Robertsons Holdings Proprietary Limited v Silver 2017 Proprietary Limited (LM251Dec17) [2018] ZACT 79 (17 August 2018)

80 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition Law — Merger Approval — Conditional approval of merger between Robertsons Holdings and Silver 2017 — Commission finding that merger unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition — Employment concerns addressed through conditions ensuring no retrenchments — Merger approved unconditionally.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings concerned the consideration of a large merger in terms of the Competition Act 89 of 1998 (as amended) before the Competition Tribunal of South Africa. The matter was adjudicated under Case No: LM251Dec17, with reasons delivered under the citation Robertsons Holdings Proprietary Limited v Silver 2017 Proprietary Limited (LM251Dec17) [2018] ZACT 79 (17 August 2018).


The primary acquiring firm was Robertsons Holdings Proprietary Limited (“Robertsons”), ultimately controlled by Remgro Limited (“Remgro”). The primary target firm was Silver 2017 Proprietary Limited (“Silver 2017”), referred to in the reasons as Newco, a special-purpose vehicle incorporated for the transaction and wholly owned by Unilever South Africa (Proprietary) Limited (“ULSA”) prior to implementation.


On 20 June 2018, the Tribunal approved the merger subject to conditions, and the written reasons were issued on 17 August 2018. The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the proposed merger was likely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market and whether it raised public interest concerns, particularly relating to employment, as well as concerns connected to a pending cartel case involving the ULSA Spreads Business.


Material Facts


Remgro, through its group structure, controlled interests relevant to the transaction. In particular, Remgro controlled RCL Foods, which manufactured branded and private label food products (including mayonnaise and cooking oil) and distributed those products through its supply chain specialist, Vector Logistics. Robertsons also held a 25.7% shareholding in Unilever South Africa Holdings Proprietary Limited (“ULSAH”), which was relevant to the funding structure of the deal.


The target business was the ULSA Spreads Business, to be housed in Newco. The Spreads Business comprised the manufacture, marketing, sale, and distribution of spread products, including margarine under the Rondo, Stork, Rama, Flora, and Marvella brands, a dairy cream alternative (Meadowland), and Flora cooking oil.


The transaction was structured so that Robertsons would sell its 25.7% interest in ULSAH back to ULSAH, and the proceeds would be used to purchase Newco, thereby acquiring control of the Spreads Business after it had been transferred into Newco by ULSA through an internal restructuring. The parties stated that the rationale was linked to ULSAH’s intention to dispose of its spreads business globally, which Robertsons viewed as a business opportunity.


In relation to competitive effects, the Commission identified a horizontal overlap in the supply of refined packed sunflower oil, because RCL Foods owned the Nola cooking oil brand and the Spreads Business included the Flora cooking oil brand. The Commission found that the merged entity’s combined market share would be less than 5%, with an accretion of less than 1%, and that several competing firms would continue to constrain the merged entity post-merger.


The Commission also identified two vertical relationships: the processing of oil seeds and the provision of cold chain distribution services. On oil seed processing, the Commission found that Nola had processing capabilities but did not provide crushing and refining services to third parties (with only ad hoc sales of excess supply), and that its refinery capacity was less than 10% of the market. ULSA did not process its own sunflower oil and relied on third-party suppliers. The parties confirmed they would continue to procure crude and refined sunflower oil from existing suppliers.


On cold chain distribution, ULSA procured such services from a third party, while the Remgro Group used Vector Logistics. The Commission considered the availability of alternative logistics providers and also considered whether the merged entity would terminate an existing supply agreement (referred to as expiring on a specified future date in the record). It identified alternative suppliers in the market and concluded foreclosure concerns were unlikely.


A further material aspect was the Commission’s submission that there were ongoing cartel investigations in markets connected to edible oils, baking fats, and margarine, and that the ULSA Spreads Business had been implicated in a cartel matter pending before the Tribunal under Case No. CR223Mar17. Because the Spreads Business would be transferred into Newco, the Commission sought clarity regarding liability for any administrative penalty that might later be imposed for that alleged contravention.


On public interest, the employees of the Spreads Business were to be transferred to Newco and were not expected to be affected. However, the parties identified approximately 60 ULSA employees (employees not transferred to Newco) who might be affected because they performed work partly for the Spreads Business and partly for ULSA’s other business interests. During the Commission’s investigation, the Minister of Economic Development filed a notice to participate and proposed approval subject to an employment condition. The Commission and the merging parties ultimately agreed to conditions aimed at ensuring no merger-related retrenchments and addressing the position of the identified employees through continued employment in ULSA or offers within Newco/Remgro Group.


