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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Decorus Ltd v Penfold & Anor [2016] EWHC 1421 (QB) (20 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1421.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1421 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Decorus Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Mr Daniel Penfold (2) Procure Store Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Spencer Keen (instructed by Fox Whitfield Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 23rd May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Molyneux :
An agreed list of issues is attached to this judgment.
"To protect the legitimate and genuine business interests of Decorus, the employee shall not directly or indirectly, for his own benefit or that of any third party, in whatever capacity:
(a) for the period of 9 months from the termination date, in competition with Decorus, deal with, solicit, canvas, seek to secure business or assist in soliciting, canvassing, seeking to securing business or accept custom or business of any customer or client of Decorus with whom the employee had dealings or for whom the employee was directly or indirectly responsible in the 12 months preceding the termination date."
"Post Termination Obligations
18.1 For the purposes of this Clause 18 the following words have the following meaning:
(a) 'Restricted Services' means any services (including but not limited to technical and product support, technical advice and customer services) supplied by the Company with which your duties were concerned or for which you were responsible during the 12 months immediately preceding the Termination Date;
(b) 'Confidential Information' has the meaning given to it at Clause 21;
(c) 'Customer' means any person, firm, company or other organisation whatsoever to whom or which the Company distributed, sold or supplied Restricted Services during the 12 months immediately preceding the Termination Date and with whom or which, during such period: (i) you had material personal dealings in the course of your employment by the Company; or (ii) any employee who was under your direct supervision with whom you had personal dealings in the course of their employment by the Company;
(d) 'Prospective Customer' means any person, firm, company or other organisation whatsoever to whom or which the Company shall have had negotiations or discussions regarding the possible distribution, sale or supply of Restricted Services during the six months immediately preceding the Termination Date and with whom or which during such period: (i) you shall have had material personal dealings in the course of your employment by the Company; or (ii) any employee who was under your direct supervision shall have had material personal dealings in the course of their employment by the Company;
(e) 'Restricted Period' means the period of six months immediately following the Termination Date, provided always that if the Company has not assigned duties to you during a period immediately preceding the Termination Date in accordance with sub clause 15.2/15.3, the Restricted Period shall be reduced by the same period as duties have been assigned to you under sub clause 15.2/15.3;
(f) 'Main Competitors' means any person, firm, company or other organisation that operates in the same industries for which the Employee has operated;
(g) 'Termination Date' means the date of termination of your employment.
18.2 You hereby undertake with the Company you will not either during your period of employment or during the Restricted Period without the prior written consent of the Company whether by yourself, through your employees or agents or otherwise and whether on your own behalf or on behalf of any person, firm, company or other organisation, directly or indirectly: (i) in competition with the Company be employed or engaged by the Main Competitors in the business of researching into, developing, manufacturing, distributing, selling, supplying or otherwise dealing with Restricted Services; (ii) in competition with the Company, directly or indirectly solicit or attempt to solicit business from or canvass any Customer or Prospective Customer in respect of Restricted Services; (iii) in competition with the Company directly or indirectly accept orders or deal with orders for Restricted Services from any Customer or Prospective Customer.
18.3 While the restrictions in this clause 18 (on which you have the opportunity to take independent advice, as you hereby acknowledge) are considered by the parties to be reasonable in all the circumstances, it is agreed that if any such restrictions, by themselves or taken together, shall be found to go beyond what is reasonable in all the circumstances for the protection of the legitimate interest of the Company but would be considered reasonable if part or parts of the wording of such restrictions were deleted, the relevant restrict or restrictions shall apply with such deletions as may be necessary to make it or them valid and effective.
18.4 The contact details of business contacts made during the course of your employment are regarded as our confidential information, and as such you will required to delete all such details from your personal social networking accounts, such as Facebook accounts or LinkedIn accounts, on termination of employment.
Clause 21 (Entitled 'Confidentiality of Information'): You will not, either during your employment or thereafter, use to the detriment or prejudice of the Company or any of its clients or customers or, except in the proper course of your duties, divulge to any person, firm or company or otherwise make use of: (i) confidential information; (ii) any confidential information about the Company, its business, accounts, finances, research products, pricing policy, future business strategy, marketing strategies and plans, employee details, client or customer lists, discount rates, sales figures, arrangements with suppliers, tenders, pitches, plans or strategies; and (iii) any other information designated as confidential which may have come to your knowledge in the course of your employment.
You will not at any time take or carry away any papers or other materials or copies thereof being the property of the Company or loaned to the Company by any client or customer.
This restriction will continue to apply after the termination of your employment without limitation in time but shall cease to apply to any information or knowledge that subsequently comes into the public domain, other than as a result of unauthorised disclosure by you.
For the purposes of this Agreement, 'Confidential Information' shall mean: (i) any trade secret, customer information, trading detail or other information relating to the business, goodwill, secrets or personal information of the Company or any Group Company, which is not publicly available; (ii) any version of any code, algorithm, programme or similar item capable of being recorded, copied or transmitted, which has been originated, developed or modified by the Company or any Group Company; (iii) any information specifically designated by the Company, any Group Company or any Customer as confidential; (iv) any information supplied to the Company or any Group Company by any third party in relation to which a duty of confidentiality is owed or arises; (v) any information required to be treated as confidential by any legislation; (vi) any informational item which should otherwise be reasonably regarded as possessing a quality of confidence."
