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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 >> MPT Group Ltd v Peel & Ors [2017] EWHC 1222 (Ch) (16 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/1222.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1222 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
____________________
MPT GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SHAUN WILLIAM PEEL (2) MICHAEL ALAN BIRTWISTLE (3) MATTRESSTEK LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Miss Kelly Pennifer (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 10 & 11 May 2017
Judgment: 16 May 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR EDWARD PEPPERALL QC:
6.1 wrongly downloaded, misused and divulged to third parties the company's confidential information, specifically its databases of customers, sales quotations, suppliers, materials & costings and technical drawings [paras 26.1 & 27.1];
6.2 solicited each other from MPT for the purpose of their intended competing business [para. 26.2];
6.3 failed to answer questions truthfully as to their future intentions [para. 26.3];
6.4 wrongly solicited, dealt and contracted with MPT clients during the six-month period of restraint [para. 27.2]; and
6.5 wrongly interfered with MPT's supply chain [para. 27.3].
7.1 misused MPT's confidential information for the purposes of the design, production and supply, in competition with MPT, of machines that are very similar to the company's own range [para. 28];
7.2 infringed MPT's database rights [para. 29];
7.3 infringed MPT's copyright in its technical drawings [para. 30]; and
7.4 wrongly conspired to use unlawful means with the intention of injuring MPT [para. 32].
11.1 an interim injunction until 30 April 2018 or further order prohibiting the Defendants from soliciting, dealing or contracting with MPT's named customers and suppliers;
11.2 an unlimited injunction prohibiting the Defendants from disclosing or using MPT's confidential information; and
11.3 directions for a speedy trial of all issues of liability.
12.1 TapeTek:
(a) MattressTek's TapeTek machine allows an operator to sew the tape edging to a mattress thereby joining the sides of the mattress to its top and bottom.
(b) Mr Trickett says, at para. 5 of his first statement, that this machine competes with MPT's Matramax machine
12.2 TuftTek:
(a) MattressTek's TuftTek machine compresses a mattress in the vertical plane while an operative inserts 'tufts' through the mattress to create the characteristic 'buttons.'
(b) Mr Trickett says that it competes with MPT's PTM-4 machine. This machine is also referred to, for example in MPT's brochure, as the Powermax-4.
12.3 Conveyor:
(a) MattressTek has also developed a belt-driven indexing conveyor for transporting mattresses.
(b) Mr Trickett says that this has been directly copied from MPT's Matramax T180.
I. SPRINGBOARD INJUNCTIONS
"240. First, where a person has obtained a 'head start' as a result of unlawful acts, the Court has the power to grant an injunction which restrains the wrongdoer, so as to deprive him of the fruits of his unlawful acts. This is often known as 'springboard' relief.
241. Second, the purpose of a 'springboard' order as Nourse L.J. explained in Roger Bullivant v Ellis [1987] I.C.R. 464 is "to prevent the defendants from taking unfair advantage of the springboard which [the Judge] considered they must have built up by their misuse of the information in the card index" (at page 476G). May L.J. added that an injunction could be granted depriving defendants of the springboard "which ex hypothesi they had unlawfully acquired for themselves by the use of the plaintiffs' customers' names in breach of the duty of fidelity" (at 478E-G). The Court of Appeal upheld Falconer J.'s decision restraining an employee who had taken away a customer card index from entering into any contracts made with customers.
242. Third, 'springboard' relief is not confined to cases of breach of confidence. It can be granted in relation to breaches of contractual and fiduciary duties (see Midas IT Services v Opus Portfolio Ltd, unreported Ch.D, Blackburne J. 21/12/99, pp. 18-19), and flows from a wider principle that the court may grant an injunction to deprive a wrongdoer of the unlawful advantage derived from his wrongdoing. As Openshaw J. explained in UBS v Vestra Wealth (supra) at … [3]-[4]:
"There is some discussion in the authorities as to whether springboard relief is limited to cases where there is a misuse of confidential information. Such a limitation was expressly rejected in Midas IT Services V Opus Portfolio Ltd, an unreported decision of Blackburne J made on 21 December 1999, although it seems to have been accepted by Scott J in Balston Ltd v Headline Filters Ltd [1987] F.S.R. 330 at 340. In the 20 years which have passed since that case, it seems to me that the law has developed; and I see no reason in principle by which it should be so limited.
