Pharmaceutical Wholesalers and Glaxo Wellcome (2) (68/IR/JUN00) [2003] ZACT 37 (18 June 2003)

70 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition Law — Exclusive Distribution Agreements — Application for interim relief by pharmaceutical wholesalers against manufacturers establishing a joint exclusive distribution agency — Wholesalers alleged that the exclusive distribution arrangement constituted a horizontal restrictive practice in violation of competition law — Application for interim relief dismissed as the Tribunal found no grounds for the relief sought, affirming the legality of the distribution arrangement under the applicable competition legislation.

THE COMPETITION TRIBUNAL 
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NO: 68/IR/JUN 00
In the matter between:
National Association of Pharmaceutical Wholesalers 1st Applicant
Natal Wholesale Chemists (Proprietary) Limited
t/a Alpha Pharm Durban 2nd Applicant
Midlands Wholesale Chemists (Proprietary) Limited
t/a Alpha Pharm Pietermaritzburg 3rd Applicant
East Cape Pharmaceuticals Limited
t/a Alpha Pharm Eastern Cape 4th Applicant
Free State Buying Association Limited 5th Applicant
Pharmed Pharmaceuticals Limited 6th Applicant
L'Etangs Wholesale Chemist CC t/a L'Etangs 7th Applicant
Resepkor (Proprietary) Limited t/a Reskor 8th Applicant
Pharmaceutical Wholesalers Mainstreet 2 (Proprietary) 
Limited t/a New United Pharmaceutical Distributors 9th Applicant 
AND
Glaxo Wellcome (Proprietary) Limited 1st Respondent
Pfizer Laboratories (Proprietary) Limited 2nd Respondent
Pharmacare Limited 3rd Respondent
Smithkline Beecham Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) 
Limited 4th Respondent
Warner Lambert SA (Proprietary) Limited 5th Respondent
Synergistic Alliance Investments (Proprietary) Limited 6th Respondent
Druggists Distributors (Proprietary) Limited 7th Respondent
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DECISION AND ORDER
INTRODUCTION 
1. This   is   an   application   for   interim   relief   by   nine   full­line   wholesale  
distributors of pharmaceutical products.   Five of the respondents are  
pharmaceutical   manufacturers   and   importers   (“the   manufacturers”)  
who have established a joint exclusive distribution agency (“EDA”) for  
their   products.     The   first,   second,   fourth   and   fifth   respondents   are  
multinational producers of ethical or patented pharmaceutical products.  
The   third   respondent,   Pharmacare,   is   the   largest   South   African  
producer of generic pharmaceutical products. The sixth respondent is a  
company   formed   by   the   manufacturers   to   establish   the   distribution  
agency; the distribution agency is the seventh respondent. This is in  
fact a re­hearing of an earlier interim relief application decided in 2000  
which was sent back to the Tribunal by the Competition Appeal Court  
(“CAC”) on review 1.  
2. During   the   course   of   these   proceedings,   certain   of   the  
pharmaceutical companies have merged. Specifically, the 1 st 
and   4 th  respondents   merged   to   form   GlaxoSmithKline  
(“GSK”) and the 2 nd and 5 th respondents merged to form the  
Pfizer  Pharmaceutical Group (“Pfizer”). There are therefore  
now   three   manufacturers   party   to   this   application,   GSK,  
Pfizer and Aspen Pharmacare (“Pharmacare”). 
3. The   ninth   complainant,     New   United   Pharmaceutical   Distributors  
(“NUPD”),   has   recently   been   acquired   by   Clicks   Pharmaceutical  
Wholesalers   (“CPW”).   An   application   was   made   to   substitute   NUPD  
with CPW at the commencement of the hearing. This application was  
unopposed and is accordingly granted.
FINDING
4. The   application   for   interim   relief   is   dismissed.   The   reasons   for   this  
decision follow.
1  The Tribunal decision was reported under 68/IR/Jun00 and the CAC decision under 03/CAC/Oct00
2

APPLICATION TO RE­OPEN HEARINGS
5. This   matter   was   heard   on   the   18­20   March   2003.     Judgment   was  
reserved.
6. On the 30 April 2003 the applicants filed an application to re­open the
hearings.     This   application   was   brought   in   response   to   the  
promulgation on the 28 March 2003 of Proclamation Numbers R23 and  
R24 in Government Gazette No. 24627 that determined the dates on  
which various amendments to the Medicines and Related Substances  
Act 101 of 1965 would come into force.
7. This application is dismissed.  Reasons are provided below.
BACKGROUND
8. In   South   Africa   the   pharmaceutical   wholesalers   have   traditionally  
effected   the   distribution   of   pharmaceutical   products   from   the  
manufacturers   to   the   retail   pharmacies.   That   is   to   say,   specialist  
pharmaceutical wholesalers purchased pharmaceutical  products from  
the   manufacturers   and   then   on­sold   these   to   retail   pharmacies   and  
other small purchasers.   Although there was some slight variance in  
the discount extended by the manufacturers to the wholesalers, it is  
common cause that the standard rate of discount was 17,5% off the  
manufacturers’   list   price.     The  wholesalers  retained   a  portion  of   this  
discount, the difference between their purchasing price and their selling  
price constituting their trading margin.   While there again appears to  
have   been   some   variance   in   the   size   of   this   trading   margin,   the  
standard range appears to have been approximately 5%­7%.  Note that  
the   full­line   wholesalers   traded   in   all   products   traditionally   available  
from   retail   pharmacists   –   hence   the   appellation   ‘full­line’   ­   including  
ethical   pharmaceutical   products,   over­the­counter   pharmaceutical  
products   and   a   range   of   fast   moving   consumer   goods.     Strictly  
speaking   then   the   pharmaceutical   wholesalers   specialized   in   the

speaking   then   the   pharmaceutical   wholesalers   specialized   in   the  
wholesaling of the full range of products traditionally stocked by retail  
pharmacies,   including,   but   not   limited   to,   ethical   pharmaceutical  
products.
9. In 1997 the manufacturers in this matter came together under the code  
name “Project Nasa” with the intention of establishing a joint EDA for  
their products.  This followed on the heels of the formation by several  
other   pharmaceutical   majors   of   International   Healthcare   Distributors  
(IHD),   an   exclusive   distribution   agency   for   the   products   of   its  
shareholders.   In   1998   the   members   of   Project   NASA   established   a  
company called Synergistic Alliance Investment (“SAI”).
10. In   February   1999,   the   erstwhile   Competition   Board   (‘the   Board’)  
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announced   that,   pursuant   to   the   complaint   submitted   by   the  
wholesalers against IHD as well as an application for exemption by the  
respondents in this matter, it would conduct a formal investigation into  
EDAs in the pharmaceutical industry. It appears that the respondents –  
then   the   members   of   Project   NASA   –   were   concerned   that   their  
intention to impose standard credit and certain other trading terms on  
their customers through the medium of their planned joint distribution  
arrangement   would   fall   foul   of   the   prohibition   on   collusive   horizontal  
agreements and so sought exemption for this aspect of their intended  
arrangement from the Board.
11. The Board released its findings in May 1999 (“Report 75”). It found that  
a joint exclusive distribution agency for pharmaceutical products would  
constitute   a   horizontal   restrictive   practice   prohibited   by   the  
Maintenance   and   Promotion   of   Competition   Act   (‘the   old   Act’).   The  
Board   found   that   the   formation   of   a   joint   EDA   in   this   market   would  
contravene the old Act. 
12. The   Board   accordingly   recommended   that   the   identified   restrictive  
practice be cured by way of a section 11 arrangement between itself  
and the manufacturers. Failing a section 11 arrangement,  the Board  
recommended that the Minister of Trade and Industry, acting in terms  
of   section   14(1)   of   the   old   Act,   should   declare   the   conduct   of   the  
manufacturers unlawful. In addition the Board recommended that the  
Minister request the Competition Commission to investigate the alleged  
horizontal restrictive practice between the manufacturers. The Minister  
decided not to implement the recommendation of the Board to declare  
exclusive distribution agencies in the pharmaceutical industry unlawful.  
He felt that the matter would be more effectively dealt with in terms of  
the then pending new Competition Act.

the then pending new Competition Act.    
13. In   March   2000,   SAI   announced   that   it   would   proceed   to  
acquire   Druggist Distributors   (“DD”), one of the wholesale  
distributors, in order to convert DD into an EDA, or, into what  
it   terms,   an   ‘integrated   logistics   service   provider’   for   SAI  
members.   This   took   effect   on   29   May   2000.     Accordingly,  
with   the   conversion,   DD   –   which   was   renamed   Kinesis  
Logistics (Pty) Ltd (“Kinesis”)   as at the conversion date ­  
went from being a   wholesaler, owning its stock and trading  
on   its   own   account,   to   an   agency   distributor   which  
distributed its principals’ stock at an agreed fee.  Note that, at  
the time, DD and the ninth complainant in this matter, United  
Pharmaceutical   Distributors   (UPD),   were   the   only   national 
full­line wholesalers in existence.
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14. The terms of the EDA provided that the shareholders of SAI  
would henceforth distribute all of their products through DD  
alone. This applied to all of their customers including retail  
pharmacists,   dispensing   doctors,   hospital   groups   and   the  
State.   Note   that   the   wholesalers   had  never   been   active   in  
distributing   pharmaceutical   products   to   the   large   hospital  
groups and the State – these were serviced directly by the  
manufacturers.  After DD’s conversion from a wholesaler into  
a distribution agent, Kinesis, ownership of the products sold  
through Kinesis remained with the manufacturer until the sale  
to   the   customer.   This,   we   emphasise,   contrasts   with   the  
wholesale   mode   of   distribution   where   the   wholesaler,   a  
trader, takes ownership of the product from the manufacturer.  
The wholesaler then on­sells these products to the retailer, in  
this way effecting the distribution of pharmaceutical products.  
In   addition   to   the   task   of   physical   distribution,   Kinesis  
performs   a   range   of   other   distribution   related   services  
including the taking of orders and collection of payment on  
behalf   of   the   manufacturers.   Kinesis   undertakes   these  
services  on  behalf   of  each  principal   in   exchange  for   a  fee  
agreed between each principal and the distribution agent. 
15. In May 2001 SAI was sold to  Tibbett and Britten  (“T&B”), a  
UK   logistics   services   provider.   Kinesis   is   a   wholly   owned  
subsidiary   of   SAI.   The   manufacturers   maintain   that   their  
relationships with their distribution agent are now governed  
by separate service level agreements concluded between the  
respective principals and T&B/Kinesis. 
16. The interim relief application before us originates in the decision of the  
manufacturers   in   this   matter   to   establish   and   utilize   an   exclusive  
distributor. On 7 June 2000 the applicants lodged their complaint with

distributor. On 7 June 2000 the applicants lodged their complaint with  
the   Commission   in   terms   of   the   then   section   44   of   the   Act.   They  
simultaneously filed an application for interim relief with the Tribunal on  
8 June 2000.  This application was made in terms of Section 59 of the  
Act, the then applicable section prior to the subsequent amendment to  
the Act. 2   
2  The Commission filed its complaint referral to the Tribunal shortly after the statutory period for the  
referral of complaints had expired. The respondents objected and the Commission withdrew its  
referral of the complaint, a deemed non­referral. On 19 June 2001, the Applicants referred their  
complaint directly to the Tribunal in terms of section 51(1) of the Act under case number 45/CR/Jul01.
5

17. This   interim   relief   matter   was   initially   heard   by   the   Tribunal   in   July  
2000. On 28 August 2000, the panel decided to award interim relief to  
the pharmaceutical wholesalers against the manufacturers in terms of  
section 4(1)(a). The Tribunal ordered as follow: 
1. “The applicants’ application for interim relief in terms of Section  
59 of the Competition Act, 89 of 1998 is granted in respect of  
the respondents’ alleged contravention of Section 4(1)(a) of the  
said Act. 
2. That   the   respondents   supply   their   products   directly   to   the  
complainant   and   other   wholesalers   on   terms   and   conditions  
similar to those that applied to transactions between them and  
the complainant and other wholesalers immediately before the  
conversion   of   DD   to   a   joint   exclusive   distribution   agency   for  
their products. 
3. That this order remains in force until the earlier of ­ 
3.1 the   conclusion   of   the   hearing   into   the   prohibited   practices  
alleged   by   the   applicants   to   have   been   committed   by   the  
respondents; or 
3.2 the date that is six months after the date of the issue of this  
order;
3.3 The respondents are ordered to pay the applicants’ costs in the  
application on the scale as between party and party, including  
the costs of two counsel and one attorney. “
18. The respondents  took this  decision  of the Tribunal  on review  to the CAC. 3  On  5  
September 2001 the CAC ordered that the Tribunal’s decision and order be set aside  
and that the matter be remitted to the Tribunal for further hearing. On behalf of the  
court   Selikowitz   AJA   (as   he   then   was)   found   that   the   order   was   vague   and  
embarrassing; that the manufacturers did not receive a fair hearing in respect of the  
relief that was ultimately granted; and that the order was overbroad. 
19. The intention was therefore to  “put the hearing back to the stage which

19. The intention was therefore to  “put the hearing back to the stage which  
had  been  reached  before the decision was  made”. Judge  Selikowitz  
stated that, in setting aside the decision and order in this matter, the  
proceedings   as   a   whole   were   not   invalidated.   In   his   judgment,   the  
learned Judge noted that:
“The Tribunal may… have to reconsider the matter and re-
3  03/CAC/Oct00
6

examine its factual findings in the light of further evidence and
the important developments that have come about since the
order was made….In addition the Tribunal may have to reapply
its mind to the evidence and decide whether or not the
Applicants have established a prohibited practice in terms of
sections 5,8 or 9-matters which have been raised or debated
but which in the light of its finding of a prohibited practice in
terms of section 4 have not yet been regarded as requiring a
determination by the Tribunal” 4
20. Note   that   the   sale   of   SAI   and   its   subsidiary,   Kinesis,   to   Tibbet   and  
Britten had taken place in the period between the Tribunal’s decision  
and the hearing of the review. On the face of it this development may  
impact on the Tribunal’s finding under Section 4(1)(a) and undoubtedly  
accounts for Judge Selikowitz’s reference to ‘important developments  
that have come about since the order was made’.  The learned Judge  
directed   the   Tribunal   to   decide   upon   further   procedural   steps   in   the  
setting down of the re­hearing.
21. At   a   pre­hearing   held   on   22   October   2001   it   was   agreed   that  
supplementary papers be filed to update the matter before the Tribunal.  
22. Lengthy supplementary filings ensued over a period of several months.  
The full record comprises the original interim relief application in 2000  
(the   “A”   files)   and   the   current   supplementary   papers   (the   “B”   files),  
totaling   more   than   8000   pages.   The   supplementary   papers   filed  
comprise   supplementary   founding   papers,   answering   papers   and  
replying   papers.   The   parties   were   also   given   leave   to   file   further  
documentation in the form of a rejoinder and surrejoinder. 
23. At a further pre­hearing held on 29 October 2002, it was agreed that  
the   Chairman   convene   a   new   panel   to   hear   the   matters   since   the  
original panel members were no longer available.

original panel members were no longer available.
APPLICABLE LEGISLATION
24. The   complaint   in   terms   of   which   this   application   for   interim   relief   is  
sought   was   filed   with   the   Commission   in   June   2000.   The   Act   was  
amended   in   February   2001 .   The   amendments   to   the   Act   have  
implications in the area of interim relief.   Which version of the Act is  
then applicable to the current proceedings?
25. Prior to the amendment of the Act, Section 59 provided: 
1. At any time, whether or not a hearing has commenced into an  
4  Page 36
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alleged prohibited practice, a person referred to in section 44  
may apply to the Competition Tribunal for an interim order in  
respect   of   that   alleged   practice,   and   the   Tribunal   may   grant  
such an order if –
a. there is evidence that a prohibited practice has occurred; 
b. an interim order is reasonably necessary to –
i. prevent serious, irreparable damage to that person; or
ii. to prevent the purposes of this Act being frustrated;
c. the respondent has been given a reasonable opportunity to  
be heard, having regard to the urgency of the proceedings;  
and 
d. the   balance   of   convenience   favours   the   granting   of   the  
order.
26. Section 49C of the amended Act provides: 
1. “At any time, whether or not a hearing has commenced  
into an alleged prohibited practice, the complainant may  
apply to the Competition Tribunal for an interim order in  
respect of that alleged practice.
2. The Competition Tribunal–
a. must   give   the   respondent   a   reasonable  
opportunity   to   be   heard,   having   regard   to   the  
urgency of the proceedings; and
b. may grant an interim order if it is reasonable and  
just   to   do   so,   having   regard   to   the   following  
factors:
i. the   evidence   relating   to   the   alleged   prohibited  
practice;
ii.the   need   to   prevent   serious   or   irreparable  
damage to the complainant; and
iii.the balance of convenience. 
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3. In any proceedings in terms of this section, the standard  
of proof is the same as the standard of proof in a High  
Court   on   a   common   law   application   for   an   interim  
interdict…”
27. In   particular   then   the   amendments   altered   the   standard   of   proof  
applicable in interim relief proceedings.   Prior to the amendment the  
standard of proof was on a balance of probabilities.   The amendment  
lowered   the   applicable   standard   of   proof   to   the   same   as   that   on   a  
common law application for an interim interdict.     This latter has been  
authoritatively   laid   down   as   ‘prima   facie   established   though   open   to  
some doubt’. 5     In addition the factors that need to be established in  
order to sustain a claim for interim relief were amended.  
28. Note also that the amended Act requires that we ‘have regard’ to three  
factors, namely, evidence relating to the alleged prohibited practice, the  
need   to   prevent   serious   or   irreparable   damage   and   the   balance   of  
convenience.  In other words, we are required to balance these factors  
– for example, if we decided that the applicant was unlikely to succeed  
at   the   final   hearing   (that   is,   if   evidence   of   a   restrictive   practice   was  
found wanting) we may still grant interim relief if we felt the damage to  
be   significant   and   the   balance   of   convenience   to   rest   firmly   with   a  
finding   in   favour   of   the   applicant.     By   the   same   token,   a   strong  
likelihood   of   success   may   counterbalance   unconvincing   evidence   of  
significant harm.   While this balancing will be borne in mind, we have  
held elsewhere that we would be extremely reluctant to grant interim  
relief   in   the  face  of   unconvincing  evidence  of  a  restrictive  practice. 6 
Harm to a market participant may be inflicted perfectly legitimately in  
the process of competition – hence, in our view, in an anti­trust case

the process of competition – hence, in our view, in an anti­trust case  
such as this a showing of harm, even considerable harm, is, on its own,  
not   sufficient,   because   to   respond   only   to   evidence   of   harm   may  
significantly   chill   the   competitive   process.     In   any   event,   as   will   be  
elaborated   below,   we   have   found   that   the   applicant   has   neither  
established evidence of a restrictive practice nor of significant harm .
29. We do not consider it necessary to make a finding on the applicable  
Act.   It   is   our   view   that   on   both   the   pre­amendment   and   post­
amendment   versions   of   the   Act,   the   applicants   fail   to   sustain   their  
claim.  We will however proceed on the assumption that the applicants’  
contention, namely that the amended Act applies, is correct.   
THE ALLEGED CONTRAVENTIONS AND THE RELIEF SOUGHT
30. The applicants have alleged contraventions of Sections 4 (‘horizontal  
54. Webster v Mitchell      1948 (1) SA 1186 (W)  
6  York Timbers Limited and South African Forestry Company Limited  15/IR/Feb01
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restrictive   practices’),   5   (‘vertical   restrictive   practices’),   8   (‘abuse   of  
dominance’) and 9 (‘price discrimination’) of the Act.
31. In its  original  Notice of  Motion,  filed on 8 June 2000,  the applicants  
sought the following relief:
 
