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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 >> British Midland Tool Ltd v Midland International Tooling Ltd & Ors [2003] EWHC 466 (Ch) (12 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/466.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 466 (Ch), [2003] 2 BCLC 523 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BRITISH MIDLAND TOOL LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
and – |
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MIDLAND INTERNATIONAL TOOLING LIMITED BRADFORD TOOL & GAUGE LIMITED DONALD ALLEN ALAN MORLEY WAYNE ALLEN ALAN SMITH (7) WILLIAM MCGRATH |
Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by Cripps & Shone) for the Claimant
Mrs Jane Giret QC and Miss Tina Kyriakides
(instructed by Whitaker Firth) for the Defendants
Hearing dates : 10,11,15,16,17,18,21,22,23,24,25,28,29,30 Oct 2002, 1,5,6,7,8,11,12,13,14,15,18,19,20,22,25,26,27,28 Nov 2002, 16,17,18,19 Dec 2002, 12 March 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hart:
[Transcript references have been taken in the main from the electronic rather than the printed transcript]
CONTENTS
I | INTRODUCTION | 1-29 |
The Claims | 10-17 | |
The principal personalities | 18-24 | |
The witnesses for the claimant | 26 | |
The witnesses for the defendants | 27 | |
A background of tension | 28-29 | |
II | THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PLAN | 30-76 |
Autumn 1999 | 30-55 | |
The nature of Mr McGrath's participation | 50-52 | |
Legal Advice is taken | 53-55 | |
January February and March 2000 | 56-72 | |
The recruitment of a workforce | 60-72 | |
April 2000 | 73-76 | |
III | LEGAL ISSUES ARISING ON FINDINGS THUS FAR | 77-92 |
IV | CONCLUSIONS ON LIABILITY | 93-95 |
V | ELECTRONIC COPYING | 96-141 |
MIT HP Brio computer ("the Brio") | 96-103 | |
BMT Eagle Computer | 104-107 | |
BMT SSC Computer ("the SSC") | 108-109 | |
Issues on the Electronic drawings | 110-134 | |
Liability in relation to the Electronic drawings | 135-141 | |
VI | HARD COPY DRAWINGS | 142-158 |
I4/I5 Hard Copies | 157-158 | |
VII | CONFIDENTIALITY OF THE DRAWINGS | 159-168 |
VIII | THE CADDRAUGHT DISC | 169-175 |
IX | PRICING INFORMATION | 176-179 |
X | SOLICITATION OF CUSTOMERS | 180-185 |
XII | CORPORATE OPPORTUNITY | 186-187 |
XII | DAMAGES | 188-252 |
Principles | 188-200 | |
The value of the business | 201-237 | |
The Claimant's evidence | 201-204 | |
The Defendants evidence | 205-208 | |
The main points of difference | 209-210 | |
What is being valued | 211-214 | |
How should interest be dealt with | 215-219 | |
The significance of the Revised Budget | 220-224 | |
Appropriate Adjustments | 225-233 | |
Conclusions on Adjustments to maintainable earnings | 234 | |
The Multiple | 235-236 | |
Conclusion on value of the business | 237 | |
Losses | 238-250 | |
Closure costs | 247-250 | |
Exemplary damages | 251-252 | |
XIII | CONCLUSION | 253 |
I INTRODUCTION
The Claims
i) the setting up of MIT as a vehicle to carry on a competitive business with BMT;ii) the copying and/or taking for use in MIT's competing business of (a) numerous drawings in hard copy and electronic form, (b) CNC computer programmes for the control of relevant machine tools (c) BMT pricing information and (d) information relating to BMT's customers;
iii) inducing CADdraught (a company subcontracted by BMT to produce drawings for it) to supply MIT with numerous drawings produced by it for BMT;
iv) enticing away 19 of BMT's employees;
v) approaching BMT's customers to advise them of the secession of BMT's management and workforce and of MIT's desire to service their needs instead of BMT;
vi) concealing from the other directors of BMT and Holdings the steps which they were taking.
The principal personalities
Witnesses
Employees
(1) Paul Bland. He was the CAD operator at BMT and left to join MIT as from 10th April 2000. He left his employment with MIT on 22nd December 2000. The principal thrust of his evidence was that he had been supplied by Alan Pearce in May 2000 with a CD (possibly two) containing a large number of drawings taken from the BMT CAD system, and had, with Wayne Allen's express approval, embarked on the task of loading these on to the MIT computer converting them in the process into drawings bearing an MIT logo and other indicia of MIT origin. Both Alan Pearce and Wayne Allen deny all knowledge of this episode. It is the case, however, that the MIT computer contained numerous drawings which had a BMT origin and which had been subjected to some such process of conversion.(2) John Crofts. He was a long standing employee (a surface and cutter grinder) of BMT who did not join the exodus but stayed with BMT until its closure in August 2001. His evidence was that he had had conversations with Alan Smith, Alan Morley and Wayne Allen about the possibility of his joining MIT but had decided against doing so. He also gave evidence of a conversation he had with Vince Mosson, in which the latter admitted that he had made "huge amounts of photocopies of drawings for next door".
