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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Semtech Corporation & Ors v Lacuna Space Ltd & Ors [2021] EWHC 1143 (Pat) (05 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2021/1143.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1143 (Pat) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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(1) SEMTECH CORPORATION (2) SEMTECH (INTERNATIONAL) AG (3) SEMTECH FRANCE SAS |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) LACUNA SPACE LIMITED (2) ROBERT SPURRETT (3) THOMAS TELKAMP (4) NICOLAS SORNIN (5) FRANCOIS SFORZA |
Defendant |
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Michael Bloch QC and Jonathan Hill (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP)
for the Claimants (Respondents)
Hearing dates: 30 April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Iain Purvis QC, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court:
Introduction
THE PARTIES AND THE factual background to THE PROCEEDINGS
(i) Under cl. 10.2 of the SPA they gave non compete undertakings, including that they would not participate or engage in any activities competing with, similar, ancillary, related or incidental to the business of either of Cycleo or Nanoscale "i.e. long range or localization wireless".
(ii) Under their employment agreements, they agreed to devote all their work and efforts to the exclusive benefit of Semtech and could not run any other business without prior and express written authorization.
(iii) Under their employment agreements, they agreed to keep Semtech's confidential information secret.
(iv) Under Semtech's successive 2013 and 2020 Codes of Conduct for its staff, which were incorporated into their employment agreements, they agreed to:
a. act with honesty and integrity in carrying out Semtech's business;
b. avoid actual or apparent conflicts of interest, which included a prohibition on diverting business opportunities from Semtech and holding interests in Semtech's customers, suppliers or competitors;
c. keep confidential information secure;
d. (explicitly in the case of the 2020 Code) not use Semtech's property, information or position for inappropriate personal interests.
(i) forwarding Lacuna legally privileged emails sent by the Claimants' in-house counsel regarding Semtech's concerns in respect of a support letter for the European Space Agency ("ESA") that Lacuna needed from Semtech to obtain funding and then acting upon suggestions from the Lacuna Defendants as to how they might inject answers to those concerns into the internal debate at Semtech;
(ii) informing Lacuna of Semtech's dealings with Semtech's customers and Lacuna's potential competitors and other commercial confidential information and trade secrets;
(iii) championing Lacuna, over and above its competitors, internally within Semtech, without disclosing their personal interest in it;
(iv) (in relation to Sornin only), procuring the release to the Lacuna Defendants of highly confidential Semtech source code and other technical confidential information and trade secrets without authorisation from the relevant persons in Semtech; and
(v) devoting much time to providing technical support in the development of the Lacuna Gateway and causing other members the Semtech team to do likewise.
the pleaded case against the defendants
Copyright infringement
Breach of confidence
Joint liability for acts of infringement of copyright and breach of confidence
Conspiracy
the law
Recital 18
In relation to insurance, consumer and employment contracts, the weaker party should be protected by rules of jurisdiction more favourable to his interests than the general rules
Section 5
Jurisdiction over individual contracts of employment
Article 20
In matters relating to individual contracts of employment, jurisdiction shall be determined by this Section, without prejudice to Article 6, point 5 of Article 7 and, in the case of proceedings brought against an employee, point 1 of Article 8
Article 22.1
An employer may bring proceedings only in the courts of the Member State in which the employee is domiciled.
it might in many cases be helpful to ask whether the acts complained of by the employer constitute breaches of contract by the employee. If so, the claims would be likely to 'relate' to the contract of employment. If not, not.
If the facts alleged are proved, the misuse of confidential information and the breach of copyright would be breaches of these provisions. It cannot, in my judgment, be right that merely because the claims for such misuse and breaches can also be framed in tort or delict that article 20(1) does not apply. To so hold would be to emasculate it.
Relating to, in the context of article 18(1), are broad and unqualified words of nexus and do not require artificial limitation, even though it may be accepted that the nexus must be material.
At [42] he had found that Mr Jasikowski's
status as an employee was directly and substantially material in point of fact to the claim advanced: it is wholly artificial to say otherwise.
As a matter of reality and substance, do the conspiracy claims relate to the Appellants' individual contracts of employment? Is there a material nexus between the conduct complained of and those contracts? Can the legal basis of these claims reasonably be regarded as a breach of those contracts so that it is indispensable to consider them in order to resolve the matter in dispute?
