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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Porton Capital Technology Funds & Anor v 3m UK Holdings Ltd & Anor [2010] EWHC 114 (Comm) (02 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/114.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 114 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) PORTON CAPITAL TECHNOLOGY FUNDS (A BODY CORPORATE) (2) PORTON CAPITAL INC. |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) 3M UK HOLDINGS LIMITED (2) 3M COMPANY |
Defendants |
____________________
for the Claimants
Mr S. Salzedo (instructed by Simmons & Simmons) for the Defendants
Hearing date: Friday 22nd January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Christopher Clarke :
Facts
Two potential witnesses
The background to the dispute
"I had a call from Daryl from 3M [Daryl Jones, a senior legal adviser at the 3M subsidiary which used to employ him] the 2 days after you called me. I told them I had been asked for a witness statement from yourselves and planned to be in London on Tuesday 8th December to provide a witness statement. They informed me that I was bound by a confidentiality agreement and could not provide a witness statement on this and would contact you to make that clear. Clearly I am caught between the 2 parties and need you both to clarify the conflicting legal position before I can provide a witness statement"
"What 3M have done is a clear attempt to interfere with our clients' preparation of this litigation by using totally unjustified and unfounded suggestions of continuing interests of confidentiality coupled with threats to use the undoubted might of 3M against individuals who cannot possibly be expected to stand out against such intimidation. That is simply not acceptable."
a. Information in relation to the matters in dispute is not confidential as between the parties for the purposes of these proceedings and accordingly MWE may seek such information from the two individuals in relation to the matters in dispute for the purpose of these proceedings and the two individuals may provide such information without either of them being thereby in breach of their confidentiality obligations to the defendants; alternatively
b. An order staying 3M's counterclaim until it waives the confidentiality obligations to the defendants of the two individuals (and those of any other relevant ex-employees/consultants of 3M or Acolyte to whom MWE may wish to speak for the purposes of these proceedings) in respect of the matters in dispute as between the parties for the purposes of the proceedings; that
c. If and so far as 3M's order for a confidentiality club (see para 15 below) is granted such order is to be subject to the condition that the two individuals (and any other ex-Acolyte or ex-3M employees or consultants to whom MWE may wish to speak for the purposes of the proceedings) are within that club and that any duties of confidentiality that they may owe to the defendants in relation to the matters in dispute be waived as between the parties for the purpose of these proceedings.
Principles
"(a) the document has been read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public;
(b) the court gives permission; or
(c) the party who disclosed the document and the person to whom the document belongs agree."
a. The Claimants were a consortium ("the Consortium") which entered into a contract with the second defendant ("Techint") to construct a marine terminal. The contract provided for increases in the contract price to be effected by a "change order" system.
b. The proceedings related to an arbitration between Techint and the Consortium for payment of sums allegedly due as increases in the contract price pursuant to the system. A consulting engineer company, OGP, had given advice (which was not privileged) to the Consortium as to payments in respect of change orders [§1-4 and 9].
c. The Consortium sought an order requiring the defendants ("FE", who were Techint's solicitors and "Techint") to identify the source of information which the Consortium alleged (on the basis of the contents of a letter written by FE to the Consortium's solicitors) they or one of them must have obtained in breach of confidence [§6 and 26].
d. The Tribunal ordered disclosure of all OGP advice regarding change orders. The Consortium agreed to give such disclosure. It also indicated that it would call evidence from OGP personnel and said that Techint could do so if it wished [§9-11].
e. Techint challenged the adequacy of the Consortium's disclosure on the grounds that OGP's advice to pay USD40 million in respect of change orders not finalised was not evidenced by it [§13]. It was this information which was said to have been obtained in breach of confidence. It emerged that information that there was such advice had been obtained by FE, Techint's lawyers, by interviewing potential witnesses. Their identity was not revealed. [§24].
f. The Consortium alleged that whether the information had come from employees or ex-employees of OGP or the Consortium, the person(s) giving the information was in breach of a duty of confidence and FE must have known that that was so [§30]. They sought orders which would have compelled revelation of his or their identity.
