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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Crafts Group LLC v M/S Indeutsch International & Anor [2023] EWHC 1455 (IPEC) (16 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2023/1455.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1455 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CRAFTS GROUP LLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) M/S INDEUTSCH INTERNATIONAL (2) M/S KNITPRO INTERNATIONAL |
Defendants |
____________________
Guy Hollingworth (instructed by Wiggin LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 22 May 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
Background
Article 132(1) of the Trade Mark Regulation
"1. An EU trade mark court hearing an action referred to in Article 124 other than an action for a declaration of non-infringement shall, unless there are special grounds for continuing the hearing, of its own motion after hearing the parties or at the request of one of the parties and after hearing the other parties, stay the proceedings where the validity of the EU trade mark is already in issue before another EU trade mark court on account of a counterclaim or where an application for revocation or for a declaration of invalidity has already been filed at the Office."
"The EU trade mark courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction:
(a) for all infringement actions and – if they are permitted under national law – actions in respect of threatened infringement relating to EU trade marks;
(b) for actions for declaration of non-infringement, if they are permitted under national law;
(c) for all actions brought as a result of acts referred to in Article 11(2);
(d) for counterclaims for revocation or for a declaration of invalidity of the EU trade mark pursuant to Article 128."
Withdrawal of the UK from the EU
"20. (1) This paragraph applies where on exit day an existing EUTM is the subject of proceedings which are pending ('pending proceedings') before a court in the United Kingdom designated for the purposes of Article 123 ('EU trade mark court').
(2) Subject to sub-paragraphs (3) and (4), the provisions contained or referred to in Chapter 10 of the European Union Trade Mark Regulation (with the exception of Articles 128(2), (4), (6) and (7) and 132) continue to apply to the pending proceedings as if the United Kingdom were still a Member State with effect from exit day."
"Article 67
Jurisdiction, recognition and enforcement of judicial decisions, and related cooperation between central authorities
1. In the United Kingdom, as well as in the Member States in situations involving the United Kingdom, in respect of legal proceedings instituted before the end of the transition period and in respect of proceedings or actions that are related to such legal proceedings pursuant to Articles 29, 30 and 31 of Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council, Article 19 of Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003 or Articles 12 and 13 of Council Regulation (EC) No 4/2009, the following acts or provisions shall apply:
(a) the provisions regarding jurisdiction of Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012;
(b) the provisions regarding jurisdiction of Regulation (EU) 2017/1001, of Regulation (EC) No 6/2002, of Regulation (EC) No 2100/94, of Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council and of Directive 96/71/ EC of the European Parliament and of the Council;"
The inconsistency
"[54] … the exclusions of Articles 128 and 132 are not relevant to the issue which the Court has to decide. The excluded provisions are all ones which required reciprocity with the EU IPO such as obligations to notify or deferring to the EU IPO and, as [counsel] said, one can see that at the time the 2019 Regulations were made the legislature may well have wanted to avoid any reciprocity with the EU IPO in the event of a no deal Brexit. As she also pointed out, it does appear that these exclusions from Articles 128 and 132 are inconsistent with Article 67.1 of the Withdrawal Agreement which provides that in pending proceedings the jurisdiction provisions in Chapter X of EU Regulation 2017/1001 will continue to apply without there being any such exclusions. However, that issue does not arise for determination in the present case so I need say no more about it."
"[70] One necessarily begins with the language of article 67, which introduces two concepts. Firstly, legal proceedings instituted before the end of the transition period, and secondly, proceedings or actions that are related to such legal proceedings pursuant to articles 29, 30 and 31 of Brussels Recast. If the latter, in contrast to the former, were required to be instituted so as to give rise to the necessary relationship prior to the expiration of the transitional period, then one would have expected article 67 to have said so. More fundamentally, perhaps, if it were a requirement that the necessary relationship existed as at the end of the transition period, then Brussels Recast would have applied in any event without the need for article 67 because both sets of proceedings would necessarily have been instituted before the end of the transitional period and so Union law would have continued to have effect by virtue of articles 126 and 127 of the Withdrawal Agreement. On this basis, article 67 and the additional wording "and in respect of proceedings or actions that are related to such legal proceedings only makes sense if construed as encompassing a relationship that only arose after the end of the transitional period, cf Briggs [Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments, 7th ed (2021)] at p 20.
