DW Intergrators CC and SAS Institute (Pty) Ltd (14/IR/Nov99) [2000] ZACT 16 (1 May 2000)

70 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Interim relief — Application for interim relief under Section 59 of the Competition Act — Claimant, DW Integrators CC, alleges exclusion from the market by SAS Institute (Pty) Ltd, a dominant firm, due to refusal to issue a software licence — Claimant asserts violations of Sections 8(b) and 8(c) of the Competition Act — Tribunal must determine existence of a prohibited practice, risk of irreparable harm, and balance of convenience — Tribunal finds that claimant has not sufficiently established the balance of convenience, resulting in dismissal of the application for interim relief.

COMPETITION TRIBUNAL
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case Number: 14/IR/NOV99
In the matter between
DW Integrators CC Claimant
and 
SAS Institute (Pty) Ltd                                                                                     Respondent   
                                                                                                    
Decision on Application for Interim Relief in terms of Section 59  
of the Competition Act, 89 OF 1998 
________________________________________________________
________
Introduction
1. This case is concerned with the complex interface between anti­trust  
and intellectual property – we are being asked, in the name of anti­
trust, to oblige the respondent, SAS Institute (SAS), a large software  
firm   and   an   uncontested   owner   of   valuable   intellectual   property,   to  
issue   a   licence   in   its   intellectual   property   to   the   claimant,   DW  
Integrators   (DWI),   a   firm   that   provides   consulting   services   to   the  
licensees of SAS software programs.   The services provided by DWI  
and other service providers essentially enable SAS’s clients to adapt  
the SAS software to their specific needs.   The claimant avers that it  
cannot   provide   its   services   effectively   without   itself   possessing   a  
licence in SAS software and that SAS, by refusing to issue a licence to  
DWI, is preventing the latter from participating in the market.
2. In other words, the claimant avers that it is being excluded from the  
market by acts perpetrated by a dominant firm and, accordingly, that  
the respondent is in violation of Section 8(c) of  the Competition  Act  
which provides that it is an offence for a dominant firm to engage in an  
exclusionary act if the anti­competitive effects of that act outweigh any

associated efficiency gains.   Moreover, the claimant alleges that the  
respondent’s   software   to   which,   it   claims,   it   is   denied   access,   is   an  
essential   facility   insofar   as   it   is,   in   the   words   of   the   Act,   ‘an  
infrastructure or resource that  cannot  reasonably be duplicated,  and  
without access to which competitors cannot reasonably provide goods  
or services to their customers’.  Accordingly, the claimant alleges that  
the respondent has thereby placed itself in violation of Section 8(b) of  
the   Act,   which   prohibits   a   dominant   firm   from   denying   a   competitor  
access  to  an essential facility.  A  violation of Section 8(b) cannot be  
countervailed by efficiency gains – it is, in other words,  per se  illegal.
3. The   claimant   has   submitted   a   complaint   along   these   lines   to   the  
Competition   Commission.     In   addition,   the   claimant   has   asked   the  
Tribunal   to   make   an   order   in   terms   of   Section   59   that   will,   in   the  
interim, provide relief from the transgressions allegedly perpetrated by  
the respondent.  This is the matter with which the Tribunal is presently  
seized. In order to grant interim relief the Tribunal must be satisfied  
that a restrictive practice exists; that, in the absence of an order, the  
claimant will incur irreparable harm or that the purposes of the Act will  
be frustrated; and that the balance of convenience favours the granting  
of an order.  The Tribunal must be satisfied on all three counts failing  
which it is not entitled to make an order in terms of Section 59.
Background
4. The respondent, SAS Institute (Pty) Ltd, is a locally registered wholly­
owned subsidiary of the SAS Institute Incorporated, a private company  
incorporated in the USA, and is the licensed South African distributor  
of its US parent’s software. The software in which SAS specializes is  
known as information delivery software. This type of software is used

