BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> IS Innovative Software Ltd v Howes [2004] EWCA Civ 275 (19 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/275.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 275 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE YELTON)
The Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
____________________
IS INNOVATIVE SOFTWARE LTD | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
ROBERT HOWES | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR ROBERT HOWSE appeared in Person
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 19 February 2004
The first issue
"This position is subject to the terms set out in the Statement of Main Terms and Conditions of Employment except where varied or amended by this document."
The letter then went on to describe some of the essential features of the post, including the remuneration, hours of work, and "employee status" which was in these terms:
"You have the privilege from October 2000 of being key employee status and these terms are laid out in your Statement of Terms and Conditions."
i) by agreeing with Miss Barker and Mr Cowling to execute the backdated letters, Mr Howes entered into an arrangement which amounted to a conspiracy;ii) because the conspiracy involved an agreement to execute the four backdated letters, it was an unlawful means conspiracy;
iii) although Mr Howes may have been principally concerned to assist the four employees, he nonetheless must have intended to harm the company;
iv) as a result of the conspiracy, the company was induced to pay, and indeed did pay, Miss Barker and Miss Kelleher substantially more money than they would have paid in respect of their respective redundancy and retirement.
i) Mr Howes did not have the requisite intention to injure the company; and
ii) in any event, the company suffered no damage as a result of the conspiracy.
"The surrounding circumstances in this case lead us to the view that none of [the four employees] did wish to negotiate on that point: they were no doubt pleased at their elevation and the consequent increase in salary."
i) as a result of Mr Howes' ceasing to run the company full time, their responsibilities would be greater;
ii) their salaries would increase;
iii) they would become "key employees", with (as the judge found consistently with the evidence) the consequence that the period of notice in respect of their employment would increase to three months on either side.
"Here we are concerned with a different problem altogether. It is an agreement by two or more to an unlawful act. ... we think there is a cause of action when it is remembered that the tort is a conspiracy to injure. We would suggest that a conspiracy to do an unlawful act - when there is no intent to injure the plaintiff and it is not aimed or directed at him - is not actionable even though he is damaged thereby. But if there is an intent to injure him then it is actionable. The intent to injure may not be the predominant motive. It may be mixed with other motives. In this context, when the agreement is to do an unlawful act, we do not get into the 'quagmire of mixed motives' as Lord Simon LC described them …. It is sufficient that the conspiracy is aimed or directed at the plaintiff, and it can reasonably be foreseen that it may injure him, and does in fact injure him."
"[I]n the case of most conspiracies to injure by tortious means it will be clear from the acts of the conspirators that they must have intended to injure the claimant. ... An example of such an inference being drawn in a similar field is in Bourgoin SA -v- Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [1986] QB 716 at 777 [where] Oliver LJ said...:
'If an act is done deliberately and with
knowledge of its consequences, we do not think
that the actor can sensibly say that he did not
"intend" the consequences or that the act was not
"aimed" at the person who, it is known, will
suffer them.'"
"In our view, the effect of the two Lonrho cases is simply that, in order to establish an unlawful means conspiracy, it is necessary to establish an intention to injure the claimant but not a predominant intention or purpose to do so."
"The claimant undoubtedly suffered some damage in the present case as a result of the secession of the Tamworth Four together with a large part of the workforce. There is also no doubt, in our judgment, that such damage was not only foreseeable but actually foreseen ... By virtue of that fact they may be said, for the purpose of the tort, to have intended that damage." (emphasis added)
The second issue
i) they, and in particular Mr Laurent and Mr Thomas, provided Mr Howes and Accquiant with technical assistance in the development of the IFS project; and
ii) they, and particularly Mr Gorst, provided services, in the form of storing documents relating to the IFS project on a company laptop and provision of general assistance to Accquiant between January and March 2001.
"It needs no long discussion to say that to work for a potential rival while employed by another is a breach of the terms of a contract of employment."
"Mr Howes did not procure or encourage the second to fourth defendants to breach their contacts with [the company]. We find that he encouraged them to work for his new company but never sought from them any confidential information or asked them to work for that new company whilst still employed by [the company]."
"Either we had got to hire consultants, and this kind of consultant is expensive … or we could simply ask somebody like David Thomas, which is what we chose to do."
"I appreciate that that general conclusion may not appear obvious to those who, unlike me, have not had the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witnesses. However, having had that benefit (which was of great assistance in this particular case) we came to that conclusion without any great hesitation."
i) Mr Thomas was "clear, sensible and honest" as a witness, and the judge believed what he said;
ii) the judge accepted the "substance of what Mr Laurent said";
iii) he believed that neither of them "agreed or actually carried out any programming work for Accquiant while they were employed by [the company]";
iv) the work required to program the front end for the IFS project was "more than could physically be done while they were working at [the company]";
v) although Mr Gorst once "went so far as to suggest that the programmers could use [the company's] machines in their spare time" this was "a suggestion ... made in a moment of temper with [the company]", and "was not approved or agreed by any of the others and ... it was never acted upon";
vi) on the balance of probabilities there were "no other e-mails referring to Accquiant which have not been disclosed and the absence of which might lead us to draw adverse conclusions against the defendants";
vii) he accepted "the evidence of Mr Thomas and Mr Laurent that they never agreed to do anything which was inimical to the interests of [the company]", and, indeed "they did not want to leave [the company] and … had done nothing to justify dismissal";
viii) Mr Gorst's "behaviour came closer to the line" but "did not overstep it";
ix) "Because information which was confidential to [Accquiant] was disclosed to [the three defendants, Mr Howes] required them to sign non-disclosure agreements". The evidence of Mr Thomas and Mr Laurent "that they regarded it as perfectly normal to sign such an agreement if a rival was trying to get them to work for them" was also accepted by the judge.
"If it were found that the destruction of the evidence was carried out deliberately so as to hinder the proof of the plaintiff's claim, then such finding would obviously reflect on the credibility of the destroyer. In such circumstances it would enable the court to disregard the evidence of the destroyer in the application of the principle."