In my judgment, springboard relief is not confined to cases where former employees threaten to abuse confidential information acquired during the currency of their employment. It is available to prevent any future or further economic loss to a previous employer caused by former staff members taking an unfair advantage, and 'unfair start', of any serious breaches of their contract of employment (or if they are acting in concert with others, of any breach by any of those others). That unfair advantage must still exist at the time that the injunction is sought, and it must be shown that it would continue unless retrained. I accept that injunctions are to protect against and to prevent future and further losses and must not be used merely to punish breaches of contract."
243. Fourth, 'springboard' relief must, however, be sought and obtained at a time when any unlawful advantage is still being enjoyed by the wrongdoer: Universal Thermosensors v Hibben [1992] 1 W.L.R. 840 Nicholls V-C; see also Sun Valley Foods Ltd v Vincent [2000] F.S.R. 825, esp. at 834.
244. Fifth, 'springboard' relief should have the aim "simply of restoring the parties to the competitive position they each set out to occupy and would have occupied but for the defendant's misconduct" (per Sir [Donald] Nicholls VC in Universal Thermosensors v Hibben [1992] 1 W.L.R. 840, at 855A. It is not fair and just if it has a much more far-reaching effect than this, such as driving the defendant out of business (at 855A).
245. Sixth, 'springboard' relief will not be granted where a monetary award would have provided an adequate remedy to the Claimant for the wrong done to it (Universal Thermosensors v Hibben [1992] 1 W.L.R. 840, at 855B).
246. Seventh, 'springboard' relief is not intended to punish the Defendant for wrongdoing. It is merely to provide fair and just protection for unlawful harm on an interim basis. What is fair and just in any particular circumstances will be measured by (i) the effect of the unlawful acts upon the Claimant; and (ii) the extent to which the Defendant has gained an illegitimate competitive advantage (see Sectrack NV v (1) Satamatics Ltd (2) Jan Leemans [2007] EWHC 3003, Flaux J.). The seriousness or egregiousness of the particular breach has no bearing on the period for which the injunction should be granted. In this regard, it is worth bearing in mind what Flaux J., said at … [68]:
"I agree with Mr Lowenstein that logically, the seriousness of the breach and the egregiousness of the Defendants' conduct cannot have any bearing on the period for which the injunction should be granted - what matters is the effect of the breach of confidence upon the Claimant in the sense of the extent to which the First Defendant has gained an illegitimate competitive advantage. In my judgment, Mr Cohen's submissions seriously underestimate the unfair competitive advantage gained by the Defendants from access to the Claimant's "customer list" and ignore, in any event, the impact (if the injunction were lifted) of actual or potential misuse of other confidential information such as volume of business or pricing information. It is important in that context to have in mind that the Claimant maintains in its evidence that all the information said to be confidential remains confidential." (emphasis added)
247. Eighth, the burden is on the Claimant to spell out the precise nature and period of the competitive advantage. An 'ephemeral' and 'short-term' advantage will not be sufficient (per Jonathan Parker J. in Sun Valley Foods Ltd v. Vincent [2000] FSR 825, esp. at 834)."
II. THE PROPER APPROACH TO THIS APPLICATION
17.1 whether, if the injunction were refused, damages would be an adequate remedy for the applicant;
17.2 whether, if the injunction were granted, the respondent would be adequately compensated by the applicant's cross-undertaking in damages;
17.3 where there is doubt as to the adequacy of such remedies, the balance of convenience, perhaps more accurately described as the balance of the risk of doing an injustice; and
17.4 where other factors are evenly balanced, the court should consider preserving the status quo ante.
"If it will not be possible to hold a trial before the period for which the plaintiff claims to be entitled to an injunction has expired, or substantially expired, it seems to me that justice requires some consideration as to whether the plaintiff would be likely to succeed at a trial. In those circumstances, it is not enough to decide merely that there is a serious issue to be tried. The assertion of such an issue should not operate as a lettre de cachet, by which the defendant is prevented from doing that which, as it later turns out, he has a perfect right to do, for the whole or substantially the whole of the period in question."
THE ALLEGED SPRINGBOARD ADVANTAGE
"First, the appropriate measure for the length of a springboard injunction is the length of time that it would have taken the wrongdoer to achieve lawfully what he in fact achieved unlawfully, relative to the victim.