known as information delivery software. This type of software is used  
to store and manage large sets of data and is typically licensed to large  
companies who pay initial licence fees that often run into millions of  
rands.  
5. DWI describes information delivery software as a specialized product  
that should be distinguished from three other categories of software:  
Personal   productivity   software,   operational   application   software   and  
transactional   database   software.   Moreover,   DWI   alleges   that   SAS  
software   is   unique.   It   relies   on   SAS’s   marketing   material   for  
substantiation of this contention. For example, it quotes SAS’s claims  
that SAS is the “only end­to­end solution for managing, organising and  
exploiting data throughout your business” and that SAS “provides the  
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only suite of tools that allows administration of data warehouses across  
the enterprise”.   
6. In   1995   DWI’s   predecessor   began   providing   consulting   services   to  
licensed users of SAS software in South Africa following suggestions  
to this effect by SAS. These services included advising on the use of  
SAS   software,   installing   and   customising   the   software,   developing  
turnkey   applications   to   be   used   in   conjunction   with   the   software,  
providing general support services for the software, and training staff in  
the use of the software. 
7. SAS and DWI formalised their relationship in 1996 by entering into a  
‘Quality Partner Agreement’ the purpose of which, as recorded in the  
preamble to the agreement, was to form the basis of a close working  
relationship   between   the   parties.   On   the   one   hand,   the   agreement  
bestowed certain privileges on DWI as a quality partner. For example,  
SAS   undertook   in   the   agreement   to   recommend   the   consulting  
services of quality partners to its customers and agreed to give quality  
partners   access   to   its   customer   mailing   lists.   On   the   other   hand,   it  
contained provisions aimed at ensuring that the quality partner’s staff  
were   properly   trained   and   provided   a   satisfactory   service   to   SAS  
licensees.   The   agreement   was   valid   for   1   year,   renewable   by  
agreement.   Either   party   could   terminate   the   agreement   on   30   days  
written notice.
8. The   Quality   Partner   Agreement   was   conditional   on   DWI’s   holding   a  
valid   licence   for   SAS   software   in   terms   of   a   SAS’s   master   licence  
agreement.   DWI   duly   concluded   a   software   licence   agreement   with  
SAS in August 1996.
9. In   August   1997,   SAS   advised   DWI   that   it   would   be   terminating   the  
Quality Partner Agreement with effect from 5 September 1997.   In its

Quality Partner Agreement with effect from 5 September 1997.   In its  
letter   of   termination,   SAS   ascribed   its   decision   to   terminate   the  
agreement to “…unwarranted, unfounded, incorrect and unprofessional  
and   slanderous   statements   [by]   DW   Integrators’   directors   and  
contractors, with regard to SAS’s employees, products and services.”  
The letter further stated that various statements made by DWI’s staff  
were having a negative effect on the SAS Institute’s relationship with  
its customers. DWI in turn attributed the breakdown in its relationship  
with SAS to three factors: first, that SAS was unhappy with the fact that  
DWI was advising clients to buy only those modules of SAS software  
that   met   the   clients’   technology   requirements,   and   not   the   full   SAS  
software   suite;   second,   that   DWI   was   advising   clients   to   buy   the  
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software   products   of   SAS’s   competitors   in   cases   where,   in   DWI’s  
opinion, the alternative software better suited the needs of the clients;  
third,   that   SAS   started   providing   comprehensive   support   services  
directly   to   licensees,   and   thus   began   to   feel   threatened   by   DWI  
because   it   considered   DWI   to   be   its   competitor   in   the   market   for  
support services. 
10. SAS denied these allegations.   It submitted that in principle it did not  
object to DWI’s recommending other software than SAS software, but  
questioned DWI’s competence to do so given the fact that DWI staff  
were not conversant with the full range of SAS’s software. In addition,  
it denied that it intended competing in the market for support services,  
stating that it considered the provision of consulting or support services  
not to be its core preferred business. It pointed out that there were a  
number   of   other   consulting   firms   providing   similar   services   to   DWI  
whose   participation   in  the   market   SAS  did  not   object   to   and   in  fact  
encouraged.
11. Following attempts by DWI to convince SAS to restore DWI’s status as  
a quality partner in terms of the original agreement between them, SAS  
proposed a new draft Quality Partner Agreement, which DWI refused  
to   sign   because   it   felt   that   its   terms   were   anticompetitive   and  
threatened   DWI’s   independence   as   a   software   consultant.   For  
example, the  new  draft  required the  quality partner  to  promote  SAS  
software   and   to   submit   to   SAS   for   prior   review   and   approval   all   its  
advertising   and   other   promotional   and   display   material   relating   to  
services in support of SAS software.  
      
