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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 >> Egon Zehnder Ltd v Tillman [2017] EWHC 1278 (Ch) (23 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/1278.html Cite as: [2017] IRLR 828, [2017] EWHC 1278 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Egon Zehnder Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Mary Caroline Tillman |
Defendant |
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Mr Daniel Oudkerk QC and Ms Amy Rogers (instructed by Simmons & Simmons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15th & 16th May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The approach to this application
"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. On a wider view of the balance of convenience it may still be right to impose such a restraint, but not unless there has been some assessment of the plaintiff's prospects of success. I would emphasise "some assessment", because the courts constantly seek to discourage prolonged interlocutory battles on affidavit evidence. I do not doubt that Lord Diplock, in enunciating the American Cyanamid doctrine, had in mind what its effect would be in that respect. Where an assessment of the prospects of success is required, it is for the judge to control its extent." (Page 258A-D)
Facts
The terms of her contract
The claimant is described as "the Company".
"Group Company: means Any company which is the parent undertaking or a subsidiary undertaking of the Company or other subsidiary undertaking of the Company's parent undertaking from time to time ..."
"You may be required to transfer your place of work (including by way of relocation at the Company's expense) to such other locations in the United Kingdom or elsewhere as the Company may reasonably direct."
"4.4 You may not, directly or indirectly, engage in any other business or employment (whether paid or not) during or outside your hours of work for the Company.
4.5 You shall not, during the course of your employment, directly or indirectly, hold or have any interest in, any shares or other securities in any company whose business is carried on in competition with any business of the Company or any Group Company, except that you may hold or have an interest in, for investment only, shares or other securities in a publicly quoted company of up to a maximum of 5 per cent of the total equity in issue of that company."
"13.2. You shall not without the prior written consent of the Company directly or indirectly, either alone or jointly with or on behalf of any third party and whether as principal, manager, employee, contractor, consultant, agent or otherwise howsoever at any time within the period of six months from the Termination Date:
13.2.1 solicit the custom of or deal with any person, firm or company with whom or which you may have regularly dealt with in respect of services of a type which at all within a period of twelve months prior to the Termination Date were or has been supplied by the Company or which the Company or any Group Company is or was in the process of negotiating to supply to a person, firm or company in question;
13.2.2 interfere or seek to interfere with the continuance of supplies to the Company and/or any Group Company (or the terms relating to those supplies) from any person, firm or company supplying the components, materials or services to the Company or any Group Company;
13.2.3 directly or indirectly engage or be concerned or interested in any business carried on in competition with any of the businesses of the Company or any Group Company which were carried on at the Termination Date or during the period of twelve months prior to that date and with which you were materially concerned during such period;"
"13.3 You acknowledge that the provisions of this clause 13 fair and reasonable and necessary to protect the goodwill and interests of the Company and the Group Companies and shall constitute separate and severable undertakings given for the benefit of each of the Company and each Group Company and may be enforced by the Company on behalf of them."
No-one made any submissions about the effect, if any, of this clause.
The applicable law
"All covenants in restraint of trade are prima facie unenforceable at common law and are enforceable only if they are reasonable with reference to the interests of the parties concerned and of the public. Unless the unreasonable part can be severed by the removal of either part or the whole of the covenant in question, its inclusion renders the covenant or the entire contract unenforceable. A covenant in restraint of trade (if unreasonable) is void in the sense that courts will not enforce it, but if the parties wish to implement it they would not be acting illegally and the courts would not intervene to prevent them from doing so. It has been held that "a covenant which is unenforceable ab initio should simply be disregarded unless and until it is subsequently and explicitly re-agreed". … The validity of a covenant in restraint of trade is assessed at the date when the contract is entered into."
"36. … In assessing reasonableness, there is essentially a three-stage process to be undertaken.
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 as at the time of trial."
Both sides invited me to adopt that approach.
"The defendant was in fact employed for over six years by the plaintiffs and no doubt became a valuable servant and acquired considerable knowledge of and personal relation with the plaintiffs' customers. It is natural in those circumstances to tend to look at what in fact happened under the agreement. But the question of the validity of a covenant in restraint of trade has to be determined at the date at which the agreement was entered into and has to be determined in the light of what may happen under the agreement, although what may happen may cover many possibilities which in the result did not happen. A covenant of this kind is invalid ab initio or valid ab initio. There cannot come a moment at which it passes from the class of invalid into that of valid covenants."