[71] Although perhaps of more limited weight following the exit of the UK from the EU, support for the defendants' construction is provided by the European Commission's 'Notice to Stakeholders' dated 27 August 2020 which, at para 1.1 thereof, comments as follows:
'Article 67(1) of the Withdrawal Agreement specifies that EU rules on jurisdiction also apply to "proceedings or actions that are related to such legal proceedings" even if such related proceedings or actions are instituted after the end of the transition period. This addresses situations where proceedings involving the same cause of action and between the same parties are brought in the courts of a member state and the United Kingdom ("lis pendens") before and after the end of the transition period respectively (or vice versa). The aim is to ensure that, in these cases, the EU rules on conflict of jurisdictions continue to apply where the court has been seised after the end of the transition period in an EU member state or in the United Kingdom.'
[72] Of particular significance is the aim identified in respect of the operation of article 67, namely to ensure that in respect of the situation where one set of proceedings is commenced prior to the end of the transition period, and another set of proceedings is commenced after the end of the transition period, the pre-existing regime should continue to apply to both sets of proceedings.
[73] Although there is no judicial authority on the point as such, I note that in On the Beach Ltd v Ryanair UK Ltd [2022] IL Pr 24, albeit in circumstances in which the parties were agreed on the point, Nugee LJ (sitting at first instance) at para 22 recorded that: 'Since all the Irish proceedings were instituted before the end of the transition period, . . . article 30 of [Brussels Recast] applies to this application, notwithstanding that this action was commenced in England after the end of the transition period' (emphasis added).
[74] Mr Ruddell, on behalf of the defendants, makes the point that article 67 preserves the applicability of Brussels Recast to 'proceedings' and not to particular claims in proceedings. On that basis, and having regard to what I consider to be the proper construction of article [67], I accept Mr Ruddell's submission that Brussels Recast continues to apply to new claims added to proceedings commenced prior to 31 December 2020 and claims against new defendants joined to such proceedings after that date. This is also consistent with the approach of Morgan J in Benkel v East-West German Real Estate Holding [2021] IL Pr 16, para 43, albeit (again) on the basis of an agreed position as to the law, and is supported by the commentary in Briggs at pp 19-20.
[75] In short therefore, I do not consider it to be an objection to the potential application of articles 29 and 30 of Brussels Recast in the present case that the Belgian Proceedings and the English Proceedings might only have become related for the purposes of articles 29 and 30 after 31 December 2020."
The arguments
Crafts' arguments
KnitPro's argument
"8B Power in connection with certain other separation issues
(1) A Minister of the Crown may by regulations make such provision as the Minister considers appropriate—
(a) to implement Part 3 of the withdrawal agreement (separation provisions), [Part 3 includes art.67]
(b) to supplement the effect of section 7A in relation to that Part, or [s.7A means s.7A of the 2018 Act as amended, which gives direct effect to the rights and procedures provided for by the Withdrawal Agreement]
(c) otherwise for the purposes of dealing with matters arising out of, or related to, that Part (including matters arising by virtue of section 7A and that Part).
…
(3) Regulations under this section may make any provision that could be made by an Act of Parliament.
(4) Regulations under this section may (among other things) restate, for the purposes of making the law clearer or more accessible, anything that forms part of domestic law by virtue of—
(a) section 7A above and Part 3 of the withdrawal agreement,
…"
Discussion
"[49] Mr Abrahams sought to answer this point by submitting that, after IP completion day, this court was no longer an EU trade mark court, because even though the repeals in Schedule 5 of the 2019 Regulations did not include the 2006 Regulations, by repealing the 2008 and 2016 Regulations that Schedule had necessarily by implication repealed the underlying 2006 Regulations. However, I do not consider that it is possible to say that the 2006 Regulations have somehow been impliedly repealed by Schedule 5 to the 2019 Regulations. Whilst the legislation giving e?ect to Brexit is not exactly clearly and coherently drafted, it would be surprising to say the least if the 2006 Regulations had been impliedly repealed by a statutory instrument made on 13 February 2019, when the 2018 Regulations, which had come into force a month earlier on 14 January 2019, had made detailed, albeit minor, amendments to the 2006 Regulations to ensure that they cross-referred to EU Regulation 2017/1001, hardly consistent with the 2006 Regulations being about to be repealed.
