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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ojsc Tnk-BP Holding & Anor v Lazurenko [2012] EWHC 2781 (Ch) (16 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/2781.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2781 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) OJSC TNK-BP HOLDING (2) OJSC TNK-BP MANAGEMENT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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IGOR LAZURENKO |
Defendant |
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Neil Kitchener QC and Owain Draper (instructed by Mishcon de Reya) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 9 - 10 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
1. "During and after termination of the employment a Manager shall keep in strict secrecy and confidence all matters and/or documents, which he may be aware of, regarding the affairs, interests or operations of the Company or any of its employees, clients or any other persons or business contacts, connected with the Company, and will not disclose such matters or documents, unless properly authorised to do so by the Company, and will not use them for personal purposes or on behalf of third parties;" (clause 2.1.7)
2. "If the parties are unable to settle disputes or differences between them by means of direct negotiations, such disputes or differences shall be resolved in Russian courts of common jurisdiction in accordance with the laws of the Russian Federation." (clause 7.1)
"6. The Defendant's employment with the Second Claimant was governed by a written contract of employment dated 1 September 2003 which contained the following express provision:
"2.1.7. During and after termination of the employment [the Defendant] shall keep in strict secrecy and confidence all matters and/or documents, which he may be aware of, regarding the affairs, interests or operations of the Company or any of its employees, clients or any other persons or business contacts, connected with the Company, and will not disclose such matters or documents, unless properly authorised to do so by the Company, and will not use them for personal purposes or on behalf of third parties."
7. The Defendant's employment with the Second Claimant gave rise to a further implied duty to keep confidential the Claimants' confidential information.
8. Further and alternatively the Defendant owed and owes to the Claimants an equitable duty of confidence in respect of information which:
8.1 has come into his possession in consequence of his employment with the Second Claimant; and/or which
8.2 he knows or ought to know is confidential to the Claimants.
9. The Defendant's duties set out hereinabove include the following:
9.1 a duty not to disclose the Claimants' confidential information;
9.2 a duty not to make personal or other improper use of any such information;
9.3 a duty to deliver up to the Second Claimant any of the Claimants' confidential information immediately upon termination of the Defendant's employment; and
9.4 a duty to account to the Claimants for any use made by the Defendant of any relevant confidential information.
10. As the Defendant knew or ought to have known, the following categories of information, amongst others, are and were confidential to the Claimants:
10.1 the terms upon which TNK-BP contracted with third parties for the provision of services;
10.2 the terms upon which TNK-BP negotiated the purchase of shares in third party companies;
10.3 details of the bank accounts used by TNK-BP, its subsidiaries and its commercial counterparts;
10.4 personal data relating to employees and/or contractors of TNK-BP, its subsidiaries and its commercial counterparts;
10.5 TNK-BP's due diligence reports; and
10.6 boilerplate clauses belonging to the Claimants."
"The Documents contain the details of wrongdoing between TNK-BP and companies beneficially owned and controlled by the most senior officers of Transneft and officials of the Ministry of Energy responsible for regulating and monitoring the oil industry in Russia."
In subsequent paragraphs he elaborates on that allegation in considerable detail. In paragraph 125 he denies that any of the Documents contains any information of any possible commercial use to a third party or of any detriment to TNK-BP. Although TNK-BP filed a good deal of evidence in reply no one, with actual knowledge of the facts, denied the detailed allegations made by Mr Lazurenko.
"17. In the circumstances the Defendant is in breach his duties of confidence to the Claimants, as specified in paragraphs 6, 7 and 8 above, by:
17.1 retaining the Confidential Information following the termination of his employment with the Second Claimant, and failing to account for it to the Claimants, deliver it up and/or destroy it;
17.2 making personal use of the Confidential Information by improperly attempting to use it to affect the outcome of the Associated Proceedings; and
17.3 threatening to disclose the Confidential Information to third parties, including the Press and Mr Nekrich."
"The law applicable to a contract by virtue of Articles 3 to 6 and 12 of this Convention shall govern in particular:
(a) interpretation;
(b) performance;
(c) within the limits of the powers conferred on the court by its procedural law, the consequences of breach, including the assessment of damages in so far as it is governed by rules of law;
(d) the various ways of extinguishing obligations, and prescription and limitation of actions;
(e) the consequences of nullity of the contract."
"Scope of the law applicable
The law applicable to non-contractual obligations under this Regulation shall govern in particular:
(a) the basis and extent of liability, including the determination of persons who may be held liable for acts performed by them;
[(b)…];
(c) the existence, the nature and the assessment of damage or the remedy claimed;
(d) within the limits of powers conferred on the court by its procedural law, the measures which a court may take to prevent or terminate injury or damage or to ensure the provision of compensation;
[(e)-(h)]"
"Would Mr Rozenberg see this case as a Labour Law case, or any other such case where the Russian Courts would see themselves as having exclusive jurisdiction, or would he rather see it as falling outside the exclusive jurisdiction clause?"
Mr Rozenberg then sets out the terms of Article 57 of the Russian Federation's Labour Code and notes that it is not any confidential information described in clause 2.1.7 of the Employment Contract which is protected by the law. In the case of commercial secret information, he continues:
"Its protection is governed by the RF Law "On commercial secret" and generally any confidential information may be protected under this law, provided however, that in relation to it, a person owing such information has undertaken particular protective measures defined in this Law.
Such measures include: determination of list of information containing commercial secret, restriction of access to this information, count of persons having access to such information, marking documents containing this information as protected etc.
