BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> IMG Data Ltd v Perform Content Services Ltd [2023] EWHC 3244 (Ch) (19 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3244.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3244 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IMG DATA LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and – |
||
PERFORM CONTENT SERVICES LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Benjamin Pilling KC and Daniel Khoo (instructed by Squire Patton Boggs (UK) LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21 November 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Cadwallader:
Introduction
The claim
Strike out
Summary judgment
The Claimant's case
Inducing Breach of Contract
"3. Liability for inducing breach of contract was established by the famous case of Lumley v Gye (1853) 2 E & B 216 . The court based its decision on the general principle that a person who procures another to commit a wrong incurs liability as an accessory. As Erle J put it (at p 232):
"It is clear that the procurement of the violation of a right is a cause of action in all instances where the violation is an actionable wrong, as in violations of a right to property, whether real or personal, or to personal security: he who procures the wrong is a joint wrongdoer, and may be sued, either alone or jointly with the agent, in the appropriate action for the wrong complained of."
4. For a court in 1853, the difficulty about applying this principle to procuring a breach of contract was that the appropriate action for the wrong committed by the contracting party lay in contract but no such action would lie against the procurer. Only a party to the contract could be sued for breach of contract. The answer, said the court, was to allow the procurer to be sued in tort, by an action on the case. There was a precedent for this mixing and matching of the forms of action in the old action on the case for enticing away someone else's servant: see Gareth Jones "Per Quod Servitium Amisit" (1958) 74 LQR 39 . Some lawyers regarded that action as a quaint anomaly, but the court in Lumley v Gye treated it as a remedy of general application.
5. The forms of action no longer trouble us. But the important point to bear in mind about Lumley v Gye is that the person procuring the breach of contract was held liable as accessory to the liability of the contracting party. Liability depended upon the contracting party having committed an actionable wrong. Wightman J made this clear when he said (at p 238):
"It was undoubtedly prima facie an unlawful act on the part of Miss Wagner to break her contract, and therefore a tortious act of the defendant maliciously to procure her to do so …"
Again at paragraph 44 he stated:
"Finally, what counts as a breach of contract? In Torquay Hotel Co Ltd v Cousins [1969] 2 Ch 106 , 138 Lord Denning said that there could be liability for preventing or hindering performance of the contract on the same principle as liability for procuring a breach. This dictum was approved by Lord Diplock in Merkur Island Shipping Corporation [1983] 2 AC 570 , 607–608. One could therefore have liability for interference with contractual relations even though the contracting party committed no breach. But these remarks were made in the context of the unified theory which treated procuring a breach as part of the same tort as causing loss by unlawful means. If the torts are to be separated, then I think that one cannot be liable for inducing a breach unless there has been a breach. No secondary liability without primary liability. Cases in which interference with contractual relations have been treated as coming within the Lumley v Gye tort (like Dimbleby & Sons v National Union of Journalists [1984] 1 WLR 67 and 427) are really cases of causing loss by unlawful means."
"168. The other tort requiring consideration is the tort of inducing a breach of contract. This tort is known by various names, reflecting differing views about its scope. At its inception in 1853 this tort was concerned with a simple tripartite situation of a non-party to a contract inducing a contracting party to break her contract. Did the other party to the contract have a cause of action against the non-party?
169. The facts in Lumley v Gye 2 E & B 216 are familiar to every law student. The well-known opera singer Johanna Wagner had contracted with Mr Lumley to perform exclusively at the Queen's Theatre. Mr Gye, the owner of Her Majesty's Theatre, 'enticed and procured' Miss Wagner to break her contract. The action came before the court on a plea of demurrer. The question was whether the counts disclosed a cause of action against Mr Gye. The court, by a majority, held they did.
170. The reasoning of the judges differed in its generality. It was established law that a person who knowingly procured a servant to leave his master's service committed an actionable wrong. Crompton J saw no reason to confine this principle to contracts for services of any particular description. Erle J reasoned more widely. He said, at page 232, that the principle underlying the master and servant cases is that procurement of the violation of a right is a cause of action:
'It is clear that the procurement of the violation of a right is a cause of action in all instances where the violation is an actionable wrong, as in violations of a right to property, whether real or personal, or to personal security: he who procures the wrong is a joint wrongdoer , and may be sued, either alone or jointly with the agent, in the appropriate action for the wrong complained of.' (emphasis added)
This principle, of liability for procurement of a wrong, applies to a breach of contract as well as an actionable wrong: page 233. Wightman J expressed himself similarly, at page 238:
'It was undoubtedly prima facie an unlawful act on the part of Miss Wagner to break her contract, and therefore a tortious act of the defendant [knowingly] to procure her to do so .' (emphasis added)
171. This 'procurement' analysis commended itself to Lord Watson in Allen v Flood [1898] AC 1 . Lord Watson approved Erle J's reasoning as quoted above, and continued, at pages 106–107:
'These statements embody an intelligible and a salutary principle, and they contain a full explanation of the law upon which the case [ Lumley v Gye ] was decided. He who wilfully induces another to do an unlawful act which, but for his persuasion, would or might never have been committed, is rightly held responsible for the wrong which he procured.'
172. Thus understood, the rationale and the ingredients of the 'inducement' tort differ from those of the 'unlawful interference' tort. With the inducement tort the defendant is responsible for the third party's breach of contract which he procured. In that circumstance this tort provides a claimant with an additional cause of action. The third party who breached his contract is liable for breach of contract. The person who persuaded him to break his contract is also liable, in his case in tort. Hence this tort is an example of civil liability which is secondary in the sense that it is secondary, or supplemental, to that of the third party who committed a breach of his contract. It is a form of accessory liability."
"(i) A contract between a claimant and a third party must have been breached by the third party." (emphasis added)."
But it is fair to say that Birss J was not concerned with the question now under consideration, and I do not understand him to have intended to add to the decision in OBG at this point.
"The tort of inducing breach of contract is based on the wrongful interference with contractual rights. It must follow, therefore, that a person who has effected a legal assignment of his rights under a contract to a third party cannot maintain an action for interference with those rights any more than he can himself bring an action to enforce them."
But that, I think, was concerned with the situation in which a claimant had parted with his rights to mount a claim, rather than with the question presently under consideration.
"20. In Global Resources Group v Mackay [2008] SLT 104, Lord Hodge, then sitting in the Outer House, articulated the tort (or delict in Scotland) in these terms at paragraph 11: "A commits the delict or tort of inducing a breach of contract where B and C are contracting parties and A, knowing of the terms of their contract and without lawful justification induces B to break that contract."
21. He went on in the following paragraphs to identify the five ingredients of the tort as being:
(1) there must be a breach of contract by B;
(2) A must induce B to break his contract with C by persuading, encouraging or assisting him to do so;
(3) A must know of the contract and know his conduct will have that effect;
(4) A must intend to procure the breach of contract either as an end in itself or as the means by which he achieves some further end;
(5) if A has a lawful justification for inducing B to break his contract with C, that may provide a defence against liability" (emphasis added).
Again, this at least assumes that the claimant will be a party to the contract broken and will have been entitled to sue on the contract; but the question whether it might also be enough that the claimant might instead be entitled to sue in respect of an interest in the contract other than that of a party was not then under consideration.
Unlawful means conspiracy
Conclusion