of law to facts, and evaluative assessments. These included whether the matter was properly enrolled as urgent; whether alleged non-joinder was fatal; whether the respondents’ tendered undertaking and the applicants’ intention to pursue a damages claim constituted an adequate alternative remedy or otherwise defeated interdictory relief; and whether the relief sought, although framed as interim, was in substance final and therefore subject to the requirements for a final interdict.


Substantively, the dispute required the court to decide whether the applicants established, at least prima facie, a protectable right in relation to their attorney client base and the related information; whether that information qualified as confidential information in the relevant sense; whether there was a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the conduct continued; whether the balance of convenience favoured granting interim relief; and whether there was an absence of a satisfactory alternative remedy.


Court’s Reasoning


On urgency, the court accepted that the complaint related to an alleged ongoing infringement of rights, making it critical that the applicants receive an opportunity for a speedy adjudication. The court also considered that the respondents had not suffered prejudice from the abridgement of time periods and the early hearing, and therefore refused to strike the matter for lack of urgency.


On non-joinder, the respondents contended that Sanlam Trust Limited should have been joined because of its alleged role under the deceased’s will. The court noted that at the time of launching the application only the second applicant held letters of executorship, the contemplated trust had not yet been formed, and the reply addressed the issue. The point was not pursued further in argument, and the court did not treat it as determinative.


The respondents’ reliance on an undertaking (to pay certain monies received by the sixth respondent into trust pending a damages claim) was analysed as addressing only past conduct and only one aspect of the complaint. The court reasoned that the relief sought was prohibitory and aimed at stopping continuing conduct; an undertaking that did not ensure cessation of future infringement could not remove the need for an interdict. The court applied the principle that an interdict is not a remedy for a past invasion of rights and accepted that prohibitory interdictory relief pending damages proceedings is a customary method to prevent ongoing harm. The court also rejected the contention that an intention to institute a damages claim was fatal to interdictory relief, holding that a litigant may seek an interdict to mitigate ongoing harm without forfeiting the right to claim damages.


In addressing whether the interdict sought was interim or final, the court outlined the different requirements for interim and final interdicts and the significance of disputes of fact in motion proceedings. The court rejected the argument that the interim relief would be final merely because trial proceedings might take time, emphasising that interim relief protects a prima facie right pending final determination and does not finally decide the parties’ rights. The court considered authority discussing finality in effect and reiterated that the criterion was the nature and effect of the order rather than whether the court of first instance would “revisit” the matter.


On disputes of fact, the court held that although the respondents asserted disputes, there was no genuine dispute on material aspects because admissions in the answering affidavit corresponded with key allegations necessary for the interim relief. The court regarded earlier contentions as lacking genuine substance and being contradicted later in the answering papers.


On the requirements for an interim interdict, the court applied the established test requiring a prima facie right (though open to some doubt), a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm, a favourable balance of convenience, and no adequate alternative remedy. The court accepted that the business relationship between RUBYCO and its attorney clients constituted a protectable business interest, and that the identity and details of the attorneys with whom RUBYCO had a specific relationship (as reflected in annexures Q2 and R3) could constitute protectable confidential commercial information.


The respondents argued that by attaching the lists to the founding affidavit, the information entered the public domain and lost confidentiality. The court reasoned that this argument conflated confidentiality with litigation privilege and disclosure obligations. The court referred to principles underlying waiver of litigation privilege when documents are referenced in pleadings, but treated the applicants’ complaint as one of confidential commercial interests, not privilege. The court then approached confidentiality with reference to the statutory definition of “confidential information” in section 1 of the Competition Act 89 of 1998, emphasising that protectable confidential information is information that belongs to a firm, has economic value, and is not generally available or known.


On whether the information was publicly available, the respondents asserted that attorney details could be obtained from sources such as the Hortors legal diary and the web. The court accepted the applicants’ distinction between general availability of attorney names and the particular value of a curated list of the specific attorneys constituting RUBYCO’s client base through service level agreements, which was said to be known only to a limited group through their working relationship. The court accepted that such information was not generally known or easily ascertainable and had economic value, making it a protectable interest, and concluded that the applicants had established a prima facie right deserving of protection.


On irreparable harm, the court placed weight on the respondents’ concessions that the sixth respondent invoiced an attorney in the applicant’s client base, despite not having rendered the services that justified the invoicing on the applicants’ case. The court regarded this as unlawful and harmful to the applicants’ business. It rejected justification based on an alleged earlier understanding that FUNDAMEDICAL would commence operations, reasoning that the sixth respondent could not invoice and collect money for work it had not done, particularly where no agreement had been concluded that it had taken over the applicants’ business. The court also treated the accompanying letter and invoicing, viewed together and in context, as supporting the inference that the respondents were creating a perception of cooperation or takeover, thereby risking diversion of business and causing continuing harm.


As to the fourth and fifth respondents, the applicants contended they had a mandate-based relationship involving appointment processing and worksheets, and that they breached that mandate by withholding worksheets and using the information to facilitate the sixth respondent’s invoicing and solicitation. The respondents disputed that any relationship was proven, but the court relied on the respondents’ own admission that the fourth and fifth respondents were owed money for work done for the business, which the court treated as confirming a remunerated service relationship. Applying principles of mandate and performance of obligations, the court found sufficient basis for a prima facie right against the fourth and fifth respondents arising from that mandate and its breach.


The court considered the balance of convenience and found that the prejudice to the applicants if relief were refused outweighed any prejudice to the respondents if relief were granted, noting also the respondents’ indication that their new business formation had not even been finalised. The court was further satisfied that there was no alternative remedy that would adequately protect the applicants from continued violation of their rights.


Finally, the court granted the applicants leave to amend the notice of motion by abandoning one prayer and inserting the word “unlawful” before “soliciting,” holding that the basis for such relief had been canvassed on the papers and in argument and did not cause inequity.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for non-compliance with the prescribed time limits, forms, and service due to the matter’s urgency. It granted leave to amend the notice of motion by abandoning prayer 2 and inserting the word “unlawful” before “soliciting” in prayer 1.


The court granted an interim interdict restraining the respondents from using confidential information relating to RUBYCO’s clients (including contact details in annexures Q2 and R3) for purposes of unlawfully soliciting RUBYCO’s clients, from representing that the sixth respondent was associated with or had taken over RUBYCO, and from issuing invoices for their benefit in respect of appointments made for RUBYCO clients. The respondents were also directed to keep an account of all invoices issued in the name of any of them in respect of consultations conducted for RUBYCO clients.