Second, it must be emphasised that the exercise is a relative one and any advantage must be measured as such. Wrongful activities may have both positive and negative effect, i.e. benefitting the wrongdoer whilst simultaneously harming the victim. Thus, for instance, the unlawful poaching of key staff is likely to advantage the wrongdoing party whilst disadvantaging the victim who has lost key staff and may have to recover lost market ground.
Third, it is relevant to look at the period of time over which the unlawful activities have in fact taken place. The relationship of this period with the length of any springboard relief is, however, kinetic not linear.
Fourth, there may be many different factors at play during the period of unlawful activity materially affecting the advantage gained which may, or may not, obtain in similar assumed circumstances of purely lawful activity. These factors might include, for instance, (i) the advantage of soliciting junior employees whilst still being employed and in positions of power, compared with the trying to recruit as an ex-employee, (ii) the advantage of stealth and secrecy, so that management are unaware and do not take defensive measures, and (iii) conversely, the advantage sometimes of being able to work speedily and not having to be covert.
Fifth, the nature and length of the 'springboard' relief should be fair and just in all the circumstances."
"From our considerable experience of developing the Matramax tape edge machine we allocated 12 months to perfect the initial prototype machine followed by 4-6 months of customer on-site testing so in essence 18 months would be [a] reasonable period for a machine of this complexity. It should be noted that this timeframe relates only to one machine. The Defendants have developed to our knowledge at least three different machines within this period (the equivalent of the Matramax) … This simply is not achievable within this timeframe."
"Michael and I have been working around the clock to achieve what we have managed to achieve. We have not been working the typical 8 hours a day, 5 days a week. Our working days have been 12 hours and 6 days a week, sometimes even 7 days."
27.1 First, they had between them some 30 years' experience of designing and working with mattress machines.
27.2 Secondly, they had been able to dedicate themselves to the task and were free of the distractions of the everyday running of a business.
27.3 Thirdly, they had the advantage (not enjoyed by MPT) of sharing facilities with an associate company that provided a metalwork fabrication capability.
TRIAL DATES
33.1 The Defence will not be served until 19 May 2017.
33.2 In order properly to litigate this case, the parties will need to give disclosure of their own confidential design drawings and databases. In view of the allegations made, it is unlikely that either party will be satisfied with limiting the other's disclosure obligations. Indeed, it would not be surprising if one or other party ends up making an application for specific disclosure in this case.
33.3 Given the confidentiality of the documents that will have to be disclosed and the evident distrust between the parties, it is likely that the parties will seek to negotiate the terms of a confidentiality club rather than simply relying on the protection offered by r.31.22 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998.
33.4 Thereafter the parties will need to serve witness statements. Much of this work has been done, but they will still need a little time between the completion of disclosure and exchange of evidence.
33.5 Both parties intend to obtain engineering evidence in respect of the issue of copying. The experts will need to examine sample machines from both MPT and MattressTek. They will also need to analyse the parties' technical drawings for evidence of copying or original design.
33.6 Further, both parties will seek to rely on IT evidence in order either to prove or disprove the viewing, use or transmission of MPT's electronic files. Both envisage obtaining reports but there is some hope that the IT evidence might not need to be called at trial.
33.7 Arranging a trial with a number of witnesses in August is notoriously difficult. One or other key player will almost inevitably be on holiday at any point in the month.
CONCLUSIONS
III. COPYING & RETAINING MPT'S CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION
IV. USE OF THE CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION
"Whether particular business was obtained as a result of misuse by him of a plaintiff's confidential information is essentially a question of fact in each case. In seeking to answer that question, the court will inquire into the facts and the surrounding circumstances as much in this case as in any other. In doing so, of course, a court will not take leave of common sense. It will view with considerable circumspection, even scepticism, a contention by a defendant who has chosen to use a list, that he already carried some of the information in his own head and that looking at the list for any particular name or names was quite superfluous and unnecessary. Moreover, any doubts and obscurities arising from the evidence are likely to be resolved against the defendant. So that, in practice, such a defendant will have a difficult row to hoe."