Legal Issues


The central questions for determination were whether the proposed transaction was likely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market, assessed through horizontal effects, vertical foreclosure (input and customer foreclosure), and the risk of co-ordinated effects in a sector subject to cartel investigations. These issues primarily concerned the application of competition-law standards to the economic and commercial facts identified in the Commission’s investigation.


A further central issue was whether the merger raised public interest concerns, in particular relating to employment, and if so, whether those concerns could be adequately addressed through conditions attached to the approval.


In addition, the Tribunal had to consider how to address the Commission’s concern regarding the potential enforcement of an administrative penalty in a pending cartel case involving the ULSA Spreads Business after that business was transferred into Newco, which raised a question of regulatory risk allocation to be managed through merger conditions.


Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal approached the competitive assessment by considering the Commission’s delineation of relevant overlaps and its evaluation of market shares and constraints. On the horizontal overlap in refined packed sunflower oil, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s conclusion that the merged entity would have a small combined market share (less than 5%) and a minimal increment (less than 1%). The Tribunal also relied on the Commission’s identification of alternative competitors that would remain in the market post-merger and therefore constrain the merged entity. On this basis, the Tribunal agreed that the merger was unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in the relevant horizontal market.


On the vertical assessment, the Tribunal considered the two vertical links identified by the Commission. Regarding oil seed processing, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s findings that Nola’s refinery capacity was relatively limited (less than 10% of the market), that it did not offer crushing and refining services to third parties as a business line, and that ULSA historically relied on third-party procurement and refining arrangements. The Tribunal also noted the parties’ confirmation that procurement patterns would continue post-merger. In this factual context, the Tribunal agreed with the Commission that the merger was unlikely to give rise to input foreclosure (restricting rivals’ access to inputs) or customer foreclosure (restricting suppliers’ access to customers).


Regarding cold chain logistics, the Tribunal accepted the Commission’s view that there were alternative logistics providers capable of constraining the merged entity after the merger. It also accepted the Commission’s analysis that, even if contractual arrangements changed (including the possibility of the termination or expiry of an existing agreement), the availability of alternative suppliers meant the transaction did not give rise to likely foreclosure effects. The Tribunal therefore concurred that vertical foreclosure concerns were unlikely.


On co-ordinated effects, the Tribunal recorded the Commission’s submission that the industry was subject to ongoing cartel investigations and that the Spreads Business was implicated in a pending case before the Tribunal. The Tribunal treated this as giving rise not to a basis to prohibit the merger on competition grounds within the merger assessment, but rather as a concern requiring clarity on the payment of an administrative fine should ULSA ultimately be found to have contravened the Act in the pending cartel matter. Although the merging parties initially opposed the inclusion of such a remedy on the basis that section 64 mechanisms were available to enforce an order, they accepted at the hearing that a condition could be included. The condition recorded ULSA’s undertaking that it would remain responsible for paying any administrative penalty imposed post-merger in relation to the pending cartel case, while also clarifying that this commitment did not exonerate Robertsons or successors from liability arising from those proceedings.


On public interest, the Tribunal focused on employment effects. It accepted that the employees directly within the Spreads Business would be transferred to Newco and would not be adversely affected. It nevertheless treated the identified group of approximately 60 employees as raising a potential employment concern, given that their work allocation spanned both the Spreads Business and other ULSA business lines. The Tribunal noted the Minister of Economic Development’s participation and the proposal for an employment condition. It accepted the negotiated solution between the Commission and the parties, namely conditions designed to ensure that the transaction would not result in any retrenchments as a result of the merger, that a portion of the potentially affected employees would receive employment offers within Newco or the Remgro Group (in their current locations where possible and on terms not materially less favourable overall), and that the remainder would continue to be employed by ULSA.


In synthesising these findings, the Tribunal concluded that the merger was unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition and that the public interest concern relating to employment was remedied through conditions. The reasoning culminated in approval of the transaction, with the approval in fact being conditional on the set of conditions attached to the decision.


Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal approved the large merger between Robertsons and Silver 2017 (Newco) subject to conditions. The conditions included an employment protection regime aimed at preventing merger-specific retrenchments and regulating the treatment of identified potentially affected employees, as well as a condition addressing liability for any administrative penalty imposed on ULSA in relation to the pending cartel case CR223Mar17, together with monitoring and duration provisions.