(3) David Sutton. He worked at BMT from early 1998 as a cylindrical grinder and joined the exodus. He was eventually made redundant by MIT on 30th November 2001, finally settling an unfair dismissal claim against MIT in May 2002. He gave evidence that Vince Mosson had admitted to him that he had photocopied numerous BMT drawings prior to the exodus. He gave evidence of management ordering "doubling up" of tooling in the early months of 2000 (an allegation not pursued) and of a conversation with Alan Smith in which he was advised to apply for the job advertised in the Tamworth Herald. He claims that he did apply, but that the application form disclosed by the defendants is a forgery. He claims that Alan Morley told the seceding workforce to confront Tim Allen with difficult questions at the meeting held on 3rd April 2000 and that Alan Smith told those who were leaving to take with them what they needed, and that he had taken certain items (including some drawings for Albon tools, having been told by Alan Morley that "we will be getting Albon work next door"). He also gave evidence as to the "lifting" of the BMT compressor and the Toshiba laptop, as well as other items in relation to which there were no pleaded allegations. He gave evidence that Alan Smith had indicated that the Ford work could be expected to come to MIT. He also gave evidence of a mass shredding exercise that had taken place at MIT following the service of the proceedings.
(4) Victor Tunley. He was another relatively longstanding employee of BMT, working since 1993 as packer and dispatcher who responded to the advertisement as a result, he claims, of advice from Vince Mosson, but who was not offered a job with MIT. He gave evidence of drawings having gone missing from BMT following the exodus, and of a post-exodus conversation with Alan Smith in which Alan Smith had suggested that he make deliberate mistakes in the despatch of BMT tools to customers.
(5) Peter Possee. He was another longstanding employee of BMT who worked as a surface grinder until 1995 when he moved into administration, becoming an assistant buyer. He is a cousin of Alan Morley. He gave evidence as to the dissatisfaction of management with Head Office, and the reluctance with which the Foreman computerised accounting system was installed. His evidence was that there was some shop floor talk about the advertisement before it actually appeared, and that when it did Wayne Allen was at first cagey with him, then encouraged him to apply, but later told him that the new company could not afford him. He therefore did not join the exodus. He deposed to some I4/I5 drawings having gone missing, and also gave evidence about the compressor. He also deposed to conversations with Jackie Yates in which she had told him that copying of drawings had taken place. He says that on about 6 occasions he was asked by Jackie Yates (then at MIT) to supply drawings from BMT's files and did so. He (together with Ian Jackson) was offered, and accepted, a job at MIT in August 2000. He gave evidence as to the use at MIT of BMT originated drawings, the use by MIT of BMT pricing information, the disposal of a compressor and the shredding of documentation following service of the proceedings. He also recounted a graphic incident when Don Allen had allegedly produced some finished tools from a ceiling space. He was dismissed from MIT in October 2001, having become increasingly unhappy with the regime there following the departure of Don Allen and Wayne Allen.
(6) David Sales. He had been an employee of BMT since 1988. He responded to the advertisement but was not offered a post and he therefore stayed with BMT. His evidence went to the compressor issue.
In addition to the above I had read (as requested) a witness statement and affidavit of Philip Baxter (an employee who joined the exodus but who became rapidly disenchanted with MIT and rejoined BMT in late May 2000, and whose evidence was relied upon by BMT in obtaining the search order); and a witness statement of Russell Greenhalgh (an employee who did not join the exodus). They were neither in the event called.Allen Group employees
(8) Marcus Nye. An Allen Group employee, he was responsible for copying files on to CDs from the BMT computers (an Eagle and an SSC) in July and September 2001.
(9) Terence Nye. An Allen Group employee, he was brought in by Tim Allen as part of the management team at BMT on and following 3rd April 2000.
Customers
(10) Paul Male. He was employed by Ford in its Commercial Vehicles Purchasing Department and was involved in Ford's decision (taken in July 2000) to cease to use BMT as a supplier. He also gave evidence as to his dealings with Mr McGrath and Ford's practices with regard to price information, drawings and quality control standards. He also gave a witness statement on behalf of the defendants.
(11) Dr David Lupton. He is employed by Aston University. Drawings done by BMT for Aston University were found on MIT's computer. His evidence that these had not been supplied to MIT by the University was agreed.
(12) Derek Waugh. His evidence, to the like effect in relation to a drawing done by BMT for his company BSK Aluminium (formerly Transtec Cast Products) was agreed.
(13) Trevor Mitchell of Metalocast. His evidence was that Metalocast had never received hard copies of drawing R2AR1 from BMT or MIT. Metalocast had sent a copy of drawing R2AR-3 to MIT in May 2000. This evidence was agreed.
(14) Keith Griffiths of Microbore Tooling Systems. His evidence (again agreed) was that his company had not received electronic drawings from BMT and had not supplied MIT with any BMT drawing. In relation to a drawing (2159 21 03 00) originated by Devlieg Microbore and later adapted he said that both BMT and MIT would have had it available.
(15) Cecil Craig of Calcast Ltd (formerly Transtec Automotive). He gave evidence (again agreed), in relation to 9 paper drawings and 33 electronic drawings, that BMT had not supplied them to Transtec and that Transtec had not supplied MIT with BMT drawings.
