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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 >> Jones v Ricoh UK Ltd [2010] EWHC 1743 (Ch) (14 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1743.html Cite as: [2010] UKCLR 1335, [2010] EWHC 1743 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ROBERT ANDREW JONES |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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RICOH UK LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Charles Hollander QC (instructed by Taylor Wessing LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 and 29 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Roth :
The Parties
The relationship between CMP and Ricoh
"3. The duties of Ricoh:
(i) To provide equipment as required by the customer orders of CMP, see Clause 4(i) at approved prices (see Schedule A of this Agreement). All equipment provided to customers of CMP under the terms of this Agreement shall be new equipment.
(ii) To deliver said equipment within 14 working days of receipt of order.
(iii) To install, train users and service and maintain said equipment in accordance with the Terms and Conditions of approved Service Agreements (see Schedules B and C of this Agreement) at approved service charges (see Schedule D of this Agreement).
(iv) To provide management and billing information data to CMP as required (see Schedules F, G and I of this Agreement
4. The duties of CMP:
(i) To obtain orders for equipment from its customers at prices approved by Ricoh (see Schedule A of this Agreement). Orders will be placed on official documentation of CMP and orders for Ricoh equipment will be obtained by CMP from its customers where Ricoh equipment is suitable and meets the needs and requirements of CMP's customers. There is no obligation under this Agreement for CMP to recommend that its customers acquire Ricoh equipment.
(ii) To obtain from its customers at the time that equipment is acquired authorised Service Agreements under approved terms and conditions and at approved service charges (see Schedules B, C, D and E of this Agreement)."
"5. Any orders for equipment or Service Agreement obtained by CMP from its customers under the terms of this Agreement may be rejected by Ricoh on the grounds of credit rating, pricing or conflicts of interest.
6. Payments:
(i) Equipment orders
At the time orders for equipment are obtained by CMP from its customers CMP will provide Ricoh either:
(a) An official purchase order on CMP documentation from CMP's customer against which Ricoh may invoice that customer for both Ricoh's selling price of equipment to customers of CMP (see Schedule A of this Agreement) and fees payable to CMP.
or
(b) An official purchase order from a leasing company against which Ricoh may invoice that leasing company for Ricoh's selling price of equipment to customers of CMP (see Schedule A of this Agreement).
When equipment orders are obtained by CMP from its customers and equipment is to be acquired on a cash purchase basis as per (a) above the order documentation will be submitted with an invoice from CMP to Ricoh. The invoices will reflect an agreed and stated amount authorised and acknowledged by CMP's customer as being the difference between Ricoh's selling price to customers of CMP (see Schedule A of this Agreement) and the net total amount payable by CMP's customers as per CMP's official documentation."
"We write to confirm that we requested you to disclose to us Confidential Information (as defined below) in relation to [CMP's] system for the acquisition of photocopying users and photocopying equipment acquirers ("the System").
For the purpose of this letter "Confidential Information" means documents and information of whatever nature and in whatever form relating to [CMP] or its businesses, business practices, finances, affairs, dealings, clients, suppliers, agents or employees disclosed or otherwise received by any Relevant Person whether before or after the date of this letter directly or indirectly by or from [CMP] or any of its employees, agents or professional advisers but excluding information which at the time of being disclosed or received is within the public domain or which comes into the public domain otherwise than as a result of a breach of the undertakings or other obligations set out or referred to in this letter.
"Relevant Person" means and includes each of us and any company which is or which is associated with:
(i) Ricoh (U.K.) Limited and in each case any of their employees, agents or professional advisors.
…
In consideration of your disclosing Confidential Information to us we hereby undertake to you:
1. That we will receive the Confidential Information under a duty of confidentiality to you and such information will be held in the strictest of confidence (subject only to the terms of this letter);
2. That we will use and procure that the Confidential Information is used only for the purpose of evaluating the purchasing terms available to [CMP] and with a view to entering into an agency agreement with you.
3. That we will not (except as expressly stated in paragraph 2 above) use the Confidential Information for our own benefit and will procure that it is not used for the benefit of any other person (including without limitation any Relevant Person);
4. That we will not and will procure that no Relevant Person will without your prior written consent at any time disclose or permit to be disclosed any of the Confidential Information to any other person whatsoever except:
(i) to those of our employees who are required in the course of their duties to receive the same for the purposes of evaluating and/or understanding the purchasing terms available to [CMP].
(ii) to those of our professional advisors requiring the Confidential Information for the same purpose.
on the basis that such employees and advisors are made aware of the provisions of this confidentiality undertaking.
….
7. That no approach or contact direct or indirect in connection with or during our discussions or whilst any Confidential Information remains in the possession or under the control of any Relevant Person shall be initiated, accepted or made by or on behalf of any Relevant Person to or with any employee, client or supplier of yours or any government body or regulatory or other authority or to or with any other person who to our knowledge has any actual prospective connection with you without your prior written consent."
Bombardier Transportation
"13 The meeting went very well and, after further internal discussions, the NPR procurement committee decided to issue an invitation to tender (ITT) for the supply of MFDs, initially to Bombardier's sites in the UK, Sweden and Germany but with the intention of expanding the scope to Bombardier's other European and global sites.
14 Bombardier's decision to issue an ITT was, therefore, a direct consequence of the work that CMP and Ricoh had carried out for us in the UK. Had the contract that Bombardier had in the UK with CMP/Ricoh not been working so well, I would not have recommended it to the NPR procurement committee."
"The suppliers to whom the 2003 ITT was sent were carefully selected by the NPR procurement committee and Ricoh's inclusion was, I believe, entirely due to its work with CMP in the UK."
It is clear, in any event, that at least from about November 2003, arrangements regarding the 2003 ITT were managed by Bombardier's UK offices.
The Claim
"I … believe that a joint CMP/Ricoh bid would certainly have been successful…. [T]he only other bid to which serious consideration was given was Canon, but Canon did not have the proven track record that CMP and Ricoh had. Further, faced with a choice between a joint CMP/Ricoh bid (who after all were the two companies that were chosen to be the final bidders) and a bid from a relatively unknown (at least as far as Bombardier was concerned) supplier, Bombardier would have been bound to choose the former."
The Present Application
i) Clause 7 of the Confidentiality Agreement is contrary to Article 101 TFEU (formerly Article 81 EU) and/or in unreasonable restraint of trade and therefore unenforceable;ii) As regards the 2003 ITT, even assuming that Ricoh was in breach (which is denied) of clause 2 and/or 3 of the Confidentiality Agreement, the damages claimed are irrecoverable as a matter of law since Ricoh was under no obligation to submit a joint bid with CMP to Bombardier;
iii) As regards the 2007 ITT, the alleged breach is fanciful and can be dismissed on the evidence in these summary proceedings. Alternatively, if it cannot be so dismissed, the circumstances of this case do not permit a claim for an account of profits.
Summary Judgment
i) The court must consider whether the claimant has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 2 All ER 91;ii) A "realistic" claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at [8];
iii) In reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a "mini-trial": Swain v Hillman;
iv) This does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel at [10];
v) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550;
vi) Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case: Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2007] FSR 63.
I omit Lewison J's seventh principle which relates to a claim of fraud and has no application to the present case.
(i) Clause 7
(a) Interpretation
i) any client of CMP; orii) any government body or regulatory or other authority; or
iii) any other person who to Ricoh's knowledge "has any actual prospective [sic] connection" with CMP.
(b) Article 101 TFEU
"(1) The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the internal market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the internal market, and in particular those which:
(a) directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions;
(b) limit or control production, markets, technical development, or investment;
(c) share markets or sources of supply;
(d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;
(e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts.
(2) Any agreements or decisions prohibited pursuant to this Article shall be automatically void."
If an agreement, decision by an association of undertakings or concerted practice falls within Article 101(1), then Article 101(3) provides that if the conditions there set out are satisfied, the prohibition will not apply.
"Pursuant to Article [101(3)] of the Treaty and subject to the provisions of this Regulation, it is hereby declared that Article [101(1)] shall not apply to agreements or concerted practices entered into between two or more undertakings each of which operates, for the purposes of the agreement, at a different level of the production or distribution chain, and relating to the conditions under which the parties may purchase, sell or resell certain goods or services ('vertical agreements')."
(ii) Clause 2 and 3
(a) The 2003 ITT
(a) the precise usage levels of all of the devices used by Bombardier in the UK;
(b) the average "down time" for devices on the Bombardier network;
(c) the servicing/maintenance requirements for the devices;
(d) Bombardier's financial position, including how quickly it paid its invoices etc; and
(e) what the cost of terminating Bombardier's existing document production contracts would be."
"The principle is that where the defendant has the option of performing a contract in alternative ways, damages for breach by him must be assessed on the assumption that he will perform it in the way most beneficial to himself and not in the way most beneficial to the claimant."
"One question is exactly what that principle means – does it mean that for the purposes of assessing damages a contract breaker is entitled to insist on having been entitled to perform in a way which would have been contrary to his commercial interests during the currency of the contract? Is the principle confined to cases where post breach or repudiation a contract breaker can insist that he would have only done that which he was contractually bound to do? How does the principle apply to a situation in which it is not the actual breach of contract in relation to which damages are being assessed to which the principle is being applied, but to the possible consequences for example of a past breach?"
"My view is that the principle is concerned with assessing damages, and the benefit which the principle has in mind is a benefit which a defendant is entitled to look to for that purpose without regard to whether if the contract was actually being performed that is the way it would have been operated. In Spiliada if the contract were being performed the charter[er]s would not actually have used all the lay time available; in Withers it would have been in the commercial interest of the employer to put the actor in the most famous theatre and he would probably have done so for at least some of the period of employment. But in the assessment of damages the defendant has the benefit of not being obliged contractually to do these things. However a contract breaker cannot go outside the four walls of the contract. To do what the distributor in Paula Lee was trying to do would have been to do that. "
Since the bank was not contractually bound to extend the facility to TM, Waller LJ concluded (at [22]):
"The Bank are thus entitled on the basis of the above principle to insist on damages being assessed on the basis of the contract they made as opposed to the contract TM suggests he had a chance of persuading them to make."
"The rule is that in assessing damages it is assumed that the defendant would have performed the contract in the manner most beneficial to himself: McGregor on Damages (16th ed.) para.386. It was held in Lavarack that the rule applies even when as a matter of probability or of chance (per Lord Denning MR in his dissenting judgment) the defendant would have behaved outside his contractual obligations in a way that benefited the claimant. However, the rule has exceptions. It will not be assumed that the defendant would have cut off his nose to spite his face (per Diplock LJ). Sometimes the facts will show that the interests of third parties were also involved (Bold v. Brough, Nicholson and Hall [1964] 1 WLR 201.
It may be that the rule would not apply in the present case, if the claimant were able to prove not merely that the defendants would have provided further finance for the properties, but also that it would have been in the defendant's own interest to do so. It would have meant that the developments could be completed and the properties sold, so enabling them to realise their existing investments and earn further profits, for themselves as well as for the claimant. The defendants are a public company, and it seems remarkable that a rule of law should require the courts to assume that they would not have acted in the best interests of themselves and their shareholders, when assessing the damages for which they are liable as contract breakers.
If these further facts were clearly alleged by the claimant, and if there was any realistic chance of their being proved in this case, it would be wrong, in my judgment, to dismiss the action at this stage. However, neither of these conditions is satisfied."
Mulvanna, like the present case, concerned a defendant's summary judgment application.
"Most of the cases are concerned with defining the limits of this principle. It is one which is capable of operating or being satisfied at a number of different levels. Most obviously it would exclude an assessment of the value of the contract to the innocent party which was conducted by reference to benefits which were themselves extra-contractual. An example of this would be the payment of discretionary bonuses to an employee or contractor where the contract makes no provision for them. This was considered by the Court of Appeal in Lavarack v Woods of Colchester Ltd [1967] 1 QB 278 which I shall come to shortly. But the principle could also be engaged to require the court to assume that the defaulting party would, as between two or more alternative methods of contractual performance, have opted for the one least onerous to himself. Similarly it might be said that, where the contract does not stipulate alternative methods of performance but requires the defaulting party (for example) to purchase goods above a stated minimum quantity, damages should be assessed by reference to the minimum level of lawful performance thereby disregarding the possibility (even, in some cases, the probability) that had the contract in fact been performed, a larger number of the goods would have been purchased. The question in cases of this kind is whether the argument or principle that a claimant should not receive damages for something which the defendant was not, strictly speaking, required to do should displace or limit the court's factual inquiry as to what, in the circumstances (bar the repudiation), the defendant would in fact have done."
"There was clearly a consensus between the members of the court that, in relation to alternative methods of performance, the claimant will be unable to rely upon the defendant performing the contract in the more onerous of the two or more ways permitted. But that was not the type of contract under consideration in Abrahams and it is not the type of contract which we have to deal with in this case. Where there is only a single obligation to be performed it is clear that the majority view was that an assessment of damages should not, as a matter of law, be limited strictly to what was the minimum level of performance permitted under the contract but should extend to a calculation of how the contract would have been performed at the relevant time had it not been repudiated. This will take into account the likely profitability of the contract and any other relevant facts that would have influenced the method of performance. "
"None of the cases I have referred to has or could have questioned the principle laid down by the majority of the Court of Appeal in Abrahams which is set out most clearly in the judgment of Atkin LJ. The court, in my view, has to conduct a factual inquiry as to how the contract would have been performed had it not been repudiated. Its performance is the only counter-factual assumption in the exercise. On the basis of that premise, the court has to look at the relevant economic and other surrounding circumstances to decide on the level of performance which the defendant would have adopted. The judge conducting the assessment must assume that the defendant would not have acted outside the terms of the contract and would have performed it in his own interests having regard to the relevant factors prevailing at the time. But the court is not required to make assumptions that the defaulting party would have acted uncommercially merely in order to spite the claimant. To that extent, the parties are to be assumed to have acted in good faith although with their own commercial interests very much in mind."
1. The contract requires the defendant to do X or Y.2. The contract requires the defendant, if he has not done X, to do Y.
3. The contract requires D to do X and the claimant has a reasonable expectation that he will do Y.
4. The contract requires the defendant to do X and allows him a discretion how he performs the obligation.
"events extraneous to the contract, upon the occurrence of which the legal obligations of the defendant to the plaintiff are dependant, may include events which are within the control of the defendant: for example, continuing to carry on business even though he has not assumed by his contract a direct legal obligation to the plaintiff to do so. Where this is so, [Diplock LJ] said that the court will not assume that he will "cut off his nose to spite his face and so control these events as to reduce his legal obligations to the plaintiff by incurring greater loss in other respects". That would not be the mode of performing the contract which is 'the least burthensome to the defendant'."
"There is good practical reason for this. Where a contract imposes alternative obligations the contract itself will identify them. But where there is a single obligation expressed in broad terms, it may be conceptually very difficult to identify as a theoretical exercise what would have been a minimum performance level, as Abrahams v Reiach demonstrated. In that case the damages of £100 which the Court of Appeal considered appropriate would have been equivalent to the royalties on 6,000 copies. Would the printing of 6,000 copies have been a minimum contractual performance? If so, why? Why not 5,500 or 5,000? The questions are impossible to answer and it is notable, as I have said, that although Scrutton LJ stated that he considered what was the minimum number which would constitute a contractual performance, he did not state his conclusion or reasoning. It would be more possible, as the majority did, to make a broad brush assessment of the number of copies which the publishers would have been likely to print having regard to the potential saleability of the book. For that reason, the approach of Atkin and Bankes LJ affords a more practical and realistic way of assessing the true loss suffered by the breach. Indeed, the logic of the publishers' argument, as their counsel submitted, was that the authors should have recovered only nominal damages. This would not have done justice. "
"The defendants undertook a negative obligation not to deal with parties other than the plaintiffs and not to entertain alternative proposals for a reasonable time. They broke that obligation by doing what they had undertaken not to do. The plaintiffs are entitled to be placed in the same position as if the defendants had performed their obligation, albeit in the manner most favourable to themselves. Depending on the facts as found by the court, the proper inference might be that the parties would probably not have come to terms even if the defendants had complied with their obligation or that the defendants would have decided not to sell; in that event the plaintiffs' damages would be nominal. But the proper inference might be that if the defendants had complied with their obligation the parties would probably have come to terms because all potential points of difference would have been compromised or conceded. If that were the correct factual inference, the plaintiffs' damages could, I think, be more than nominal."
(b) The 2007 ITT
(i) No realistic chance of success
(ii) Account of profits
"An account of profits will be appropriate only in exceptional circumstances. Normally the remedies of damages, specific performance and injunction, coupled with the characterisation of some contractual obligations as fiduciary, will provide an adequate response to a breach of contract. It will be only in exceptional cases, where those remedies are inadequate, that any question of accounting for profits will arise. No fixed rules can be prescribed. The court will have regard to all the circumstances, including the subject matter of the contract, the purpose of the contractual provision which has been breached, the circumstances in which the breach occurred, the consequences of the breach and the circumstances in which relief is being sought. A useful general guide, although not exhaustive, is whether the plaintiff had a legitimate interest in preventing the defendant's profit-making activity and, hence, in depriving him of his profit."
"341. Cases will frequently arise where a significant choice falls to be made between damages calculated by reference to a notional reasonable buy out fee and an account of profits. Then in my judgment, in the light of Blake, where one is not dealing with infringement of a right which is clearly proprietary in nature (such as intellectual property in the form of a patent, as in Siddell v Vickers) and there is nothing exceptional to indicate that the defendant should never have been entitled to adopt a commercial approach in deciding how to behave in relation to that right, the appropriate remedy is likely to be an award of damages assessed by reference to a reasonable buy out fee rather than an account of profits. The law will control the choice between these remedies, having regard to the need to strike a fair balance between the interests of the parties at the remedial stage, rather than leaving it to the discretion of the claimant. The significance of Seager v Copydex is that it shows that, even in relation to confidential information closely akin to a patent (such as a secret manufacturing design or process), the law will not necessarily afford protection to the claimant extending to an account of profits. Still more strongly will that be the case as one moves further away from confidential information in a form resembling classic intellectual property rights towards forms of obligation in respect of confidential information more akin to purely personal obligations in contract and tort.
342. This approach is, I think, supported by the judgments in the Court of Appeal in Experience Hendrix. In that case the defendant licensed masters of recordings of certain music in breach of its agreement with the claimant that they should should not be licensed, and thereby made a profit. The claimant's claim for an account of profits arising from the breach of the agreement was dismissed, even though the breach was deliberate, because the case was not exceptional (there was no special interest of the claimant in having its rights protected, unlike in Blake) but rather arose in a commercial context, and the defendant was not in the position of a fiduciary or any position analogous to that. The claimant was instead awarded a payment equivalent to the reasonable notional royalties which would have been paid by the defendant to buy release from its obligations so as to be able to license the masters as it did: see in particular [37] and [43]-[45] (Mance LJ) and [55] (Peter Gibson LJ).
343. The approach which I adopt also, in my view, produces a coherent picture regarding the extent of protection afforded by the law, moving from lesser protection in relation to an ordinary commercial context to greater protection where there is a fiduciary relationship, rather than too readily equiparating the two…."
Conclusion
i) there will be summary judgment for the defendant on the claim for breach of clause 7 of the Confidentiality Agreement;ii) the defendant's application for summary judgment is dismissed in respect of the claim for breach of clauses 2 and/or 3 of the Confidentiality Agreement in connection with the 2003 ITT;
iii) the defendant's application for summary judgment is dismissed in respect of the claim for breach of clauses 2 and/or 3 of the Confidentiality Agreement in connection with the 2007 ITT on condition that the claimant provides security for the defendant's costs, in an amount to be determined;
iv) the claimant's application for permission to amend is refused as regards a claim for an account of profits, but allowed as regards a claim for damages.
Note 1 Many of the contemporary documents refer to the company as CMP Group Purchasing Limited, but neither party suggested that this was significant. [Back] Note 2 This expression, quoted inChitty, comes from Mont v Mills [1993] IRLR 172. [Back]