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 High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Eville & Jones (Group) Ltd & Anor v Aldiss & Ors [2022] EWHC 269 (QB) (11 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/269.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 269 (QB) |
[New search] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
(1) EVILLE & JONES (GROUP) LIMITED (2) EVILLE & JONES (G.B.) LIMITED |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
(1) DR JASON ALDISS (2) JAVIER GARCIA MELERO (3) LUISE CASTROMIL CABO (4) VETLINE LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Christopher Stone (instructed by John Howe & Co) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 10 November 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30am on 12 February 2022.
David Pittaway QC:
"11.1 ……not, either solely or jointly with or through any other person, on their own account or as agent, manager, adviser or consultant for any other person or otherwise howsoever, directly or indirectly:
11.1.1 for so long as he is a registered holder of any Shares, carry on or be engaged, concerned or interested in, or assist, a business which competes, directly or indirectly, with a business of the Group as operated at any time during the previous 12 months in a territory in which the Group has operated such business during such previous 12 months;
11.1.2 during the Restricted Period, carry on or be engaged, concerned or interested in, or assist, a business which competes, directly or indirectly, with a business of the Group as operated at any time during the Relevant Period In a territory in which the Group has operated such business during such Relevant Period;
… 11.1.4 during the Restricted Period, solicit or accept custom or business from any person in respect of goods and/or services competitive with those manufactured and/or supplied by the Group at any time during the Relevant Period, such person having been a customer of the Group in respect of such goods and/or services during such Relevant Period;
… 11.1.8 during the Restricted Period, induce, solicit or endeavour to entice to leave the service or employment of the Group, or employ, any person who, during the Relevant Period for that Shareholder, was an employee of the Group occupying a senior, managerial, technical, sales or research position or was a consultant to the Group or carried out duties for and on behalf of the Group and who (in any such case) is in possession of Confidential Information or able to influence the client, customer, supplier or other relationships or connections of the Group…"
Application for summary judgment
"The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if –
(a) it considers that –
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
"(1) The court must consider whether the case of the respondent to the application has a realistic as opposed to fanciful prospect of success – in this context, a realistic claim is one that carries some degree of conviction and is more than "merely arguable".
(2) The court must not conduct a "mini-trial" and should avoid being drawn into an attempt to resolve conflicts of fact which are normally resolved by the trial process.
(3) If the application gives rise to a short point of law or construction then, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should "grasp the nettle and decide it"."
"…the best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts."
i) the court must consider whether the claimant has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 2 All ER 91;
ii) a "realistic" claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at [8],
iii) in reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a "mini-trial": Swain v Hillman;
iv) This does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel at [10];
v) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550.
Mr Stone added:
vi) Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case: Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2007] FSR 63.
vii) The Supreme Court has recently emphasised that the factual assertions of the respondent should be rejected as being demonstrably unsupportable by contemporaneous documents only in "clear cases": Okpabi and Others v Royal Dutch Shell Plc and another [2021] UKSC 3, 1 WLR 1294, per Lord Hamblen at [110]. Lord Hamblen cited the judgment of Carnwath LJ in Mentmore International Ltd v Abbey Healthcare (Festival) Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 761 at [23], in which he drew a distinction between those contemporaneous documents which "may be very powerful cross-examination ammunition" and those which provide "the kind of 'knock-out blow' which Lord Hope seems to have had in mind [in Three Rivers]".
viii) The overall burden rests on the Claimants to establish that the Dr Aldiss' case has no real prospect of success: ED&F Man Liquid Products Ltd at [9].
ix) At [20] and [21] of his judgment in Mentmore, Carnwath LJ cited the judgments of Lord Hope in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No 3) [2003] 2 AC 1, at [95], and Colman J in De Molestina v Ponton [2002] 1 All ER (Comm) 587, at 600g, which are, respectively, authority for the proposition that: i) more complex cases and ii) cases reliant on inferences drawn from the documents, are unlikely to be suitable for summary judgment. Both types of case are likely to require discovery and oral evidence before they can be fairly determined. As Colman J said, "Where in a complex case, as may often be the situation, the frontier between what is merely improbable and what is clearly fanciful is blurred, the case or issue should be left to trial". As Lord Hobhouse said in Three Rivers DC at [158], "The criterion which the judge has to apply under CPR Part 24 is not one of probability; it is absence of reality."
"My reading of these authorities is that it is not simply a matter of categorization, non-compete clauses in employment agreements on one hand, non-compete clauses in shareholder agreements on the other. Non-compete clauses for the vendor of a partnership share or the shares in a business will generally be enforced as reasonable and enforceable. Apart from anything else, such clauses are negotiated in a commercial context and have the legitimate aim of preventing vendors from attacking the goodwill of the partnership or business from which they have just transferred. Towards the other end of the spectrum are ordinary employees, who have a small shareholding in their employer-company as part of a share participation scheme."
Part 1 - Submissions
"the question of mutuality of the contract is a most important consideration. The contract applied equally to all the partners. None of them could tell whether he might find himself in a position of being a retiring partner subject to the restriction in clause 28, or of a continuing partner with an interest to enforce the restriction" (at p.716).
He relies upon a parity of reasoning in this case.
"It is for the judge, after informing himself as fully as he can of the facts and circumstances relating to the employer's business, the nature of the employer's interest to be protected, and the likely effect on this of solicitation [or in this case "competition"], to decide whether the contractual period is reasonable or not".
Discussion
Part 2 - Submissions
Discussion
Conditional Order
"4. Where it appears to the court possible that a claim or defence may succeed but improbable that it will do so, the court may make a conditional order, as described below.
"5.1 The orders the court may make on an application under Part 24 include:
(1) judgment on the claim,
(2) the striking out or dismissal of the claim,
(3) the dismissal of the application,
(4) a conditional order.
"5.2 A conditional order is an order which requires a party:
to pay a sum of money into court, …"
"42. As the Rules make clear, on an application for summary judgment the court may make a conditional order (CPR 24.6). A typical condition will be to require the defendant to pay a sum of money into court or to provide security in some other form. Such an order may be made, as CPR 24 PD para 4 states, "where it appears to the court possible that a … defence may succeed but improbable that it will do so". It is not necessary to show that a defence is "shadowy" or "dubious in its bona fides " (expressions which were sometimes used in considering whether to give conditional leave to defend under the pre-CPR regime), although if a defence is shadowy or of doubtful good faith that will no doubt be a relevant consideration in exercising the power to make a conditional order and deciding the amount of any security which should be ordered.
43. It follows that there is a category of case where the defendant may have a real prospect of success, but where success is nevertheless improbable and a conditional order for the provision of security may be made. This is the typical case where a conditional order may be made requiring the provision of security for the full sum claimed or something approaching that sum."