Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NIRANJAN SHANKAR GOLIKARI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CENTURY SPINNING AND MFG. CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/01/1967
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1098 1967 SCR (2) 378
CITATOR INFO :
R 1980 SC1717 (6,15,19,23)
ACT:
Indian Contract Act (9 of 1872), s. 27--Public
policy--Restraint on alternative employment during
contracted period of service when justified.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant joined the service of the respondent
company as Shift Supervisor and was given training in the
manufacture of tyre cord yarn. The contract was for five
years and it was stipulated that during the said period the
appellant would not work in similar capacity in any other
concern and would maintain secrecy as to the technical
aspects of his work. However, shortly after completing his
training the appellant joined a rival concern at higher
emoluments. The respondent company thereupon filed a suit
for an injunction against the appellant restraining him from
working elsewhere as a shift Supervisor in the manufacture
of tyre cord yarn or in similar capacity and from divulging
the trade secrets of the respondent company. The injunction
was granted. His appeal before the High Court having
failed, the appellant came to this Court under Art. 136 of
the Constitution. It was contended on his behalf that the
covenant was against public policy within the meaning of s.
27 of the Indian Contract Act, that it was unreasonable, and
that it was unnecessary for Safeguarding the trade interest
of the company.
HELD: The appeal must fail.
(i) Negative covenants operative during the period of
employment when the employee is bound to serve his employer
exclusively are not to be regarded as restraint of trade and
therefore do not fall under s. 27 of the Contract Act. A
negative covenant that the employee would not engage himself
in trade or business or would not get himself employed by
any other master for whom he would perform similar or
substantially similar duties is not a restraint of trade
unless the contract as aforesaid is unconscionable or
excessively harsh or unreasonable or one-sided [389 F]
Caselaw considered.
In the present case the injunction issued against the
appellant was restricted as to time, the nature of the
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employment and as to area and could not therefore be said to
be too wide or unreasonable or unnecessary for the
protection of the interests of the respondent company. [389
G-H]
(ii) There is nothing to prevent a court from granting a
limited injunction to the extent that is necessary to
protect the employers’s interests where the negative
stipulation is not void. The rule against severance applies
only to cases where the covenant is bad in law, and it is
only in such cases that the court is precluded from severing
the good from the bad [390 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2103 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 28, 1966 of the Bombay High Court in First Appeal No.
526 of 1965.
379
A. K. Sen, Rameshwar Dial and A. D. Mathur, for the
appellant.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, R.P. Bhatt, R. A. Gagrat,
G.L Sanghi and B. R. Agarwala, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. This appeal by special leave is against the
judgment and order of the High Court of Maharashtra
confirming an order of injunction against the appellant.
The respondent company manufactures amongst other things
tyre cord yarn at its plant at Kalyan known as the Century
Rayon. Under an agreement dated January 19, 1961 Algemene
Kunstzijde Unie of Holland (hereinafter referred to as AKU)
and Vereinigte Clanzstoff Fabrikan AG of West Germany
(hereinafter referred to as VCF) agreed to transfer their
technical know-how to the .respondent company to be used
exclusively for the respondent company’s tyre cord yarn
plant at Kalyan in consideration of 1,40,000 Deutsche Marks
payable to them by the respondent company. Clause 4 of that
agreement provided that the Century Rayon should keep secret
until the termination of the agreement and during three
years thereafter all technical information, knowledge know-
how, experience, data and documents passed on by the said
AKU and VCF and the Century Rayon should undertake to enter
into corresponding secrecy arrangements with its employees.
The respondent company thereafter invited applications for
appointments in its said plant including appointments as
Shift Supervisors. On December 3, 1962 the appellant sent
his application stating therein his qualifications. By its
letter dated March 1, 1963 the respondent company offered
the appellant the post of a Shift Supervisor in the said
tyre cord division stating that if the appellant were to
accept the said offer he would be required to sign a
contract in standard form for a term of five years. On
March 5, 1963 the appellant accepted the said offer agreeing
to execute the said standard contract. On March 16, 1963 he
joined the respondent company and executed on that day the
said contract Ex. 28.