“1 The   Applicants   are   hereby   granted   leave   to   bring   this  
application as a matter of urgency and to argue this matter on  
the same papers as were filed by the parties in Case Number  
53/IR/Apr00, which Application has been withdrawn.
2 The non­compliance  with the time  periods  be  and is  hereby  
condoned.
3 The Respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from  
converting the Seventh Respondent from a full­line wholesaler  
to an agency distributor.
4 The Respondents are ordered to terminate with immediate effect the  
exclusive agency distribution agreement between the Seventh Respondent and  
the First to Fifth Respondents.
5 The Respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from  
inducing   and/or   allowing   any   other   pharmaceutical  
manufacturer/importer to become a user or participant in the  
exclusive   agency   distribution   arrangement   that   Seventh  
Respondent has with the First to Fifth Respondents.
6 The   Respondents   are   hereby   interdicted   and   restrained   from  
forming   any   new   agency   distribution   firm   to   distribute   their  
products on an exclusive and/or discriminatory basis.
7 The   Respondents   are   hereby   interdicted   and   restrained   from  
acquiring   an   interest   in   an   existing   agency   distribution   firm,  
whether it is solely or jointly owned, or contracting with such  
10

firm or any of its parent firms, for the purposes of distributing  
their products on an exclusive and/or discriminatory basis.  
8 The   Respondents   are   ordered   to   continue   supplying   their  
products to the Applicants on terms and conditions identical to  
those given by Respondents to DD.
9 The   Seventh   Respondent   is   hereby   ordered   to   remain   an  
independent wholesaler in the market that neither accepts from,  
nor   grants   to,   the First to  Fifth  Respondents   any  commercial  
advantages   that   it   does   not   accept   from,   nor   grant   to,   other  
pharmaceutical manufacturers in equivalent transactions.
10 The  Respondents are hereby ordered:
10.1 to   advise   all   pharmacies,   doctors   or   other  
purchasers   that   have   been   informed   that   it   is   to  
commence   business   on   29   May   2000   as   an  
agency   distributor   that   this   will   no   longer   be   the  
position; and 
10.2not   to   make   any   further   representations   to  
pharmacists,   doctors   or   other   purchasers   of  
pharmaceutical   products   that   DD   will   act   as   agency  
distributor   on   behalf   of   the   First   to   Fifth  
Respondents…“
32. As already noted, the CAC reviewed   the decision of the previous Tribunal panel in  
this matter because it found the relief granted to be vague and embarrassing and  
overbroad.  The court also found that the relief actually granted departed to such an  
extent   from   the   relief   claimed   that   the   requirement   of   fairness   dictated   that   the  
respondents be given a prior opportunity to be heard in relation to the relief actually  
granted.
33. Under these circumstances one may have been entitled to expect the  
applicants’   supplementary   papers   to   evidence   particularly   close  
attention to the framing of the relief claimed.   Indeed if this were not  
11

sufficient   reason   to   focus   on   the   question   of   relief,   then   the   ‘further  
evidence and the important developments’ that had occurred since the  
initial   finding   and   specifically   alluded   to   by   the   Court   should   have  
alerted the applicants to the necessity to consider carefully the framing  
of the relief claimed.
34. However, far from producing greater clarity on the question of the appropriate relief,  
all   that   has   ensued   since   the   remittal   by   the   CAC   is   characterized   by   the   most  
unseemly confusion and vacillation, responsibility for which is to be laid firmly at the  
feet of the applicants.    In the applicants’ supplementary  papers submitted  for this  
hearing,   in  each  of the  two  versions  of  their  heads  of  argument  and  in  their  oral  
argument  we have been presented  with a range of alternative  options for relief –  
hence, we have  been told that the relief  specified  in the original  notice of motion  
applies;7  we have also been told that, despite the CAC’s strictures to the contrary,  
the claim for ‘further and/or alternative relief’ is a catch­all that effectively permits the  
Tribunal   to   grant   whatever   relief   it   deems   appropriate   as   long   as   it   affords   the  
respondents the opportunity to be heard on the precise formulation; 8 alternatively we  
have been presented with a bald claim for a restoration of the  status quo ante  and  
with an equally bald denial that a restoration of the  status quo ante  is sought; 9 at the  
beginning of the hearing, in response to a request by the panel to identify the relief  
sought, we were presented by the applicants’ counsel  with a precise formulation that  
purported to address the CAC finding that the relief was vague and embarrassing  
and   overbroad   and   that,  we   understood,   attempted   to   specify   appropriate   ‘further  
and/or alternative relief’ and that effectively replaced the relief claimed in the original

and/or alternative relief’ and that effectively replaced the relief claimed in the original  
notice of motion; 10 and then finally, after a three day hearing, we were presented in  
the applicants’ oral reply with a formal application to amend the notice of motion to  
include,   along  with   the original   notice  of  motion,   the formulation   presented  at  the  
beginning of the hearing! 11
35. We will return to this later, if only because the applicants’ treatment of the question of  
relief is sufficient ground for dismissal of their claim.  Indeed, it verges on an abuse  
of the adjudicative process. For the present, it suffices to note that we are unable to  
identify precisely the relief sought by the complainant.  We then proceed to examine  
whether sufficient evidence has been adduced to sustain the allegation that a range  
of   restrictive   practices   have   been   perpetrated   without   clear   knowledge   of   the  
remedial action that we would order should any of these allegations be sustained.  
One unsatisfactory consequence of the applicants’ failure to specify the relief that  
they   seek   is   that   it   has   left   them   at   liberty   to   traverse   the   Act   in   search   of   a  
sustainable   allegation,   unconstrained   by   the   usual   requirement   to   specify   what  
should be done in the event of such an allegation being sustained. While, as already  
noted and will be further elaborated, there is no doubt in our mind that this alone  
would constitute ground for dismissal, we nevertheless believe that after some three  
years of hearing an application for  interim  relief we have a public duty to examine the  
merits of this matter and it is to this task that we now turn albeit unguided by the light  
that clearly framed relief usually places at the end of that tunnel.
WHOLESALERS, DISTRIBUTORS AND THE CHAIN OF DISTRIBUTION
7  Transcript, page 427 
8  Record, page B2192
9  Transcript, page 419
10  Transcript, page 13
11  Transcript, page 428
12

36. Before   turning   to   the   alleged   restrictive   practices,   it   is   necessary   to  
clarify pertinent aspects of the chain of pharmaceutical production and  
distribution.  
37. In   the   pharmaceutical   industry   –   as   with   many   consumer   goods   –   there   are   a  
relatively small number of manufacturers whose products are purchased by the final  
consumer through a relatively large number of retail outlets.  In the case of ‘ethical’  
or patented pharmaceutical products these retail outlets are a myriad of pharmacists,  
colloquially   referred   to   in   South   Africa   as   ‘chemists’.   The   manufacturer   is   thus  
confronted with  the formidable task of ensuring  that its product is available  in the  
required quantity and form at the ultimate point of sale. In a word, the manufacturer  
is confronted with the task of  distributing its product to the retailers.  
38. There   are   a   number   of   alternative   mechanisms   for   effecting  
distribution.     The   manufacturer   may   simply   be   approached   by   the  
ultimate interface with the final end consumer, that is, the retailer, take  
orders for the product and arrange for its transportation to these points  
of   retail   distribution.   Indeed,   in   the   case   of   very   large   retailers   of  
pharmaceutical products – these being the large hospital groups, most  
particularly, although not exclusively, the state hospital services – this  
is  precisely   how   distribution   is   effected  to   this   day.     In   other  words,  
there   is,   in   this   important   latter   segment   of   the   pharmaceutical  
manufacturing   and   distribution   chain,   a   direct   interface   between   the  
manufacturer, on the one hand, and, on the other, the vehicle through  
which   the   final   end   consumer   acquires   pharmaceutical   products.  
There has been no need, presumably either on the part of the seller or  
the buyer, for an intermediary between these two ends of the chain and

the buyer, for an intermediary between these two ends of the chain and  
so   the   wholesale   trade,   precisely   the   intermediary   between  
manufacturer and retailer, has largely been absent from this segment.  
39. However,  there are  a  large number of  consumers  of pharmaceutical  
products who do not procure their medicines by attending a hospital.  
Instead, they approach, in a manner not fundamentally different to a  
purchaser of, for example, clothing or grocery products, a high street  
retailer in order to satisfy their needs.  However, unlike in the case of  
grocery   or   mass   clothing   products,   and   this   largely   because   of  
regulatory intervention, the retail pharmaceutical sector is not, at this  
stage, dominated by increasingly large outlets that, like, for example,  
Pick ‘n Pay or Edgars, are household names in the area of grocery or  
clothing retail. Note that the rise of the large retail grocery supermarket  
chains has all but eliminated the grocery wholesale trade. The retail  
pharmaceutical   sector,   on  the  other  hand,  is   still   characterized  by   a  
large number of small retailers and so the wholesalers have maintained  
a considerable presence in this segment of pharmaceutical distribution.  
40. For   a   manufacturer,   per   definition   skilled   in   and   focused   upon   the  
innovation and production process, interfacing with a large number of  
13

retailer customers is highly undesirable.  It is indeed, albeit for different  
reasons, no less taxing for a large number of retailers to deal with a  
small number of producers, particularly in an industry whose peculiar  
features   demand   that   the   retailer   stock   the   product   of   all   or   most  
manufacturers.   In a word, the high costs associated with transacting  
between a small number of manufacturers, on the one hand, and, on  
the other hand, a large number of retailers – costs borne in various  
ways by both parties to the transaction ­ have created an opportunity  
for   a   set   of   traders,   the   wholesalers,   to   simultaneously   meet   the  
requirements of both the manufacturers and retailers.  Naturally, as in  
any   trade,   the  rise   of  these  intermediaries  is  accompanied  by  rules,  
associations,   legislation,   venerable   firms   and   the   like,   by,   in   other  
words, a sense of permanence.  However, it is essential to understand  
that the rise of this intermediary trading function, however ordered and  
permanent   it   may   subsequently   appear   to   be,   was   essentially   a  
spontaneous,   admirably   opportunistic  response  to  a  particular  set   of  
market conditions, a response to the high transaction costs incurred in  
the process of direct trade between manufacturer and retailer.  In other  
words, a changed set of market conditions may call  forth a different  
response from the key participants.
41. The   wholesaling   function   is,   of   course,   by   no   means   costless.     It  
requires   considerable   investment   and   the   investors   naturally   seek   a  
reward   –   their   decision   to   direct   their   resources   to   pharmaceutical  
wholesaling is not, after all, driven by charitable considerations.   It is  
driven   by   commercial   considerations,   by   the   reward   that   the  
entrepreneurs and investors expect to receive in exchange for meeting

entrepreneurs and investors expect to receive in exchange for meeting  
a demand generated by market conditions.  But they are traders – they  
seek their reward neither from those from whom they purchase product  
nor from those to whom they sell product.  They garner their reward by  
buying cheap and selling dear.   If market conditions change so as to  
cause a deterioration in the wholesalers’ terms of trade then they will  
either   re­position   themselves,   usually   by   identifying   value­added  
services   that   they   introduce   into   the   market   thus   allowing   them   to  
maintain or increase their overall trading margins, or they will face the  
risk of decline and, ultimately, outright elimination from the market.
42. It is clear that the writing has long been on the wall both in this particular sector of  
the   economy   and   in   the   business   of   distribution   more   generally.   In   the  
pharmaceutical  sector   it  is  common   cause   that  there   is  a  hitherto   unprecedented  
effort by the purchasers of pharmaceutical products and by those who finance the  
purchase of these products to secure a decrease in their prices. The buyers have, in  
short,  sought   to  counter­balance   the  power  of  pharmaceutical   manufacturers.  For  
instance, the formation of large pharmacy chains such as Pharmacare, Hyperpharm,  
Dischem and Galleria are, in large part, inspired by an effort to constrain the prices  
of pharmaceutical products. In addition, increased monitoring of prices by managed  
health care organizations and medical aids as well as efforts through the formulary  
system,   are   all   driven   by   the   desire   to   constrain   the   pricing   of   pharmaceutical  
14

products.12  But   this   has   also   meant   the   entry   of   the   large   buyer   into   an   area  
traditionally characterized by small retail pharmacies.   These large purchasers are,  
like the state, perfectly capable of interfacing directly with the manufacturer.  They do  
not, in other words, require the intermediation of the wholesaler.  
43. This pressure to constrain their pricing behaviour has also caused the  
pharmaceutical manufacturers to focus on costs incurred in the chain  
of manufacturing and distribution and this, too, explains their increased  
attention   to   the   mode   of   distributing   their   products.     In   other   words,  
there is no doubt that the manufacturers, pressured to constrain their  
own pricing, will look to decrease costs and to appropriate pockets of  
profit in the value chain. They have clearly decided that there are costs  
that can be squeezed out of the distribution chain and/or that there are  
profits to be appropriated in undertaking this function differently to the  
traditional   wholesaler   model.   There   is,   however,   nothing   necessarily  
sinister   about   this   albeit   that   it   may   reverberate   to   the   detriment   of  
established   pharmaceutical   wholesalers   –   it   is   simply   part   of   the  
competitive   process,   a   process   that   we   are   charged   with   promoting  
rather than reifying. 
44. This may all seem rather obvious.  However we have found it necessary to elaborate  
these   seemingly   self­evident   truths   because,   whether   blinded   by   self­interest   or  
hubris, they are not sufficiently appreciated by the applicants in this matter.   They  
appear  to  have  forgotten  that  great  markets  –  and with  them   great  products  and  
services – have disappeared before and will do so again.   Great companies have  
frequently   been  victims   of  this,   the  competitive   process.     Still  greater  companies,

spurred by the competitive process, have repositioned themselves – they have found  
new   value­adding   services   to   offer   their   customers,   they   have   developed   new  
products, and, at times, they have entered new markets.  However, the matter before  
us represents an effort by a group of companies which, when confronted by market  
dynamics, turn to regulation, rather than innovation, to rescue them. 13  They insist in  
effect, that their service must remain viable for no greater reason than the time it has  
served as the industry’s standard mode of effecting distribution.  They insist that we  
order   the   manufacturers   to   maintain   a   discount   to   the   wholesalers   for   the   sole  
purpose of allowing the wholesalers to continue buying cheap. However, we have no  
greater warrant for this sort of intervention than we would have for an order imposing  
a  higher  price   on  the  wholesaler’s  customers,  the  retailers,   an  intervention  which  
would allow the wholesalers to sell ‘dearer’. 
ASSESSMENT OF ALLEGED RESTRICTIVE PRACTICES
12  Pharmaceutical lists and formularies define those pharmaceutical products that are reimbursed by a  
particular medical aid scheme. 
13  This is not, as we elaborate below, entirely accurate.  In fact the wholesalers have turned to new  
markets – the wholesaling of camera equipment was frequently mentioned – which is one reason why  
they   have   not   been   able   to   show   that   they   have   suffered   serious   or   irreparable   harm.     And   the  
shareholders of the largest of the applicants – UPD – have sold their interests to Clicks, a large chain  
store intent upon entering  pharmaceutical retailing on a significant scale.  Although it is not clear yet  
precisely how this will reposition UPD in the pharmaceutical  market, common sense suggests that it  
will ultimately have a dramatic impact.   These attempts at repositioning themselves constituted one

response to changing market conditions.  The other response –  and the one that we are adjudicating –  
essentially seeks to use competition regulation to put a brake on changing market conditions.
15

