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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Design & Display Ltd v Ooo Abbott & Anor [2016] EWCA Civ 95 (24 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/95.html Cite as: [[2016] EWCA Civ 98, [2016] FSR 27, [2016] EWCA Civ 95 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HACON
CC12P01174
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(CHANCELLOR OF THE HIGH COURT)
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
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DESIGN & DISPLAY LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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OOO ABBOTT & ANR |
Respondents |
____________________
Hugo Cuddigan QC and Chris Aikens (instructed by Gordons Partnership LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 16/02/2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction and background
"[4] The case concerns display panels used in shops. Shopfitters often use a wooden wall called a slatwall as a panel on which to construct displays. Today the slatwall is made of MDF and has horizontal slots. Back plates or other shelf fixings can be fitted into the slots in order to secure display accessories such as shelves, brackets and hangers. The merchandise is displayed from the display accessories. The fittings are inserted into the jaws of the mouth of the slot and hooked into the top of an internal chamber of the slot lying behind its mouth.
[5] The slots are made by a computer controlled router moving across the width of the panel. A router makes a T shaped slot and leaves visible machined surfaces within the slot having machined away the decorative veneer that generally covers the face of the MDF. Also the edges of the veneer around the mouth of the slot are susceptible to damage as display accessories are hooked in and removed.
[6] For these reasons it became standard practice to provide inserts for slots, as protection against damage and to hide the machined surfaces. To an extent the inserts also strengthen the panel. The accessories are then fitted into the inserts rather than being fitted directly into the bare slots.
[7] The inserts are made by extrusion. By 2004 the standard inserts used were of two kinds: "slide-in" or "snap-in". As the name suggests slide-in inserts were slid into place from the edge of the slat wall. They were made of aluminium. They could be T-shaped, corresponding to the T shaped cross-section of the slot or else they could be L-shaped, using only the top arm of the slot. A problem with slide-in inserts was that if the edge of the slatwall was not accessible, for example at a corner, there is no room to slide the insert into place. Snap-in inserts solve this problem by being inserted from the front with a spring action. Because they needed to be compressible, they were made of PVC instead of aluminium.
[8] The invention in this case is a snap-in insert made from a resilient metal like aluminium."
"1. A display panel (10) having an outer face (11), at least one elongate slot (12) of re-entrant shape extending across the panel and having a mouth in the plane of the outer face,
and an elongate insert (19) having substantial rigidity in the lengthwise direction thereof and adapted to be received in the slot,
which insert is resiliently deformable
and has a base portion (20) from one side of which extends an arcuate leg (21), and from the other side of the base portion there extends an angled leg (22) having a substantially planar first part (27) lying generally parallel to the part of the arcuate leg near the base portion and a substantially planar second part (28) turned outwardly with respect to the first part,
an outwardly-directed abutment (30) being formed along the free edge region (29) of the second part and extending along the length of the insert (19),
characterised in that the insert is made of a resilient metal,
in that a first rib (25) upstands from the free edge (23) of the arcuate leg (21), a second rib (26) extends parallel to the first rib and is disposed further from the free edge of the arcuate leg than the first rib so that a channel (24) is defined by the first and the second ribs, said channel extending along the length of the insert (19) and being directed outwardly with respect to the curvature of the free edge region (23) of the arcuate leg (21),
and further in that the spacing between said channel (24) and said abutment (30) is slightly greater than the width of the mouth of the re- entrant slot (12) whereby the insert (19) may be entered into the slot (12) from the outer face (11) of the panel (10) with the base portion (20) leading into a re-entrant part of the slot until the abutment (30) engages the corner region (32) between the outer face (11) of the panel (10) and one side of the slot, and the channel (24) is engaged with the corner region (33) between the outer face of the panel and the other side of the slot."
"[5] Design & Display manufactures and sells retail equipment, including display panels for use in shops. … [Its] primary business was as a joiner for shopfitters, making bespoke items of shop furniture, … called 'equipment'. This equipment included displays, some of which had slatted panels (sometimes referred to as slatboards or slatwalls) sold both in standard sizes and as custom-sized panels. These were the panels with horizontal slots into which the aluminium inserts could be introduced – in the case of the infringing inserts, introduced by a snap-in process. Shelves or hangars for displaying the goods could then by located into the inserts.
[6] In the relevant period Design & Display sold the slatted panels in two ways. First, it sold the panels with inserts separately for subsequent assembly by the customer. At the trial these were referred to as 'unincorporated' panels and inserts. Secondly, Design & Display sold pre-assembled displays of which the panels with inserts were part. These were referred to as 'incorporated' panels and inserts. In addition, some unincorporated inserts were sold without slatted panels.
