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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Philips Electronics N.V. v. Ingman Limited, The Video Duplicating Company Limited [1998] EWHC Patents 321 (13th May, 1998)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/1998/321.html
Cite as: [1998] EWHC Patents 321

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Philips Electronics N.V. v. Ingman Limited, The Video Duplicating Company Limited [1998] EWHC Patents 321 (13th May, 1998)

CH 1997 P. No. 4100

CH 1997 P. No. 4101

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

CHANCERY DIVISION

PATENTS COURT

Before: THE HON. MR. JUSTICE LADDIE

 

 

PHILIPS ELECTRONICS N.V.

Plaintiff

 

- and -

 

 

INGMAN LIMITED (T/a DISKXPRESS)

THE VIDEO DUPLICATING COMPANY LIMITED (T/a C D SYSTEMS)

 

Defendants

 

Mr. Paul Lasok QC and Mr. Jon Turner instructed by Bristows for the Plaintiff

Mr. Gerald Barling QC and Mr. Nicholas Green instructed by Hammond Suddards for the Defendants

Hearing dates: 13, 16-17 March 1998

 

JUDGMENT

This is the official judgment of the court and I direct that no further note or transcript be made

 

DATED: 13th May, 1998

Mr. Justice Laddie:

1. The plaintiff, Philips Electronics N.V., is the proprietor of a number of patents relating to the design and manufacture of compact discs ("CDs"). Among the portfolio of patents owned or controlled by the plaintiff are UK Patents Nos. 2,076,569 and 2,083,322. They are the patents in suit in this action. Because of international standardisation, in practice anyone who wants to make CDs is likely to infringe one or more of the plaintiff's patents. The plaintiff offers licences on standard terms to anyone wanting to enter this market.

2. The defendants, Ingman Limited and The Video Duplicating Company Limited, are involved in the manufacture of CDs. They were offered a licence on the standard terms by the plaintiff. They asserted that the terms of that licence would be commercially unfair to them. They refused a licence but carried on making CDs. In July of last year, the plaintiff commenced the present proceedings, asserting that the defendants were infringing the patents in suit.

3. The defendants deny infringement but their major defence is pleaded (The defendants put forward a proposed amended defence. In this judgment, references to the defence are to be taken as references to that document.) on two bases. First they allege that the patents are invalid. They counterclaim seeking an order for revocation and in support of that they have served particulars of objections. The second substantive defence arises out of the provisions of the Treaty of Rome. They allege that the plaintiff is using these proceedings to force them into signing a standard form licence which offends against Article 85 of the Treaty. Furthermore they say that the plaintiff is using the present proceedings as part of an abuse of a dominant position it holds within the European Union. Such activity offends against Article 86 of the Treaty. Based on these two arguments, the defendants say that they have a defence to the present infringement proceedings. Further they say that the breaches of the Treaty entitle them to recover damages from the plaintiff. As a result they raise the Articles 85 and 86 issues both in their defence and as part of their counterclaim.

4. The defendants have also taken the offensive. I have been told by Mr. Barling QC, who appears on behalf of the defendants, that his clients have taken their complaints informally to the Commission where they met a "not-discouraging" reception. I was not told what the Commission said or intimated and I have not been told that the Commission has made any preliminary observations on the strengths or otherwise of the defendants' complaints. Mr. Barling tells me that his clients are in the process of drafting a formal complaint which will be lodged with the Commission within a few weeks. He says that it will cover all of the issues of fact and law raised in his clients' defence and counterclaim insofar as they relate to the Treaty issues.

5. It is against this background that the plaintiff has launched the present application. In effect, the relief sought is of two types. First the plaintiff says that the defendants' Treaty pleadings are bad on their face and should be struck out accordingly. This is, in substance, an application to strike out under the provisions of Ord. 18 r. 19. Alternatively it says that the Treaty issues are ones which ought to be tried separately pursuant to the provisions of RSC Ord. 15 r. 5. In my view it is convenient to consider the second of these issues first.

Ord. 15 r. (5)

6. The court has a wide discretion to split the issues arising in an action and to order them to be tried separately. Where issues overlap, separate trials may result in some duplication of work and raise the possibility of inconsistent decisions. In most cases it will be quicker and cheaper in the long run for all issues to be tried together. I think that before the court decides to exercise its discretion to split issues it must be persuaded that some significant benefit would flow from taking that course.

7. The patent law and Treaty of Rome issues in this action are quite distinct. Under the former it will be necessary to consider whether the defendants' products or process fall within the scope of those claims of the patents in suit which are asserted by the plaintiff to have independent validity. The validity will have to be assessed in the light of the attacks pleaded in the particulars of objections served by the defendants in November of last year. Those attacks include allegations of lack of novelty, obviousness and insufficiency. They are detailed allegations which will involve consideration of issues of patent law and technical evidence relating to digital technology. On the other hand the Treaty of Rome defences and counterclaims proceed on the assumption that the patents are valid and infringed. There is no allegation that any breach of Articles 85 or 86 arises out of or is connected to any assertion of invalidity or non-infringement. If and to the extent that the Treaty of Rome issues survive, they will involve the consideration of detailed commercial evidence. The technical patent issues will be substantially irrelevant to them.

8. The difference between the two sets of issues is consistent with the legal representation chosen by the parties. For the patent issues each side has had its pleadings prepared by counsel well known as a specialist in the patent field whereas the counsel who have argued the Treaty of Rome issues are well recognised as leading specialists in that area of law but not, so far as I am aware, having any particular expertise in relation to patent law.

9. If this was an ordinary patent action, by now it would be expected to be nearing a trial. As noted above, this action was commenced in July of last year yet, as far as I am aware, little or nothing has been done to get it before the court. No attempt has been made to fix a trial date nor have directions as provided for under O. 104 been put before the court. It seems likely that the existence of the Treaty of Rome issues has slowed down the whole action. If the latter issues survive it is to be expected that they will give rise to wide ranging requests for discovery.

10. I have come to the conclusion that it would be inconvenient for these issues to continue to be tried together. I can not see there being any significant saving in cost in doing that. In fact if all the issues are tried together it may well be that the costs will be increased. Those counsel who are expert in and only concerned in one area of the case will almost inevitably have to attend for those parts of the trial which are only of peripheral relevance to them. I do not think that there will be any saving in time achieved by running the issues together nor was that suggested to me by counsel. In addition to this, there is likely to be a very substantial delay in the determination of the patent issues unless there is severance now. Such delay is undesirable. If, as the defendants allege, these patents are invalid then the sooner that is determined the better, not only from the point of view of these defendants but also in the interest of all others in the trade both here and abroad who have taken or are minded to take licences under these patents or their foreign equivalents. Furthermore if the patents are invalid, the time consuming and expensive resolution of the Treaty of Rome issues may be rendered substantially unnecessary since the defendants have not allowed the plaintiff's patent claims to deter them from entering the market and using the plaintiff's logos on their CDs. Therefore, unlike others in this industry, they have not had to bear the additional cost of royalty payments to the plaintiff. It is difficult to see how they can have suffered any damage as a result of any activity of the plaintiff. It may be that, absent the patent issues, the defendants will have little reason to pursue their Treaty of Rome counterclaim.

11. Severing these issues is therefore attractive. However it is said on behalf of the defendants that if the patent part of the case is determined before the Treaty of Rome part, it will prevent the court from granting relief if the patents are held to be valid and infringed. If that is so, it would be a factor which would weigh against splitting the issues. I do not think this submission is well founded. If the court decides in the plaintiff's favour, there is no reason why it can not grant injunctive and other relief. The court has wide powers to grant injunctive relief when the circumstances so demand. If the plaintiff wins in relation to patents, it would expect to be granted an injunction. In view of the fact that Treaty of Rome issues may still be outstanding, it could be that any such injunction would have to be in an interlocutory form in the sense that the plaintiff would have to agree to compensate the defendants if, because of the effects of Articles 85 or 86, it is subsequently determined that it is not allowed to enforce its patents. It seems to me that even if the plaintiff is not required to give an express cross-undertaking in damages and it is subsequently held to have breached the Treaty of Rome by enforcing the patents, it is likely to be obliged to compensate the defendants for any loss caused by its having obtained and enforced the injunction. So whether or not any injunction granted at the end of the patent trial is subject to an express cross-undertaking in damages pending the outcome of any surviving Treaty of Rome case is more a matter of form than substance. Similarly if the plaintiff pursues an inquiry as to damages (The defendants withdrew their claims for an account of profits prior to the hearing of the application.) there is no reason why it should not proceed with that even before any surviving Treaty of Rome issues are determined. After all, that is what happens now in many cases when an unsuccessful defendant is appealing to the Court of Appeal. The timing of any such inquiry and whether or not the payment of any sums found due should be delayed or subject to other terms is a matter which the court can decide at an appropriate time.