Clause 6 of the agreement provided
"The employee shall during the period of his
employment and any renewal thereof, honestly,
faithfully, diligently and efficiently to the
utmost of his power and skill
(a)
380
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(b) devote the whole of his time and energy
exclusively to the business and affairs of the
company and shall not engage directly or
indirectly in any business or serve .Whether
as principal, agent, partner or employee or in
any other capacity either full time or part
time in any business whatsoever other than
that of the company."
Clause 9 provided that during the continuance of his
employment as well as thereafter the employee shall keep
confidential and prevent divulgence of any and all
information instruments, documents, etc., of the company
that might come to his knowledge. Clause 14 provided that
if the company were to close its business or curtail its
activities due to circumstances beyond its control and if it
found that it was no longer possible to, employ the employee
any further it should have option to terminate his services
by giving him three months’ notice or three months’ salary
in lieu thereof. Clause 17 provided as follows :
"In the event of the employee leaving,
abandoning or resigning the service of the
company in breach of the terms of the
agreement before the expiry of the said period
of five years he shall not directly or
indirectly engage in or carry on of his own
accord or in partnership with others the
business at present being carried on by the
company and he shall not serve in any
capacity, whatsoever or be associated with any
person, firm or company carrying on such
business for the remainder of the said period
and in addition pay to the company as
liquidated damages ’an amount equal to the
salaries the employee would have received
during the period of six months thereafter and
shall further reimburse to the company any
amount that the company may have spent on the
employee’s training."
The appellant received training from March to December 1963
land acquired during that training, knowledge of the
technique, processes and the machinery evolved by the said
collaborators as also of certain documents supplied by them
to the respondent company which as aforesaid were to be kept
secret and in respect of which the respondent company had
undertaken to obtain secrecy undertakings from its
employees. According to the evidence, the appellant as a
Shift Supervisor was responsible for the running of Shift
work, control of labour and in particular with the
specifications given by the said AKU.
No difficulty arose between the appellant and the respondent
company until about September 1964. The appellant
thereafter remained absent from the 6th to the 9th October
1964 without obtaining leave therefor. On the 10th October,
he took casual leave. On
381
October 12, he applied for 28 days’. privilege leave form
October 14, 1964. Before that was granted he absented
himself from the 14th to the 31st October, 1964. On October
31, he was offered salary for 9 days that he had worked
during that month. On November 7, 1964, he informed the
respondent company that he had resigned from October 31,
1964. The respondent company by its letter of November 23,
1964 asked him to resume work stating that his said
resignation had not been accepted. On November 28, 1964 the
appellant replied that he had already obtained another
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employment.
It is clear from the evidence that in October he was
negotiating’ with Rajasthan Rayon Company at Kotah which was
also manufacturing tyre cord yarn and got himself employed
there ,at a higher salary of Rs. 560/- per month than what
he was getting from the respondent company. The respondent
company thereupon filed a suit in the court at Kalyan
claiming inter alia an injunction restraining the appellant
from serving in any capacity whatsoever or being associated
with any person, firm or company including the said
Rajasthan Rayon till March 15, 1968. The Company also
claimed Rs. 2410/- as damages being the salary for six
months, under Clause 17 of the said agreement and a
perpetual injunction restraining him from divulging any or
all information, instruments, documents, reports, trade
secrets, manufacturing process, knowhow, etc. which may have
come to his knowledge. The appellant,. while admitting that
he was employed as a Shift Supervisor, denied that he was a
specialist or a technical personnel asserting that his only
duty was to supervise and control labour and to report
deviations of temperature etc. He also alleged that the
said agreement was, unconscionable, oppressive and executed
under coercion and challenged its validity on the ground
that it was opposed to public policy. He challenged in
particular clauses 9 and 17 of the said agreement on the
ground that whereas clause 9 was too wide as-it was
operative not for a fixed period but for life time and
included not only trade secrets but each and every aspect of
information, clause 17 precluded him from serving elsewhere
in any capacity whatsoever which meant a restraint on his
right to trade or to carry on business, profession or
vocation and that such a term was unnecessary for the
protection of the respondent company’s interests as an
employer.
