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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Sparta Global Ltd & Anor v Hayes & Anor [2024] EWHC 100 (KB) (25 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/100.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 100 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
(1) Sparta Global Limited (2) Condor Topco Limited |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) Ben Hayes (2) Kubrick Group Limited |
Defendants |
____________________
for the Claimants
Judy Stone (instructed by TLT LLP) for the First Defendant
Simon Devonshire KC (instructed by Eversheds Sutherland) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 7 December 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Dexter Dias KC :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Section | Contents | Paragraphs |
I. | Introduction | 3-9 |
II. | Applications | 10-14 |
III. | Evidence | 15-16 |
IV. | Chronology | 17 |
V. | Covenants | 18 |
VI. | Law | 19-27 |
VII. | Serious issue to be tried | 28-30 |
VIII. | Adequacy of damages | 31-33 |
IX. | Investment agreement | 34-56 |
X. | Balance of convenience | 57-75 |
XI. | Disposal | 76-77 |
§I. INTRODUCTION
"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."
§II. APPLICATIONS
Application 1
Application 2
§III. EVIDENCE
§IV. CHRONOLOGY
Date | Detail |
2020 13 October |
IA involving private equity house and certain Sparta personnel. |
24 November | Mr Hayes's contract of employment with Sparta. |
2021 8 March |
Mr Hayes signs Deed of Adherence. |
2023 August |
Mr Hayes interviewed by Kubrick. |
25 September | Mr Hayes's notice to resign. Subsequently placed on garden leave. |
22 October | End of gardening leave (final date of employment). |
6 November | Sparta letter to Mr Hayes asking whether he intends to take up employment with Kubrick. No allegations of misuse of confidential information made. |
9 November | Mr Hayes replies that he is reviewing Sparta's letter and taking legal advice. He requests the IA "deed", saying he has not received a copy. |
10 November | Sparta serves Mr Hayes with an unsealed copy of the claim for injunction proceedings and application for interim relief to last until 25 March 2023 - 6 months from the 25 September resignation. The draft order contains a penal notice. No undertakings sought from Mr Hayes. |
13 November | Mr Hayes's solicitors (TLT) reply. Mr Hayes rejects the suggestion he has misused confidential information, but offers undertakings that he would not solicit Sparta's clients nor misuse its confidential information. |
15 November | Sparta rejects undertakings and insists on the full relief applied for. |
16 November | Mr Hayes offers an undertaking that he will perform only a role involving different duties form those he performed for Sparta – confined to the Technology Partners Manager Role ("TP Role") until 25 March 2024. |
17 November | First hearing. Sparta indicates that it will apply to enforce the IA (as well as apply for the imaging order) at the adjourned hearing date on 7 December. |
22 November | Parties agree draft order, including directions for service of evidence. |
24 November | Application notice 2 (see above). |
5 December | Letter from claimants' solicitors (Osborne Clarke LLP): application for imaging order withdrawn along with specific disclosure application. Interim relief against Kubrick withdrawn altogether. |
7 December | Second hearing. Return/adjourned date. |
§V. COVENANTS
Clause 16.1(f) ["Clause F", or the "non-compete"]:
"in the case of any Manager who is not David Rai or Tim Staton, he or she will not at any time while the Manager is a director, employee or consultant of the Company or any other Group Company or during the period of 12 calendar
months from the Applicable Date, directly or indirectly:
(i) engage in; or
(ii) be concerned or interested in,
any Restricted Business in the Restricted Territory'
The Term 'Restricted Business' means
"the business carried in by the Target [the Claimant] and any other business
conducted or proposed to be conducted by any Group Company in the 24
calendar month period immediately prior to the Relevant Date [the date when a person ceases to be employed] including (but not limited to) the business of the training and deployment of technology and business consultants to public and private sector organisations"
The 'Restricted Territory' is the UK and anywhere else where the Claimant has in the 24 months prior to the termination of the individual's employment actively explored carrying on business.
The 'Applicable Date' is the earlier of the date when the employee ceases to be employed or to hold an interest in shares.
Clause 16.1(g) ["Clause G" or the "non-solicitation"] provides that:
"in the case of a Manager who is not David Rai or Tim Staton, he or she will not during the period of 12 calendar months from the Applicable Date, directly or indirectly:
(i) seek to procure orders from or solicit the custom of or deal with any
person, firm, organisation or company with whom he or she had any
material dealings at any time during the period of 12 calendar months
ending on the Relevant Date so as to compete with or harm the goodwill of the Company or any other Group Company during such period."
§VI. LAW
(1) Is there a serious question to be tried?
(2) Would damages be an adequate remedy for either of the parties injured by granting/not granting the injunction?
(3) If not, where does the balance of convenience lie?
"Lord Diplock's speech is neither a statute
nor a biblical text, and should not be read as if it were
either. The Cyanamid case itself was a large and
complex patent claim. The interlocutory injunction
which was the subject of appeal to this court (where
the hearing lasted eight days) and the House of Lords
(where it took a mere three days) had been granted in
the High Court on 30 July 1973. The case did not come
to trial until the autumn of 1977, and the trial lasted
some 100 working days (see [1979] RPC 215). It is one
thing to say in a case of such complexity and duration
that on an interlocutory injunction application the
court should not go beyond asking whether there is a
serious question to be tried. But in an employment
case of far more limited scope it may be unjust to stop
at that: and it should always be remembered that the
statutory test for the grant of an injunction is whether
it is just and convenient. Hence the decision of this
court in Lansing Linde Ltd v Kerr [1991] IRLR 80,
[1991] ICR 428 that where it will not be possible to
hold a trial until the period of the covenant has
expired, or substantially expired, it is permissible for
the judge to form at least a preliminary view of the
claimant's prospects of success, and to factor that in at
the 'balance of convenience' stage of the analysis."