g. The Vice-Chancellor rejected the allegation [§37], saying, inter alia::
"I am not satisfied that any advice or recommendation by OGP to the Consortium of the type alleged in the particulars of claim is either confidential or privileged as between the Consortium and FE and Techint. The actions of the Consortium in agreeing to disclose and inviting Techint to obtain such oral evidence from OGP as they wish is inconsistent with the claim to confidence and privilege now maintained. The Tribunal has already determined that documents of the description given in the particulars of claim are discloseable and are not privileged. Neither FE nor Techint has threatened to use any information they may obtain outside the proper confines of the arbitration."
The alternative
" the court will grant a stay unless a claimant consents to relevant information being obtained from a treating doctor. There is no property in a witness, but there is a right of confidentiality between a patient and his treating doctor which the law will uphold. It is a right which it is for a patient to waive and he can only waive it voluntarily. The court will not order him to waive such a right. But in an appropriate case, the court can order that the claim be stayed until such time as he consents to waive his right of confidentiality."
The confidentiality club application
"Each case has to be decided on its own facts and the broad principle must be that the court has the task of deciding how justice can be achieved taking into account the rights and needs of the parties. The object to be achieved is that the applicant should have as full a degree of disclosure as will be consistent with adequate protection of the secret. In so doing, the court will be careful not to expose a party to any unnecessary risk of its trade secrets leaking to or being used by competitors. What is necessary or unnecessary will depend upon the nature of the secret, the position of the parties and the extent of the disclosure ordered. However, it would be exceptional to prevent a party from access to information which would play a substantial part in the case as such would mean that the party would be unable to hear a substantial part of the case, would be unable to understand the reasons for the advice given to him and, in some cases, the reasons for the judgment. Thus what disclosure is necessary entails not only practical matters arising in the conduct of a case but also the general position that a party should know the case he has to meet, should hear matters given in evidence and understand the reasons for the judgment."
The correspondence
"However, it is clear that your clients are intent on using the issue of confidentiality to make sure that we and our clients are not able to investigate properly the relevant issues and the underlying facts and are not able to obtain the evidence which we might otherwise wish to adduce. That being the case, we are currently not minded to accede to your request that all of your clients' disclosure should be treated as confidential "
"(A) information on the Defendants' investment strategy, and sales and profits projections for BacLite and for the Medical Division;
(B) intelligence on the competitors of the Defendants' Medical Division and their products;
(C) proprietary research that the Defendants have conducted or commissioned into the markets for MRSA and other microbial detection products;
(D) information on the resources and costs of the Defendants' Medical Division, and specific financial and strategic information about Medical Division products other than BacLite. Many of these products are still actively sold by the Defendants;
(E) specific information on the Fastman product, which the Defendants continue actively to develop; and
(F) management-level documents in the possession of senior personnel within the Defendants concerning the finances of and the short-, medium- and long-term business strategies of the Defendants' Medical Division."
The statement goes on
13. In addition, the Defendants' disclosure contains information on how the Medical Division conducts its day-to-day business. The Defendants' disclosure therefore contains a large amount of material that the Defendants view as being commercially sensitive".
"The fact that a document discloses matter of commercial interest described as "sensitive" does not necessarily mean that it should be excluded from public inspection. Statements of this kind are too vague to give good grounds for consideration, and if a request is made for confidentiality of this type of material, a rather more exact indication should be given as to the reasons why the document ought not to be disclosed."
The claimants' submissions
The defendants' submissions
Conclusion
"(a) the document has been read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public"
Whilst the draft contains a liberty to apply I think it appropriate that this particular provision should be specifically subject to any order of the court to the contrary, in order to underscore the fact that the court may wish to reconsider the position. The present order should not include the trial of the action; although it will be open to the trial judge to make whatever order, if any, he then thinks appropriate.
Note 1 Whether the Consortium had invited Techint to obtain oral evidence from OGP (their solicitors had said if [Techint] wishes to call OGP witnesses as well, this is entirely a matter for them) may perhaps be debatable. [Back]