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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Glaxo Wellcome UK Ltd (t/a Allen & Hanburys) & Anor v Sandoz Ltd & Ors [2018] EWHC 2747 (Ch) (25 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/2747.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2747 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) Glaxo Wellcome UK Limited (t/a Allen & Hanburys) (2) Glaxo Group Limited |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Sandoz Limited (2) Sandoz International GMBH (3) Aeropharm GMBH (4) Hexal AG (5) Sandoz AG (6) Vectura Group plc (7) Vectura Delivery Devices Limited |
Defendants |
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Martin Howe QC and Iona Berkeley (instructed by White & Case LLP) for the 1st to 5th Defendants
Hearing dates: 25 September 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
Issue 1 - Legal Advice Privilege
"11. Email from Susanne Groeschel-Jofer internal to the Sandoz group seeking information to provide to Bristows for the purposes of Bristows giving legal advice.
…
14. Email from Susanne Groeschel-Jofer internal to the Sandoz group seeking information to provide to Bristows for the purposes of them giving legal advice, along with internal Sandoz group email providing the information requested."
[Bristows LLP were providing external legal advice to the Sandoz Defendants during this period. They are now acting for the Vectura Defendants.]
"Email from Michael Malaun to Susanne Groeschel-Jofer requesting legal advice, along with a note of legal advice given by her."
In that example, both parties to the communication are named.
"6. Having inquired of the Sandoz defendants, I have been informed that, during the period of the Date Range, members of staff employed within the Sandoz group, such as those involved in the communications in which privilege is claimed, were authorised to request and receive legal advice where relevant to the performance of their job functions." [my emphasis]
"The basis for this claim of privilege is that employees of the Sandoz Group, to whom Ms Susanne Groeschel-Jofer sent emails, in different Sandoz Group companies, were all capable of instructing the external law firm Bristows on behalf of the second Defendant and were authorised to receive advice from Bristows on behalf the second Defendant, so that their communications with Ms Groeschel-Jofer attract legal advice privilege."
"5. … I do not agree that the description of these documents given in the Schedule to my Eighth Witness Statement at exhibit MLC 35 is inadequate or that it does not fully justify the claim to privilege. A request by a legal adviser for information for the purposes of providing legal advice to the client necessarily discloses the substance of the matters on which legal advice is being sought, as does a response by the client providing information sought for that purpose. I do not understand why Mr Morris in his paragraph 85 suggests that it is relevant to the claim for privilege in relation to the documents at items 11 and 14 whether the person with whom Susanne Groeschel communicated was or were authorised to receive legal advice, since there is no need for a person to be authorised to receive legal advice in order to be able to respond to a request for information which assists a lawyer in providing legal advice.
6. But in any event, I can confirm that item 11 was an email from Susanne Groeschel to Michael Malaun (at the time, a drugs regulatory affairs manager at the Fourth Defendant) and item 14 was an email from Susanne Groeschel from Dr Malaun responding to item 11. Susanne Groeschel was at the time of these documents (and still is) a German Rechsanwältin, as discussed in paragraph 5.2 of my Eighth Witness Statement. Dr Malaun was authorised to request and receive legal advice where relevant to the performance of his job functions. It was also within the scope of his authority to provide information for the purposes of obtaining legal advice. The claim to privilege is further maintained because each of the items evidence the nature of the legal advice sought. The Sandoz Defendants therefore maintain their claim for privilege in those documents."
Legal advice privilege – the law
"81. We can fully accept that the Court of Appeal could have decided Three Rivers (No 5) on the simple basis that Freshfields' client was the BIU (not the Bank), and the documents had been prepared by the Bank (not the BIU), so that the position of the particular Bank employee who had prepared them was irrelevant to the question of legal advice privilege. We do not, however, think that, fairly read, that was the Court of Appeal's reasoning. As we have explained, it seems to us that Longmore LJ reasoned that, because agents and employees, on authority, stood in the same position in relation to legal professional privilege, once it was established that only communications between the lawyer and the client, and not between the lawyer and an agent for the client, could attract legal advice privilege, communications between a lawyer and an employee of the client (other than employees specifically tasked with seeking and receiving legal advice) could also not be privileged. As we have said, we are not sure that it is necessary for us to determine whether this reasoning was the ratio decidendi, but if that did have to be decided, we would hold that it was.
…
123. … As will be apparent from what we have already said, we would have determined that Three Rivers (No 5) decided that communications between an employee of a corporation and the corporation's lawyers could not attract legal advice privilege unless that employee was tasked with seeking and receiving such advice on behalf of the client, as the BIU was in Three Rivers (No 5)."
"… the employee must be authorised to seek/obtain the legal advice that is the reason for the communication …". [my emphasis]
Mr Hickman relies on the words I have emphasised as pointing against general authority to obtain legal advice being sufficient.
