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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 >> One Step (Support) Ltd v Morris -Garner & Anor [2014] EWHC 2213 (QB) (07 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/2213.html Cite as: [2015] IRLR 215, [2014] EWHC 2213 (QB), [2014] CN 1275 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ONE STEP (SUPPORT) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) KAREN MORRIS-GARNER (2) ANDREA MORRIS-GARNER |
Defendants |
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Mr Stephen Knafler QC and Mr Peter Irvin (instructed by Neves LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 15 17, 20 24, 27 29 January, 2, 3 April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Phillips :
Introduction
The background facts
(i) The concept of supported living
(i) the White Paper Valuing People: A New Strategy for Learning Disability for the 21st Century, presented to Parliament in March 2001;
(ii) the Department of Health's Building Capacity and Partnership in Care initiative, issued in October 2001;
(iii) the Department of Health Guidance on Supported Housing and Care Home Regulation, issued in August 2002 (the "DOH Guidance");
(iv) The Supporting People programme, introduced in 2003; and
(v) The White Paper Our Health, Our Care, Our Say, presented to Parliament in January 2006.
"Personal care
. Its established, ordinary meaning includes four main types of care which are:
? assistance with bodily functions such as feeding, bathing, and toileting
? care which falls just short of assistance with bodily functions, but still involving physical and intimate touching, including activities such as helping a person get out of a bath and helping them to get dressed
? non-physical care, such as advice, encouragement and supervision relating to the foregoing, such as prompting a person to take a bath and supervising them during this
? emotional and psychological support, including the promotion of social functioning, behaviour management, and assistance with cognitive functions
It is only the two more intensive kinds of personal care (1st and 2nd bullets), which trigger the requirement under the Care Standards Act for registration as a domiciliary care agency, although other kinds of personal care and support may also be provided by such an agency.
Non-physical care, emotional and psychological support do not of themselves trigger a requirement for registration with the National Care Standards Commission. Such care and support may be provided by various agencies according to the context and the persons' overall needs. In certain circumstances, these will be part of housing-related support, funded through Transitional Housing Benefit, or, from April 2003, Supporting People" .
(ii) The origins of One Step's business
(a) provisions for dealing with a situation of deadlock between the directors by the service of a Deadlock Notice, constituting an offer by the server of the notice to sell all their shares to the other party at the price specified, but also an alternative offer to buy all the other party's shares at the same price;
(b) provisions restricting any shareholder, during the course of the agreement or for three years thereafter, from engaging in a business which was in material competition with One Step or soliciting One Step's significant clients, such provisions being in materially the same terms as the restrictive covenants subsequently entered in 2006 (see paragraph 24 below);
(c) a provision that the second defendant could act as an alternate director for the first defendant.
(iv) One Step's business from 2002 to 2005
(v) The breakdown in the relationship between the defendants and the Costelloes
(v) The buy-out of 20 December 2006
"1. All information concerning the business transactions of the Company and of any person with whom the Company is in a confidential relationship shall be kept confidential unless or until [the first defendant] can reasonably demonstrate that any such communication, information and material is, or part of it is, in the public domain through no fault of her own, whereupon to the extent that it is in the public domain or is required to be disclosed by law, this obligation shall cease.
2. [The first defendant] shall not without the prior written consent of the Board (such consent to be withheld only so far as may be reasonably necessary to protect the legitimate interests of the Company);
2.1 engage as a director, principal, partner or consultant or accept employment or assist in any capacity in any business concern (of whatever kind) which shall be in material competition with the Company;
2.2 whether alone or jointly with or as principal partner agent director servant or consultant of any other person or persons directly or indirectly in competition with any of the businesses or activities of the Company as at the date of this Deed:
2.2.1 either on her own behalf or on behalf of any other person or persons knowingly canvass solicit or approach or cause to be canvassed or solicited or approached for orders in respect of any services provided or any goods dealt in by the Company any person or persons who at the date of this Deed or within one year prior to such date is or was a significant client or customer of the Company (and for the purposes of this clause it is agreed that the clients or customers of the Company are the local councils paying for the services provided by the Company rather than the consumers of those services);"
(vi) One Step's business after December 2006
(vii) The establishment of Positive Living
"Positive Living is now accepting referrals for placements in your area.
What is Positive Living?