(16) John McLarty of Fielding & Platt. He gave evidence (again agreed) in relation to 16 electronic drawings that there was no traceable record of them having been sent to MIT.
(17) Timothy Ladbrooke of Cromwell Tools. His (agreed) evidence was, in relation to two electronic drawings, that Cromwell Tools had not been supplied with them by BMT in either paper or electronic form and had not supplied them to MIT.
(18) John Claypole of Mapal. His evidence, in relation to 9 paper and 1 electronic drawing, was that none had been supplied to Mapal by BMT or by Mapal to MIT. In cross-examination he conceded that the ultimate customer had been KTH/Transtec and that Mapal would not have known of the transmission of drawings between that company and MIT.
I had also read (as requested) the witness statement Roy Arthurton of Lamb Technicon, but his evidence was not in the event led.
Solicitors
(19) Ms Furniss of Cripps & Shone, BMT's solicitors, gave evidence in relation to certain matters arising out of the search, as also did her supervising partner Stephen Robins.
(20) Stephen Robins. His evidence related principally to certain documents which he claimed to have seen in the course of the search but which the defendants suggested had been planted by him.
Miscellaneous
(21) Edna Possee. Her agreed evidence was that Alan Smith had attempted to contact Peter Possee in August 2002 with what appeared to be an offer of help finding employment.
(22) Peter Hicks. He was the estate agent who introduced Don Allen to what became MIT's premises. His evidence was agreed.
(23) Peter Rollin. As an employee of Mercian Training Limited he had been responsible for devising and documenting a Quality Assurance system conforming to the ISO 9002 Quality Management Standard at BTM and subsequently performing the same work for MIT. He also gave a witness statement on behalf of the defendants.
(24) Alexander Lawrence. He was the founder of Mercian Toolmaking who was brought in to assist Tim Allen at BMT in the period following the exodus. He gave evidence in relation to that period and also as to industry practice with regard to the use of manufacturing drawings.
Employees
(1) Vince Mosson. A longstanding employee of BMT he had by 1998 been promoted from the shop floor to be production supervisor, which included the role of "inspector" for the purposes of BMT's ISO 9002 approved quality management system. He was part of the exodus. As appears from the above he was the target of a number of allegations that he had been directly involved in copying BMT's library for the purpose of use at MIT. He denied these charges, while admitting that he had taken photocopies of some quality control forms devised by himself.(2) Alan Pearce. He was also a longstanding BMT employee who joined the exodus. While at BMT only he and Paul Bland had the necessary expertise to use the Autocad software. He denied having supplied Paul Bland at MIT with CDs containing files taken from BMT's computer.
(3) Jackie Yates. She had been the office manager of BMT for some 11 years and was the long term partner of Wayne Allen. Her resignation from BMT was transmitted together with those of the Tamworth 4, but she did not work out her notice on health grounds. She was alleged to have made various incriminating statements (see Peter Possee above) but denied having done so. She also denied having requested him to supply her with drawings from BMT.
(4) Ian Jackson. He was a long-standing employee of BMT, working latterly in Purchase Administration. He applied to join MIT in response to the advertisement but was not offered a job. He later, in August 2000, was offered, and accepted, employment by MIT.
(5) Neil Hirst. He was an OPG (optical profile grinder) and surface grinder operator at BMT for some six years prior to the exodus of which he was a part. He gave evidence as to the events leading up to the exodus and Tim Allen's meeting with the seceding employees on 3rd April, as well as commenting on the relative merits of the machinery operated by him at BMT and MIT.
(6) David Holden. He was employed by BMT as a Universal Grinder for six years before the exodus of which he was part. His evidence was similar to that of Neil Hirst.
(7) Christopher Lakin. He was a surface and external grinder operator with BMT for some 25 years prior to the exodus of which he was part. His evidence ran along similar lines.
(8) Robert Lunn. He had worked at BMT as a CNC cutter grinder and universal miller for some sixteen years at the time of the exodus. He did not respond to the advertisement and continued to work at BMT until 29th May 2000 when he moved to MIT. He was already committed to emigrating to New Zealand and wanted to spend his last few months with colleagues whose company he enjoyed. He said he was unaware of anything having been removed from BMT by those who were part of the exodus. His evidence was given by videolink from New Zealand where he has lived since October 2000.
In addition I had read before the trial, as requested, statements from David Engley, Steve Marklew, and Peter Arnold, but in the event none of them was called.CustomersI had evidence from the following Ford witnesses, namely:(9) Steve Hammond, a Senior Tool Engineer based in Basildon, who was involved in the I4/I5 project and gave evidence as to Ford's practice in making orders and supplying drawings to manufacturers;
(10) Trevor Everett, a senior engineer at Ford Dagenham, who gave evidence as to the reasons underlying that plant's switch of supplier from BMT to MIT;
(11) Michael Jones, a tooling engineer at Ford's Bridgend plant who gave similar evidence in relation to that plant's decision, and also as to Ford's practice in relation to drawings.
(12) Paul Male (see under claimant's witnesses). His witness statement on behalf of the defendants gave a much fuller account of the events leading to the Ford decision no longer to use BMT, and deposed to Ford's practices in relation to drawings.
