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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> AAA & Anor v CCC [2020] EWCA Civ 846 (07 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/846.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 846 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
HH Judge Eyre QC
BL-2019-MAN-000091
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
____________________
(1) AAA (2) BBB |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and – |
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CCC |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
MARK HARPER QC (instructed by JMW Solicitors LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 16 June 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
(1) that the contractual provisions relied on by the claimants as the basis for the injunctions did not justify the relief granted and that the judge was wrong in his construction of those provisions which were too uncertain to support the orders made; and
(2) that in any event the orders made are insufficiently clear to operate as injunctions and should not therefore have been made in that form.
"3. The Defendant must not:
(a) use, publish, or communicate, or disclose to any other person (other than (i) by way of disclosure to legal advisors instructed in relation to these proceedings (the Defendants' legal advisers) for the purpose of obtaining legal advice in relation to these proceedings or (ii) for the purpose of carrying this order into effect) all or any part of the information referred to in paragraph 17 of the Confidential Schedule to the Particulars of Claim that is included herein as Confidential Schedule 1 (the Information);
(b) use, publish or communicate or disclose any information which is liable to or might identify the Claimants as a party to these proceedings and/or as the subject of the Information or which otherwise contains material (including but not limited to the profession) which is liable to, or might lead to, the claimants' identification in any such respect provided that nothing in this Order shall prevent the publication, disclosure or communication of any information which is contained in this Order other than in the confidential Schedules;
(c) make any adverse or derogatory comment about the First Claimant (including its directors or employees) or the Second Claimant;
(d) seek to damage the business of the Claimants, the Second Claimant or the business of any company controlled by the Second Claimant by the release of the Information or release of any matter arising out of engagement with the Claimants.
Provided that if the Defendant wishes in the future to make a comment or disclosure referring to the conduct of the First or Second Claimant occurring wholly after the date of this order that would fall within paragraph 3(a), (c) and/or (d) above, he may apply to the Court on notice to the First and Second Claimant to vary paragraph 3(a), (c) and/or (d) above."
"Any information or purported information that falls within any of the following categories:
(1) Any information relating to the alleged sexual harassment of [ ] by the Defendant or the alleged sexual assault of the Defendant by [ ] and/or the Second Claimant;
(2) Any information relating to the allegations that the Second Claimant has been involved in hate crimes, is racist, is anti-Semitic, is violent, has behaved in a sexually inappropriate manner towards women, and/or was arrested/charged/ convicted of a Section 47 assault;
(3) Any information relating to the allegations that the First and/or Second Claimant have been involved in fraud, blackmail and/or bribery, perverting the course of justice, dishonesty, forgery, tax evasion and/or money laundering; the Second Claimant is or has been under investigation by HMRC as a result of his business dealings."
"33. Are the terms sufficiently clear to be enforceable as a matter of contract? Mr Chaisty placed considerable force on his contention that the terms are too vague to be enforceable as a matter of contract and/or are simply meaningless. In particular he made reference in that regard to the definition of confidential information in the settlement and release agreement saying that it was circular and/or too wide. He made reference to what he said, or what he would say, is the vagueness and uncertainty of references to making adverse or derogatory comments and/or action which might bring the Claimants into disrepute.
34. In deciding whether the provisions of the agreements are sufficiently certain to give rise to contractual rights those provisions must be seen in the context of the overall dealings; of the parties' arrangements; and of the fact that they formed part of an arrangement whereby the Defendant was receiving £800,000 and an entitlement to a further £200,000 for giving up his interest in the First Claimant. The situation is akin to that of a trader agreeing to wide non-competition provisions on selling the goodwill of his business.
35. The court will not enforce terms which are meaningless or are too vague or uncertain to be given effect but it will be slow to conclude that terms contained in a formal agreement are unenforceable on grounds of uncertainty. In my judgement, the clauses here have a wide ambit but they do not fail on grounds of uncertainty. It is possible to give meaning to them in the context of particular actions and in large part they employ in a non-technical sense everyday language to which the court and the parties can give effect in a particular context. It follows that there is no prospect of a finding that the terms are unenforceable as a matter of contract on the grounds of vagueness.
36. Would the disclosure which is alleged by the Claimants amount to a breach? I have already said that I am proceeding today on the basis that the allegations are true and are believed to be true. I cannot say, at least at the summary judgment stage, that there is not a real prospect of establishing their truth. I have already set out the list of the allegations. The Claimants say that even if they are true they are a breach because they are a disclosure of facts which although true are not known to others and can be adverse or derogatory and which can cause disrepute or harm to the Claimants. Mr Chaisty contended that it cannot be derogatory or adverse to someone to reveal the truth nor can a disclosure bring a person into disrepute if in making the disclosure one is simply putting paid to a false or undeserved reputation.
37. It is important to bear in mind that the Defendant is not being required to make positive comments. He is not being required to praise or compliment or support the Claimants. He is being required under the agreements to refrain from making adverse or derogatory comments. It is also important to keep in mind the context to which I have already adverted of the Defendant receiving a substantial payment for giving up his interest in the First Claimant. A further factor is that the Second Claimant robustly denies the allegations. This is not a case where he accepts the allegations are true. It might be, though I doubt it would be, that different considerations would apply if the references were to undisputed facts but here Mr Harper is right to say that there is a real benefit to the Claimants in not having to litigate the question of the truth or otherwise of the allegations and it is legitimate for a party to say, "I don't accept your allegations but I will agree with you that if you do not disclose them, I will make payment".
