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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Perry v F H Brundle & Ors [2015] EWHC 2737 (IPEC) (02 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2015/2737.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2737 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RICHARD PERRY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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F H BRUNDLE (a private unlimited company) BETAFENCE LIMITED BRITANNIA FASTENERS LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Stuart Baran (instructed by Collyer Bristow LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 25 September 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Background
"I have spent at least the equivalent of one day in dealing with and analysing the papers relating to this application for permission to appeal."
Judge McCahill's decision on the application was as follows:
"Permission to appeal is refused on all grounds.
All grounds are totally without merit. They are doomed to fail.
There is no prospect of a successful appeal or any other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
Pursuant to CPR 52.3(4A)(a), Mr Perry may not request this decision to be reconsidered at a hearing."
Jurisdiction of the IPEC
"Extended Civil Restraint Orders
3.1 An extended civil restraint order may be made by –
(1) a judge of the Court of Appeal;
(2) a judge of the High Court; or
(3) a Designated Civil Judge or their appointed deputy in the County Court."
"3.7 An order under paragraph 3.3(2) may only be made by –
(1) a Court of Appeal judge;
(2) a High Court judge; or
(3) a Designated Civil Judge or their appointed deputy."
The law on extended CROs
"[9] What seems, therefore, to be required is a persistence in making wholly unmeritorious claims. I note that in Supperstone v Hurst [2009] EWHC 1271 Mr Bernard Livesey QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division) regarded three wholly unmeritorious claims or applications by Mrs Hurst as being sufficient to constitute "persistence" (para 55). To my mind, three unmeritorious claims or applications must be the bare minimum for establishing "persistence". The essential thrust of decisions such as Ebert, Bhamjee and Kumar is that the court should engage in a graduated, and proportionate, response to the identified abuse. This would make it logical for the statutory scheme to have a higher pre-condition threshold for the making of an extended CRO as opposed to a limited CRO (and an even higher threshold as a pre-condition for the making of a general CRO). The wordings of paras 2.1, 3.1 and 4.1 of the PD clearly confirm that this is the case. If the pre-condition threshold for a limited CRO is two or more applications which are totally without merit then "persistence" in para 3.1 of the PD must, on any logical analysis, require more than two unmeritorious claims or applications."
The three cases referred to in that passage are the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Attorney General v Ebert [2002] 2 All ER 789, Bhamjee v Forsdick [2004] 1 WLR 88 and R (Kumar) v Secretary of State for Consitutional Affairs [2007] 1 WLR 536.
"[96] I agree with the Deputy Judge that the court should engage in a graduated and proportionate response to abuse when it is identified and I also agree that "persistence" in sub-paragraph 3.1 of PD 3C must require more than two claims or applications which are totally without merit.
[97] Whether or not the two applications referred to in sub-paragraph 2.1 relating to a Limited CRO are required to be in the same proceedings as the one in which the Limited CRO arises, the test to be applied relating to an Extended CRO under sub-paragraph 3.1 has a wider ambit. In deciding whether a litigant has persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit, the court is entitled to and should consider the litigant's conduct as a whole, so far as it is able to do so. All aspects of the litigant's conduct are capable of being relevant, not only his or her conduct in the particular proceedings in which the point arises."
(1) When considering the appropriate order in relation to an application for a CRO, the court should engage in a graduated and proportionate response to the identified abuse.(2) Where the application is for an extended CRO, the litigant against whom the order is sought must have made a minimum of three claims or applications which were totally without merit in order to be taken to have 'persistently' issued such claims or applications within the meaning of paragraph 3.1 of PD3C.
(3) Subject to that minimum, the persistence of the litigant in issuing such claims, in particular the likelihood that such persistence will be maintained in the future, is to be assessed by reference to his conduct as a whole.
(4) The categorisation of a claim or application as being totally without merit need not have been done at the time they were made; the court hearing the application for the CRO is entitled retrospectively to adjudge a claim or application to be totally without merit.
In relation to this last point (4), see KL Communications (cited above) at [5]-[6].
This case