[50] In any event, even if the 2006 Regulations have somehow been impliedly repealed, I consider the submission that this court is no longer an EU trade mark court as regards pending proceedings is misconceived. It ignores the position as regards pending proceedings in circumstances where, when the 2019 Regulations came into force on IP completion day, 31 December 2020, the Withdrawal Agreement and the EU Withdrawal Acts 2018 and 2020 were all in force. Immediately prior to IP completion day, these proceedings were pending before this court, which was an EU trade mark court. Mr Abrahams' submission did not really address how it was that this court ceased to have that status when paragraph 20 of Schedule 2A makes it clear that, as regards proceedings already pending before this court as an EU trade mark court on IP completion day, this court continues to be an EU trade mark court. Thus, paragraphs 20(3) and (4), even if they were limiting jurisdiction as Mr Abrahams contends, are obviously forward looking, in the sense that they are dealing with jurisdiction in pending proceedings after IP completion day and yet they refer to the relevant court in the United Kingdom as 'the EU trade mark court' not 'the former EU trade mark court'. On the basis that this court remains an EU trade mark court for the purposes of pending proceedings, the clear intention of article 67 of the Withdrawal Agreement, which has full legal e?ect, is that this court should retain the same jurisdiction under EU Regulation 2017/1011 as it had before IP completion day."
Case management
"Continued protection in the United Kingdom of registered or granted rights
1. The holder of any of the following intellectual property rights which have been registered or granted before the end of the transition period shall, without any re-examination, become the holder of a comparable registered and enforceable intellectual property right in the United Kingdom under the law of the United Kingdom:
(a) the holder of a European Union trade mark registered in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2017/1001 of the European Parliament and of the Council ( 33) shall become the holder of a trade mark in the United Kingdom, consisting of the same sign, for the same goods or services;
…
3. Notwithstanding paragraph 1, if an intellectual property right referred to in that paragraph is declared invalid or revoked, or, in the case of a Community plant variety right, is declared null and void or is cancelled, in the Union as the result of an administrative or judicial procedure which was ongoing on the last day of the transition period, the corresponding right in the United Kingdom shall also be declared invalid or revoked, or declared null and void, or be cancelled. The date of effect of the declaration or revocation or cancellation in the United Kingdom shall be the same as in the Union.
By way of derogation from the first subparagraph, the United Kingdom shall not be obliged to declare invalid or to revoke the corresponding right in the United Kingdom where the grounds for the invalidity or revocation of the European Union trade mark or registered Community design do not apply in the United Kingdom."
"21A.— Existing EUTM: effect of invalidity or revocation
(1) This paragraph applies where, on IP completion day, an existing EUTM is the subject of proceedings under Article 58 (Grounds for revocation), 59 (Absolute grounds for invalidity) or 60 (Relative grounds for invalidity) which have been instituted but not finally determined before IP completion day ('cancellation proceedings').
(2) Subject to sub-paragraph (4), where—
(a) the existing EUTM is revoked or declared invalid (whether wholly or partially) pursuant to a decision in the cancellation proceedings which is finally determined, and
(b) the registrar has—
(i) received notice of the situation referred to in paragraph (a) ('a cancellation notice'), or
(ii) otherwise become aware of the situation referred to in paragraph (a),
the registration of the comparable trade mark (EU) which derives from the existing EUTM must be revoked or declared invalid to the same extent as the existing EUTM.
…
(4) The registration of a comparable trade mark (EU) must not be revoked or declared invalid under sub-paragraph (2) where the grounds on which the existing EUTM was revoked or declared invalid (whether wholly or partially) would not apply or would not have been satisfied in relation to the comparable trade mark (EU)—
(a) if the comparable trade mark (EU) had existed as at the date the cancellation proceedings were instituted, and
(b) an application for the revocation or a declaration of invalidity of the comparable trade mark (EU) based on those grounds had been made on that date under section 46 or 47 (as the case may be).