12. A few months later, SAS cancelled its software licence agreement with  
DWI   after   DWI   had   failed   to   pay   its   licence   fees   despite   several

DWI   after   DWI   had   failed   to   pay   its   licence   fees   despite   several  
reminders. The parties are at odds as to whether SAS’s cancellation  
complied with the terms of the licence agreement. At any rate, DWI  
tried to convince SAS to change its mind and tendered payment of the  
licence fee. SAS, however, rejected DWI’s late payment stating that it  
would   not   accept   payment   “prior   to   being   convinced   that   DWI’s  
business   supported   the   best   interests   of   SAS   Institute”.   DWI  
interpreted   this   statement   to   support   its   contention   that   SAS   was  
denying DWI a licence in order to exclude it from the market unless it  
agreed to go along with the allegedly anticompetitive terms of SAS’s  
new draft Quality Partner Agreement.     
13. DWI   maintains   that   without   a   SAS   software   licence   it   is   unable   to  
provide   adequate   consulting   services   to   its   clients.   It   alleges   that  
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access to its clients’ software is scant consolation, since its clients do  
not   always   have   spare   computers   available   for   DWI   consultants   to  
work on. Furthermore, it says that without its own licence it is unable to  
run training courses for its consultants, which impairs its ability to keep  
its consultants properly trained. As a result, it runs the risk of losing  
some of its clients.                
Interim Relief
14. As   mentioned   above,   the   Tribunal   may   only   grant   an   interim   relief  
order in terms of Section 59 if it is satisfied that a prohibited practice  
has occurred, that an interim order is necessary to prevent irreparable  
harm or to prevent the purposes of the Act from being frustrated, and  
that   the   balance   of   convenience   favours   the   granting   of   the   order.  
Once the Tribunal has determined that each of these conditions has  
been   met,   it   may   grant   an   order   for   interim   relief   although   it   must  
ensure that the terms of the order are indeed interim in nature, that is  
that they do not inadvertently have final effect.
15. The   respondent   pointed   out   that   the   claimant   had   not   made   any  
allegation   in   its   founding   affidavit   in   respect   of   the   balance   of  
convenience and argued that the application should fail on this ground  
alone. While it is striking that the claimant failed to deal with this very  
important interim relief requirement explicitly, we are of the opinion that  
we have been given enough general information in this case to form an  
opinion in respect of this requirement. We are therefore not prepared  
to dismiss the claimant’s application merely because it failed to aver  
that the balance of convenience was in its favour.        
16. Per   definition   an   application   for   interim   relief   is   decided   without   the  
advantage   of   a   full   investigation   by   the   Competition   Commission.

