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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Beckett Investment Management Group Ltd & Ors v Hall & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 613 (28 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/613.html Cite as: [2007] IRLR 793, [2007] ICR 1539, [2007] EWCA Civ 613 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (HHJ SEYMOUR QC)
HQ06X03256
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
____________________
Beckett Investment Management Group Ltd & ors |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Glyn Hall & ors |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Peter Oldham (instructed by Messrs Bradshaw Hollingsworth) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 21 May 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
The trial
"Mr Yadev and Mr Hall did not discuss Mr Yadev's proposed new business at all until the day Mr Yadev handed in his resignation from BIMG, 28 April 2006 … By this date Mr Hall had written his letter of resignation of 4 April 2006, but had been in discussion with his fellow directors about the possibility that he would stay. The first discussion between Mr Yadev and Mr Hall was in May 2006 and at that time Mr Hall agreed in principle to join Mr Yadev in the new business. Mr Hall even at that time was considering all his options. He made his final decision on 30 June 2006. Mr Yadev and Mr Hall … each worked loyally and industrially for BIMG and BFS until each left his employment … Mr Hall and Mr Yadev never discussed or agreed that each or either of them should act in breach of his contract of employment in order to advance the business of Hyrifa. In fact … each of them set out not to solicit the custom of any existing BFS customer, but each decided, independently, that it was not unlawful for him to act for a former client of BFS who specifically requested him to act … They did not discuss the views to which they had come on this point at any stage prior to the commencement of this action. … Mr Yadev retained 17 files belonging to BFS after the termination of his employment by oversight and not out of some impure motive … Mr Hall was not aware of who Mr Yadev was acting for Trueway or Hyrifa whilst Mr Hall remained at BIMG. Even after Mr Hall joined Hyrifa I accept that essentially Mr Yadev and Mr Hall each had his own customers with whom he dealt and was not aware in any detail of the identities of the clients of the other until that issue fell to be addressed in the context of the present action. … Hyrifa has in fact done business for 32 clients for whom BFS had previously done business and been in contact with a further 31."
Express terms regarding Restrictions after Termination of Employment
"The employee hereby agrees with the Company that for the period of his … employment and for the period of 12 months immediately following the termination of his … employment with the Company he … shall not, whether on his own account or with, through, for or on behalf of any other person, firm, company or organisation, directly or indirectly, deal with or attempt to deal with, any Relevant Client for the purpose of supplying, or seeking to supply, thereto any Prohibited Services."
"the provision of advice in relation to pensions, life assurance, investments and other advice of a type provided by the Company in the ordinary course of its business at the date of termination of the Employee's employment with it."
"any person, firm, company or organisation whom or which was at any time during the period of 12 months immediately prior to the termination of the Employee's employment a client of the Company (or Subsidiary Company) with whom or which the Employee dealt in the course of his … employment during that 12 month period."
That primary definition was extended in a way to which I shall return in paragraph 30.
Construction issues
"… it follows that neither Mr Hall nor Mr Yadev was in breach of clause 17.3 because neither of them supplied or sought to supply advice of a type provided by BIMG in the ordinary course of its business at the date of the termination of his employment. It follows that the claims of the claimants against the defendants all fail."
"Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract."
"Agreements in restraint of trade, like other agreements, must be construed with reference to the object sought to be attained by them."
"… if the parties meant to include in any particular reference to BIMG reference to its subsidiaries, they did so. In the end, in my judgment, the latter is the only sense one can make of the frequent use of the words "the Company (or Subsidiary Company)", where they appear. Thus, even though the effect of such construction is to deprive clause 17.3 of practical utility … I hold that what was prevented by clause 17.3 of the relevant contracts of employment, as a matter of construction, was only doing business with 'clients', in the sense which I have construed that expression, for the purpose of supplying or seeking to supply advice of the type provided by BIMG at the dates of the respective terminations of the contracts of Mr Hall and Mr Yadev."
"The answer is, I think, the law today has regard to the realities of big business. It takes the group as being one concern under one supreme control."
"The subsidiary companies were merely agencies or instrumentalities through which the appellant company directed its integrated business." (at page 404D)
These words resonate in the present case.
Enforceability
"(1) If the Court is to uphold the validity of any covenant in restraint of trade, the covenantee must show that the covenant is both reasonable in the interests of the contracting parties and reasonable in the interests of the public: see for example Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby … (at page 707 per Lord Parker of Waddington) …
(3) In the case of contracts between master and servant, covenants against competition are never as such upheld by the Court …
(4) The subject matter in respect of which an employer may legitimately claim protection from an employee by covenant in restraint of trade was further identified by Lord Wilberforce in Stenhouse Ltd v Phillips [above paragraph 19] at page 400 as follows
'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.'
