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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 >> Associated Foreign Exchange Ltd v International Foreign Exchange (UK) Ltd & Anor [2010] EWHC 1178 (Ch) (26 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1178.html Cite as: [2010] IRLR 964, [2010] EWHC 1178 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
CHANCERY DIVISION
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ASSOCIATED FOREIGN EXCHANGE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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-and - |
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(1) INTERNATIONAL FOREIGN EXCHANGE (UK) LIMITED (2) SAEED ABBASSI |
Defendants |
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Mr Marcus Pilgerstorfer (instructed by Messrs Keystone Law, 53, Davies Street, LONDON W1K 5JH) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JEREMY COUSINS QC:
BACKGROUND
THE EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT
"13.1 The Employee undertakes that he will not, in any Capacity (without the previous consent in writing of the Employer) for:
....
13.1.2 A period of 12 months immediately after the Termination Date, [in any Capacity for a Competitor] negotiate or, solicit Business from, or endeavour to entice away from the Employer a Customer, or a Potential Customer.
13.1.3 A period of 6 months immediately after the Termination Date, undertake [for a Competitor], to provide or supply either directly or indirectly, any Restricted Services to or for any person who is or was a Customer, or a Potential Customer.
....
13.3 The periods for which the restrictions at clauses … 13.1.2,
13.1.3 … apply shall be reduced by any period that the Employee spends on Garden Leave (pursuant to clause 10) immediately prior to the Termination Date."
"Business" means all and any business or other commercial activities of the Employer in the field of international payment services, foreign exchange risk management, buying and selling foreign exchange, or foreign exchange outsourcing with which the Employee has been concerned or involved to any material extent at any time during the 12 month period immediately prior to the Termination Date.
"Capacity" means as an agent, consultant, director, employee, owner, partner, shareholder or in any other capacity.
"Competitor" means – any institution, bank, firm, company or other business entity that engages in Business similar to that carried on by the Employer during the period of the Employee's employment including but not limited to: Travelex, Moneycorp, Corporate FX, Cambridge Mercantile, Baydonhill, Worldfirst Currencies, Currencies Direct, Globex, HIFX, IFX, Schneider FX, Raphael Bank, Customs House, AMEX, Interchange, Smart Currency Exchange and PEX.
"Customer" means any firm, company or person who during the 12 months prior to the Termination Date has been supplied with any Restricted Services and with whom the Employee had contact in order to supply Restricted Services in the course of his employment.
"Potential Customer" means a Customer who the Employee has had contact with at any time during the 12 month period prior to the Termination Date and with whom the Employee has been actively soliciting business for the purpose of providing Restricted Services.
"Restricted Services" means all and any services of any kind including the provision of foreign exchange services which shall be provided by the Employer [or any Group Company] in the normal course of Business.
THE APPLICATION
"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 trial. In those circumstances it is not enough to decide merely that there is a serious issue to be tried."
THE ISSUES
(1) Whether the non-solicitation covenant is enforceable ("the Enforceability Issue").
(2) Whether, if enforceable, the covenant was breached by Mr Abbassi ("the Breach Issue").
(3) Whether, if enforceable, IFX induced or procured Mr Abbassi to commit a breach of that covenant ("the Procurement Issue").
(4) Whether there are any other factors which should affect the grant or refusal of equitable relief by way of injunction ("the Relief Issue").
THE ENFORCEABILITY ISSUE
The evidence for AFEX
"… A recently departed employee will know which clients are the most profitable overall and which provide the most business. This is clearly highly confidential information which again should not fairly be accessible to a competitor from a former employee. Such information allows the employee to target particularly good clients and, in combination with confidential information on margins, focus their efforts on undercutting us with our key customers."
The evidence for IFX and Mr Abbassi
"It is the nature of foreign exchange business that most customers trade frequently, making one-off deals on a weekly, fortnightly or monthly basis. A smaller number of clients, those with fewer currency exchange requirements, can trade once every two months or so. The exception would be when a customer makes a forward buying or forward selling contract. A forward contract involves a payment at a future date, or a series of payments throughout the term of the contract, and although this is still a single deal, there will be regular contacts with the customer throughout the contract term as they draw down or make payments against the contract. The term of most forward contracts is four months or less. In addition, customers do not commit to doing more than one deal at a time with any given broker or brokerage – and certainly, there are no contractual obligations requiring them to do so. In my experience, customers understand that the foreign exchange market is highly competitive and that, in order to get the best deal for themselves, they are free to negotiate with and use whichever broker they wish for any given transaction."