12. For these reasons I have decided that this is a case in which it is appropriate to order the patent and any surviving Treaty of Rome issues to be tried separately. After judgment I expect counsel to address me on the directions to be made to ensure that the patent part of the case gets to trial with reasonable expedition.

13. As far as the Treaty of Rome issues are concerned, it must be remembered that the defendants are taking all their complaints to the Commission in the next few weeks. There are many cases in which the courts have recognised the primary role played by the Commission in determining competition issues. It has also been said to be undesirable for national courts and the Commission to be deciding the same competition issues at the same time. Frequently the national courts have stayed proceedings to await the outcome of Commission's deliberations. Many of the relevant cases are set out in Iberian UK Limited v. BPB Industries plc [1997] EuLR 1, [1997] ICR 164. It is sufficient for this purpose to refer to MTV Europe v. BMG Record (UK) Limited [1997] EuLR 100 in which Sir Thomas Bingham M.R. made the following general observations:

"... material rulings of the European Court of Justice are, as I understand them, based on the extreme undesirability of inconsistent decisions as between the Commission, on the one side, and national courts on the other. It is not hard to understand the undesirability of such inconstancy which undermines legal certainty, leaving parties in doubt as to where they stand, and infringes the integrity of the Community legal order."

1. He then referred to BRT v. SABAM [1974] ECR 51 and said:

"It seems to me that the effect of that decision is that the national court should generally stay proceedings pending a decision by the Commission in the interests of legal certainty unless the answer to the complaint is clear."

14. To the extent that any competition issues survive this application, I will stay them pending the outcome of the defendants' complaint to the Commission.

15. Although I am prepared to stay the latter issues, this does not remove the need to determine the application to strike them out. If and to the extent that there is nothing in them, they should be removed from contention now. They should not be left to hang over the plaintiff's head if they are without substance. Furthermore if the Commission decides not to entertain the defendants' complaint the stay will be lifted and the Treaty of Rome issues will come back to life. Then they will have to be considered again here. A refusal by the Commission to entertain the complaint would not inevitably mean that it is without substance. For example it might not be entertained because the Commission decides it to be of insufficient priority to warrant the expenditure of the Commission's limited resources. Since I have heard the arguments, I should deal with them.

Ord. 18 r. 19

16. The approach to be adopted on an application under Ord. 18, r.19(1)(a) was explained by the Court of Appeal in Morgan Crucible Company Plc v. Hill Samuel & Co. Ltd. [1991] Ch. 295 at 314B as follows:

"On an application to strike out a pleading under RSC Ord. 18, r.19(1)(a) no evidence is admissible and since it is only the pleading itself which is being examined, the court is required to assume that each and every one of the facts pleaded (unless manifestly incapable of proof) is true and will be capable of proof at the trial. In some instances, the court may regard the assumption as somewhat unrealistic, but it nevertheless has to be made."

In BCCI v. Price Waterhouse, Ernst & Whinney and Others (unreported 13 February, 1998) the Court of Appeal also said:

"... care should be taken to distinguish between primary facts and conclusions or inferences from those facts. Such conclusions or inferences may require to be subjected to closer scrutiny. It is also to be remembered that it is only in plain cases that recourse should be had to the summary process of striking a claim out at an interlocutory stage."

17. On this application the plaintiff served a significant quantity of evidence. The defendants responded. However since this is, in substance, an application to strike out, I indicated that I was not inclined to read any of it. I think that both sides accepted this as the correct approach with the result that, save for one or two small matters where the parties appeared to be agreed on the relevant additional facts, the application proceeded on the basis of the pleadings alone. In what is set out below, I recite only the facts as alleged in the defence and counterclaim. For the purpose of this application I shall assume that they are all accurate. In fact many of them appear to be common ground between the parties.

The Technical and Commercial Background

18. CDs are comparatively high capacity storage devices. They can be made to contain large quantities of digital information. There are a number of different formats for CDs. They are referred to as CD-A, CD-ROM, CD-I and CDV. They differ from one another in some respects but they share many common technical features. Each is designed to cater for a different type of market. For example CD-A (meaning CD-Audio) is the form of CD used for storing musical recordings whereas CD-I is a form of CD used in certain types of computer controlled games. The plaintiff and Sony Corporation each embarked on the development of the technology. In about 1980 they entered into an agreement ("The Philips/Sony agreement"). Under it the two companies were to co-operate, inter alia, in the development of industry standards for CDs. In the course of that work they would obtain further patent protection. The patents would be pooled and would be enforced by Philips alone. It was agreed that the patents would be licensed, again by Philips alone, to all-comers on standard terms which were agreed between them. Philips would pursue infringers.

19. The plaintiff started offering licences ("the Standard Licence") on the basis of terms agreed between them and Sony under the Philips/Sony agreement in about 1983. The plaintiff and Sony also set about trying to ensure that their method of producing CDs became the industry standard. In this they were successful. In particular the Philips/Sony standards for CD-A and CD-ROM, the two CD formats with which the defendants are concerned, became accepted as industry standards by CENELEC (The European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardisation) and the European Association for Standardising Information and Communication Systems.

20. Needless to say, a CD player can only play a CD which is compatible with it. The manufacturers of the players need to make their equipment capable of playing most of the CDs on the market while the manufacturers of CDs need to ensure that their products can be played on the majority of players on the market. This can be achieved if the manufacturers of CDs and players adhere to the same standards. Since the international standards involve the use of technology which is covered by various Philips or Sony patents, any person trying to enter the market has to obtain a licence from and pay royalties to Philips. It is not economically viable for a producer of CDs to enter the market without adhering to those standards.

21. The Standard Licence includes standard royalty and grant back provisions. Although the defendants assert that the patents in suit are invalid and have not been infringed, they plead that they have at all times been prepared and remain prepared to accept a licence on reasonable terms under the patents in suit. The problem is, of course, that terms which they would consider reasonable are not those which are provided for in the Standard Licence and which have been accepted by all the other licensees in the industry. Mr. Lasok QC, who appears for the plaintiff, puts the defendants' position rather unflatteringly. They complain in their pleadings of the highly competitive nature of the CD market and its low profit margins. He says that what they do not want is an even reduction of the royalties to be paid by all licensees. They want a preferential reduction of royalties which favours them and improves their competitiveness. It is not possible for the plaintiff to agree a more favourable royalty rate because each licensee is entitled contractually to parity with other licensees as to the royalty rate with the consequence that if the plaintiff was to give the defendants a more favourable royalty rate, all other licensees would be entitled to the same rate.

The Defence and Counterclaim:

22. The defendants plead that the bringing and continuation of these proceedings is contrary to Articles 85 or 86 (Defence par. 14.1.). They say that even if the patents are valid and infringed, the Court is not entitled to grant the relief sought or any other relief condoning or requiring or permitting the plaintiff to infringe those Articles "in particular, perpetuating the situation whereby prospective licensees (such as the Defendant) are bound to accept a licence of the said patents on the terms of the Standard Licence or face infringement action."(Defence par. 14.2.) In the alternative, even if the patents are valid and infringed the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief sought in circumstances where, as here, the action and the relief sought are as a result or consequence of the Philips/Sony agreement. (Defence par. 14.3.) The defendants have set out in their defence those facts and matters which are relied on in support of these pleadings. It is convenient to consider the Article 86 points first.

Article 86

23. For the purpose of this action, it is necessary to consider three matters; first what is the dominant position allegedly held by the plaintiff, secondly what breach of the dominant position is alleged and thirdly what consequences flow from that breach if it is made out. The broad introductory paragraph to Article 86 provides that

"Any abuse by one or more undertakings of a dominant position within the common market or in a substantial part of it shall be prohibited as incom-patible with the common market in so far as it may affect trade between Member States".

24. The existence of a dominant position itself is not prohibited. Further, the holder of a dominant position in one market is not penalised if he abuses a non-dominant position in another market. It is only abuse of the dominant position which is prohibited and then only to the extent that "it may affect trade between Member States" - that is only to the extent that the identified abuse of the identified dominant position may affect trade.

25. In this case the defendants identify two markets (one with sub-markets) in which the plaintiff is said to be dominant as follows:

"the market for the licensing of technology for the manufacture use and sale of Compact Disc Systems and related products and in particular for CD-Audio-Discs and CD-ROM-Discs (hereafter the "Licence Market") and

"the market for the production of the products referred to above (hereafter the "Production Market"). The Defendant avers that the Production Market is itself to be divided into separate markets: the replicator production market (hereafter the "Replicator Market") and the content production market (hereafter the "Content Market")." (Defence par. 38. In the defence these markets are referred to together as "the Market". However this is not a plea that these two species of market are part and parcel of one overall market and that the plaintiff is dominant not only in the two markets separately but in the composite whole as well. It was not suggested to me by Mr. Barling during the course of argument that that is what the pleading meant nor that it was possible to put forward such a plea. It is clear that the market for licences is quite different to the market for products. The reference in the pleading to "the Market" appears to be nothing more than a drafting convenience. The defendants' skeleton argument refers to them as being "in principle separate and discrete one from the other".)