The interdictory and accounting relief was ordered to operate pending the finalisation of an action for damages, which the first applicant was directed to institute within 30 days of the order.


The respondents were ordered to pay the costs of the application.


Cases Cited


Phillip Morris Inc v Marlboro Shirt Co SA Ltd 1991 (2) SA 720 (A)


Noah v Union National South British Insurance Co Ltd 1979 (1) SA 330 (T)


Minister of the Interior and Another v Harris and Others 1952 (4) SA 769 (AD)


L F Boschoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality 1969 (2) SA 256 (C)


Simon No v Air Operations of Europe AB and Others [1998] ZASCA 79; 1999 (1) SA 217 (SCA)


Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd 1957 (4) SA 234 (C)


B H Water Treatment (Pty) Ltd v Leslie and Another 1993 (1) SA 47 (W)


Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A)


Nuco Chrome Bophuthatswana (Pty) Ltd and 2 Others v Mogale Alloys (Pty) Ltd and Martin Rosenberg (2008/13094) [2011] ZAGPJHC 12; 2011 (6) SA 96 (GSJ)


Metlika Trading Ltd and Others v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service 2005 (3) SA 1 (SCA)


South African National Defence Union v Minister of Defence and Others / Minister of Defence and Others v South African National Defence Union and Others 2007 (1) SA 402 (SCA)


Competition Commission of South Africa v ArcelorMittal South Africa Ltd (680/12) [2013] ZASCA 84


Woodlands Dairy (Pty) Ltd v Parmalat South Africa (Pty) Ltd 2002 (2) SA 280 (SCA)


Bloom's Woollens (Pty) Ltd v Taylor 1962 (2) SA 532 (AD)


David Trust v Aegis Insurance Co Ltd [2000] ZASCA 108; 2000 (3) SA 289 (SCA)


Port Nolloth Municipality v Xhalisa and Others; Luwalala and Others v Port Nolloth Municipality 1991 (3) SA 98 (C)


Trustees of the Orange River Land and Asbestos Company v King and Others 6 HCG 260


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998 (section 1, definition of “confidential information”)


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 35(12)


Held


The court held that the application was urgent because it concerned an alleged ongoing infringement requiring speedy adjudication, and that the respondents were not materially prejudiced by the abridgement of time periods. The non-joinder point was not treated as determinative in light of the executorship position at launch and the explanation provided in reply.


It held further that the respondents’ undertaking to pay certain monies into trust did not address the alleged continuing conduct and therefore did not remove the need for a prohibitory interdict. The applicants’ intention to institute a damages action was not fatal to interdictory relief, because an interdict may be used to prevent continued infringement and mitigate ongoing harm pending damages proceedings.


On the merits, the court held that the applicants established a prima facie protectable right in the confidentiality and economic value of their curated attorney client base information, and that the respondents’ conduct—particularly invoicing an attorney client for work the sixth respondent had not performed and sending correspondence suggesting future instructions should be channelled through the sixth respondent—supported a reasonable apprehension of ongoing harm. The court found no genuine dispute of fact on the material issues, accepted that the balance of convenience favoured the applicants, and concluded that no adequate alternative remedy existed. Interim interdictory and accounting relief was therefore granted, operative pending a damages action to be instituted within 30 days, with costs awarded against the respondents.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An interdict is an extraordinary, summary remedy directed at preventing ongoing or threatened unlawful interference with rights; it is not a remedy for a past invasion of rights alone. A prohibitory interdict may be granted even if the unlawful conduct has ceased by the hearing, provided there is a basis to conclude it may persist and the requirements for the remedy are met.


For an interim interdict, the applicant must establish a prima facie right (though open to some doubt), a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm, that the balance of convenience favours the grant, and the absence of a satisfactory alternative remedy. The prima facie right is assessed with reference to inherent probabilities and the threatened or actual infringement.


The existence of a contemplated or pending damages claim does not preclude interim interdictory relief where the interdict is sought to prevent continuing harm and to mitigate further damages pending the action. An undertaking that addresses only past consequences and does not ensure cessation of ongoing conduct does not necessarily provide an adequate alternative remedy.


The classification of relief as interim or final in effect depends predominantly on the effect of the order rather than its form, and delay in the ultimate determination of the main action does not, without more, transform interim protection into final relief.


Commercial information may qualify as confidential information deserving of protection where it has economic value, belongs to a firm, and is not generally available or known; the confidentiality enquiry is distinct from litigation privilege and document disclosure principles in motion proceedings.


Where a party accepts a mandate or obligation to perform functions (whether remunerated or not), that party is bound to perform the mandate faithfully, honestly, and with care and diligence, and breach of such a mandate may ground interim relief where the breach is used to the detriment of the principal’s protectable business interests.

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[2013] ZAGPPHC 204
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De Villiers Van Zyl and Another v Oelofse and Others (31878/2013) [2013] ZAGPPHC 204 (21 June 2013)