[7] Design & Display did not itself make the inserts but purchased them from an aluminium extruder in the form of lengths which were cut into sections to make the individual inserts. The panels were purchased in the form of plain MDF panels into which the slots were machined by Design & Display."
Profits on sale of incorporated panels
"Someone invents a new form of tin whistle. With the aid of his patent agent he obtains a patent. Regrettably, but as is now common, the patent ends with claims of ever greater particularity and narrowness. … Claim 1 is for the tin whistle. Claim 10 is for a funnel to which the new tin whistle is connected. Claim 15 is for a battleship with a funnel to which the tin whistle is connected. No doubt none of the subsidiary claims are independently valid over Claim 1 but they are probably not per se invalid. Nor is there any doubt that an injunction or an order for delivery up would be directed to the tin whistle alone rather than the whole battleship. Similarly on an account substance not form counts. What the defendant has to account for is the profit made by exploitation of the invention, i.e. the whistle, not profits made by exploitation of material or activities which are not attributable to the plaintiff's ingenuity, i.e. the rest of the battleship."
"In my view the inventive concept was not just the idea of an insert made of a resilient metal (which was known). It was the composite idea of an insert made of such a metal and its having a particular shape and its interacting with the slot of the panel in a particular way, such that the metal insert could engage with the panel by snap-in means."
"[8] The invention in this case is a snap-in insert made from a resilient metal like aluminium.
[20] It is worth noting that claim 1 is not to an insert per se but to a display panel with at least one slot into which an insert has been fitted. The first two characterising parts of the claim relate to the insert. The insert must be made of a resilient material. It must have certain ribs and a channel, in particular a "second rib" which corresponds to item 26 in figure 1. The way in which the insert works is defined in a third characterising part. The words boil down to saying that the insert must be able to be fitted from the front and will in effect snap into place. The jaws of the insert are wider than the corresponding size of the slot. The second rib makes a channel with the first rib which is supposed to engage with what would be the lower lips of the mouth of the slot.
[33] … I have construed claim 1 above as well. This case is not one in which it would be helpful to extract out a distinct inventive concept."
"… common sense answers to questions of causation will differ according to the purpose for which the question is asked. Questions of causation often arise for the purpose of attributing responsibility to someone, for example, so as to blame him for something which has happened or to make him guilty of an offence or liable in damages."
"These examples show that one cannot give a common sense answer to a question of causation for the purpose of attributing responsibility under some rule without knowing the purpose and scope of the rule."
"It may be that the remedy of an account of profits is also somewhat confined, since it speaks of "profits … derived from the infringement": see Encyclopaedia of UK and European Patent Law para 10–124A and n (63), Dart Industries Inc v Decor Corp Pty Ltd [1994] FSR 567. As to whether that would include convoyed goods I express no opinion; it seems to me of little or no weight in determining the extent of the words "damages in respect of the infringement" in section 61(1)."
"My answer would be, at first impression, that the Patents Act is aimed at protecting patentees from commercial loss resulting from the wrongful infringement of their rights. That is only a slight gloss upon the wording of the statute itself. In my judgment, again as a matter of first impression, it does not distinguish between profit on the sale of patented articles and profit on the sale of convoyed goods. So I must look to see whether any such distinction emerges from the case law."
"Beyond that the assessment of damages for infringement of a patent is in my judgment a question of fact. There is no dispute as to causation or remoteness in the present case; nor can I see any ground of policy for restricting the patentees' right to recover. It does not follow that, if customers were in the habit of purchasing a patented article at the patentee's supermarket, for example, he could claim against an infringer in respect of loss of profits on all the other items which the customers would buy in the supermarket but no longer bought. The limit there would be one of causation, or remoteness, or both. But the present appeal, in so far as it seeks to restrict the scope of recovery, should be dismissed."
"… the parts incorporating the invention, are, in my opinion, component and essential parts of the meter regulating and controlling – from the Gas Company's point of view – the most important functions of the meter, that is to say the supply of the exact amount of gas to which the consumer is entitled having regard to the amount he has paid and the current price of gas. In my opinion, the mechanism protected by these Patents is of the very essence of the meter; … and … it is no answer to the Plaintiffs whose invention has been infringed to say that similar results could have been achieved without infringing the Patent. In this case I think that the inclusion in the Defendants' meter of the infringement results in the meter itself being an infringement … and that the Master has rightly held that the profit on the meters is a proper factor to be taken into the calculation and not the profit only on those parts of the inventions."
"The respondent cannot gainsay that it is only entitled to the profits obtained by the infringement. If, for example, a patented brake is wrongfully used in the construction of a motor car, the patentee is not entitled to the entire profits earned by sales of the motor car. He must accept an appropriate apportionment. But the question is how that principle shall be applied to a situation where the patent relates to the essential feature of a single item . . . it seems to us that it was open to the judge to find, and he correctly found, that what characterised the infringing product was the press button lid, without which this particular container would never have been produced at all."