The Trial Court on a consideration of the evidence led by
the parties held : (1) that the respondent company had
established that the appellant had availed himself of the
training imparted by the said AKU in relation to the
manufacture of tyre cord yarn, the operation of the spinning
machines and that he was made familiar with their know-how,
secrets, techniques and information; (2) that his duties
were not merely to supervise labour or to report
382
deviations of temperature as alleged by him; (3) that the
said agreement was not void or unenforceable;- (4) that he
committed breach of the said agreement; (5) that as a result
of the said breach the respondent company suffered loss and
inconvenience and was entitled, to damages under clause 17
and lastly that the company was entitled to an injunction.
On these findings the Trial Court passed the following order
"(1) The injunction is granted against the
defendant and he is restrained from getting in
the employ of or being engaged or connected as
a Shift Supervisor in the Manufacture of tyre
cord yam or as an employee under any title
discharging substantially the same duties as a
Shift Supervisor in Rajasthan Rayon, Kotah or
any other company or firm or individual in any
part of India for the term ending 15th March
1968.
(2) The defendant is further restrained
during the said period and, thereafter, from
divulging any of the secrets, processes or
information relating to the manufacture of
tyre cord yam by continuous spinning process
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obtained by him in the course of and as a
result of :his employment with the
plaintiffs."
It is clear that the injunction restrained the appellant
only from serving as a. Shift Supervisor and in a concern
manufacturing tyre’ cord yarn; by, continuous spinning
process or as an employee under any designation
substantially discharging duties of a Shift Supervisor. It
was also confined to the period of the agreement and in any
concern in India manufacturing tyre cord yarn.
In the appeal filed by him in the High Court, the plea taken
by him as to undue influence and coercion was given up. The
High Court, agreeing with the Trial Court, found that the
evidence of Dr. Chalishhazar, Mehta and John Jacob
established that the appellant had been imparted training
for about nine months during the course of which information
regarding the special processes and details of the machinery
evolved by the said collaborators had been divulged to him.
It also found that as a result of his getting himself
employed in the said rival company, not only the benefit of
training given to him at the cost of the respondent company
would be lost to it but that the knowledge acquired by him
in regard to the said continuous spinning process intended
for the exclusive use of the respondent company was likely
to be made available to the rival company which also was
interested in the continuous spinning process of tyre cord.
The High Court further found that though the machinery
employed by the said Rajasthan Rayon might not be the same
as that in the respondent company’s
383
plant the know-how which the appellant acquired could be
used for ensuring continuous spinning yarn. The High Court
further found that Rajasthan Rayon started production of
tyre cord yam from January 1965, that is, two or three
months after the appellant joined them along with two other
employees of the respondent company, that the Cumulative
effect of the evidence was that the appellant had gained
enough knowledge and experience in the specialised
continuous spinning process in the tyre cord yarn division
of the respondent company and that it was evident that he
left the respondent company’s employment only because the
said Rajasthan Rayon promised him a more lucrative
employment. The High Court concluded that it was not
difficult to imagine why the appellant’s services were
considered useful by his new employers and that the
apprehension of the respondent company that his employment
with the rival company was fraught with considerable damage
to their interest was well-founded and justified its prayer
for an injunction restraining him from undertaking an
employment with the said rival manufacturers.
As regards the challenge to the validity of clauses 9 and
17, the High Court held that though the said agreement was
with the respondent company and the company carried on other
businesses as well, the employment was in the business of
Century Rayon. The appellant was employed as a Shift
Supervisor in that business only, the training given to him
was exclusively for the spinning department of the tyre cord
division and his letter of acceptance was also in relation
to the post of a Shift Supervisor in that department. The
High Court therefore concluded that Clauses 9 and 17 related
only to the business in the tyre cord division and therefore
restraints contained in those clauses meant prohibition
against divulging information received by the appellant
while working in that Division and that clause 17 also meant
a restraint in relation to the work carried on in the said
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spinning department. Therefore the inhibitions contained in
those clauses were not blanket restrictions as alleged by
the appellant, and that the prohibition in clause 17 opera-
ted only in the event of the appellant leaving, abandoning
or resigning his service during the term of and in breach of
the said agreement. On this reasoning it held that clause
17, besides not being general, was a reasonable restriction
to protect the interests of the respondent company
particularly as the company had spent considerable amount in
training, secrets of know-how of specialised processes were
divulged to him and the foreign collaborators had agreed to
disclose their specialised processes only on the respondent
company’s undertaking to obtain corresponding secrecy
clauses from its employees and on the guarantee that those
processes would be exclusively used for the business of the
respondent company. Furthermore, Clause 17 did not prohibit
the appellant even from seeking similar employment from any
other manufacturer after
384
the contractual period was over. The High Court lastly
found that there was no indication at all that if the
appellant was prevented ’from being employed in a similar
capacity elsewhere he would be forced to idleness or that
such a restraint would compel the appellant to go back to
the company which would indirectly result in specific
performance of the contract of personal service.