IN
THE NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT- PRETORIA
(REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA)
CASE
NO: 31878/2013
DATE:
21/06/2013
In
the matter between:
EUGENE
ANDREW DE VILLIERS VAN
ZYL
.............................................
1st
APPLICANT
REZANNE
OENIE LOUW
N.O.
....................................................................
2nd
APPLICANT
and
VIC
OELOFSE
..............................................................................................
1st
RESPONDENT
LOUISE
OELOFSE
…................................................................................
2nd RESPONDENT
MIKI
HEGYI
....................................................................................................
3rd
RESPONDENT
ANNA-LISE
JANSE VAN
RENSBURG
....................................................
4th RESPONDENT
CAREN
BRINK
.............................................................................................
5
th
RESPONDENT
and
TOP
COAT PROPERTY INVESTMENTS
10
PTY LTD T/A FUNDAMEDICAL
[Registration
no:
2001/007946/07]
..............................................................
6th
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
N
V KHUMALO AJ
[1]
Applicants launched an urgent Application seeking an interim
interdict restraining the Respondents from:
[1.1]
using any confidential information in their possession relating to
the clients of the Applicant's business, RUBYCO, including
the
contact details of the "clients as set out in Annexures Q2 and
R3 to the founding affidavit,
in
any manner either directly or indirectly, for the purposes of
soliciting the business of RUBYCO'S clients;
[1.1]
contacting, dealing with, securing or soliciting the business of the
first applicant's clients, as set out in annexures "Q2"
and
"R3" to the founding affidavit;
[1.2]
representing to any person that the sixth respondent is associated
with or has taken over RUBYCO;
[1.3]
issuing invoices for the benefit of any of them in respect of
appointments made for clients of RUBYCO.
[2]
In addition, it is also seeking an order
[2.1]
directing the Respondents to keep account of all the invoices issued
in the name of any of them in respect of consultations
conducted for
clients of RUBYCO;
[2.2.]
that the relief sought in paragraphs {1.1] - [2.1] above operate as
interim interdict pending the finalisation of an action
for damages
to be instituted by the first Applicant within 30 days from the
granting of the order.
[2.3]
for costs of the Application.
[3]
The Application notwithstanding its urgency status consisted of bulky
and cumbersome affidavits due to parties attempting to
argue their
positions in the affidavits. The delivery of a speedy judgment became
a challenge.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[4]1st
Applicant's late brother, Jan Hendrik Stadler van Zyl, a general
medical practitioner who passed away on 8 January 2013 conducted
a
business he called RUBYCO ("the business"). He conducted
this business in two provinces, in Gauteng and the Western
Cape. He
conducted the business in Gauteng in partnership with 1st Applicant
and in the Western Cape with Johan Huisamen ("Huisamen").

On his passing away the business was legally dissolved and 1st
Applicant continued with the daily management of its operations
in
Gauteng.
[5]
Second Applicant is the sister of the late J H S van Zyl and the
executrix of his estate appointed in terms of his will of which
two
of his minor children are beneficiaries and as such have an interest
in the business.
[6]
The business' undertaking is to facilitate the procurement by
attorneys, (who formed part of its client base) of medical reports

mainly for Road Accident Fund, ("RAF") medical negligence
and risk assessment. Such undertaking entails the coordination
of
facilities that includes medical consultation with doctors and
specialists and obtaining medical reports for compilation and
to be
forwarded to the attorneys at a fee. The business in turn pays the
medical doctors, specialists and their assistants at the
facilities
used.
[7]
1st and 2nd Respondents, husband and wife orthopaedic surgeons were
part of the
panel
of medical doctors and specialists whose services and expertise the
business
utilises
as "service providers" and the only orthopaedics in Gauteng
used by the business. 1st Applicant credits that
to the long
relationship between his family and the Oelofse.
[8]
4th and 5th Respondent, nurses at Arwyp Hospital where the practice
of the 2nd and 3rd Respondents is situated, assisted and
worked
closely with the 2nd and 3rd Respondents. The business worked with
them to arrange and co-ordinate the medical appointments
with the
required specialist. During that process, they will pre-assess the
client and complete the required questionnaire.
[9]
The business will on receipt of the medical report issue the attorney
with an invoice. The report is then released to the attorney
on
payment of the invoice.
[10]
1st Applicant's responsibility included marketing, liaising and
maintaining the good business relationship with the attorneys.
[11]
Following the passing away of 1st Applicant's brother, 2nd Respondent
had a meeting about the business with the 1st Applicant
and his
parents at 1st Applicant's house, in the course of which 2nd
Respondent made an offer to the family to take up 50% interest
in the
business. The offer was still to be considered by the 1st Applicant
and his parents.
[12]
2nd Respondent subsequently introduced 3rd Respondent to 1st
Applicant as her business contact and suggested that he be employed

by the business. In a follow up meeting that took place in April
2013, 2nd and 3rd Respondents presented 1st Applicant with a business

plan that now suggested a formation of a new business under the name
FUNDAMEDICAL that was to be operated within a company called

FUNDAMEDICAL (Pty) Ltd with registration number 2001/007946/07) ("6th
Respondent") and 1st and 3rd Respondents are its
directors.
[13]
According to that plan the software of the existing business
(developed by Huisamen) was to be incorporated into the new business.

Applicant and the minor children were offered a shareholding in the
new business of 15% and 10% respectively. The 3rd Respondent's
wife
was going to take over the duties of the 1st Applicant at a salary of
R30 000 whilst 1st Applicant was now going to be paid
only a
commission of between R1000 to R1500 on each and every case that he
refers to the new business. Of the remaining shareholding
50% was
allocated to 1st and 3rd Respondent and 25% to 2nd Respondent.
[7]
In a further meeting held on 1 May 2013, 1st Applicant made a
counteroffer of a minimum of 25% of the shares to himself and
also
demanded to be a director on a basic salary of R40 000 per month. The
3rd Respondent undertook to consider and rethink the
plan. In the
same meeting it was agreed in principle that a letter was to be sent
to the existing clients of the business to inform
them of the new
business to be operated under the name "FUNDAMEDICAL".
[8]
Later that day after the meeting and again on 3 and 7 May 2013, 1st
Applicant received requests from 3rd Respondent's wife,
Marlette, who
is an employee at 6th Respondent, for certain information relating to
the business operations. On 6 May 2013, 1st
Applicant sent Mariette a
service level agreement that is signed by the business and the
attorney clients and examples of invoices.
He ignored a request of a
template of the RAF 4 report received subsequent thereto.
FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
[9]
It is Applicants' assertion that the aforementioned requests whilst
awaiting a response to the counter-offer, made him uncomfortable
and
suspicious of the 3rd Respondent's motive. He therefore on 12 May
2013 contacted 1st, 2nd and 3rd Respondents to find out if
his
counteroffer was perhaps accepted and none of them was able to
clarify the issue. He, as a result withdrew his counter-offer.
[10]
He visited 1st, 2nd and 4th Respondents the next day on Monday 13
May 2013 at about 14h00 -15h00 and informed them of his
decision to
withdraw his counteroffer. He later telephonically informed 3rd
Respondent. He then proceeded to purchase Johan Huisamen's