"All businesses hope to retain their customers over a 12-month period (in fact IFX aims to retain its customers for far longer than that). However, customers have no obligation to use or retain any particular broker for any given trade. They can – and frequently do – shop around amongst foreign exchange brokers before making a transaction, so any broker wishing to compete needs to offer a similarly inclusive and attractive package of services above and beyond the ability to offer a preferable rate of exchange."
The submissions on behalf of AFEX
"The court can exercise its discretion in deciding the permissible length of garden leave but, if the restrictive covenant is valid, the employer is entitled to have it enforced, subject to all the usual grounds on which an injunction may be withheld, such as delay and a finding that damages would be an adequate remedy in the circumstances. Moreover, it is to be remembered that the existence of a garden leave clause may be a factor to be taken into account in determining the validity of a restrictive covenant as at the date of the contract.
I would, however, add a caveat. Terms which operate in restraint of trade raise questions of public policy. The opportunity for an individual to maintain and exercise his skills is a matter of general concern. I would therefore leave open the possibility that in an exceptional case where a long period of garden leave had already elapsed, perhaps substantially in excess of a year, without any curtailment by the court, the court would decline to grant any further protection based on a restrictive covenant. But that is not this case."
"(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 [1916] AC 688 at p.707 per Lord Parker of Waddington).
(2) A distinction is, however, to be drawn between (a) a covenant against competition entered into by a vendor with the purchaser of the goodwill of a business, which will be upheld as necessary to protect the subject-matter of the sale, provided that it is confined to the area within which competition on the part of the vendor would be likely to injure the purchaser in the enjoyment of the goodwill he has brought, and (b) a covenant between master and servant designed to prevent competition by the servant with the master after the termination of his contract of service: (see for example Kores Manufacturing Co Ltd v Kolok Manufacturing Ltd [1959] Ch 109 at p 118 per Jenkins LJ).
(3) In the case of contracts between master and servant, covenants against competition are never as such upheld by the court. As Lord Parker put it in Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby (supra) at p 709:
'I cannot find any case in which a covenant against competition by a servant or apprentice has, as such, ever been upheld by the Court. Wherever such covenants have been upheld it has been on the ground, not that the servant or apprentice would, by reason of his employment or training, obtain the skill and knowledge necessary to equip him as a possible competitor in the trade, but that he might obtain such personal knowledge of and influence over the customers of his employer, or such an acquaintance with his employer's trade secrets as would enable him, if competition were allowed, to take advantage of his employer's trade connection or utilize information confidentially obtained.'
On this appeal we are not concerned with trade secrets. The plaintiff's staff handbook contained special provisions (in clause 4.3) dealing with confidentiality, but no issue concerning confidentiality has been raised in this court.
(4) The subject-matter in respect of which an employer may legitimately claim protection from an employee by a covenant in restraint of trade was further identified by Lord Wilberforce in Stenhouse Ltd v Phillips [1974] AC 391 (at p.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 Provident Clothing & Supply Co Ltd [1913] AC 724 at p.742 per Lord Moulton). As Lord Parker stressed in Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby (supra) at p.707, for any covenant in restraint of trade to be treated as reasonable in the interests of the parties 'it must afford no more than adequate protection to the benefit of the party in whose favour it is imposed' [Lord Parker's emphasis]."
"37. Firstly, the court must decide what the covenant means when properly construed. Secondly, the court will consider whether the former employers have shown on the evidence that they have legitimate business interests requiring protection in relation to the employee's employment. In this case, as will be seen later on, the defendant concedes that TFS have demonstrated on the evidence legitimate business interests to protect in respect of customer connection, confidential information and the integrity or stability of the workforce, although the extent of the confidential information is in dispute in relation to its shelf life and/or the extent to which it is either memorable or portable.
38. Thirdly, once the existence of legitimate protectable interests has been established, the covenant must be shown to be no wider than is reasonably necessary for the protection of those interests. Reasonable necessity is to be assessed from the perspective of reasonable persons in the position of the parties as at the date of the contract, having regard to the contractual provisions as a whole and to the factual matrix to which the contract would then realistically have been expected to apply.
39. Even if the covenant is held to be reasonable, the court will then finally decide whether, as a matter of discretion, the injunctive relief sought should in all the circumstances be granted, having regard, amongst other things, to its reasonableness as at the time of trial.
