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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 >> Illiquidx Ltd v Altana Wealth Ltd [2021] EWHC 647 (Ch) (19 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/647.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 647 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ILLIQUIDX LIMITED | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
ALTANA WEALTH LIMITED | ||
LEE ROBINSON | ||
STEFFEN KASTNER | ||
BREVENT ADVISORY LIMITED | Defendants |
____________________
Tom Moody-Stuart QC and Ben Longstaff (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 19 February 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 19 March 2021 at 10.00 am
Deputy Master McQuail:
Introduction
Permission to Amend
Pleading Breach of Confidence
"if a plaintiff wishes to seek relief against a defendant for misuse of confidential information it is his duty to ensure that the defendant knows what information is in issue. This is not only for the reasons set out by Edmund Davies L.J. in John Zink but for at least two other reasons. First, the plaintiff usually seeks an injunction to restrain the defendant from using its confidential information. Unless the confidential information is properly identified, an injunction in such terms is of uncertain scope and may be difficult to enforce: See for example P.A. Thomas & Co. v. Mould [1968] 2 Q.B. 913 and Suhner & Co. AG v. Transradio Ltd. [1967] R.P.C. 329. Secondly, the defendant must know what he has to meet. He may wish to show that the items of information relied on by the plaintiff are matters of public knowledge. His ability to defend himself will be compromised if the plaintiff can rely on matters of which no proper warning was given. It is for all these reasons that failure to give proper particulars may be a particularly damaging abuse of process.
"These principles do not apply only to the question of the content of the pleadings. Just as it may be an abuse of process to fail properly to identify the information on which the plaintiff relies, it can be an abuse to give proper particulars but of information which is not, in fact, confidential. A claim based even in part on wide and unsupportable claims of confidentiality can be used as an instrument of oppression or harassment against a defendant. It can be used to destroy an ex-employee's ability to obtain employment or a competitor's ability to compete. The wider the claims, the longer and more expensive the litigation."
CF Partners
"124 The basic attribute or quality which must be shown to attach to the information for it to be treated as confidential is inaccessibility: the information cannot be treated as confidential if it is common knowledge or generally accessible and in the public domain. Whether the information is so generally accessible is a question of degree depending on the particular case. It is not necessary for a claimant to show that no one else knew of or had access to the information.
"125 A special collation and presentation of information, the individual components of which are not of themselves or individually confidential, may have the quality of confidence: for example, a customer list may be composed of particular names all of which are publicly available, but the list will nevertheless be confidential. In the Saltman case (supra) Lord Greene MR said:
""…it is perfectly possible to have a confidential document, be it a formula, a plan, a sketch, or something of that kind, which is the result of work done by the maker on materials which may be available for the use of anybody; but what makes it confidential is the fact that the maker of the document has used his brain and thus produced a result which can only be produced by somebody who goes through the same process.""
Or as it is put in Gurry on Breach of Confidence (2nd ed., 2012) para 5.16:
""Something that has been constructed solely from materials in the public domain may possess the necessary quality of confidentiality: for something new and confidential may have been brought into being by the skill and ingenuity of the human brain. Novelty depends on the thing itself, and not upon the quality of its constituent parts. Indeed, often the more striking the novelty, the more commonplace its components…""
"126 Further, and of particular potential relevance in this case, pieces of information which individually might appear to have limited value and marginal secrecy, in combination in particular hands, might have special composite value and confer on the recipient a considerable advantage: as was noted by the New Zealand Court of Appeal in the Arklow case when at that stage (see [1998] 3 NZLR 680 at 700 in the judgment of the majority which was affirmed by the Privy Council)."
"The Claimant's case as to what attached to information provided by CFP in the course of Project Arctic Fox the necessary quality of confidence was stated in its Re-Amended Particulars of Claim as follows (the separation into separate alphabetised points being my addition):
""8. CF Partners provided Barclays with a single, composite piece of confidential information, namely the fact that Tricorona was an (a) attractive and (b) available takeover/purchase prospect; (c) the aggregate bundle of information provided by CF Partners to Barclays essentially presented Barclays with the ""trade"" that the purchase of Tricorona represented, allowing Barclays to see (ultimately for itself) the disparity between the value of Tricorona's portfolio of carbon credits, and the potential purchase price of the entire issued share capital of Tricorona (namely the market capitalisation of the company by reference to its share price, plus the customary premium to such market capitalisation required to obtain shareholder approval, referred to herein for convenience as ''the Market Price'').
9. Further or alternatively, CF Partners provided Barclays with a great number of pieces of confidential information (which, taken together, form the single, composite, piece of confidential information identified above). Such confidential information is identified and detailed below.""