"The value of the card index to the defendants was that it contained a ready and finite compilation of the names and addresses of those who had brought or might bring business to the plaintiffs and who might bring business to them. Most of the cards carried the name or names of particular individuals to be contacted. While I recognise that it would have been possible for the first defendant to contact some, perhaps many, of the people concerned without using the card index, I am far from convinced that he would have been able to contact anywhere near all of those whom he did contact between February and April 1985. Having made deliberate and unlawful use of the plaintiffs' property, he cannot complain if he finds that the eye of the law is unable to distinguish between those whom, had he so chosen, he could have contacted lawfully and those whom he could not. In my judgment it is of the highest importance that the principle of Robb v Green [1895] 2 QB 315 which, let it be said, is no more than fair and honourable dealing, should be steadfastly maintained."
46.1 The admitted use of MPT's data.
46.2 The untruthful answers given by Messrs Peel and Birtwistle as to their future intentions.
46.3 The Defendants' failure to respond to letters from MPT's solicitors.
46.4 The Defendants' destruction, and the timing of such destruction, of the best evidence, namely the devices on to which they had copied MPT's data.
46.5 The speed with which the Defendants have been able to bring their machines to market.
46.6 The similarity between the parties' respective machines.
46.7 A specific design feature of MPT's Matramax that appears to have been copied in the TapeTek.
46.8 The incorporation of a carriage guide on the TapeTek.
46.9 The Defendants' failure to disclose their original design drawings, which Mr Peel claimed in evidence, would "prove" the Defendants' case.
46.10 The evidence in exhibit SP2.
(1) ADMITTED USE OF THE DATA
47.1 Mr Peel said, at para. 30 of his first statement:
"I designed our machines from scratch from a blank piece of paper, beginning with sketches of my design ideas, working them through typical design phases, component and prototype builds and testing. I did not base my designs on MPT's or use their drawings save in one respect. I acknowledge that in relation to the TapeTek machine design, I did access MPT drawings to check the measurement for the floor to operational height of the needle of the sewing head. I remember accessing this measurement more than once because I didn't write it down the first time. I cannot say for certain that I did not look at anything else but if I did I cannot now remember. I could just as easily have got this measurement from looking at a machine or possibly even on line. For example Michael carried out a quick on-line search on 1 May 2017 of Matpart Ltd's website (www.matparts.com). In the brochures section of that website Michael found an on-line operating manual for the MatraMax Tape Edger (pages 1-53 of SP1). At pages 54-59 are screenshots which showed the link on the website through which you access the brochure. Section 8 of the brochure states the overall height of the machine, namely 69 inches / 1750 mm. It is possible to use this information available on-line to calculate the sewing head height by deducting the height of a sewing head (which can be accessed from any supplier of that type of sewing head) from the overall height. Looking at the head height on MPT's drawings, therefore, saved me no more than 30 minutes. It is also worth explaining that the operating manual provides a full set of assembly drawings showing each individual component of the MatraMax Tape Edger including the bearings sizes, shaft diameters, full motoring gearbox specifications and gearbox ratios. In other words the brochure, which is readily available online, provides the full electrical schematics for the MatraMax Tape Edger including the inverter program settings."
47.2 Mr Birtwistle said, at paras. 26 and 29 of his first statement:
"26. I have accessed the drive since leaving MPT on my new PC but I only browsed out of curiosity, not in the context of carrying out any specific task or in relation to producing designs (which Shaun led on rather than me anyway …). For that reason I cannot recall what files I may have accessed but I can say that I have not used those files to gain any kind of head start in the design process or otherwise …
29. I did start to build up the beginnings of a database of potential customers during the 6-month period but I never completed it. I had access to customer email addresses which had saved automatically to my personal email account, MPT Yahoo email account and personal phone over the years at MPT, which I looked at when I started to build this database up, and I apologise for that. However, we did not gain any head start from having access to this information. These customers are generally well known and it would have been relatively easy for me to obtain the contact details by using information which is publicly available on the internet. In fact, I decided in the end that it wasn't worth completing the database and never used it anyway."
50.1 As Miss Pennifer stresses, it was volunteered by the Defendants without there being, at this stage, evidence from the Claimant to prove such misuse. She invites me not to cherry pick by accepting the incriminating while dismissing the exculpatory.
50.2 On the other hand, as Miss Ranales-Cotos urges, it is not just evidence of some misuse of MPT's confidential information but might well be a cloak for greater wrongdoing. In other words, the admissions might be part of a strategy of "confess and avoid."
