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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 >> CBS Butler Ltd v Brown & Ors [2013] EWHC 3944 (QB) (16 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/3944.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3944 (QB), [2013] Info TLR 263 |
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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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CBS BUTLER LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) JOE BROWN (2) ALASTAIR MILLAR (3) PEOPLEFORCE RECRUITMENT LIMITED |
Defendants |
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The First and Second Defendants appeared in person
Hearing dates: 21 November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"Upon service of this Order [the Defendants] must identify to the persons identified in Schedule A to this Order ('the Representatives') any of the following which is in his possession or under his control … any computer…, any mobile device (including mobile phone or tablet), any personal e-mail account, any external media (including hard drives …) and any cloud storage (together 'the disclosable items')".
"2. The … image shall be interrogated by [the Claimant's expert] as follows:
(a) in relation to all files (save for system files and forensic artefacts)
(i) a search shall be undertaken by Keyword and Blacklist;
(ii) in so far as a file contains a Keyword, but not a Blacklist, that file shall be produced to both parties;
(iii) in so far as a file contains a Keyword and a Blacklist, that file shall be produced only to [the Defendants] solicitors for them to determine (within 48 hours …) whether the file is, or contains information which is, irrelevant or privileged. To the extent that the file contains information which is relevant, such information as is irrelevant or privileged shall be redacted the document produced to [the Claimant]'s solicitors
(iv)(1) Keyword refers to a word on a list of keywords for the purpose of identifying documents relevant to the claim, set out in Schedule C hereto;
[(iv)](2) Blacklist refers to a word on a list of keywords for the purposes of identifying documents which contain material which is irrelevant to the claim (including information that is entirely personal) or which is privilege …"
"By 4pm on Monday 9 December 2013 the Defendants shall provide standard disclosure in relation to the images identified as A001, A002, A003, A004, A005, A006, A007, A008, A011, J002, J003, J004, and J005 in the report produced by ProvenIT and exhibited at DRL4 page 39 in relation to all files (save for system files) by keyword search (by reference to the keywords set out in the said report exhibited at DRL4 pages 40-43, but excluding the terms SAT, ADD, Princess and Vietnam and including the term Muggeridge) from 1 January 2013."
THE LAW
"When giving standard disclosure, a party is required to make a reasonable search for documents…"
"The Respondent must permit [the applicant's solicitor and other identified individuals] to enter the premises mentioned in Schedule A to this order and any other premises of the Respondent disclosed under paragraph 18 below and any vehicles under the Respondent's control on or around the premises ('the premises') so that they can search for, inspect, photograph or photocopy, and deliver into the safekeeping of the Applicant's solicitors all the documents and articles which are listed in Schedule B to this order ('the listed items')."
"… under an Anton Piller order, the whole purpose … is to gain possession of material evidence without giving the defendant the opportunity of considering whether or not he shall make any disclosure at all."
"Anton Piller orders are frequently sought in actions against former employees who have joined competitors or started competing businesses of their own. I have learned to approach such applications with a certain initial scepticism. There is a strong incentive for employers to launch a pre-emptive strike to crush the unhatched competition in the egg by causing severe strains on the financial and management resources of the defendants or even a withdrawal of their financial support. Whether the plaintiff has a good case or not, the execution of the Anton Piller order may leave the defendants without the will or the money to pursue the action to trial in order to enforce the cross-undertaking in damages.
Some employers seem to regard competition from former employees as presumptive evidence of dishonesty. Many have great difficulty in understanding the distinction between genuine trade secrets and skill and knowledge which the employee may take away with him.
Even in cases in which the plaintiff has strong evidence that an employee has taken what is undoubtedly specific confidential information, such as a list of customers, the court must employ a graduated response. To borrow a useful concept from the jurisprudence of the European Community, there must be proportionality between the perceived threat to the plaintiff's rights and the remedy granted. The fact that there is overwhelming evidence that the defendant has behaved wrongfully in his commercial relationships does not necessarily justify an Anton Piller order. People whose commercial morality allows them to take a list of the customers with whom they were in contact while employed will not necessarily disobey an order of the court requiring them to deliver it up. Not everyone who is misusing confidential information will destroy documents in the face of a court order requiring him to preserve them.
In many cases it will therefore be sufficient to make an order for delivery up of the plaintiff's documents to his solicitor or, in cases in which the documents belong to the defendant but may provide evidence against him, an order that he preserve the documents pending further order, or allow the plaintiff's solicitor to make copies. The more intrusive orders allowing searches of premises or vehicles require a careful balancing of, on the one hand, the plaintiff's right to recover his property or to preserve important evidence against, on the other hand, violation of the privacy of a defendant who has had no opportunity to put his side of the case. It is not merely that the defendant may be innocent. The making of an intrusive order ex parte even against a guilty defendant is contrary to normal principles of justice and can only be done when there is a paramount need to prevent a denial of justice to the plaintiff. The absolute extremity of the court's powers is to permit a search of a defendant's dwelling house, with the humiliation and family distress which that frequently involves….
Even if it was thought that the defendants were the kind of dishonest people who would conceal or destroy incriminating documents, it would surely have been sufficient at the ex parte stage to allow the plaintiff's solicitors to remove the documents and make copies for their own retention pending an application by the plaintiff inter partes for leave to inspect them. The defendants would then have had the opportunity to object or to ask for a restricted form of inspection, such as by independent expert only. I do not regard the right to apply to discharge the order as a sufficient protection for the defendants. The trauma of the execution of the Anton Piller order means that in practice it is often difficult to exercise until after substantial damage has been done."
"should be seriously considered where there are substantial reasons for believing that a husband is … intending to conceal or destroy documents".
"Not everyone who is misusing confidential information will destroy documents in the face of a court order requiring him to preserve them".
WHAT THE CLAIMANT HAS SHOWN
"As things stand, the Claimant has adduced evidence that Mr Brown at least has sent to his personal email address and/or to Mr Millar information which the Claimant considers to be confidential and which relate to one of its key clients. There is also evidence (albeit disputed) of Mr Brown seeking to cover up the fact he had forwarded this e-mail. The Claimant is left in a position where it simply does not know what information has been unlawfully diverted from its use to that of the Defendants. It therefore seeks an interrogation of the images…"
WHAT IMAGES WERE TAKEN PURSUANT TO THE ORDER OF 20 AUGUST
"to make sure that they were aware of the potential for the Defendants to argue that the cross undertaking in damages should extend to Mrs Brown's business and that they were content to meet the costs of imaging these two laptops in the circumstances".
CONCLUSION ON WHY I MADE THE ORDER
COSTS