("Huisamen") interest in the Western Cape business and
consequently remains the sole owner of the entire business. Huisamen

has filed a confirmatory Affidavit.
[11]
On 14 May 2013, one of the business's clients from Risaba Attorneys,
informed him that they have strangely, received invoices
from the 6th
Respondent on a number of matters that the business has already
billed the practice. The invoices were sent on the
evening of 13 May
2013, the day he informed the Respondents of his withdrawal. The
invoices were sent with a letter that he alleges
creates an
impression that 6th Respondent was associated or has taken over the
business.
[12]
The appointments for Risaba Attorneys' clients to consult with 1st
Respondent and a Dr Luc Gordon for which the 6th Respondent
had
issued invoices were made and facilitated through the business.
[13]
The conduct was clearly calculated to deceive or confuse the
business's existing clients in order to divert the attorneys to
6th
Respondents in an unlawful and deceitful manner. Respondents are
expected to compete in a fair and lawful manner.
[14]
The worksheets confirming the appointments that were usually sent by
the 4th and 5th Respondent also immediately stopped. The
last
confirmation was for 10 appointments on 13 May, 1 for 15 May and 10
for 17 May 2013. As such 4th and 5
th
Respondents are
co-perpetrators in the unlawful taking over of the business^clients.
There are appointments made well up to the
month of June 2013 that
are stil! is to be invoiced for by the business.
[22]
The 17 appointments scheduled for 2nd Respondent by the business on
behalf of Honey attorneys in Bloemfontein for 17 May 2013
were
cancelled and rescheduled
........
with another specialist, as the Respondents were now in direct
competition with the
business
of the Applicant. Honey attorneys and 2nd Respondent were notified.
Nevertheless 2nd Respondent proceeded with the appointments
as
initially scheduled by the business, notwithstanding the notification
of cancellation.
[23]
He regards the lists of attorneys as in Q2 and R3 to be confidential
by reason of the fact that the information is useful to
the business
and known to a few people, sourced and solicited by the business and
can be useful to any competitor to gain advantage
on the business,
having due regard to the uniqueness of the concept.
[24]
He alleges the Respondents to have been aware and had a duty not to
misuse the information obtained by the 4th and 5th Respondents
as it
was improperly acquired and would confer an unfair advantage on the
Respondents. Contrary thereof the Respondents are using
the
confidential information in an improper way by soliciting existing
clients of the business, forwarding confusing correspondence
to the
attorney and using the information as a springboard for activities
detrimental to the business as well.
[25]
He reckons the matter to be urgent on the basis that he would not be
afforded substantial redress in a later hearing. So, the
intention of
the Application is to protect him and the deceased estate from
suffering further damages and incurring irreparable
harm, having
regard to the fact that appointments are booked until the end of June
2013.
[26]
He submits that the Respondents recently started with their unlawful
activities and persists therewith notwithstanding demand
to desist.
The interim relief will as a result stop the Respondents and protect
him and the business from suffering further irreparable
harm. If the
interim interdict is refused, the prejudice to be suffered by the
Applicants far outweighs the prejudice to be suffered
by the
Respondents.
[27]
He reckons further to have good prospects of success in claiming
damages in future.
OPPOSING AFFIDAVIT
[28]The
Respondents are vigorously opposing the relief sought on a list of
several grounds contained in a 60 page answering affidavit
excluding
annexures, deposed to by 3rd Respondent.
[29]
They broach the following matters, as preliminary issues to defeat
the purpose of an interdict, that:
[29.1]
whilst not conceding to the need for an interim relief, tender an
undertaking to deposit any monies received to which the
Applicant
lays claim (not including the monies due to the 1st and 2nd
Respondents) into the trust account of their attorney of
record
pending the outcome of the proposed damages claim,
[29.2]
the non-joinder of Sanlam Trust Limited that is in terms of the
deceased's will appointed to be an executor together with
the 2nd
Applicant and also as trustee of the trust to be formed; and
[29.3]
consider the acknowledgement by the Applicants that they have a
damages claim to be fatal to their Application.
[30]
On the relief sought, they aver;
[30.1]
in respect of the interim relief Applicants are seeking pending the
finolisotion of an action for damages to he instituted
within 30 days
from the granting of the order, that, due to the delay the action
might take to finalise, the effect of the relief
will be final and
Applicant has thus to meet the requirements of a final interdict.
[30.2]
in respect of the confidential information, that Applicants failed to
identify the confidential information or a propriety
interests to be
protected and deny that information in annexures Q2 and R3 is a
protectable interest as asserted by the Applicants.
They allege the
information to be now in the public domain because it was attached to
their Founding Affidavit and is part of the
record.
[30.3]
with respect to the involvement of the first Respondent, they do not
deny that the facilitation and procurement of consultations
was done
by the business however deny that the deceased was responsible for
the conceptualisation of the business idea and allege
that it was
started by 1st Respondent, deceased, Huisamen and Burger with the
intention that if successful, each of them will acquire
a
shareholding in a company to be formed and later the 2nd Respondent.
[30.4]
that 1st Respondent is the one paying 4th and 5th Respondents for
compiling the claims and reports using software developed
by 1st
Respondent but 4th and 5th Respondents are owed money by the
business.
[30.5]
that they do not admit to the existence of the business RUBYCO, and
none of the services rendered by the business are unique
that they
can be considered of propriety interest or confidential to the
Applicant as the functions are administrative, facilitating
the ease
of communication between medical practitioner and attorneys for
purpose of compiling the RAF.
[30.6]
that the Applicants are seeking to prevent competition and 1st and
2nd Respondent from appointing their own administrator
that is
FUNDAMEDICAL, to perform the administrative functions.
[30.7]
that, they are aware of the money that is owed to 1st Respondent,
payment of which is the responsibility of the estate, and