The Relevant Markets
45. The   applicants   insist   that   it   is   necessary   to   identify   the   markets   relevant   to   the  
transaction.     It   is   noted   that   both   Section   4(1)(a)   and   5   require   a   showing   of   a  
substantial   preventing   or   lessening   of   competition   ‘in   a   market’.     While   we   have  
previously   taken   the   view   that   Section   4   and   5   claims   do   not   require   a   prior  
identification of the relevant market – that is, the relevant market can be read back,  
as   it   were,   from   evidence   of   the   anti­competitive   practice,   thus   side­stepping   the  
formalism   inherent   in   efforts   at   a   prior   identification   of   the   market 14  –   Section   7  
specifies that dominance is established with respect to market share.   Establishing  
dominance is, in turn, a threshold condition for establishing a Section 8 ‘abuse of  
dominance’.     A   prior   identification   of   the   market   is   thus   necessary   in   order   to  
evaluate the allegations of abuse of dominance.   
46. The applicants have referred, in the course of their written and oral submissions, to a  
wide range of markets.  The respondents note that there are references to 15:
“154.1 product markets based on therapeutic categories
 154.2 a wholesale distribution market
 154.3 a market for the wholesale distribution of pharmaceutical  
products
154.4
 a market for agency distribution services
 154.5 an oligopolistic market”
47. There are, in our view, two relevant markets implicated in this matter.   The first is,  
strictly   speaking,  not  a  single   market   but  a  set  of  distinct  markets.     Given   that  a  
pharmaceutical product intended for one therapeutic use cannot be substituted by a  
product   intended   for   another   therapeutic   use,   anti­trust   investigations   of   the  
pharmaceutical industry tend to use the ATC3 categories as the bases for identifying

pharmaceutical industry tend to use the ATC3 categories as the bases for identifying  
the relevant pharmaceutical product markets.   While we are alert to the possibility  
that   an   uncritical   adoption   of   the   ATC3   categories   may   occasionally   produce  
somewhat   distorted   outcomes   from   an   anti­trust   perspective,   for   the   purposes   of  
interim   relief   the   therapeutic   categories   are   an   acceptable   proxy   for   identifying  
relevant markets. 16 However an important point to underline is that there can be no  
aggregation of pharmaceutical products into a single pharmaceutical product market.  
48. The   second   market   at   issue   is,   it   is   argued,   the   market   for   the   distribution   of  
pharmaceutical products.  This is the market in which Kinesis is said to compete with  
14  Natal Wholesale Chemists (Pty) Ltd and Astra Pharmaceuticals (Pty) Ltd  & Others  ­  98/IR/Dec00
15  Respondents’ Heads page 64
16  Using the ATC categories as the basis for determining the boundaries of the relevant market may  
lead to overly narrow markets because in certain instances it may be possible to substitute from  
outside of a given ATC designation.  In other instances, the market definition derived from the ATC  
categories may be too broad insofar as particular consumers may not be able to substitute across the  
full range within an ATC category. 
16

the applicants. 17  However a number of caveats are in order:
49. Firstly, the applicants, by their own admission, do not compete for the full range of  
logistical services offered by Kinesis.  For example, the applicants do not offer what  
they themselves refer to as ‘pre­wholesaling’ services. 18  They only wish to provide  
what they at times identify as a ‘wholesaling’ or, at other times, refer to as a ‘fine  
distribution’ service. However, there is no apparent basis for their insistence that a  
particular   set   of   distribution   related   functions   (eg.   fine   distribution)   properly   and  
exclusively belongs to the realm of wholesaling, while others (eg. pre­wholesaling)  
may  be performed  in­house  (as was  historically  the case)  or by specialist  logistic  
service providers (as is the case at present).   The implicit suggestion made by the  
applicants,   is   that   they   contend   for   this   ‘wholesaling’   or   ‘fine   distribution’   activity  
because that is all that they have always done in the past and that is all that they are  
interested in doing in the future.  
50. The truth of the matter is that the wholesalers  do ‘fine distribution’  as an intrinsic  
element   of   their   role   as   wholesale   traders   –   that   is,   they   buy   in   bulk   from   the  
manufacturers and they sell in smaller quantities (‘fine distribution’) to the retailers  
and, in the process, are rewarded by the difference between their buying price and  
selling price less the cost (for example, warehousing) of this intermediation. They do  
not perform ‘fine distribution’ as a service charged out to the manufacturers.  This is  
why   the   applicants   occasionally   slip   into   referring   to   a   ‘ wholesale  pharmaceutical  
distribution market’ or even a ‘full­line  wholesale pharmaceutical distribution’ market  
rather than to a pharmaceutical distribution market. In other words, they choose, for

rather than to a pharmaceutical distribution market. In other words, they choose, for  
obvious reasons, to define the distribution market by reference to the characteristics  
of   the   wholesale   mode   of   distribution,   rather   than   by   reference   to   the   functional  
characteristics of the activity in question, these simply being distribution and related  
logistical functions.  What the applicants’ approach conveniently serves to disguise is  
that they have been successfully challenged by competitors who effect distribution  
through a wholly new modality, a modality that is characterized not by wholesaling,  
but by the provision of a range of logistical services, including, but not limited to, fine  
distribution.     It   is   wholly   conceivable   that   these   two   distribution   modalities   may  
continue to co­exist and compete – this is precisely what is happening at present.  
But it is equally conceivable that, like the horse and buggy and the motor car, or the  
typewriter and the personal computer, the one modality may ultimately disappear in  
favour of a superior alternative. 
51. Secondly, and this is also elaborated below, we are not persuaded that there is a  
separate market for the distribution of  pharmaceutical   products.  That is, we know of  
no reason why, in the event that the specialist distributors of pharmaceutical services  
raise their charges, others who specialize in the production of distribution services  
generally should not offer their services to pharmaceutical manufacturers.  There is,  
on   the   face   of   it,   nothing   unique   about   the   distribution   services   required   by  
pharmaceutical manufacturers.  A more detailed examination of the evidence, of the  
sort   possible   at   the   final   stage   of   determination,   may   persuade   us   that  
pharmaceutical   distribution   can   only   be   carried   out   by   dedicated,   specialist

17  Although the applicants also insist that the respondent manufacturers are competitors in this  
market.  This is dealt with below.
18  Pre­wholesaling is defined as those finished goods supply chain activities, such as bulk or primary  
warehousing,   inter­depot   stock   movements   to   and   between   secondary   warehouses   and   subsequent  
distribution to customers such as the State, hospitals, clinics and large buying groups. In South Africa  
these   distribution   and   logistic   activities   have   been   traditionally   undertaken   by   the   manufacturers.  
Record, B1020. Kinesis also performs administrative functions such as order­taking, invoicing and  
debt collection. 
17

wholesalers  or by dedicated, specialist  distribution  service  providers.    But, on the  
face   of   it,   the   market   is   for   the   provision   of   distribution   services,   rather   than  
pharmaceutical  distribution services.  As we elaborate below, this has a major, even  
dispositive, impact on the applicants’ allegations relating to foreclosure.
52. Thirdly, the applicants contend that the manufacturers and wholesalers  
compete   in   this   distribution   market,   or,   at   any   rate,   in   what   the  
applicants identify in their heads of argument as ‘the relevant markets  
for   the   sale   of   products   to   retail   pharmacies   and   to   medical  
practitioners’.   The   gist   of   this   argument   seems   to   be   that   whereas  
previously   only   the   wholesalers   enjoyed   direct   access   to   the  
manufacturers, this has now been extended to retailers and medical  
practitioners   as   well.   Because,   under   this   new   regime,   both  
manufacturers and wholesalers interact directly with retailers, they are  
somehow divined to be competitors in the same market ‘for the sale of  
products to retail pharmacies and medical practitioners.’  
53. We  understand  that the manufacturers  have decided to interface  directly,  through  
their   agent,   Kinesis,   with   the   retailers   of   their,   that   is,   the   manufacturers’,   own  
products.  We are prepared to concede, with some residue of doubt, that this places  
both wholesalers and distribution agent in the same distribution market – despite the  
incontrovertible fact that the former trades in pharmaceutical products and the latter  
trades   in   distribution   and   logistical   services   we   concede   that   both   do,   in   effect,  
distribute pharmaceutical products.  However, we cannot agree that this places the  
manufacturers and distributors in the same market. Even if the manufacturers had

manufacturers and distributors in the same market. Even if the manufacturers had  
elected   to   perform   all   the   distribution   functions   in­house,   that   is,   through   a   fully  
vertically integrated distribution division, this would not make them competitors in the  
distribution   market   any   more   than   performing   security   functions   in­house   would  
make them participants in the security services market.   There is no iron law that  
says that the manufacturing process begins and ends at pre­ordained points, much  
less   that   it   is   illegitimate   from   a   competition   perspective   for   the   manufacturer   to  
engage   in   any   activity   beyond   those   points.     The   products   belong   to   the  
manufacturers and our starting point is that they are entitled to distribute it to their  
various customers as they see fit, just as they are entitled to secure their premises  
as   they   see   fit.     Indeed,   if   the   wholesalers   were   to   permit   the   general   public   to  
purchase products directly from their premises, the retailers would have no recourse  
under competition law 19.  
54. In   fact,   in   this   case,   the   manufacturers   have   not   taken   distribution  
services in­house – they have simply elected to determine price in a  
direct interface with the retailers and, in certain, but not all, instances  
they have decided that they will offer a uniform price regardless of the  
purchasers   designation   as   ‘wholesaler’   or   ‘retailer’.     Most   of   the  
physical acts associated with the task of ensuring that their products  
arrive   at   the   purchasers’   premises   have   been   contracted   out   to   a  
specialist provider of distribution services.  If the wholesalers compete  
with anybody in this scheme then it is with the distribution agent and  
certainly   not   with   the   manufacturer.     In   short,   further   argument   and

certainly   not   with   the   manufacturer.     In   short,   further   argument   and  
19  Other regulations may prevent the general public from purchasing directly from wholesalers but  
these are not imposed in terms of competition imperatives.
18

evidence   may   well   reveal   that   the   wholesalers   participate   in   the  
pharmaceutical wholesale market which, like the erstwhile market for  
typewriters, is in terminal decline, not because of a restrictive practice  
perpetrated by a customer or a competitor but because a wholly new  
product, a wholly new mode of distribution, has displaced it.
 
55. In   summary,   then,   we   conclude   that   there   is   a   range   of   separate  
pharmaceutical   product   markets.     While   we   note   that   closer  
examination may cause us to revise the use of ATC3 categories as the  
basis for designating these markets, this categorization will serve for  
the purposes of interim relief.  
56. The distribution market is more difficult to identify with confidence on the basis of the  
evidence  before us. Conventional  wisdom  appears  to concede  the existence  of  a  
market for the distribution of  pharmaceutical products.  However, just as those who,  
like  the applicants,  identify  themselves  as specialist  distributors  of pharmaceutical  
products, are nevertheless able to participate with apparent ease in the distribution  
of a range of non­pharmaceutical products,  so too are we inclined  to believe that  
specialist   providers   of   distribution   or   logistical   services   could,   with   relative   ease,  
participate in the distribution of pharmaceutical products.  
57. Indeed, Tibbet and Britten is a case in point.  It is a specialist supplier  
of   logistical   services   that   is   now   offering   these   services   to  
pharmaceutical manufacturers and these include, but are by no means  
limited   to,   the   ‘fine   distribution’   performed   by   the   wholesalers.  
Certainly,   it   is   doing   this   through   the   medium   of   a   specialist  
pharmaceutical distributor, Kinesis.  However, it is clear that Kinesis is  
offering   a   range   of   logistical   services   identical   to   those   offered   by

offering   a   range   of   logistical   services   identical   to   those   offered   by  
Tibbet   and   Britten   to   its   other   non­pharmaceutical   clients.     And,  
conversely, it is not immediately apparent what specialist facilities or  
capabilities are required in order to distribute pharmaceutical products.  
The   existence   of   a   cold   chain   is   not   peculiar   to   pharmaceutical  
products.   Particular safety and security considerations may attach to  
distributing   pharmaceutical   products   but   then   special   treatment   is  
required in the distribution of many products.
58. We   are,   in   short,   on   the   evidence   presented,   unable   to   reach   a  
conclusion on the reach of the relevant distribution market. It may well  
be that further evidence supports the notion that there is a market for  
the distribution of pharmaceutical products. On the other hand, there  
are prima facie indications that a fuller investigation may reveal that the  
market is for the distribution of consumer goods generally and is not  
restricted to the distribution of pharmaceutical products.  
Restrictive Horizontal Agreements
59. Section 4 of the Act provides:
19

“1. An   agreement   between,   or   concerted   practice   by,   firms,   or   a  
decision by an association of firms, is prohibited if it is between  
parties in a horizontal relationship and if –
a. it has the effect of substantially preventing, or lessening ,  
competition in a market, unless a party to the agreement,  
concerted   practice,   or   decision   can   prove   that   any  
technological,   efficiency   or   other   pro­competitive   gain  
resulting from it outweighs that effect; or
b. it   involves   any   of   the   following   restrictive   horizontal  
practices:
i. directly   or   indirectly   fixing   a   purchase   or   selling  
price or any other trading condition;
ii.dividing   markets   by   allocating   customers,  
suppliers, territories, or specific types of goods or  
services; or
iii.collusive tendering.”
60. Section 4 specifies two threshold conditions for an adverse finding under both sub­
sections   (a)   or   (b).     These   are,   first,   that   there   be   an   agreement  or   a   concerted  
practice  between firms or a decision by an   association   of firms.   Second, that this  
agreement should be between firms in a  horizontal  relationship.  
61. The   manufacturers   are   all   manufacturers   of   pharmaceutical   products.     We   have  
determined   that   the   relevant   pharmaceutical   product   markets   are,   for   present  
purposes, defined by ATC3 categories.   For present purposes what is clear is that  
the manufacturers  – the  principals  in  the present  agency  arrangement   – are in  a  
horizontal relationship (or, more accurately, a number of horizontal   relationships) to  
one another, that is, they do compete in several markets, although that horizontality  
extends only to those therapeutic categories in which more than one of the principals  
is active. 
62. However,   have   these   horizontally   related   firms   concluded   an  
agreement between themselves?

agreement between themselves? 
63. In   the   initial   application   for   interim   relief   the   Tribunal   panel   found   that   the  
respondents had contravened Section 4(1)(a) of the Act.   The panel found that the  
element of agreement required to establish a claim under Section 4 resided in the  
respondents’   joint ownership   of SAI and of its wholly owned exclusive distributor,  
Kinesis.  It is noteworthy that the panel specifically concluded:
“The   anti­competitive   effects   of   this   type   of   distribution  
arrangement   derive   from   three   important   features   of   the  
arrangement:   firstly,   it   is   a   joint   exclusive   initiative   between  
20

competing   manufacturers;   secondly,   the   manufacturers   jointly  
control   the   agency   and   thirdly,   the   manufacturers   play   a  
significant role in a number of therapeutic product categories in  
which they currently compete.
Without   the   first   feature,   the   arrangement   would   essentially   be   a   vertical  
agency agreement of the type that would not raise competition concerns in  
terms of, for example, the EC's Guidelines on Vertical Restraints. In terms of  
these   guidelines   an   agency   agreement   is   considered   not   to   be   anti­
competitive if the agent does not bear any risk in relation to the business it  
conducts on behalf of the principal. It is not material whether the agent acts  
for one or several principals or if the agreement prevents the principal from  
appointing   other   agents   in   competition   with   the   contracted   agent   (i.e.   an  
exclusive   agency   agreement).   Such   an   agency   agreement,   however,  
becomes problematic where it facilitates collusion between the principals. In  
the present case, the relevant characteristics of the distribution agent (DD)  
are  that  it  is  an  exclusive   agent; it  acts   for  several  manufacturers;  and  it  
bears no risk in relation to the manufacturers' businesses. As such, in terms  
of  the  EC  guidelines,  the  individual  bilateral  agency  agreements   between  
each of the manufacturers and DD are not in themselves problematic from a  
competition perspective. The distribution arrangement that these individual  
agreements establish is nevertheless anti­competitive because it arises from  
a concerted initiative by competing manufacturers.” 20
64. However, the respondents insist that any ‘agreement’ that may have  
been imputed in consequence of the previous regime of joint ownership  
is clearly vitiated by the sale of SAI/Kinesis to Tibbet and Britten.  What  
we   have   now,   argue   the   respondents,   are   three   separate   agency

we   have   now,   argue   the   respondents,   are   three   separate   agency  
agreements   concluded   between,   respectively,   GSK,   Pfizer   and  
Pharmacare,   on   the   one   hand,   and,   on   the   other   hand,   Tibbet   and  
Britten and/or its wholly owned subsidiaries, SAI and/or Kinesis.   The  
complainants nevertheless continue to insist that both Section 4(1)(a)  
and (b) have been contravened.
65. This respondents’ argument would, on the face of it, appear to be incontrovertible. In  
light   of   the   abovementioned   sale   of   SAI/Kinesis   –   surely   one   of   the   ‘important  
developments’ alluded to by the Competition Appeal Court ­ the applicants, in order  
to establish the continued existence of an agreement, would have to demonstrate,  
either   that   the   sale   to   Tibbet   and   Britten   was   a   sham   designed   to   camouflage  
continued   joint   ownership,   or   that,   notwithstanding   the   termination   of   the   joint  
ownership arrangement, horizontal agreements remained in place that contravened  
either Sections 4(1)(a) or 4(1)(b), or, that the very decision by the respondents to sell  
SAI/Kinesis   constituted   an   agreement   in   contravention   of   the   Act,   or   that   the  
decision/s   of   the   manufacturers   to   enter   into   agency   agreements   with   the   new  
owners   constituted   such   an   agreement.     Certainly,   the   Act   gives   a   very   wide  
meaning to ‘agreement’, a meaning that would extend some way beyond a legally  
enforceable contract. 21
20  NAPW and others and GlaxoWellcome (Pty) Ltd and others  68/IR/Jun00, at paragraph 38,39
21  American Natural Soda Ash Corp and Others vs the Competition Commission, Botswana Ash (Pty)  
Ltd and Others  49/CR/Apr00
21

