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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 >> LC Services Ltd & Ors v Brown & Ors [2003] EWHC 3024 (QB) (12 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2003/3024.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 3024 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
L C SERVICES LIMITED (1) COLIN BOOTMAN (2) KEVIN WINGROVE (3) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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ANDREW BROWN (1) KINESIS SOLUTIONS LIMITED (2) |
Defendants |
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Claire Miskin (instructed by Neilson & Co) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 18-21, 24, 25 November 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON:
Introduction
The parties
The claims in summary
Evidence
Mr Brown's Service Agreement
"4.1.1 devote the whole of his time, attention and ability to the company, both during the normal business hours and during such additional hours (without further remuneration) as the company deems necessary for the proper fulfilment of his duties;
4.1.2 faithfully and diligently perform those duties and exercise such powers consistent with them which are from time to time assigned to or vested in him;
4.1.4 keep the Board promptly and fully informed (in writing if so requested) of his conduct of the business or affairs of the Company and its Group Companies and provide such explanations as the Board may require;
4.1.5 use his best endeavours to promote the interests of the Company and any Group Company."
"16.1 Without prejudice to the obligations of the Executive arising by law during the employment or at any time thereafter, the Executive shall not, except with the prior written authority of the Board or as required by law, use for his own purposes or disclose to any unauthorised third party and shall use his best endeavours to prevent the publication or disclosure of any information relating to the business, prospective business, technical products or processes, finances, designs, inventions, price lists or lists of customers and suppliers of the Company or any Group Company (both current and those who were customers or suppliers during the two years prior to commencement of Employment) which comes into his possession by virtue of the Employment, and which the company or any relevant Group Company regards, or could reasonably be expected to regard, as confidential."
"17.2. The Executive shall not for the period of twelve months after the termination either directly or indirectly and whether on his own behalf or on behalf of any other business, person, partnership, firm, company or other body which is wholly or partly in competition with any business carried on by the Company or any Group Company:
17.2.1 canvass, solicit or attempt to entice away or accept the custom or business of any customer or client (being any business, person, partnership, firm, company or other body for whom the Company or any relevant Group Company has provided goods or services) with whom the Executive has had business dealings on behalf of the Company or such company within the last twelve months of the employment; or
17.2.2 canvass, solicit or approach or caused to be canvassed, solicited or approached any person or persons who was or were negotiating with the Company or any relevant Group Company for the supply of services or goods by the Company or such company and with whom the Executive has had business dealings on behalf of the Company or such company within the last twelve months of the Employment; …"
"The Parties agree that each of the covenants set out in Clauses 17.1 and 17.2 is separate and severable and (with particular regard to the Executive contacting many customers not more than once or twice in each calendar year) is considered by the Parties to be reasonable and necessary for the protection of the legitimate interests of the Company and any relevant Group Company in whose business the Executive shall from time to time be involved. However, if any such covenants shall be adjudged to be void or ineffective for whatever reason but would be adjudged to be valid and effective if it or another such covenant had been deleted in whole or in part then such covenant shall apply with such deletions as may be necessary to render it valid and effective."
The business of LCS
MR JUSTICE BURNTON: What about retention of existing business?
A. Yes, my Lord, yes. That was done through the renewals.
MISS ELLENBOGEN: And that was your role?
A. It was, yes.
MR JUSTICE BURNTON: Did that involve you speaking to people within the customer company?
A. Yes, my Lord, yes.
MISS ELLENBOGEN: On behalf of LCSL, for that purpose, you developed personal contacts within the client companies, the prospective client companies, did you not?
A. I would say so, yes. I would put that as part of a good
salesman job, to build up a good rapport with his customers.
Q. You were particularly good at that?
A. I would like to think so, yes.
Q. You, for example, have forged and retained relationships with people such as Mr Sykes at Croda Colloids and Graham Logan at SSL?
A. Yes, some I have had more contact with or I have had more meetings with than others.
Q. And they knew you, and you were a name that meant something to them, and someone they trusted?
A. I would hope so, yes.
A. Yes, basically, CNA is a company that gives a lot of work to LCSL. LCSL actually do work on CNA's behalf, and I built up a rapport with Oliver at CNA. So I actually went out and had lunch with him over in Windsor.
Kinesis
Confidentiality of information
Q. The company had also collated information in relation to business which it had tried but so far failed to secure, but which it considered to be a business lead. So the idea would be that, if it had failed in year one to secure the business, it would make a note of the date when the renewal of the existing contract would fall due and target the same customer or prospective customer the following year with a view to taking the business?
A. These were the leads in the red lever arch files, yes.
Q. They were arranged in the lever arch files in accordance with the date upon which contact should be made with a view to gaining business?
A. Generally, yes. As I said, from January to June, there was two, or January to June, June to July. So, sensibly, if a contract you knew was coming up with a manufacturer or whatever in March, you would contact them in February. So you would have a lead in February, my Lord.