"82. Hildyard J accepted the submission that, in order to warrant protection, where the client is a corporation, the communication with the lawyer must be to or from a person who is authorised to seek and receive legal advice on behalf of the corporation, and the communication must be for the purposes of, or in the course of that person giving or receiving legal advice. Such a communication is to be distinguished from the preparatory work of compiling information undertaken by persons with no authority to seek or receive legal advice, for the purposes of enabling the corporate client to seek and receive such advice. That is so whether the preparatory work is conducted by the client or by the lawyer."
"Whether they, or any other individual employee or group of employees had such authority in a given case, is a question of fact to be determined on the evidence."
"The [witness statement] is conclusive unless it is reasonably certain from:
(a) the statements of the party making it that he has erroneously represented or misconceived the character of the documents in respect of which privilege is claimed:
(b) the evidence of the person who or entity which directed the creation of the communication or documents over which privilege is claimed that the affidavit is incorrect:
(c) the other evidence before the court that the affidavit is incorrect or incomplete on material points.
Discussion on Issue 1
(1) The conflict between paragraphs 2 and 6.
(2) The inadequate statement "I am informed that" in paragraph 6. The source of the instructions is not identified.
(3) The failure in items 11 and 14 of exhibit MLC 35 to identify the person or persons to whom Ms Gröeschel's email was sent and the person or person who replied. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the description of the email as being "internal to the Sandoz group" deliberately avoided identifying Dr Malaun.
(4) Its failure to specify which company or companies claimed the privilege.
(5) The failure to identify with any clarity in paragraph 6 the members of staff who were authorised to request and receive legal advice. To say that members of staff "… such as those involved in the communications in which privilege is claimed…" were authorised does not identify the class of person concerned. It is merely illustrative of persons who are included, but no more than that.
(1) It is apparent from the items in MLC 35 that relate to obtaining external legal advice from Bristows, and paragraph 5.1 of Mr Collins' eighth statement, that Mr Cordery of Bristows provided legal advice to the second defendant. There is no suggestion that he provided advice to, for example, the fourth defendant, which Dr Malaun and Ms Gröschel worked for.
(2) The statement about Dr Malaun's authority does not say he was authorised to seek legal advice from external lawyers acting for the second defendant. It seems more likely that Ms Grösechel may have been given the task of obtaining legal advice and she was obtaining information for that purpose. In that event, her exercise in gathering information from Dr Malaun would not be subject to legal advice privilege. The provision of information by him would not make the communication privileged unless he was the client for the purposes of him obtaining legal advice.
Issue 2 – A privileged document disclosed by mistake
(1) It runs to approximately 1½ pages of A4.
(2) It has no descriptive heading or signature at the end and it is not directed to anyone.
(3) It has three sections under three different headings. The headings are:
"Airflusal in colour purple & decision making processJustification for the colour purple in the generic version of Viani
Timelines and assessments made regarding the colour purple according to my knowledge
(4) It is written in a narrative form in the first person explaining the writer's knowledge of the subject matter that is indicated in the headings.
(5) It refers to advice having been obtained.
(6) It says: "Respective emails are attached as evidence".
"A detailed assessment was made in 2006/2007 by IP and Trade Marks. Both departments confirmed, that there was no valid protection for the "colour purple and Viani" and recommended to us the proposed colour tone in the production (see above mentioned emails) …".
(1) The Document is privileged. This is accepted by the Claimants.
(2) The Document was provided for inspection by mistake.
(3) The mistake either was obvious so that the solicitor reviewing the Document appreciated that a mistake had been made before making use of it, or it should have been obvious to the solicitor that a mistake had been made.
"Document SDZ0031275 is a duplicate of an attachment to an email relating to the Irish litigation and that covering email and its attachments were duly identified in the Defendants' review of disclosure as covered by litigation privilege and have not been provided for inspection. The inclusion of the version at SDZ0031275 was thus in error, it would appear, because it was reviewed in isolation from a covering email."
"9. I have investigated why the document had been disclosed instead of being marked as privileged. The version of the document at SDZ0031275 is a standalone document and does not have any family members. It was therefore reviewed out of context without a covering email which would have made its purpose more immediately apparent."
(1) Documents describing how the colour purple was chosen are sparse making it "inconceivable" that this document would not have been drawn to the attention of senior members of the Sandoz Defendants' review team.
(2) He was unaware that privilege had been claimed over a duplicate version.
(3) It was not clear to him that the document would necessarily attract litigation privilege.
(4) He refers to the description of the document's metadata as a 'statement' but says "… this makes it all the more unlikely that the disclosure of this document was unintended and unnoticed."
(5) He says both that the document is helpful to the case put forward by the Sandoz Defendants which made it likely that giving inspection was intentional and that the document raises issues about the accuracy of Ms Norvasuo-Huber's recollection.
(6) He refers to other documents of a similar nature which have been provided for inspection over which privilege has not been claimed.