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Showing posts with label non-disclosure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label non-disclosure. Show all posts

Tuesday 24 October 2017

How do Non Disclosure Agreements Work?

Shannon Bond and Jane Croft in FT


Many of the women who have spoken about sexual harassment by Harvey Weinstein, the Hollywood film producer, signed non-disclosure agreements. Such agreements have been criticised for being a tool used by the wealthy and powerful to silence victims. 

What is an NDA? 

An NDA is a legal agreement signed between two parties to share confidential information or to keep trade secrets private. They are widely used in the business world, such as in mergers and acquisitions, where one company receives sensitive financial information about a business it wants to buy. 

“The original legitimate point of a non-disclosure agreement is for people to talk about business ideas together and make sure someone does not run off and start their own venture,” says Robert Ottinger, founder of the Ottinger Firm, a US employment law practice. 

NDAs are also used in employment settlements so that workers cannot speak about events that happened during their employment, such as sexual harassment. 

“What is absolutely de rigueur in our business these days is the employer pays you money and you will never say anything about it again,” says Kathleen Peratis, head of the sex discrimination and sexual harassment practice group at the New York law firm Outten & Golden. 

“They’ve been used more lately to hide people’s dirty secrets. The consequence is the public never knows,” Mr Ottinger says. “We sign settlement agreements every week, and you can’t tell anyone but your spouse, your accountant and your lawyer.” 

How secure are NDAs? 

NDAs are legally binding. However, once confidential information enters the public domain, there is a question as to how an NDA could be enforced. 

“If the information is something very, very bad, such as allegations of sexual harassment against an employer, there is a public interest argument that this should not be covered up,” says one UK employment lawyer. “If other women who have not signed NDAs suddenly start speaking out then there is a question of whether the information is still confidential or has now entered the public domain. If it is now deemed as public, an employer would be unlikely to succeed in the courts if they sought damages against someone who has breached an NDA.” 

Ms Peratis says clients have recently asked about the consequences of breaking their confidentiality agreements. “What I say is, you made a deal. If you choose to violate that deal, you are at risk of having this guy demand what the contract allows him to demand. But I also tell them, if you’re the first to come out with this your risk is high. If you’re the third or fourth, your risk is not so high.” 

In the UK, lawyers reject the idea that there will be a flood of parties breaching NDAs in light of the Weinstein case. However, there is a possibility that the use of gagging clauses may be curbed, particularly in the UK public sector, which have historically been used to stop workers flagging safety concerns. 

What is the legal position for an employee who breaks an NDA? 

In both the UK and US, an ex-employee can be sued for breaching a confidentiality agreement. A company can seek damages from the former staff member and can try to claw back all or part of any financial settlement. In the UK, they can also seek an injunction preventing the former employee from speaking out again. 

Paul Quain, partner at GQ Employment Law, says UK employment settlement agreements usually have a clause in the agreement that allows ex-employees to speak out about confidential information if they are “required by law, HMRC [HM Revenue & Customs], any regulatory body”. 

This means that an ex-employee would be able to speak to UK lawmakers at a parliamentary select committee hearing, to UK tax investigators or to the UK financial regulator despite having signed such an NDA. 

In the US, NDAs cannot lawfully prevent people from reporting claims to law enforcement and government agencies, such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, or responding to a subpoena. 

US federal law does stop “employers from preventing employees from their right to engage in what are called ‘concerted activities’,” says Maya Raghu, director of workplace equality at the National Women’s Law Center in Washington. “That can include restraining or preventing employees from discussing sexual harassment complaints among themselves. That can be an unfair labour practice.” 

How does an NDA differ from a non-disparagement agreement? 

Non-disparagement agreements are more specific than NDAs and mean that both parties (such as an employer and employee) agree not to make derogatory or adverse statements about each other. 

Are the numbers of NDAs increasing? 

Mr Quain says the number of NDAs has been increasing since the 1970s and 1980s as companies have become more concerned that sensitive information could be leaked. “It may be that companies started to get their fingers burnt and confidential information was made public. They are now pretty standard in employment settlement agreements,” he says. 

Ms Peratis recalls the first time she saw such an agreement mooted, about 40 years ago. “I said to the lawyer on the other side, ‘Ah, you want silence. That’s going to cost you a little more.’” 

Today, she says, “no conversation like that ever occurs any more because it is absolutely expected that with every single employment settlement agreement there will be a confidentiality agreement . . . Anybody who says these days I am not going to agree to confidentiality is not going to get a deal.”

Non Disclosure Agreements: a legal weapon used to silence and intimidate

Shannon Bond in The FT

Companies, and individuals, have a range of ways to make sure stories about misconduct do not spread. 

Most financial settlement agreements between accused and accuser include non-disclosure provisions that bar the person receiving the financial settlement from talking about their allegations or even revealing the amount of the settlement, according to lawyers who have represented women in sexual harassment cases. Non-disparagement provisions, which prevent an alleged victim from speaking ill of the person or company they have accused, are also common. 

The penalties for breaking this silence can be steep. “A lot of defendants and the companies they work for are powerful. They can put in draconian liquidated damages provisions in the event there is disclosure,” says one lawyer who has worked on such cases. 

For example, an alleged victim might be forced to pay back not just the full amount of the settlement but also an additional financial penalty and the other party’s legal fees. “There is a lot of fear hanging over your head,” the lawyer says. 

Many of the women who received settlements after accusing Roger Ailes, the former Fox News chief executive and Bill O’Reilly, one of its key presenters, of sexual harassment do not feel free to speak publicly about their experiences because of NDAs. That includes Gretchen Carlson, who received a $20m settlement in a lawsuit she filed against Ailes in 2016 that set off a cascade of allegations about the cable news network’s most powerful figures. 

Ms Carlson has become an advocate for prohibiting forced arbitration clauses and their accompanying NDAs. “We have chosen as a culture to silence the victims either with settlements where you are gagged from ever saying what happened to you or enforced arbitration, which is a part of employment contracts now, and here’s the key — it’s secret,” she told CBS News last week. 

However, NDAs cannot lawfully prevent people from reporting claims to law enforcement and government agencies, such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in the US, or responding to a subpoena. 

Allegations of sexual harassment or misconduct can also be kept quiet by limiting what employees can say about their workplaces. Employment contracts often include NDAs. Many also require that any complaints, including sexual harassment, be resolved in private arbitration rather than a courtroom. Those arbitration-only clauses — which are being challenged in a Supreme Court case — typically limit what a worker can say about the complaint and the ensuing arbitration. 

“All of these operate to silence survivors of sex harassment and sex assault from coming forward and reporting, and they also help shield serial harassers from accountability,” says Maya Raghu, director of workplace equality at the US National Women’s Law Center. “As we’ve seen in the last few weeks, many survivors feel like ‘I’m the only one who this has happened to’ — so they stay silent.”