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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Abbott & Anor v Design & Display Ltd & Anor [2017] EWHC 932 (IPEC) (26 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2017/932.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 932 (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 :
____________________
OOO ABBOTT GODFREY VICTOR CHASMER |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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DESIGN & DISPLAY LIMITED EUREKA DISPLAY LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Tom St Quintin (instructed by Appleyard Lees IP LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 1 March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
"2. The Account of profits be remitted to the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court for determination of the following issues:
(a) What proportion of sales of slatted panel sold together with infringing inserts should be included within the Appellant's account of profits?
(b) What deductions (if any) for general overheads may the Appellant make in its account of profits?"
The background facts
"[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 due to Abbott on Design & Display's sale of panels
The law
"[7] Section 61(1)(d) of the Patents Act 1977 entitles a patentee to claim against an infringer an account of the profits 'derived by him from the infringement'. An account of profits is confined to profits actually made, its purpose being not to punish the defendant but to prevent his unjust enrichment. The underlying theory is that the infringer is treated as having carried on his business (to the extent that it infringes) on behalf of the patentee. The broad principle is that the patentee is entitled to profits that have been earned by the use of his invention. If the patentee does not recover those profits, the infringer will have been unjustly enriched. So the purpose of the account is to quantify the extent to which the infringer would be unjustly enriched if he were to retain the profits derived by him from the infringement. That requires the fact finder first to identify the patentee's invention and second to decide what (if any) profits the infringer derived from the use of that invention. The second of these questions may give rise to difficulty where the infringer sells products associated with the subject matter of the patent (often called 'convoyed goods') or products into which the subject matter of the patent is incorporated. The court must determine what profit has been earned, in a legal sense, by the infringer's wrongful acts. It is clear, then, that an account of profits looks at the facts through the lens of what the infringer has done; and what the patentee might have suffered by way of loss in the real world is irrelevant."
(1) Identify the invention.
(2) Identify the profits (if any) made by the defendant from his use of the invention, taking into account convoyed goods and/or products into which the subject matter of the invention is incorporated.
Identifying the invention
"125(1) For the purposes of this Act an invention for a patent for which an application has been made or for which a patent has been granted shall, unless the context otherwise requires, be taken to be that specified in a claim of the specification of the application or patent, as the case may be, "
"[26] Abbott claim the profit made by Design & Display from the sale of panels in which infringing inserts were incorporated. There is no doubt that such panels were infringing products see claim 1 of the Patent. But as I have said, that is not a useful guide to the scope of the account. I must consider the inventive concept."
"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."
Identifying the profits made by the defendant from his use of the invention
"[14] Having identified the inventive concept of the patent, it is then necessary to address the question of causation. It has been consistently said that an assessment of damages for patent infringement and the taking of an account of profits proceed on a common principle of legal causation: Celanese International Corp v BP Chemicals at [37] (citing Imperial Oil v Lubrizol [1966] 71 CPR (3d) 26). But the question whether an infringement has caused a loss (in the legal sense) and the question whether the infringer has derived a profit from the infringement are different questions. Mr Cuddigan QC submitted that the question of causation was to be answered as a matter of common sense, relying on Gerber Garment Technology Inc v Lectra Systems Ltd [1997] RPC 443. However, as Lord Hoffmann pointed out in Environment Agency (formerly National Rivers Authority) v Empress Car Co (Abertillery) Ltd [1999] 2 AC 22, at 29:
' 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.'
[15] Having given examples he said at 31:
"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.'
"[21] In Gerber Garment Technology v Lectra Systems [1997] RPC 443 Staughton LJ referred to Dart Industries Inc v Decor Corp Pty Ltd [1994] FSR 567 with apparent approval on the question of the scope of an account of profits; and part of the reasoning in that case has also been expressly approved by the Court of Appeal in Hollister Inc v Medik Ostomy Supplies Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 1419; [2013] FSR 24 . I begin with Dart Industries v Decor Corp [1994] FSR 567 which deals with both the issues that arise in our case, although in the opposite order.
[22] Decor was a manufacturer of plastic kitchen canisters. The canisters had lids incorporating a press-button seal. The seal infringed Dart's patent. In giving directions for the taking of an account the primary judge ruled that only costs which were directly attributable to manufacture or sale of the infringing product should be taken into account. He also directed that the profits for which Decor had to account were the profits from the manufacture and sale of the complete canisters, including the press-button seals. The intermediate appeal court (the Full Court) reversed the primary judge on the first of those directions, holding that Decor would be at liberty to show that various categories of overhead costs contributed to the obtaining of the relevant profit, and to show how and in what proportion they should be allocated in the taking of the account of profits. However they upheld the primary judge on the second direction. Dart appealed to the High Court on the first direction and Decor sought leave to cross-appeal on the second.
[23] The High Court refused leave to cross-appeal against the second direction because there were concurrent findings of fact against Decor by both the primary judge and the Full Court. But as I read their judgment they approved the way in which the Full Court described the question to be answered:
'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.'
[24] The High Court went on to approve the statement of Windeyer J in Colbeam Palmer v Stock Affiliates Pty [1972] RPC 303 at p.315:
'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.'
[25] On the facts, as shown by the quotation from the Full Court, Dart Industries v Decor Corp [1994] FSR 567 was a case in which but for the invention the canister 'would never have been produced at all'. "
An essential feature of the goods and a feature of the goods without which the goods would not have existed
(1) Where the invention relates to an essential feature of those goods.
