Enforceability of Covenant to Protect
Confidential Information.
Employers are often concerned to protect
their business interests when an
employee leaves to work for a
competitor. An important method of
ensuring that an employee does not use
his or her previous employer’s trade
secrets or confidential information to
benefit the new employer’s business is
to include in the employee’s contracts
of employment various restrictive
covenants. Typically, such covenants
will oblige an ex-employee not to
divulge confidential information, such
as product pricing or customers’
addresses, and not to work for a
competitor for a certain period of time
after employment has ceased.
However, it is sometimes difficult to
enforce restrictive covenants in the
courts. First, restrictive covenants are
only enforceable if they are no wider
than is necessary to protect the
ex-employer’s legitimate business
interests. Restrictive covenants aimed
simply at restricting competition will
be struck down as an unreasonable
restraint of trade. Secondly, the law
will not permit an employer to enforce a
restrictive covenant if the employee
ended the contract because of a
repudiatory breach by the employer or
where the employer wrongfully dismisses
the employee without notice.
The case reported below is unusual
because, whereas most of the case law in
this area concerns restrictive covenants
preventing ex-employees from working for
a competitor, this concerns an
independent contractor and a restrictive
covenant that protects only confidential
information.
Model’s assistant sells story to
newspaper.
C, a famous model hired F in January
2001 to work as her personal assistant.
F was not an employee but an independent
contractor working under contract for
services. In addition to the contract,
the parties signed a confidentiality
agreement. This provided that without
the express written consent of C, no
information relating to C’s professional
and private life which F might come to
learn as a result of her work would be
disseminated to the media during or
after the performance of the contract.
On April 7 2001 relations between C and
F broke down. F alleged that C had
violently assaulted her and that she, F,
had taken this conduct as repudiation of
the contract for services with the
result that the parties were discharged
from all future obligations under the
contract, including the obligation to
protect confidential information.
Shortly thereafter F gave an interview
to the News of the World for which she
was paid £25,000. In June 2001 the
newspaper published an article using
information F had supplied that revealed
details of how C had conducted personal
relationships with both her boyfriend
and another man. It also reported F’s
description of the manner in which C had
treated her in the period leading up to
and including the alleged assault that
had terminated their working
relationship.
Model claims breach of confidentiality.
C began an action in the High Court
alleging that F had breached the
confidentiality agreement and claimed
damages. F conceded that she had
provided some of the information
contained in the newspaper article, but
claimed that she was not bound by the
confidentiality agreement because she
had accepted the alleged assault as a
repudiatory breach of contract. F also
counterclaimed for damages for the
alleged assault.
C made an interim application claiming
summary judgment in her favour, arguing
that since F had conceded that she had
supplied the newspaper with some of the
information in the article, F had no
realistic prospect of successfully
defending the action if it went to
trial. In reply, F argued that she had
realistic defence since, if she could
show at trial that the alleged assault
had taken place and that it constituted
a repudiation of the contract, she would
not be bound by the confidentiality
agreement.
The judge granted C summary judgment on
that part of the action concerning the
information that F conceded she had
revealed, on the ground that there was
no rule of law that could release F from
the confidentiality agreement. It was
also directed that the remainder of the
claim should proceed to trial.
Assistant asserts covenant not binding.
F appealed against the decision to a
full judge of the High Court, arguing
that the entirety of the action should
proceed to trial. In support of her
contention that the confidentiality
agreement should not be enforced, F
sought to rely upon two cases; General
Billposting Co Ltd v Atkinson and Rock
Refrigeration Ltd v Jones.
The General Billposting case concerned
an employee who was dismissed without
notice by his employers and who sought
to avoid a restrictive covenant that
prevented him from working with a
competitor. The case established the
principal – which was later confirmed by
the Court of Appeal in Rock – that
restrictive covenants do not survive the
termination of a contract of employment
when the employer repudiates the
contract even where the covenant stated
that it would continue to be operative
after the determination of the contact
“howsoever arising”.
Obligations of confidence not affected.
The High Court began by noting that they
had to decide two issues; first, whether
the principle in the General Billposting
case extends beyond restraint of trade
covenants to confidentiality covenants;
and, secondly, whether and to what
extent the principle applies in cases of
contracts for services.