Positive Living is an organisation that enables clients with personal care needs to live in the community rather than in a residential establishment. Positive Living is unique in this respect as although we provide accommodation and support we differ in that we can provide personal care as we are registered with the Commission for Social Care Inspection. Although we are aware that there are other providers locally that offer semi-independent accommodation we are not aware of any organisations that are registered with the commission to meet personal care needs.
Therefore we are able to administer medication, bath clients, help with dressing, go shopping on their behalf, cook meals for clients etc .
Positive Living evolved as a community care option that can provide that extra bit of care needed compared to standard semi independent organisations.
I have attached our brochure for your perusal and would very much like the opportunity to come along and meet with you to discuss our services as we provide a range of options that is best discussed face to face. I will contact you in the very near future in order to try and make a convenient appointment for you but if you are able to email any dates and times to me that would be great. "
Whether Positive Living was in material competition with One Step
(i) The proper construction of the non-compete covenant
"From these cases and other cases in the same field it is possible to collect certain rules: (1) that the question of construction should be approached in the first instance without regard to the question of legality or illegality; (2) that the clause should be construed with reference to the object being sought to be obtained; (3) that in a restraint of trade case the object is the protection of one of the partners against rivalry in trade. To these rules can be added a fourth: (4) that the clause should be construed in its context and in the light of the factual matrix at the time when the agreement was made "
" the prospect of obtaining new clients from recommendations and referrals was obviously part of the goodwill of the defendant's practice. There could be no certainty that the plaintiff could secure such clients for themselves but they were entitled to try and prevent the defendant from denying them the opportunity of succeeding ".
(ii) Material competition between the businesses West London and Thames Valley
"Supported living tenancies for people with significant dependencies are indeed common. There can be different way their need can be met. Separate parts of the same organisation can provide housing and support service (including registerable personal care), or different combinations of separate services work together. In my experience [local authority] commissioners vary in their approach to this, dependent on each individual, the services available, budget constraints and ideology."
" if you were in any one local authority any one local authority there would, at any one moment of time, be a range of potential providers. There would be one man bands, very small organisations; there would be regional examples of large organisations. There would also be people who provided quite specific services. And there would be organisations who provided a huge range of services. So at any one moment of time a commissioner in a particular authority would be looking at a very wide range of potential providers "
Farouk Sheikh, a director of the CareTech group, the purchasers of One Step in 2007, gave evidence to the same effect:
"We saw what was out there was a mixed economy; local authorities were quite keen to work with a mixture and range of sort of service providers"
i) Several of the witnesses called by the defendants confirmed witness statements in which it was asserted that One Step only ever catered for children leaving care ("CLC"), whereas Positive Living dealt only with adults. These assertions were plainly incorrect and had to be withdrawn: whilst OSAAT's initial business had been catering for CLC, the business had expanded to include adults even before it was acquired by One Step. More significantly, One Step's expansion into Reading in 2003 involved significant numbers of adult clients, referred by local authority teams responsible for adults with mental health and learning disabilities. By 2006 the majority of One Step's clients were adults, with a range of needs. Even some of the clients referred as CLC had disabilities or had transferred to the care of adult teams within the relevant authority. I accept One Step's contention that by the time the restrictive covenants were entered, One Step was a diversified supported living provider.
ii) The first defendant did recognise in her witness statement that One Step provided services to "some adults with mild disabilities", but contended that One Step provided the same services to those adults as they provided to CLC, that is to say, support and life-skills training. She asserted that, with just two exceptions, One Step did not provide any personal care to clients. However, whilst it was common ground that One Step could not itself provide registerable personal care (the first two bullet points of the DOH Guidance), there was ample evidence that One Step provided non-registerable personal care, a prime example being service user GH. A detailed examination of that evidence is unnecessary because the first defendant accepted in giving evidence that One Step did indeed provide emotional and physical support to its adult clients, falling within the fourth bullet point of the definition of personal care. Mr Knafler pointed out that, in the case of children, One Step could not provide any care with accommodation (because that would trigger a requirement to register as a children's home), and that Mr Costelloe had confirmed to regulators that One Step generally provided support services only and no care services. Whilst this forensic point was skilfully deployed, the evidence demonstrated that the support provided by One Step to its adult clients undoubtedly included significant elements of personal care, including prompting personal hygiene activities and meal preparation.