"A restrictive covenant is void as an unlawful restraint of trade unless the employer can show that it goes no further than is reasonably necessary to protect his legitimate business interests."
"there must be some subject matter which an employer can legitimately
protect by a legitimate covenant. Indeed Lord Wilberforce said in Stenhouse Australia v Phillips [1974] AC 391; [1974] 2 WLR 134 at 400 E "the employer's claim for protection must be based upon the identification of some advantage or asset inherent in the business which can properly be regarded as, in a general sense, his property, and which it would be unjust to allow the employee to appropriate for his own purposes, even though he, the employee, may have contributed to its creation."
§VII. SERIOUS ISSUE TO BE TRIED
§VIII. ADEQUACY OF DAMAGES
"… in cases such as this damages are not what an employer wants. The damages potentially sufferable by a covenantee such as the claimant by breach of the relevant restraint will usually be unquantifiable and will rarely, if ever, provide the covenantee with an adequate substitute for an injunction."
"it is quite unrealistic to argue that (since the Claimants have the resources to honour the crossundertaking) damages would be an adequate remedy for the Defendant if an injunction against competition was granted at the interlocutory stage, but was proved at trial to have been an unenforceable restraint of trade. Except in cases of very wealthy defendants, or where the claimant employer is offering paid garden leave for the whole period of the restraint, this argument has no traction. Mr Gilligan's evidence is that he has a wife and child, a mortgage and other family commitments. It is by no means clear that his current employers would be able and willing to transfer him to work which had no connection with facilities management software; indeed it would be risky for them to do so in the face of a non-competition injunction breach of which would be a contempt of court. The likely effect of such an injunction would be to deprive him of his income until and unless he can find a new job."
§IX. INVESTMENT AGREEMENT
"in an employment case of far more limited scope it may be unjust to stop at that: and it should always be remembered that the statutory test for the grant of an injunction is whether it is just and convenient."
"where it will not be possible to hold a trial until the period of the covenant has expired, or substantially expired, it is permissible for the judge to form at least a preliminary view of the claimant's prospects of success, and to factor that in at the "balance of convenience" stage".
"28 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.
29 Similar approaches were advocated in cases such as Lawrence David Ltd v Ashton [1989] I.C.R. 123 at 135. In those circumstances, the proper approach is not to apply the American Cyanamid test on this application, but instead to consider in respect of claims for an injunction whether it is more likely that CEF would succeed at trial."
"the court will consider a number of factors in assessing reasonableness including the factual and contractual background and the relevant bargaining strength of the parties." [71] (and see also [65]).
"inequality of bargaining power … is a significant factor in determining reasonableness" and "where there is such inequality, the court will be astute to examine any restrictive covenant critically to ensure that it is only upheld if it is reasonable between the parties in all the circumstances." [73].
"[It] may make an agreement "more akin to a contract of employment" [77], particularly where a party is not given any opportunity to negotiate the terms [81]."
"The length of the period of notice can be an indication of the unreasonableness regarding the duration of the restraint."
"24. There may, however, be an easier solution. The covenant in the employment contract is narrower. It is shorter. It lasts only 6 months. In fact, the definition of Termination Date means that the restraint only runs from the date when garden leave commenced so there are only 5 months more to run if one takes the 6 months as running from the date when the Defendant gave notice not the date of termination.
25. Certainly for the purposes of this application, but the Claimant will suggest the same at the Return Date, it is necessary to consider only the employment contract. If it is possible to get on a speedy trial by the latter half of March 2024, the investment agreement will only have to be considered at trial."
"Whilst (as already made clear) our client will abide by any interim injunctive order made, it will not be able to keep Mr Hayes on the books if he is unable to do any work. We have to say that we are surprised by this change of position. As apparent from your Leading Counsel's skeleton argument at the hearing on 17 November 2023, Sparta's stated position at that stage was that it was only seeking to enforce the employment non-compete at that hearing and on any Return Date (paras 24 to 26), and in advocating the reasonableness of that restriction relied on the fact that the clause did not preclude his working for Kubrick in a non-competitive role (e.g. paras 34 and 35). Sparta's position at that stage was that this would hold the ring over to the speedy trial in March 2023. We do not understand what has changed."
"34. Non-compete covenants have been struck down because they are not limited to activity which competes with the employer: Scully v Lee [1998] IRLR 259 or because the activity in which the employee is restrained from engaging is not confined to that which was undertaken by the employee for the employer: Wincanton v Cranny [2000] IRLR 716. Covenants restraining solicitation with clients have been struck down because they extended to clients with whom the employee had not dealt: Austin Knight v Hinds [1994] FSR 42.
35. The covenants in this case have none of those defects and so are appropriately focused and do not offer the employer more than adequate protection."
§X. BALANCE OF CONVENIENCE
"An employer's justification for a restraint has to be analysed and to be scrutinised with particular care, as experience shows that employers in many cases exaggerate the reasons why post-termination restraint provisions are reasonable. So a decision tailored to the facts of the claim against particular employees is required."
"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."
§XI. DISPOSAL
(1) Application to enforce IA covenants against the defendant: dismissed.
(2) Application to join Kubrick as second defendant: granted.
(3) Application to join Condor as second claimant: granted.
UPDATE