Recent developments in South African competition law have significantly elevated the role of transformative considerations and public interest objectives. The first crucial development occurred when the Constitutional Court reviewed Mediclinic Southern Africa’s proposed acquisition of two private hospitals. While public interest considerations have been part of the statutory criteria for mergers since the Competition Act was enacted, the Court’s strong support for the Act’s underlying goals of public interest and transformation expanded these considerations to influence all competition law matters beyond merger decisions.
The Mediclinic judgment is critical, as South Africa’s highest court emphasized that the Competition Act must be interpreted and applied in a manner that promotes the Bill of Rights and gives effect to the Competition Act’s socio-economic transformation and public interest objectives. This judicial emphasis provides essential context for understanding how the Competition Tribunal has applied these considerations in recent interim relief decisions. We consider the 2024 eMedia v MultiChoice decision and contrast it with the decision in Apollo Studios v Audatex, with a focus on the respondents’ respective intellectual property (“IP“) related justifications for their conduct, in light of the role that transformation and public interest considerations may play in this regard.
The Cases in Brief
Both the eMedia and Apollo cases involved allegations of abuse of dominance where an alleged dominant firm’s conduct entailed not making available IP and the services derived from that IP and similar investments.
In eMedia, the dispute centred on restrictive clauses in sports sub-licensing agreements preventing SABC from broadcasting content on eMedia’s Openview service. eMedia contended that this was an anti-competitive abuse of MultiChoice’s market position. The Tribunal granted interim relief, ordering MultiChoice to lift the restrictions, emphasising the public interest in broad access to sports events of national interest and the need to support the growth of a black-owned, medium-sized competitor.
In Apollo, Apollo and its subsidiary, Motomatix, contested Audatex’s termination of Apollo’s access to Audatex’s online claims processing software. Apollo claimed this was an unlawful refusal to supply a scarce service. The Tribunal dismissed the interim relief application, noting the lack of clear, non-speculative evidence of competitive harm to Apollo or its end-customers.
Contrasting Approaches to Intellectual Property
Both MultiChoice and Audatex presented arguments relating to protecting their investments and proprietary assets:
- MultiChoice argued that the restrictions were essential to safeguard its substantial investment in exclusive sports broadcasting rights, contending that eMedia had not made similar investments and sought to “free-ride” on MultiChoice’s investments.
- Audatex justified its termination of Apollo’s access to protect its proprietary software information, since Apollo had established a wholly-owned subsidiary which was a direct competitor.
The Tribunal’s treatment of these IP-related defences varied. In eMedia, despite acknowledging MultiChoice’s investment, the Tribunal did not give weight to MultiChoice’s justifications that exclusivity was required to protect that investment. Conversely, in Apollo, the Tribunal accepted Audatex’s concerns about protecting its proprietary software, information and services from a direct competitor.
The key differentiator in outcomes appears to be the Tribunal’s assessment of public interest and transformative impact.
- In eMedia, the Tribunal placed significant and explicit weight on the public interest and transformative considerations. It found prima facie public harm related to denying a substantial number of SABC viewers on Openview access to sports events of national interest and a negative impact on eMedia’s ability to grow as a black-owned, medium-sized competitor. These factors were central to its assessment of MultiChoice’s investment justifications and free-riding concerns but also played a significant role in the Tribunal’s findings regarding likely harm and its decision on the balance of convenience.
- In Apollo, the Tribunal found “no non-speculative evidence” that the termination of access would result in competitive harm to Apollo or end-customers paying higher premiums or otherwise being prejudiced. It also accepted Audatex’s justification for its conduct based on its IP and investment justifications and concerns regarding free-riding. The potential for Audatex’s competitor to gain access to IP and proprietary information compromised Audatex’s IP and investment. The need for competition law to have regard for the ability of a black-owned SME competitor to compete did not feature as strongly – or was not accepted – by the Tribunal as being prima facie evident in the Apollo context.
Legal standard for compulsory dealing
The focus of this article is on the IP-related commercial justifications. However, to appreciate the implications of the role of transformation and other public interest factors in abuse of dominance cases, it is useful to briefly address the standard requirements for an abuse of dominance allegation involving a refusal to deal with a competitor. South African competition law is influenced by competition law principles applicable in the European Community. The European decision in Bronner set out a high threshold, requiring (i) the product or service to which access was sought must indispensable to the competitor’s ability to compete, (ii) the refusal eliminates effective competition, and (iii) there is no objective justification for the refusal. These principles were further developed in Microsoft, where compulsory licensing was imposed due to the lack of a legitimate business rationale for the refusal.
Balancing effects-based analysis
Since different outcomes are possible depending on whether, or to what extent, transformation and other public interest considerations apply, there is a tension in how to apply these considerations within the framework of traditional competition analysis of abuse of dominance cases. The Tribunal’s approach in eMedia did not clearly differentiate between public interest and competition issues nor, if it considered them to overlap, how to approach the overall effects-based analysis. This introduces uncertainty in decision-making, potentially undermining predictability. Dominant firms may find themselves without a clear legal framework for assessing when exclusivity, investment protection, or content rights will be respected versus when they will be subordinated to public interest goals.
Implications for businesses
The application of transformative and public interest considerations to abuse of dominance cases raises implications for businesses.
Compulsory dealing with a competitor may no longer be an exceptional remedy: The eMedia case indicates a shift where commercial justifications, including the protection of IP and other investments, may receive less recognition. This is in contrast to economic and competition law principles, which have recognised that protecting IP and investments incentivises firms to innovate and invest, and that compulsory dealing with competitors would diminish incentives to innovate and invest.
Public interest is now a decisive factor: The evidentiary burden on the applicant to provide “non-speculative evidence” of competitive harm (in the traditional sense) will be heavily influenced by the potential impact on the public interest and transformative objectives. Arguably, the burden is lower as the Tribunal is more likely to intervene, potentially overriding commercial or IP-based justifications, where conduct by a dominant firm may have a negative impact on consumer access to assets or services of public value or where it hinders access to the economy by black-owned or small and medium-sized firms.
Businesses, particularly those with a substantial market presence, should proactively consider how their strategies align with the Constitutional Court’s and Tribunal’s interpretation of the Competition Act’s transformative goals. Conduct that supports these goals may be viewed more favourably, while conduct with the potential to hinder them is likely to face significant scrutiny. Firms with significant market presence wishing to protect their IP, investments and similar proprietary assets from competitors need to be aware that public interest objectives may override or limit what would otherwise seem to be objectively justifiable, commercial reasons. eMedia indicates that this may particularly be the case where such firms’ products can be considered to be of public value or “national interest”, or where its competitors are small or medium-sized and/or black-owned competitors.
However, until the Tribunal and Competition Appeal Court provide clear guidance, the way in which these considerations must be assessed within, and consistent with, the competition law framework will be subject to some uncertainty. While the constitutional imperative of transformation is non-negotiable, its integration into competition law must be balanced with the need for clear, principled tests that provide guidance to firms and legal predictability in enforcement.
Written by Paul Cleland, Director; Kwanele Diniso, Associate; Werksmans
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