66. The   requirements   to   prove   that   a   contract   of   sale   and   the   subsequent   agency  
agreements constitute a mere sham are very onerous and no evidence of this has  
been presented despite the applicants’ bald characterization of the merger as ‘not a  
sincere commercial transaction motivated by normal business principles’ .22  
67. The applicants have alleged the existence of certain common practices (common,  
that is, between  the manufacturers  acting through  their distribution  agent) that, in  
their view, evidence the agreements contemplated in Section 4.  Indeed they appear  
to   claim   that   the   subject   matter   of   these   alleged   agreements   conform   to   the  
agreements contemplated in Section 4(1)(b) and are therefore susceptible to the  per 
se  or outright condemnation provided  for in that section of the Act.     These refer  
variously to the alleged existence of a single credit application form, to the alleged  
existence of identical credit terms, to alleged co­ordinated revocation of credit, to the  
alleged fixing of delivery schedules and, then, to a thoroughly incomprehensible set  
of allegations  derived from the allegedly  oligopolistic  nature of the pharmaceutical  
market   and   to   parallel   conduct   allegedly   engaged   in   by   the   participants   in   that  
market.23 
68. Suffice   to   say   that   certain   of   these   allegations   refer,   by   the   applicants   own  
admission, to historical practices, that is, practices that have been discontinued and  
are thus no longer interdictable.   In other instances the applicants have not proved  
that the practices alleged actually took place, much less that they were collusively  
determined.    In  other  instances  –  and  this  refers  particularly   to  allegations   of the  
existence of an oligopolistic market and parallel conduct between the participants in  
this alleged oligopoly – it is frankly not possible to discern the conduct alleged.   In

this alleged oligopoly – it is frankly not possible to discern the conduct alleged.   In  
the case of other practices – notably the allegations regarding the delivery schedules  
adhered to by Kinesis – it is clear that even if the conduct alleged actually occurs  
and even if these practices were collusively determined by Kinesis’ principals, they  
would   nevertheless   not   fall   to   be   condemned   under   Section   4(1)(b)   which   is  
exclusively concerned  with ‘directly or indirectly fixing a purchase or selling price or  
any   other   trading   condition’.     We   have   previously   determined   that   the   ‘trading  
condition’ referred to in this section must relate to the price­quantity nexus and would  
certainly not cover delivery schedules. 24
69. We   should   add   that   this   raft   of   allegations   is   particularly   difficult   to  
22  See Record at P. B24.
23  The   notion   that   the   market   is   oligopolistic   appears   to   rely   on   the   existence   of   a   market   for  
pharmaceutical products (as opposed to product markets defined by therapeutic categories)   and the  
position therein of the manufacturers who respectively utilize the services of Kinesis and IHD, another  
provider of distribution services.   Even if the elements of this allegation had been established – for  
example, even if it had been established that the various manufacturers were indeed competitors in a  
single pharmaceutical products market and that their conduct reflected the existence of an agreement  
or merely proceeded in parallel – it is not clear how we would be expected to address this allegation.  
If the IHD related manufacturers are indeed colluding, or conducting themselves in parallel, with the  
Kinesis related manufacturers then surely remedial action would have to be instituted against all of  
these   manufacturers   and   their   respective   distribution   providers   who   are   presumably   alleged   to

constitute the platform for this co­operation .   Ordinarily, this allegation is so confused that it would  
not   warrant   the  dignity  of  a  response.     But   it  does   serve   to  illustrate  the   shot­gun   type  approach  
utilized by the applicants, that being to proliferate the quantum of allegations made with no regard to  
their coherence and rationality or to the existence of any factual basis, in the apparent  hope that one of  
these wild allegations succeeds in hitting the target, that being the granting of interim relief. 
24  See  The Competition Commission and Patensie Sitrus Beherend Beperk  37/CR/Jun01 at paragraph  
35
22

sustain in the light of the clear evidence, which we understand to be  
common   cause,   that   the   core   price­relevant   trading   conditions   –  
specifically   the   scale   and   structure   of   their   discounts   –   diverge  
significantly as between each of the manufacturer respondents.
70. The notion that the agreement required by Section 4 is manifest in the decision by  
the erstwhile owners  to sell their stake in SAI/Kinesis  is thoroughly unpersuasive.  
The Tribunal had previously found their   joint ownership  to underpin a contravention  
of the Act.  As already noted, the manufacturers then took steps to bring themselves  
into compliance by selling their jointly owned distribution company to an independent  
owned supplier of logistic and distribution services.   Given that they jointly owned  
SAI/Kinesis, per definition the decision to sell the distribution companies and thus  
bring  themselves   into  conformity  with   the  views   expressed   by  the  Tribunal  would  
have to have been taken jointly.   Are they to be penalized for bringing themselves  
into compliance with the Act? 
71. What of the decision of the three respondents to then enter into EDAs with the new  
owners of Kinesis?   In other words, argue the applicants, the respondents had not  
merely agreed to sell SAI and Kinesis to T&B, but they had also agreed to enter into  
EDAs with the new owners of SAI/Kinesis or, what is the same thing, they had all  
agreed   to   discontinue   key   elements   of   their   traditional   relationship   with   the  
wholesalers, notably the industry­wide practice of granting wholesalers a discount of  
17.5% off the manufacturers’ list price. 25  Indeed, insist the applicants, not only does  
this constitute an agreement for the purposes of meeting the threshold condition for  
Section 4, but, more than that, it constitutes an agreement about the pricing policy  
that   they   would   follow.     This,   argue   the   applicants,   is   tantamount   to   ‘directly   or

indirectly fixing a purchase or selling price or any other trading condition’ and is thus  
vulnerable to the outright or ‘per se’ condemnation provided for in Section 4(1)(b).  
72. It is reasonably clear that   each  of the manufacturers had, prior to the sale, agreed  
that they would utilize T&B as their exclusive distribution agent.  Although there is no  
evidence that they had reached this agreement between   themselves , it is entirely  
conceivable   that   T&B   would   not   have   agreed   to   purchase   SAI/Kinesis   from   the  
manufacturers   had   they   not   been   assured   that   each   of   the   manufacturers   would  
enter into EDAs post­sale.  We are accordingly prepared to accept, for the purposes  
of this interim relief application, that each of the erstwhile owners of SAI/Kinesis had  
been   aware   that   their   fellow   shareholders   were   entering   into   the   process   of  
concluding  an EDA with the new owner,  T&B, and that prior commitments  to this  
effect had been made by the three sellers, subsequently the three principals. But this  
does not change the  vertical character of the agreements in question.  
73. The applicants make much of the fact that the Commission, in approving the sale (an  
‘intermediate’ merger), had insisted on the omission, from the sale agreement, of the  
commitments apparently made by each of the sellers to enter into EDAs with T&B.  
But there is nothing to suggest thereby that the Commission had been concerned  
about a   horizontal  agreement between the respective sellers. Nor is there anything  
25  In presenting the version of the relief asked for at the beginning of these hearings, Mr. Nelson,  
counsel for the applicants, expressed it thus: ‘A simple way to clarify that again on an interim relief  
basis is to say to restore terms and conditions relating to discount structures because we will show  
you,   Mr.   Chairman,   that   the   anti­competitive   behaviour   here   pertains   to   a   horizontal   agreement

between   competitors   pursuant   whereto   they   agreed   to   a   discount   policy   and   that   policy   changed  
simultaneously the discount structure that applied in the pharmaceutical distribution industry.  And it  
pertained to how discounts are calculated …’ (Transcript P10)
23

untoward   at   the   parties   to   the   sale   agreement   removing   the   condition,   the  
requirement,  to   enter   into   EDAs   from   that   agreement,   and   then   subsequently  
concluding   EDAs   with   the   respondents   or,   for   that   matter,   with   any   other  
manufacturers who wished to utilize their services. If these EDAs are then, as in the  
present   matter,   subject   to   anti­trust   scrutiny,   they   are   properly   examined   as   a  
species of vertical agreement or, if dominance is established, abuse of dominance.  
But the mere fact that more than one manufacturer utilizes the distribution services  
of  the  same   distributor  does   not  transform   a  series   of  vertical   agreements  into   a  
single horizontal agreement. 26
74. In short, then, the allegation that the manufacturers have contravened  
Section 4 of the Act by entering into EDAs with Kinesis does not pass  
muster because the applicants have failed to establish the prima facie  
existence of an agreement between parties in a horizontal relationship.  
All that has been established is the existence of a number of vertical  
arrangements,   and   this,   of   course,   has   never   been   denied   by   the  
respondents.
75. We   should   add   that   even   if   the   applicants   had   established   the  
existence of a horizontal agreement this would not have been sufficient  
to secure an adverse finding under Section 4(1)(b) because in order to  
succeed   under   4(1)(b)   it   would   have   to   be   established   that   the  
agreement fixed prices or any other trading condition or that it divided  
markets or that it amounted to collusive tendering.  
76. A   characteristic   allegation   of   price   fixing   would   allege   that   the   three  
manufacturers   in   question   each   produce,   for   example,   drugs   for  
treating a particular cancer – that is, drugs within the same therapeutic  
category or relevant market ­ and that they are somehow utilizing their

category or relevant market ­ and that they are somehow utilizing their  
common   distribution   service   as   a   mechanism   for   eliminating   price  
competition in the sale of these drugs.   This is not the allegation that  
has been made for the purpose of securing a conviction under Section  
4(1)(b).  What is alleged is that the three manufactures conspired to cut  
the   discount   extended   to   the   wholesalers   –   the   standard   17.5%   in  
respect   of   GSK   and   Pfizer   and   10%   in   respect   of   Pharmacare   –   in  
order to give a competitive edge to ‘their’ exclusive distributor, Kinesis.  
The manufacturers have not  hesitated to  point out  that  if there ever  
was a price fixing element in existence here then it is probably to be  
found precisely in the standard 17,5% received by wholesalers prior to  
the decision of the respondents to enter into the EDA agreements.  
77. In this case as already noted, the applicants insist that because the  
26  We concur with the following argument in para 159 of the respondents’ heads: ‘The simple fact of  
the matter is that when the manufacturers established SAI so as to convert DD into an agency  
distributor, they did so not as competitors in various markets based on therapeutic categories, but  
rather as manufacturers having certain distribution requirements. Further they did not act as  
competitors in the distribution market but rather as firms that required the rendering of distribution  
services.’ 
24

effect   of   the   EDAs   was   to   reduce   the   discount   available   to   the  
wholesalers that this establishes that the ‘agreement’ covered ‘pricing  
policy’   and   hence   offended   Section   4(1)(b)(i).     In   other   words,   the  
manufacturers,   argue   the   applicants,   have   collusively   decided   to  
reduce the discount, or, what is the same thing, increase the price, at  
which   they   make   their   products   available   to   the   wholesalers   thus  
contravening the prohibition on price fixing.  
78. We cannot agree with this.  This attempt to conflate pricing policy, or, more properly,  
distribution  policy,   with   price   fixing,   would   severely   inhibit   innovation   in   the  
distribution of pharmaceutical products.  It would effectively ensure that the existing  
pharmaceutical   wholesalers   or   any   who   set   themselves   up   as   wholesalers   of  
pharmaceutical products  would be entitled, as of right, to receive,  in perpetuity,  a  
preferential discount off the manufacturer’s list price in order to enable them to effect  
the distribution of the manufacturers’ products even if the manufacturers had, as in  
this case, made alternative arrangements for the distribution of their products.   We  
are asked to find that a refusal on the part of more than a single manufacturer to  
extend this preferential discount to the wholesale trade is a manifestation of a price  
fixing conspiracy.  
79. We should add that the applicants are constrained to demand  more  
than mere preference in the discounting structure – they must stake a  
claim   for   a   preference   sufficiently   great   to   enable   them   to   insert  
themselves between the manufacturers and the retailers and it is for  
this  reason,   above all,   that   this  dispute  has  such  strong  commercial  
overtones.  
80. This latter point cannot be emphasized too strongly. We are in effect  
being   asked   to   set   the   price   of   pharmaceutical   products   to   the

being   asked   to   set   the   price   of   pharmaceutical   products   to   the  
wholesale trade.  For the interim it appears that we are being asked –  
although given the confusion surrounding remedies this is by no means  
clear   –   to   order   the   manufacturers   to   extend   precisely   the   same  
discount to the wholesalers as was extended prior to the introduction of  
the EDAs.  The applicants argue that this is merely an interim remedy  
implying that in the final hearing a more ‘market­friendly’ solution, one  
more   in   keeping   with   the   fundamental   mission   of   a   competition  
authority,   may   be   found.     But   what   could   this   possibly   be?     The  
wholesalers   themselves   insist   that   the   discount   is   the   basis   of  
existence of their trade, and the size of the discount – that is, the size  
of the differential between the price received by the wholesalers and  
that   received   by   other   purchasers   of   pharmaceutical   product   –   is   a  
critical  determinant of  the viability  of the wholesale trade.    We must  
then, perforce, be asked again at the final stage to order a discount for  
wholesalers and one great enough to ensure their viability.   Implicitly,  
we will also be asked then – as now – to order that the ‘wholesalers’  
discount’ not be extended to any of the ‘wholesalers’ customers’.  For  
the present these seem to be confined to retail pharmacies, although  
there is no particular reason for this limitation.   The wholesalers may,  
25

for example, desire to intermediate between the manufacturers and the  
state hospitals – what, on their present argument, would prevent them  
from approaching the Tribunal for an order giving them a discount that  
enabled them to trade profitably in this segment of the pharmaceutical  
market?
81. The truth is that the change in the discount available to the wholesalers  
flowed   directly   from   the   vertical   agreements,   that   is,   the   EDAs   –   it  
arises, in other words, as a direct consequence of the decision to opt  
for one mode of distribution over another.   Even if the applicants had  
managed   to   prove   the   existence   of   an   agreement   between   the  
respondents   to   move   from   one   mode   of   distribution   to   another   this  
would not constitute a price fixing agreement. 
82. Moreover, the contents of each of the vertical agreements provide no evidence of a  
price   fixing   conspiracy.     Certainly,   post   the   sale   to   Tibbet   and   Britten,   the  
wholesalers are treated differently by each of the manufacturers in question – GSK  
appears   to   trade   off   a   single,   uniform   discount   off   its   list   price;   Pfizer’s   discount  
structure is volume based; and Pharmacare appears to be operating on much the  
same   basis   in   relation   to   the   wholesalers   as   it   ever   did.     That   is,   while   Kinesis  
handles   Pharmacare’s   physical   distribution,   wholesalers   are   nevertheless   still  
encouraged to trade in this manufacturer’s product by the availability of a discount  
larger than that received by its other customers. 27   All that can be shown is that  
three manufacturers have elected to enter into EDAs with a service provider; it has  
not   even   been   shown   that   this   was   the   product   of   an   agreement   between   the  
manufacturers concerned, much less that the agreement fixed any price.
83. To succeed under Section 4(1)(a), the complainants would have to establish that the

83. To succeed under Section 4(1)(a), the complainants would have to establish that the  
agreement substantially prevented or lessened competition in a market.   There are  
allegations   scattered   around   the  volumes   of   documents   submitted   that  allege   the  
fixing   of   non­price   conditions.     For   example   it   is   consistently   alleged   that   the  
principals have fixed the delivery schedules at a single delivery per day in contrast  
with the multiple daily delivery service offered by the wholesalers.  However, properly  
speaking   these   are   not   conditions   fixed   by   the   principals   but   rather   refer   to   the  
services provided by the distributor. In any event, the applicants would still, in order  
to   succeed   under   Section   4(1)(a),   have   to   show   that  the   agreement   substantially  
prevented or lessened competition in a market. They have averred that the allegedly  
exclusive   nature of the  agreements  between  each of the manufacturers  and their  
distributor   has   eliminated   intra­brand   competition   in   markets   characterized   by   an  
absence   of   inter­brand   competition.     These   are   the   allegations   made   in   order   to  
establish  their claim  under Section 5(1)  for the existence  of a vertically  restrictive  
agreement and we shall examine these under that section of the Act.
Restrictive Vertical Agreements
84. Section 5(1) of the Act provides:
“1. An agreement between parties in a vertical relationship is prohibited if it has  
27  This   would   appear   to   bear   out   the   respondents’   contention   that,   even   on   the   applicants’   own  
argument, there is no case against Pharmacare.  The applicants nevertheless insist that an order is still  
required against Pharmacare in order to ensure that it cannot in future change the discount. 
26

the effect of substantially preventing or   lessening competition in a market,  
unless a party to the agreement can prove that any technological, efficiency  
or other pro­competitive gain resulting from that agreement outweighs that  
effect.” 
85. In   this   matter   it   is   alleged   that   the   respondents,   by   entering   into  
contracts   to   establish   an   exclusive   distribution   agency,   have   fatally  
compromised intra­brand competition, competition between alternative  
sellers of the same brand.   This, argue the applicants, should be of  
particular concern to the competition authorities because, it is alleged,  
it takes place in the context of an industry notable for the absence of  
inter­brand competition, competition between producers of alternative  
brands.
86. It is also alleged that the EDA effectively constitutes a barrier to new  
entry at the manufacturing level.  Full­line wholesalers will, it is alleged,  
not be able to continue in business if they are not able to trade in the  
full range of pharmaceutical products.  This means that pharmaceutical  
distribution will be dominated by agencies all in the exclusive service of  
active participants  in the  industry.     Any would­be new  entrant would  
then either have to persuade its competitors to undertake distribution  
on its behalf or, alternatively, face the formidable hurdle of entering at  
the distribution and manufacturing levels simultaneously.   
87. Moreover, when the EDA under scrutiny here is seen in the context of  
the   establishment   of   two   other   exclusive   arrangements   that   serve   a  
number   of   other   multinational   producers   of   ethical   pharmaceutical  
products – namely, the IHD and PHD arrangements ­ we are invited by  
the  applicants  to  conclude  that  the mechanism  of  EDAs is  part of a  
conspiracy to prevent generic products in particular from entering the  
market.
88. We will examine each of the elements of these allegations:

market.
88. We will examine each of the elements of these allegations:
89. Firstly,   certain   particular   features   of   this   EDA   call   the   applicants’  
contentions into question.  Hence, we note that the EDA under scrutiny  
provides for an asymmetric form of exclusivity.  That is to say, while the  
principals   are   contractually   bound   to   exclusively   use   the   distribution  
and   other   services   offered   by   the   agent,   the   agent   is   under   no  
obligation to offer its services to the founding principals on an exclusive  
basis.     Indeed   it   is   pointed   out   that   the   principals   have   a   positive  
interest in their distribution agent extending its client base to the extent  
that this permits the realization of scale economies and a consequent  
reduction in the unit costs of distribution.   It appears, in fact, that the  
service   level   agreements   between  the   principals  and  the  distribution  
agent explicitly provide that the existing principals benefit from further  
scale   economies   realized   by   the   agent   through   the   expansion   of   its  
27