Counsel for the appellant raised the following three con-
tentions : (1) that the said agreement constituted a
restraint on trade and was therefore opposed to public
policy, (2) that in order to be valid and enforceable the
covenant in question should be reasonable in space and time
and to the extent necessary to protect the employer’s right
of property and (3) that the injunction to enforce a
negative stipulation can only be granted for the legitimate
purpose of safeguarding the trade secrets of the employer.
He argued that these conditions were lacking in the present
case and therefore the respondent company was not entitled
to the enforcement of the said stipulation.
As to what constitutes restraint of trade is summarised in
Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd ed.) Vol. 38, at page 15 and
onwards. It is a general principle of the Common Law that a
person is entitled to exercise his lawful trade or calling
as and when he wills and the law has always regarded
jealously any interference with trade, even at the risk of
interference with freedom of contract as it is public policy
to oppose all restraints upon liberty of individual action
which are injurious to the interests of the State. This
principle is not confined to restraint of trade in the
ordinary meaning of the word "trade" and includes restraints
on the right of being employed. The court takes a far
stricter view of covenants between master and servant than
it does of similar covenants between vendor and purchaser or
in partnership agreements. An employer, for instance, is
not entitled to protect himself against competition on the
part of an employee after the employment has ceased but a
purchaser of a business is entitled to protect himself
against competition per se on the part of the vendor. This
principle is based on the footing that an employer has no
legitimate interest in preventing an employee after he
leaves his service from entering the service of a competitor
merely on the ground that he is a competitor. (Kores
Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Kolak Manufacturing Co. Ltd.(1).
The attitude of the courts as regards public policy however
has not been inflexible. Decisions on public policy have
been subject to change and development with the change in
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trade and in economic thought and the general principle once
applicable to agreements in restraints of trade have been
considerably modified by later decisions. The rule now is
that restraints ’whether general
(1) [1959] Ch. 108,126.
385
or partial may be good if they are reasonable. A restraint
upon freedom of contract must be shown to be reasonably
necessary for the purpose of freedom of trade. A restraint
reasonably necessary for the protection of the covenantee
must prevail unless some specific ground of public policy
can be clearly established against it. (E. Underwood and
Son Ltd. v. Barker (1). A person may be restrained from
carrying on his trade by reason of an agreement voluntarily
entered into by him with that object. In such’ a case the
general principle of freedom of trade must be applied with
due regard to the principle that public policy requires for
men or full age and understanding the utmost freedom of
contract and that it is public policy to allow a trader to
dispose of his business to a successor by whom it may be
efficiently carried on and to afford to an employer an
unrestricted choice of able assistants and the opportunity
to instruct them in his trade and its secrets without fear
of their becoming his competitors. (Fitch, v. Dewes)(2).
Where an agreement is challenged on the ground of its being
a restraint on trade the onus is upon the party supporting
the contract to show that the restraint is reasonably
necessary to protect his interests. Once, this onus is
discharged, the onus of showing that the restraint is
nevertheless injurious to the public is upon the party
attacking the contract. (See Cheshire’s Law of contract,
(6th ed.) 32.8, Mason v. Provident Clothing and Supply Co.
Ltd.(3). and A. G. of Common wealth of Australia v. Adelaide
Steamship Co. Ltd.(4).
The courts however have drawn a distinction between res-
traints applicable during the term of the contract of
employment and those that apply after its cessation.
(Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd ed.) Vol. 38, p. 31). But
in W. H. Milsted and Son Ltd. v. Hamp(5) where the contract
of service was terminable only by notice by the employer,
Eve J. held it to be bad as being wholly one-sided. But
where the contract is not assailable on any such ground, a
stipulation therein that the employee shall devote his whole
time to the employer, and shall not during the term of the
contract serve any other employer would generally be
enforceable. In Gaumont Corporation v. Alexander(6) clause 8
of the agreement provided that
"the engagement is an exclusive engagement by
the corporation of the entire service of the
artiste for the period mentioned in clause 2
and accordingly the artiste agrees with the
corporation that from the date hereof until
the expiration of her said engagement the
artiste
(1) [1899] 1 Ch. 300 C.A.