The Licence Market

26. Although the defence pleads that the plaintiff holds a dominant position in the market for licensing technology, there is no doubt that what is meant by that is the licensing of patented technology. That is the basis on which the argument before me has proceeded. No doubt the plaintiff and Sony have generated technology in the CD field but what is complained about is the plaintiff's control over the patents which are an essential requirement for entering into the CD market defined by the international standards. Other technology is readily available to those interested in entering the market. These defendants did not need any technology from Sony or the plaintiff to commence the manufacture of the CDs which are pleaded as infringements. What they need is an appropriate patent licence. There is no suggestion by the defendants that the plaintiff holds a dominant position in the licensing of technology other than patented technology.

27. The defendants plead that the plaintiff's dominance in this market has been abused in a number of ways. Although it will be necessary to consider the details of this plea later, by far and away the most important breach alleged is the rate of royalty required. This is referred to at numerous places in the defence. The most extensive plea is as follows:

"The rates of royalty are abusive for the following reasons:

(3)(i) The rates of royalty are discriminatory in that licensees who acquired licences under the Standard Licence in previous years paid the same rate of royalty the Plaintiff demands from present and prospective Licensees such as the Defendant. The same rate of royalty has been applied since about 1983 notwithstanding that the licensee is required to pay for a much smaller portfolio of rights (whether valid and enforceable or otherwise) than its competitors who entered the market in previous years.

(3)(ii) The Plaintiff has sought to demand royalties for patents which have expired. For example, Exhibit I to the Standard Licence dated 1 July 1996 purports to grant licences which expired prior to the date thereof.

(3)(iii) The Plaintiff has acted in a discriminatory fashion in that it has not applied the same rate of royalty to all prospective licensees but instead has discriminated as to the rates to be applied.

(3)(iv) The rate of royalty is excessive and the Defendant relies upon the facts and matters set out at paragraphs 43.2 to 43.4 above. The Defendant will rely also upon the fact that a typical rate of royalty in the electronics industry including the Licence to replicate media is between about 0.5% and 3% and the rate demanded herein is in excess thereof."( Defence par. 43.4(3)).

28. The third of these needs some explanation. It is not suggested that any licensee obtains a licence at other than the standard royalty. However it is said that the Standard Licence grants a licence for the entire range of patents and technical information held by the plaintiff. The defendants are therefore obliged to take a licence for patents which they do not need, for example the patents relating to CD-I. It is therefore suggested, although not asserted expressly in the pleading, that the defendants are being asked to pay more than they should. In that sense they are paying more than other licensees who take the Standard Licence but need to operate under all the patents (See for example Defence par. 17.3.3 and the paragraphs which refer back to it and par. 43.2.).

29. The same royalty objections are set out in paragraph 43.2 of the defence:

"The Standard Licence is in breach of Article 86 in that ... [i]t has the effect of limiting production contrary to Article 86(b) in that the rate of royalty curtails the ability of potential manufacturers such as the defendant from producing economically or at all. Initially, the royalty of 3 cents per item represented about 1% of manufacturing costs. However, today, 3 cents per item represents a much higher percentage of manufacturing costs (nearer 10%) in circumstances where the Production Market referred to at paragraph 38.2 has become intensely price sensitive, where margins have decreased and where many of the patents set out in Exhibits I through IV have expired. Moreover, the royalty has a disproportionate effect on those licensees who are replicators only (i.e. companies which are not the owners or controllers of the copyright in the material recorded on the discs but only licensees in relation thereto)."

30. So, according to the defendants, those who took their licenses some time ago should continue to pay at the old rate of 3% but they, as new entrants, should pay much less. What they are not suggesting is that all rates should move down equally for all licensees.

31. In view of the alleged abuses of the plaintiff's dominant position, the defendants say that they are entitled to a licence on reasonable terms. This is expressed as follows:

"Under Article 86 EC the Plaintiff is bound to grant licences on fair and reasonable terms. The duty to licence arises, inter alia: because of the Plaintiff's individual and/or joint dominant position; because in commercial reality the grant of licences represents the sole means by which a prospective entrant to the market for the production of Compact Disc Systems and in particular the CD-Audio-Discs and CD-ROM-Discs may enter that Market; and because of the Plaintiff's prior practice of offering Standard Licences to all applicants for such licences." (Defence par. 41.,)

"In the premises the Defendant is entitled under Article 86 to a licence of, inter alia, UK Patent 569 and UK Patent 322 (if valid) and infringed on reasonable and fair terms." (Defence par. 45.)

and:

"The Plaintiff is not entitled under Article 86 to refuse a licence on reasonable or fair terms or seek indirectly to enforce the Standard Licence by an infringement action, including the action herein." (Defence par. 46.)

32. The defendants say that it falls to the court to settle the terms on which they are to be permitted to exploit the plaintiff's patents:

"The Defendant will abide by whatever terms this Court decides are fair and reasonable in the circumstances, including as to the rate of royalty (if any)." (Defence par. 47.)

33. The plaintiff says that this defence and the counterclaim based on it are unarguable. The Treaty of Rome recognises the continued existence and value of intellectual property rights. It is not true to say, as the defendants do, that under Article 86 the plaintiff, by virtue of his position as a patent owner, is bound to grant licences on fair and reasonable terms. It can, if it wishes, refuse to grant licences at all. Before turning to consider the case law, it may be useful to say something about the nature of patent rights.

34. A patent does not entitle the proprietor to exploit his invention. His patented invention may infringe an earlier patent belonging to someone else. But a patent entitles the proprietor to the exclusive right to prevent others from exploiting his invention. This exclusive right is the central defining characteristic of a patent. It is what gives it its legal and commercial value. The function of patents is to promote research and development. To do this our legal system, and the legal systems of most countries, provide a mechanism for rewarding those who put time, effort and skill into research and development. The reward takes the form of a right to exclude competitors from using or exploiting any inventive product of such research and development. The purpose and effect of that right of exclusivity is to enable the owner of the patent to take advantage of the absence of competition so as to increase his prices and thereby increase his profits or market or both. It is the hope and promise of that financial reward which is designed to justify the risk involved in investing in research and development. Alternatively the proprietor of the right may choose to obtain his financial reward by charging whatever price the market will bear to third parties who wish to be given the right to exploit the invention. In either case it is the power and ability to reap financial rewards from the right to exclude or control competition which underpins the patent system and is its perceived justification. If, as the defendants suggest, the Treaty of Rome obliges a patentee to grant licences on fair and reasonable terms, it will have a serious impact on the patent system. Not only would the patentee not be able to decline licences at all but his ability to benefit financially from having taken the research and development risk would be seriously compromised. A licence negotiated between a patentee and a potential licensee in circumstances where the patentee can decline to grant a licence at all is likely to be on very different terms to one negotiated in circumstances where the licensee knows that he is entitled to a licence and the court or some other third party can be called on to settle reasonable terms if the patentee asks for too much.

35. The plaintiff argues that the Treaty of Rome does not have the effect for which the defendants contend. Article 222 safeguards the existence and ownership of property rights, and the exclusivity arising under patents is such a right. Even though the provisions of Articles 85 and 86 create restrictions on anti-competitive practices they have to live side by side with the continued existence and promotion of intellectual property rights which, as part of their very nature, are deliberately anti-competitive. Although under community law the occupier of a dominant position in relation to the market in, say, a particular product may be prohibited from refusing to supply that product to a customer, prima facie he is entitled to refuse to licence his exclusive patent rights. Were that not so, the patent rights would be emasculated. The plaintiff argues that this view of the effect of the Treaty of Rome is supported by authority and draws my attention to two cases. Although they are concerned with design rights, the same principles must apply to patents.

36. In CICRA v. Renault [1988] ECR 6039 Renault was seeking to enforce by infringement proceedings its rights in certain registered designs relating to body parts for its cars. In its judgement the European Court of Justice (ECJ) said:

"15. It should be noted at the outset that the mere fact of securing the benefit of an exclusive right granted by law, the effect of which is to enable the manufacture and sale of protected products by unauthorised third parties to be prevented, cannot be regarded as an abusive method of eliminating competition.

16. Exercise of the exclusive right may be prohibited by Article 86 if it gives rise to certain abusive conduct on the part of an undertaking occupying a dominant position such as an arbitrary refusal to deliver spare parts to independent repairers, the fixing of prices for spare parts at an unfair level or a decision no longer to produce spare parts for a particular model even though many cars of that model remain in circulation, provided that such conduct is liable to affect trade between Member States."