advantage   of   a   full   investigation   by   the   Competition   Commission.  
Moreover,   although   not   precluded   from   hearing   oral   evidence,   in  
proceedings of this nature the Tribunal is, for the most part, obliged to  
base its decision on the papers submitted.  Adjudication on contested  
evidence generally requires the benefit of the full investigation and the  
taking of oral evidence and this limits the Tribunal to a decision based  
on uncontested evidence contained in the papers.
17. Accordingly,   the   Tribunal   will   not   grant   interim   relief   lightly.     The  
evidence upon which it must rely is limited, and, although underpinned  
by   a   rich   legal   and   economic   theory,   anti­trust   adjudication   is  
enormously influenced  by  the  facts  particular  to each  case.   This is  
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particularly   so   when   efficiency   arguments   have   to   be   evaluated   as  
provided for in Section 8(c).  Conversely, when, as in Section 8(b), no  
defence   is   provided   for,   the   Tribunal   is   required   to   be   particularly  
confident of its facts before granting interim relief.   Interim relief is a  
powerful   instrument   of   the   Competition   Act,   and   though   of   vital  
importance   in   the   context   of   anti­trust   enforcement,   must   be  
approached with care.
18. Caution   is   particularly   well­advised   when   dealing   with   the   interface  
between anti­trust and intellectual property. We concur with the much­
cited decision in   Atari Games Corporation v Nintendo of America Inc  
(897   F.2d   1572   (Fed.   Cir.   1990),   which   warns   that   “the   danger   of  
disturbing   the   complementary   balance   struck   by   Congress   is   great  
when a court is asked to preliminarily enjoin conduct affecting patent  
and   antitrust   rights.     A   preliminary   injunction   entered   into   without   a  
sufficient factual basis and findings, though intended to maintain the  
status quo, can offend the public policies embodied in both the patent  
and anti­trust laws.” (at 1577). 
Arguments in Limine
19. The respondent raised a number of points   in limine   in the answering  
affidavit filed in its defence. It has persevered with only two of these  
points.     Firstly,   it   objects   to   the   claimant’s   software   importation   and  
distribution activities, which it alleges are activities that fall beyond the  
scope   of   the   claimant’s   founding   statement.   It   contends   that   the  
claimant’s   present   application   is   aimed   at   protecting   these  
unauthorised activities and consequently that if we were to allow the  
application we would be encouraging the claimant to continue to act  
beyond its chosen scope. This is clearly not the case. The claimant’s

beyond its chosen scope. This is clearly not the case. The claimant’s  
importation   and   distribution   activities   have   no   bearing   on   the   relief  
sought   in   this   application.   If   we   were   to   find   that   the   respondent’s  
refusal to licence is an infringement of the Competition Act, our finding  
would stand irrespective of whether the claimant is engaging in other  
activities not covered by its founding statement. 
20. The respondent’s second point  in limine  is the argument that because  
the   claimant’s   request   for   the   renewal   of   the  licence   and   for   a  new  
licence was made and rejected before 1 September 1999, the date on  
which   the   Competition   Act   came   into   operation,   the   Competition  
Tribunal   has   no   jurisdiction   to   hear   this   application.       We   are   not  
persuaded by this argument either.   The alleged anti­trust violation –  
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the respondent’s refusal to grant a licence – is ongoing and therefore  
falls   within   the   jurisdiction   of   the   competition   authorities   under   the  
Competition Act. It is irrelevant when the respondent first refused to  
grant a licence or what form the refusal took – the refusal continues.
The Continued Validity of the Licence Agreement 
21. The   principal   relief   that   the   claimant   seeks   from   the   Tribunal   is   a  
declaration that the licence agreement which the respondent refused to  
renew remains in full force and effect and is binding upon the claimant  
and respondent, provided the claimant pays the relevant licence fee.  
To grant an order in these terms, the Tribunal would have to find that  
the respondent’s refusal to renew the licence constituted a breach of  
contract.   An   enquiry   into   whether   the   respondent   breached   the  
contract is not a competition law enquiry. The competition law issue  
here is rather whether the  respondent’s  refusal  to  grant the  licence,  
whether by way of renewal of the existing licence or the issuing of a  
new one, is an abuse of dominance in terms of the relevant provisions  
of Section 8 of the Act. If we find that Section 8 has been transgressed,  
we could order that the respondent be granted a licence, but we could  
not declare that this should be by way of renewal of the existing licence  
agreement rather than under a new licence agreement.  
Abuse of a Dominant Position – the relevant market
22. We are then left with the allegation that the respondent, by refusing to  
enter  into  a  new   licence   agreement,   is  abusing   a  dominant   position  
and   this   in   two   ways:   firstly,   by   perpetrating   an   exclusionary   act   in  
violation   of   8(c);   secondly,   by   denying   the   claimant   access   to   an  
essential facility in violation of 8(b).
23. A   necessary   preliminary   in   establishing   abuse   of   dominance,   is