Q. For that purpose, you would revert to the lever arch files according to the month at which you were then looking at them and say, "I need to contact companies X, Y and Z with a view to gaining their business"?
A. That is correct, yes.
Q. All of this, the database, the maintenance procedures and the red lever arch files, were company property, were they not?
A. They were indeed.
Q. Your input in their collation or their revision at any time was on behalf of the company?
A. It was, yes.
Q. And you had no interest in accessing or using that material other than on behalf of the company?
A. That is correct, my Lord, yes.
Q. So, for example, whilst you were working as LCSL's sales director, if someone from, say, Jaytee Biosciences, a main competitor of LCSL, had approached you and said, "Could I have a copy of any of that documentation", you would not have given it to them, would you?
A. No, I would not.
Q. Why was that?
A. Because that information was obviously built up for LCSL, although they may have that information because a lot of the customers were customers of many other companies within the industry, my Lord.
Q. And because this was information which, if provided by you, would have been of great use to a competitor and enabled it to steal a march on LCSL's business?
A. Possibly some of it, not all of it. I mean, the ACT! Database alone would give customer contact, but there was no pricing on the ACT! Database in any way, shape or form.
Q. But there was an equipment list and there were renewal dates, were there not?
A. There were, yes.
MR JUSTICE BURNTON: And a contact?
A. And a contact.
MR JUSTICE BURNTON: So you would have known who to get in touch with and say, "You've got such and such equipment. We're doing a special deal on maintenance contracts"?
A. Yes, my Lord, yes.
MISS ELLENBOGEN: That, in turn, could enable that competitor to poach LCSL's business, could it not?
A. I would say so, yes.
Q. In short, revealing that sort of information to a competitor or prospective competitor on the market could wreak serious harm to LCSL's business, could it not?
A. Um, it would have a detrimental effect, my Lord, yes.
Q. That was something which you had, at all times during your employment, appreciated?
A. Yes, my Lord.
Relevant events
"Following your recent meeting with James Bull and our representative from Kinesis Solutions we would like to offer the enclosed maintenance support proposal for your consideration.
As already discussed Kinesis Solutions (sic) aim is to deliver high quality support for your HPLC (ie, high pressure liquid chromatography) equipment encompassing customer choice and flexibility whilst working within budgetry constraints.
We hope you find our quotation favourable and look forward to discussing our proposal in the near future."
"With effect from today, Thursday 27th March 2003 I hearby resign my position within LC Services and give three months notice to leave as per my contract agreement, with my last working day to be Friday 27th June 2003.
I would like to thank you for the last nine years and wish you and all LC Services staff every success in the future."
"I basically said that I was considering all my options at that time."
See day 3 page 66. That was misleading, and in my judgment deliberately so. Mr Brown had already committed himself to join Mr Gallifant. He was well aware that if Mr Bootman knew that he was going to join a competing business he would be put on garden leave. I find that he misled Mr Bootman in order to avoid being put on garden leave, so that he could, during the period of his notice, take steps for the benefit of KSL, himself and Mr Gallifant. Mr Brown was also concerned that Mr Bootman would want to enforce the post-competition restraints in his service agreement: that was another reason for him to dissemble about his intentions. Mr Brown said in evidence that he wanted to avoid a confrontation with Mr Bootman. I find that what he wanted to avoid was Mr Bootman's enforcement of the rights of LCS.
The input of data into Kinesis's Goldmine database on 2 January 2003
"I can confirm, however, that Andrew Brown took a copy of the ACT database home with him during his employment to enable him to work from home. Approximately six months ago, Andrew Brown informed me that he was experiencing problems with the ACT database and, as I was the database administrator, he asked me if I could visit him at home to rectify this. He was, in fact, able to fix the problem himself and I was never, therefore, actually required to carry out the visit. Andrew Brown has not returned his copy of the ACT database to me, and to my knowledge, he has not returned it to anyone else at LCSL."
Mr Bayliss enlarged on this in his second witness statement, at paragraphs 4 to 7. He explained that Mr Brown had used a floppy disk to input the LCS database into his home computer, and had confirmed that he had successfully done so. His evidence was supported by Mr Wingrove, who said in his witness statement:
"The "office method" was to use the back-up facility within ACT to copy the database to floppy disk and upload it onto any computer with the ACT program. In fact, this was the same method which Mr Brown used to create a floppy disk of the database from his office computer. I would ask him periodically for an update and he would then give me a floppy disk containing this. This ensured that we were both working from the most up to date version of the database."
The documents missing from the red files
The failure to send out renewal quotations during the last period of Mr Brown's employment with LCS
LCS's maintenance procedures
The enforceability of clause 17.2 of Mr Brown's service agreement
Clean hands
Conclusions
Remedies