37. These paragraphs are illuminating. First the ECJ is saying that it is permissible to exploit the exclusive rights so as to maintain exclusivity. In other words to prevent someone putting infringing goods on the market. Although that eliminates competition, in the context of the Treaty of Rome and, in particular, the acceptance of the continued existence of intellectual property rights, it is not a form of elimination which is abusive. Secondly when one considers how Article 86 comes into play, all the examples given by the ECJ are of cases where the proprietor of the right uses the right to effect some anti-competitive effect in relation to a market in products. For example it is the arbitrary refusal to supply independent repairers. The existence of the intellectual property rights may facilitate anti-competitive behaviour, but such behaviour consists of abusive interference with the market for a product. The abusive conduct can be prohibited, i.e. the proprietor may be forced to supply spares and he may be forced to reduce the price of his goods. In prohibiting the conduct the court may have the power to intervene in the manner in which intellectual property rights are exploited by the proprietor. This is to ensure that the proprietor does not continue the abusive conduct in relation to the products by the back door route of using his intellectual property rights.

38. The plaintiff also relies on Volvo v. Veng [1988] ECR 6211 which it described as a watershed in this area of community law. In that case Volvo owned certain registered designs for body panels which were used on its cars. Veng imported copy panels made without Volvo's licence into the United Kingdom. It was sued for design infringement. In its defence it raised an argument that the enforcement of the registered design to take it off the market would be an abuse of a dominant position and that it was entitled to a licence on reasonable terms. The Patents Court in England referred three questions to the ECJ. The first and second were as follows:

"(1) If a substantial car manufacturer holds registered designs which, under the law of a Member State, confer on it the sole and exclusive right to make and import replacement body panels required to effect repair of the body of a car of its manufacture (if such body panels are not replaceable by body panels of any other design), is such a manufacturer, by reason of such sole and exclusive rights, in a dominant position within the meaning of Article 86 of the EEC Treaty with respect to such replacement parts?

(2) Is it prima facie an abuse of such dominant position for such a manufacturer to refuse to licence others to supply such body panels, even where they are willing to pay a reasonable royalty for all articles sold under the licence (such royalty to represent an award which is just and equitable having regard to the merits of the design and all the surrounding circumstances, and to be determined by arbitration or in such other manner as the national court shall direct)?"

39. The ECJ only answered the second question. It said:

"8. It must also be emphasised that the right of the proprietor of a protected design to prevent third parties from manufacturing and selling or importing, without its consent, products incorporating the design constitutes the very subject-matter of his exclusive right. It follows that an obligation imposed upon the proprietor of a protected design to grant to third parties, even in return for a reasonable royalty, a licence for the supply of products incorporating the design would lead to the proprietor thereof being deprived of the substance of his exclusive right, and that a refusal to grant such a licence cannot in itself constitute an abuse of a dominant position.

9. It must however be noted that the exercise of an exclusive right by the proprietor of a registered design in respect of car body panels may be prohibited by Article 86 if it involves, on the part of an undertaking holding a dominant position, certain abusive conduct such as the arbitrary refusal to supply spare parts to independent repairers, the fixing of prices for spare parts at an unfair level or a decision no longer to produce spare parts for a particular model even though many cars of that model are still in circulation, provided that such conduct is liable to affect trade between Member States.

11. It must therefore be stated in reply to the second question submitted by the national court that the refusal by the proprietor of a registered design in respect of body panels to grant to third parties, even in return for reasonable royalties, a licence for the supply of parts incorporating the design cannot in itself be regarded as an abuse of a dominant position within the meaning of Article 86"

40. Paragraph 8 emphasises that compulsory licences would destroy "the very subject-matter" of the exclusive right. It should also be noted that what was being suggested by Veng was that it would pay reasonable royalties. Inherent in the ECJ decision is that it is not an abuse for the owner of an intellectual property right to refuse a reasonable royalty. In so doing he may well be acting unreasonably in all the circumstances. But he is entitled to choose how to exploit his exclusive rights. (Very similar sentiments were expressed in the ECJ in CICRA v. Renault:)

"It should then be noted that the authority of a proprietor of a protective right in respect of an ornamental model to oppose the manufacture by third parties, for the purposes of sale on the internal market or export, of products incorporating the design or to prevent the import of such products manufactured without its consent in other Member States constitutes the substance of his exclusive right. To prevent the application of the national legislation in such circumstances would therefore be tantamount to challenging the very existence of that right." [1988] ECR 6039 at page 6071 par. 11.

41. The plaintiff also says that paragraph 9 draws a distinction between the exclusive right owned by the proprietor of a registered design and a "dominant position" within the meaning of Article 86. It does not say that mere existence of the intellectual property constitutes a dominant position in the market. The intellectual property right may be instrumental in creating a dominant position but, as the plaintiff puts it, the market must be defined by reference to products (or services), not to legal rights.

42. The importance of recognising the difference between the exclusivity created by an intellectual property right and the market for the goods - i.e. identifying the relevant market for the purpose of Article 86, is alluded to in the opinion of the Advocate General:

"But in the present case, the industrial property rights relate to body panels for a motor vehicle and the only products which can be substituted for them are products having exactly the same shape as the parts produced by the manufacturer. As the Commission rightly pointed out, in the circumstances of this case no substitutable goods exist which do not encroach upon the registered rights of the manufacturer. Accordingly, as soon as the proprietor exercises the rights deriving from his registered design and substitutable parts can no longer be produced, there is no doubt that the manufacturer holds a dominant position in the market in the spare parts for which he registered the design and which is, in the last analysis, the 'relevant market' in the present case." ([1988] ECR page 6226 par. 14.)

43. The defendants say that the relevant market in these proceedings, at least for this part of the case, is the market in patent licences. They do not dispute the importance of Volvo v. Veng but they say that it has to be considered in the light of the Magill television listing case (Magill). The decision before the Court of First Instance (CFI) is reported as RTE and Others v. Commission [1991] ECR II-485 (Magill I) and the unsuccessful appeal from there to the full ECJ is reported as RTE and ITP v. Commission [1995] ECR I-743 (Magill II). At first glance they are difficult to reconcile with Volvo v. Veng. Magill wanted to produce a weekly television guide setting out the essential scheduling details of all the terrestrial television broadcasts receivable in Ireland. Three television companies, RTE, ITP and BBC each produced a weekly guide which gave scheduling and other details of its own broadcasts. Each gave very limited rights, essentially on a day by day basis, to newspapers to publish their own schedules. However they each refused to allow anyone to use their weekly schedules to produce a comprehensive guide of the type which Magill wanted to produce. Provisions in Irish law gave copyright protection to, inter alia, the collection of information in television schedules. Such compilations of data were and are treated for the purpose of Irish (and English) copyright law as literary works and are protected as such. So, although Magill had no difficulty finding the necessary scheduling information, it was prevented from producing its guide as a result of successful copyright infringement proceedings brought by the television companies. Magill argued that the television companies held a dominant position in a relevant market, their deployment of copyright to prevent the reproduction of their schedules was an abuse and that therefore the copyright should not be enforceable or that Magill should be entitled, in effect, to a compulsory licence.

44. The Commission made an order in the following terms:

"ITP, BBC and RTE shall bring the infringements [of article 86] to an end forthwith by supplying each other and third parties on request and on a non-discriminatory basis with their individual advance weekly programme listings and by permitting reproduction of those listings by such parties. ... If they choose to supply and permit reproduction of the listings by means of licences, any royalties requested by ITP, BBC and RTE should be reasonable. ... The parties are therefore required, within two months from the date of notification of this Decision, to submit proposals for approval by the Commission of the terms upon which they consider third parties should be permitted to publish the advance weekly programme listings which are the subject of this Decision.

45. That was, in substance, an order for a compulsory licence with terms to be settled by the Commission. Magill appealed unsuccessfully. This appears to suggest that the owner of an intellectual property right may be prevented from using it to exclude competition from products which he has not licensed. He may be forced to allow third parties to use his right, thereby destroying its defining exclusivity. As such it would appear to conflict with Volvo v. Veng.

46. Mr. Barling argues for a wide interpretation of Magill. He says that the power to order the grant of compulsory licences pursuant to Article 86 under intellectual property rights is consistent with the decision of the Commission in Port of Rødby [1994] 5 CMLR 457. In that case a public undertaking, DSB, which was a department of the Danish Transport Ministry, refused to allow the Swedish shipping group, Stena, to operate from the public port of Rødby. At the same time the Danish Transport Minister refused to allow Stena to build a private commercial port in the immediate vicinity. DSB operated the only ferry service from Rødby in conjunction with a German company, DB. Stena wanted to compete by running a ferry service between Rødby and Puttgarden in Germany. Having held that the relevant market was the market for the organisation of port services in Denmark for ferry services operating on the Rødby-Puttgarden route and that there was no real alternative to the port of Rødby, the Commission held:

"The refusal to allow ... Stena to operate from Rødby has the effect of eliminating a potential competitor on the Rødby-Puttgarden route and hence of strengthening the joint dominant position of DSB and DB on that route.

