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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 >> Corbiere Ltd & Ors v Xu [2018] EWHC 1650 (Ch) (27 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/1650.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1650 (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) CORBIERE LIMITED (2) TRENCHANT LIMITED (3) TRENCHANT EMPLOYEE SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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KE XU |
Defendant |
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Stephen Cragg QC and Tom Wainwright (instructed by Imran Khan and Partners) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15, 18 and 19 June 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli :
(1) The proceedings for contempt, in cases of breach of an order, fulfil the purpose, specifically, of upholding the authority of the court by punishing the contemnor and deterring others, and of providing an incentive for compliance.(2) Freezing Orders (and I would add, orders such as the January Order) are made for good reason and any substantial breach is a serious matter which merits an appropriate sentence.
(3) An appropriate sentence for such contempt normally means a prison sentence (unless the circumstances – such as where the contempt has been purged and relevant assets recovered – justify a fine instead).
(4) Where there is a continuing failure to disclose relevant information, the court should consider imposing a long sentence, possibly even the maximum of two years, in order to encourage future co-operation by the contemnor.
(5) The court has the power (and may see fit) to indicate (a) what portion of the sentence should be served in any event as punishment for past breaches and (b) what portion the court might consider remitting in the event of prompt and full compliance thereafter.
(1) In relation to non-compliance with disclosure orders:(a) The extent of the failure to disclose;
(b) How long it has lasted;
(c) How far it has caused or might have caused harm;
(d) Whether it was deliberate, and the reasons for it;
(e) Whether it has been accompanied by positively misleading disclosure (e.g. pretence that disclosure has been given);
(2) In all cases, relevant mitigating factors include:
(a) Whether, and if so when, the defendant has admitted the contempt;
(b) Whether the defendant has expressed remorse;
(c) Whether the defendant has, so far as he is able to, complied belatedly with the order or otherwise made amends for the wrong;
(d) The defendant's character and antecedents.
"11.1 Details of all third parties to whom [the defendant] has at any time allowed possession of or access to the Intellectual Property; and 11.2 Details of all locations of all copies of the Intellectual Property."
"14. … As far as the proceedings for contempt are concerned, as Lady Justice Hale said in Hale v Tanner … there are two objectives. First, the court has to mark the court's disapproval of disobedience to its order; secondly, it has to consider how best to secure future compliance with the order. Those are two considerations which are quite different and separate from the considerations which are raised by a criminal charge. Unlike contempt proceedings, which are essentially proceedings between the court seeking to enforce its order and the contemnor, criminal proceedings are between the public and are concerned with different considerations.15. The essential feature of a criminal charge is the attempt to protect public order; the necessity to punish offenders and in so doing both deter the offender and others from committing offences and therefore provide protection for the public. Incidentally, of course in relation to the sentencing process, there will be considerations relating to the rehabilitation of the offender. But the important feature of a criminal charge is the fact that it is seeking to ensure that there is proper sanction for those who break the law. Not a court's order, but the law."
(1) The court must have regard to the sentence passed by the criminal court.(2) Given that the functions of the criminal proceedings and the civil proceedings are different, that does not require the civil court to decline to sentence at all, because of a prior criminal sentence arising out of the same conduct.
(3) It does mean, however, that the civil court cannot punish the defendant again for the same conduct.
(4) The sentence, therefore, must be only for such conduct as was not the subject of the criminal proceedings.
(5) As Wilson LJ put it succinctly (at [23]): "…even when the breach is serious, the civil court must rigorously remind itself that, however problematical, its function is to sentence only for the fact of a serious contempt and not for the content of the serious contempt."
(1) Mr Xu has doggedly refused, since August 2014, to admit that he took copies of the confidential information away with him.(2) He refused to do so notwithstanding the making of the SCPO, the criminal charge for breaching that order, and his conviction.
(3) Even if (as the claimants contend) Mr Xu had been taking his chances with the jury in the SCPO trial, it would nevertheless have been open to him to mitigate the likely sentence by making the disclosure in the period of a few days between conviction and sentencing.
(4) Accordingly, it is clear that no further coercive measures will cause Mr Xu to do what he has so far failed to do.
"6. The essence of the Appellants' case on risk of harm has been the suggestion that if another trader, such as Mr Xu, carries out a particular trade, before or at the same time as the Appellants, this "can undermine" the profitability of the strategies deployed by the Appellants. It is important to remember that Mr Xu has not deprived the Appellants of their strategies; he took copies, and the Appellants have continued to possess, use, adapt and modify those strategies in the ordinary course of their business since Mr Xu's
offences. The strategies are valuable because they can be profitably used by the Appellants; since Mr Xu's offences, they have continued to use them profitably. They have explained that the strategies are profitable because they exploit market inefficiencies which would disappear if there were widespread use of the strategies by others. The Appellants are not inevitably harmed merely because someone else misuses a copy of one of the strategies or even profits from that misuse, because the profitability of the Appellants' trading may not be adversely affected. The Appellants have never satisfactorily evidenced the level of risk posed to that profitability if copies of the strategies were to be misused by one person, namely Mr Xu, or a few people in concert with him, particularly if on a small scale. It would clearly be contrary to Mr Xu's financial interests for him to publish the strategies widely because they would then become financially worthless to him as well as to everyone else.
7. In any event, there are simply too many imponderables for any risk posed by Mr Xu to be quantified in a meaningful way. For example, the nature of any risk must depend on the likelihood of Mr Xu in China: (i) being reunited with the strategies; (ii) having access to sufficient capital in order to trade on any meaningful scale; (iii) being able to trade before the Appellants; (iv) being able to trade using the same strategies as those currently used by the Appellants (which may have been modified since Mr Xu's original offences); and (v) being able to trade using combinations of strategies in the pool of strategies being used by the Appellants in 2018. Furthermore, the risk of harm must depend on the nature of the particular opportunity or inefficiency that is being targeted. In short, therefore, the evidence as to risk of harm was entirely speculative, and the SSHD and the Judge were correct to so conclude."
"What, in my view, is clear from all the evidence is that whilst there is a potential risk that the Claimants could suffer significant harm to their commercial interests, any financial loss that they are likely to sustain remains unquantifiable and very uncertain."