23. A   necessary   preliminary   in   establishing   abuse   of   dominance,   is  
establishing dominance and, in order to do this, the relevant market  
has to be identified.  The evidence and arguments of the parties is not  
helpful in identifying the relevant market with the requisite degree of  
confidence. In interim relief proceedings where, without the benefit of  
the Commission’s investigation, the views of the parties are all that the  
Tribunal has to rely upon, the effect of the inability of the parties to  
establish the relevant market is particularly debilitating.
 
24. The   claimant   holds   that   the   relevant   market   is   the   market   for  
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information   delivery   software   and,   conceivably,   because   of   the  
allegedly unique qualities of the respondents product, the market for  
SAS   information   delivery   software.   The   claimant   claims   that   the  
respondent   is   dominant   in   the   former   market   –   the   market   for  
information   delivery   software   ­both   internationally   and   domestically;  
and obviously that it is a monopolist in the latter market, the market for  
SAS information delivery software. It then identifies a ‘sub­market’ ­ the  
market for   servicing  SAS information delivery software ­ arguing that  
SAS is leveraging its monopoly, or, alternatively, its dominant position  
in the primary market in order to limit competition in the ‘sub­market’.
25. Little   concrete   evidence   is   presented   in   support   of   these   various  
claims.   We   reject   the   contention   that     SAS   is   a   monopolist.     It   is  
common   cause   that   there   are   other   information   delivery   software  
products   available.     While   we   are   prepared   to   accept   that   none   of  
these   are   homogenous   ‘commodity­type’   products   and   that   the  
commercial   strategy   of   participants   in   this   market   is   to   continually  
distinguish, primarily through innovation, its particular offering from that  
of its competitors, we have no reason to believe that these products  
cannot  be  substituted  for each  other.   The evidence relied upon for  
asserting   the   uniqueness   (read   ‘monopoly   position’)   of   the   SAS  
product are the boasts made in SAS promotional literature, where, per  
definition, SAS would be most inclined (and feel most free) to proclaim  
the technological uniqueness of its product.
26. That   having   been   said,   SAS   clearly   occupies   an   important   place   –  
indeed   the   pre­eminent   place   –   in   the   global   market   for   information

indeed   the   pre­eminent   place   –   in   the   global   market   for   information  
delivery   software.     The   claimant,   drawing   once   more   on   SAS  
promotional  literature, mentions a figure of 50%.   This  is called  into  
question by the respondent’s rejoinder to the effect that this figure only  
incorporates   the   market   shares   of   those   firms   dedicated   to   the  
production   of   information   delivery   software   and,   accordingly,   that   it  
does not include the market shares of some very powerful firms – IBM  
for   example   –   who   produce   a   wider   range   of   software.     While   the  
respondent has been extremely imprecise in its rejoinder, by pointing  
to the casual basis whereby the claimants have arrived at the figure of  
50%, the real possibility that the actual figure falls below 45% must be  
considered.   This is important because immediately the market share  
falls below 45%, the Act requires an assessment of market power in  
order   to   make   a   finding   of   dominance.     While   again   less   than  
absolutely  conclusive,   the  respondent’s  argument   calls  into  question  
the contention that SAS exercises market power.   We are impressed  
by   the   respondent’s   uncontested   claim   that   information   delivery  
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software is accounting for a rapidly growing share of the total software  
market   and,   accordingly,   that   this   will   attract   the   attention   of   other  
software firms.  When one considers the resources – both financial and  
human capital – available in this industry and the consequent likelihood  
of  rapid  new   entry,   it  seems  unlikely  that  SAS  would be  capable  of  
exercising   market   power.     In   the   absence   of   market   power,   the  
claimant would, in order to establish dominance, have to demonstrate  
conclusively that SAS’s international market share exceeds 45%.  We  
do not believe that the claimant has discharged this onus where the  
international market is concerned.
27. The claimant appears to be on stronger ground when they argue that  
SAS accounts for a share of the local market for information delivery  
software   considerably   in   excess   of   50%.     While   the   respondent’s  
rejoinder to the effect that SAS occupied a small share of the potential  
information   delivery   software   market   is   rejected     (market   share   is  
properly identified in relation to the   existing  not to the unquantifiable  
potential market), we are not satisfied that the claimant has discharged  
its onus to establish conclusively the respondent’s share of the South  
African market.  However, more damaging to the claimant’s argument  
is its failure to establish the relevance of the South African, as opposed  
to   the   international,   market   for   information   delivery   software.       The  
nature of the product, the scale of the individual licence contracts, and  
the   scale   and   multinational   character   of   the   typical   customer   for  
information   delivery   software   suggests   that   the   search,   by   the  
customer, for the best and most cost­efficient product is not likely to  
stop at South Africa’s borders – in other words we have no reason to  
believe that there is a national market for information delivery software