According to the case law of the Court, an abuse within the meaning of Article 86 is committed in cases where, without any objective necessity, an undertaking holding a dominant position on a particular market reserves to itself an ancillary activity which might be carried out by another undertaking as part of its activities on a neighbouring but separate market, with the possibility of eliminating all competition from such undertaking: Case 311/84 CBEM v. CLT and IPB.

Thus, an undertaking that owns or manages and uses itself an essential facility, i.e. a facility or infrastructure without which its competitors are unable to offer their services to customers, and refuses to grant them access to such facility is abusing its dominant position."

47. So here, the owner of an intellectual property right owns an "essential facility", namely the right to licence, without which its competitors are unable to offer infringing goods to customers. Refusal to grant competitors "access" to that right, i.e. refusal to licence, is an abuse of the dominant position.

48. I do not accept Mr. Barling's argument based on the Port of Rødby case. If he is right, in any intellectual property right case it will be open to the defendant to say that the proprietor of the right cannot enforce the exclusivity of his right and must allow access. He must grant a licence on reasonable terms. Ownership of an intellectual property right would, per se, mean the ownership of a dominant position or an "essential facility" and the refusal of a licence would, per se, amount to an abuse of it. That appears to me to be inconsistent with CICRA v. Renault and Volvo v. Veng.

49. Mr. Lasok says that defining a market in which a dominant position is held by reference to an intellectual property right is impermissible. What is necessary is to identify a product market. He says that this is supported not only by Volvo v. Veng and CICRA v. Renault but also by Magill when properly analysed. In my view Mr. Lasok is right. The Magill decisions do not have the breadth which Mr. Barling suggests. In both Magill I and Magill II the court referred with approval to Volvo v. Veng. That part of the judgment of the ECJ in Magill II which deals with the existence of a dominant position starts with a reaffirmation:

"So far as dominant position is concerned, it is to be remembered at the outset that mere ownership of an intellectual property right cannot confer such a position." (Magill II page 822 par. 46. )

50. This is, in effect, an answer to the first question referred to the ECJ in Volvo v. Veng. It is inconsistent with Mr. Barling's argument based primarily on the Port of Rødby case. Furthermore, as Mr. Lasok argues, in Magill the Commission, the CFI and the ECJ all approached the dispute on the basis that it was necessary to identify a market by reference to particular products. It was a product market in which RTE and the other broadcasters held a dominant position. This is clear in Magill I in which it was said:

"In the [Commission's] decision, the relevant products are defined as follows for the three organizations concerned: they are the advance weekly programme listings of ITP, the BBC and RTE, and also the television guides in which those listings are published. ... In the Commission's definition, a programme listing is a 'list of programmes to be broadcast by or on behalf of a broadcasting organization within a given period of time, the list including the following information: the title of each programme to be broadcast, the channel, the date and time of transmission'." (Page 495 par. 12.)

and:

"The Commission considers in particular that 'substantial potential demand ... for comprehensive TV guides' exists on the market. ... It finds that, by using its dominant position 'to prevent the introduction on to the market of a new product, that is, a comprehensive weekly TV guide', the applicant is abusing that dominant position. It adds that, a further element of the abuse is that, by virtue of the offending policy regarding information on its programmes, the applicant retains for itself the derivative market for weekly guides for those programmes." (Page 496 par. 13.)

51. The CFI also identified the weekly programme listings and the guides as the relevant market (Magill I page 515 par. 61.). Thus because, say, RTE decided what programmes it was going to broadcast, it was the sole original source of that information. Those seeking to put out a television guide were therefore in a position of economic dependence on RTE in relation to that information or programme listing. The dominant position in property in that information was "strengthened" by RTE's claim to copyright (Magill I page 496 top par.). This is explained particularly clearly by the ECJ:

"However, the basic information as to the channel, day, time and title of programmes is the necessary result of programming by television stations, which are thus the only source of such information for an undertaking, like Magill, which wishes to publish it together with commentaries or pictures. By force of circumstance, RTE and ITP, as the agent of ITV, enjoy, along with the BBC, a de facto monopoly over the information used to compile listings for the television programmes received in most households in Ireland and 30% to 40% of households in Northern Ireland. The appellants are thus in a position to prevent effective competition on the market in weekly television magazines. The Court of First Instance was therefore right in confirming the Commission's assessment that the appellants occupied a dominant position." (Magill II page 822 par. 47.)

and:

"Thus the appellants - who were, by force of circumstance, the only sources of the basic information on programme scheduling which is the indispensable raw material for compiling a weekly television guide - gave viewers wishing to obtain information on the choice of programmes for the week ahead no choice but to buy the weekly guides for each station and draw from each of them the information they needed to make comparisons." (Magill II page 824 par. 53.)

52. Even if Irish copyright law did not protect the type of low-level information which Magill wanted to publish, the television companies were the only source of it. If they chose not to distribute the information at all, it was not obtainable elsewhere. Similarly, if they chose to distribute the information in small packages and only at the last possible moment, it might have crippled Magill's nascent business. The information was the raw material from which television guides were made. The television companies therefore held a dominant position both in the information itself and in the guides made from it quite independently of any copyright they might own. It was that dominant position which was being abused. The copyright was merely the tool used to effect the abuse. None of this supports the suggestion that an intellectual property right gives rise to a per se dominant position in the area of technology covered by the right.

53. It can be said that the defendants' pleading does not assert directly that the plaintiff's patents give rise to a per se dominant position. Instead it alleges that the plaintiff owns a dominant position in the market for licensing the patented technology. But it seems to me that this is a matter of semantics only. Whenever an intellectual property right exists there is a correlative potential market in licences to exploit it. It is the ability to grant or refuse such licences which constitutes the right in the first place. This is only an alternative way of saying that the proprietor owns exclusive rights which he can exploit, if he wishes, by licensing.

54. For these reasons I have come to the conclusion that the first type of dominant position pleaded in the defence is not arguable. The Article 86 plea based on this assertion fails accordingly.

55. Furthermore on the basis of CICRA v. Renault and Volvo v. Veng, I do not accept that the defendants have pleaded an arguable case of abuse even if a dominant position in relation to patent licensing is arguable. As noted above, the proprietor of an intellectual property right is entitled to go as far as refusing to licence even if it is offered reasonable terms. Most of the objections raised by the defendants are to the terms of the Standard Licence. The abuses alleged are set out from paragraph 42 onwards in the defence. Thus paragraphs 42.1 and 42.2 complain of the alleged unfairness of the terms of the Standard Licence. Similar pleas are to be found in paragraph 43. Paragraph 43.4(3) complains about the royalty rate. Based on the cases referred to above it is not an abuse of a dominant position to refuse to licence an intellectual property right on reasonable terms. Even if the royalties sought by the plaintiff are objectively unreasonable and have the effect of destroying the competitiveness of the defendant, it is not an abuse of a dominant position defined by reference to the existence of the intellectual property right. Indeed the proprietor may offer terms which no reasonable competitor could accept. It is difficult to see how that can be worse, or commercially different, to offering no terms at all - i.e. to refusing a licence - a course the rights owner is entitled to take.

56. There are one or two specific allegations of abuse which go beyond complaints about royalty rates and deserve special mention.

57. Paragraph 42.3 alleges;

"the plaintiff has abused its individual or joint dominant position by ... suppression of new technology by virtue of the adoption of the Standards referred to in paragraph 21-30 above."

58. This is expanded in paragraph 43.4(4). It is said that the plaintiff should have adopted a technique known as "track wobble" but did not do so because of the terms of the international standards set. Similarly it is said that the plaintiff failed to adopt a copyright protection system developed by a Greek company.

59. It appears to me that these allegations have nothing to do with the plaintiff's alleged dominant position in relation to the patents. It is a complaint about the contents of the international standards set for the industry. Even assuming, as I do for the purpose of this application, that these techniques were commercially viable and technically beneficial, the failure to adopt them is not said to flow from the existence or exercise of the plaintiff's patent rights. It is not suggested, and as far as I am aware could not be suggested, that any of the plaintiff's patent rights have been used to prevent or could prevent either of these techniques being adopted. There is no discernible or pleaded nexus between the non-adoption of these techniques and the plaintiff's patent rights and there is no nexus between that non-adoption and the plaintiff's enforcement of its patents in these proceedings. I cannot see how these alleged abuses could give rise to a defence in this action. Breach of a provision of the Treaty does not turn the offender into a pariah all of whose rights and privileges in law are suspended. Although the defendants plead that the court should not grant the plaintiff relief which condones, permits or requires the plaintiff to infringe Article 86, it has not been explained to me, nor can I see, how refusing to allow the plaintiff to enforce its patent rights could have any impact at all on the contents of the international standards and, in particular, on the question whether these allegedly significant techniques should be included within them (assuming for that purpose that inclusion now would be possible). For this additional reason, this plea seems to me to be without any substance.