"If one man makes profits by the use or sale of some thing, and that whole thing came into existence by reason of his wrongful use of another man's property in a patent, design or copyright, the difficulty disappears and the case is then, generally speaking, simple. In such a case the infringer must account for all the profits which he thus made."
"Although the infringer cannot avoid paying over profits by relying on possible non-infringing alternatives, the patentee, as noted above, cannot recover profits which were not earned by use of his invention. I have already referred to a case where the defendant has two businesses, one infringing and the other not. But the same approach should apply where only part of a product or process infringes. Profits attributable to the non-infringing parts were not caused by or attributable to the use of the invention even if the use of the invention was the occasion for the generation of those profits. For example imagine a case in which there is a 3-stage process for making a product. The profits achieved by making and selling the product are attributable to each of the three stages. Assume also that each stage is protected by a separate patent. There is only one profits "pot" which has to be divided amongst the three stages. Where each stage is as expensive to run and as important to the characteristics of the final product as the other stages it may be that one third of the profits should be attributed to each of them. If this is so, then that attribution applies whether the three patents are owned by the same or different proprietors. It must also apply even when one or more of the patents expires or even if one or other patent has not been applied for. The existence or expiry of patent protection does not alter which stages make what profit. In such a case it is necessary to apportion the total profits actually made among the stages or parts which generated it."
"Sometimes the court may come to the conclusion that all the profits are attributable to the act of infringement. That is what Pennycuick J did in [Peter Pan Manufacturing Corp v Corsets Silhouette Ltd [1963] RPC 45]. There the whole of the defendant's brassieres were made by misuse of the plaintiff's confidential information. Without it brassieres to that design would not have existed. No apportionment was appropriate. Similarly, the court may come to the conclusion, as a matter of fact, that the invention was the essential ingredient in the creation of the defendant's whole product or process. If so, it may be appropriate not to apportion. See Dart Industries v Decor Corp."
"I will consider first just the sales of the infringing inserts. It is likely that in at least some cases the customer either specified or was recommended the infringing inserts because of the advantages they offered for particular displays and for use of the panel in which they were incorporated. Mr Lloyd in cross-examination accepted that there were such advantages. I have no real doubt that in those circumstances the sale of infringing inserts drove the sale of the compatible panels in which they were incorporated."
"However, I will assume that some sales of panels with incorporated infringing inserts went ahead with the customer indifferent to the type of inserts used. I will also assume that while the panels must have been machined to be compatible with the infringing inserts, they may also have been compatible with non-infringing inserts (although it was the evidence of Mr Chasmer, the Second Claimant, that there is little if any such cross-compatibility in the industry). In those circumstances the sales of the infringing inserts were not in the same way the driving force behind the sales of panels but in the end I think it makes no difference. The customer will have specified panels with incorporated inserts (and also possibly that the panels were incorporated into a display, it doesn't matter). Design & Display was thus either going to make a sale of inserts and panels both, or no sale at all. The sales necessarily went hand in hand. Design & Display chose to sell infringing inserts. Because the sales went together, the sale of the inserts caused (in the relevant sense) the sale of the panels in which they were incorporated. It was also foreseeable that the sale of the panels would be a consequence of the sale of the inserts."
"It goes further. As I have said, part of the inventive concept was embodied in the shape of a section of the panel. The fact that it was a modest section makes no difference. The sale of that section of the panel both caused the sale of the panel as whole and the latter sale was a foreseeable consequence of the former."
"Design & Display did infringe and in my view the scope of the profit derived from such infringement extends to the profit made from sales of panels in which the infringing inserts were incorporated."
"Are the Claimants entitled to claim the profits which accrued to [the Defendant] as a result of the sale of slatted panels sold together with the clip in aluminium extrusion?"
Overheads
"In calculating an account of profits, the defendant may not deduct the opportunity cost, that is, the profit forgone on the alternative products. But there would be real inequity if a defendant were denied a deduction for the opportunity cost as well as being denied a deduction for the cost of the overheads which sustained the capacity that would have been utilised by an alternative product and that was in fact utilised by the infringing product. If both were denied, the defendant would be in a worse position than if it had made no use of the patented invention. The purpose of an account of profits is not to punish the defendant but to prevent its unjust enrichment.