(13) Alan Payne, the head of Group Staff Tool Engineering at Basildon. His evidence (which was agreed) went to the I4/I5 project, and Ford's practice in relation to drawings.
I also had evidence from the following Albon plc employees(14) David Saul, who testified that Albon's decision to switch to MIT in May 2000 was largely due to the quality of its relationship with Alan Morley;
(15) Ian Lomas, an engineer, who gave evidence that Alan Morley had obtained from him discs containing Albon drawings which had previously been supplied to Albon by Alan Morley in 1999 acting then on behalf of BMT.
I had also read (as requested) a witness statement from Harry Nisbet of Fin Machine Co Ltd who was not in the event called.
Suppliers
(16) Paul Moore, an executive with ANCA Ltd, manufacturers of CNC cutter machines, who gave evidence about the purchase of machines by MIT in April 2000 (the first contact having been made by Don Allen in January 2000).
(17) Martin Cross, ANCA's technical sales manager, whose witness statement, covering similar ground, was (with one excision) agreed.
Solicitors
(18) David Ford, of Argyles, gave evidence by a witness statement (which was agreed) of the advice which he had given to the Tamworth 4 in the period from 16th December 1999 to May 2000.
Miscellaneous
(19) Warren Bradford. He was a friend of Wayne Allen who had originally supplied BMT with its SST computer and who was called in by Tim Allen in May 2000 to repair BMT's Eagle computer. His evidence was that the chip in that computer had been removed. He was also responsible for supplying MIT with computers in May 2000, and in loading a new operating system on MIT's CAD computer in November 2000.
(19) Peter Rollin. See under claimant's witnesses.
(20) John Gold. He is a director of another engineering firm in Tamworth, who gave a witness statement (which was agreed) that he had been approached by Alan Morley around Christmas 1999 with a view to Alan Morley obtaining alternative employment.
(21) Brian Yates. An old friend of Don Allen he gave evidence by a witness statement (which was agreed) that he was approached in November/December 1999 by Don Allen who was looking for money to set up his own small cutting tool business.
(22) Antonio Fontanella. This occupant of neighbouring premises gave evidence by an agreed witness statement of an event he had witnessed in May or June 2000, the relevance of which escaped me.
A Background Of Tension
II THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PLAN
Autumn 1999
The Seeds Of The Plan
Q. So Don does ring you?
A. He did, yes, and that were about half five, quarter to six, Spanish time. I was on the verandah reading my Daily Mail. I were expecting his call.Q Okay, so what does Don say?
A. More or less he'd had enough of working for Mike Allen. He was very derogatory about him and he just wanted to get away, and he thought the other wanted to get - well, he said the others wanted to get away to start their own small business in a small shed with low overheads, and just do enough to earn a living. There were no numbers at this stage regarding turnover or investments, or what have we.Q Not even ball park figures?
A. No, nothing. No, nothing at all, and would I be interested in financing the project. I said: "Well, what's the details?" Well, he didn't have any details: "Well, I'll need two surface grinders, three universal" - he didn't have any detail, how many men. I could tell he were upset. I said: "Well, look, get sorted out, so the answer is provisionally, yes, I'll look into it, so you can ring me any time you want in Spain or England, I'll be back at my desk on December 6th in England, but you can ring me any time you want, either Spain or England, to clarify a bit more what it is you want to do". He didn't want a blank cheque. He wouldn't have got one either.Q No. So you made it clear that if it were to be taken any further it needed some degree of detail - fair enough?
A. Yes. Not detail, but outline detail, yes.Q When you get back from Spain ----
A. No, I got a phone call before I left Spain.Q While you are still in Spain you get another phone call. Who is it from this time?
A. This is Wayne. This is late November or early December. I think it were early December that one. Q What has Wayne got to say? A. Oh, he's irate. I've known Wayne about ten years, I have known Don nearly 30. He were wanting to do it now. He were really irate, were Wayne, "wah, wah, wah", and generally absolutely determined to leave Mike Allen and Tim Allen and the M.D. Allen Group. Again, no details, they wanted to start on their own, and I said: "Well, really, we can't just talk here, me in Spain and you over there, we'll have to have a meeting, so work out your proposals", and we decided that the Saturday morning of 11th December were the right time to do it. That were the last I heard until I got there then."
The Nature Of Mr McGrath's Participation
"The private money I'd got, there was very little point shoving it in a building society, the bank, and filling tax forms in and God knows what else, and it were far easier just to put it into my sons' situations. Then when an opportunity came along like this, I thought: Yes, thank you very much, that'll do nicely. And that's why I did it." [21/44-45]
Legal Advice Is Taken
"The clients are all directors of British Midland Tools Limited. The company was originally Grinding Aids and was owned by Don Allen, but he sold out several years ago but the buyers of his company were not successful and it went into receivership and was then acquired by a private group of companies, the Allen Group. It had been in the ownership of the Allen Group for around nine years and in that time the clients had built-up the business successfully and it had made good profits notwithstanding charges made by the group for the benefit of the parent and other group companies which were detailed by Wayne Allen. In the last trading year the company had returned profits of £107,000 but in the last quarter of the year it had lost money and it was expected that it would loose [sic] money in the current quarter. There were a number of special circumstances which had lead [sic] to the reduced profit which Wayne Allen detailed, mentioning particularly increased pension contributions and depreciation and loan charges on a very expensive machine which BMT did not require. Also the performance was affected by ordinary market conditions and particularly a lack of demand from their main customer Ford.