Turning to the first issue, the High
Court stated that the courts in General
Billposting and Rock had not been
required to decide whether the principle
established in the former applied to
covenants protecting confidential
information, as they had been
considering only covenants restricting
an employee’s future ability to trade in
competition with his previous employer.
There were, however, passages in Rock
which supported a finding that F could
not rely upon the General Billposting
principle to argue that she was no
longer bound by the confidentiality
covenant.
Confidential information is property.
In Rock Lord Justice Morritt had stated
that the principle in General
Billposting would not restrict an
employer’s rights to property after a
repudiatory breach. For example, an
employee would be obliged to return a
company car to his or her employer. He
added that similar situations might
arise in relation to the employer’s
trade secrets, papers and access to
property. The High Corut interpret
Morritt LJ’s approach to mean that since
confidential information was a form of
property belonging to the employer, the
employer’s rights over it would survive
termination of the contract.
The High Court also drew support for its
decision from the judgment of Lord
Justice Phillips in Rock. He had stated
that the principle in General
Billposting accorded neither with
current legal principles regarding the
effects of acceptance of a repudiation,
which had developed since General
Billposting was decided in 1909, nor
with the requirements of business
efficacy. Giving an example of the
latter point, Phillips LJ had speculated
that if an employer exercised his right
to summarily dismiss an employee for a
repudiatory breach of contract, the
application of the General Billposting
principle suggested that he would not be
able to enforce his restrictive
covenants even though it was the
employee who was in breach of contract.
Contracts for services caught by
confidentiality.
The High Court went on to consider the
second issue and stated that if the
instant case had concerned a contract of
employment, they would have found that
the principle in General Billposting did
not apply. In the Court’s view, there
could be no justification for making a
wrongfully dismissed employee a present
of his or her employer’s trades secrets
or other confidences. The Court stressed
that there are only a limited number of
situations in which an employee is
released from his or her obligations.
Former employees are protected from
unfair and unreasonable covenants in
restraint of trade because the law has
always placed the highest importance on
the right of former employees to obtain
new employment. Employees are also
protected from fair and reasonable
covenants where they have been
wrongfully dismissed. In addition, the
law even allows former employees a
degree of protection in respect of
confidential information that they
cannot reasonably help carrying away in
their heads and using in their fresh
employment. However, subject to this
limited qualification, the Court
stressed that an employee’s acceptance
of the employer’s repudiatory breach
cannot displace the employer’s
established property rights, which
include rights in respect of
confidential information.
The instant case, however, concerned a
contract for services, so it was not
necessary, in the Court’s opinion, to
decide the claim according to the
principle in General Billposting. In a
case involving a contract for service,
there could be no conceivable basis for
the suggestion that a repudiatory breach
by the client entitles the independent
contractor to be released from
obligations of confidentiality. It was
plain beyond question that the
obligations of confidence of, for
example, lawyers, doctors or security
consultants survived acceptance by the
service provider of the repudiation of
the contract by the client. Indeed, that
was surely the premise upon which the
relationship between the client and
service provider was created. It
therefore followed that, in the Court’s
opinion, F continued to be bound by her
obligations of confidentiality even if
she had accepted a repudiation of the
contract. The decision of the Master was
accordingly upheld.
Revelations not in public interest.
The High Court also considered a second
line of argument whereby F claimed that
there was a public interest in the
disclosure of the revelations made by
her to the newspaper, and that this
interest was protected by the Human
Rights Act 1998. This argument was
dismissed on the ground that there was
no sufficient public interest in C’s
personal life to justify protecting the
breach by F of her obligations of
confidence.
Comment.
The decision in the case dealt
specifically with a confidentiality
clause in a contract for services.
Accordingly, the Court did not have to
decide whether a similar clause would
have been enforceable had F been an
employee working under a contract of
employment. However, Mr. Justice
Lightman, who gave judgment in the case,
made it clear that he would have come to
the same conclusion if F had been an
employee. He could see no reason to
treat employees and independent
contractors differently, stating that
their obligations of confidence should
continue notwithstanding the fact that
it was the employer’s breach that
terminated the contract.
Restrictive Covenants are often a
complex area of employment law and
although often contained in a contract
of employment, are often unenforceable.
If you have any issues about restrictive
covenants which may be contained in your
contract, please do not hesitate to
contact Lorraine Merry, Robinson King
Solicitors, 0800 62 22 66.