axiomaticaliy that of the 1st Applicant. They theoretically agree
that 1st and 2nd Respondent would be paid for the work and they
did
allege that the business owes them substantial amounts as well as the
4th and 5th Respondents.
[30.8]
that the invoices and the letter were sent as alleged which was in
line with the agreement that FUNDAMEDICAL was to commence
business on
1 May 2013 and that 1st Applicant at no stage objected and
Respondents did not need his authority.
[30.9]
that, any consultations with 1st and 2nd Respondents after 1 May 2013
were, with the 1st Applicant's knowledge, to be made
through
FUNDAMEDICAL.
[30.10]that
1st Respondent developed the software for the business
[31]
They then deny that:
[31.1]
they represented themselves as the business RUBYCO as alleged or at
all to the business' clients base;
[31.2]
they misused any purported confidential information, to the extent
that confidentiality exists or has been defined. Alleging
that the
information available in the Hortors legal diary and the web;
[31.3]
Applicants have demonstrated any propriety interests and allege that
the information in which propriety interests are alleged
was
voluntarily shared by the 1st Applicant;
[31.4]
they are competing unlawfully and passing off as the business, that
the conduct complained of as unlawful conduct of Respondents
is
unlawful as alleged or at ail and that it constitutes passing-off and
calculated to deceive or confuse the business's customers;
[31.5]
that the letter created the impression suggested by the 1st Applicant
but instead informed the addressee that future use
of 1st and 2nd
Respondent for medico-legal reports should be done through the new
business.
[32]
Further in the affidavit, in a nutshell 3rd Respondent proceeds to
admit that when he was approached by 2nd Respondent he had
no clue of
the business. He started investigations of his own into the business
and its marketability and put together a business
plan, after the
meeting with 1st Applicant. The plan was indeed presented to 1st
Applicant with the shareholding proposals that
he stay on in the role
that he played running the logistics of the new business which he
did through a separate company. Also
confirming that the software
used by the business RUBYCO developed by Huisamen, an IT specialist
was going to be used for the new
business. He subsequently changed
his mind to sourcing better and efficient software. He intended to
include 1st Applicant, agreed
to further meetings having taken place
between 1st, 2rd Respondent, 1st Applicant and himself, and they were
concerned about the
manner in which the business was run with vat and
several creditors owed a lot of money. He confirmed offering 1st
Applicant's
job to Marlette and a salary whilst 1st Applicant was to
be paid R1000 to R1500 commission and that a letter was sent off as
per
annexures to the Founding affidavit, informing attorneys to the
henceforth sent requests to 6 Respondent if they want to use the

services of Is
and
2nd Respondents. On 13 May 2013, 1st Applicant informed 2nd
Respondent that
there
were 20 consultations that have been set up by the business for 17
May 2013.
The
appointments were cancelled but Respondents insisted that they should
go
ahead.
6 Respondents did issue invoices to Honey Attorneys as well. He did
address 1st Applicant's interest.
REPLY
[15]
Applicants filed a reply, the significance of which was the proof of
prior payments made to the 4th and 5th Respondents for
the services
rendered to the business and the statement by 1st Applicant that
Sanlam renunciated any interest in the executorship
or administration
of the will. 1st Applicant also denied that the response on the
consultations that were arranged by the business
on 17 May 2013 was
to FUNDAMEDICAL but 2nd Respondents, alleging that 6th Respondent had
no right to invoice unless taking over
the business.
[16]
I found it prudent and more efficient to first deal with preliminary
issues as their determination might be destructive of
the whole
Application or result in the disposal of a substantive defence.
PRELIMINARY ISSUES Urgency
[17]
Respondents Counsel disputed urgency, urging the court to strike the
matter from the roll due to lack of urgency and I decided
otherwise,
finding the matter to be urgent due to an alleged on going or
continuation of an infringement of a right making it critical
to give
the Applicant a reasonable opportunity for a speedy adjudication of
the complaint. The Respondents, it seemed have not
suffered any
prejudice by the abridgement of the prescribed times and an early
hearing.
Non joinder
[36]
At the time of launching the Application, only 2nd Applicant held
the letters of executorship to the deceased estate in terms
of the
will and the trust was yet to be
formed.
The allegations in the Applicant's Reply further explain the issue of
non­joinder of Sanlam Trust Limited, so I do not
see it fit to
pursue the issue anymore that was also in argument not followed or
carried further by the parties.
Undertaking & Pending Damages
Action
[37]
Respondent's'Counsel argued that the offer of an undertaking to pay
the monies received.by the 6th Respondent, to which the
Applicant
lays claim (not including the monies due to the 1st and 2nd
Respondents), into the trust account of their attorney of
record
pending the outcome of the proposed damages claim takes away the need
for the relief sought and proves that the Applicants
have an
alternative remedy. He further argued that the intended damages claim
is under the circumstances fatal to the Applicant's
Application. It
is apparent then that the offer was made in order to setback or
defeat the purpose of an interdict.
[38]
In terms of the relief sought the Applicants intention is to prohibit
the Respondents from continuing to contact, deal with,
solicit and
issuing out invoices to the business's clients in respect of
appointments made by the business and receiving payments
for such
appointments, conduct Applicants consider unlawful and harmful and
the continuation of which is causing irreparable harm.
The interdict
sought is prohibitory, intended to stop the Respondent from further
infringement pending the action for damages to
be later instituted
from which Applicants further submit they will not get substantial
redress. Taking into consideration that
Respondents conceded to
having received the monies.
[39]
The undertaking as tendered is only remedial of the past conduct and
only of one aspect, in respect of monies already received
by the 6
Respondent and does not address the alleged continuing conduct that
Applicants are seeking the Respondents to refrain
from. The position
with regard to future infringement, that is, not to persist with the
alleged offending behaviour is not guaranteed
by the undertaking,
which is the relief that Applicant is seeking as per Notice of
Motion. In that prospect the undertaking is
not sufficient to cater
for the relief sought and cannot oust the necessity of an interdict;
See Phillip Morris Inc v Marlboro
Shirt Co SA Ltd
1991 2 SA 720
(A).
It is settled law that an interdict cannot be remedy for past
invasion of rights.
[40]
It is also customary practice that the aggrieved party would apply
for a prohibitory interdictory relief pending an action
for damages
whereby the interdict will apply pendete lite, particularly in
matters were the offending conduct persists. See Noah
v Union
National South British Insurance Co Ltd
1979 1 SA 330
(T).
[41]
A damages claim pending or an indication of an intention to
institute such a claim can therefore not be fatal against the

