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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Bei Yu Industrial Co v Nuby (UK) LLP & Anor [2022] EWHC 652 (IPEC) (22 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2022/652.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 652 (IPEC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Judgment handed down by email |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
BEI YU INDUSTRIAL CO. | Claimant | |
- and – | ||
(1) NUBY (UK) LLP | ||
(2) MS MARIA LOUISE BURNELL | Defendants |
____________________
THOMAS ST QUINTIN (instructed by HCR Hewitsons) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 8th March 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Nicholas Caddick Q.C. (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge):
Introduction
The applicable law
a. The purpose of the account of profits is to deprive Nuby of the profits which it has improperly made by its wrongful importation and sale of the Nuby Baby Bath and to transfer those profits to Bei Yu – see Hotel Cipriani v Cipriani Grosvenor Street [2010] EWHC 628 (Ch) per Briggs J at [8]. In this regard, it is Nuby's actual profit that the court has to identify rather than the profit that Nuby could or ought to have made. In effect, Bei Yu must take Nuby (and its profit) as it is – see Jack Wills Ltd v House of Fraser (Stores) Ltd [2016] EWHC 626 (Ch), at [10]).
b. The relevant profits are the sum left after deducting Nuby's allowable expenses from the sums received or receivable by Nuby in respect of its infringing acts.
c. The allowable expenses will include any costs that were associated solely with Nuby's infringing acts. Those costs might be direct costs (e.g. the costs of purchasing and importing the relevant products) or any increased overheads specifically related to the infringing acts. Such expenses may be deducted in their entirety – see OOO Abbott v Design and Display Ltd [2017] EWHC 932 (IPEC), per HHJ Hacon at [57(1) and (2)].
d. The allowable expenses can also include a proportion of Nuby's general overheads unless (a) the relevant overhead would have been incurred anyway (i.e. it would have been incurred even if the infringing acts had not occurred) and (b) the sale of infringing products would not have been replaced by the sale of non-infringing products – see OOO Abbott per HHJ Hacon at [57(3)].
e. Where a deduction can be made in respect of a general overhead, the amount deducted is such proportion of the overhead figure that can fairly be attributed to Nuby's infringing activities as opposed to its non-infringing activities. This apportionment is done on a broad brush basis - see Jack Wills at [53].[1] However, it may be appropriate to use different bases of apportionment for different types of overhead. A basis that is fair and appropriate in relation to, for example, an expense relating to the business premises may not be fair and appropriate when applied to, say, wages - see Jack Wills at [53]. As noted by Lewison LJ in OOO Abbott [2016] EWCA Civ 95 at [39], the question posed by the court as regards deductible overheads is a relatively simple one to ask, even if it may not be easy to answer.
f. The evidential burden rests on Nuby to support a claim that it is appropriate to make a deduction on account of a sum said to be an allowable expense under the principles set out in (b) to (e) above – see OOO Abbott [2017] EWHC 932 (IPEC) at [57(4)].
Witnesses
Sales
Direct costs
General overheads – can any deduction be made
General overheads – what sums can be taken into account
Gross wages
Consultancy costs
Bad debt write off
General overheads – the correct approach to apportionment
The rival approaches
The pleading point
The appropriate apportionment in the present case
"…I always come back to the sales value because as a company we have a margin that we work towards and we want to get similar margin for all of our products. And in an ideal world, obviously, the overhead cost would be the same for each pound spent on a product. Whilst we cannot guarantee that, we would, if we had products that were particularly burdensome because of the size or their complexity, we would from our experience of that type of product know that and seek to get a better margin at the top end to accommodate that ....".
In contrast, when questioned about the one in 280 approach, she commented that it would be a difficult metric, especially given Nuby's varying product lines and the varying numbers of products and given the fact that its products were not all of a similar value or size.
Interest
17. The guidance to be derived from these cases includes the following:
(1) Interest is awarded to compensate claimants for being kept out of money which ought to have been paid to them rather than as compensation for damage done or to deprive defendants of profit they may have made from the use of the money.
(2) This is a question to be approached broadly. The court will consider the position of persons with the claimants' general attributes, but will not have regard to claimants' particular attributes or any special position in which they may have been.
(3) In relation to commercial claimants the general presumption will be that they would have borrowed less and so the court will have regard to the rate at which persons with the general attributes of the claimant could have borrowed. This is likely to be a percentage over base rate and may be higher for small businesses than for first class borrowers.
(4) In relation to personal injury claimants the general presumption will be that the appropriate rate of interest is the investment rate.
(5) Many claimants will not fall clearly into a category of those who would have borrowed or those who would have put money on deposit and a fair rate for them may often fall somewhere between those two rates.
Conclusion
Note 1 The same point was made as regards any apportionment that needs to made between profits attributable to infringing and non-infringing activities – see Hotel Cipriani at [8]. [Back] Note 2 Bank of England base rates being 0.75% until 11 March 2020, 0.25% until 19 March 2020 and 0.1% until 16 December 2021 [Back]