38. So which I proceed on the footing that these are allegations which are true but are disputed. In my judgement, the disclosure of information which is true can be derogatory, adverse, or harmful and can bring a person into disrepute if the information is not otherwise in the public domain. It follows that the truth of the allegations would not be a defence to a claim that the Defendant is in breach. The allegations here are clearly derogatory and adverse and such as to bring the Claimants into disrepute. It follows that notwithstanding their truth the making of the allegations would amount to a breach of the contract."
Lady Justice King :
Lord Justice Singh :
The Settlement Agreement and Release dated 31 August 2017
1. In this agreement, unless the context otherwise requires, the following words and expressions have the following meanings:
…
Confidential Information: means all information exchanged between the parties during the negotiations of the agreement and all information contained within the correspondence, both open and without prejudice, passing between the parties and their legal representatives; the contents and terms of this agreement, the fact of its existence, including the transfer of shares by the Defendant to a company formed by the Second Claimant and the payment made in respect of those shares, the terms of the shareholder's agreement; any information regarding the First Claimant as a result of any period of employment/directorship at the First Claimant and any documentation or information that may be deemed to be confidential to the business of the First Claimant or its suppliers, clients, employees, directors, or shareholders.
…
11.2 It is hereby agreed that the Defendant's fiduciary duties to the First Claimant and the Second Claimant, including but not limited to his duty to act in the best interests of the First Claimant and the Second Claimant shall continue following the date of execution of this agreement and the transfer of shares indefinitely.
11.3 It is hereby agreed by all parties that they shall not seek to damage the business of the First Claimant, Second Claimant, or the business of any company controlled by the Second Claimant, whether by way of release of confidential information or by way of release of any matter arising out of the Defendant or his son or another person's engagement with the First Claimant or the Second Claimant or by any such manner that a reasonable person would consider would cause damage to the First Claimant, Second Claimant, or any company controlled by the Second Claimant. Should any party directly or indirectly cause any damage whatsoever to the business of the Claimant, the Second Claimant, or any company controlled by the Second Claimant, then the indemnity provided by the Defendant at clause 12(3) should prevail.
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11.5 All Parties ... agree to the following restrictions in respect of confidentiality:
11.5.1 To keep the Confidential Information secret and confidential at all times and not to pass any Confidential Information to any third party whatsoever;
11.5.2. Not to directly or indirectly use, disclose, exploit, or make available any confidential information in whole or in part to any person, except as expressly permitted by or in accordance with this agreement or by agreement in writing between the parties.
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12.3 The Defendant hereby indemnifies and shall keep indemnified the First Claimant, the Second Claimant and any Company Controlled by the Second Claimant against all or any future actions, claims or proceedings that may arise as a result of any breaches by any Parties of clause 11 of this Agreement including costs and damages (including the entire legal expenses of the First Claimant, the Second Claimant or any Company Controlled by the Defendant.
The Employee Compromise dated 31 August 2017
…1. The following definitions and rules of interpretation apply in this agreement.
1.1 Confidential Information: information in whatever form (including, without limitation, in written, oral, visual or electronic form or on any magnetic or optical disk or memory and wherever located) relating to the business, products, affairs and finances of any Group Company for, the time being confidential to any Group Company and trade secrets including, without limitation, technical data and know-how relating to the business of any Group Company or any of their suppliers, clients, customers, agents, distributors, shareholders or management, including (but not limited to) information that the Employee created, developed, received or obtained in connection with his employment, whether or not such information (if in anything other than oral form) is marked confidential.
Copies: copies or records of any Confidential Information in whatever form (including, without limitation, in written, oral, visual or electronic form or on any magnetic or optical disk or memory and wherever located) including, without limitation, extracts, analysis, studies, plans, compilations or any other way of representing or recording and recalling information which contains, reflects or is derived or generated from Confidential Information.
…
5.1 If the Employee breaches any material provision of this agreement ... he agrees to indemnify the Company for any losses suffered as a result thereof including all reasonable legal and professional fees incurred.
6.1 The Employee shall, before the Termination Date, return to the Company:
(a) all Confidential Information and Copies;
(b) all property belonging to the Company...
(c) all documents and copies (whether written, printed, electronic, recorded or otherwise and wherever located) made, compiled or acquired by him during his employment with the Company or relating to the business or affairs of any Group Company or their business contacts;
in the Employee's possession or under his control.
6.2 The Employee shall, before the Termination Date, erase irretrievably any information relating to the business or affairs of any Group Company or its business contacts from computer and communications systems and devices owned or used by him outside the premises of the Company, including such systems and data storage services provided by third parties (to the extent technically practicable).
…
10.1 The Employee acknowledges that, as a result of his employment as Director, he has had access to Confidential Information. Without prejudice to his common law duties, the Employee shall not (except as authorised or required by law or as authorised by the Company) at any time after the Termination Date:
(a) Use any Confidential Information; or
(b) Make or use any Copies; or
(b) Disclose any Confidential Information to any person, company or other organisation whatsoever,
…
10.3 The Employee and the Company confirm that they have kept and agree to keep the existence and terms of this agreement and the circumstances concerning the /termination of the Employee's employment confidential, except where such disclosure is to HM Revenue & Customs, his professional advisers or required by law.
…
10.5 The Employee shall not make any adverse or derogatory comment about the Company, its directors or employees and the Company shall use reasonable endeavours to ensure that its employees and officers shall not make any adverse or derogatory comment about the Employee. The Employee shall not do anything which shall, or may, bring the Company, its directors or employees into disrepute and the Company shall use reasonable endeavours to ensure that its employees and officers shall not do anything that shall, or may bring the Employee into disrepute.
10.6 Nothing in this clause 10 shall prevent the Employee from making a protected disclosure under section 43A of the Employment Rights Act 1996 and nothing in this clause 10 shall prevent the Company from making such disclosure as it is required by law to make.
© Crown copyright