prohibitory interdict relief sought to immediately stop the on-going
infringement pending such an action. It is Applicants' right
to
mitigate the damages they might suffer and can do so by way of an
interdict to prevent Respondents from persisting with the
offending
behaviour. It is untenable to suggest that by enforcing a right to
prevent the continued invasion of a right one forfeits
the right to
sue for such damages as may ultimately be proven. The fundamental
principle of our law that accords an appropriate
and effective remedy
for the infringement of a right would be undermined if a litigant was
to be precluded from approaching the
courts on motion to protect a
right; See Minister of the Interior and Another v Harris and Others
1952(4) SA 769 (AD) at 781A to
D.
INTERDICT
[42]
As a remedy, an interdict has been described as extraordinary and of
a summary nature, allowed in cases where a person requires
protection
against on-going unlawful interference/conduct or a threat that such
conduct/interference will continue. It is said
that it can be granted
even when the unlawful conduct has seized at the time the Application
is heard by the court. So as long
as such conduct might persist the
remedy will be granted and all the requirements for such a relief are
met.
[43]
The test applicable is whether or not a clear right has been
established. If only a prima facie right has been established,
an
interim interdict may be granted provided certain requirements are
met. The existence of the prima facie right is established
upon
inherent probabilities and that such right has been infringed by the
Respondent or his conduct threatens to infringe the right.
Therefore
to succeed with an interim interdictory relief, it is sufficient for
the Applicants to establish prima facie, (that might
appear on the
face of it to be) a right, though open to some doubt; See LF Boschoff
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1969 (2) SA 256
(C).
The Applicant must also have a well-grounded apprehension of
irreparable harm with the balance of convenience favouring granting

an interim relief. There should be no satisfactory alternative remedy
available to the Applicant. See Simon No v Air Operations
of Europe
AB & Others
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA) 228G- H.
[44]
The prima facie right is enforced for a period of time and at the end
of which the interim interdict may be discharged unless
a clear right
is proven whereupon a final interdict may be granted.
[45]
It is Respondents' contention that the relief sought by the
Applicants is final as there would be nothing that the Court of
first
instance will be able to revisit. They aver that the effect of the
interim relief sought by the Applicants pending the finalisation
of
an action for damages to be instituted within 30 days from the
granting of the order, will also, due to the delay the action
might
take to be finalised, be final and Applicant has thus to meet the
requirements of a final interdict.
[46]
The distinction is critical as the substantive requirement of an
interim or final interdict, differ and the success of an application

for interdict will often turn on the temporal nature and attendant
requirement of the relief being sought.
[47]
For a final interdict relief to be granted, the Applicant must have a
clear right, with the concomitant injury, reasonably
apprehended or
real and with no alternative remedy available. The relief cannot be
granted if there are disputes of facts (i.e
a
genuine
dispute), whereby the applicable test and the correct approach to be
followed will be as set -out in Steilebosch Farmers
Ltd v Stellenvale
Winery (Pty} Ltd Winery
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) and well explained in B H
Water Treatment (Pty) Ltd v Leslie and Another
1993 (1) SA 47
(W) at
55 A-E. In terms of this approach, a final interdict is to be granted
in motion proceedings if the facts stated by the respondent,
together
with the admitted facts in the applicant's affidavit, justify such an
order. The approach now coined the Plascon - Evans
approach; Plascon-
Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A)
at 634H- 635B.
[48]
Respondent's argument that this court as a court of first instance
will not be able to revisit the issues to be determined
implies that
the rights of the parties would have been decided upon, with the
order granted being definitive of such rights, whereas
an interim
interdict does not fully determine rights of the parties. The
argument has no merit. In the trial for the determination
of the
Applicant's claim for damages, the court will have to determine if
Applicants indeed had a right and If it was infringed
and as a result
of such infringement suffered damages that entitle Applicants to be
compensated. So the determination of any entitlement
to damages
claimed will involve the reconsideration of the issues that have been
abstractly considered by this court, requiring
real substantiation of
actual rights and harm, thus interlinked. The effect of the relief
will therefore not be final. Even so,
being able to revisit the issue
cannot be the criteria determining the finality of the relief but the
nature of the interim relief
sought.
[49]
The nature of the interim interdicts is such that they do not have to
be reconsidered in the action. In Nuco Chrome Bophuthatswana
(Pty)
Ltd & 2 Others v Mogale Alloys (Pty) Ltd Martin Rosenberg
(2008/13094} [2011] ZAGPJHC 12;
2011 (6) SA 96
(GSJ) par 41,
Hendricks J stated that:
"The
relief sought in the action although in form is different from the
relief sought in the interim interdict proceedings
they are
interlinked and inter­related and will lapse upon final
adjudication of the trial proceedings. They were granted to
ensure
that the first respondent will, if successful in the main action,
receive adequate and effective relief. For this reason,
this purpose
will be defeated if they are appealable before the final
determination of the main action. Hence they are not final
in form
and effect.
[50]
The distinctive feature of the relief sought whether temporal or
final depends on its effect on the issues to be determined.
If has
been unequivocally decided that if it brings finality to the issues,
by dealing with the substance thereof and not the form,
it is then
final in nature as confirmed in Metlika Trading Ltd & others v
Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
2005 (3) SA 1
(SCA), when
held that:
"in
determining whether an order is final in effect it is important to
bear in mind that 'not merely the form of the order
must be
considered but also, and predominantly, its effect...
[51]
In South African National Defence Union (SANDU) v Minister of Defence
& Others / Minister of Defence & Others v South
African
National Defence Union & Others 2007
........
(1) SA 402 (SCA). In paragraph [33] Conradie JA opined that:
"The
order is not interim in the sense that its fate depends upon the
final resolution of a dispute by the Court that granted
it. it is
temporary in nature, that is true, intended to fall away on the
happening of a certain event, ..., but it is not an interim
order in
the sense that it governs issues that will arise in the pending
action and which entitle the Court which granted it to
reconsider
it."
[52]
Again dealing with the notion of "revisiting” or
"reconsideration" of issues in the interim relief Hendricks

J in Nuco Chrome on par 40 explains that:
"The
issue whether or not an interim interdict pending an action to be
instituted is final in effect does not depend solely
on whether or
not a court "will revisit it" in the main proceedings. In
this case, if it is found in the action proceedings
...that the First
Respondent is not entitled to the shares which are in dispute, the
interim interdicts will automatically fall
away due to the fact that
they were granted on the basis that the First Respondent had
established a prima facie right to the shares
in dispute, and was
thus entitled to interim protection (as foreshadowed in the agreement
of sale) pending a decision on whether
the First Respondent was
entitled to transfer of the shares in question.
[53]
Respondent's further argument that due delay in finalisation of the
pending action also makes the relief of final effect is
also
unconvincing. The interdict is intended to stop the alleged harmful
conduct of the Respondents with immediate effect pending
the
finalisation of the action for damages. I do not agree that based
only on due delay the relief sought must be considered final,