(3) [1913] A.C. 724
(5) [1927] W.N. 233.
M1 Sup Court/67-11
(2) [1921] 2 A.C. 158,162-167,
(4) [1913] A.C. 781 796.
(6) [1936] 2 All.E.R. 1686.
386
shall not without receiving the previous
consent of the corporation do any work or
perform or render any services whatsoever to
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any person firm or company other than the
corporation and its sub-lessees".
On a contention that this clause was a restraint of trade,
Porter J. held that restrictions placed upon an employee
under a contract of service could take effect during the
period of contract and are not in general against public
policy. But the learned Judge at p. 1692 observed that a
contract would be thought to be contrary to public policy if
there were a restraint, such as a restraint of trade, which
would be unjustifiable for the business of the claimants in
the case. He however added that he did not know of any
case, although it was possible, there might be one, where
circumstances might arise in which it would be held that a
restraint during the progress of the contract itself was an
undue restraint. He also observe that though for the most
part, those who contract with persons and enter into
contracts which one might for this purpose described as
contracts of service, have generally imposed upon them the
position that they should occupy themselves solely in the
business of those whom they serve but that it would be a
question largely of evidence how far the protection of
clauses of that kind would extend, at any rate during the
existence of the contract of service. Therefore, though as
a general rule restraints placed upon an employee are not
against public policy, there might, according to the learned
Judge, be cases where a covenant might exceed the
requirement of protection of the employer and the court
might in such cases refuse to enforce such a covenant by
injunction. In William Robinson and Co. Ltd. v. Heuer(1)
the contract provided that Heuer would not during this
engagement without the previous consent in writing of
William Robinson & Co., "carry on or be engaged directly or
indirectly, as principal, agent, servant or otherwise, in
any trade, business or calling, either relating to goods of
any description sold or manufactured by the said W. Robinson
& Co. Ltd., ....or in any other business whatsoever."
Lindley M.R. there observed that there was no authority
whatsoever to .show that the said agreement was illegal,
that is to say, that it was unreasonable or went further
than was reasonably necessary for the protection of the
plaintiffs. It was confined to the period of the
engagement, and meant simply that "so long as you are in our
,employ you shall not work for anybody else or engage in any
other business". There was, therefore, according to him,
nothing unreasonable in such an agreement. Applying these
observations Branson J. in Warner Brothers Pictures v.
Nelson(2) held a covenant ,of a similar nature not to be
void. The defendant, a film artist, entered into a contract
with the plaintiffs, film producers, for fifty-two weeks,
renewable for a further period of fifty-two weeks
(1) [1898] 2 Ch. 451.
(2) [1937] 1 K.B. 209.
387
at the option of the plaintiffs, whereby she agreed to
render her exclusive service as such artist to the
plaintiffs, and by way of negative stipulation not to
render, during the period of the contract, such services to
any other person. In breach of the agreement she entered
into a contract to perform as a film artist for a third
person. It was held that in such a case an injunction would
issue though it might be limited to a period and in terms
which the court in its discretion thought reasonable.
A similar distinction has also been drawn by courts in India
and a restraint by which a person binds himself during the
term of his agreement directly or indirectly not to take
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service with any other employer or be engaged by a third
party has been held not to be void and not against section
27 of the Contract Act. In Brahmaputra Tea Co. Ltd. v.
Scarth(1) the condition under which the covenantee was
partially restrained from competing after the term of his
engagement was over with his former employer was held to be
bad but the condition by which he bound himself during the
term of his agreement, not, directly or indirectly, to
compete with his employer was held good. At page 550 of
the report the court observed that an agreement of service
by which a person binds himself during the term of the
agreement not to take service with any one else, or directly
or indirectly take part in, promote or aid any business in
direct competition with that of his employer was not hit by
section 27. The Court observed:
"An agreement to serve a person exclusively
for a definite term is a lawful agreement, and
it is difficult to see how that can be
unlawful which is essential to its fulfilment,
and to the due protection of the interests of
the employer, while the agreement is in
force."
