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JUDGMENT IN APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
DJ Smit, AJ
Introduction
[1] This is an application for leave to appeal against a judgment dated 25 June 2025
in which I enforced, on an urgent basis, a restraint of trade and confidentiality
undertakings given by Mr Henrico Scholtz.
[2] Mr Scholtz and his new employer, 4PL Africa argue that an appeal would have
reasonable prospects of success, for essentially the following reasons:
a. While I found that the interest protected by the restraint clause was the
customer connections that Mr Scholtz had built up while he was in the
employ of TMA Express Road and TMA Logistics, the ambit of the order I
made was far wider than that and prevent s him from dealing with any
customers of 4PL Africa even if they had no connection with the former
employers of Mr Scholtz.
b. By framing the interdicts as I did, I made a new contract for the parties.
c. There was a dispute of fact on the papers regarding whether Mr Scholtz
used his former employers’ confidential information (which, it appears to be
common cause, was at his disposal) to further his new employer’s interests.
Applying the Plascon-Evans rule, I should have found that he did not breach
his confidentiality undertakings.
[3] In my view, there is no reasonable prospect that another court will uphold an
appeal against the order made on 25 June 2025.
[4] In the first place, the very purpose of restraint of trade clauses in general – and
this clause in particular – is to prevent a former employee from working for a
competitor in circumstances where that creates the opportunity for the employee
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to exploit the customer connections he had built up in his previous employment.
It is irrelevant to that purpose that a collateral result of the prevention of
competing with the former employer is also to prevent the employee from dealing
with new customers with whom he had no prior involvement. That collateral effect
is justified by the primary purpose.
[5] Put differently, it is impossible to police an obligation on the employee not to deal
with former customers but only with new customers , which is why it is not
disproportionate to prohibit employment (for a limited period and geography) with
competitors altogether, regardless of the fact that they may also have customers
who are entirely new to the employee.
[6] In my view, these propositions are correctly stated and explained in the Experian
judgment,1 with which I align myself.
[7] In the second place, Wallis AJ (as he then was) explained in Den Braven2 that
limiting the ambit of a restraint in an order to what is justified on the facts
comports both with general principles and, in particular, with the prior decisions
he cited. In my view, that was a correct statement of the law, and I did not
understand Mr Elliot SC to contend otherwise.
[8] Rather, counsel contended that I strayed outside the ambit of the restraint clause.
I do not think, however, it is reasonably arguable that paragraphs (b) or (d) of the
order add anything to the wide ambit of the wording of the restraint clause itself,
which prohibits competing with the ex-employers.
[9] Third, to be entitled to a final interdict against the dissemination of confidential
information, it was not necessary for the former employers to show that
Mr Scholtz actually breached his confidentiality undertaking. It was sufficient to
show a reasonable apprehension of harm. 3 In this case, the risk of harm was
amply demonstrated by common cause or undeniable facts, such as that Mr
Scholtz was in possession of the contact details of customers of his ex -
Scholtz was in possession of the contact details of customers of his ex -
employers; that he contacted them upon taking up employment with 4PL Africa;
1 Experian South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Haynes 2013 (1) SA 135 especially paras 21-22
2 Den Braven SA (Pty) Ltd v Pillay 2008 (6) SA 229 (D) paras 42-47.
3 Experian South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Haynes 2013 (1) SA 135 para 59
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Date of hearing: 4 August 2025
Date of judgment: 4 August 2025
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For the applicants for leave to appeal:
For the respondents in the application
for leave to appeal:
G Elliott SC instructed by Maurice
Phillips Wisenberg
M Lennox instructed by DH Hinrichsen
Attorneys Inc.