client base.
90. We are also asked to note that South Africa’s largest generic producer  
– Pharmacare – is one of the principals served by the distribution agent  
in question here and that other smaller generic producers also utilize  
the   services   of   Kinesis.     Moreover,   it   appears   that   the   other   EDAs  
count  generic  producers  in  their  client   base.    Hence even if  Kinesis  
were   prevailed   upon   by   one   its   principals   to   exclude   a   competing  
generic producer, this would not preclude one of the other EDAs whose  
principals were not in competition with the generic producer in question  
from  distributing  the  latter’s  product.    We  have  also  been  presented  
with   evidence   that   demonstrates   that   important   generic   producers   –  
inter   alia,   Adcock   Ingram   –   are   successfully   distributing   their   own  
product.
91. In general, in order to sustain this allegation of likely foreclosure we would have to be  
persuaded that Kinesis is dominant in the pharmaceutical distribution market – which  
is manifestly not the case – or that it has entered into a conspiracy with the other  
EDAs.  There is no evidence of such a conspiracy.  But even this would not suffice to  
persuade   us.     There   are   other   pharmaceutical   distribution   mechanisms   in   place,  
other, that is, than the various EDAs, to be found not least of all in the ranks of the  
present applicants.  Moreover, as we have already indicated in our discussion of the  
relevant   market,   we   have   no   reason   to   believe   that   other   distributors,   that   is,  
providers of distribution and other logistic services in other sectors of the economy,  
would not be able to effect the distribution of pharmaceutical products.   There are,  
we   acknowledge,   particular   unique   features   that   attach   to   the   distribution   of  
pharmaceutical products, but this applies to a range of products – fresh and frozen

pharmaceutical products, but this applies to a range of products – fresh and frozen  
food products with their cold chain requirements is a pertinent example ­ and these  
have   not   precluded   specialist   logistic   providers   from   meeting   the   requirements   of  
manufacturers   of   these   products.     Indeed,   as   already   noted,   we   are   yet   to   be  
persuaded that the relevant market for the purposes of our present examination is  
correctly   identified   as   that   for   the   provision   of   distribution   services   to   the  
pharmaceutical industry. 
92. In other words the fuller examination of the evidence permitted by adjudication of the  
evidence presented at the final stage of the complaint referral, may well show that  
the relevant market is simply that for the provision of distribution services generally.  
Just   as   international   freight   forwarders,   as   well   as   shippers   and   air   freight  
companies, participate in the export and import distribution of a range of products  
from fresh fish to diamonds, many with exotic regulatory and other requirements, so  
too is it wholly conceivable that providers of logistic and distribution services on the  
domestic   market   will   respond   positively   to   a   commercial   incentive   to   distribute  
pharmaceutical products. 28
28  The applicants have understandably made much of a throwaway statement in the respondents’ early  
submission document to the Competition Board in 1998 at paragraph 12.1 (Transcript page 43) to the  
effect that wholesalers facilitate the entry into the market of generic substitutes and appears to offer  
the establishment of EDAs as a counter to the introduction of generics.  The meaning of this statement  
– made in 1998 – has not been clarified by the respondents.  However, even if this was their intention  
we would still have to be satisfied that market conditions would allow this exclusionary intent to be  
realized.  
28

93. The applicants counter that, whatever the theoretical prospects for new entry may  
be, this has not occurred for many years and that the allegedly low returns earned by  
the   wholesalers   are   an   effective   deterrent   to   new   entrants. 29    Again,   we   are  
skeptical.     Low   returns   may   be   endemic   and   permanent   in   the   pharmaceutical  
wholesale trade.   But this may be a signal that the wholesale mode of distribution  
has, like the typewriter, finally run into the sand.  Wholesalers unwilling to grasp this  
nettle   and   reconsider   their   business   model   may   well   find   themselves   subject   to  
endemically low returns.  However, it is not for the competition authorities to protect  
them from their commercial folly. Certainly, as the present case exemplifies, there  
has been new entry by providers of logistic and distribution services. In other words,  
low returns may well be the outcome of a comfortable oligopoly whose participants  
are   content   with   the   easy   life,   with   passing   on   pharmaceutical   products   and   the  
associated   margins   to   their   long­standing   and,   it   frequently   appears,   captive  
customers30.   Low returns are not necessarily indicative of robust competition.
94. We should note another feature of the exclusivity that attaches to this particular EDA.  
Certainly,   Kinesis   is   exclusively   contracted   to  perform   a   range   of   distribution   and  
logistical services on behalf of its principals.  But this does not preclude wholesalers  
from  procuring   product  through   the agency   of  Kinesis   for  on­sale  to  the retailers.  
Nor,   naturally,   are   the   retailers   precluded   from   sourcing   the   principals’   product  
through   the   wholesale   channel.     The   wholesalers   argue   that   by   establishing   an  
identical   price   for   retailers   and   wholesalers   any   possible   incentive   for   retailers   to

purchase   their   requirements   from   the   wholesalers   has   been   eliminated   –   the  
wholesalers   would   either   have   to   charge   the   retailers   a   higher   price   than   that  
available   through   the   EDA   or   they   would   have   to   forego   all   margin.     But   this  
seemingly self­evident contention requires considerably closer scrutiny.  Certainly, it  
is   common  cause  that  Pharmacare  actually  maintains  an   explicit   price  differential  
between   its   wholesale   customers   and   its   retail   customers. 31    Pfizer’s   pricing  
structure is explicitly determined by the volume of purchases and so there appears to  
be a margin available for those wishing to purchase in bulk for on­sale to smaller  
purchasers.  GSK, the third principal, appears to maintain a uniform pricing structure.  
95. However pricing aside, that is, even if we assumed that wholesalers  
and retailers were in fact charged an identical price, does this serve to  
eliminate   the   possibility   of   other   pro­competitive   offerings   from   the  
wholesalers?     For   example,   the   wholesalers   insist   that   the   full­line  
service   that   they   offer   is   a   convenient   alternative   for   small   retailers  
who, in the absence of such an offering, would have to place orders  
with a number of different EDAs.   If this is indeed so, then why are  
wholesalers   not   able   to   charge   for   the   convenience   of   one­stop  
purchasing?       The   greater   frequency   of   the   deliveries   from   the  
wholesalers is also presented as one of their competitive strengths.  In  
other words, the EDA does not preclude the wholesalers from inserting  
themselves between the principals and their retail customers.  However  
the test  for a successful  and sustainable  pro­competitive insertion is  
that   the   wholesalers   provide   a   pro­competitive   rationale   for   their  
existence.  If these additional offerings cannot be charged out, then it is

existence.  If these additional offerings cannot be charged out, then it is  
clear   that   they  are  not   valued   by  the   market.     It   is   not  then   for   the  
29  Transcript page 76
30  Respondents Heads page 143, Transcript p234
31  Respondents’ Heads, page 97
29

competition authorities to foist these upon the market by providing that  
the wholesalers’ position be secured through the provision of a price  
advantage.
96. Secondly,   we   have   to   examine   the   contention   that   the   EDA   has  
eliminated   vigorous   intra­brand   competition,   that   is,   competition  
between wholesale distributors of the identical pharmaceutical brand.  
Exclusive distribution arrangements do, per definition, eliminate intra­
brand competition. However, there is insufficient evidence of vigorous  
competition   between   wholesalers   (that   is,   intra­brand   competition)   in  
the   pre­EDA   era   to   sustain   the   allegation   that   this   amounts   to   a  
substantial lessening of competition.  We are asked to infer high levels  
of competition between the various wholesalers from the allegedly low  
returns earned by the latter.  However, as already noted, this may well  
be  indicative   of   a  monopolist   or  a   group  of  co­operating  oligopolists  
who value the quiet life over and above high returns.  
97. This latter interpretation is supported by other prima facie evidence of co­operation,  
rather   than   vigorous   competition,   between   the   wholesalers,   the   uniform   discount  
demanded from the manufactures not the least of these indicators.  Furthermore, the  
respondents have submitted evidence suggesting that, far from vigorous competition  
between wholesalers for the custom of the retailers, many of the latter are effectively  
tied into supply arrangements with one or other full­line wholesalers.  These ties are  
variously cemented – in some instances it appears that the retailer customers of the  
full­line wholesalers own equity stakes in the latter; at other times, there is evidence  
of wholesaler financial assistance to the retailer in exchange for a commitment on  
the part of the retailer to purchase supply exclusively or predominantly through the  
wholesaler in question. 32

wholesaler in question. 32
98. In the face of these prima facie indicators of co­operation as well as  
evidence   submitted   by   the   respondent’s   we   are   not   able   to   accept,  
without   further   evidence,   the   complainant’s   bald   assertion   of   strong  
intra­brand   competition   for   pharmaceutical   products   in   the   pre­EDA  
era.  
99. We should also note the argument, widely supported in contemporary competition  
analysis,  that holds that insofar as a diminuition of intra­brand competition occurs as  
a result of an exclusive distribution arrangement, that this will be likely compensated  
for   by   more   intensive   inter­brand   competition,   that   is,   by   competition   between  
competing   brands   –   in   other   words,   that   the   distributor’s   focus   on   procuring  
competitive advantage for its clients brands will intensify competition with brands that  
do not enjoy the services of the distribution agent. 
100. In   opposition   to   this   argument,   the   applicants   contend   that   the  
pharmaceutical   industry   is   characterized   by   unusually   low   levels   of  
inter­brand  competition.   This contention appears to  derive  from two  
features   associated   with   the   market   for   pharmaceutical   products.  
These are, first, the widespread use of intellectual property protection  
32  Record B900, Respondents Heads, page 144
30

of pharmaceutical  products.     And,  second, the  ‘must­have’  nature of  
the product, the fact that product and brand selection of pharmaceutical  
products is made by the prescribing doctor thus eliminating the ability  
of   the   actual   purchaser   of   the   product   to   exercise   any   competitive  
choice.
101. We,   of   course,   acknowledge   ubiquitous   use   of   patents   in   this   sector.   We   note,  
however,   the  respondents’  observation  that  even   many  patent   protected   products  
face   competition   from   products   applicable   for   the   same   broad   therapeutic  
purpose.33 Moreover, we are constrained to observe that on closer appraisal of the  
evidence, the market for ethical pharmaceutical products may well be an innovation  
market, that is, that competition occurs in the innovation stage of the product life­
cycle.  This latter form of competition is not diminished by patent protection – indeed,  
it is competition in order to achieve patent protection in respect of a new innovation.  
The   evidence   before   us   does   not   justify   a   far­reaching   judgment   on   the   state   of  
competition   in   the   market   for   pharmaceutical   products.     We   stress   that   further  
evidence and argument may well establish low levels of inter­brand competition in  
the pharmaceutical products market – certainly the exceptional returns posted by the  
pharmaceutical majors suggest low levels of competition.  However, this conclusion  
cannot be justified on the papers submitted in this application for interim relief.
102. Even the ‘must­have’ nature of pharmaceutical product consumption has been called  
into question by relatively recent developments  that have been highlighted by the  
respondents.    We refer, of course,  to increasing evidence  of demand side buying  
power supported by legislative intervention that requires the use, under a range of  
circumstances,   of   cheaper   products   than   those   frequently   prescribed   by   the

circumstances,   of   cheaper   products   than   those   frequently   prescribed   by   the  
consumer’s   doctor,   as   well   as   increasing   pressure   from   medical   aid   schemes   to  
contain costs 34.  Again, the respondents’ counter arguments by no means dispose  
of their opponents’ contentions.  But they do unquestionably call them into a degree  
of doubt sufficient to constrain a granting of interim relief – in a word, more evidence  
is required to resolve this argument.
103. In   summary   then,   based   on   general   pharmaceutical   product  
characteristics   –   the   widespread   use   of   patent   protection   and   the  
‘must­have’   nature   of   the   product   –   the   applicants   argue   that   inter­
brand competition is already considerably muted and that the formation  
of an EDA will  eliminate  intra­brand competition.   However,  contrary  
evidence   submitted   by   the   respondents   suggests   that   intra­brand  
competition   has   never   been   particularly   strong   and   that   inter­brand  
competition may well be a great deal more robust than suggested by  
the applicants.
104. In the absence of further evidence, we accordingly cannot find that the  
vertical   agreement   between   the   respective   principals   and   the  
distribution   agencies   as   represented   by   three   EDAs   in   question   has  
resulted in a substantial preventing or lessening of competition in any  
of the relevant markets implicated in this matter.
33  Respondents Heads, page 115
34  Record, B1092
31

105. In   the   light   of   this   finding,   we   are   not   obliged   to   determine   the  
conflicting   claims   made   regarding   the   efficiency   or   otherwise   of   the  
EDAs over the wholesale form of distribution.  
Abuse Of Dominance
106. The applicants also allege contravention of Sections 8 (a), (b) (c ) and (d)(i). These  
contraventions   would   all   constitute   abuses   of   a   dominant   provision.   Section   9  
prohibits price discrimination by a dominant firm.
107. We should state at the outset that the allegations relating to abuse of  
dominance   have   been   particularly   poorly   framed   by   the   applicants.  
Indeed, in most instances while a raft of allegations pertaining to abuse  
of dominance have been made in the original notice of motion, they are  
barely referred to in the papers subsequently filed or in the argument  
before the Tribunal. 
Dominance
108. The   threshold   necessary   to   sustain   an   allegation   of   abuse   of  
dominance, is that dominance in a market should be established.  It is  
here that the applicants’ difficulties begin.
109. Section 7 of the Act provides that:
A firm is dominant in a market if –
a) it has at least 45% of that market;
b) it has at least 35%, but less than 45%, of that market,  
unless it can show that it does not have market power; or
c) it   has   less   than   35%   of   that   market,   but   has   market  
power.
110. ‘Market power’ is defined in the Act as:
‘the power of a firm to control prices, or to exclude competition  
or   to   behave   to   an   appreciable   extent   independently   of   its  
competitors, customers or suppliers.’
111. Recall that we have identified two relevant markets.  The first refers to  
a set of pharmaceutical products markets each defined by the ATC3  
therapeutic   categories.     The   second   refers   to   the   market   for   the  
distribution   of   pharmaceutical   products,   although   as   we   have   noted

distribution   of   pharmaceutical   products,   although   as   we   have   noted  
above, there is prima facie evidence suggesting that the market may  
be   cast   more   broadly   as   a   market   for   the   distribution   of   consumer  
products.  
112. We   can   find   no   coherent   allegation   regarding   dominance   in   the   second   of   these  
markets, the distribution market. The applicants do assert that the principals’  alleged  
32

market power in the various product markets has enabled them to extend this into  
the   distribution   market.   This   assertion   appears   to   rely   upon   an   aggregation   not  
merely   of   the   respondent   manufacturers’   market   shares,   but   also   of   the   market  
shares of all the manufacturers who are party to one or other exclusive distribution  
arrangement.35  Clearly, whether defined broadly as a market for the distribution of  
consumer products, or narrowly as a market for the distribution of pharmaceutical  
products,   it   would   be   impossible   to   establish   dominance   on   the   part   of   Kinesis.  
Accordingly our discussion of the abuse of dominance allegations is focused on the  
pharmaceutical product markets.
113. With respect to the pharmaceutical product markets, the applicants have produced  
therapeutic   class   analysis   tables   to   establish   that   the   principals   collectively   hold  
market shares in excess of 45% in 31 ATC 3 classes and market shares exceeding  
35% in 3 other ATC 3 classes. On this basis they conclude that   “the principals are  
jointly dominant or presumed to be dominant (i.e. have more than a 35% share) in  
31 ATC 3 classes.” 
114. With   respect   to   this   allegation   of   ‘joint   dominance’,   the   respondents  
counter that 
“It is not sufficient to assert collective dominance   (and we do not concede that  
the concept is recognized in our legislation) merely because the sum of the  
sales of the companies that use the same distributor is at least 35%. There  
can be no economic justification for aggregating sales in this way. Where  
GSK,   Pfizer   and   Pharmacare   products   have   similar   therapeutic   qualities  
they are competing products in a particular product market, properly defined,  
whether or not they use the same distribution agent.”
115. We   cannot   but   concur   with   the   respondents.   The   applicants   have   essentially

asserted  that  which   they  have  sought  unsuccessfully  to  prove  in  order   to  sustain  
their   allegations   under   Section   4,   namely   that   the   principals   have   entered   into   a  
horizontal agreement.  Even if we understand why a competition authority may elect  
to exercise particular vigilance towards a group of competing manufacturers using  
the   same   distribution   agency   ­   distribution   being   a   particularly   ‘close   to   market’  
activity ­ the mere fact that they are doing so cannot be used to infer an agreement  
between the manufacturers and therefore cannot, of itself, infer ‘joint’ or ‘collective’  
dominance for the purposes of sustaining a Section 8 allegation.  Were we to permit  
this   inference   to   be   drawn   we   would   expose   every   logistic   or   distribution   service  
provider that had more than one client in the same market (as well as the clients  
themselves) to prosecution under Section 4 and, assuming that our Act does actually  
recognize   the   concept   of   abuse   of   collective  dominance,   Sections   8   and   9.     In  
essence  we would,  by requiring  that each provider  of distribution  services  restrict  
itself   to   one   client   in   each   market,   be   severely   inhibiting   specialization   in   the  
provision of these services.   Indeed, the entire tenor of the applicants’ arguments  
suggests that this is precisely the conclusion that they would have us draw. 36 
116. In addition to ‘joint dominance’ the applicants allege that “ the principals individually  
35  Heads p 84, Record B2306
36  This is further borne out by the applicants professed comfort with the fact that Adcock Ingram  
distributes its own product.  We infer from this that if each of the respondent manufacturers had  
elected to undertake distribution of its own product this would have encountered no opposition from  
the applicants – the anti­competitive core of the respondents’ conduct then resides, from the