believe that there is a national market for information delivery software  
and every reason to believe that it is a global or international market  
that is relevant for the purposes of this enquiry.
  
28. The   respondent,   for   its   part,   holds   that   the   market   for   servicing 
information delivery software in South Africa is relevant.   It points out  
that it does not compete with the claimant in the market for information  
delivery software, but only in the South African market for the servicing  
of this software.  The respondent points out that in this market – even if  
confined to the servicing of SAS information delivery software alone –  
the respondent, far from being dominant, has a smaller market share  
than the claimant.
29. We   do   not   accept   the   respondent’s   argument   here.     An   abuse   of  
dominance is generally perpetrated by a dominant firm in a particular  
market vis­ à­vis customers or suppliers in markets down or upstream  
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of the market in which the alleged perpetrator is dominant.   In other  
words   to   establish   dominance   in   the   market   for   information   delivery  
software   would   be   a   legitimate   basis   for   examining   possible   abuse  
downstream in the servicing of this software. The question of course is  
whether dominance has been established in the relevant global market  
for information delivery software.   As already elaborated, we are not  
satisfied that this has been established.
30. There is one remaining issue relevant to the question of establishing  
dominance and that concerns the claimant’s argument that, because it  
has established itself as a specialist service provider for SAS software,  
the respondent effectively enjoys the power of a monopolist in relation  
to the claimant, regardless of whether SAS is actually in a monopoly  
position in relation to the market for information delivery software (it  
clearly   is   not)   or,   indeed,   whether   it   is   dominant   in   the   market   for  
information   delivery   software   (which   we   conclude   has   not   been  
conclusively established).  We have to tread carefully here.  Were this  
argument to be accepted too easily it would in effect mean that any  
distributor   or   supplier   or   service   provider   that   attached   itself   to   a  
particular   brand   would   be   absolved   of   the   necessity   to   establish  
dominance,   but   would   simply   have   to   establish   that   an   abuse   took  
place.   A similar argument is raised in the case of franchising where  
the cost to the franchisee of switching from an established franchise  
into   a   new   franchise   relationship   is   prohibitive,   thus   according   the  
existing franchisor effective dominance, despite the putative existence  
of alternative franchising opportunities. This is referred to as ‘relational  
dominance’.   It   is   a   controversial   concept.   The   US   courts   have   for