"38 ..It is a fundamental principle that the reasonableness of the restriction must be interpreted in accordance with what was in the contemplation of the parties at the date when the contract was made and not as matters in the end turned out. The reason for this is that the covenant will have been formed at the beginning of the employment in the light of what was in the contemplation of the parties at that time….
39. Since the defendant was recruited into a senior position with a mutual hope that it would mature into a partnership offer, it clearly was within the actual contemplation of the parties that the claimant would promote the defendant to all its actual and target clients, that she would assist in marketing, would generate relationships with actual and potential clients and might well be successful in generating clients from just the sort of introductions as were the natural consequence of each of the marketing events on which the claimant spent its money."
"49. … The Court cannot say that a covenant in one form affords no more than adequate protection to a covenantee's relevant legitimate interests if the evidence shows that a covenant in another form, much less far-reaching and less potentially prejudicial to the covenantor, would have afforded adequate protection."
"If the clause is valid in all ordinary circumstances which can have been contemplated by the parties, it is equally valid notwithstanding that it might cover circumstances which are so 'extravagant', 'fantastical' 'unlikely' or 'improbable' that they must have been entirely outside the contemplation of the parties".
"43. I accept Mr Reade's submission that if, having examined the restrictive covenant in the context of the relevant factual matrix, the Court concludes that there is an element of ambiguity and that there are two possible constructions of the covenant, one of which would lead to a conclusion that it was in unreasonable restraint of trade and unlawful, but the other would lead to the opposite result, then the court should adopt the latter construction on the basis that the parties are to be deemed to have intended their bargain to be lawful and not to offend against the public interest."
"40. If they restrictive covenant applying after employment has terminated is held to be unreasonable, then it is void and unenforceable. The court cannot read down such a clause in an effort to render it reasonable and enforceable. In certain circumstances, however, if only a discrete phrase within a particular covenant is held to be unreasonable, individual words or phrases may be 'blue-pencilled' or severed, provided that what is left makes independent sense without the need to modify the wording and that the sense of the contract is not changed …"
Two points of construction
"You agree… you will not… directly or indirectly do or attempt to do any of the following:
(a)… undertake, carry on or be employed, engaged or interested in any capacity in either any business activity which is competitive with Relevant Business… or any business activity an objective or anticipated result of which is to compete with Relevant Business…".
"127. His [viz Mr Oudkerk, appearing for the claimant employer] argument is that the contract must be read as a whole, that there is express provision (Clause 3.2) relating to shareholdings during the currency of the contract (which permits a limited quantum of shareholding in another company) and that it cannot sensibly have been intended that D1 should be subject to a more onerous restriction as to shareholdings after his employment had terminated than whilst still an employee, particularly if it is suggested that the more onerous obligation is created by a clause that makes no express reference to shareholdings at all. In other words, whatever "interested in any capacity … in any business activity" means, it cannot be a reference to a shareholding. By way of emphasis he submits that Mr Cohen's interpretation would mean that D1 could have had a 1% shareholding whilst he was employed (because the ceiling was 5%) but as soon as he was no longer employed he would have to sell his 1% shareholding.
128. He also suggests that passive investment by way of a minority shareholding is not a "business activity" since the only kind of business activity to which the clause could relate was the activity of the relevant desks. If that argument was the only argument on this issue, I would be less convinced by it. "Business activity" is a wide and somewhat amorphous expression and might, when combined with the concept of an "indirect interest" in such an activity, embrace involvement in a company that carried out IDB work simply through owning a shareholding in that company. However, I consider that reaching such a conclusion would require some other indicia in the contract and I do not see the presence of such indicia: indeed Mr Oudkerk's primary argument set out in paragraph 127 above seems to me to negate it. If I was wrong about that, I would certainly conclude that the expression relied upon by Mr Cohen was ambiguous and, by applying the principle set out in paragraph 20 above, it should be construed as rendering the provision valid rather than invalid.
129. I see this as a straightforward issue of simply seeking to give effect to the proper meaning of this contract. I have not, of course, overlooked the authorities to which Mr Cohen referred, including Scully (UK) Ltd v Lee [1998] IRLR 259, but they do not, in my judgment, take the issue any further. Each involved the construction of the particular contract in question and, as Mr Oudkerk observes, in Scully the non-compete clause made express reference to "shareholdings" whereas that is not the case here."
The width of the clause
Discretion
Conclusion