60. In paragraph 43.4(1) the defence says that the plaintiff has abused its dominant position by "tying". This is expanded as follows:

"The plaintiff is prepared to grant licences only on the terms of the Standard Licence which includes the requirement that the Licensee takes a licence of the "Licensed Patents" as defined in clause 1.19 thereof. Such patents extend beyond patents relating to CD-Audio-Discs and/or CD-ROM-Discs or any method of producing the same."

61. Once again, it appears to me that this plea is really a more elaborate way of complaining about the royalty rate. The plaintiff has decided on a price of entry into the CD market. The price of entry entitles the licensee to become involved in whatever part of the market he pleases. He can choose to make some or all CD formats as he wishes. But he is not forced to make things he has no interest in. He only pays a royalty on CDs which he makes. Even if the plaintiff had a dominant position, I do not see how this could be an abuse.

62. Finally, in paragraph 43.4(2) of the defence objection is taken to the fact that the Standard Licence requires all licensees to cross-licence all other licensees, Sony and the plaintiff under any present or future patent rights they might own or acquire which may be pertinent to the manufacture of products licensed under the Standard Licence agreement. It is said that the plaintiff is abusing its dominant position by forcing third parties into a licence which requires them to enter into this patent pooling arrangement. The relevant clause in the Standard Licence is set out at paragraph 35 of the Defence. Although it requires the grant of cross-licences, the owner of the cross-licensed patent is entitled to set such "reasonable, non-discriminatory" terms as he likes. Again, I can not see how this could be said to be an abuse of the plaintiff's patent ownership. Even if it is, I do not see how a court could refuse to grant the plaintiff the relief sought in this action. The defendants do not suggest that they are in any way interested in carrying out research and development or in acquiring any patented technology from any third party. These provisions are, as far as one can see from the pleadings, irrelevant to the defendants. To refuse to enforce the plaintiff's patents on the basis of this clause would be disproportionate.

63. Before leaving this part of the case, there are two related topics arising out of Magill which deserve mention. First, the ECJ pointed out that the case was exceptional (Magill II page 823 par. 50.). In Magill a substantial market for a product existed throughout Ireland. It was being supplied by no one and it was being strangled at birth by the television companies. There was no objective justification for the broadcasters' refusal to allow their scheduling information to be used. (Magill II page 824 par. 55.) To the extent that weekly information on television schedules was made available, it was being made available only by the broadcasters (Magill II page 824 par. 56.). If a party is to rely on Magill to resist the enforcement of an intellectual property right it is incumbent on him to plead explicitly what are the exceptional features which take the case outside Volvo v. Veng. Mere assertion will not do. Bearing in mind the cost and time implications of raising this type of plea in an action, it is reasonable to require the pleader to set out the essential facts on the basis of which he will invite the court to decide that an exceptional case exists. In this case it does not appear that any such exceptional case has been pleaded. There is no suggestion that the market is being starved of products which are generally wanted. It is not even suggested that anybody is being starved of licences. On the contrary, the underlying economic reality is that the grant of licences has been so extensive and the number of licensed manufacturers is so great that the market has become too competitive for the defendants.

64. The second topic arises as follows. Both the CFI and ECJ said that there has to be a necessary reconciliation between intellectual property rights and the fundamental principles of the Treaty concerning the free movement of goods and freedom of competition (Magill II page 818 par. 31.). For example the CFI said;

"[P]reventing the production and marketing of a new product, for which there is a potential consumer demand, on the ancillary market of television magazines and thereby excluding all competition from that market solely in order to secure the applicant's monopoly - clearly goes beyond what is necessary to fulfil the essential function of the copyright as permitted in Community law." (Magill I page 521 top par. .)

65. Therefore it is necessary to identify the particular essential characteristics of the intellectual property right which are in issue. In Magill the relevant intellectual property right was literary copyright. By an eccentricity of Irish (and English) law, this has been held to cover by the back door entirely non-literary information such as details of what television programme was being broadcast at what time. But the essential function of copyright, so far as the Treaty is concerned, was stated to be:

"to protect the moral rights in the work and ensure a reward for the creative effort, while respecting the aims of, in particular, Article 86." (Magill II page 817 par 28.)

66. Although it is not necessary to decide the point for the purposes of this application, it seems to me to be strongly arguable that not all intellectual property rights are equal. Some are more equal than others. It is convenient and conventional to treat copyright, designs, topography rights, moral rights, confidential information, patents and trade marks as a group. But there are substantial differences between them. They last for different periods in respect of different types of subject matter. They are infringed by different types of activity. They are subject to different types of defences or exceptions. For example the fair use defences in copyright law have no equivalent in patent law and the compulsory licence provisions in patent law have no equivalent in copyright law. In Magill what was being considered was the rights in a subspecies of copyright. It does not follow inevitably that Magill can be applied by analogy to a patent case.

  1. For all of these reasons, I have come to the conclusion that the plea of abuse of a dominant position in the Licence Market is without substance. There is neither a relevant dominant position nor is there any abuse.

The Production Market

68. As noted above, the defendants say that the plaintiff has a dominant position in the market for the production of CDs. Although it also alleges that there are separate sub-markets, the Replicator Market and the Content Market, it does not plead that any considerations apply to them which do not apply equally to the Production Market as a whole. Indeed it is not clear from the defence whether it is even alleged that the plaintiff has a dominant position in either the Replicator Market or the Content Market. In any event, during the course of oral argument Mr Barling addressed only the Production Market as a whole.

69. In this part of the case also the defendants have to demonstrate that they have pleaded an arguable case that the plaintiff holds a dominant position in the identified market. A dominant position has been defined by the ECJ in Gottrup-Klim v. DLG ([1994] ECR I-5641.) as follows;

"The concept of a dominant position is defined in settled case-law as a position of economic strength enjoyed by an undertaking which enables it to prevent effective competition being maintained on the relevant market by giving it the power to behave to an appreciable extent independently of its competitors, customers and ultimately of its consumers. In general the existence of a dominant position derives from a combination of several factors which, taken separately, are not necessarily decisive (see in particular, the judgments in Case 27/76 United Brands v. Commission [1978] ECR 207, paragraphs 65 and 66, and Case T-30/89 Hilti v. Commission [1991] ECR II-1439, paragraph 90)" (At page 5690 par. 47).

70. It appears that the only fact pleaded by the defendants in support of the allegation that the plaintiff has a dominant position in the Production Market is contained in paragraph 40.2 of the defence. Mr. Barling does not rely on any other material. That paragraph reads as follows:

"The Defendant will rely upon ... the fact that Plaintiff (through Polygram) and Sony (through Sony DADC) jointly produce about 40% of the total output of compact discs in the EU from plants in France (Louviers), Germany (Langenhagen), the UK (Blackburn) and Austria (Anif-Thalgau)".

71. Among other things, Mr. Lasok says that 40% does not, per se, represent a dominant position, even if it was held exclusively by the plaintiff. In relation to this he referred to the following paragraph in Gottrup-Klim v. DLG:

"It is true that in certain cases the fact that an undertaking holds a large market share may be considered to be a strong indication of the existence of a dominant position. According to the national court, at the time when DLG amended its statutes in 1988, it held around 36% of the Danish fertiliser market and 32% of the Danish market in plant protection products. While an undertaking which holds market shares of that size may, depending on the strength and number of its competitors, be considered to be in a dominant position, those market shares cannot on their own constitute conclusive evidence of the existence of a dominant position." (page 5690 at par. 48.)

72. Although in my view Mr. Lasok is right on this, it may be that a 40% share of the market would represent or evidence the existence of a dominant position if, say, all other competitors are very weak. If this was the only objection to this plea I would order the defendants to give further particulars rather than strike it out at this stage. However it is not the only objection.

73. It is necessary to look closely at what is and is not asserted remembering always that the inquiry is whether, at this stage, the defendants have pleaded an arguable case that the plaintiff is able to hinder the maintenance of effective competition on the pleaded market by allowing it to behave to an appreciable extent independently of its competitors. First it should be noted that the pleading is that the plaintiff and Sony together produce about 40% of the "total output of compact discs in the EU". This is not saying that they account for 40% of the total market for CDs in the EU. It may be, and the pleading is silent on the point, that much of the market for CDs in Europe is met by importation from outside. Absent a credible plea to the contrary, a producer in Europe must compete not just with CDs of European manufacture but with those from other countries. When considering the plaintiff's ability to act independently of its competitors, absent any credible plea from the defendants to the contrary, it is not legitimate to ignore those competitors who produce outside the EU. It follows that the 40% figure relied on by the defendants is not pleaded as representing 40% of the market occupied by the plaintiff and all its relevant competitors. The percentage of that market may be much smaller, but the defence makes no relevant plea in this respect.