No costs order was recorded in the reasons.


Cases Cited


No prior reported cases were cited in the reasons for decision.


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998 (as amended)


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (as amended)


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 39 of the Rules for the Conduct of Proceedings in the Competition Commission


Held


The Competition Tribunal held that the proposed transaction was unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market, given the limited horizontal overlap and the absence of likely vertical foreclosure effects. It further held that public interest concerns relating to employment could be adequately addressed through agreed conditions ensuring that the merger would not cause retrenchments and that potentially affected employees would be accommodated through continued employment within ULSA or offers within Newco or the Remgro Group. The Tribunal therefore approved the merger subject to conditions, including an undertaking allocating responsibility for payment of any administrative penalty imposed on ULSA in relation to the pending cartel case.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The merger assessment applied the principle that a large merger may be approved where it is not likely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any relevant market, evaluated through consideration of horizontal overlaps (including combined shares and the extent of remaining competitive constraints) and vertical relationships (including the likelihood of input foreclosure and customer foreclosure).


In assessing vertical effects, the Tribunal applied the approach that foreclosure concerns are less likely where the upstream capacity is limited, where the relevant input is available from alternative sources, where the firm does not materially supply third parties as a business model, and where customers have feasible alternatives, including in logistics and distribution services.


The decision reflected the principle that public interest factors, particularly employment, may justify merger conditions designed to prevent merger-specific job losses and to structure commitments for redeployment and continued employment, with compliance monitoring mechanisms.


Where merger implementation intersects with pending enforcement proceedings (here, cartel proceedings), the decision illustrated the use of merger conditions to obtain clarity on responsibility for payment of any administrative penalty post-merger, coupled with monitoring and duration provisions tied to the finalisation of the pending proceedings.

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[2018] ZACT 79
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Robertsons Holdings Proprietary Limited v Silver 2017 Proprietary Limited (LM251Dec17) [2018] ZACT 79 (17 August 2018)

COMPETITION TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No:LM251Dec17
In
the matter between:
Robertsons
Holdings Proprietary
Limited
Acquiring Firm
and
Silver
2017 Proprietary
Limited
Target Firm
Panel

Mondo Mazwai (Presiding Member)
Medi Mokuena (Tribunal Member)
Fiona Tregenna (Tribunal Member)
Order issued on
20 June 2018
Reasons issued on
17 August 2018
PUBLIC
REASONS FOR DECISION
Approval
[1]
On
20 June 2018, the Competition Tribunal conditionally approved the
large merger between Robertsons Holdings Proprietary Limited
("Robertsons")
and
Silver 2017 Proprietary Limited
("Silver"
).
[1]
[2]
The
reasons for the approval follow.
Parties
to the transaction and their activities
Primary
acquiring firm
[3]
The
primary acquiring firm is Robertsons which is ultimately controlled
by Remgro Limited, a public company listed on the JSE. Remgro

controls a number of firms of which RCL Foods is relevant to this
transaction.
[4]
Remgro
is an investment holding company which holds interests in various
industries including food, liquor and home care. RCL Foods

manufactures branded and private label food products, including
mayonnaise and cooking oil which it distributes through its own

supply chain specialist, Vector Logistics.
[5]
Robertsons
also owns 25.7% shareholding in Unilever South Africa Holdings
Proprietary Limited ("ULSAH").
Primary
target firm
[6]
The
primary target firm is Newco which was specifically incorporated for
this transaction and is wholly owned by Unilever South
Africa
Proprietary Limited ("ULSA"). Newco will be used to house
the ULSA Spreads Business which is the business of manufacturing,

