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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 >> Extec Screens & Crushers Ltd v Rice [2007] EWHC 1043 (QB) (04 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2007/1043.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1043 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Extec Screens & Crushers Ltd |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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David Rice |
Defendant |
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Mr Rupert Butler (instructed by Brindley Twist Tafft and James) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18,19,20,23 April 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat:
CONSTRUCTIVE DISMISSAL
"If the employer is guilty of conduct which is a significant breach going to the root of the contract of employment, or which shows that the employer no longer intends to be bound by one or more of the essential terms of the contract, then the employee is entitled to treat himself as discharged from any further performance. If he does so, then he terminates the contract by reason of the employer's conduct. He is constructively dismissed. The employee is entitled in those circumstances to leave at the instant without giving any notice at all or, alternatively, he may give notice and say he is leaving at the end of the notice. But the conduct must in either case be sufficiently serious to entitle him to leave at once. Moreover, he must make up his mind soon after the conduct of which he complains: for, if he continues for any length of time without leaving, he will lose his right to treat himself as discharged. He will be regarded as having elected to affirm the contract."
"a. Extec would allow Mr Rice to resign his employment whenever Mr Rice wished to leave;
b. Extec would not do anything that would undermine the mutual trust and confidence between the parties;
c. Extec would not exert undue influence over Mr Rice;
d. Extec would not demote or discriminate against Mr Rice;
e. Extec would provide to Mr Rice all necessary equipment and computers to carry out his job"
a. On the 23rd, 25th and 29th January 2007, Mr Rice tried to resign, but he was not allowed to.
b. On the 31st January 2007, Mr Rice lost the use of his laptop and mobile phone as Extec set out trying to break his customer connections and the laptop was never returned.
c. On the 31st January 2007, Mr Rice was demoted to data-inputting tasks for his notice period.
d. Between the 2nd February and 5th February 2007, Mr Rice was subjected to extreme pressure and strong-arm tactics by Extec to make him stay - including the threat of legal action. In the course of these discussions a non-specific allegation (the specifics of which were known and believed by Extec) that Mr Rice had made unauthorised disclosures to a customer were put to him. According to Extec his version was not believed.
e. The Defendant was unable to exercise an informed judgment as to his options because of the influence his employer held over him who preferred its own interests.
f. The withdrawal of his resignation was not a voluntary act by Mr Rice but one coerced out of him by Extec in circumstances where Extec had lost confidence in Mr Rice.
THE FACTS RELATING TO MR RICE'S LEAVING EXTEC
"Spares & Crushing - Development Manager reporting to Rod Savage Managing Director. You will be responsible for developing the purchasing and establishing a customer database for Crusher Spares Parts aimed at all well known brands"
"shall be under no obligation to assign any duties to [Mr Rice] and ... may require [Mr Rice] to carry out specified projects, provided that this shall not affect [Mr Rice]'s entitlement to receive the salary and other contractual benefits".
"I am being victimised because I have handed in my notice, had my computer removed, thus making it impossible to carry out my duties".
"I will call her first thing and get to call you and let her draft you reply. Have a chill out weekend and the gloves are now off.
"I am writing to advise you that with immediate effect, I have decided to tender my resignation with Extec ... After our discussions last week, I have thought long and hard on where my future lies and unfortunately, I feel my future does not lie with Extec. I would like to thank you for the time you took last week and indeed for the additional benefits you offered which I received confirmation of on Thursday 8 February 2007. The last six months for me have not been enjoyable and on reflection of this, feel the time is right to move on.
I would respectfully request that I am not contacted either by telephone or email and would hope that you understand my reasons for this decision.. This last week as been really difficult for me and I feel that this is a contributory factor to my current state of health"
"Further to me serving my notice on xx Januaiy 2007 I_am writing to advise you that due to the events and actions that have happened since me giving notice, including but not limited to the legal letter presented to me, I feel that my trust and confidence in you and Extec as my employer has been completely destroyed by these actions and events. Therefore with immediate effect, I have decided to leave Extec Screens & Crushers.... I would like to thank you for the time you took last week, which while appreciated, left me confused. On the one hand you were offering me additional benefits, yet on the other hand you were serving me unnecessary and contradictory legal letters. This has contributed to the breakdown of trust and confidence..."
"I don't honestly feel comfortable with the whole situation. I had anticipated working my notice and starting with UK Spares on a fresh footing ... please accept my sincere apologies for appearing to have strung you along ... As for my future with Extec, if there is one, only time will tell!! You are all really lovely people ..."