(5) Where a comparable trade mark (EU) is revoked or declared invalid to any extent pursuant to this paragraph—
(a) the rights of the proprietor are deemed to have ceased to that extent as from the date on which the rights of the proprietor of the existing EUTM are deemed to have ceased under the EUTM Regulation;
(b) subject to any claim for compensation for damage caused by negligence or lack of good faith on the part of the proprietor or a claim for restitution based upon the unjust enrichment of the proprietor, the revocation or invalidity of the comparable trade mark (EU) does not affect—
(i) a decision arising from infringement proceedings which has been finally determined and which has been enforced prior to the date on which the entry in the register of the comparable trade mark (EU) has been removed or amended pursuant to sub-paragraph (3) ('the decision date');
(ii) any contract entered into prior to the decision date to the extent that it has been performed prior to the decision date, subject to the right of a party to the contract to claim the repayment of any consideration paid under the contract where, having regard to the circumstances, it is fair and equitable for such repayment to be made.
…
(7) For the purposes of this paragraph—
(a) proceedings are instituted if an application or counterclaim for revocation or for a declaration of invalidity—
(i) has been filed (and not subsequently withdrawn) with the European Union Intellectual Property Office or a court designated for the purposes of Article 123, and
(ii) meets the requirements for being accorded a filing date under the European Union Trade Mark Regulation and Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2018/625 of 5th March 2018;
(b) a decision is finally determined when—
(i) it has been determined, and
(ii) there is no further possibility of the determination being varied or set aside (disregarding any power to grant permission to appeal out of time)."
"[68] In the light of the observations in Virgin and the arguments in this appeal I would recast the Glaxo guidance as follows:
1. The discretion, which is very wide indeed, should be exercised to achieve the balance of justice between the parties having regard to all the relevant circumstances of the particular case.
2. The discretion is of the Patents Court, not of the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal would not be justified in interfering with a first instance decision that accords with legal principle and has been reached by taking into account all the relevant, and only the relevant, circumstances.
3. Although neither the EPC nor the 1977 Act contains express provisions relating to automatic or discretionary stay of proceedings in national courts, they provide the context and condition the exercise of the discretion.
4. It should thus be remembered that the possibility of concurrent proceedings contesting the validity of a patent granted by the EPO is inherent in the system established by the EPC. It should also be remembered that national courts exercise exclusive jurisdiction on infringement issues.
5. If there are no other factors, a stay of the national proceedings is the default option. There is no purpose in pursuing two sets of proceedings simply because the Convention allows for it.
6. It is for the party resisting the grant of the stay to show why it should not be granted. Ultimately it is a question of where the balance of justice lies.
7. One important factor affecting the exercise of the discretion is the extent to which refusal of a stay will irrevocably deprive a party of any part of the benefit which the concurrent jurisdiction of the EPO and the national court is intended to confer. Thus, if allowing the national court to proceed might allow the patentee to obtain monetary compensation which is not repayable if the patent is subsequently revoked, this would be a weighty factor in favour of a grant of a stay. It may, however, be possible to mitigate the effect of this factor by the offer of suitable undertakings to repay.
8. The Patents Court judge is entitled to refuse a stay of the national proceedings where the evidence is that some commercial certainty would be achieved at a considerably earlier date in the case of the UK proceedings than in the EPO. It is true that it will not be possible to attain certainty everywhere until the EPO proceedings are finally resolved, but some certainty, sooner rather than later, and somewhere, such as in the UK, rather than nowhere, is, in general, preferable to continuing uncertainty everywhere.
9. It is permissible to take account of the fact that resolution of the national proceedings, whilst not finally resolving everything, may, by deciding some important issues, promote settlement.
10. An important factor affecting the discretion will be the length of time that it will take for the respective proceedings in the national court and in the EPO to reach a conclusion. This is not an independent factor, but needs to be considered in conjunction with the prejudice which any party will suffer from the delay, and lack of certainty, and what the national proceedings can achieve in terms of certainty.
11. The public interest in dispelling the uncertainty surrounding the validity of monopoly rights conferred by the grant of a patent is also a factor to be considered.
12. In weighing the balance it is material to take into account the risk of wasted costs, but this factor will normally be outweighed by commercial factors concerned with early resolution.
13. The hearing of an application for a stay is not to become a mini-trial of the various factors affecting its grant or refusal. The parties' assertions need to be examined critically, but at a relatively high level of generality."
In the result, all the claims in these proceedings are stayed pending final resolution of the application made in the EUIPO for cancellation of the EU Chevron Mark.