(2) UNTRUTHFUL ANSWERS
51.1 On 4 August 2016, Mr Peel told Mr Trickett that he wished to work from home and spend more time with his child by working as a freelance CAD designer, while Mr Birtwistle said that he had been offered a position doing panel wiring.
51.2 On further questioning, both men denied any intention of going into partnership together.
51.3 A few days later, Mr Peel declined to say where he was going. Subsequently, Mr Peel told Mr Rodgers that he was not planning to work in MPT's industry because he had too much respect for him. He repeated that he intended to spend more time at home and work on a freelance basis.
51.4 At some later point during his notice period, Mr Birtwistle told Mr Rodgers that his new job would be building electrical control panels.
(3) THE FAILURE TO RESPOND TO THE SOLICITORS' LETTERS
(4) THE DESTRUCTION OF THE DEVICES
56.1 Mr Peel said, at para. 18 of his first statement:
"I became uncomfortable with the fact that I had information (on a Toshiba hard drive) that I realised I shouldn't have and … I destroyed that hard drive. I took the information because I thought that it might be useful at some point. I realise now that I should not have done that and I apologise."
56.2 He added, at para. 41 of his second statement:
"About two months ago, if not longer, I accessed the Toshiba Drive to look at some personal insurance documents. I started to feel uncomfortable about having it and thought it was probably best to get rid of it. I therefore disposed of it in the skip outside our office."
56.3 Mr Birtwistle said, at para. 26 of his first statement:
"In or around the end of March 2017 I started to get uncomfortable about having that hard drive (a customer of MPT told me that MPT were going to sue us). I started to realise that I shouldn't have it. So I panicked and threw the drive away."
(5) SPEED WITH WHICH THEY BROUGHT THEIR MACHINES TO MARKET
(6) SIMILARITIES BETWEEN THE MACHINES
"The plaintiff's engineering expert deposes to many resemblances between the two engines … It will be seen that some of these items relate to design and others to the components used; and plainly the two engines enjoy a number of close and important similarities. But as Mr Alexander pointed out with some force, that is not enough. What matters is how far the Scamp achieves these similarities by drawing on confidential information imparted by the plaintiff in confidence, and how far these factors had produced in the Coco an engine which had originality or other qualities that could provide information of a confidential nature. I remain in almost complete darkness as to the extent to which the ideas were common to the moped world."
62.1 A new carriage guide rail and guide block, which Mr Peel claimed was at the heart of the TapeTek design and around which every other aspect of the machine had been designed.
62.2 An increased range of table movement allowing the TapeTek to accommodate mattresses from 45mm to 546mm deep. By contrast, Mr Peel explained that the Matramax has a maximum capacity of 305mm.
62.3 The TapeTek only requires one electrical supply, compared to two for Matramax.
62.4 Improved stability meant that the TapeTek can be run at faster speeds.
(7) COPYING A DESIGN FEATURE
(8) THE CARRIAGE GUIDE
(9) FAILURE TO DISCLOSE THE DRAWINGS
(10) EXHIBIT SP2
78.1 At page 88-91 of the exhibit, there was a list of files that appeared to relate to MPT's prices, master bills of materials and drawings on Mr Peel's desktop computer. All of these appeared on the E drive.
78.2 Likewise, I was taken to pages 80-88 which listed files on the E drive of Mr Birtwistle's desktop computer.
78.3 I was then taken to pages 1 and 47-52. Pages 47-52 evidenced a series of files that had been created on Mr Peel's computer between 13:45 and 13:49 on 24 January 2017. Pages 1 and 47 also revealed some activity on Mr Birtwistle's computer in late 2016 and early 2017.
CONCLUSIONS
81.1 The burden is on MPT to prove not just that the Defendants took its data, but that they actually used such data in order to bring their machines to market.
81.2 There is no irrebuttable presumption that the Defendants used MPT's data just because they took it.
81.3 In view, however, of Messrs Peel and Birtwistle's conduct in taking, retaining and later browsing the stolen data, even after receipt of the solicitors' letters, I approach their protestations that they only made marginal use of the data with circumspection.