In practical terms this means that an employer willing to protect certain confidential information vis-à-vis its employees has to adopt a special list of information comprising its commercial secret and grant access to this information to its employees under their personal signatures acknowledging that such information is protected as commercial secret (as expressly required under Article 11 of the RF Law "On commercial secret").
Absent such a list formally adopted by Management and the said written acknowledgement by Mr Lazurenko, information to which he got access in the course of his employment with Management may not be considered as protected by commercial secret provisions and consequently as providing under Russian labour law grounds for liability of Mr Lazurenko in case of its unauthorized disclosure.
Based on the above, to advance a position under Russian labour law in relation to Mr Lazurenko's statutory labour law duty to keep confidentiality of certain information which became known to him within the course of his employment, it is essential whether information listed in paragraph 10 of the Particulars of Claim was formally assigned a regime of protection as commercial secret by Management in relation to Mr Lazurenko."
"Further, Russian labour law provides for two types of recourses for the unauthorized disclosure of the protected information by the employee: (i) termination of the labour contract under Article 81 of the RF Labour Law by the employer (which is irrelevant here given that Mr Lazurenko's employment with Management has already terminated) and (ii) recovery of material damage inflicted to the employer by unauthorized disclosure of this information (the amount of such damage shall be substantiated by the claimant) under Article 243 of the RF Labour Code. No such recourse as to stop/prevent disclosure of the protected information or an order to destroy such documents is provided by Russian labour law.
At the same time, it is theoretically possible to seek judicial prohibition to the defendant to undertake particular actions in relation to protected information as an injunctive relief measure under Article 140 of the RF Civil Procedure Code (for example, in connection with a substantive claim for damages under Article 243 of the RF Labour Code), but we are unaware whether the Russian courts have ever granted any such injunction to secure the employer's claim seeking compensation of damages caused by unauthorized disclosure by the employee of the protected information.
However, it must be emphasized that Russian labour law only provides for the recourse in case of unauthorized disclosure of protected information, not in case of a threat of unauthorized disclosure as in the present case and therefore it seems that obtaining the injunctive relief before the actual unauthorized disclosure takes place may prove unrealistic in Russian courts."
Accordingly, it is clearly Mr Rozenberg's view that under Russian law commercially confidential information may not be protected by a quia timet injunction, whether interim or final.
"At the same time, in our view the dispute described in the Particulars of Claim seems to arise from the particular threat (blackmail) that Mr Lazurenko posed against Management and Holding having articulated it in London and having connected its realization with the conduct of the English court proceedings; based on these considerations, England shall be recognized as the place of commitment of the wrongdoing (and potentially of its consequences) on which the claim against the Defendant is based.
From this perspective, an effective recourse to prevent threatened disclosure of confidential information belonging to the Claimants (being reaction to the torturous action by Mr Lazurenko which took place in England) should take place in England in accordance with the English procedure and substantive norms."
The validity of that conclusion is ultimately a question of the proper construction of the particulars of claim. That is an issue of English, not Russian law.
"(1) Do you generally agree with Rozenberg as to the requirements for information to be protected as a commercial secret? What are the implications for these proceedings?
10. Yes, I generally agree with Mr. Rozenberg. In order for information to be confidential and protected, the holder of a commercial secret must take special steps to preserve confidentiality. Among other things, the holder must expressly identify the information comprising its commercial secrets, must mark documents containing such information as "Commercial Secret of [name of holder of the secret]". If these precautions are not taken, confidentiality is lost. An employer that grants access to commercial secrets held by the employer itself or those to which the employer has access on behalf of contact partners must grant such access to employees under their personal signatures acknowledging that such information is protected as a commercial secret, and must keep records of those having access to such information. If the employer does not take these steps, neither the employer to its contract partners will have a trade secret violation claim against the employee.
11. The Claimants cannot succeed with their claim if the Documents do not satisfy the Court that the Documents are marked and have been protected as described above. The burden is on the Claimants to establish this."
"(3) Does the Documents Claim fall outside the scope of the exclusive jurisdiction clause in Mr Lazurenko's employment contract with Management?
The Documents Claim falls under the exclusive jurisdiction clause in favor of Russian courts in Article 7 of the Employment Contract. The present claim is brought to enforce the Employment Contract, and as such clearly falls within the scope of the exclusive jurisdiction clause. Mr Rozenberg is mistaken to say that a jurisdiction clause cannot or does not apply where what is alleged act is criminal. Indeed Article 243(5) lists "causing harm as the result of the criminal acts of an employee established by the verdict of a court" as a basis for imposing full material liability under the employment contract. Moreover, as I have said above, if the Documents disclose criminality then Mr. Lazurenko cannot have committed a crime by threatening to disclose them (or by in fact disclosing them)."
"These procedures and polices are designed to protect TNK-BP, ensure proper financial and commercial controls as well as to prevent corruption. In particular, Mr Lazurenko would have been aware of the Corporate Standards of Information Security policy (the "Standard"), which establishes complex measures to protect information assets of TNK-BP from a wide range of threats. The Standard provides that:
"All information assts, lawfully created or acquired by Company employees in the course of operating business activities shall constitute Company property.
Company employees must return all Company information assets at their disposal upon expiry of the civil labour or other contract validity term. If an employee possesses knowledge which is of importance to the company business operations such information must be documented and handed over to the Company".
There is no suggestion there of any express identification or acknowledgement of confidential information such as Professor Maggs and Mr Rozenberg regard as necessary.
(1) discharge the orders made by Roth and Vos JJ and dismiss the applications for their continuance made by TNK-BP;
(2) in respect of Mr Lazurenko's application and subject to any further argument counsel wish to address, summarily strike out or dismiss the claims of TNK-BP.
I invite counsel to agree a form of order for implementing these decisions.