Where the defendant has forgone the opportunity to manufacture and sell alternative products it will ordinarily be appropriate to attribute to the infringing product a proportion of those general overheads which would have sustained the opportunity. On the other hand, if no opportunity was forgone, and the overheads involved were costs which would have been incurred in any event, then it would not be appropriate to attribute the overheads to the infringing product. Otherwise the defendant would be in a better position than it would have been in if it had not infringed. It is not relevant that the product could not have been manufactured and sold without these overheads. Nor is it relevant that absorption method accounting would attribute a proportion of the overheads to the infringing product. The equitable principle of an account of profits is not to compensate the plaintiff, nor to fix a fair price for the infringing product, but to prevent the unjust enrichment of the defendant." (Emphasis added)
"But there was no evidence in this case that Décor … had unused or surplus capacity. There was evidence that the infringing canisters were an integral part of one consistent product range produced, marketed and sold according to a common system. From this it might be inferred that, had those companies not been engaged in the manufacture and marketing of the infringing press-button seal canisters, their capacity for those activities would have been taken up in the manufacture and marketing of alternative products." (Emphasis added)
"[85] I find this reasoning persuasive and am satisfied that it is not permissible for a defendant simply to allocate a proportion of its general overheads to an infringing activity…. The defendant must show that the relevant overheads are properly attributable to that activity. All will depend upon the facts and circumstances of the case. For example, it may be relevant to consider whether a defendant has surplus capacity, whether the infringing activity was an additional line to an established business and whether the defendant's overheads have been increased as a result of the infringing activity or whether its overheads would have been lower had it not engaged in that activity.
[86] We heard little argument on the question of opportunity costs and they have formed no part of the case advanced by either side so I need express no final conclusion upon them. Nevertheless, I believe that if the defendant's business is not running to capacity, the defendant has not foregone an opportunity to make and sell other non infringing products, and the defendant's general overheads have not been increased by reason of the infringement and would have been incurred in any event, then to allow it to attribute such overheads, or a proportion of them, to the infringements would be to allow it to profit from its unlawful activity. I believe such a result would not be just and would undermine the purpose of the account."
"In this case Medik has not attempted to prove its business was running to capacity or that, but for the infringement, it would have sold some other products."
"(1) Costs associated solely with the defendant's acts of infringement are to be distinguished from general overheads which supported both the infringing business and the defendant's other businesses.
(2) The defendant is entitled to deduct the former costs from gross profits.
(3) A proportion of the general overheads may only be deducted from gross profits in two circumstances:
(a) if an overhead was increased by the acts of infringement (i.e. the increase would not have occurred but for the acts of infringement), that increase may be deducted;
(b) if the defendant was running to maximum capacity such that the infringing business displaced an alternative business which otherwise would have been conducted, the apportioned overheads incurred by the infringing business (and which would have been incurred by the displaced business) may be deducted.
(4) The evidential burden is on the defendant to establish any of the above."
"(1) The switch from sales of infringing inserts to sales of non-infringing inserts made no difference to sales figures. Design & Display would have sold just as many products if it had not infringed. Therefore the overheads claimed which supported the infringing business would have supported a non-infringing business if Design & Display had chosen not to infringe.
(2) Because it would have received no less custom had it sold non-infringing inserts, its business was working to capacity in the sense that there was no more business to be had by selling infringing inserts.
(3) Mr Lloyd gave evidence that it did not have staff or machines standing idle ready to exploit other opportunities. If an exceptional opportunity arose (as happened because of a contract with Vodafone in 2012) Design & Display took on contract workers, hired equipment and a temporary building to accommodate the extra work. The employee headcount varied from year to year. This showed that the company was working to maximum capacity."
"[46] Design & Display's arguments instead focussed on its business operating to capacity. Taking the first two arguments above to begin with, I think they mistake what the Court of Appeal had in mind by working to maximum capacity such that the defendant suffers an opportunity cost. I accept Mr Lloyd's evidence that when Design & Display stopped selling infringing inserts, its sales remained constant. This does not show that the company was working to maximum capacity. At most it might show that the market did not attach much importance or practical value to the infringing inserts, but not necessarily even that – it is also consistent with Design & Display focussing its selling strategy on a different sector of the market.
[47] The third argument does not suggest that Design & Display suffered an opportunity cost. On the contrary, if a sales opportunity arose the company was able to adapt to meet that opportunity alongside its existing sales. Apparently no business was foregone.
[48] In my view Design & Display has not satisfied the evidential burden to show that it is entitled to make any of the deductions from gross profits claimed in its table."
"… in any case where a defendant seeks to deduct an element of general overheads it will be for it to prove its business was running to capacity or that but for the infringement it would have sold other products or that its overheads would have been lower if it had not infringed." (Emphasis added).
"…if the defendant was running to maximum capacity such that the infringing business displaced an alternative business which otherwise would have been conducted, the apportioned overheads incurred by the infringing business (and which would have been incurred by the displaced business) may be deducted." (Emphasis added).
Disposal
Lord Justice Tomlinson:
Sir Terence Etherton, Chancellor of the High Court: