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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 >> Centek Holdings Ltd & Anor v Giles [2020] EWHC 1682 (Ch) (26 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1682.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1682 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
4INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) CENTEK HOLDINGS LIMITED | ||
(2) CENTEK TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED | ||
(3) CENTEK LIMITED | Claimants | |
-and- | ||
TRISTRAM GILES | Defendant |
____________________
Mr Gerwyn Wise (instructed by TV Edwards Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15, 16 and 26 June 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Marcus Smith:
(1) His first affidavit, sworn 5 September 2019 (Giles 1).(2) His second affidavit, sworn 6 September 2019 (Giles 2).
(3) His third affidavit, sworn 17 September 2019 (Giles 3).
(4) His fourth affidavit, sworn 23 September 2019 (Giles 4).
(5) His fifth affidavit, sworn 2 October 2019 (Giles 5).
(1) Breach of pargraph 5(b) of the Order |
Paragraph 5(b) of the Order ordered Mr Giles to deliver up all copies of all material within his control that embodied Centek Material by 4:30pm on 16 September 2019 | Mr Giles did not comply with paragraph 5(b) of the Order because he did not deliver up by 4:30pm on 16 September 2019 |
Contempt 1 | (a) the "back_up_mayay" folder (the Malay Back Up Folder) referred to in paragraphs 25 to 36 of the affidavit of Danny Howett (Howett) and section 9.1 of the affidavit of Charlotte Bolton (Bolton), but instead deleted it on about 3 September 2019 | |
Contempt 2 | (b) the contents of his WhatsApp account (the WhatsApp Account), but instead deleted copies of it and provided the doctored copy of it at Exhibit CB1/17 referred to in sections 6.3, 9.2 and 9.3 of Bolton | |
(2) Breach of paragraph 5(f) of the Order |
Paragraph 5(f) of the Order ordered Mr Giles to preserve relevant disclosable documents and/or documents relevant to this dispute | Mr Giles failed to preserve the required documents in accordance with paragraph 5(f) of the Order because he |
Contempt 3 | (a) deleted the Malay Back Up Folder on about 3 September 2019 | |
Contempt 4 | (b) deleted copies of the WhatsApp Account and prvoided the doctored copy of it at Exhibit CB1/17 | |
Contempt 5 | (c) gave instructions to a third party on about 1 September 2019 to delete his email account [email protected] (including by sending messages which included "So basically I need to wipe, without any trace, most or all of my emails so there is no way whatsoever that a specialist company can retrieve" and "That's why I need it gone!! Thanks for your help!") with the result that access to it was prevented and/or it was deleted (the Rapax Account) | |
Contempt 6 | (d) wiped and failed to preserve the contents of the HP Laptop referred to in paragraphs 58 to 64 of Howett and sections 6.5 and 9.4 of Bolton (the HP Laptop) on about 8 September 2019 | |
Contempt 7 | (e) failed to preserve the missing USB memory device referred to in paragraphs 59(3) to 64 of Howett and sections 6.5 and 9.4 of Bolton (the Missing USB Device) between 8 September and 2 October 2019 | |
(3) Breach of paragraph 4(b) of the Order |
Paragraph 4(b) of the Order ordered Mr Giles to disclose the name and address of everyone to whom he had disclosed, supplied or offered to supply Centek Material by providing a sworn witness statement detailing them by 4:30pm on 16 September 2019 | Mr Giles failed to disclose the name and address of everyone to whom he had disclosed, supplied or offered to supply Centek Material by 4:30pm on 16 September 2919 in accordance with paragraph 4(b) of the Order because he did not do so in relation to |
Contempt 8 | (a) the lady identified as "Farrah" (an ex-Centek employee and current director of a Malaysian company "Flowpax" who worked on behalf of Rapax | |
Contempt 9 | (b) the man identified as "Saufi" (an ex-employee of Centek's customer and distributor Halliburton, who worked on behalf of Rapax) to whom he had been supplying and offering to supply Centek Material from at least June to July 2019 as illustrated in the WhatsApp conversations in Exhibits AB1/2 and AB/3 to the second affidavit of Andrew Boulcott (Boulcott) and in other ways | |
(4) Breach of paragraph 4(c) of the Order |
Paragraph 4(c) of the Order ordered Mr Giles to provide Centex with full details of every supply or offer to supply Centek Material by 4:30pm on 16 September 2019 and to provide copies of such material | Mr Giles failed to provide full details of every supply or offer to supply Centek Material by 4:30pm on 16 September 2019 or provide copies of such material in accordance with paragraph 4(c) of the Order, in that he did not do so in relation to |
Contempt 10 | (a) the content of the WhatsApp Account and his supply of Centek Material through it to Farrah, Saufi and the man identified as "Rafek" (who also worked on behalf of Rapax) but instead provided the doctored WhatsApp record at Exhibit CB1/17 to the Claimant | |
Contempt 11 | (b) the Malay Back Up Folder | |
Contempt 12 | (c) the documents obtained from the Malaysian Defendants identified in section 4 of Boulcott and sections 8 and 9.6 to 9.9 of Bolton | |
(5) Breach of paragraph 3(a) of the Order Contempt 13 |
Paragraph 3(a) of the Order ordered Mr Giles not to be engaged or concerned in a business in competition with Centrex's Restricted Business until the return date or 12 January 2020. On 10 October 2019, the Consent Order of Mr Justice Marcus Smith vacated the Return Date fixed for 7 October 2019 and varied paragraph 3 of the Order such that it remained in force until 12 January 2020 | Mr Giles continued to assist Farrah, Saufi, Rafek, Shaiful, Rapax and/or Flopax with their centralizer business after the order was served on him on 31 August 2019 including by working for Rapax remotely from 31 August 2019 on the basis that "the Malaysians" would pay him "as long as I'm still working" as set out in Exhibit DH1/19/3-4 to Howett and doing so after that including by modifying or dealing with a PowerPoint presentation called 'The_CHIEF (003)' at Exhibit AB3/8 to Bolton on about 3 November 2019 and assisting in the writing of and dealing with "The Memorandum of Understanding" between Oakenshield and Ezzytech at Exhibit AB3/9 on about 6 December 2019 B. False Affidavits |
(6) False evidence |
Mr Giles gave false evidence: | |
False evidence in Giles 3 | (a) in Giles 3 in that | |
Contempt 14 | (i) Centek Materials were not only supplied or offered to the people identified as "Rafek" and "Norman Mokhtar" (para 3) | |
Contempt 15 | (ii) Centek Materials were not only forwarded to Rafek on the dates listed in paragraphs 4(a) to 4(i) (para 4) | |
Contempt 16 | (iii) Rafek was not the only person who Mr Giles contacted regarding this and was not the only person Mr Giles sent the files to (para 7) | |
Contempt 17 | (iv) Mr Giles had not delivered up all copies and all materials that embodied the Centek Material (para 10) | |
Contempt 18 | (v) to the best of his knowledge Mr Giles had not done everything possible to comply with the Order (para 12) | |
False evidence in Giles 4 | (b) in Giles 4 in that | |
Contempt 19 | (i) he had not only disclosed Centek Material to Rafek (para 4) | |
Contempt 20 | (ii) he had not taken all reasonable steps to recover possession of copies of the Centek Material supplied to third parties (para 9, 1st sentence) | |
Contempt 21 | (iii) he had given Rapax or Flowpax Centek Material (para 9, 2nd sentence) | |
Contempt 22 | (iv) he had not done everything possible to comply with the Order and knew that to be so (para 12) | |
False evidence in Giles 5 | (c) in Giles 5 in that | |
Contempt 23 | (i) it was not true that no Centek Material was transferred on to any type of device or passed on to any third party (para 8) | |
Contempt 24 | (ii) he had not done everything he could to comply with the Order and Michelmores' requests (para 9) | |
Those false statements interfered with the course of justice and were likely to interfere with the course of justice because they undermined the recovery, preservation and disclosure of the information and materials which the Order was intended to protect and Mr Giles had no honest belief in the truth of the statements set out above and knew of the likelihood that they would interfere with the course of justice |
"I accept the contempt as set out in [Centek's] Application Notice dated 7 April 2020. I apologise to the Court and Centek for breaching the Order of Mr Justice Norris dated 30 August 2020 and for giving false evidence in my third, fourth and fifth affidavits as set out in [Centek's] Application Notice dated 7 April 2020. Unfortunately, I am unable to purge the contempt for the reasons set out below "
"What was going round in my mind was that I could be about to lose my new position and the security and lifestyle I had hoped my family would get through my working in Malaysia."
That, I think, puts Mr Giles' dilemma very well. He had burnt his boats with Centek by extracting the Centek Material from the company, resigning, and committing to the Malaysian venture. When he was caught, there was no going back. The choice Mr Giles had was either to proceed with the Malaysian venture or to forgo the money he would thereby derive from it by complying with the order, in circumstances where there was no prospect of a return to Centek.
(1) First, there is the fact that Mr Giles has admitted all of the contempts alleged against him, and so has saved the time and expense that would have been involved in proving these. He has done so without qualification. Although it was clear some time before Giles 6 that Mr Giles was not going to dispute the allegations against him, it was really only in Giles 6 that that intention was clearly and unequivocally articulated. It follows that Mr Giles' admissions have come fairly late in the day. The Order, as I have described, was made on 30 August 2019, and Mr Giles' breaches of the Order took place over a considerable period of time thereafter. On the other hand, Giles 6 was sworn on 26 May 2020, some time after the application to commit was made on 7 April 2020. In short, whilst I accept that Mr Giles is entitled to a significant discount in his sentence by reason of his "guilty plea", I have to recognise that that plea came relatively late in the day, well-after the case against him had been articulated.(2) Secondly, there is Mr Giles' apology for breaching the Order, which he made in person from the witness box and in Giles 6. Whilst I accept that Mr Giles is sorry, I am afraid that I regard his apology as amounting to no more than an acknowledgment that he has breached the Order and has been caught doing so, rather than as a genuine reflection of remore. I have considered the terms of Giles 6 very carefully, and listened most carefully to Mr Giles' evidence in the witness box. Even now, Mr Giles fails to acknowledge the true significance of his breach of the Order. By way of example, Mr Giles has yet to accept that his conduct in breaching the Order was done in furtherance of a scheme to use the Centek Material against Centek by benefiting Centek's competitors. There is no other way to regard Mr Giles' conduct, yet he maintained his denial that he was not assisting Centek's competitor. Thus, paragraph 12 of Giles 6 states:
"I had worked for Centek for so many years and had a particular way of designing and using data and I did not want to start from scratch but use what I already knew. I never had any intentions of using the data against them and did not believe we would be in competition with them as my understanding was at the time they would not have been eligible for the VDP contracts as they are not a Malaysian company."I am afraid I regard this as incredible. It is one thing to deploy abstract skills one has learned with one employer to the benefit of another, subsequent, employer. It is quite another to take the former employer's information, and use that information to further another's business. I consider that this essential failure on the part of Mr Giles to acknowledge the true nature of his conduct explains that regrettable lack of detail amounting in some cases to serious omissions in his account of his Malaysian dealings. I am afraid that Mr Giles has been neither full nor frank with the court in his evidence, and that is a factor that affects his plea in mitigation. I say this, fully recognising two factors that will have affected the drafting of Giles 6:(a) First, Mr Giles was very frank that he so did not want to remind himself of his past conduct, that he simply could not bear to look at the detail of the documents that he had "in the back of his car". I can sympathise with this denial, but this does not obscure the partial nature of Mr Giles' mitigation.(b) Secondly, although Mr Giles was, if I may say so, outstandingly well-served by his counsel, Mr Wise, and those instructing Mr Wise, there was an inequality of arms between the time and expense lavished on Centek's evidence (all of which was helpful) and the fact that the budget for legal assistance does not run to a similar attention to Mr Giles' evidence. I have no doubt that if money were no object, Giles 6 might have become (subject to Mr Giles' willingness) a more detailed account of his Malaysian misdoings.Even recognising these two factors, I consider that there is a deliberate lack of frankness in Giles 6, which serves to undercut the apology and regret that Mr Giles seeks to convey.(3) Thirdly, and finally, there is the more general mitigation that is contained in Giles 7. Giles 7 seeks to articulate the devastating effect that imprisonment would have on Mr Giles' family his wife, his children, his mother, the community around him. I accept this evidence, and there is no doubt in my mind that it is genuine and true. I accept that Mr Giles is of good, unblemished character; I take account of his character references, which I accept; I take particular account of the evidence from his family, as to the suffering they are presently undergoing because of Mr Giles' conduct and to what would happen were Mr Giles to be imprisoned. Mr Giles is not only an important emotional support for his family, he is also the only breadwinner. I also accept that these proceedings from the date of the Order to date have been remarkably unpleasant for Mr Giles and that he is suffering including medically as a result.
(1) The nature of Mr Giles' contempts is such that the custody threshold is met. This was quite rightly recognised by Mr Wise on Mr Giles' behalf.(2) I consider that the starting point for contempts of the gravity of Mr Giles must be 20 months imprisonment. That is towards the maximum of 24 months. Whilst I would not go so far as to say that this was the "very worst sort of contempt", it does not (in terms of the extent of Mr Giles' breaches, the significance of the Order, and Mr Giles' protracted and deliberate flouting of the rules) fall far short. Recognising, as I do, that my sentence must reflect the minimum necessary, 20 months seems to me the appropriate starting point. I note what the Court of Appeal said at [40] of McKendrick:
" because the maximum term is comparatively short, we do not think that the maximum can be reserved for the very worst sort of contempt which can be imagined. Rather, there will be a comparatively broad range of conduct which can fairly be regarded as falling within the most serious category and as therefore justifying a sentence at or near the maximum."(3) Turning, then, to the question of mitigation, I consider that the first and third factors warrant a significant deduction in sentence, and I propose to reduce my 20 month starting point to a period of 14 months.
(4) In McKendrick, the Court of Appeal made clear that, in an appropriate case, it was important, when sentencing, to differentiate between the punitive/deterrent and coercive aspects of the sentence. This is undoubtedly the case here. I consider that, in this case, there are significant elements of both in play. The punitive/deterrent element of the 14-month period is 8 months; and the coercive element 6 months. There is a significant coercive element because for the reasons I have articulated I do not consider that Giles 6 comes anywhere near to purging Mr Giles' contempt, nor do I accept Mr Giles' assertion that his contempt cannot be purged. Of course, there are things done by Mr Giles that cannot be undone. But that makes Mr Giles' obligation if he is to purge his contempt to make a full and candid disclosure of his wrongdoing all the more important.
(1) The Order is an important one, and it is essential that breaches of such orders are properly butressed by sanctions that are and are seen to be appropriately serious.(2) In this case, Mr Giles has not merely breached the Order, he has flouted it over a period of time and with a deliberation that, in my judgment, must be marked by an unsuspended sentence.
(3) Moreover, Mr Giles has had the opportunity of being very frank in seeking to purge his contempt. He has not availed himself of that opportunity, and I do not consider that suspending his sentence, on condition that he now be full and frank, is in any way appropriate. Rather, Mr Giles must serve his punishment and if he does choose to purge his contempt in the manner I have suggested the coercive element of my sentence (6 months) can be remitted.