dominance’.   It   is   a   controversial   concept.   The   US   courts   have   for  
instance   not   developed   a   clear   and   unambiguous   approach   to   this  
issue. See for example  Siegel v Chicken Delight  664 F.2d 43 (9 th Cir.  
1971),   in   which   the   court   based   its   analysis   on   a   market   narrowly  
defined as the franchisor’s line and the subsequent US Supreme Court  
decision in  Eastman Kodak Co. v Image Technical Services , Inc. 504  
US 451, 467 – 79 (1992), in which the court recognised that switching  
costs could limit the relevant market to the seller’s line of products. In  
contrast, the courts in a number of more recent cases have interpreted  
the   Kodak   decision   narrowly   and   have   refused   to   accept   a   market  
definition   limited   to   the   franchisor’s   product   line   –   see   for   instance  
Digital Equipment v Uniq Digital Tech  73 F. 3d 756, 762 (7 th Cir. 1996)  
and   other   cases   surveyed   in   McDavid   and   Steuer’s   article   in   the  
Antitrust   Law   Journal,   vol.   67   of   1999).     Although   the   concept   of  
‘relational   dominance’   might   possibly   be   applicable   in   this   case,   we  
have not been provided with either a sufficient factual or conceptual  
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basis   to   identify   dominance   purely   on   the   basis   of   the   relationship  
between the parties.
  
31. Our conclusion then is that dominance has not been established in the  
market for information delivery software, and nor has dominance been  
established   in   the   relationship   between   the   parties.     There   is  
accordingly   no   further   basis   for   examining   the   alleged   restrictive  
practice   because   it   is   framed   as   an   abuse   of   a   dominant   position.  
Accordingly, the application for interim relief is dismissed because it  
has failed to establish the existence of a restrictive practice.
Irreparable harm/frustrating the purposes of the Act
32. The claimant’s failure to establish dominance, much less an abuse of  
the   dominance   alleged,   means   that   the   Tribunal   is   not   required   to  
examine   the   additional   conditions   that   must   be   established   if   the  
Tribunal is to grant interim relief.  We note, however, that the claimant  
has   equally   failed   to   establish   that,   in   the   absence   of   interim   relief,  
irreparable   harm   will   result   or   that   the   purpose   of   the   Act   will   be  
frustrated.
33. There   is   clear   evidence   to   the   effect   that   successful   providers   of  
services to SAS clients operate without the benefit of a licence.  These  
providers   use   the   software   licences   of   their   clients   to   provide   the  
required   service.   There   is,   to   be   sure,   evidence   that   the   lack   of   a  
licence   will   inconvenience   DWI.     Its   ability   to   provide   training   to   its  
consultants   may   suffer   somewhat   as   will   its   ability   to   provide  
emergency services.  However, should this matter come to full trial and  
should the claimants prevail at that stage, the inconvenience will be  
temporary.  What is clear is that the claimant is, in the interim, capable

temporary.  What is clear is that the claimant is, in the interim, capable  
of carrying out its core service functions and that it is, in fact, presently  
providing   these   services   to   its   clients.   Establishing   irreparable   harm  
requires   stronger   evidence   than   this.   The   claimant   itself   makes   the  
highly qualified claim that, absent an order for interim relief,  ‘there is a  
very real risk that that the claimant  may breach a contract with a client,  
which   could  result in such client electing to cancel the contract’.   We  
concur with this assessment of the potential harm and it falls well short  
of what the Tribunal requires to make a finding of irreparable harm. 
34. Nor has the claimant established that the purposes of the Act will be  
frustrated.  This, too, is a sterner test than that apparently assumed by  
the   claimant.     It   requires   more   than   a   simple   restatement   of   the  
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purposes   of   the   Act   and   an   accompanying   assertion   that   the  
respondent’s   actions   are   at   odds   with   these   purposes.     It   requires  
tangible, demonstrative evidence that the administration and reputation  
of the Act will be compromised by a failure to obtain interim relief. The  
claimant has not discharged this onus.
Finding and order
35. The claimant’s request for interim relief is dismissed. 
36. The   claimant   is   ordered   to   pay   the   respondent’s   costs   in   the  
application   on   the   scale   as   between   party   and   party,   including   the  
costs of one counsel and one attorney.
 
___________________________ ________________
D.H. Lewis Date
Presiding Member
Concurring: M.G. Holden and U. Bhoola
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