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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Morgan Fire Protection Ltd v Mogford & Anor [2024] EWHC 1192 (KB) (17 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/1192.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1192 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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MORGAN FIRE PROTECTION LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ROBERT PETER MOGFORD (2) GENERAL FIRE PROTECTION LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Robert Mogford appearing in person for the First and Second Defendants
Hearing dates: 30 April 2024, 10 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Rory Dunlop KC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge:
The Factual Background
"During the course of your employment, you will have access to and be entrusted with information in respect of the business and financing of the Company and its dealings, transactions and affairs and its clients and suppliers and similar information concerning its clients and suppliers all of which information is or may be confidential.
You hereby agree that you will not (except in the proper course of your duties) during or at any time after your employment divulge to any person whatever or otherwise make use of any trade secret or any confidential information concerning the business or finances of the Company or its clients or suppliers or any like details relating to its clients or suppliers.
The restriction in the paragraph above shall not apply in respect of any information which is or has become in the public domain (otherwise than by a breach by you of this clause) or which you are required to disclose by any court or competent authority or which by virtue of your employment are part of your own skill and knowledge.
All documents and relating to the Company's business, whether they be stored on hard copy, electronic, through the Cloud or by any other means, remain the property of the Company. All such documents or contacts that may be in your possession must be returned to the Company upon the termination of your employment."
"1. For the purpose of this clause, the following expressions shall have the following respective meanings:
1.1 "Client" means a person, firm or corporate body who placed business with the Company at any time during the last 12 months of the Employment or for the period of the Employment, if shorter, and who has not also placed business with the Competing Business during the said period and was not a client known to the Employee prior to the Employment who he/she introduced to the Company.
1.2 "Potential Client" means a person, firm or corporate body who was negotiating with the Company or from whom the Company actively and directly attempted to solicit business at any time during the last 12 months of the Employment or for the period of the Employment, if shorter and who has not also placed business with the Competing Business during the said period and was not a client known to the Employee prior to the Employment who he/she introduced to the Company.
1.3 "Competing Business" means any person, firm or corporate body providing services directly or indirectly in competition with the Company.
1.4 "Termination Date" means the date upon which the Employment terminates for any reason whether by notice or without notice or in the event that the Company requires the Employee to stay away from work during the period of notice then it shall mean the date on which the Employee last attended work notwithstanding the fact that the Employment continues beyond that date.
2. The Employee will not without the prior written consent of the Company (such consent only to be withheld so far as may reasonably be necessary to protect the legitimate business interest of the Company) during the Employment or for a period of 12 months from the Termination date whether alone or jointly with or as shareholder, advisor, principal, partner, agent, director, employee, consultant or otherwise of the Competing business, directly or indirectly:
2.1 solicit or canvass, or attempt to solicit or canvass, business from any Client or Potential Client with whom the Employee dealt;
2.2 deal with or accept instructions from any Client or Potential Client with whom the employee dealt;
2.3 endeavour to entice away from the Company any person who at the Termination Date shall have been an employee of the Company with whom the employee worked at any time during the Employment."
Pre-action correspondence
These proceedings
i) Customer names;
ii) Customer sites;
iii) Key individual's details;
iv) Contact information; and,
v) Services offered to those customers including dates and pricing information.
i) The clauses relied upon are unenforceable;
ii) The Claimant had delayed bringing the application; and/or,
iii) The Claimant had engaged in a repudiatory breach of contract which has released Mr Mogford from his obligations.
Legal Framework
i) Is there a serious issue to be tried?
ii) Would damages be an adequate remedy?
iii) Where does the balance of convenience lie?
The first issue - a serious issue to be tried?
"At the first stage of the analysis the question is whether there is a serious issue to be tried. This is not a demanding test, and it really only serves to exclude the case where the claim is frivolous or vexatious, or otherwise demonstrably bad. If a restrictive covenant is clearly wider than is reasonably necessary for the protection of the employer's legitimate interests, then the Court can so hold and refuse an injunction, but prolonged examination of the merits at the interlocutory stage is not appropriate and in many cases of this type, as the Judge rightly found here, there will be at least a serious issue to be tried."
"It is also well established however that at the third stage of the analysis, when considering the balance of convenience, the Court may, in cases of this type, undertake some assessment of the merits: Lansing Linde v Kerr [1991] 1 WLR 251 at 258C per Staughton LJ. But I emphasise, as Staughton LJ did, that this is merely "some assessment" or as Bean LJ refers to below, "a preliminary view".
i) They do not prohibit competition; they prohibit the solicitation of the Claimant's business;
ii) Mr Mogford is not prevented from approaching or working for all of the Claimant's clients, he is only restrained from approaching those clients of the Claimant who placed business with the Claimant in the last 12 months of Mr Mogford's employment with the Claimant and, of those clients, he is only restricted from approaching or working for those with whom he had dealt;
iii) The restriction is limited to 12 months; and,
iv) Mr Mogford can also ask for written consent to solicit and deal with such clients and that consent can only be withheld in so far as may be necessary to protect the Claimant's reasonable business interests.
Adequacy of Damages
Balance of Convenience
The Form of Order
"2. Until further order of the court, the Defendants will not:
a. use or permit the use of any Confidential Information or any copies, notes or memoranda of Confidential Information; or
b. disclose or cause to be disclosed and will use his or its best endeavours to prevent the publication or disclosure of any Confidential Information, save that the Defendants shall be entitled to disclose Confidential Information required to be disclosed by law, regulation or any tax authority and the Defendant shall be entitled to confidentially disclose Confidential Information to professional advisers for the purposes of advising the Defendants.
3. The Defendants will deliver up to the Claimant's solicitors by no later than 4pm on [x] [x] 2024 any copies, notes or memoranda of Confidential Information in their possession or control including any business cards containing Confidential Information.
4. To the extent that the Defendants maintain that they have nothing to deliver up in accordance with paragraph 3 above, the Defendants shall by 4pm on [x] [x] 2024 file and serve an affidavit verifying the same.
5. The Claimant will preserve any material delivered up pursuant to paragraph 3 above until further or order of the court.
"6. Until 27 October 2024 or further order of the court, the First Defendant shall not without the prior written consent of the Claimant (such consent only to be withheld so far as may reasonably be necessary to protect the legitimate business interest of the Claimant) , whether alone or jointly with others, or as shareholder, advisor, principal, partner, agent, director, employee, consultant or otherwise of a Competing Business, directly or indirectly:
1. solicit or canvass, or attempt to solicit or canvass, business from any Client with whom the First Defendant dealt whilst employed by the Claimant; or,
2. deal with or accept instructions from any Client with whom the First Defendant dealt whilst employed by the Claimant."
Costs
"A defendant who has entered into a contractual restraint, which is sought to be enforced, should seriously consider, when the matter first comes before the court, offering an appropriate undertaking until the hearing of the action, provided that a speedy hearing of the action can then be fixed and the plaintiff is likely to be able to pay any damages on his cross undertaking. It is only if a speedy trial should not be possible that it would then be necessary to have a contest on the interlocutory application. I do not believe that, in this comparative limited type of case – limited in numbers, that is – the courts of first instance will not be able to arrange for a speedy hearing of the action, and thus avoid time being spent, usually necessarily, on contested interlocutory applications."
"there may be cases where the balance of convenience is so clear, and the outcome of hearing of the application for the interlocutory injunction should be so plain for the parties, that the court should conclude that an order should be made against the defendant for wasting time and money in fighting the issue (whether or not the defendant eventually concedes)"