"[The Defendant] orally informed Mr Sheppard that he planned to set up a new business and forge a new client base for the purpose of this new business. He said that he had an urge to go out on his own. During this discussion Mr Sheppard reminded Mr Penfold of his post-termination restrictions in his contract of employment. Mr Penfold replied that he had no intention of taking the Claimant's customers and would be establishing a 'new customer base' partly because he had become 'bored' with the Claimant's customers."
"The first Defendant did have a conversation with Mr Sheppard along these lines."
"I asked him to review his situation to ensure that he could afford to do it. I asked him why he was doing it, he said he needed money for a house and I offered to lend the money to him. I offered to support him in his venture because he was a good friend. I also offered to incubate his clients for him for a period of six months in case he wanted to come back."
"I did not say to Mr Sheppard that I had no intention of taking his customers and would establish a new customer base. I did say that I would be setting up on my own. We had a conversation about covenants and I said 'do you not expect my customers to follow me?' to which Mr Sheppard replied 'yes'."
Law Governing Conduct during Employment
"In the absence of any express term, the obligations of the employee in respect of the use and disclosure of information are the subject of implied terms. […] While the employee remains in the employment of the employer the obligations are included in the implied term which imposes a duty of good faith or fidelity on the employee. […] It may be noted that the duty of good faith will be broken if an employee makes or copies a list of the customers of the employer for use after his employment ends or deliberately memorises such a list, even though, except in special circumstances, there is no general restriction on an ex-employee canvassing or doing business with customers of his former employer."
"1. It is indisputable that an employee owes his employer a contractual duty of fidelity and how far it extends will depend on the facts of each case.
2. The more senior the staff the greater the degree of loyalty, fidelity and diligence required.
3. The first task of the court is to identify the nature of the employee obligation of fidelity and then to decide whether the employee's activities are in breach.
…
7. It is a breach of the duty of fidelity for an employee to misuse confidential information belonging to his employer.
8. The court should ask whether the activities in which the employee is engaged affect his ability to serve his employer faithfully and honestly and to the best of his abilities."
Conduct during Employment
"That's amazing thanks… I'll give you a call tomorrow as I am leaving Decorus and wanted to thank you for all the business you've put my way."
"Mr Sheppard asked me and I said I haven't told anyone I was leaving. That was a lie. I accept it. It was a mistake to lie."
Purchase Logs
"An informed reader would know what software and hardware would need renewing by each customer."
"On a date or dates unknown to the Claimant between the 1st December 2015 and the 29th February 2016 the First Defendant accessed electronic copies of historic purchasing logs of transactions between the Claimant and its customers. In particular the First Defendant accessed the purchasing log pertaining to October, November and December 2015 33 and 10 times respectively. It is averred that there was no reason for the First Defendant to access such information in the course of his employment. It is to be inferred that the First Defendant has retained or copied the purchase log information for the benefit of himself or a third party."
"I had already decided to set up the business when I looked at the logs. When I looked at them it was to figure out how much profit I would make. I looked at the 2012 logs which were for the period when I started at Decorus. I looked at the six month period from when I had started from fresh to see how long it had taken me to build up a profit. I wanted to figure out from a profit point of view how long it would take me to build up. This was entirely for my own business. If I had taken any information it would have been unlawful. That is not what I did. I did not make a note, I glanced through to see how much I would make month on month."
InPrint Litho
Lush
"She was the first person I told. I told her sometime in January that I was leaving and I told her my new company name."
"Hi Ya. This is the spreadsheet I was talking to you about."
"We had a conversation. Lush was going out to price review. She sent the spreadsheet to Procure Store. I did not reply to it. Our conversation was a general one about supply review. She knew I was setting up. She sent the spreadsheet so that I could compete against Decorus. I did nothing about it until after I left. I speak to Ms Archer regularly."
"Hi Ya. Not sure if work has taken your work phone, need to pick your brains on something – Adobe and Autocad."
"I would have spoken to her, I cannot be sure when I spoke to her, but my best guess is that I spoke to her before I left Decorus."
"Two companies did get in touch with me following my departure from the Claimant. The first was Lush. They got in touch with me after the Claimant provided them with a quote for some equipment and they were not happy with the price."
Agreed List of Issues: Findings for Questions 3 and 4
Agreed List of Issues Question 1: Which Express Written Terms Governed D1's Employment?
(a) Brearley and Bloch Employment Covenants and Confidential Information, 3rd edition:
"11.33 In conclusion, at the inception of employment there will rarely be a problem. No consideration is necessary beyond the agreement on the terms which include the covenant. However, where covenants are later introduced into the contractual documentation, the employer should provide consideration which is substantial and not nominal, e.g. a pay rise or promotion."
and (b) Goulding, Employee Competition, 3rd edition:
"6.22 Any variation of contract may be agreed between the parties. Consideration (normally some benefit to the employee) must be given in return for the covenants. How much benefit is sufficient to form valid consideration? There is no right answer but nominal consideration is risky, as is reliance on the employee continuing to work for the employer on otherwise unchanged terms as is the introduction of a variation by way of a deed unsupported by consideration. Ideally there should be some real or monetary other benefit (promotion, for example) conferred on the employee, for the purpose of causing the employee to agree to the restrictive covenants. In such a case the promotion should be conditional on the employee entering into the new contract… there would need to be some evidence that if the employee did not sign the new contract he would be dismissed."