(See also Pragji v. Pranjiwan(2) and Lalbhai Dalpathbhai and
Co v. Chittaranjan Chandulal Pandva(3). In Deshpande v.
Arbind Mills Co.(4) an agreement of service contained both a
positive covenant, viz., that the employee shall devote his
whole-time attention to the service of the employers and
also a negative covenant preventing the employee from
working elsewhere during the term of the agreement. Relying
on Pragji v. Pranjiwan(2), Charlesworth v. MacDonald(5),
Madras Railway Company v. Rust,(6) Subba Naidu v. Haji
Badsha Sahib(7) and Burn & Co; v. MacDonald(8) as instances
where such a negative covenant was enforced, the learned
Judges observed that Illustrations (c) and (d) to section 57
of the Specific Relief Act in terms recognised such
contracts and the existence of negative covenants therein
and that therefore the
(1) I.L.R. (XI) Cal. 545.
(3) A.I.R. 1966 Guj 189.
(5) I.L.R. 23. Bom. 103.
(7) I.L.R. 26 Mad. 168.
(2) 5 Dom. L.R. 872.
(4) 48 Bom. L.R. 90.
(6) I.L.R. 14 Mad. 18
(8) I.L.R. 36 Cal. 354.
388
contention that the existence of such a negative covenant in
a service agreement made the agreement void on the ground
that it was in restraint of trade and contrary to section 27
of the Contract Act had no validity.
Counsel for the appellant, however, relied on Ehrman v. Bar-
tholomew(1) as an illustration where the negative
stipulation in the contract was held to be unreasonable and
therefore unenforceable. Cleuse 3 of the agreement there
provided that the employee shall devote the whole of his
time during the usual business hours in the transaction of
the business of the firm and shall not in any manner
directly or indirectly engage or employ himself in any other
business, or transact any business with or for any person or
persons other than the firm during the continuance of this
agreement. Clause 13 of the agreement further provided that
after the termination of the employment by any means, the
employee should not, either on his sole account or jointly
with any other person, directly or indirectly supply any of
the then or past customers of the firm with wines etc. or
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solicit for orders any such customers and should not be
employed in any capacity whatsoever or be concerned, engaged
or employed in any business of a wine or spirit merchant in
which any former partner of the firm was engaged. Romer J.
held these clauses to be unreasonable on the ground that
clause 3 was to operate for a period of 10 years or for so
much of that period as the employer chose and that the word
"business" therein mentioned could not be held limited by
the context to a wine merchant’s business or in any similar
way. So that the court, while unable to order the defendant
to work for the plaintiffs, is asked indirectly to make him
do so by otherwise compelling him to abstain wholly from
business, at any rate during all usual business hours. The
other decision relied on by him was Mason v. Provident
Clothing and Supply Co. Ltd.(2). This was a case of a
negative covenant not to serve elsewhere for three years
after the termination of the contract. In this case the
court applied the test of what was reasonable for the
protection of the plaintiffs’ interest. It was also not a
case of the employee possessing any special talent but that
of a mere canvasser. This decision, however, cannot assist
us as the negative covenant therein was to operate after the
termination of the contract. Herbert Morris v. Saxelby(3)
and Attwood v. Lamont(4) are also cases where the
restrictive covenants were to apply after the termination of
the employment. In Commercial Plastics Ltd. v. Vincent(5)
also the negative covenant was to operate for a year after
the employee left the employment and the court held that the
restriction was void inasmuch as it went beyond what was
reasonably necessary for the protection of the employer’s
legitimate interests.
(1) [1898] 1 Ch. 571.
(3) [1916] A.C. 688.
(2 [1913] A. C. 724.
(5) 3 AII.E.R. 546. (4) [1920] 3 K.B. 571.