Put another way, those contracts do not feature at all, let alone are indispensable, in the resolution of these claims.
Certain legal systems, including English law, impose on claimants a standard of strict pleading, requiring them to state in their applications not only the facts and subject matter of the claim, but also the legal bases on which they rely. Others, by contrast, including French law, do not constrain claimants with such a requirement. Nevertheless, a certain degree of relativism is again called for. The fact that an applicant is not required to state the legal basis on which he relies does not mean that, where he has taken care to do so, it should be disregarded.
a claim made by an employer against an employee is "a matter relating to" an individual contract of employment within the meaning of art.18(1) of the Lugano II Convention, where it relates to a dispute arising in connection with the employment relationship, irrespective of the substantive legal grounds relied on by the employer in his application. In particular, a claim for compensation brought by an employer against an employee falls within the scope of s.5 where the conduct complained of is in fact related to the duties performed by the employee.
arising in connection with the employment relationship, irrespective of the substantive legal grounds relied on
is consistent with the 'material nexus' approach of the Court of Appeal. The example of a case where the conduct complained of is 'related to the duties performed by the employee' is also helpful and consistent with that approach, though one needs to be careful not to read it as 'within the scope of the duties performed by the employee.' As Longmore LJ remarked in Alfa Laval at [31]
In one sense any employee who acts in breach of contract is not acting qua employee but it is in just those circumstances that the employer will be suing the employee in the first place.
In light of the foregoing considerations, I would suggest excluding from the scope of s.5 only claims of the employer against the employee which concern harmful conduct that is not connected by any objective circumstance pertaining to time, place, means or purpose with the duties performed by the employee.
APPLYiNG THE LAW IN THIS CASE
In relation to the latter contention Semtech relies upon the aforesaid breaches of the SPA and contracts of employment and the fact that Lacuna, Spurrett and Telkamp procured and/or knew of those breaches.
by persons who acquired those trade secrets unlawfully as aforesaid.
This is a reference back to the allegations of breach of employment contract by Sornin made in §§78-79, as explained in §140:
The use and disclosure of the Technical Trade Secrets for and to Lacuna by Sornin were unlawful as they were carried without Semtech's consent, in breach of the confidentiality obligations in his contract of employment and the Code of Conduct.
(i) The alleged conflict of interest only arises in the first place because of Sornin and Sforza's position as senior employees within Semtech responsible for setting up the licence agreement. Arranging such deals was part of their duties. It thus plainly 'relates' to their employment contract (and indeed the same conflict of interest is pleaded as being a breach of the employment contract in, for example, §77e of the Particulars of Claim).
(ii) The vitiation of the licence agreement is only part of the copyright infringement claim. As Mr Tritton pointed out, the licence was only entered into in March 2019 and the allegations of copyright infringement go back to the end of 2017.
(iii) The particulars of common design to infringe copyright set out in §148 include allegations which amount to breaches of employment contract. (f) and (g) of the particulars are set out below:
f. The regular provision of Semtech's confidential information and trade secrets to Telkamp and Spurrett without authorisation from the relevant persons in charge within Semtech, as both Telkamp and Spurrett were aware.
g. The assistance Sornin and Sforza provided in furthering Lacuna's interests from within Semtech, by extolling Lacuna's merits and directing Semtech's resources to assisting Lacuna.[4]
(i) As a matter of reality and substance, the claims relate to the Appellants' individual contracts of employment.
(ii) There is a material nexus between the conduct complained of and those contracts.
(iii) The legal basis of the claims can reasonably be regarded as deriving from an alleged breach of those contracts such that it is indispensable to consider them in order to resolve the matter in dispute.
Note 2 I should point out that Ds 1-3 deny that they were aware of this non-disclosure [Back] Note 3 In Bosworth by contrast, as Gross LJ put it in [68], the key to the alleged fraud lay not in the employment relationship with the individual companies but in the Defendants’ de facto roles as CEO and CFO across the whole group of companies. [Back] Note 4 Mr Bloch suggested that the second of these did not necessarily imply a breach of employment contract, but it is plainly a reference back to the more detailed allegations along these lines in §77 which are said to be a breach.
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