74. Secondly the plea alleges that the plaintiff and Sony "jointly produce" 40% of the total output in the EU. It is not alleged that even half of that "joint production" is attributable to the plaintiff alone. I understand from Mr. Lasok that no such plea would have been possible because the plaintiff only accounts for some 14% of the total market. Whether that is so or not, the defendants have chosen not to assert that the plaintiff's own market share, taken by itself, has given it a dominant position. Instead it has relied on the combined market share of the plaintiff and Sony. It is well established that joint dominance is possible. What constitutes joint dominance was restated in Compagnie Maritime Belge Transports and others v. Commission ([1996] ECR II-1201.):

"It should be stressed that the Court of Justice has held that, in order for such a collective dominant position to exist, the undertakings in question must be linked in such a way that they adopt the same conduct on the market (DIP and Others, paragraph 26.)" (page 1230 par. 62.)

75. The defence pleads that the plaintiff and Sony have co-operated in the development of CD technology, the establishment of the international standards and the pooling of patents. In relation to these activities it may well be that the two companies' activities have been closely intertwined. But the defence does not assert that the plaintiff and Sony co-operate at all in the production of CDs. No link is pleaded. It is not suggested that they adopt the same conduct in the production market. When the defence refers to the plaintiff and Sony "jointly" producing 40% of the total output of compact discs, this does not mean that such production is in any sense a joint or co-operative exercise. Again, Mr. Barling does not suggest otherwise. What the defence means is that between them the plaintiff and Sony produce 40% of the total output of CDs. The pleading does not allege or suggest that in the Production Market the plaintiff and Sony are anything other than full blooded and independent competitors, each trying to secure a larger slice of the market at, inter alia, the other's expense. This is not an arguable plea of joint dominance.

76. Market share is only one factor which has to be taken into account in deciding whether a dominant position exists. In the absence of exceptional circumstances, extremely large market shares are themselves evidence of the existence of a dominant position (Compagnie Maritime Belge Transports and others v. Commission [1996] ECR II page 1234 par76.) It is not suggested that 40% of the market, even had that been properly pleaded, would have constituted an extremely large share. So the 40% plea in the defence does not indicate by itself market dominance, it is only one relevant factor. Further, the defence has to be looked at as a whole. As noted above the major complaint made by the defendants is that the CD market is highly competitive and has low margins so that they can no longer afford to pay the royalties which were charged some years ago. It therefore appears that on its face the defence does not assert, and it would be inconsistent to assert, that the plaintiff is able to hinder the maintenance of effective competition and to behave to an appreciable extent independently of its competitors. The competitiveness of the market undermines any such assertion.

77. In my view all of these matters must be taken together. I have come to the conclusion that the defendants have come nowhere near pleading an arguable case that the plaintiff holds a dominant position in the Production Market. For these reasons it appears to me that these defences based on Article 86 are bound to fail.

Article 85

78. Both the Standard Licence and the Philips/Sony agreement are said to be void pursuant to Article 85(2) and prohibited under Article 85(1). The present proceedings are said to have been commenced in retaliation for the defendants' refusal to enter into the Standard Licence. They are therefore described as being "the result, the means or the consequence" of the two agreements and are themselves in breach of Articles 85 and/or 86. It is also said that the purpose of these proceedings to force prospective licensees to accept a licence of the patents on the terms of the Standard Licence (Defence par. 14.2.).

79. The allegation in so far as it relates to Article 86 is dependent on there being a relevant and arguable pleaded dominant position. I have dealt with that issue above and do not need to repeat it here. Instead I will concentrate on the Article 85 allegations directed at the two contracts.

80. Insofar as relevant to this application, Article 85 of the Treaty provides:

"1. The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the common market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may affect trade between Member States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the common market, and in particular those which:

(a) directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling prices or any other trading conditions;

(b) limit or control ... technical development, or investment;

(d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive disadvantage;

(e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the other parties of supplementary obligations which, by their nature or according to commercial usage, have no connection with the subject of such contracts."

81. Before turning to the specific pleas made in relation to Article 85, it is worth bearing in mind a significant difference between that Article and Article 86. Article 85 is concerned with consensual activities involving two or more participants. An agreement between two or more parties is subject to different considerations to actions of a single enterprise. Anti-competitive actions of an enterprise acting alone can only be caught by Article 86 and then only when the enterprise occupies a relevant dominant position. In other words a single enterprise which does not hold a relevant dominant position can carry out anti-competitive actions which, if done by agreement with another, would be outlawed under Article 85. In a sense this is similar to our parochial law of conspiracy. For example a trader holding a non-dominant position in the market may chose to sell to one customer but may decide either to cut off or sell at a significantly higher price to another. In so doing he breaches no provision of the Treaty of Rome. But if he agrees with another to discriminate against customers in this way he may well offend against Article 85. Therefore activities which are unimpeachable under Article 86 because the actor does not hold a dominant position may still be anti-competitive. When carried out in co-operation with another enterprise they may fall within the scope of Article 85.

82. The pleas under Article 85 are to be found at paragraphs 51 to 55 of the defence. The Philips/Sony agreement and the Standard Licence were anticipated to have effects throughout the international CD market. Mr. Barling points out that any doubts about the legitimacy of the Standard Licence and the Philips/Sony agreement could have been eliminated if the plaintiff or Sony had obtained negative clearance or exemption under Article 85(3). That would have been the appropriate and safe course to follow. They did not.

83. The plea that the Standard Licence is void appears at first a little odd. The defendants have not entered into such a licence. Therefore in respect of the Standard Licence there is at present no relevant agreement between undertakings as required by Article 85. Mr. Barling says that this does not matter because it cannot be right for the court to give relief in this action which will force the defendants to enter into an agreement which, once executed, will offend against the Article. Furthermore, as noted above, one of the pleas advanced by the defendants is that a purpose of these proceedings is to force prospective licensees - not just these defendants - to accept a licence of the patents on the terms of the Standard Licence.

84. In its reply the plaintiff pleads:

"Neither of the patents in suit is endorsed "licences of right" or is liable to the grant of a compulsory licence and the Court has no jurisdiction to impose or settle any licence. Further, the Plaintiff has offered to the Defendant a licence under the patents on fair and reasonable terms but the Defendant has rejected such licence and has instead elected to challenge the validity of the patents. In the circumstances, the Plaintiff hereby states that if the Defendant fails in its defences of non-infringement and invalidity, the Plaintiff has no obligation to and does not intend to offer the Defendant a licence under the patents, whether in the terms of the Standard Licence or at all. In the premises the alleged breaches of Articles 85 and/or 86 (which are denied), even if established, provide no defence to the Defendant's acts of infringement of the patents or the relief sought herein." (Par. 5.)

85. Insofar as the threat not to offer the defendants a Standard Licence in the future, notwithstanding the fact that it is available to everyone else, is to be taken seriously rather than as a show of petulance, it does not answer the defendants' allegation that these proceedings have been brought to force prospective licensees to accept such a licence. On the contrary, it seems to me that it reinforces the point. What is being said is that because these defendants have "elected" to challenge the validity of the patent they can no longer expect to be granted a licence in the future. If the plaintiff succeeds in this action on the issues of patent validity and infringement and thereafter refuses a Standard Licence to the defendants, the message conveyed to any other licensee who objects to the terms of that licence is clear; either sign up on the only terms on offer or be excluded completely from the market by patent proceedings. It seems to me that it is at least arguable that these proceedings have been brought, inter alia, to force prospective licensees to accept a Standard Licence.

86. On the assumption that the Standard Licence, if entered into, would offend against Article 85, does this raise a defence to this action? In support of this argument that it does, Mr. Barling draws my attention to two cases. The first is British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers [1981] CMLR 75. It was a case in which the plaintiff was seeking to enforce its copyright in the drawings for exhaust systems against an unlicensed manufacturer of replacement parts. Although British Leyland was prepared to offer licences to such manufacturers on standard terms, T.I. Silencers Limited said that the terms were unreasonable and, if entered into, would breach Article 85. British Leyland applied to strike out the relevant paragraphs of the defence. That application was unsuccessful in the Court of Appeal. Templeman LJ expressed the view of the Court as follows:

"If, for example, it was proved in evidence that the owners of English copyright were only prepared to grant a licence on terms which created, or helped to create, a breach of Community law, this court, I apprehend, would not grant an injunction against an infringer who desperately needed a licence for his business purposes and was willing to pay a reasonable royalty for the privilege, but was unwilling to accept or assist or acquiesce in any breach of Community law. The court could award damages in lieu of an injunction based on a reasonable royalty, or the court could accept an undertaking by the defendant to pay a reasonable royalty to be assessed if not agreed. The court would strive to prevent any breach of Community law while, at the same time, preserving for the copyright owner the benefit of and the right to make, in the learned judge's words, 'the ordinary use of their copyright.' But I do not accept that the court would lend countenance to an argument that the ordinary use of copyright included a use which enabled the owner of the copyright to flout European Community law. That, of course, is only theory; I am far from saying that this has actually happened in the present case, and it must be said in the beginning that all facts which have been pleaded and the assumptions which are necessarily made at this stage may all turn out to be wrong. It may be that there has been no abuse and nobody has done anything which gets anywhere near infringing either Community law or English law. Those will be matters for the trial. All we are concerned with is whether, on the pleadings, if the facts alleged turn out to be true, there is any European defence or an arguable European defence available to the defendants."