The proprietor of the group had made his displeasure known in a way which Don Allen considered to be inappropriate having regard to the team's performance over several years and all of them were upset by his attitude. He was critical that they had not taken steps earlier to reduce overhead expenditure and in particular cutting staff and he required them to do this. It was their view that the adverse factors which had affected profitability were temporary and that they should retain labour for a recovery which they were confident would come.
The confrontation with the proprietor of the group had lead [sic] them all to conclude that their futures did not lie with BMT and they were resolved to quit the company and set up their own business in the same line. Wayne Allen said that if the four of them left BMT it was likely that a large number of the employees would follow them and the company would suffer considerable commercial damage. They were all concerned therefore as to what claims might be made against them by Allen/BMT. He confirmed that none of them had written service contracts and none of them were subject to any restrictive provisions as to competition following termination of their employment. He also confirmed that the position was the same in relation to the employees, i.e. none of them were subject to restrictions once they left the company.
He added that they had located a backer who was prepared to provide the funding to enable them to purchase another sma1l company in a nearby town and to acquire the necessary machinery to enable them to carry out a similar business to that currently conducted by BMT. The backer was prepared to provide the finance upon the basis that he would receive a return of 20% upon the capital provided and 'he would also derive an ancillary benefit as a result of certain of the work coming into the new company being sub-contracted to a company belonging to him.
DHF enquired whether they had considered making a bid for BMT themselves and Don Allen said that they had asked the proprietor of the group if he was prepared to sell. but he had given them a blank refusal. He knew that he was willing to sell the company and was looking for £3 million which he felt was excessive and in any event beyond what they could fund."
"1. The policy of English law was to encourage and promote competition in the market-place. In these circumstances it was well established that an employee of a business. once he had properly terminated his employment contract, was free to immediately go into competition with his previous employer, to solicit his "customers for business and to solicit his employees. This was subject to any restrictions against such activities that might be contained in their service contracts, but in this case he was instructed that there were no such restrictions.
2. Consequently provided each of them gave proper notice to terminate their service contracts then, immediately those service contracts terminated, they were free to do precisely what they had in mind doing and even if this caused substantial commercial damage to BMT. This was an inevitable consequence of freedom of competition which the law encouraged.
3. This principle was not affected at all by the fact that a1l four of them gave in notice together.
4. However, it was essential for each of them to realise that whilst they remained employees and directors of BMT, they owed that company a duty of good faith and in those circumstances it was critical that they did nothing until their employment contracts were actually terminated, i.e. their notices had expired, which was contrary to the interests of BMT: If they did so, they would lay themselves open to a claim for damages. It was inevitable that the proprietor of the group would be upset by their mass departure and it was therefore important that they provided him with no ammunition that he could use to attack them with once they left. The last thing they would want was to be bogged down in the law suit and incurring heavy expenditure when they ought to be getting on with promotion of the new business.
Having regard to this they must not, whilst still employed and directors, seek to divert away from BMT business which would otherwise likely go to that company, nor must they solicit employees. They must continue to perform their duties as employees and directors in the best interests of BMT and subordinate their own interests as prospective competitors, but only until such time as their employment contracts were terminated.
5. They owed no particular additional duty to BMT as directors, as distinct from employees. Directors had. wider responsibilities, e.g. also towards other employees, creditors and shareholders but, provided they resigned their directorships by the time their employment contracts terminated, the fact that they were directors made no difference to the advice which DHF was giving.
There was nothing to prevent them doing the ground work in connection with the setting up of a new operation provided that they did nothing which conflicted with their duties as continuing employees as last mentioned. They could for example locate premises, negotiate a deal with their financial backer, but they must not actually commence business or start competing in any way until termination of their contracts
6. DHF suspected that the proprietor of the group would realise immediately what was occurring when they all resigned and might well put in replacement management to avoid them working their notice period. If this occurred, their obligations would still continue until the expiration of their notices. Although the proprietor would no doubt huff and puff, provided they did not breach the duties which DHF had detailed, they would be nothing he could do about their quitting and setting up in competition.
7. DHF felt the problems of leaving the company, provided his advice was followed, would not be a major problem, but he was concerned that they did not jump out of the frying pan and into the fire and therefore it was important that the deal with the backer was documented and signed up so everyone knew what that deal was. His experience was that, very often these matters were left upon verbal understandings and with the passage of time and often the success of a business, there were then arguments as to what precisely was agreed.
……………………….