"The Local Authorities I have worked in were both willing and accustomed to split provision of care/support between providers, depending on the nature of care/support required, the availability of an appropriate provider, cost, and wishes of the individual service user. The clear, statutory, responsibility for the overall care package lies with the LA care manager, not the provider. If the care package is complex, then one provider is likely to take a lead, on a day to day basis, 'on the ground'. This role would be defined in the contract with the provider. The coordination of services to meet complex needs typically did not simply relate to personal care and housing related support, but also to a range of health care, family arrangements, and cultural/religious needs."
(a) On 9 December 2005, after receiving a referral for JC from Ealing, Mr Costelloe emailed the first defendant, asking "What is your view on this placement the personal care needs are addressed by another agency ?is it viable"
(b) the first defendant did think the placement was viable and One Step started to look for suitable accommodation. On 25 May 2006 Mr Costelloe emailed Ms Whaley, the Deputy Manager at the Northolt office, referring to the fact that Ealing had approved the placement and stating:
"Lets make sure we are on the case with the flat and ensure that we assess him properly as he is a wheelchair user etc. Personal care is their remit and will be done by others that we will need to liaise.
This is a client group that we will go for all over West London and is long term ([YS],[AH]) and unlike Leaving care YMCA's are not an option!!"
(c) After a chasing email from Ealing on 20 July 2006, Ms Whaley emailed the first defendant as follows:
".. do you want me to arrange a date and time or not as this could bring us a lot of future business working with adults with physical disabilities."
(d) On 27 July 2006 the first defendant emailed Mr Costelloe referring to problems locating a flat suitable for JC's needs, the main problem being the need for a walk-in shower. She concluded: "We are obviously working intensively to try and sort this out".
(e) Mr Costelloe replied that day that One Step would have to put in a shower itself, stating " it will mean we will keep the placement for ever as they wont want to move him out once settled maybe we will spend a grand or so but it will be well worth it ."
(f) The email chain concluded with the first defendant asking if Mr Costelloe would email Ealing about obtaining a grant for the installation of a shower.
iii) Material competition between the businesses the Midlands
"Taking these factors together, Dawnay Day clearly in my view was entitled to claim protection not only for those kinds of business which Dawnay Securities was carrying on when the managers left, in the sense that their desks were actively dealing with clients, but also for the other kinds which were in an advanced state of preparation. That would mean that facilities were being installed, traders recruited and trained, and that all the necessary connections were being established with intended or hoped-for clients. The managers were privy to the plans generally and to details of that sort. If some protection post-termination is justified, then it becomes necessary to consider how long the period should be."
Whether the defendants breached the non-solicitation covenant
Whether the second defendant's covenants were unreasonable
"The question is one of substance, not form and the court has always to try and apply the test of reasonableness to the facts and of the particular case .
In my judgment, far from confining the circumstances in which covenants in restraint of trade may be enforced to certain categories of case, and defining those categories strictly, the courts have moved in the opposite direction. The established categories are not rigid, and they are not exclusive. Rather, the covenant may be enforced when the covenantee has a legitimate interest, of whatever kind, to protect, and when the covenant is no wider than is necessary to protect that interest"
Whether the first defendant breached obligations of confidence
One Step's claims in tort
Remedies
"The law recognises that damages are not always a sufficient remedy for breach of contract. This is the foundation of the court's jurisdiction to grant the remedies of specific performance and injunction. Even when awarding damages, the law does not adhere slavishly to the concept of compensation for financially measurable loss. When the circumstances require, damages are measured by reference to the benefit obtained by the wrongdoer. This applies to interference with property rights. Recently, the like approach has been adopted to a breach of contract. Further, in certain circumstances an account of profits is ordered in preference to an award of damages. Sometimes the injured party is given the choice: either compensatory damages or an account of the wrongdoer's profit
(i) Account of profits
" like Mance L.J., I do not think the present case an appropriate one for ordering an account of profits. He has drawn attention to the features of this present case which distinguish it from the circumstances in Blake. No doubt deliberate breaches of contact occur frequently in the commercial world; yet something more is needed to make the circumstances exceptional enough to justify ordering an account of profits, particularly when another remedy is available. "
(ii) Wrotham Park damages
"When the court makes an award of damages on the Wrotham Park basis it does so because it is satisfied that that is a just response to circumstances in which the compensation which is the claimant's due cannot be measured (or cannot be measured solely) by reference to identifiable financial loss "
Conclusion