(2) Where those goods would not have existed had the defendant not infringed the claimant's patent.
"[28] Thus he, too, concluded that an apportionment would be inappropriate where without the infringement the infringing articles would not have existed or where the invention was an essential ingredient in the creation of the infringer's whole product."
"[19] Meters v Metropolitan Gas Meters was another case of the assessment of damages for patent infringement. The patented article was a mechanism for controlling the supply of gas in a pre-paid gas meter. The patentee was a manufacturer of gas meters, and claimed damages representing lost sales of gas meters. It did not claim an account of profits. The defendant had sold 19,500 gas meters incorporating the patented article. However, the patentee claimed the profit on sales which it claimed that it would have made if the defendant had not infringed. It did not claim the profit that the infringer had made. The number of lost sales on which damages were awarded was assessed by the Master at 5,000 meters, although on appeal Eve J reduced that number to 3,500. It was in that context that the judge had to decide whether the damages should be assessed as the whole of the profit that the patentee would have made on the lost sales, or only such part of that profit was attributable to the patented article, which represented approximately 1/44th of the whole profit. It was in that context that Eve J said:
' 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 sale of goods or services are driven by the sale of infringing goods
"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 other items which the customers would buy in the supermarket but no longer bought. The limit would be one of causation, or remoteness, or both."
Evidential burden
Summary of the law
(1) In an account of profits the claimant is entitled to the infringer's profit made from the exploitation of the right infringed.(2) Where the right is a patent, the invention must be identified. Where the invention is a product, the claimant is entitled to the infringer's profit made from the sales of articles or part articles which embody the invention.
(3) Where the patent protects only part of an article sold by the infringer, the claimant is entitled to the profit made by the infringer from the sale of the entire article if either
(a) the protected part is the essential feature of the entire article, or(b) the entire article would never have been made by the infringer if there had been no infringement of the claimant's right.(4) Part of an article is its 'essential feature' if the part is functionally and/or commercially the most significant part of the whole.
(5) If the patent protects part of an article and neither 3(a) nor (b) apply, the court must assess how much of the total profit made by the infringer on the sale of the article is to be apportioned to the protected part of the article. The claimant is entitled to that part of the total profit.
(6) Where the sale of an article protected by the patent drives the sales of other, unprotected, goods or services, the claimant is in addition entitled to the profit made by the infringer on the sale of those other goods and services (convoyed goods and services).
(7) The sale of an article 'drives' the sales of other goods or services if there is a causative link between the purchase of the article protected by the patent and a consequential purchase of the other goods or services.
(8) There will be a causative link where there is a perceived compatibility, functional interaction or other connection of that nature between the protected article and the other goods or services.
(9) The purchase of the putative convoyed goods or services must be consequential in the sense that the purchase of the protected article is the principal purchasing decision in the mind of the buyer and the purchase of the other goods or services follows as a consequence.
(10) In relation to the foregoing issues the evidential burden rests on the infringer.
The first remitted issue: What proportion of sales of slatted panel sold together with infringing inserts should be included in the account of profits?
Identifying the invention
"[28] 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."
The alternative ways in which panels were sold with inserts
Panels with incorporated inserts
Panels separate from inserts
The customer did not specify infringing inserts
Deductible overheads
The law
"[39] In my judgment the question posed by the court is a relatively simple one to ask (even if it may not be easy to answer): if the defendant had not infringed the patent would he have carried on a non-infringing business which would have been sustained by the overheads in fact used to sustain the infringement?"
"[42] It seems to me to be clear that if the infringer would have manufactured or sold non-infringing products had he not infringed and would have incurred overheads in supporting that manufacture or sale, then he ought to be allowed a proportion of his general overheads. The question is not dependent on whether the infringer is or is not working to capacity. The bottom line is whether (a) the overheads would have been incurred anyway even if the infringement had not occurred and (b) the sale of infringing products would not have been replaced by sale of non-infringing products. It is in those circumstances that an allowance for overheads will not be permitted."
"[51] I do not doubt that, as Mr Cuddigan submitted, if an infringer in fact has spare capacity which he has not used he may find that a tribunal is sceptical about his evidence to the effect that had he not been infringing he would have used his overheads to support a non-infringing line of business. As Mr Cuddigan said, the obvious question would be: if you had spare capacity why did you not use it to support the non-infringing line of business?"
(1) Costs that were 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, non-infringing, businesses.(2) The defendant is entitled to deduct the former costs from gross relevant profits.
(3) A proportion of the infringer's general overheads may be deducted from gross relevant profits unless
(a) the overheads would have been incurred anyway even if the infringement had not occurred, and(b) the sale of infringing products would not have been replaced by the sale of non-infringing products.(4) The evidential burden rests on the defendant to support a claim that costs specific to the infringement and/or a proportion of general overheads are to be deducted from profits due to the claimant.
Second remitted issue: what deductions (if any) for general overheads may Design & Display make?
The Island Records disclosure
Costs associated solely with Design & Display's acts of infringement
Whether Design & Display can deduct general overheads
(a) it would have incurred the same overheads; and(b) its sales of non-infringing products would have been at the same level as its sales of infringing plus non-infringing products made in reality.
Level of overheads
Level of sales
Specific arguments raised by Abbott in relation to overhead deductions
Whether overheads should be apportioned by reference to the entire business
Whether apportionment should be by reference to revenue or volume
Payments to directors
Rent
Delivery charges
Conclusion