"if possible could we meet tomorrow face to face to discuss. I don't want to loose this once i a life time position but i don't like the thought of bring all this shit to your door step"
"Grievance and resignation
As you are aware, I tendered my resignation on the 25th January to join Spares UK Plc in order to advance my career.
Following my resignation, you bought to my attention a number of restrictive covenants in my contract which effectively prevented me from working anywhere in the UK for a period of eight months for any Company which had a common interest with yours.
Since my resignation, my Company computer was confiscated without my knowledge on the grounds that they are 'faulty'. My mobile phone was also later taken from me. I was informed that I would be working the duration of my 3 months notice period on data entry duties. Due to the Company's unreasonable behaviour, I did not attend work on the 1st or 2nd February.
On the 1st February, I was contacted by the Company and asked to meet them the following day, off site at a local Little Chef Upon arrival I was presented with two envelopes. One contained a salary increase of £10,000, BUPA family medical insurance, a 5% payment into a private pension and a Company vehicle. I was told that I could walk away with that and it would be the end of the matter. I was then threatened that the other envelope contained a solicitor's letter detailing that the Company would ensure that I could not work at all for a period of 8 months. I was also asked if I was supplying confidential information and drawings to one of the company's competitors.
I returned to work on the Monday and was told to continue in my previous role but it was impossible to do so without the use of my computer. I was also made aware that my role as Parts and Services Manager had already been replaced.
The Company have put me under immense pressure and have essentially tried to back me into a corner and manufacture a situation where I have felt afraid to leave the Company by able to work or pay my mortgage for 8 months and that I had no other choice but to continue working for them.
The Company's actions have caused me to stop eating and I was absent from work with stress on the 7th, 8 9th February. You will be aware that in the five years I have worked for you, I have never taken a day off sick.
I returned to work on Monday the 12th February where I was presented with a pre-prepared letter to my prospective employer confirming that I would not be accepting their offer of employment. I signed this under duress.
I perceive the company's behaviour to be completely unnecessary and unreasonable for what I considered previously to be a professional organisation. The Company are actually going out of their way to make life difficult for me and I am not prepared to put my health at risk.
As a result of the above, I feel that the relationship of mutual trust and confidence has broken down and I do not feel that I can continue to work for the Company for the remainder of my notice period. Please accept this letter as formal notice that I am terminating my employment with immediate effect due to the recent conduct and behaviour of the Company. I confirm that I will return my fuel card and company mobile to the gatehouse. Could you please also insure my passport is handed . in to the Gate House for my collection.
Please treat this letter as a formal grievance."
AN ISSUE RAISED AFTER THE TRIAL
"The court will be invited to draw the inference that there is a prima facie case for [Extec] and Mr English to answer as to the timing of the sale and of their knowledge of it.... His evidence was either untruthful or incomplete - either way, it was actively misleading [Mr Rice]".
EMPLOYMENT DURING THE PERIOD OF NOTICE
"10.1 During the Employment [Mr Rice] shall not directly or indirectly:
(a) be employed, engaged, concerned or interested in any other business or undertaking which competes with any business being carried on by [Extec] or by any Group Company; or
(b) engage in any activity which [Extec] reasonably considers may be, or become, harmful to the interests of the [Extec] or of any Group Company or which might reasonably be considered to interfere with the performance of [Mr Rice]'s duties under this agreement".
THE RESTRICTIVE CONVENANTS
"1. Definitions...
"Group Company" means together [Extec], its holding company if any, and every company which is for the time being a subsidiary of [Extec] or such holding company and expressions "subsidiary" and "holding company" bear the same meanings as they respectively bear in the Companies Act 1985;
"Restricted Area" means England, Scotland, Wales and any other country in which [Extec] or any Group Company carries on or intends to carry on any Restricted Business as at the termination of [Mr Rice]'s employment;
"Restricted Business" means the design, production, sale and distribution of mobile screening and crushing equipment and all or any other commercial activities carried on or to be carried on by [Extec] or any Group Company in which [Mr Rice] worked or about which [Mr Rice] knew Confidential Information to a material extent at any time during the final two years of [Mr Rice]'s'employment with the group;
"Confidential Information" means all and any information (whether or not recorded in documentary form or on computer disk or tape) of [Extec], any company within [Extecl's group or any of its or their customers, suppliers or agents which [Extec] or the relevant group company regards as confidential and which may include but is not limited to technical, financial and business information or in respect of which it owes an obligation of confidentiality to a third party which is not of [Mr Rice] 's own stock in trade and which is not readily ascertainable to persons not connected with [Extec] either at all or without significant expenditure of labour, skill or money...