Factual background
The POC
(i) the Claimant has since May 2017 dedicated time and resources towards gathering intelligence and expertise in potential Venezuela related credit investment opportunities including (but not limited to) Venezuelan government/corporate bonds and claims and other Venezuelan receivables, private equity and other such Venezuela related opportunities defined as "the Opportunities" (paragraph 6 POC);
(ii) the NDA defined the "Opportunities" as set out above … and defined "Confidential Information" as "any and all information that information relating to [the First Defendant] and/or to [the Claimant] and/or any Opportunities and which is considered by the disclosing Party to be of a confidential information (or is marked or described as confidential)". There follows an illustrative list of examples of such information (paragraph 16 POC);
(iii) the express terms of the NDA on which the Claimant relies (paragraph 17 POC);
(iv) the reference to Confidential Annex 1 as containing a list setting out the Confidential Information asserted by the Claimant (paragraph 19 a POC);
(v) the list of 6 documents or groups of documents, the introduction of two named parties and 3 listed items of legal advice (Confidential Annex 1 to POC);
(vi) the plea that the Confidential Information is a Trade Secret (paragraph 20 POC);
(vii) the circumstances of confidence in which the Confidential Information was disclosed to the Defendants (paragraphs 22-25 POC);
(viii) the misuse of the Confidential Information and/or Trade Secrets set out in Confidential Annex 1 and further information in Confidential Annex 6 relating to the legal framework and strategies surrounding the Opportunities in setting up ACOF, within the ACOF Presentation and by the distribution of the ACOF Presentation (paragraphs 27 and 28 POC).
(i) breached the NDA;
(ii) breached obligations of confidence; and
(iii) unlawfully used or disclosed Trade Secrets.
(i) the "Opportunities" referred to in the Particulars of Claim are intended to be identical to the "Opportunities" defined in the NDA (Responses 2 and 5);
(ii) the "idea of the Opportunities" is not materially distinct from the "Opportunities" and is confidential information in Annexes 1 and 6 (Response 3);
(iii) the "information imparted in respect of the Opportunities" is the Confidential Information (Response 4);
but decline to confirm that:
(iv) the Confidential Information constitutes the entirety of the confidential information relied on by the Claimant as further particulars are proposed to be provided by way of a Confidential Annex to the Reply (Response 6).
The Proposed Amendments to the Particulars of Claim
(i) ones dealing with the Claimant company and its history (paragraphs 1, 3, 5-5E APOC);
(ii) ones relating to the preliminary discussions between the parties (paragraphs 7-8 APOC);
(iii) ones relating to the Joint Venture document (paragraphs 9-10 APOC);
(iv) ones relating to the Non-Disclosure and Non-Circumvention Agreement consequential on the re-arrangement of the definition of "the Opportunities" (paragraphs 13 and 14 APOC);
(v) ones relating to the NDA including the express adoption of the term "Opportunities" in the pleading as defined in the NDA (paragraph 16 APOC):
(vi) ones specifying that the confidential information relied upon is now set out in Amended Confidential Annex 1 ("ACA1") (paragraph 18, reference in paragraph19 to ACA1, and ACA1 APOC);
(vii) refinements of the dates at which information is claimed to be protected in equity only or also by contract and clarification of the claim in relation to Trade Secrets (paragraphs balance of 19, 20 and 20A APOC);
(viii) ones limiting the copyright claim to an earlier version of the document previously relied upon, namely one pre-dating any involvement of the Defendants (paragraphs 21 and 31 APOC);
(ix) ones consequential on the proposed amendments to 19, 20 and 20A (paragraph 22 APOC);
(x) ones clarifying how the dissemination of the ACOF Presentation came to the attention of the Claimant (paragraphs 27 a to c APOC) and ones pleading further information derived from the First Defendant's website about the ACOF (paragraph 27d APOC); and finally
(xi) amendments to plead that the ACOF itself misuses the Confidential Information and/or Trade Secrets set out in ACA 1 by misuse of the Big Idea and/or the Detail (paragraph 28 APOC) and amendments to plead that the ACOF presentation misuses the Confidential Information and/or Trade Secrets set out in ACA1 by misuse of the Big Idea and/or the Detail (paragraph 28A APOC) in the case of each paragraph by reference to the misuse set out in Amended Confidential Annex 5 ("ACA5") (original Confidential Annex 6 is no longer relied upon and ACA5 is essentially its replacement).
Confidential Information
Misuse
Defendants' Position
Analysis of "Big Idea" and "Detail" Amendments
"As to it being allegedly unclear whether any of the matters alleged under paragraph 3 are said to be (i) confidential information or (ii) part of the Big Idea the answer is both: everything in [ACA1] is asserted as being Confidential Information and since those points appear under the heading "The Big Idea", of course they are said to form part of the Big Idea;
The pleading of the Big Idea and the Detail is not "unintelligible". Our clients' case is that the pieces of information (in this case "the Detail") in combination can have special composite value and confer a considerable advantage (in this case, the "Big Idea"), so it apposite to plead confidentiality in respect of both. This is why the Big Idea is pleaded separately from the Detail, yet, as you correctly note, it is also said to be the sum total of the Detail."
(i) the distinction, if any, between the "Big Idea" and the totality of "the Detail";
(ii) where, if anywhere, the "recipe of application" is to be found;
(iii) upon what confidential information or trade secret the Claimant relies within the documents, introductions and legal advice detailed in ACA1; and
(iv) whether there is said to be some particular combination of the elements of the Detail or the Confidential Information which has "special composite value" and, if so, what that combination is and whether that is different from "the Big Idea".
Analysis of Misuse Allegations
Conclusions
ADDENDUM