the applicants – the anti­competitive core of the respondents’ conduct then resides, from the  
applicant’s perspective, in the fact that they all use the same provider of distribution services. 
33

are dominant or presumed to be dominant (i.e. have more than a 35% share) in the  
following classes:
Respondent ATC 3 Classes
First Respondent  14
Second Respondent 2
Third Respondent 6
Fourth Respondent 4
Fifth Respondent 1
Source: Applicants’ founding affidavit B17
117. Individual dominance is claimed as follows in the applicants’ replying  
affidavits:
Respondent  No. of ATC3 Categories 35%+
GSK (First & Fourth Respondents)  15
Pfizer (Second & Fifth Respondents 3
Pharmacare (Third Respondent) 19
Source: Synthesis of Applicants’ Market Share Analysis, B3218
118. The respondents, for their part, deny that dominance is proven in respect of the ATC  
3 classes.  They argue that in respect of certain products the manufacturer’s patent  
may   have   expired,   or   other   new   innovative   treatments   may   provide   vigorous  
competition,   or   generic   alternatives   may   be   available.   On   this   basis   their   expert  
report by Europe Economics, analyses the various markets and concludes that the  
degree of substitutability in the ATC 3 categories is such that the number of ATC 3  
categories in which the respondents are dominant is relatively few. 37 
119. The applicants, in addition to the evidence submitted on market share  
in the various therapeutic categories, allege, relying upon Section 7(c),  
that the respondents have market power.  
120. In support of this allegation, the applicants insist, firstly, that the respondents’ have  
the power to control price.    This, they argue, is a consequence of patent protection  
and of the “must­have” nature of pharmaceutical products.
121. Clearly, patent protection confers a degree of monopoly power – this is  
its   manifest   intention.     And   while   we   have   referred   above   to   the  
submissions of the manufacturers in which they argue, inter alia, that  
even   patented   drugs   are   not   immune   from   competition   from   other  
treatments in the same therapeutic category, there can be little denying

treatments in the same therapeutic category, there can be little denying  
the power conferred by a patent and the controversies surrounding the  
alleged   willingness   of   the   pharmaceutical   manufactures   to   milk   this  
power   for   all   that   it   is   worth.     However,   this   having   been   said,   it   is  
indeed   difficult   to   understand   how   the   EDA   confers   ‘additional’  
monopoly power on the patent holder.  The source of the market power  
37  Record page B1405
34

is the patent and this is not influenced by the distribution arrangement  
employed by the patent holder.
122. Secondly,   the   applicants   argue   that   the   principals   have   the   power   to   behave  
independently of their customers and assert that this is evidenced by their unilateral  
alteration   of   the   distribution   pricing   system   and   by   the   imposition   of   new   trading  
terms and conditions via the EDA’s .    We will restate our response to this argument,  
which,   although   fundamentally   flawed,   constantly   re­appears,   in   one   guise   or  
another, throughout the applicants’ submissions.
123. The view supported by the applicants – and accepted for the purposes  
of   this   decision   –   is   that   the   wholesalers   and   the   logistic   and  
distribution   services   specialists   like   Tibbet   and   Britten   perform   a  
distribution service for the pharmaceutical manufacturers.   This is the  
basis of the applicants’ insistence that they be rewarded for rendering  
this distribution service.  The respondents, for their part, have decided  
to utilize the services of Kinesis, Tibbet and Britten’s subsidiary.  They  
have   entered   into   a   contract   with   Kinesis   that   appoints   them   their  
exclusive distribution agent.   This is no different to appointing, on an  
exclusive basis, a firm of auditors or attorneys or an advertising agent  
or a security company.  During the contract period alternative firms of,  
for example, auditors will not expect to perform an auditing function for  
the entity in question and they will naturally not expect to be rewarded.  
Indeed the only basis for the applicants’ insistence that, in the face of  
the EDA, they continue to perform distribution services and that they be  
‘rewarded’ for so doing is that, in fact, they are, in reality, not providers  
of distribution services at all, but they are rather traders in, inter alia,  
pharmaceutical products.  What has changed is not the ‘reward’ offered

pharmaceutical products.  What has changed is not the ‘reward’ offered  
to them for performing the distribution service, but rather their terms of  
trade,   terms   that   now   include   the   cost   of   the   distribution   and   other  
related logistical services, costs which have been internalized by the  
respondents   in   the   form   of   an   exclusive   agency   agreement   with  
Kinesis. 
124. The applicants are, of course, perfectly at liberty to continue as traders  
of pharmaceutical products.  To do this may well pre­suppose that they  
improve their terms of trade, that they bargain down the price charged  
by the manufacturers and/or bargain up the price they receive from the  
retailers.     In   order   to   improve   their   bargaining   position   they   may,   in  
turn, have to incorporate new services into their trading activities.  But  
why should their inability to achieve more favourable terms of trade be  
construed   as   a   manifestation   of   market   power   on   the   part   of   the  
manufacturers? 
125. The mere selection by the manufacturers of a distribution agent does  
obviously   not,   in   itself,   reflect   market   power.     Monopsonistic   market  
power would be manifest if a purchaser of distribution services were  
35

able   to   extract   a   sub­competitive   price   for   the   provision   of   these  
services.  But there is no evidence for this, nor could there be.  If the  
respondents insisted upon Kinesis delivering a competitive service at a  
sub­competitive   price,   then  Kinesis  would  be   at   liberty  to  refuse   the  
business   and   to   compete   for   the   distribution   business   of   other  
pharmaceutical manufacturers, or, indeed, of camera manufacturers if  
the   distribution   market   was   defined   broadly.     The   custom   of   the  
pharmaceutical   manufacturers   is   undoubtedly   incentive   for   the  
distribution   service   providers   to   bargain   hard,   to   attempt   to   reduce  
costs  in  order   to  maintain  a  viable   return   and  to   introduce  new   and  
better   services.     But   if,   in  the   end,   they   are   unable   to   agree   on   an  
acceptable rate and/or level of service, then the manufacturer would  
seek out another service provider and the distributor would seek out  
another purchaser of its services.
126. The wholesalers appear to contend that it is the exclusive element that  
manifests market power.  But this too is untenable. There is an element  
of   ‘exclusivity’   in   every   transaction   –   once   I   elect   to   purchase   a  
motorcar,   or,   for  that   matter,   the  week’s   groceries,   from  a   particular  
vendor, then other vendors are ‘excluded’. I will have been induced to  
support the  chosen vendor by  the superiority  of  her offering. This is  
why   it   has   been   recognized,   from   the   earliest   days   of   US   anti­trust  
jurisprudence, that every contract contains an implicit ‘restraint of trade’  
and this is precisely why the sweeping language of the Sherman Act  
has  been  moderated  by  a  rule  of  reason.    It   was  recognized  that  a  
literal interpretation of the Sherman Act’s prohibition of every contract

literal interpretation of the Sherman Act’s prohibition of every contract  
in   restraint   of   trade   would   have   the   perverse   consequence   of  
restraining   the   operation   of   the   market   itself,   rather   than   the   anti­
competitive conduct at which it was directed.
127. The   principle   outlined   above   is   not   affected   by   the   fact   that   the  
commodity in question here is a service which is provided over a period  
of   time,   rather   than   a  product   supplied   at   a   particular   point   in   time.  
Exclusivity in the provision of the service, in particular the length of time  
for which it is granted, is simply part of the bargain. It takes no great  
insight  to  imagine the service  provider conceding  a  lower price or a  
higher level of service in exchange for greater certainty in the form, on  
this occasion, of a time bound exclusive arrangement.   In the normal  
conduct of trade these bargains are entered into every minute of every  
day.  Certainly, as soon as the bargain is struck others are ‘excluded’,  
are ‘restrained’ from trading to a greater or lesser extent.  
128. We will not even attempt to untangle the web of conflicting evidence  
surrounding the question of whether or not the applicants were given  
the   opportunity   of   bidding   for   the   right   to   provide   the   distribution  
services sought by the manufacturer respondents.  Suffice to say that  
36

there is no requirement that the provision of any input be subject to a  
public   tender   process.     This   form   of   purchasing   may   promote   good  
governance   and   financial   accountability;   it   may   well   be   the   most  
effective means of the purchaser ensuring that it is, indeed, receiving  
the best available good or service, at the lowest possible price.  But it is  
certainly   not   required   by   competition   law.     Indeed   competition   law  
seeks to protect the market precisely because of a presupposition that  
profit   maximizing  incentives  will   dictate  that,   even   in  the  absence  of  
formally administered auctions and bidding processes, purchasers and  
sellers will find each other.  We note also that the applicants have not  
given   the   impression   that   they   were   willing   to   provide   many   of   the  
services required by the manufacturers and offered by Kinesis.  On the  
contrary, the applicants have consistently attempted to deride many of  
these services as unnecessary ‘luxuries’ and have made it clear that all  
that   they   are   interested   in   providing   are   the   sub­set   of   distribution  
services which they have identified as ‘fine distribution’ for the purpose  
of   on­sale   or   ‘distribution’   to   the   retail   trade.     Under   these  
circumstances it is hardly surprising that the purchaser of the services  
– the respondents – never ‘met’ these particular would be suppliers –  
the applicants ­ in the market place. 
Abuse of Dominance
129. Even if we proceed on the basis that one or other of the respondents  
‘individually’ dominate 27 (founding affidavit) or 37 (replying affidavit)  
pharmaceutical   product   markets,   the   applicants   would   still   have   to  
establish that this dominance had been abused.
130. Section 8 of the Act provides:
It is prohibited for a dominant firm to – 
(a) charge an excessive price to the detriment of consumers;

(a) charge an excessive price to the detriment of consumers;
(b) refuse to give a competitor access to an essential facility when it is  
economically feasible to do so;
(c) engage  in an exclusionary act, other than an act listed in paragraph (d), if  
the anti­competitive effect of that act outweighs its technological, efficiency or  
other pro­competitive gain; or
(d)   engage   in   any   of   the   following   exclusionary   acts,   unless   the   firm  
concerned can show technological, efficiency or other pro­competitive gains  
which   outweigh   the   anti­competitive   effects   of   its   act   ­
(i) requiring or inducing a supplier or customer to not deal with a competitor;
…”
37

131. Section   9   prohibits   a   dominant   firm   from   engaging   in   price  
discrimination.
132. Though they relied on certain sub­sections of sections 8 and 9 in their papers, the  
applicants did not deal in great detail with these abuse of dominance allegations in  
their   Heads   of   Argument   or   in   their   oral   argument   at   the   hearing.   Their   Heads  
indicate that they are only pursuing abuse of dominance allegations under sections  
8(d)(i) and 8(c). 38The Tribunal expressly queried whether the wholesalers persisted  
in their claims under sections 8 (a) and (b) but no response was forthcoming. We  
therefore will not deal with either sections 8 (a), 8 (b) or 9, as these were not pursued  
by the applicants. 
133. Note that the respondents in the record raise the in limine point that the Competition  
Tribunal   does   not   have   jurisdiction   to   consider   whether   the   respondents   have  
contravened section 8(a) of the Act because this was not part of the complaint that  
the Commission was originally asked to investigate. Therefore they ask that this be  
struck out of the founding affidavit. The respondents also queried the legitimacy of  
raising a section 8(b) complaint at this interim relief application. A similar point was  
raised in the Complaint Referral wherein the Tribunal held that it had no jurisdiction  
to consider  certain  allegations  that were not part of the original  complaint  referral  
investigated by the Commission 39. The Competition Appeal Court on appeal held  
that   the   Tribunal   correctly   struck   out   references   to   the   prohibited   practices   of  
excessive   pricing   (section   8(a))   and   predatory   pricing   (section   8(d)(iv))   from   the  
referral   and   that   the   Tribunal   erred   in   not   striking   out   reference   to   the   denial   of  
access   to   an   essential   facility   (section   8(b))   from   the   referral 40.   There   is   some

controversy surrounding whether or not the wholesalers agreed they would abide the  
CT decision.
 
134. Therefore, even if they had been pursued, the CAC has held that sections 8(a) and  
8(b) do not form part of the original complaint referral. 41 
Section 8(d)(i)
135. The wholesalers allege that the respondents are inducing each other,  
alternatively   retail   pharmacists   and   doctors,   not   to   deal   with   the  
wholesalers, but with Kinesis.
136. In their Heads of Argument they state that:
“The Principals have perpetrated an abuse of dominance by compelling or at least  
inducing the Complainant’s customers to buy directly from them by offering them  
prices and/or discounts that the Applicants cannot match” 42
137. The   respondents   point   out   that   the  applicants   have   not  established   that  they   are  
competitors   of   the   respondents,   as   envisaged   by   this   section.   They   argue   that  
38  Page 84 of Applicants’ Heads
39  45/CR/Jul01
40    The manufacturers raised the procedural issue of whether this section can be prosecuted at this  
interim relief application. Heads page 164 This issue was not dealt with by the wholesalers.
41  Transcript page 260.  
42  Page 84
38

pharmacists   will   choose   to   source   product   either   from   the   manufacturers   or   the  
wholesalers on the basis of the  distribution services  offered, therefore, they compete  
in   respect   of   the   distribution   service   –   not   in   respect   of   pharmaceutical   products  
supplied.   In   this   sense,   the   wholesalers   and   manufacturers   compete   at   different  
levels   of   the   supply   chain,   the   wholesalers   exerting   no   constraining   force   on   the  
manufacturers at the product level, that is, in setting prices.  They furthermore argue  
that   “induce”   cannot   be   interpreted   broadly   to   include   any   manner   of   offering  
discounts  based on volume of products purchased.  We agree with this argument.  
More is required in terms of this section. It is the very essence of competition for  
competitors to compete for custom on the basis of superior offerings. 
Section 8(c)
138.  It is not clear from their papers whether the applicants are relying on  
the general species of exclusionary conduct in section 8(c). 
139. In their Heads of Argument they state that:
“The   Respondents,   with   effect   from   29   May   2000,   effectively  
refused   to   supply   their   products   to   the   Applicants   at   the  
customary   discounted   rate,   or   at   any   price   which   would  
compensate the wholesalers for the services they render or to  
enable   them   to   compete   effectively   with   the   Principals   in   the  
sale of their products.  As their products are no longer offered to  
wholesalers   on   terms   and   conditions   that   make   it   viable   for  
wholesalers to trade in such products. This is tantamount to a  
refusal to deal because the concept of a refusal to deal covers  
not  only  pure  refusal, but  also  where a  dominant company  is  
only willing to deal on an unreasonable basis…”
140. From   their   assertions   in   their   Heads,   it   seems   the   applicants   are

140. From   their   assertions   in   their   Heads,   it   seems   the   applicants   are  
seeking   to   encapsulate   under   this   section   their   allegations   that   the  
manufacturers are denying them competitive access to their products;  
raising the barriers to entry into the distribution market; and ensuring  
that their accounts are paid for in preference to other creditors.
141. The   respondents   argue   once   again,   that   the   applicants   have   not  
established,   even   on   a   prima   facie   basis,   the   markets   in   respect   of  
which the respondents are dominant. They also insist that the evidence  
before us shows there are a number of efficiency and pro­competitive  
gains which arise from the use of the EDA.
142. It is not clear to us that the respondents’ conduct is  exclusionary. The applicants are  
clearly   able   to   continue   trading   profitably   in   the   respondents’   products   and   the  
effluxion of time has demonstrated that they have not been ousted from the market.  
This point is elaborated on later in the decision.  We refer to our decision  in   York 
Timbers Limited and Safcol Limited :43  
43  15/IR/Feb01 at paragraph 100
39

“As already elaborated, we are not persuaded that the practice  
complained   of,   the   reduction   in   the   guaranteed   supply   from  
Witklip, is 'exclusionary' within the meaning of the Act ­ that is, it  
does not impede or prevent the applicant from expanding in the  
market but merely requires that it competes for its supply of raw  
material on terms similar to those available to its competitors.  
Moreover,   even   if   the   practice   complained   of   were   to   be  
established   as   an   impediment   to   the   applicant's   expansion   in  
the market, it still remains for the applicant to establish the 'anti­
competitive effect' of the practice, to show, in other words, that  
market power has been created or extended in consequence of  
the alleged act. This has not been done.”
143. Our reasoning in the York case is applicable here.
SERIOUS   AND   IRREPARABLE   DAMAGE   AND   THE   BALANCE   OF  
CONVENIENCE
144. As already indicated, we will not take a view on which legislation – pre­  
or post­amendment ­ governs this matter because on both versions of  
interim relief, the fundamental criteria required for the granting of relief  
have not been established.
145. We held in   Natal Wholesale Chemists (Pty) Ltd and Astra Pharmaceuticals   that in  
terms of the amended Act, the Tribunal no longer has to consider whether each of  
the requirements for interim relief has been established in isolation, but must rather  
examine all of the factors listed in Section 49(2)C as a whole. 44   In this scheme a  
strong showing on some factors – say harm and the balance of convenience – may  
conceivably   counterbalance   a   poor   showing   on   another   factor,   say   the   evidence  
relating to the alleged restrictive practice.
146. We   have   already   dealt   with   the   first   of   the   factors   to   be   considered   in   deciding  
whether or not to grant interim relief, namely, the requirement to show evidence of a

whether or not to grant interim relief, namely, the requirement to show evidence of a  
restrictive   practice.   As   in   the   NWC   case,   in   this   case   there   is   no   evidence   of   a  
restrictive practice. We have, elsewhere in this decision, elaborated why, where we  
find   the   evidence   of   a   restrictive   practice   very   weak,   and   where,   accordingly,  
evidence relating to the existence of a causal nexus between a restrictive practice  
and the harm is concomitantly weak, that we are unlikely to grant interim relief on the  
basis of harm or the balance of convenience alone.   We have even previously held  
that where the applicants have not proved the restrictive practice on the basis of a  
prima   facie   case,   it   has   not   been   necessary   for   us   to   deal   with   the   remaining  
requirements   of   section   49C,   viz.   irreparable   harm   and   the   balance   of  
convenience.45  We will nevertheless proceed to examine harm, an issue of some  
considerable   contention   between   the   parties   to   this   matter.   Following   that,   the  
balance of convenience of granting the relief will be considered.  
44  98/IR/Dec00. This was also applied in  York Timbers Limited and South African Forestry Company  
Limited 15/IR/Feb01    .   
45  Nkosinauth Ronald Msomi        & Others and BAT     49/IR/Jul02
40

SERIOUS OR IRREPARABLE DAMAGE
147. In order to establish serious or irreparable damage the evidence must   demonstrate 
that, on the face of it, absent a granting of interim relief, the ability of the applicants  
to   remain   as   viable   competitors   within   the   market   is   ‘seriously’   or   ‘irreparably’  
threatened.   In such circumstances, the material content of the applicants’ right to  
move to the final stage of adjudication is called into question because, even if relief  
was   granted   at   that   stage,   it   may   nevertheless   not   assist   the   applicants   in   their  
attempt to remain viable competitors.  This has manifestly not been demonstrated in  
this case.  
  