40. If a restrictive covenant applying after employment has terminated is held to be unreasonable, then it is void and unenforceable. The court cannot read down such a clause in an effort to render it reasonable and enforceable. In certain circumstances, however, if only a discrete phrase within a particular covenant is held to be unreasonable, individual words or phrases may be "blue-pencilled" or severed, provided that what is left makes independent sense without the need to modify the wording and that the sense of the contract is not changed. I shall consider this issue in greater detail below."
The submissions on behalf of IFX and Mr Abbassi
"[195] It is not uncommon to find in a contract of employment a promise by the employee that upon leaving the firm's employ he will not set up in competition with his employers or solicit their customers or enter the employment of a rival and so on. Such a clause is valid provided it is confined within reasonable limits, but a clause which is too wide will be held void as being in unreasonable restraint of trade. It is always important therefore to remember that invalidity is the default position with any such clause.
....
[216] ...If [the clause] is more than adequate [to protect the employer], it will be struck down. If it is no more than adequate it may be upheld, but not necessarily so. The employer's interest is but one of the factors to be taken into account. The restraint must be considered too from the employee's point of view. Is it a reasonable restraint to impose upon him in view of the principle that he ought to enjoy complete freedom to follow his trade or calling? It is a question of balancing the two competing interests. It is a matter to be judged on the facts of each case. But it is not a question of fact; it is a question of law (Dowden & Pook Ltd v Pook [1904] 1 KB 45, CA; Mason[1]).
[217] Because each case depends on its own facts, there is little that can be said by way of general guidance (see for example the restatement of this point in Dairy Crest Ltd v Pigott [1989] ICR 92, CA). Normally the restraint will be limited either in point of time or to some specified geographical area or both, as well as defining the kinds of activity which are to be banned. These factors all interrelate. The longer the time, the smaller must be the geographical area and the narrower the nature of the restriction. The more lowly the employee, the less the restraint that is reasonable. The weaker the employee's bargaining position, the more jealous the court will be of his interests: a travelling salesman may have no choice but to agree to a wide restriction, but 'a managing director can look after himself' (M and S Drapers v Reynolds [1956] 3 All ER 814, [1957] 1 WLR 9, CA, distinguishing Gilford Motor Co Ltd v Horne [1933] Ch 935, CA).
"It seems clear that the judge considered that the complete protection for 12 months afforded by the garden clause was unnecessary but that some protection for this period was appropriate. He therefore enforced the more limited protection in the restrictive covenants. I consider that on the facts of this case the judge was entitled to reach the conclusion that he did. It may be that another court might have taken a different view and have concluded that a total period of protection of six months was sufficient. But I can see no error of principle in the judge's approach and I do not consider that he was plainly wrong. …"
Discussion and conclusions
"The question is not how long the employee could be expected to enjoy, by virtue of his employment, a competitive edge over others seeking the clients' business. It is, rather, what is a reasonable time during which the employer is entitled to protection against solicitation of clients with whom the employee had contact and influence during employment and who were not bound to the employer by contract or by stability of association. This question, secondly, their Lordships do not consider can advantageously form the subject of direct evidence. It is for the judge, after informing himself as fully as he can of the facts and circumstances relating to the employer's business, the nature of the employer's interest to be protected, and the likely effect on this of solicitation, to decide whether the contractual period is reasonable or not. An opinion as to the reasonableness of elements of it, particularly of the time during which it is to run, can seldom be precise, and can only be formed on a broad and common sense view."
(This passage was cited in the judgment of Balcombe LJ in Dairy Crest Ltd v Pigott [1989] ICR 92.)
THE BREACH ISSUE
The evidence for AFEX
The evidence for IFX and Mr Abbassi
"We obviously discussed his existing customers, many of whom were longstanding friends of his. However, the offer IFX made to him was not conditional in any way upon him bringing customers with him. We particularly needed an experienced broker to develop certain new strategies we wanted to follow."
"Whilst I felt I was entitled to speak to my old customers and do business for them at IFX if that is what they wanted me to do, I was not encouraged to do so by IFX. We also discussed the 6-month non-dealing clause but I have to say I did not really understand what it meant and soon forgot about it and why it was different from the non-solicitation clause."
The submissions on behalf of AFEX
The submissions on behalf of IFX and Mr Abbassi
Discussion and conclusions
THE PROCUREMENT ISSUE
The submissions on behalf of AFEX
The submissions on behalf of IFX and Mr Abbassi
Discussion and conclusions
THE RELIEF ISSUE
Delay
DISPOSAL
Note 1 Mason v Provident Clothing & Supply Co Ltd [1913] AC 724. [Back]