marketing, sale and distribution of spread products.
[7]
The
Spreads Business is involved in the manufacture, marketing, sale and
distribution of the following;
7.1.
margarine products under the Rondo,
Stork, Rama, Flora and Marvella brands;
7.2.
a dairy cream alternative, Meadowland;
7.3.
and Flora cooking oil.
Proposed
transaction and rationale
[8]
In
terms of the proposed transaction, Robertsons which currently owns
25.7% in ULSAH will sell this interest back to ULSAH. The
money
generated from this transaction will be used to purchase Newco for
the purpose of acquiring the Spreads Business.
[9]       The
parties submitted that their rationale for the transaction is ULSAH's
intention
to dispose of its Spreads Business worldwide which
Robertsons sees as an ideal business opportunity.
Relevant
market and impact on competition
Horizontal
assessment
[10]     During its
investigation, the Commission identified an overlap in the supply of
refined packed sunflower
oil as the acquiring firm, through RCL
Foods, owns the Nola cooking oil brand and the target firm owns the
Flora cooking oil brand.
[11]
The
Commission found that the combined market share of the merged entity
would be less than 5% with an accretion of less than 1%.
It
identified a number of competing firms which would continue to
constrain the merged entity post­ merger.
[12]
We
concur with the Commission's finding that the proposed transaction is
unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition
in the
relevant market.
Vertical
assessment
[13]
The
Commission identified two vertical overlaps; (i) the processing of
oil seeds and (ii) the provision of cold chain distribution
services.
[14]
In
its assessment of the processing of seeds the Commission found that
Remgro through the Nola brand manufactures processed sunflower
oil
through its processing facility. Nola does not provide crushing and
refining services to third parties. It does sell its excess
supply to
third parties on an ad hoc basis. The Commission found that Nola's
refinery capacity amounts to less than 10% of the
market. The
Commission is of the view that the proposed transaction does not
raise input foreclosure concerns. ULSA does not process
its own
sunflower oil but relies on third party suppliers. Currently it
procures crude sunflower oil from [….] and refines
it by [….].
Nola's refinery capacity accounts for less than 10% of the market and
neither [….] raised concerns. The
merging parties also
confirmed that they would continue to procure crude and refined
sunflower oil from their current suppliers.
The Commission is of the
view that the proposed transaction would be unlikely to raise
customer foreclosure concerns.
[15]
In
its assessment of cold chain distribution, ULSA procures cold chain
distribution from [….] while Remgro Group procures
it from its
own subsidiary Vector Logistics. The Commission is of the view that
there are a number of other suitable logistics
providers who could
continue to constrain the merged entity post-merger. The Commission
is of the view that the proposed transaction
would unlikely raise
input foreclosure concerns. In relation to customer foreclosure, the
Commission considered whether the merged
entity would terminate its
contract with Clover following the transaction. The current supply
agreement would expire on [….].
The Commission identified a
number of suppliers within the market who could serve as alternatives
[….].· Given this,
the Commission was of the view that
the proposed transaction would not result in customer foreclosure
concerns.
[16]
We
concur with the Commission's finding that the proposed transaction is
unlikely to result in foreclosure concerns.
Co-ordinated
effects
[17]
The
Commission submitted that the market for the production and supply of
edible oils, baking fats and margarine in South Africa
have on-going
cartel investigations. The ULSA Spreads Business was implicated in
one of the Commission's cartel investigations
which is currently
pending before the Tribunal.
[2]
As the ULSA Spreads Business will be transferred to Newco for the
proposed transaction the Commission submitted that clarity should
be
garnered on the payment of an administrative fine should ULSA be
found to have contravened the Act. The merging parties, while

initially opposing the inclusion of the remedy indicating that the
Commission would be able to use mechanisms available in section
64 to
enforce an order, accepted the inclusion of a condition at the
hearing. The condition to this merger is an undertaking by
ULSA that
if an administrative penalty was imposed it would be responsible for
such payment.
Public
interest
[18]
The
employees of the Spreads Business which were part of ULSA will be
transferred to Newco in light of the proposed transaction.
As such
all the Spreads Business employees will not be affected by the
proposed transaction. The remaining employees of ULSA, i.e.
employees
of ULSA that were not transferred to NEWCO, would remain in the ULSA
Business post-transaction and could potentially
be affected by the
proposed transaction. The merging parties submitted that the
remaining employees would have been employees in
ULSA who would have
done some work for the Spreads Business and some work for ULSA's
other business interests. As a result of the
proposed transaction the
merging parties undertook to determine whether the remaining
employees could be gainfully employed and
identified approximately 60
ULSA employees who may be affected. During the Commission's
investigation of the effect this may have
on the 60 employees, The
Minister of Economic Development filed a notice to participate during
the Commission's investigation and
proposed that the merger be
approved subject to an employment condition.
[19]
After
negotiations, the merging parties and the Commission agreed to a
condition to remedy the employment concern that the proposed