81.4 I also take into account that Messrs Peel and Birtwistle have disposed of important evidence, namely the USB drives and a laptop, that might have proved or disproved the true extent of their use. The destruction of this evidence at a time when the net was closing in, particularly in Mr Birtwistle's case given his admission (at para. 26 of his first statement) that he disposed of the drive that he held after hearing that MPT might be about to commence proceedings, entitle me, in my view, to be sceptical of their claims not to have made any significant use of MPT's data.
V. OTHER CAUSES OF ACTION
(1) FAILURE TO ANSWER QUESTIONS TRUTHFULLY
(2) SOLICITING EMPLOYEES
(3) THE ECONOMIC TORTS
VI. SERIOUS ISSUE TO BE TRIED
93.1 There is no doubt that Messrs Peel and Birtwistle were in breach of their duty of fidelity and that they probably infringed MPT's copyright and database rights by copying and retaining MPT's drawings and other databases.
93.2 On the Defendants' own admissions, at the very least they have made some use of such information. Specifically, Mr Peel has obtained a measurement from MPT's drawings in the course of designing the TapeTek machine and Mr Birtwistle has both browsed MPT data and used the data to start the compilation of a customer database.
93.3 While there is no actual evidence of other use, the Court is entitled to treat with some scepticism the Defendants' claims that they went to the trouble of taking substantial volumes of data but then made no real use of it.
93.4 These circumstances coupled with the speed with which the Defendants were able to bring their machines to market, raise, in my judgment, a serious question to be tried as to the misuse of MPT's confidential information.
VII. ADEQUACY OF DAMAGES
THE CLAIMANT
95.1 MattressTek being a fledgling business, the Defendants are unlikely to be able to meet any award of damages.
95.2 Any award is unlikely to compensate MPT for its true losses given the difficulties in quantifying and assessing damages in these cases. In support of this submission, Miss Ranales-Cotos relied on recent observations by Leggatt J. in Marathon Asset Management LLP v Seddon [2017] EWHC 300 (Comm), at [164].
THE ADEQUACY OF THE CROSS-UNDERTAKING
All figures in £ | 2015 | 2016 |
Sales | 5,138,231 | 3,964,513 |
Gross profit | 1,587,285 | 1,094,221 |
Operating profit | 615,633 | 111,632 |
Dividends paid | 312,333 | 272,240 |
Net assets | 312,921 | 161,548 |
100.1 The accounts appear to show dividends of £300,885 together with £213,226 on the profit and loss account.
100.2 An improvement in the net assets of about £206,000 in a year in which dividends of about £300,000 were drawn would tend to indicate that a net profit of about £500,000.
100.3 Such net profits could only be achieved by incurring a corporation tax liability of about £100,000, and yet the relevant ledger entry is only £8,777.
VIII. BALANCE OF CONVENIENCE
IX. CLAIM TO ENFORCE THE CONFIDENTIALITY CLAUSE
"You will not, either during your employment or thereafter, use to the detriment of the Company or any of its customers, except in the proper course of your duties, divulge to any third party or otherwise make use of, and shall use your best endeavours to prevent the use or disclosure by or to any person of any Confidential Information or any other information designated as 'confidential' which may have come to your knowledge in the course of your employment. For the avoidance of doubt any information contained on the Company's IT Systems is regarded as confidential. This restriction shall continue to apply after the termination of your employment without limitation in time but shall cease to apply to any information or knowledge which subsequently comes into the public domain, other than as a result of unauthorised disclosure by you.
For the purposes of this clause Confidential Information means (but is not limited to): information about the Company including its finances, affairs, processes, technical data and know-how, future business strategy, marketing strategies and business development plans, customer lists, pricing/fee structures and pricing/fee discounts, employees and personnel details, plans or strategies, methods, designs, formulae, technology and business activities; and information about the Company's customers including any of their personal details and any information given to the Company in confidence by any customers."
108.1 She submitted that it purported to provide perpetual protection in respect of the company's confidential information even though much confidential information will have a shelf-life beyond which it cannot be reasonably protected.
108.2 She argued that it defined confidential information in unreasonably wide terms, such that it purported to protect information that would already be in the public domain and/or form part of the employee's knowhow.
113.1 the Claimant's technical drawings of its range of machines;
113.2 the Claimant's customer lists;
113.3 the Claimant's supplier lists; and
113.4 the Claimant's bill of materials database.