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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 >> Norbrook Laboratories (GB) Ltd v Adair & Anor [2008] EWHC 978 (QB) (06 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/978.html Cite as: [2008] IRLR 878, [2008] EWHC 978 (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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Norbrook Laboratories (GB) Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Rebecca Adair (2) Pfizer Limited |
Defendants |
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Shirley Bothroyd (instructed by Nabarro, Sheffield) for the First and Second Defendants
Hearing dates: 13th-15th February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
The facts
'Upon termination of the Employee's employment howsoever determined, and in order to protect the Company's legitimate business interests (including the goodwill, confidential information, trade secrets, business connections and human resources of the Company the Employee):
6.1 shall not directly or indirectly on his/her own account or as an agent partner director or employee of any other person
(a) for the Restricted Period be employed or engaged or concerned in or carry on any Restricted Business. For these purposes:
i. Restricted Business means any pharmaceutical business engaged in the manufacture of medical or veterinary products or the synthesis or fermentation of active ingredients for such products or the wholesale distribution of these products or research for the purpose of generating scientific data related to pharmaceutical products or developing methods of manufacture or processes for production of raw materials or active ingredients.
ii. In the case of any managerial or technically-qualified employee (a) who reports directly to the Company's board of directors or to any board member; or (b) whose duties to the Company are liable to require him/her regularly to operate, develop, or study any actual or intended processes, methods, formulae, or clinical or pharmacological data and analyses which are not in the public domain, or supervise any such activity, or (c) who has before termination of his/her employment actually acquired knowledge of such processes, methods, formulae or products, the Restricted Period shall be two (2) years immediately following termination.
iii. In the case of other employees, the Restricted Period shall be one (1) year immediately following termination and this clause shall only prohibit acts in the United Kingdom and Ireland and any territory outside the United Kingdom and Ireland in relation to which such Employee had responsibility, or obtained material Confidential Information, in the year before termination of his/her employment.
iv. This clause 6.1 shall not apply in relation to a pharmaceutical business which is not engaged and does not intend to be engaged in the manufacture, distribution or development of products which are or are intended to be competitive with any products manufactured, distributed or developed by the Company or any of its subsidiaries and with which the Employee was concerned in the last 5 years of his/her employment.
v. Nothing in this clause shall prevent the Employee from holding (together with any spouse, partner or dependent child) not more than 3% of the shares of any company listed on any recognised stock exchange.
(b) for a period of one (1) year immediately following such termination solicit or transact business in competition with the business of the Company or any subsidiary at the date of termination from or with any of the persons, corporations or bodies who within the period of two years immediately preceding the date of such termination had been customers or prospective customers of the Company (and whether or not a contract between the customer and the Company or its subsidiaries was in force as at the date of termination of the Employee's employment), and where during the said two years either (i) the Employee had direct access to and/or dealings with such customer or prospective customer or (ii) the Employee had access to confidential information relating to the customer or prospective customer during the year before the termination of his/her employment.'
Confidential Information was defined as
' ….information which is in the possession custody care and/or control of NORBROOK and/or any of its subsidiaries, holding or associated companies relating to NORBROOK'S activities in the research, development, manufacture, distribution and sales of veterinary and/or medical pharmaceutical products and/or chemical synthesis and which is not in the public domain. Such Confidential Information includes Technical Information and Commercial Information as follows:-
1.1 Technical Information (which does not purport to be an exclusive list or definition) shall include NORBROOK's laboratory and formulating methods for its products, product analytical methods, product formulae, product compounds, product compositions, product related organisms, research and development projects, product stability data, clinical and pharmacological data relating to products, licence applications, submissions and related correspondence to and with governmental regulatory authorities and agencies, drug master files, inventions,
regulatory authorities and agencies, drug master files, inventions, designs, discoveries, patent applications, laboratory equipment (which has been specially designed, adapted or sourced),, design of production facilities, manufacturing equipment and design of ancillary plant, manufacturing methods, production control records ("PCRs"), processes and techniques and all other know-how, trade secrets and information relating thereto which are not in the public domain.
1.2 Commercial Information (which does not purport to be an exclusive list or definition) shall include NORBROOK's unpublished marketing and sales information in relation to its products, names and addresses of customers and suppliers, names and addresses of potential customers and suppliers, customer pricing arrangements, customer targeting strategies, production and marketing costs, sales data, profit margins, accounts history, marketing surveys, plans and reports, sales targets, discount structures, annual budgets, new product proposals, maturing new business opportunities, budgets for research and development projects, trademark applications, sensitive personnel data, and all other trade secrets and information relating thereto which have not been published or disclosed to the general public.'