11.1 [Mr Rice] shall neither during the Employment (except in the proper performance of his duties) nor at any time (without limit) after the termination of the Employment except in compliance with an order of a competent court:
(a) divulge or communicate to any person, company, business, entity or other organisation any Confidential Information;
(b) use any Confidential Information for his own purposes or for any purposes other than those of [Extec] or any Group Company; or
(c) through any failure to exercise due care and diligence, permit or cause any unauthorised disclosure of any Confidential Information.
These restrictions shall cease to apply to any information which shall become available to the public generally otherwise than through any breach by [Mr Rice] of the provisions of this agreement or other default of [Mr Rice]...
14.1 [Mr Rice] will not for a period of 8 months after the termination of the Employment whether as principal or agent, and whether alone or jointly with, or as a director, manager, partner, shareholder, employee or consultant of any other person, directly or indirectly:
(a) carry on, or be engaged, concerned or interested in or serve as a director, employee or consultant of any business carried out :within the Restricted Area wholly or partly in competition with any Restricted Business
(b) interfere with, tender for, canvass, solicit or endeavour to entice away from [Extec] or from any Group Company the business of any person who at the date of termination of the Employment or during the period of 1 year prior to that date (or if earlier, prior to the date on which [Mr Rice] last carried out duties assigned to him by [Extec]) was, to his knowledge, a customer, client or agent of or who had dealings with [Extec] or with any Group Company and with whom he had personal dealings-in the normal course of his employment at that date or during that, period;
(c) interfere with or endeavour to interfere with the continuance of supplies to [Extec] or to any Group Company (or the terms relating to those supplies) by any person, firm or company who at the date of termination of the Employment or during the period of 1 year prior to that date was, to his knowledge, a supplier of any goods or services to [Extec] or to any Group Company and with whom he had personal dealings in the normal course of his employment at that date or during that period;
(d) supply any product, carry out or undertake or provide any service similar to those with which he was concerned to a material extent during the period of 1 year prior to the termination of the Employment to or for any person who, at the date of termination of the Employment or during the period of 1 year prior to that date was a customer, client or agent of or was in the habit of dealing with [Extec] or with any Group Company and with whom [Mr Rice] had personal dealings in the normal course of his employment during that period of 1 year;
(e) be employed by, or enter into partnership with, employ or attempt to employ or negotiate or arrange the employment or engagement by any other person, of any person who to his knowledge was, at the date of the termination of the Employment, or within 1 year prior to that date had been, an employee employed in a skilled or managerial capacity of [Extec] or any Group Company and with whom he had personal dealings during that period;
(f) solicit, interfere with, tender for or endeavour to eritice away from [Extec] or from any Group Company any contract, project or business, or the renewal of any of them, carried on by [Extec] or by any Group Company which is currently in progress at the date of the termination of the Employment or which was in the process of negotiation at that date and in respect of which [Mr Rice] had contact with-any customer, client or agent of or supplier to [Extec] or any Group Company at any time during the period of 1 year prior to the date of termination of the Employment.
14.2 None of the restrictions contained in clause 14.1 shall prohibit any activities by [Mr Rice] which are not in direct or indirect competition with any business being carried on by [Extec] or by any Group Company at the date of the termination of the Employment.
14.3 At no time after the termination of the Employment shall [Mr Rice] directly or indirectly represent himself as being interested in or employed by or in any way connected with [Extec] or any Group Company, other than as a former employee of [Extec].
14.4 [Mr Rice] agrees that, having regard to all the circumstances and having taken independent legal advice, the restrictions contained in this clause 14 are reasonable and necessary for the protection of [Extec] and the Group Companies and that they do not bear harshly upon him and the parties agree that:
(a) each restriction shall be read and construed independently of the other restrictions so that if one or more are found to be void or unenforceable as an unreasonable restraint of trade or for any other reason the remaining restrictions shall not be affected; and
(b) if any restriction is found to be void but would be valid and enforceable if some part of it were deleted, that restriction shall apply with such deletion as may be necessary to make it valid and enforceable".
CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION
"27. In Faccenda Chicken Neill LJ, delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal, said (at 137D) that information can only be protected after the employment has ceased
if it can properly be classed as a trade secret or is material which, while not properly to be described as a trade secret, is in all the circumstances of such a highly confidential nature as to require the same protection as a trade secret eo nomine.