DHF also explained the way in which, in litigation, a plaintiff could enforce production of documents and even in extreme circumstances make raids on premises to seize documents (i.e. the Anton Piller procedure). It was important that no documents were created that could be interpreted as showing that any of them were acting in breach of their duty of good faith to the company during the period of their employment, e.g. correspondence with existing customers or existing employees. He also explained that documents such as customer lists, details of pricing, drawings and so forth were the property of the company and must not be removed or copied. He also advised that as employees they had a duty of confidentiality to the company in respect of all information which was of a confidential nature, i.e. not generally available in the market place, and this duty of confidentiality would continue even after their employment contracts had terminated. Therefore if they were aware of secret processes or sensitive financial information concerning BMT, they should not utilise it for their own benefit otherwise they would expose themselves to claims. For example if BMT had tendered for a particular contract and they were aware of the basis and prices of the tender, they should not, even after they had left the company, tender for the same contract because they would be utilising confidential information which came into their possession as employees of BMT, i.e. particular tender prices put in for a specific contract. They needed however to distinguish between information which was confidential to BMT and their general knowledge of the market and price levels and so forth. This was their intellectual property and they were entitled to take it with them and utilise it for their own benefit once their employment contract was terminated."
January February and March 2000
Q. Right. Now, you did not ask them to provide any security themselves ----
A. Oh, I did. That were the first thing. "How much are you putting in?"
Q. What was the answer?
A. "Well, we ain't got owt". "What do you mean you ain't got owt? You can't have been in life all this time". "No, we haven't got owt." "Well, a guarantee to bank then. You don't have to have any money but" -- "No, I can't do that. My wife won't let me do that". Alan Morley hadn't got owt and still hasn't got owt. Alan Smith had something in his house with his wife but there were no way she could -- she were a poorly woman. "Oh, hey Alan, will you sign the house away?" Wayne were a single lad, lives with his parents. He'd had a few bob but that's all, and they spend it on cars and beer and meals, don't they, young lads? And Don, he weren't into signing guarantees. So I said: "Right, fair enough, I'm on me own then".
Q. Just explain that last bit. "Don weren't into signing guarantees"?
A. This is the January 29th meeting.
Q. Did he have anything to offer by way of security? You have told us the others did, but Don did, did he not?
A. No, Alan Smith had some equity in his house.
Q. What about Don?
A. Well, I didn't know at the time that -- what his house and equity -- I've since discovered it. But I don't know at the time. But, no, they weren't prepared to do it. I said: "Well, fair enough then, if you're not going to do that, then I'll tell you rules of the game. I will, through me wife" -- and if you say why I'm doing it through me wife, because of my retirement thing and having to sever my link with the company, that's why I use me -- because she was still a director of the thing. "Well, these will be the rules. She will own 100% of the shares. Don, you will be the only director. My wife, Anne, will be the company secretary". So that gave a safeguard on the form signing. "And my auditors will be the auditors. My bank will be the bank. You will have a credit account only at Tamworth and the cheque signing facilities will be me and my wife, any two from four, Don and Wayne". So I laid the rules. Once they weren't putting owt in, the rules were going to be like exactly my way. If not, we weren't going to play.
…………………………
Q. The buy-back arrangement that you had in relation to the shares, that was a separate matter from repayment of the loan, was it not, as Wayne told us?
A. Could have been all in one package because we discussed this, that they wanted to own their own company. I said: "Well, look, there's no reason why you can't buy this. As long as I get me 150 grand back plus me interest, you can have the 1,000 shares for £1,000. I've got my deal as a business angel, I've got my package, I've had a very handsome return, and there's your company", and they generate it or found another backer or won the lottery, or whatever. I had no interest in continuing running the company. You know, that were just bail them out for three years and send them on their way with a kiss and a fond farewell."
"It might sound a bit Chinese or gobbledygook to you, but I'm going to be involved in a commercial transaction which may disrupt your tooling supplies, it may not, but it may. However, don't forget that Ford have used our 24-hour service for manufacturing tools since we introduced it ten years ago all the time and that may be well worth remembering, but I can't tell you any more of the circumstances regarding it, but in the next few weeks everything will become apparent." And he says, "You're right, it is a bit gobbledygook". I said the objective of that was so that I did not lose my credibility, because he could say, "Well, you never said anything to me when you were there". A smart move."
The recruitment of a workforce
"… he was convinced BMT would collapse when they left. They would take all the customers. Allen may then try and sell it and McGrath may well buy it cheap. He would have to do it in co-operation with Wayne etc"
April 2000
III LEGAL ISSUES ARISING ON FINDINGS THUS FAR.
"has suffered loss or damage as a result of unlawful action taken pursuant to a combination or agreement between the defendant and another person or persons to injure him by unlawful means, whether or not it is the predominant intention of the defendant to do so"
see Kuwait Oil Tankers v Al Bader 2000 EWCA Civ 160, [2000]2 All ER Comm 271 at para 108 (Nourse Potter and Clarke LJJ). The three essential ingredients for present purposes are (1) unlawful means taken pursuant to an agreement, (2) loss suffered as a result of that, and (3) the intention to injure by the unlawful means.
"It would, it seems to me, be surprising to find that directors alone, because of the fiduciary nature of their relationship with the company, were restrained from exploiting after they had ceased to be such any opportunity of which they had acquired knowledge while directors. Directors, no less than employees, acquire a general fund of knowledge and expertise in the course of their work, and it is plainly in the public interest that they should be free to exploit it in a new position."