(5) If, however, the court is to uphold restrictions which a covenant imposes upon the freedom of action of the servant after he has left the service of the master, the master must satisfy the Court that the restrictions are no greater than are reasonably necessary for the protection of the master in his business: see Mason v Providence Clothing and Supply Co Ltd … at page 742 per Lord Moulton … "
"The subsidiary companies were merely agencies or instrumentalities through which the appellant company directed its integrated business. Not only did the appellant company have a real interest in protecting the businesses of the subsidiaries, but the real interest of so doing was that of the appellant company. It is not necessary to resort to a conception of 'group enterprise' to support these proceedings. The case is, more simply, that of the appellant's business being to some extent handled for it by subsidiary companies."
I have no doubt that BIMG had a legitimate interest to protect by a restrictive covenant.
"… the period of 12 months for which the restraint was sought was in fact purely arbitrary. The clause was thus, in my judgment, too wide on that account. If the reason for a covenant was [to give the covenantee the opportunity to try to stabilise its client base following the departure of an adviser and to rebuild client contact and personal trust], what was needed was only a period long enough to enable BFS to make contact with a client … and thereafter to have an adequate opportunity, if the client was not immediately persuaded to continue to do business with BFS, to seek to change his mind. I would have thought that three months would have been adequate for that purpose. Any longer period would have had the effect that the client, being unimpressed by the possibility of continuing to do business with BFS, was prevented from doing business with someone with whom he had confidence. Once BFS had made its pitch and had failed, to prevent a client from doing business with someone in whom he did have confidence seems to me to be contrary to public policy."
"The courts will, in most cases, carefully consider the nature of the market in which the employee was engaged. The narrower and more specialist the market, thus the more likely it is that a non-dealing covenant will upheld, given that clients will in those circumstances naturally gravitate to the ex-employee who opens a new, competing company in such a case."
"… there are significant difficulties in policing a non-solicitation covenant … and that is why there is included a 12 month non-dealing covenant which gives Beckett the opportunity to try to stabilise its client base (into which much time and effort has been invested) following the departure of an adviser. We need this period of time to rebuild client contact, the nature of our business is sporadic and with some clients there may only be annual contact. It is important to rebuild personal trust and therefore a non-dealing clause is important and necessary for the protection of our business interests. A 12 month non-dealing clause such as this is standard in the industry."
The extended definitions
"If the Employee so dealt with an individual in that individual's capacity as an officer, employee or representative of any firm, company or organisation, that firm, company or organisation shall be deemed to be a 'Relevant Client' and the individual shall also be deemed to be a 'Relevant Client' in his or her personal capacity as well. If the Employee had, on behalf of the Company during the 12 month period, dealt with an individual on behalf of others that individual and those others shall be deemed to be Relevant Clients as well."
"The first point to note about this extended definition is that it is a deeming provision; it provides that something should be considered to be so which was not in fact so. That is important. … The object of the extended definition in clause 17.1.3 was to bring within the meaning of 'Relevant Client' people who would not otherwise have done so. It does not seem to me that there was any justification for such an extended definition."
"when an employer had exacted a covenant deliberately framed in unreasonably wide terms, the courts were to come to his assistance and, by employing their ingenuity and knowledge of the law, carve out of this void covenant the maximum of what he might validly have required."
"I think, therefore, that it is still the law that a contract can be severed if the severed parts are independent of one another and can be severed without the severance affecting the meaning of the part remaining."
"where the two parts of a covenant are expressed in such a way as to amount to a clear severance by the parties themselves, and as to be substantially equivalent to two separate covenants".
"The learned judges of the Divisional Court, I think, took the view that such severance always was permissible when it could be effectively accomplished by the action of a blue pencil. I do not agree. The doctrine of severance has not, I think, gone further than to make it permissible in a case where the covenant is not really a single covenant but is in effect a combination of several distinct covenants. In that case and where the severance can be carried out without the addition or alteration of a word, it is permissible. But in that case only."
"We are not alone in looking askance at this … point in Attwood v Lamont … we are able to state our preference for a system of law which holds that if you find two restraints which as a matter of construction are to be regarded as intended by the parties to be separate and severable, and the excision of the unenforceable restraint being capable of being made without other addition or modification, there is no third question, even in master and servant cases."
"… a contract which contains an unenforceable provision nevertheless remains effective after the removal or severance of that provision if the following conditions are satisfied:
(1) the unenforceable provision is capable of being removed without the necessity of adding to or modifying the wording of what remains;
(2) the remaining terms continue to be supported by adequate consideration;
(3) the removal of the unenforceable provision does not so change the character of the contract that it becomes 'not the sort of contract that the parties entered into at all'."
"a matter of construction, including the question whether one obligation can be removed or severed without altering the nature of the contract and without having to add or modify the wording otherwise than by excision."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Carnwath:
The Master of the Rolls