"My wife was involved in the new contracts, advised by HR Solutions. I sat down with HR Solutions early in the year. It was to be a three phase review. I do not recall discussing changes in the contract. I cannot say what business aim my wife had in mind when discussing changes in the contract. My wife dealt with all the Claimant's HR matters."
"I will now be doing them over two days (17th and 23rd April), a pack will be sent out whilst I am away from HR Solutions for you to complete."
"Following on from yesterdays appraisals I will be completing the outstanding appraisals next week… This is the first part of a three phase review, the stages are as follows: 1. appraisal 2. the sign off on the agreed milestones and actions from the appraisals 3. updated contract – all the existing contracts are somewhat outdated with regards to employment legislation and are being updated."
"Following Dan's appraisal yesterday can you please increase his salary to £27,000 per annum."
"Your main terms and conditions of employment have been transferred to your new contract of employment. Please ensure that you read this document in full as once accepted this contract will replace your existing terms and conditions."
"I thought six months would be more enforceable than nine. The template I used had been reviewed by our solicitors and I had worked in the IT sector and had experience in it. I thought it better to reduce the period to six months. The clause I used was standard from our standard contract. I discussed with Carly Baker whether it could be reduced to six months and she confirmed that it could. We also resolved the conflict in the original contract. I did not discuss with Carly Baker the aims of the clause or what she was trying to achieve. I understood the industry pretty well."
"I was asked to sign it a couple of times. Carly came and asked me to sign it. I did not read it. I just signed it. I accepted that it was part of a three phase review. I had received the email on the 18th April, I had had an appraisal, I had had a pay rise. I do not accept that the pay rise was part of this. It did not cross my mind to ask what would happen if I did not sign the contract. I expected that it would contain a non-solicitation clause but I did not expect that I would not be able to work at all."
"If I was asked about it on the day I signed it I would say that I thought the new contract applied. I changed my mind when I saw the restrictive covenant. I read it through after I left the Claimant. I had not read it in detail before. It was after I left that I read it and then I thought I am not bound by it."
Agreed List of Issues Question 2: Are the Applicable Restrictive Covenants Enforceable?
"In fact the reason, and the only reason, for upholding such a restraint on the part of an employee is that the employer has some proprietary right in the nature of a trade connection or in the nature of trade secrets, for the protection of which such a restraint is, having regard to the duties of the employee, reasonably necessary. Such a restraint has, so far as I know, never been upheld, if directed only to the prevention of competition or against the use of the personal skill and knowledge acquired by the employee in his employer's business."
"Firstly, the court must decide what the covenant means when properly construed.
Secondly, the court will consider whether the former employers have shown on the evidence that they have legitimate business interests requiring protection in relation to the employee's employment.
Thirdly, once the existence of legitimate protectable interests has been established, the covenant must be shown to be no wider than is reasonably necessary for the protection of those interests. Reasonable necessity is to be assessed from the perspective of reasonable persons in the position of the parties as at the date of the contract, having regard to the contractual provisions as a whole and to the factual matrix to which the contract would then realistically have been expected to apply."
"In a case where the wording of a covenant restricting competition by an employee after leaving his employer's service does not specifically state the interest of the employer which the covenant is intended to protect, the court is, in my judgment, entitled to look both at the wording and the surrounding circumstances for the purpose of ascertaining that interest, by reference to what would, objectively, appear to have been the intentions of the parties."
The Three Stage Approach
i) in competition with the companyii) directly or indirectly
iii) solicit or attempt to solicit business from or canvass
iv) any customer (which is defined in Clause 18(1)(c) and is effectively any customer with whom the employee had material personal dealings in the course of his employment by the Company) or
v) any prospective customer (which is defined in Clause 18(1)(d) to mean any firm or company with which the employee had material person dealings in the course of his employment by the Company)
vi) in respect of restricted services (which are defined in Clause 18(1)(a)).
i) Its durationii) Its scope, extending as it does to prospective customers as well as actual.
Issue 5: Do D1 and D2 Owe and Continue to Owe a Duty in Equity Not to Misuse Trade Secrets or Confidential Information?
Issues 6 and 7: Did D1 Breach the Duty of Confidence and If So To What Extent?
Relief
1. The Claimant is awarded damages in the sum of £29,852.17 as set out in Mr Sheppard's witness statement. This figure was not effectively challenged by the Defendants.2. Final injunctive relief in the terms of paragraphs 2, 3, 6 and 7 of the order made on 16th March 2016.
3. Neither party addressed the court on the question of costs, which should be awarded on the usual principles and be assessed if not agreed.
4. The parties to draw and agree an order.