"It follows from [Swain], which is consistent with Bell v. Lever Brothers Ltd. [1932] AC 161 and is binding upon us, that there is no general duty to report a fellow-servant's misconduct or breach of contract; whether there is such a duty depends on the contract and on the terms of employment of the particular servant. He may be so placed in the hierarchy as to have a duty to report either the misconduct of his superior as in [Swain], or the misconduct of his inferiors, as in this case. Mr. Munby will not have it that Mr. Roques' "no. 2" was subordinate to Mr. Roques, or that the other managers involved in the conspiracy were his subordinates or inferiors; but on this point I agree with Walton J. and I refer, again without apology and with approval, to the way in which he put the matter in his judgment below:
"I do not think that there is any general duty resting upon an employee to inform his master of the breaches of duty of other employees; the law would do industrial relations generally no great service if it held that such a duty did in fact exist in all cases. The duty must, in my view, depend upon all the circumstances of the case, and the relationship of the parties to their employer and inter se. I think it would be very difficult to have submitted, with any hope of success, that Messrs. Bell and Snelling, having been appointed to rescue the affairs of their employers' African subsidiary in effect jointly, ought to have denounced each other."
That is a reference to the finding that Messrs. Bell and Snelling were according to the report of the case in the House of Lords, in joint management and therefore one was not subordinate to the other. Walton J. goes on:
"However, where there is an hierarchical system, particularly where the person in the hierarchy whose conduct is called into question is a person near the top who is responsible to his employers for the whole of the operation of a complete sector of the employers' business - here the European zone - then in my view entirely different considerations apply. That the principle of disclosure extends at least as far as I think it extends (and perhaps further, but that is of no consequence for present purposes) has been decided once and for all, so far as this court is concerned, by Swain v. West (Butchers) Ltd., a decision of the Court of Appeal. Bell v. Lever Brothers Ltd. was very much in the forefront of everybody's mind in that case, but none of the Lords Justices thought it had any bearing on the case before them."
After reading, pretty well in full, the judgment of Greene L.J., from which I have read extracts, Walton J. went on:
"This judgment has, if I may respectfully say so, the great merit of common sense. A person in a managerial position cannot possibly stand by and allow fellow servants to pilfer the company's assets and do nothing about it, which is really what Mr. Munby's submissions would come to when applied to the present type of case. Certainly at all events where the misconduct is serious and the servant is not discharged immediately it must be quite obvious that, as part of his duties generally, the senior employee is under a duty to report what has happened as soon as he finds out, and further to indicate which steps (if any) he has taken to prevent a repetition thereof.
"Of course, this all depends upon the duties of the relevant employee under his contract of service. In the present case there was a well-recognised reporting procedure, where under the zone controller, Mr. Roques, was expected to make reports as to the state of matters in his zone every month. It may possibly be argued that in such a case the duty to report was not an immediate duty but one to be fulfilled at the next reporting date; so be it, because even if this is correct no such report was ever made by Mr. Roques to his superiors. "I therefore reach the not very surprising conclusion that Mr. Roques was under a duty to report all he knew about the misdeeds of his subordinate employees, commencing with those of Mr. Bove, as soon as he found out about them, and that he did not do so, deliberately and fraudulently, because he was one of the conspirators himself. The duty which lay upon him was, I repeat, not a duty to report his own misdeeds - this may well be regarded as negative by Bell v. Lever Brothers Ltd. - but to report those of his fellow conspirators."
IV CONCLUSIONS ON LIABILITY
"The law has always looked with favour upon the efforts of employees to advance themselves, provided they do not use or steal the secrets of their former employer. In the absence of restrictive covenants, there is nothing in the general law to prevent a number of employees in concert deciding to leave their employer and set themselves up in competition with him."
V ELECTRONIC COPYING
I begin by summarising the evidence in relation to the physical equipment available, and the installed software.
MIT's HP Brio computer ("the Brio")
BMT's Eagle Computer
BMT's SSC computer ("the SSC")
Issues On The Electronic Drawings
MS. GIRET: I suggest to you again it is consistent with them all going on at the same time.
A. It could be in this file but I was developing it so I could change these files as quickly as possible. It's no unfeasible that I didn't ----
MR. JUSTICE HART: You were working out the best way of going about it.
A. Yes. I wouldn't know how I did it now but I did set up a ---- It was very tedious and I was looking for the shortest route to do it.
Liability in relation to the electronic drawings
VI HARD COPY DRAWINGS
"86. There was a lot of shredding that took place at MIT. I cannot remember much shredding going on before the proceedings were commenced in December 2001 [sic]. Tim Allen came over and served this writ on the factory and this caused a great deal of tension. In the end it took about three weeks to do all the shredding. But for the first couple of days it was a question of finding everything. Over these days it was a massive search exercise within the factory, for things that needed to be shredded.
88. I remember Tony Brown gave me a thick folder, which contained documentation like quality control standards and letters relating to BMT and drawings. I was told to go through that file to find anything that was relevant to BMT, if it had BMT on it in any shape or form, shred it. I remember going through it page by page, removing and shredding the relevant documents. And after about half an hour or so I got tired of this and just shredded the lot, ripped up all the pages from the folder and shredded the whole thing. It became a joke on the shop floor when people walked past us, seeing Ian Jackson and I walk past with bales of shredded paper.