(1) record cards for Area 7 which contain information on each customer including customer details, the number of vets and the point of contact in each practice, price details and details of discounts given.
(2) confidential verbal information on the way in which Norbrook's discounting system works;
(3) information on and key selling points of Norbrook's products.
Customer information
Customer connection
Sales Strategy and Information
'I should be grateful if you would treat all product price information as confidential – this commercial confidentiality is essential in order to maintain the prices we have agreed.'
Product information
(1) weaknesses of certain products;
(2) complaints by customers regarding certain products
(3) steps being taken to combat the problems;
(4) marketing Norbrook products with reference to particular difficulties with two products;
(5) ways to improve existing products and the creation of new products.
Pfizer
Recruitment of Rebecca Adair by Pfizer
The position of the parties
Discussion.
The relevant legal principles
' ….. what is meant is that for a restraint to be reasonable in the interests of the parties is that it must afford no more than adequate protection to the party in whose favour it is imposed.'
It is to be noted that the claimant bears the onus of establishing reasonableness (p700 Lord Atkinson) and that in that case the appellant desired to be protected against knowledge carried away which would improve rivals' sales methods making them more formidable competitors (p704 Lord Atkinson).
'The difficulties are such that the only practicable solution is to take a covenant from the servant by which he is not to go to work for a rival in trade. Such a covenant may well be held to be reasonable if limited to a short period.'
'The reasonableness of a contract in restraint of trade must be tested not by a reference to what the parties have actually done or intend to do but by what the terms of the contract entitle or require them to do.'
See also TFS Derivatives v Morgan [2005] IRLR 246 paragraph 38.
' … in considering the reasonableness or otherwise of a covenant such as this, the Court is entitled to consider whether or not a covenant of a narrower nature would have sufficed for the covenantee's protection.'
The burden is on the covenantee to establish that the restraint is no greater than is reasonably necessary for the proper protection of his protectable interests.
'It appears to me that the problem is one of definition: what are trade secrets, and how do they differ (if at all) from confidential information? Mr Poulton suggested that a trade secret is information which, if disclosed to a competitor, would be liable to cause real (or significant) harm to the owner of the secret. I would add first, that it must be information used in a trade or business, and secondly that the owner must limit the dissemination of it or at least not encourage or permit widespread publication.
That is my preferred view of the meaning of trade secret in this context. It can thus include not only secret formulae for the manufacture of products but also, in an appropriate case, the names of customers and the goods which they buy. But some may say that not all such information is a trade secret in ordinary parlance. If that view be adopted, the class of information which can justify a restriction is wider, and extends to some confidential information which would not ordinarily be called a trade secret.'
' … shows, very clearly in my judgment, the kind of personal knowledge and influence, the kind of close relationship, which naturally develops between a competent salesman … and his customers.'
In that case there was reference to a customer's account being active if an order had been placed within the last three months. A two year restraint was upheld.
'37. Firstly, the court must decide what the covenant means when properly construed. Secondly the court will consider whether the former employers have shown on the evidence that they have legitimate business interests requiring protection in relation to the employee's employment. ……
38. Thirdly, once the existence of legitimate protectable interests has been established, the covenant must be shown to be no wider than is reasonably necessary for the protection of those interests. Reasonable necessity is to be assessed from the perspective of reasonable persons in the position of the parties as at the date of the contract, having regard to the contractual provisions as a whole and to the factual matrix to which the contract would then realistically have been expected to apply.
39. Even if the covenant is held to be reasonable, the court will then finally decide whether, as a matter of discretion, the injunctive relief sought should in all the circumstances be granted, having regard, amongst other things, to its reasonableness at the time of trial.'
(1) The unenforceable provision is capable of being removed without the necessity of adding to or modifying the wording of what remains.
(2) The remaining terms continue to be supported by adequate consideration.
(3) The removal of the unenforceable provision does not so change the character of the contract that it becomes 'not the sort of contract that the parties entered into at all'.
(4) The severance must be consistent with the public policy underlying the avoidance of the offending part.
The enforceability of the restrictions
' … without the written consent of NORBROOK, during the term of h[er] employment or thereafter use for h[er]self or others or disclose to others, any Confidential Information howsoever obtained by h[er] during the course of h[er] employment with NORBROOK.'
Clause 6.1(a)
Construction
Protectable interests
Confidential information
Customer connection
No wider than is reasonably necessary?
Clause 6.1(b)
Construction
Protectable interests
Reasonableness
Conclusion on enforceability of the covenants
Injunctive relief
Relief against Ms Adair
Relief against Pfizer
Orders