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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 >> Bartholomews Agri Food Ltd v Thornton [2016] EWHC 648 (QB) (23 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/648.html Cite as: [2016] IRLR 432, [2016] EWHC 648 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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BARTHOLOMEWS AGRI FOOD LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MICHAEL ANDREW THORNTON |
Respondent |
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Michael Duggan QC (instructed by Birketts LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge McKenna :
Introduction
Background
The Relevant Provisions of the Contract
"INTRODUCTION
This document is a written form of agreement between the Employee and Bartholomews (Holdings) Ltd and therefore any Company owned by Bartholomews (Holdings) Ltd. Keep this document safe. Any changes to the Contract will be made to you in writing.
6 TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
Employees who wish to leave the Company must give written notice of this intention. The period of notice varies with the type of job being undertaken and is notified separately to employees in a document that is an integral part of the Contract of Employment.
10. COMPANY CONFIDENTIALITY
Employees should not, during the continuance of their employment, or at any time thereafter, divulge any of the details of the business rf trade information relating to Bartholomews (Holdings) Ltd or any subsidiary Company, acquired during their employmentbyt the Company, or any person, firm, or other organisation.
10.2 PROTECTION OF KNOWLEDGE ACQUIRED DUE TO THE COMPANY'S SPECIALISED BUSINESS
Employees shall not, for a period of six months immediately following the termination of their employment be engaged on work, supplying goods or services of a similar nature which compete with the Company to the Company's customers, with a trade competitor within the Company's trading area, (which is West and East Sussex, Kent, Hampshire, Wiltshire and Dorset) or on their won account without prior approval from the Company. In this unlikely event, the employee's full benefits will be paid during this period."
It is to be observed at the outset that these provisions have not been well drafted. There are no definitions and, on one reading, the covenant prevents the Respondent from being able to work in the six specified counties at all, albeit that Bartholemews does not interpret the clause in that way. What then is meant by the words "of a similar nature?"
The Issue
"The first task of the Court – faced with the contention that post-termination restraints on an employee's ability to engage in future business activity are not enforceable – is to construe the contract under which those restraints are to be imposed. That, as it seems to me, is a task which the Court ought to carry out on an application for interim relief (if there is one) if it can properly do so. Unless the Court is satisfied that there are disputed facts which bear on the construction of the relevant contractual terms, and that those facts cannot be resolved without a trial, the Court at the interlocutory stage is as well able to construe the relevant contractual terms as a court will be at a trial. There is no need to put off until trial determination of the question – what do the contractual terms mean? The court can, and should, determine the scope of the restraints which, as a matter of construction (the contractual) terms seek to impose "
The Evidence
i) Customers for whom the Respondent was an exclusive agronomic advisor (of which there were 52), and;ii) Customers with whom the Respondent had dealt in the course of marketing activities. Moreover the Respondent had, as a result, acquired confidential information about Bartholomews' pricing, services and customer base.
Discussion and conclusions
i) It was limited in time, namely 6 months, which was no longer than reasonably necessary to provide Bartholomews with the opportunity for it to introduce one of its other agronomists to customers who had been serviced by the Respondent and for that agronomist to develop a relationship with those customers, having regard to the evidence as to peak farming periods;ii) It was limited to the supply of goods or services of a similar nature to those supplied by the Respondent in competition with Bartholomews;
iii) It was limited to dealings with Bartholomews' existing customers, a necessary provision to protect confidentiality and customer connection because of the Respondent's possession of confidential information relating to Bartholomews' business. In this regard reliance was placed on the authorities of GW Plowman & Son Ltd v Ash [1964] 1WLR 568, Business Seating v Broad [1998] ICR 729 and Dentmaster (UK) Ltd v Kent [1977] IRLR 636 to support the validity of a covenant of short duration, regardless of whether or not the employee concerned had himself had any recent connection and / or notwithstanding the absence of a so-called backstop temporal limit.
Disposal