It was obvious why we were doing this; this was stuff that had been taken from BMT and I knew that shredding was wrong. I just got on with it and did as I was told. No one really questioned Alan Smith or Alan Morley, because everyone was so tense and so anxious at that point in time. This shredding took at least a couple of days. But later after this exercise had been completed we would still find material which should have been shredded. Alan Smith would normally be of the opinion that it did not really matter but Alan Morley always wanted to play safe and instructed me to shred the documentation. In the end, we ended up with several dustbin liners full of shredded paper. This was not put in a skip outside or in a bin but was used for packing tools. The shredded paper was taken to the packing department and used for packing tools, which were then sent off to customers.
I4/I5 hard copies
VII CONFIDENTIALITY OF THE DRAWINGS
VIII THECADDRAUGHT DISC
IX PRICING INFORMATION
X SOLICITATION OF CUSTOMERS
"something would be happening to one of Ford's suppliers and that there would be potential for some disruption. They stated that if this happened they would support Ford with a 24 hour turnaround for the supply of cutting tools to ensure Ford's production would not be affected."
It is clear that no further details were given as to what was about to happen save that it would soon become obvious.
XII CORPORATE OPPORTUNITY
XI DAMAGES
Principles
The value of the business
The Claimant's Valuation Evidence
The Defendant's Valuation Evidence
Main points of disagreement
(1) a difference as to what was being valued;(2) a difference as to how interest should be dealt with; and
(3) a difference as to the use which could properly be made of the revised budget.
What is being valued
How should interest be dealt with
5.34 "My reason for adopting this approach is that the interest cost on fixed and working capital used to finance the business is directly influenced by the type of capital provided. For example, if all of the Group support and overdraft had been provided in the form of share capital, no interest cost would have been incurred in BMT's Profit and Loss Account. Conversely, if it had all been provided by a bank on a loan or overdraft (perhaps with a parent company guarantee for security), a larger interest cost would have probably been incurred than is reflected in my maintainable profits of £326,000.
5.35 Thus, if interest was to be recognised in my assessment of the profits for valuation purposes, different values would emerge depending on the financing policy that is assumed.
5.36 In this context, it is appropriate to repeat that it is only the business that is being valued, not the shares of BMT. The capital and/or loan or other financial liabilities used to finance the business will not be acquired by the purchaser who buys only the business; the purchaser will finance it as he chooses and it is not possible to say with certainty how a purchaser would approach it."
The significance of the revised budget
"would produce a budget like this, and typically it would show a loss declining, then returning to profitability, normally supported by forecasts, balance sheets and cash-flows, and would usually show the bank debt being re-paid over a period, and a not very long period. What you see as you monitor the performance of that company going forward is that the budgets are not achieved …. But it's producing new forecasts that show exactly the same trend of reducing the losses…. So you have a curve that is like a hockey stick, and all that happens is reality in my experience is the hockey stick moves along in time" (T29.44)
"I don't have a major problem with the overall sales forecast at 2,005,000. It's not adrift from what had been achieved in prior years. My problem with that line is merely the growth that's shown from quarter one to quarter four. That's a fantastic turn around in turnover for this company, bearing in mind also the seven redundancies that had been made. Now, we've talked about productivity gains. No evidence has been shown to me as to how those productivity gains were to be achieved. If it was such a simple matter, why didn't we do it before? That's a feature that's typical of the hockey stick mentality."
1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | [2000] | |
Turnover | 2.1m | 2.5m | 2.4m | 2.5m | [2.05] |
Profit before tax | 179 | 259 | 164 | 95 | [145] |
(The figures in square brackets for 2000 are taken from the revised budget. The figures actually used by Mr Campbell are higher because of his disregard of Q1 and Q2 2000).
Appropriate Adjustments
Conclusions on Adjustments
1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | ||
Profit before tax | 179 | 259 | 164 | 95 | |
Add back actual interest | 16 | 18 | 15 | 38 | |
Pre-interest profits | 195 | 277 | 179 | 133 | |
Add Don Allen's savings say | 31 | 33 | 35 | 37 | |
226 | 310 | 214 | 170 | ||
Less depreciation | (25) | (25) | (25) | (25) | |
201 | 285 | 189 | 145 | ||
Weighting | x1 | x2 | x3 | x4 | |
201 | 570 | 567 | 580 | ||
Weighted Average of pre-interest earnings | 191.8 | 191.8 | 191.8 | 191.8 | 191.8 |
Less interest (1.27m at 8%) | 101.6 | ||||
90.2 |
The Multiple
Conclusion on value of the business
Losses
Additional costs of closure
i) Fixed asset disposals 286247
ii) Stock disposals 205668
iii) Additional costs of closure 84442
576357
Exemplary damages
"..in the nature of things, cases satisfying the test of outrageousness will usually involve intentional wrongdoing with additionally, an element of flagrancy or cynicism or oppression or the like: something additional rendering the wrongdoing or the manner or circumstances in which it was committed particularly appalling. It is these features which make the Defendant's conduct outrageous… [para. 23]
"it is not surprising therefore that when describing conduct meet for an award of exemplary damages judges have often used adjectives or phrases primarily, or even solely, aimed at advertent conduct. These include: malicious, vindictive, high handed, wanton, wilful, arrogant, cynical, oppressive, and contumelious disregard of the plaintiff's rights. [para25]"
XIII CONCLUSIONS