ignoring the confirmation that the relief is in substance not final.
In appropriate cases interim interdicts may be granted for
a long
period of time or extended to protect a prima facie right until for
example an action is finalised. Therefore the delay
in finalisation
of the pending action will not result in final determination of the
parties' rights in respect of the issues between
them.
Dispute of fact
[54]
In the course of dealing with the Application it became apparent that
whilst it is Respondent's argument that there were disputes
of fact,
it was obvious that there was no genuine dispute of fact on the
material aspects of the evidence. The admissions in the
latter part
of the Respondents answering affidavit as deposed to
by
the 3rd Respondent are in agreement with the key allegations in
Applicant's affidavit that are vital to the resolution of the
matter.
The contentions made prior, were without genuine substance and
belatedly contradicted to support its own party's claim.
In my view,
there is little of material importance that remains in dispute
between the parties.
Prima facie right
[48]
Applicants' Counsel submitted that as indicated the core operations
of the business entail facilitating the procurements of
medical
reports on behalf of attorneys that have signed service level
agreements with the business and thus form part of their
client base.
Applicant alleges that this has resulted in a relationship between
the business and the attorneys that needs to be
protected ("business
interest"). The names and details of the specific attorneys they
have a business relationship with
are contained in the list mentioned
as Q2 and R3 that Applicants allege to be confidential and want
Respondents to refrain from
using unlawfully to harm the business,
(therefore protecting its interest). For example soliciting,
diverting the attorneys to
the new business in an unlawful and
deceitful manner and for unfair competition, invoicing such attorneys
for services they have
not rendered and using it as a springboard to
start its business.
[49]
Even though the Respondents have admitted to the operations run by
the business and to 6th Respondent invoicing for the service
rendered
by the business, they deny that Applicants have proven any propriety
interest that needs to be protected. They challenge
the
confidentiality of the information that Applicants seek to protect,
the list of names of attorneys in annexure Q2 and R3 and
argue that
by mere attaching it to the Founding Affidavit the lists lost their
confidentiality. The argument espoused by the Respondent
clearly
relates to litigation privilege raised against discovery of documents
in terms of Rule 35 of the Uniform Rules of the High
Court. That is a
privilege against production or inspection that protects certain
documents obtained with a view to litigation.
The waiver of that
privilege is implied if the document is referred to in the affidavit
or referring documents. Rule 35(12) renders
such a document
disciosabie, if reference is made to it in a pleading. In Competition
Commission of South Africa v Arcelomittal
(680/12) [
2013] ZASCA 84
dealing with litigation privilege and confidential information
confirmed that disclosing a privileged document in pleading amount
to
implied waiver.
[50]
Respondents are conflating the issue of litigation privilege with
'confidential information' that protect the confidential
commercial
interests, in the sense of the Applicant wanting to protect the list
of the specific attorneys that form the client
base of the business
that 4th and 5tfl Respondents had access to due to the working
relationship they had with the business. The
confidential information
so described to be worthy of protection must fall within the ambit of
Section 1
of the
Competition Act 89 of 1998
, which defines it to mean
'trade, business or industrial information that belongs to a firm,
has a particular economic value, and
is not generally available or
known by others'. The erosion of confidentiality in this instance can
only result if the documents
are divulged without the nature of the
information being explained with sufficient precision in order to
support any subsequent
claim that it should not be published or
disclosed to anyone else.
[51]
Respondents argue that the information can be accessed with ease
from the Hortors legal diary and the web. Applicants7 Counsel
deny
that, stating that the names of the specific attorneys that have a
particular relationship with the business, are only known
by the 4th
and 5tn Respondent as they finalised the facilitation of the
appointments for the clients of these attorneys. Therefore
the
availability of names of persona! injury attorneys in the Hortors or
web in general as alleged by the Respondent is not an
issue but the
information as to which specific attorneys does the business have a
relationship forming its client base as contained
in 'Q2 and R3 with
signed service level agreements is privy only to the business, 1st
2nc 3rd and 4th Respondents due to the working
relationship they had
with the business. This information is not generally known or easily
ascertainable. It is therefore not public
knowledge and has a
particular economic value to the business that forms a protectable
interest deserving of protection. They argue
that the business has
proved a prima facie right to its client base. The Respondent are
tempering with such a right and taking
advantage of that interest. I
agree with the Applicants. The applicants have prima facie,a
legitimate right that is deserving of
protection against
infringement.
Irreparable harm
[52]
The Respondents have conceded that 6th Respondents has invoiced
Risaba Attorneys, an attorney that is part of the client base
of the
Applicant's business without having rendered any services to such
attorney, for appointments or the procurement of the medical
reports
facilitated by the business. Consequently the issuing of the invoices
by 6th Respondent was unlawful and harmful to the
business of the
Applicant. Respondents' attempt to justify the conduct of 6th
Respondent by alleging that it was agreed on 1 May
2013 that letters
will be sent to the attorneys A, L informing them of the new business
does not assist them. 6 Respondent was
still entitled to invoice and
collect money for work that it has not done and after the deal
between the 1st Applicant and the
Respondents was not established. It
was evident that Respondents had intended to proceed as if there was
an agreement and that
6th Respondent was taking over from the
business of the Applicant when sending the invoice and receiving the
payments. The 6th
Respondent remains in possession of the money even
when it is not questionable that it is not entitled to keep it
exacerbating
the situation, and has continued to invoice other
attorneys which conduct is as alleged by Applicants causing
Applicants irreparable
harm and financial prejudice. Applicants are
justified to seek immediate protection from Respondents' continuance
with such conduct.
[53]
The Respondents have not denied that worksheets on the appointments
scheduled after the breakdown of the negotiations were
not sent and
conceded to not only sending an invoice to Risaba, but also a letter
that informs them that further reports
required
from 1st and 2nd Respondent be requested through the 6th Respondent,
whilst continuing to invoice appointments scheduled
by the business
of the Applicants. The conduct indeed points to an intention to take
over the operations of the business of the
Applicant, unlawfully. To
determine if conduct unlawful, the letter should be viewed in the
context of it being sent together with
an invoice billing the
attorney client for services that have been rendered by the business,
which establishes motive. See Woodlands
Dairy (Pty) Ltd v Parmalat SA
(Pty) Ltd 2002 (2) p280- SA. Reading the contents of the letter (does
not matter that letter does
not say so), against the invoice sent
under cover thereof clearly sends a message either of co-operation or
take over. It is obvious
that the Respondents through 6th Respondents
were creating a perception that their new business has taken over
from the Applicants.
It might be denied by the Respondents but that
denial is contrary to its own statement where it alleged that 1st
Applicant knew
about the take-over because he voluntarily divulged
information of the 20 appointments that were scheduled for
Bloemfontein. Furthermore
that Applicant was divulging the
information in the knowledge that 6th Respondents will start
operating from 1 May 2013 and did
not have objections thereto.
[61]
Applicant's submission was also that the information that 4th and
5tn Respondents have on the appointments, indicating for
which
attorney client they were booked is used as a springboard by 6th
Respondents to solicit clients belonging to the business
by sending
the invoices and the letter. The argument is fair since it is the 4th
and 5th Respondents who have information about
the appointments and
the reports available, making it possible for 6th Respondent to
invoice and send the offending letters. Applicant's
Counsel argues
that 4th and 5th Respondents had a relationship with the business,
that of a mandate. She argues that 3rd and 4th
Respondent accepted a
mandate to do the processing of appointments and send the worksheets
to the business at a fee and have breached
that mandate by not
sending the worksheets to Applicants but using it to the detriment of
the Applicants' business and allowing
it to be used unlawfully
against the business.
[62]
Respondent's Counsel disputed that any relationship was proven
between 4th and 5th Respondent and the business. However it
is of
utmost significance to point out that even though Respondents
disputes that 4th and 5th Respondents were paid by the business,