transaction raises. In totality, the proposed transaction would not
result in any retrenchments. The merging parties have undertaken
not
to retrench any employees as a result of the merger. Half of the
identified employees will be made employment offers within
the Remgro
Group or Newco while the remaining half will continue to be employed
in ULSA.
[20]
The
proposed transaction further raised no other public interest
concerns.
Conclusion
[21]
In
light of the above, we conclude that the proposed transaction is
unlikely to substantially prevent or lessen competition in any

relevant market. In addition, employment concerns are remedied by the
conditions to the approval of this merger. Accordingly, we
approve
the proposed transaction unconditionally.
Ms
Mondo Mazwai
Mrs
Medi Mokuena and Prof. Fiona Tregenna concurring.
17 August 2018
Date
Tribunal
case manager
:
Ms
Aneesa Ravat.
For the merging parties
:
Mark
Garden of Edward Nathan
Sonnenbergs and Chris Charter of Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr.
For
the Commission
:

Reabetswe Molotsi, Nelly Sakata and Thabelo Masithulela.
CC Case Number: 2017Nov0058
In
the large merger between:
ROBERTSONS
HOLDINGS (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Primary acquiring firm
and
SILVER
2017 PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Primary target firm
CONDITIONS
1.
DEFINITIONS
In this document and the annexures hereto the
following expressions bear the meanings assigned to them below and
related expressions
bear corresponding meanings-
1.1.
"Approval
Date"
means the date on which
the Merger ls approved by the Tribunal or the Competition Appeal
Court, as the case may be;
1.2.
"Competition
Act"
means the Competition Act,
No. 89 of 1998 (as amended);
1.3.
"Competition
Appeal Court"
means the
Competition Appeal Court of South Africa, a court established in
terms of
section 36
of the
Competition Act;
1.4.
"Commission
"
means the Competition Commission of
South Africa, a statutory body established in terms of
section 19
of
the
Competition Act;
1.5.
"Implementation
Date" means the Implementation Date as
defined in clause 1.2.48 of the Sale of Business Agreement;
1.6.
"Labour
Relations Act"
means the Labour
Relations Act, No. 66 of 1995 (as amended);
1.7.
"Merger"
means the acquisition by Robertsons
of control over Newco, subsequent to the transfer of the Spreads
Business from ULSA into Newco
by way of an internal restructuring;
1.8.
"Merging
Parties"
means, collectively,
ULSA, Robertsons and Newco;
1.9.
"Newco"
means Sliver 2017 Proprietary
Limlted, a company duly Incorporated in South Africa (Reglstration
Number 2017/397657/07);
1.10.
"Remgro"
means
Remgro Limited, a company incorporated in South Africa (Registration
Number 1968/006415/06);
1.11.
"Remgro Group"
means
Remgro and any of its direct or Indirect subsidiaries;
:
'
1.12.

Robertsons”
means Robertsons Holdings
(Proprietary) Limited, a company Incorporated In South Africa
(Registration Number 1982/008128/07);
1.13.
"Sale
of Business Agreement" means the Sale of Business Agreement
concluded between ULSA and Newco on 14 December 2017;
1.14.
"Spreads Business"
means
that portion of the business conducted by ULSA, as a going concern,
which relates to the manufacture, marketing, sales and
distribution
of the "Rondo"; "Stork"; "Rama";
"Flora" (including Flora branded sunflower
oil packaged In
750ml bottles); and "Marvella" branded margarine products
·(but excluding dressings and mayonnaise);
and the
"Meadowland" branded dairy cream alternative;
1.15.
"Tribunal"
means the Competition Tribunal of
South Africa, a statutory body established In terms of
section 26
of
the
Competition Act; and
1.16.
"ULSA"
means Unilever South Africa
(Proprietary) Limited, a company incorporated in South Africa
(Registration Number 1939/012365/07).
2
EMPLOYMENT
2.1
The
Merging Parties shall not retrench any employees as a result of the
Merger.
2.2
Insofar
as ULSA had identified a potential of 60 (sixty) job losses by
employees who spend less than 50% (fifty percent) of their
working
time per annum working in its Spreads Business (“the
Potentially Affected Employees") -
2.1.1
Remgro shall, on the Implementation Date
or as soon as practicably possible thereafter, procure that offers of
employment are made
to between 25 (twenty five) and 35 (thirty five)
appropriately qualified Potentially Affected Employees for additional
positions
that will be created by Newco, or otherwise required within
the Remgro group post-merger. For the avoidance of doubt, such offers

