Direct damage in the UK required in order to serve out of jurisdiction in trade secrets case: headquarters or revenue location alone will not suffice
May 06, 2026
Direct damage in the UK required in order to serve out of jurisdiction in trade secrets case: headquarters or revenue location alone will not sufficeMay 06, 2026 In Playtech Software Limited v Realtime SIA & Anor [2025] the Court of Appeal issued an important ruling on when English courts can hear trade secrets claims against foreign defendants. It held that Latvian law, not English law, applied to Playtech's claims, meaning the case could not proceed in England. The decision clarifies how courts determine applicable law in cross-border confidential information disputes under the Rome II Regulation. BackgroundPlaytech, an English company licensing online gambling games, alleged that a former employee of its Latvian subsidiary continued to access confidential game information after leaving employment and shared it with his new employer, Realtime SIA, a Latvian competitor. Playtech claimed this confidential information constituted trade secrets and was used to develop competing games. Since Realtime and the former employee were both based in Latvia, Playtech needed the court's permission to serve proceedings abroad. The relevant lawIn summary, to serve proceedings outside England and Wales, a claimant must show:
For trade secrets claims, Gateway 21 of the CPR applies where detriment was suffered in England or English law governs the obligation of confidence. Under the Rome II Regulation, the applicable law is determined by where “direct damage” occurred, not where indirect consequences (such as lost revenue) are felt. What was decided?The judge at first instance allowed the claim to proceed, drawing an analogy with Celgard LLC v Shenzhen Senior Technology Material Co Ltd [2020]. In that case, the Court of Appeal held that where infringing goods produced using misappropriated trade secrets were imported into and marketed in the UK, English law applied because direct damage occurred in the UK market. The Court of Appeal disagreed and allowed the appeal, holding that Playtech had failed to establish direct damage in the UK. Playtech argued that as a UK company receiving licensing revenues here, any damage occurred in England. The Court rejected this, holding that loss of revenue at a claimant's headquarters is merely an indirect consequence rather than direct damage. What matters is where the initial harmful impact of the wrongdoing occurred. Crucially, Playtech had not alleged or evidenced that the competing games were ever downloaded, accessed, or made available to consumers in the UK. All the alleged acts of misuse (accessing the confidential platform and developing the competing games) occurred in Latvia. Since direct damage occurred in Latvia, Latvian law applied. Playtech could not satisfy Gateway 21, and the claim could not proceed in England. Key takeawaysThis decision has important implications for companies seeking to protect trade secrets across borders:
ConclusionThis case confirms that pursuing cross-border trade secrets claims in England requires more than being a UK company suffering commercial harm. Claimants must identify where direct damage occurred and plead their case accordingly. Where wrongful acts took place abroad with no specific UK-based infringing activity, English courts will decline jurisdiction. Latest Insights
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