148. The   applicants’   prediction,   stated   in   the   strongest   of   terms,   of   their  
imminent   demise   has   been   a   notable   feature   of   this   application   for  
interim   relief.     Given   the   unusual   length   of   time   taken   to   reach   the  
stage of actually adjudicating this application we are in the fortunate  
position of being able to evaluate the accuracy of these claims.  Suffice  
to   say,   that   they   have   proved   to   be,   at   the   very   least,   wildly  
exaggerated.     Indeed   the   possibility   of   all   of   the   original   applicants  
remaining   in   business   some   three   years   after   the   initiation   of   this  
application – and they are all still in business ­ could not have been  
countenanced   on   the   basis   of   the   applicants’   own   consistent  
contentions   over   the   duration   of   this   matter.     Alternatively,   the  
applicants’ have vastly underestimated their own ability to respond pro­
competitively to the new environment in which they find themselves.
149. The   respondents   have   submitted   evidence   that   persuasively   establishes   that   the  
applicants have not been seriously or irreparably harmed. 46    While we agree with

applicants have not been seriously or irreparably harmed. 46    While we agree with  
the applicants’ argument that a successful showing of serious or irreparable harm  
does   not   require   a   showing   of   imminent   bankruptcy,   evidence   submitted   by   the  
respondents,  evidence frequently  drawn from  the applicants’ financial  records  and  
communications   with   their   shareholders   and   the   public,   demonstrates   that   they  
remain   robust   participants   in   the   wholesale   pharmaceutical   trade.     Indeed   the  
respondents have produced evidence which suggests that either the sale of Kinesis  
products  by the applicants  has not declined  nearly  as significantly  in the relevant  
period as asserted by the applicants, alternatively, that the wholesalers’ sales of the  
principals’   products   have   grown,   or   certainly   remained   constant,   in   the   relevant  
period.47  Clearly,   the   applicants   remain   major   customers   of   the   manufacturer  
respondents   in   this   matter.   We   must   infer   from   this   that   their   pro­competitive  
offerings vis­a­vis the EDAs – for example, greater frequency of deliveries and the  
benefits of one­stop purchasing – have held them in good stead.
150. The applicants have, in an attempt to explain the absence of apparent serious harm,  
argued that many of them have turned to the wholesaling of alternative products, for  
example cameras, but that their viability as   pharmaceutical  wholesalers remains in  
question.  No evidence has been offered in support of this assertion.  However, even  
if this were to be established, it serves to indicate that the changed environment in  
the pharmaceutical trade has caused them to deploy their talents and infrastructure  
elsewhere.   This does not mean that, in the colourful but essentially unconvincing  
46  Record page B1824­B1880
47  B1878­B1880 and B4209 to B4211, Respondents’ Heads, pages 41­42
41

analogy   offered   by   Mr.   Nelson   for   the   applicants,   they   have   moved   from   wine  
manufacturing   to   legal   practice.     Rather   they   have   deployed   the   experience   and  
other capital accumulated in the pharmaceutical wholesale trade in order to trade in  
a product range wider than that traditionally within the province of pharmaceutical  
wholesalers.  
151. This   is   precisely   the   sort   of   response   that   an   unfettered   process   of  
competition   promises.   Indeed,   as   indicated   in   our   discussion   of   the  
relevant market, it may serve to suggest that the relevant distribution  
market is not limited by pharmaceutical products – that is, just as the  
pharmaceutical   wholesalers   have,   under   competitive   pressure,  
expanded their business model to incorporate other products, so too is  
it possible for suppliers of distribution services to non­pharmaceutical  
products to offer their services to pharmaceutical manufacturers.     Be  
that as it may, what is clear is that the applicants’ response has staved  
off serious harm and it has enabled them to remain profitably active in  
the wholesale business – their experience remains intact, as do their  
networks   and   capital   equipment.   Should   the   hearing   on   final   relief  
arrive at conclusions different to our findings at this stage, there should  
be no obstacle to restoring their competitive position.
152. Several of the confidential affidavits submitted by representatives of the applicants  
confirm that since the advent of the EDA some of the wholesalers have resorted to  
‘roundtripping’, effectively arbitrage where pharmaceutical product is acquired from  
participants in the chain of distribution who, for one reason or another, receive their  
product at a discounted price.   This too represents a response to changed market  
conditions although it is suggested that it is not a recent phenomenon – it is, indeed,

conditions although it is suggested that it is not a recent phenomenon – it is, indeed,  
an   inevitable   feature   of   all   markets   in   which   price   differentiations   are   present.  
However, the recent amendments to the Medicines Act prohibit the procurement of  
pharmaceutical   products   from   any   source   other   than   original   manufacturer   thus  
effectively   prohibiting   arbitrage   or   roundtripping.   This   amendment   –   promulgated  
subsequent   to   the   conclusion   of   hearings   in   this   matter   –   is   the   basis   for   an  
application to re­open the hearings and which is discussed below.   
153. It appears, however, that roundtripping has generally been regarded as  
unethical and potentially compromising of safety and other standards.  
For this reason, while, as one may expect in a segmented market, it  
has always been present to some degree or another, perhaps even in  
existence prior to the formation of EDAs, it appears to have been a  
relatively peripheral feature of the pharmaceutical trade.  Hence, while  
we would expect the incidence of roundtripping to have intensified in  
the wake of the formation of the EDAs, and while the foreclosure of this  
response  by  the  amended   Medicines  Act,  is  an  additional   source   of  
pressure   on   the   wholesalers,   the   impact   of   this   amendment   will   not  
substantially alter the calculus of harm.   That is, there is no basis for  
believing that roundtripping had constituted the basis for the continued  
viability   of   the   wholesalers   or,   conversely,   that   its   elimination   would  
impact significantly on the quantum of harm.
42

BALANCE OF CONVENIENCE
154. The applications insist that they are sustaining continuing harm.   Our  
assessment of the harm suffered by them is that it is neither serious or  
irreparable.     In   many   cases   the   harm   generated   by   change   in   the  
respondents’ discounting structure has been ameliorated by the pro­
competitive responses of the applicants who have, it appears, found  
ways   of   retaining   a   significant   component   of   their   pharmaceutical  
business, including that related to the respondents themselves; in other  
instances   they   have   sought   out   other   wholesale   markets,   cameras  
being the example most frequently mentioned.  In the case of UPD, it  
has   been   absorbed   into   the   Clicks   group   and   clearly   its   future  
prospects   and   activities   are   likely   to   diverge   significantly   from   their  
past.   The   long   and   short   of   it   is   that   there   is   no   reason   to   expect,  
absent   the   granting   of   interim   relief,   that   the   situation   a  year   hence  
would look significantly different from the current position.
155. From the perspective of the respondents, the assessment of the prejudice that they  
will   suffer  in   consequence  of  a  granting  of   interim   relief  depends  crucially  on  the  
nature of the relief granted.   Given the vacillation on the part of the applicants and  
the consequent uncertainty regarding the relief asked for, it is well nigh impossible to  
assess the prejudice that will be suffered by the respondents in consequence of a  
granting of relief.    For example, it appears that the applicants are still asking that we  
order that Kinesis revert to DD, although, curiously, they insist, in the face of queries  
from the panel, that they make this request in the full knowledge that the Tribunal  
would not grant such far reaching relief.   We can only surmise that they recognize  
that were this extraordinarily far reaching remedy to be considered then this would

that were this extraordinarily far reaching remedy to be considered then this would  
clearly tilt the balance of convenience in their opponents’ favour.
156. Consistent with what appears to be the central feature of their case, the  
applicants   insist   that   were   we   merely   to   order   that   the   respondents  
temporarily   restore   the   pre­EDA   discount   structure   that,   then,   the  
inconvenience to the respondents would be minor and the balance of  
convenience would favour the applicants.  Again we cannot concur with  
this assessment.  The respondents point out that the restoration of the  
discount   structure   in   favour   of   the   applicants   may   well   give   rise   to  
demands   from   other   customers   for   a   similarly   favourable   discount.  
This may well lead to further disruptive litigation.
157. We   repeat   that   it   is   not   possible   to   determine   the   balance   of  
convenience in light of the uncertainty surrounding the relief claimed.  
In   any   event,   we   have   found   that   the   evidence   submitted   by   the  
applicants   in  support   of  their  various  allegations  does   not   justify   the  
granting of interim relief.   We are also not persuaded that, absent a  
granting   of   interim   relief,   the   applicants   will   sustain   serious   or  
irreparable damage.   Given these findings it seems hardly relevant to  
assess   the   balance   of   convenience   consequent   upon   granting   a  
remedy when we have determined that there is no discernible basis for  
43

instituting a remedy at all.
RELIEF
158. As set out earlier, as a point of departure, the applicants have failed to  
unequivocally establish the relief they are seeking. So glaring is their  
failure to do so, that it merits separate mention.
159. In their supplementary papers, filed in November 2001, the applicants do not clarify  
the relief they are claiming. When pressed on this issue by the respondents, they  
refer to the relief they are claiming in their supplementary replying affidavit where, in  
response   to   the   respondents   contentions   that   their   relief   sought   is   deficient,   they  
state that their notice of motion contains a prayer for  “further and/or alternative relief”  
and  that the  Tribunal   should  grant  such   relief   as  it  deems   appropriate   under  this  
head. Clearly mindful of the outcome of the CAC’s review of the relief granted by the  
first Tribunal panel they go on to say: 48
“The   Applicants   reiterate   that   the   Tribunal   should   only   grant  
relief   under   this   head   that   differs   from   the   relief   claimed   in  
prayers 3 to 11of the notice of motion after affording the parties  
an opportunity to address it in respect of such proposed relief.” [  
Record, B2192]
160. In their Heads of Argument (para 22) the Applicants state:
“The   interim   relief   order   requested   by   the   Applicants   is   set   out   in   the   notice   of  
motion that was filed on 8 June 2000.  In the interim, both the facts and the law  
relating to this interim relief application have changed.”
161. The applicants then go on to state:
“It would accordingly be reasonable and just for the Tribunal to  
grant an interim order in accordance with the directions handed  
down by the CAC.”
162. At the hearing on 18 th March 2003, counsel for the wholesalers took great pains to  
articulate the “further and/or alternative” relief claimed in accordance with the order  
handed down by Judge Selikowitz in the CAC judgment, in other words, to address

handed down by Judge Selikowitz in the CAC judgment, in other words, to address  
all the points of contention of the previous interim relief order. He contended that the  
wholesalers were now claiming relief as follows:
“The   first   to   fifth   Respondents   are   ordered   to   supply   their  
products to the complainant on terms and conditions relating to  
discounts   structures   identical   to   those   that   applied   to  
transactions   between   them   and   the   complainant   immediately  
48  On appeal, in 03/CAC/Oct00, Selikowitz AJA remarked that the Tribunal is only permitted to grant  
alternative relief where a case was made out for that relief on the papers; appellants ( manufacturers) 
were apprised of the alternative relief contemplated; and appellants ( manufacturers) are granted a full  
hearing in respect of such alternative relief. [our italics inserted]
44

before   the   conversion   of   DD   to   a   joint   exclusive   distribution  
agency for their products.”
163. However, two days later, during his argument in reply, counsel for the wholesalers  
contended that the relief contained in the original notice of motion on 8 June 2000  
had not been abandoned, but that in fact was being resurrected, along with the new  
order sought.   He contended that the   respondents had known since inception that  
the complainant sought an interim order  inter alia  as part and parcel of the reversion  
to the  status quo ante,  including that relating to the terms and conditions as set out  
as   to   discounts   (p419   transcript).   They   also   argued   that   the   Competition   Appeal  
Court considered the granting of an interim order that encompasses the reversion to  
a  status quo ante  that has anticompetitive elements. 
164. At   the   same   time,   the   complainant   moved   to   amend   their   Notice   of   Motion   to  
incorporate the relief  in the form of an addition to the original Notice of Motion. 
“For the sake of safety and in order to avoid technical objections at  
some   later   stage,   Mr   Chairman,   we   are   going   to   move   for   an  
amendment to the Notice of Motion, just to add what we told you on  
day   one   with   the   manner   in   which   we   think   the   order   should   be  
formulated.”
165. Counsel for the respondents objected vehemently to this application to  
amend. He based his objection on the fact that it was being brought at  
the   close   of   proceedings,   after   argument,   and   that   it   attempted   to  
reinstate relief that was abandoned, having never been referred to in  
the applicants’ papers.
166. We accept these arguments. While it is true that the CAC stated that  
the Tribunal is not necessarily limited to granting the exact relief set out  
in the Notice of Motion, we find that this does not change the fact that,

in the Notice of Motion, we find that this does not change the fact that,  
after   the   matter   was   referred   back   to   the   Tribunal   by   the   CAC,   the  
applicants   failed   to   specify   clearly   the   relief   sought.   The   applicants  
themselves   acknowledged   that   the   facts   and   law   in   relation   to   this  
interim   relief   application   had   changed.   This   strongly   suggests   that  
since the conditions under which the original relief was formulated had  
lapsed, the appropriate course was now for the Tribunal to determine  
appropriate   relief.   The   respondents   are   justified   in   protesting   their  
confusion as to what remedy is being sought against them. 
Nature of Relief Claimed
167. The respondents contend that the relief claimed is deficient for various
reasons. Firstly that the relief sought in prayers 3 and 9 of the original  
notice   of   motion   is   incompetent   since,   as   all   the   respondents   have  
already joined Kinesis, the relief contended for is no longer appropriate  
and outdated. Similarly, they argue that the relief claimed in prayer 4 is  
of   final   effect,   therefore  would   end   up  undoing   the  Kinesis  structure  
45

prematurely, before any final pronouncement on the complaint referral.
168. At the hearing, the respondents argued that insofar as the EDA is already in place  
and the applicants continue to operate profitably in the market, there is no imminent  
harm to them. There is evidence that the applicants continue to trade profitably, both  
in the manufacturers  products  and non­pharmaceutical products. They maintained  
that interim relief is only competent as long as there is ongoing harm. 49     To the  
extent that any harm was suffered, it has now passed, and accordingly the Tribunal  
cannot make an order in respect of that which has already occurred.
169. The respondents rightfully point out that the framing of competent relief  
is essential to any claim for interim relief. We agree with this and point  
out that this is especially so in the light of the CAC criticism of the relief  
provided for in the earlier decision of the Tribunal. This being a central  
issue in the CAC decision, it was incumbent on the applicants to frame  
the relief appropriately ab initio.
Relief sought with regard to Pharmacare 
170. The respondents point out that there is no justification for the relief sought against  
Pharmacare  since the relief  sought, a reversion to the discount  structure,  actually  
reflects   Pharmacare’s   existing   pricing   regime   –   in   other   words,   Pharmacare   is  
already   discounting   its   price   to   wholesalers.   The   respondents   request   that,   since  
pursuing a claim against Pharmacare amounts to  vexatious litigation, the claim must  
be dismissed with an award of costs on a special scale by reason of pursuing a case  
against parties against whom there is no complaint. 
171. The   applicants   have   nevertheless   persisted   in   seeking   relief   against  
Pharmacare, arguing, or so it would seem, that in the absence of relief  
it   too   may   decide   to   amend   its   discount   structure   in   the   direction

it   too   may   decide   to   amend   its   discount   structure   in   the   direction  
favoured by the other respondents.   We concur with the respondents  
that this is wholly inappropriate and, were we competent to do so, may  
well have attracted a punitive costs order.
APPLICATION TO RE­OPEN
172. As already indicated, approximately one month after the conclusion of  
the hearing of this matter and reservation of judgment, the applicants  
applied for leave to re­open the hearing.  This application was inspired  
by   the   promulgation ,  subsequent   to   our   reservation   of   judgment,   of  
certain amendments to the Medicines and Related Substances Act 101  
of 1965 (‘the Medicines Act’).  These amendments were published on  
the 28th March 2003, under Proclamation Numbers R23 and R24 in  
Government Gazette No. 24627.  Central to this application, this notice  
specified the dates on which various amendments to the Medicines Act  
would come into operation. 
49  Transcript page 272
46