will be made to appropriately qualified Potentially Affected
Employees before the relevant posts are offered to any other
applicant.
2.1.2
Employment offers will be made to the
Potentially Affected Employees In their current locations. Only if no
other options are available
or if Potentially Affected Employees
indicate a desire for relocation, will offers requiring relocation be
made.
2.1.3
The offers of employment will be on
terms and conditions which, when taken as a whole, are not materially
less favourable to the
employee concerned than his/her current terms
and conditions of employment with ULSA. For the avoidance of doubt,
it is recorded
that an offer of employment which will necessitate the
relocation of a Potentially Affected Employee will not amount to a
materially
less favourable term or condition only if, taking into
account the specific circumstances of the employee concerned, any
relocation
does not negatively affect the employee. Upon an offer of
employment by Newco or another entity within the Remgro group being
accepted
by the employee concerned, ULSA shall terminate the
employment of that employee.
2.1.4
ULSA, in turn, will ensure continued
employment for the remaining Potentially Affected Employees who do
not receive an offer as
contemplated in clauses 2.1.1 to 2.1.3 above
(expected to be between 25 (twenty five) and 35 (thirty five)
employees).
2.3       For the
sake of clarity, the Potentially Affected Employees will either be
absorbed within
Newco or another Remgro group· entity, or will
remain with ULSA, such that there will be no retrenchments arising
from the
Merger. Retrenchments do not Include (I) any termination of
employment by ULSA in relatlon to those Potentially Affected
Employees
who receive and
accept
an offer of employment from
Newco or another entity within the Remgro group as contemplated in
clauses 2.1.1 to 2.1.3 above; (ii)
any termination of employment by
ULSA in relation to those Potentially Affected Employees who receive
and
unreasonably reject
an offer of employment from Newco or
another entity within the Remgro group as contemplated In clauses
2.1.1 to 2.1.3 above; (Iii}
voluntary retrenchment and/or voluntary
separation arrangements; (iv) voluntary early retirement packages;
(v) unreasonable refusals
to be redeployed in accordance with the
provisions of the
Labour Relations Act; (vi
) resignations or
retirements in the ordinary course of business; (vii) retrenchments
lawfully effected for operational requirements
unrelated to the
Merger; and (viii) terminations In the ordinary course of business,
Including but not limlted to, dismissals as
a result of misconduct or
poor performance.
3
LIABILITY FOR ADMINISTRATIVE
PENALTY POSTMMERGER
3.1
ULSA
undertakes, as part of the conditions, that It shall remain
responsible for the payment of any Administrative Penalty that
may be
Imposed on it post-merger by the Tribunal, or the Competition Appeal
Court or any other court, as the case maybe, In relation
to the
pending cartel case before the Tribunal under Case Number:
CR223Mar17.
3.2
For
the sake of clarity, the above commitment does not exonerate
Robertsons or its successor(s) in title, from being liable for
the
payment of any Administrative Penalty arising from the pending cartel
proceedings in the Tribunal under Case No.:
CR223Mar17.
4
MONITORING
OF COMPLIANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS
4.1
ULSA
shall circulate a copy of the Conditions to the Potentially Affected
Employees within 10 (ten) business days of the Approval
Date.
4.2
As
proof of compliance thereof, ULSA shall within 7 (seven) business
days of circulating the Conditions, provide the Commission
with an
affidavit by a senior representative attesting to the circulation of
the Conditions and attach a copy of the notice sent.
4.3
Any
employee who believes that the Merging Parties have not complied with
these Conditions may approach the Commission. In the event
that the
Commission determines that there has been an apparent breach by the
Merging Parties of these conditions, the matter shall
be dealt with
in terms of
Rule 39
of the Rules for the Conduct of Proceedings in
the Commission.
4.4
All
correspondence in relation to these conditions must be submitted to
the following email address:
merqerconditions@compcom.c.oza.
5
DURATION OF THE CONDITIONS
The Conditions will terminate upon fulfilment
by the Merging Parties of their obligations contained herein, but in
any event, in
respect of paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 on the finalisation
of pending cartel proceedings under Tribunal Case No.:
CR223Mar17,
including ay subsequent appeals and/or reviews.
6
VARIATION
The Merging Parties or the Commission shall be
entitled, on good cause shown, to apply to the Tribunal for a waiver,
relaxation,
modification and/or substitution of any of these
conditions at any time after the Approval Date.
1]
Conditions attached as  Annexure  A.
[2]
Case no CR223Marl 7.