In that case the court identified four factors that were relevant: the nature of the employment, the nature of the information, the extent to which the employer impressed the information's confidentiality on the employee and the ease with which the information could be isolated from other information that the ex-employee was free to use. But there is no universal formula for determining what is a trade secret or item of equivalent confidentiality. In PSM International PLC v Whitehouse [1992] IRLR 279, 282, Lloyd LJ described it as a question of degree. In Lansing Linde Limited v Kerr Staughton LJ (at 260 A-B) considered that "trade secrets" embrace information used in a trade, restricted in its dissemination, and the disclosure of which would be liable to cause real or significant harm to the party claiming confidentiality. In FSS Travel and Leisure Systems Limited v Johnson Mummery LJ came back to the approach of Cross J in Printers & Finishers v Holloway, observing that later decisions had not improved upon it. In Lancashire Fires Ltd v SA Lyons & Co Ltd Bingham MR (at 18) described the distinction as one which may often on the facts be very hard to draw.
41. In order to establish that the inclusion of a non-competition clause in an employment contract was reasonably necessary for the protection of the employer's interest in confidential information, the first matter which the employer obviously needs to establish is that at the time of the contract the nature of the proposed employment was such as would expose the employee to information of the kind capable of protection beyond the term of the contract (i.e. trade secrets or other information of equivalent confidentiality). The degree of the particularity of the evidence required to establish that matter must inevitably depend on the facts of the case. To say this is to say nothing new. Aldous LJ stated the principle in Scully UK Limited v Lee [1998] IRLR263 at 23:
In cases where a restrictive covenant is sought to be enforced, the confidential information must be particularised sufficiently to enable the court to be satisfied that the plaintiff has a legitimate interest to protect. That requires an enquiry as to whether the plaintiff is in possession of confidential information which it is entitled to protect. (See Littlewoods Organisation v Harris [1977] 1 WLR 1472 at 1479F). Sufficient detail must be given to enable that to be decided but no more is necessary.
42. Provided that the employer overcomes that hurdle, it is no argument against a restrictive covenant that it may be very difficult for either the employer or the employee to know where exactly the line may lie between information which remains confidential after the end of the employment and the information which does not. The fact that the distinction can be very hard to draw may support the reasonableness of a non-competition clause. As was observed by Lord Denning MR in Littlewoods Organisation v Harris at 1479 and by Waller LJ in Turner v Commonwealth and British Minerals Limited [2000] IRLR 114 at para 18, it is because there may be serious difficulties in identifying precisely what is or what is not confidential information that a non-competition clause may be the most satisfactory form of restraint, provided that it is reasonable in time and space."
i) The strategic plan;
ii) The Mesh Book;
iii) Parts manuals;
iv) Machine sales and future plans of customers;
v) Sales volumes and activities of customers and dealers;
vi) Service schedules and requirements for Extec's machines (Although Mr Rice denied this in his second witness statement);
vii) Key customer details and requirements;
viii) Key dealer details and requirements;
ix) Manufacturing costs;
x) Some information on the cost of procuring spare parts;
xi) Suppliers and procurement arrangements and terms;
xii) Information arising from ongoing relationships with many of Extec's client base, and access to Extec's customer database;
xiii) Extec's product development and general strategic direction;
xiv) Warranty claims, warranty history and records;
xv) Global sales figures, prices, internal costings, sales prices, margin and payments.
DOES ANY BUSINESS OF SPARES UK COMPETE WITH ANY BUSINESS BEING CARRIED ON BY EXTEC?
"Spares UK PLC - Authorised supplier of genuine spares and parts for Powerscreen - Pegson Crushers - Doppstadt -Backhus - Blue Machinery
Spares UK PLC - Leading supplier and manufacturer of spares and parts for plant and equipment used in Waste - Recycling -Construction....
Spares UK PLC - Screens - Mesh - Punch Plate - Finger Decks - Crusher Parts - Rollers - Bearing - Engines -..."
"Looking back over the past three weeks, we all had a fantastic weekend, both personally, and, discussing the market opportunities for our products along with the knowledge and information about other crushing and screening products and markets you were bringing to the business
"Everybody is still excited about the role offered to you; Pat and I discussed and agreed that there is a possibility for you to be appointed Sales Director within 12-18 months".
ARE THE RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS VOID?
'.... If the clause can be shown to be reasonable then such a clause is enforceable. But, of course, any court will approach the question with care. There are 2 relevant policy considerations. Firstly, the fundamental policy that the law should not act in restraint of trade unless that is plainly justified. Secondly ... that these clauses can represent a temptation to employers to include very wide powers of restricting services or restricting activities by employees, agents, former employees or former agents and then use their financial and legal muscle to fight the issue out afterwards, hoping to retain most possible from such a clause. So clearly, any court will approach these clauses with great care.'
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