389
These decisions do not fall within the class of cases where
the negative covenant operated during and for the period of
employment as in Gaumont Corporation’s Case(1) and Warner
Brothers v. Nelson(2) where the covenant ws held not to be a
restraint of trade or against public policy unless the
agreement was wholly one-sided and therefore unconscionable
as in W.H. Milsted and Son Ltd. v. Hamp(3) or where the
negative covenant was such that an injunction to enforce it
would indirectly compel the employee either to idleness or
to serve the employer, a thing which the court would not
order, as in Ehrman v. Bartholomew(4). There is, however,
the decision of a Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court in
Gopal Paper Mills v. Malhotra(5), a case of breach of a
negative covenant during the period of employment. This
decision, in our view, was rightly distinguished by the High
Court as the period of contract there was as much as 20
years and the contract gave the employer an arbitrary power
to terminate the service without notice if the employer
decided not to retain the employee during the three years of
apprenticeship or thereafter if the employee failed to
perform his duties to the satisfaction of the employer who
had absolute discretion to decide whether the employee did
so and the employer’s certificate that he did not, was to be
conclusive as between the parties. Such a contract would
clearly fall in the class of contracts held void as being
one sided as in W.H. Milsted and Son Ltd. v. Hamp(3). The
decision in Gopal Paper Mills v. Malhotra(5) therefore
cannot further the appellant’s case.
The result of the above discussion is that considerations
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against restrictive covenants are different in cases where
the restriction is to apply during the period after the
termination of the contract than those in cases where it is
to operate during the period of the contract. Negative
covenants operative during the period of the contract of
employment when the employee is bound to serve his employer
exclusively are generally not regarded as restraint of trade
and therefore do not fall under section 27 of the Contract
Act. A negative covenant that the employee would not engage
himself in a trade or business or would not get himself
employed by any other master for whom he would perform
similar or substantially similar duties is not therefore a
restraint of trade unless the contract as aforesaid is
unconscionable or excessively harsh or unreasonable or one
sided as in the case of W.H. Milsted and Son Ltd.(3). Both
the Trial Court and the High Court have found, and in our
view, rightly, that the negative covenant in the present
case restricted as it is to the period of employment and to
work similar or substantially similar to the one carried on
by the appellant when he was in the employ of the respondent
company was reasonable and necessary for the protection of
the company’s interests and not such
(1) [1936] 2 All E.R. 1686. (2) [1937] 1 K.B. 209.
(3) [1927] W. N. 233. (5) A. 1. R. 1262 Cal. 61.(4)
[1898] 1 Ch. 671.
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as the court would refuse to enforce. There is therefore no
validity in the contention that the negative covenant
contained in clause 17 amounted to a restraint of trade and
was therefore against public policy.
The next question is whether the injunction in the terms in
which it is framed should have been granted. There is no
doubt that the courts have a wide discretion to enforce by
injunction a negative covenant. Both the courts below have
concurrently found that the apprehension of the respondent
company that information regarding the special processes and
the special machinery imparted to and acquired by the
appellant during the period of training and thereafter might
be divulged was justified; that the information and
knowledge disclosed to him during this period was different
from the general knowledge and experience that he might have
gained while in the service of the respondent company and
that it was against his disclosing the former to the rival
company which required protection. It was argued however
that the terms of clause were too wide and that the court
cannot sever the good from the bad and issue an injunction
to the extent that was good. But the rule against severance
applies to cases where the covenant is bad in law and it is
in such cases that the court is precluded from severing the
good from the bad. But there is nothing to prevent the
court from granting a limited injunction to the extent that
is necessary to protect the employer’s interests where the
negative stipulation is not void. There is also nothing to
show that if the. the negative covenant is enforced the
appellant would be driven to idleness or would be compelled
to go back to the respondent company. It may be that if he
is not permitted to get himself employed in another similar
employment he might perhaps get a lesser remuneration than
the one agreed to by Rajasthan Rayon. But that is no
consideration against enforcing the covenant. The evidence
is clear that the appellant has torn the agreement to pieces
only because he was offered a higher remuneration.
Obviously he cannot be heard to say that no injunction
should be granted against him to enforce the negative
covenant which is not opposed to public policy. The
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injunction issued against him is restricted as to time, the
nature of employment and as to area and cannot therefore be
said to be too wide or unreasonable or unnecessary for the
protection of the interests of the respondent company.
As regards Clause 9 the injunction is to restrain him from
divulging any and all information, instruments, documents,
reports etc. which may have come to his knowledge while he
was serving the respondent company. No serious objection
was taken by Mr. Sen against this injunction and therefore
we need say no more about it.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed
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