Respondents through 3m Respondents confirm that 4th and 5th
Respondents are owed money by either the business or Applicants for

work done for the business. Thus admitting that 4th and 5th
Respondents had a relationship with the business in terms of which

they rendered services to it for a fee as explained by the
Applicants, ie, with regard to the worksheets. In that respect
Applicant's
Counsel is correct that there was an agreement of mandate
that 4th and 5th Respondents accepted, to do certain things for the
business
which justified Applicants expectation that it would be
fulfilled diligently. It is trite in our law that a person who has
accepted
an obligation is bound duly to perform it, whether or not he
is to receive remuneration, see Bloom's Woollens (Pty) Ltd v Taylor
1962 (2) SA 532
(A.D) at 539G- H. Once 4th and 5th Respondents
accepted that mandate they became obliged to perform its functions
faithfully, honestly
and with care and diligence (David Trust v Aegis
Insurance Co Ltd [20001 ZA5CA 108
[2000] ZASCA 108
; ;
2000 (3) SA 289
(SCA) par 20).
[63]
I therefore find that there is enough evidence set out by the
Applicants of a prima
facie
right against the 4th and 5th Respondents arising from the mandate
they had and prove of its infringement causing as alleged
in the
papers irreparable harm to the Applicants, accordingly the relief
sought against them is justified.
[64]
Applicants also moved for a motion to amend their notice of motion
abandoning prayer 2 and adding the word “unlawful"
in
paragraph 1 before the word soliciting. The Application was opposed
by the Respondent. In Port Nolloth Municipality v Xhaiisa
and Others;
Luwalala and Others v Port Nolloth Municipality
1991 (3) SA 98
(C) at
112 D-F, Berman J was very informative in his explanation that:
"Such
a prayer can be invoked to justify or entitle a party to an order in
terms other than that set out in the notice of motion
(or summons or
declaration) where that order is clearly indicated in the founding
(and other) affidavits (or in the pleadings)
and is established by
satisfactory evidence on the papers (or is given), cf Trustees of the
Orange River Land and Asbestos Co v
King and Others 6 HCG 260 at
296-7. Relief under this prayer cannot be granted which is
substantially different to that specifically
claimed, unless the
basis therefor has been fully canvassed, viz the party against whom
such relief is to be granted has been fully
apprised that relief in
this particular form is being sought and has had the fullest
opportunity of dealing with the claim for
relief being pressed under
the head of "'further and/or alternative relief'.
[65]
The motion was fully canvassed and debated by the parties and am
satisfied that the Appellants" affidavits do fulfil the

requirement as explained by Bergman J, in particular as referred to
in paragraphs [20], [24] and [26] above, and in paragraphs
6.3, 6.6
and 6.16 of the Applicant's affidavit. Applicant's Counsel has also
satisfactory lain the basis thereof in argument.
[66]
I am also of the view that the grant of the interdict at this stage
will not cause any inequity and the balance of convenience
favours
the granting of the relief as sought, in that the prejudice to be
suffered by the Applicants far outweighs the prejudice
to be suffered
by the Respondents if relief not granted. Respondents have also
indicated that the formation of their new business
has not even been
finalised. I am as well convinced that there is no alternative remedy
to adequately protect the Applicants from
continued violation of
their rights.
[67]
In the circumstances i grant Applicant relief in the following order:
[67.1]
Condonation is granted to the Applicants for the non-compliance with
the prescribed time limits, forms and service.
[67.2]
Leave to amend the Notice of Motion as applied for by the Applicant,
abandoning prayer 2 thereof and inserting the word "unlawful"

in prayer 1 before the word soliciting, is granted.
[67.3]
Respondents are restrained from:
[67.3.1]
using any confidential information in their possession relating to
the clients of .the Applicant's business, RUBYCO, including
the
contact details of the "clients as set out in Annexures Q2 and
R3 to the founding affidavit, in any manner either directly
or
indirectly, for the purposes of unlawfully soliciting the business of
RUBYCO'S clients;
[67.3.2]
representing to any person that the sixth respondent is associated
with or has taken over RUBYCO;
[67.3.3]
issuing invoices for the benefit of any of them in respect of
appointments made for clients of RUBYCO.
[67.4]
Respondents are also directed to keep account of all the invoices
issued in the name of any of them in respect of consultations

conducted for clients of RUBYCO;
[67.5]
the order granted as per subparagraphs [64.3.1] - [64.4] above is to
operate as an interim interdict pending the finalisation
of an action
for damages to be instituted by the first Applicant within 30 days
from the granting of the order.
[67.6]
Applicant Costs of the Application.
N
V KHUMALO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT NORTH GAUTENG
Counsel
for Applicant: E Muller
Instructed
by: Van der Merwe and Associates
012
343 5432 (t)
012
343 5435 (f)
Counsel
for Respondent: D L Williams
Instructed
by: De Preez & v Associates
Oil
455 0859 (t)
011455
1874 (f)