173. The proclamation provided for the ‘staggered’ introduction of key amendments.   In  
particular the proclamation provided that whereas Section 22H(1)(a) would come into  
operation   with   effect   from   the  2 nd  May   2003,   Section   18A   would   only   come   into  
operation from the 2 nd  May 2004, a full year later.   The latter provision – Section  
18A   –   prohibits   any   person   from   supplying   “any   medicine   according   to   a   bonus  
system, rebate or any other incentive scheme.”   It provides, in other words, that the  
manufacturers’ list price shall be the applicable prices of pharmaceutical products to  
the final end­consumer.  In short, trading in pharmaceutical products was, as of the  
2nd May 2004, to be prohibited.
174. Under this scheme, intermediaries in the chain of distribution from manufacturers to  
end­consumer would be rewarded by means of a pre­determined service fee.   The  
level  of this  fee would  be determined  by a yet­to­be­appointed pricing  committee.  
Therefore, implementation of the relevant section will be delayed until the Minister  
makes regulations based on the pricing committee’s regulations.
175. The respondents had argued that after the coming into effect of Section  
18A,   an   order   restoring   the   discount   structure   could   not   be   granted  
because it would conflict with the legislature’s prohibition of ‘rebate or  
any other incentive scheme’. Note that the applicants suggested that in  
their   discussions   with   relevant   government   officials   in   the   period  
preceding the proclamation of the Act, they had asked government that  
specific consideration be given to this interim relief application.  That is  
to say, it was specifically contemplated, or so the applicants claim, that  
were   single   exit   pricing   not   to   be   implemented   immediately,   the  
Tribunal would be entitled to order that the manufacturers continue –  
for a period of one year at least – extending a discount to wholesalers.

for a period of one year at least – extending a discount to wholesalers.  
176. However,   although   the   introduction   of   section   18A   was   delayed   until   May   2004,  
Section 22H(1)(a) of the Medicines Act was to come into effect from the 2 nd  May  
2003.  This section provided that “ no wholesaler shall purchase medicines from any  
source other than the original manufacturer ”.   This means that the various devices  
that the applicants claim to have employed in response to the manufacturers’ refusal  
to grant them a preferential wholesalers’ discount were no longer available to them.  
All   of   these   devices   amount   to   one   or   other   form   of   arbitrage   whereby   the  
wholesalers   procured   pharmaceutical   products   for   on­sale   from   those   who   had  
managed to acquire these products at a preferred price from the manufacturers – for  
example,   dispensing   doctors.     These   various   forms   of   arbitrage   would   now,   with  
effect   from   2 nd  May   2003,   be   outlawed   by   the   requirement   enshrined   in   Section  
22H(1)(a)   that   the   wholesalers   acquire   medicines   from   no   source   other   than   the  
original manufacturer.
177. The applicants argue that the upshot of this staggered implementation  
is that the wholesalers cannot be rewarded (and therefore mitigate their  
loss) through the provision of a service fee because this is yet to be  
determined and will only become operative once the Minister makes  
regulations based on the pricing committees’ recommendations, which  
committee is yet to be constituted. Moreover, they can no longer, by  
dint of the immediate coming into effect of Section 22H(1)(a), engage  
47

in arbitrage.  Hence, they argue, the staggered coming into effect of the  
amendment places them, for a period of the year, entirely at the mercy  
of the manufacturers who refuse to give them a preferential discount.
178. While the applicants readily conceded that both parties had previously addressed the  
imminent   coming   into   operation   of   the   amendments   to   the   Medicines   Act,   they  
pointed out that the “staggered or partial” implementation of the Medicines Act had  
not been contemplated either in oral argument at the hearings or in the papers. The  
applicants   contended   that   the   partial   implementation   of   the   Act   constituted   a  
“material new development”   to be considered by the Tribunal when determining the  
outcome   of   the   interim   relief   application.     The   applicants   argued   that   this   ‘new  
development’  ­ the staggered introduction of the Act – impacted on our assessment  
of the restrictive practice and on the extent of harm suffered by them.
179. The respondents opposed the application to re­open the hearing. The  
application was heard on 23 May 2003.   As indicated above we have  
dismissed the application and the reasons for this decision follow.
180. The imminent coming into operation of the Medicines Act was indeed  
discussed   at   some   length   in   the   hearings.     The   issue   was   however  
raised by the respondents who effectively argued that, in the event that  
we found for the applicants, and if, pursuant on this finding, we were of  
a mind to order the restoration of the wholesalers’ discount, then we  
should consider the impact of the amendments to the Medicines Act  
which would, because of its support for single­exit pricing, effectively  
render nugatory the relief in question.  
181. In our view then, the context in which the Medicines Act was raised in  
the  hearings  never  contemplated  that  it  would  impact  on  our  finding

the  hearings  never  contemplated  that  it  would  impact  on  our  finding  
with   respect   to   the   existence,   or   otherwise,   of   a   restrictive   practice.  
Even on the respondents’ own argument it could only have impacted  
on   the   relief   granted.     In   the   event,   we   have   not   found   against   the  
respondents and, hence, have not had to consider the granting of relief  
or the possible altered context provided by the amendments to the Act,  
amendments   which,   even   on   the   respondents’   own   version   only  
impacted upon the relief that we may have granted.  
182. This much appears to have been conceded by the applicants in the  
course of the  hearing  to  re­open although it was suggested, without  
further   elaboration,   by   their   legal   counsel   that   the   increased  
dependence   of   the   wholesalers   on   the   manufacturers   may   provide  
grounds for arguing ‘relational dominance’, the controversial anti­trust  
theory sometimes advanced in the context of franchise­related claims.
183. However,   the   applicants   also   argued   that   the   staggered   introduction   of   the   Act  
significantly impacted on the quantum of harm suffered by them, particularly those of  
the   applicants   who   relied   for   their   continued   viability   upon   ‘round­tripping’   –   a  
particular form of arbitrage – effectively outlawed by the coming into effect of Section  
22H(1)(a).  It is clearly conceivable that these amendments to the Medicines Act will  
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impact significantly on the business of the wholesalers and it may well be that the  
particular form in which it is introduced will exaggerate the impact.   Clearly the Act  
envisages the demise of the wholesaler model.  Insofar as  trading in pharmaceutical  
products is prohibited, the wholesalers will have no alternative but to become fee­
based providers of distribution services, in common with other providers of similar  
services.     In   a   word,   they   will   cease   to   exist   as   wholesalers   and   the   recently  
proclaimed amendments to the Act set them firmly on course to extinction in their  
present   form.     However,   the   additional   harm,   insofar   as   there   is   any,   is   a   direct  
consequence   of   the   legislature’s   decision   to   prohibit   arbitrage   in   pharmaceutical  
products.  It is not directly attributable to the conduct of the manufacturers. In short  
there is no nexus between the additional harm alleged and the alleged conduct of  
the respondents in this matter.
184. We should also emphasise that we have not found the alleged conduct  
of the respondents to be in contravention of the Competition Act.   In  
our discussion of harm we have underlined the importance in anti­trust  
cases   of   demonstrating   a   causal   connection   between   an   anti­
competitive  practice   and  harm  because  it  is  possible   that  a  weaker,  
less   innovative   competitor   may   find   itself   harmed   in   the   process   of  
competition   by   the   pro­competitive   activities   of   a   more   effective  
competitor.   This broadly comports with our finding in this matter.   In  
short, the applicants have been harmed, if at all, by a more effective  
competitor and now by a legislature intent on striking at the very heart  
of the wholesaler business model, namely, the trade in pharmaceutical  
products. We have also noted that the individual applicants have not  
simply ignored this changed environment, nor have they sought to rely

simply ignored this changed environment, nor have they sought to rely  
solely upon regulatory intervention.   There have been pro­competitive  
responses,   including,   but   not   limited   to,   arbitrage   in   pharmaceutical  
products, a practice now prevented by the legislature.   But it is clear,  
and has been elaborated in our discussion of the question of harm, that  
these   pro­competitive   responses,   including   but   not   limited   to   round­
tripping and other forms of arbitrage, have significantly ameliorated any  
damage generated by the manufacturers’ conduct.
185. Following on from this, it is incumbent on us to point out, that we have  
not found significant harm as a result of the manufacturers’ conduct.  
The   applicants   have   cried   wolf,   for   three   years   –  that   is,   they   have  
predicted their own imminent demise on countless occasions and, we  
have found, they have vastly exaggerated their predicament.   If their  
credibility is now found wanting when, yet again, they seek to invoke  
significant harm, then they have only themselves to blame.
186. The respondents, who had no objection to us taking judicial notice of  
the amendment, argued that the imminent coming into operation of the  
Medicines Amendment Act had already been fully addressed both in  
the papers and at the hearings of the interim relief matter. They argued  
that the applicants were well aware of the impact of the amendments to  
the   Medicines   Act   and   the   fluid   state   of   the   legislative   environment  
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earlier on in the proceedings.  They referred to the record wherein the  
applicants admitted that it was not known when the Act would come  
into   force,   confirming   their   recognition   that   the   timing   of   the   Act’s  
implementation was uncertain. In this sense, the date of coming into  
force of section 18A was not material new evidence.
187. The re­opening of hearings is an extra­ordinary measure and the courts have clearly  
identified   the   circumstances   under   which   this   should   be   permitted.     The   most  
authoritative ruling on this question is that of Holmes JA in   Mkhwanazi v van der  
Merwe50.    Here the learned Judge stated;
The   discretion   under   Rule   28(11) 51  must   be   exercised   judicially,   upon   a  
consideration of all relevant factors, and in essence it is a matter of fairness  
to both sides. It is inappropriate for judicial decisions to lay down immutable  
conditions   which   have   to   be   satisfied   before   the   relief   sought   can   be  
granted.   Over   the   years   the   Courts   have   indicated   certain   guiding  
considerations   or   factors,   but   they   must   not   be   regarded   as   inflexible  
requirements, or as being individually decisive. Some are more cogent than  
others; but they should all be weighed in the scales, the pros against the  
cons.”…
“The   considerations   which   usually   fall   to   be   weighed,   in   an  
application   by   a   plaintiff   under   Rule   28(11),   include   the  
following:
i. The reason why the evidence was not led timeously.
ii. The degree of materiality of the evidence.
iii. The possibility that it may have been shaped to relieve  
the pinch of the shoe.
iv. The balance of prejudice, i.e. the prejudice to the plaintiff  
if   the   application   is   refused,   and   the   prejudice   to   the  
defendant   if   it   is   granted.   This   is   a   wide   field.   It   may  
include such factors as the amount or importance of the

include such factors as the amount or importance of the  
issue   at   stake;   the   fact   that   the   defendant’s   witnesses  
may   already   have   dispersed;   the   question   whether   the  
refusal might result in a judgment of absolution, in which  
event whether it might not be as broad as it is long to let  
the   plaintiff   lead   the   evidence   rather   than   to   put   the  
parties to the expense of proceedings de novo.
v. The   stage   which   the   particular   litigation   has   reached.     Where  
judgment has been reserved after all evidence has been led on both  
sides   and,   just   before   judgment   is   delivered,   the   plaintiff   asks   for  
leave  to lead  further  evidence,  it  may  well  be that he will  have  a  
harder   row   to   hoe,   because   of   factors   such   as   the   increased  
possibility of prejudice to the defendant, the greater need for finality,  
50  1970 1 SA 609 (A) at 616­7
51  Under the Magistrates court Act Rule 28(11) provides that: ‘Either party may, with the leave of the  
court, adduce further evidence at any time before judgment; but such leave shall not be granted if it  
appears to the court that such evidence was intentionally withheld out of its proper order.’
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and the undesirability of throwing the whole case into the melting pot  
again,   and   perhaps   also   the   convenience   of   the   court,   which   is  
usually   under   some   pressure   in   its   roster   of   cases.   On   the   other  
hand, where  a plaintiff  closes  his case and, before his opponents  
have taken   any steps, asks for leave to add some further evidence,  
the case is then still in medias res as it were.
vi. The healing balm of an appropriate order as to costs.
vii. The general need for finality in judicial proceedings. This  
factor is usually cited against the applicant for leave to  
lead   further   evidence.   However,   depending   on   the  
circumstances,   finality   might   be   sooner   achieved   by  
allowing   such   evidence   and   getting   on   with   the   case,  
than   by   granting   absolution   and   opening   the  
indeterminate way to litigation de novo in all its tedious  
amplitude.
viii. The   appropriateness,   or   otherwise,   in   all   the  
circumstances, of visiting the remissness of the attorney  
upon the head of his client.”
188. Our   decision   to   dismiss   this   application   to   re­open   the   hearing   is  
grounded in a detailed consideration of the factors outlined by Holmes  
JA.  Hence:
189. While the evidence regarding the   staggered  introduction of the Act could not have  
been introduced at an earlier stage, the fact is that the substantive content of the  
legislation was accurately predicted and its impact, including the impact on harm, did  
form part of the submissions in the main application for interim  relief.   Indeed, as  
counsel   for   the   respondents   has   pointed   out,   one   or   more  of   the   applicants   that  
claims to have relied on round­tripping in the period subsequent to the formation of  
the EDA specifically submitted evidence of the harm that would be generated in the  
event   that   the   avenues   for   arbitrage   were   foreclosed.     We   have   considered   this

evidence in the context of our general discussion of the question of harm.  
190. This  leads  directly  to the question  of materiality,  surely  a consideration  that must  
rank   primus inter pares   in deciding whether or not to re­open a hearing.   This has  
already been considered.  We simply restate that the imminent coming into operation  
of the Medicines Act was invoked by the respondents only in respect of a possible  
remedy  arising  from  a finding  against  them  on the restrictive  practice  allegations.  
We have not found against them on the restrictive practice and so no question of  
imposing a remedy arises.  The staggered implementation of the Act has no bearing  
on whether or not a restrictive practice has occurred.  
191. The applicants argue that the staggered coming into operation of the  
Act   impacts   on   the   quantum   of   harm   suffered   by   them.     Again   we  
restate that the question of harm arising from the restrictive practice  
has been considered at considerable length.   We have found that, far  
from being threatened by imminent demise, the applicants appear, for  
the   most   part,   to   be   thriving.   This   is   largely   as   a   result   of   their  
competitive   offerings   vis­ à­vis   Kinesis   (for   example,   one­stop  
purchasing and more frequent deliveries) which have allowed them to  
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continue   trading   in   the   products   of   the   Kinesis   principals,   and   as   a  
result of their pro­competitive responses to changed circumstances (for  
example, entering new wholesale markets).   Indeed not only has this  
evidence led us to reject the applicants’ submissions regarding harm,  
but it has called into question their very credibility on this issue.  There  
is, in our view, no prospect that the additional harm, if there be any,  
occasioned   by   the   staggered   introduction   of   the   Act   would   tilt   the  
scales in the applicants’ favour.
192. Further, on the question of harm, we restate that we have found no evidence of a  
restrictive   practice   and   hence   there   can   be   no   question   of   additional  harm   in 
consequence   of   the   identical   restrictive   practice   allegations.       If   the   respondents  
have caused harm to the applicants it has occurred through the legitimate pursuit of  
their business interests, through, that is, the process of competition.  We have made  
it   clear   that   evidence   of   harm   on   its   own   would,   in   any   event,   not   serve   the  
applicants’ cause – there has to be a nexus between the harm and the conduct of  
the   respondents.     Had   the   applicants   alleged   new   evidence   of   anti­competitive  
conduct on the part of the respondents, then they may have had stronger grounds  
for arguing that the hearings to be re­opened.   In fact, the additional harm alleged,  
has been occasioned by the ‘conduct’ of the legislature.   This conduct is no more  
attributable   to   the   respondents   than   would   be   an   unfavourable   movement   of   the  
exchange rate or a tax increase.  Both of these latter developments may cause harm  
to the applicants, but responsibility could not be laid at the door of the respondents.
193. On the balance of prejudice, we note that these are interim proceedings.  After some

193. On the balance of prejudice, we note that these are interim proceedings.  After some  
three years and many thousands of pages of affidavits and other submissions, we  
cannot believe that the applicants, who are   dominus litis   in the complaint referral,  
would not be ready to move expeditiously to a full hearing on this matter. They will,  
at that stage, be at liberty to present this evidence of the additional harm it alleges. In  
other words, our refusal to re­open the hearing now does not mean that there will be  
no further occasion on which the additional evidence can be ventilated and, hence,  
they   are   not   unduly   prejudiced   by   our   dismissal   of   their   application.     The  
respondents, on the other hand, have been at the receiving end of an application for  
interim relief for some three years, a factor that has itself delayed proceeding to the  
final stage of adjudication in this matter.  They have pointed out that, in the context of  
this litigation, Kinesis has not been able to go out into the market and encourage  
others   to   purchase   their   distribution   and   logistical   services   –   we   accept   that   the  
respondents are prejudiced by further delay.
194. The   stage   which   the   particular   litigation   has   reached   is   another  
important consideration.  Suffice to point out that judgment had already  
been reserved in this application for interim relief when the application  
to re­open was made.   Indeed, so late was the application to re­open  
that under all normal circumstances judgment would have already been  
handed down by the time at which we received the application.   It is  
only   because   of   the   extraordinary   volume   of   documents   filed   in   this  
matter that judgment had not, by then, been handed down.
195. We are conscious of the need to reach finality in this application for   interim  relief  
which has already dragged on far beyond the time appropriate in applications of this

which has already dragged on far beyond the time appropriate in applications of this  
nature.   We are equally cognizant  of Judge Holmes’ concern  that dismissal of an  
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application to re­open a hearing may, itself, give rise to further litigation and delay.  
However, we cannot allow this to influence our judgment believing, as we do, that  
there   are   no   persuasive   substantive   grounds   for   re­opening   this   matter.   If   the  
applicants wish to follow their legal rights then they must do so – we must, however,  
take the decision which we believe to be correct regardless of thinly veiled threats by  
the applicants to employ a decision that is not to their liking as a basis for generating  
further delay.
196. The application to re­open the hearings is accordingly dismissed.
FINDING AND COSTS
197.The applications for interim relief and to re­open the hearings are  
accordingly dismissed. 
198.The applicants are jointly and severally liable for the costs of the  
respondents   such   costs   to   include   the   costs   of   3   legal  
representatives.
___________ 18 June 2003
D. Lewis Date
Concurring: M.G. Holden; U. Bhoola
For the parties:   Adv. AJ Nelson SC, Adv. J. Van Dorsten  
instructed by Roestoff Venter and Kruse  
Attorneys 
                                            Adv. D. Unterhalter, SC, Adv. J. Wilson, Adv. AG Gotz,  
instructed by Webber Wentzel Attorneys (Respondents)
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