Six Lithuanian chicken catchers have won a settlement of more than £1 million from a gangmaster couple who trafficked them to work on egg farms. 

The landmark legal ruling represents the first High Court action brought by migrants over modern-day slavery. 

Aged between 19 and 58, the men said they were driven from farm-to-farm across the country, travelling up to seven hours before being put to work in filthy conditions. 

The six chicken catchers were trafficked to work on farms producing eggs bound for high street brands, including Happy Eggs and McDonald's. 

They were paid by the number of chickens caught and their wages were often docked or withheld entirely, with workers threatened and abused by supervisors, including with the use of Rottweilers. 

One supervisor allegedly split the lip of a worker by punching him in the face before pouring urine and cider into the wound. 

Antanas Galdikas, one of the six men told the lawyers, Leigh Day: "We felt trapped, we were being treated like slaves." 

Husband and wife Darrell Houghton and Jackie Judge, of DJ Houghton Catching Services Limited, in Maidstone, Kent, agreed to the compensation deal after the ruling in June. 

At the June hearing judge Justice Supperstone found the defendants - described by the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) as "the worst UK gangmaster ever" - had failed to pay the national minimum wage. 

Houghton and Judge also made unlawful deductions from wages for spurious reasons such as leaving a mug unwashed and also failed to provide adequate facilities to wash, rest, eat and drink. 

Trafficked to the UK in 2008 by a Lithuanian who was paid by DJ Houghton, the group were employed to catch birds in chicken houses until they escaped in August 2012 and told police about their ordeal. 

Shanta Martin, partner at law firm Leigh Day who represented the men, said: "Our clients have faced enormous difficulties since they came to the UK thinking they would be earning a decent living for honest work, but found themselves being terribly exploited by a British business. 

"Our clients are so pleased to finally be getting not only wages they were owed, but a substantial sum to settle claims alleging physical and psychological abuse. 

"We are extremely pleased to have achieved this result for our clients as it will go a huge way towards helping them rebuild their lives. 

"The very large bill being faced by the defendants for both the compensation and their defence costs, is also a salutary lesson to others who might seek to profit from modern slavery." 

DJ Houghton's licence was revoked by the GLA in October 2012 and 38 workers were referred to the UK Human Trafficking Centre, which confirmed that all the men were victims of trafficking. 

Ten other migrant workers are now expected to bring similar cases since the first proceedings, to join the civil claim against DJ Houghton. 

Their case is likely to be heard in 2017, Leigh Day said.