87. Mr. Barling says that the same principles apply here. If the Standard Licence would offend against Article 85, the court should not help to create that offence by forcing this defendant or other potential licensees into accepting its terms.

88. The other case relied on by Mr. Barling is Holleran v. Daniel Thwaites plc [1989] 2 CMLR 917. There the plaintiffs were tenants of two tied houses. They refused to enter into revised tenancy agreements with the defendant landlord because, they asserted, those agreements offended against Article 85. The landlords issued the plaintiffs with notices to quit. The plaintiffs sued for a declaration that the new tenancy agreements, if entered into, would infringe that Article and sought an interlocutory injunction to restrain the landlords from enforcing or giving effect to the notices to quit. In finding for the plaintiffs on their interlocutory application Peter Gibson J said:

"I ask myself why a court is unable to prevent the exercise by the owner of a contractual right when a nexus is perceived between the exercise of that right and an arguable illegality. For example, one can instance a landlord serving a notice to quit on a tenant unless the tenant enters into an agreement a provision of which requires the tenant to do something that is arguably illegal. ... I can see no reason in principle why the court should be unable to intervene.

It seems to me that the authorities relied on (Which included British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers.) .. support the view that the Court has power to prevent a person from abusing his rights, whether conferred on him by statute or contract, in order to create a breach of Community Law.

... I would hold that the Court has power to restrain a landlord from abusing his contractual right to terminate a tenancy when it is shown that his purpose was to procure a breach of Community law by requiring a tenant to enter into an agreement illegal under Community law. At the interlocutory stage it is sufficient that an arguable case for these matters is shown."

89. Mr. Barling argues that the same principles apply to a case in which a patentee or, more precisely, someone who has acquired rights in or over patents, seeks to enforce them so as to force competitors into offensive contracts.

90. Mr. Lasok criticises both these cases. He says that British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers has been overtaken by later cases and that Holleran v. Daniel Thwaites plc was not concerned with the special character of intellectual property rights. Instead he draws my attention to two more cases. The first is the decision of the Court of Appeal in British Leyland v. Armstrong Patents [1984] FSR 591. This was another action by British Leyland to enforce the copyright in its production drawings. The defendant ran Article 85 and 86 defences which failed in the High Court and before the Court of Appeal. It is to be noted that British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers was cited and referred to by the Court of Appeal in Armstrong but there is no suggestion that it was in any way incorrectly decided or should be given a narrow scope. Analysis of the judgment shows that the Court of Appeal was not dealing with an argument of the sort run in T.I. or here. The Article 85 argument dealt with by the court in Armstrong was that because British Leyland had entered into offensive agreements with third parties, it was not entitled to enforce its copyright against the defendant. The argument and the way in which it was disposed of are set out in the following extract:

"Now the only agreements upon which the defendants rely as infringing [Article 85] are certain licence agreements ... under which certain manufacturers of spare parts engage to pay royalties to the plaintiffs on spare parts manufactured and sold by them, and there is, as it seems to me, a very short answer to the defence based on this Article.

The defendants have not entered into such an agreement, so that what they are saying, in effect, is this: "because you have entered into agreements with x, y and z, which are void under Article 85(2), you are debarred from exercising any of the rights which the law confers on you in respect of infringements by us". The answer to this is, I think, conveniently set out in the judgment of Sir Robert Megarry, V.-C. in Imperial Chemical Industries v. Berk Pharmaceuticals [1981] FSR 1, where he struck out a paragraph in the defence which pleaded that by reason of breaches of Article 86 (in that case) the plaintiffs were debarred from relief against passing off on the ground of lack of nexus between the abuse pleaded and right claimed by the defendants.

That seems to be equally applicable here, where the defendants claim the right to do what they would otherwise be prohibited from doing because of some contractual relationship which has been entered into between the plaintiffs and third parties." ([1984] FSR p. 618.)

91. In that case, the court was not facing an allegation that the purpose of the proceedings was to force the defendant or others into signing up to offensive agreements. It believed that it was only facing an allegation that because the plaintiff had done something illegal in relation to an unrelated third party, it was not entitled to enforce its intellectual property rights. That is quite different to the point raised here and in British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers.

92. The other case relied on by Mr. Lasok is Marchant & Eliot Underwriting Ltd. v. Higgins [1996] 1 Lloyds's LR 313. It was a case in which a Lloyd's Name was trying to resist paying on a call made by his syndicate. The syndicate had applied for summary judgment on the debt. The defendant argued that the proceedings had been brought at the instigation of Lloyd's with the aim, inter alia, of protecting the central fund from further disbursements and that both the central fund and its relevant Byelaw were anti-competitive and that no part of the standard agency agreement which the defendant had signed and which was in the form set out in the schedule to the Byelaw was enforceable. Rix J. referred to a number of decisions in his judgment, including Holleran v. Daniel Thwaites plc, but not British Leyland v. T.I. Silencers. He held that the Article 85 defence was unarguable because "the rights being exercised are not being exercised for the purpose of implementing an unlawful arrangement" (p. 324 left hand column.). The case reached the Court of Appeal ([1996] 2 Lloyd's LR 31.) where Rix J's judgment was upheld on the basis that it was not shown that there was any relevant effect on trade between member states (p. 39 left hand column.). In my view none of this undermines Mr. Barling's arguments.

93. As I have said, it seems to me that it is at least arguable that the purpose of these proceedings is to force the defendant or others to enter into Standard Licences. If such licences offend against the Treaty of Rome, then it is at least arguable that the court may decline to give the plaintiff all the relief it seeks in its writ.

94. Furthermore, Mr. Lasok's argument does not address the Philips/Sony agreement. It is clearly arguable that the present action is being brought as part of the implementation of the provisions of the Philips/Sony agreement. According to the pleadings, the plaintiff and Sony pooled their patents and each agreed not to licence their own patents independently of the other. In fact all the patents were put in the name of the plaintiff so that it could enforce them on behalf of both companies. As the defendants put it, the plaintiff exercises control over all rights the subject of the Philips/Sony agreement owned by Sony (Defence par. 52.). Furthermore, pursuant to the terms of the agreement the plaintiff is bound to grant licences only on terms and on conditions agreed or consulted over with Sony (ibid.) and the plaintiff is obliged to pursue infringers of its and Sony's patents (Defence par. 17.6.). The result of this, according to the defendants, is that the plaintiff and Sony have set up an agreement which has the object or effect of restricting, distorting or preventing competition within the EU in all the ways referred to above, namely imposing unfairly high royalty rates, imposing royalty rates which discriminate against manufacturers such as the defendants, obliging licensees to grant back improvements in the technology, suppressing technology and so on. The Philips/Sony agreement contractually obliges the plaintiff to bring these proceedings against the defendants so as to enforce, inter alia, Sony's patent rights and to ensure that everyone enters into agreements containing the provisions of which the defendants complain.

95. In the light of these considerations the defence must be allowed to proceed to trial if the Standard Licence or the Philips/Sony agreement offend against Article 85.

96. As I have already noted, the major objection is to the alleged unfairness of the royalty rate. It is said to be too high or discriminatory or both. The potential breach of Article 85(1) can be formulated in the following way with respect to the Philips/Sony agreement. That agreement takes away from each of the signatories the ability to compete with each other in relation to CD patents. Each agrees to impose on the licensees for its patents the royalty which the other party accepts as reasonable. If the royalties are excessive, it is the agreement between the plaintiff and Sony which is the direct cause of their imposition and the present proceedings are the mechanism used by the plaintiff and Sony to ensure that all comers abide by that rate.

97. Unless the court can be convinced at this stage that there is no hope of the defendants making out these allegations, then it must be at least arguable that the plaintiff has breached Article 85 in the Philips/Sony agreement and is trying to force the defendants into signing an offensive agreement which also offends against that Article. It seems to me that that would give rise to an arguable defence.

98. It seems to me that in the current state of community jurisprudence, an excessive royalty may constitute an abuse under Article 85. I have already referred to CICRA v. Renault and Volvo v. Veng in both of which it was said, in relation to Article 86, that the fixing of prices for products at an unfair level could be abusive. The same principle appears to have been applied, for the purposes of Article 85, to royalties payable under an intellectual property right licence. In Coditel No. 2 [1982] ECR 3381, the Coditel cable companies were re-broadcasting in Belgium a film which had been broadcast to viewers in Germany. The owners of the copyright in the film had granted an exclusive licence to a Belgian company, Ciné-Vog, to show the film in Belgium. Ciné-Vog sued Coditel in respect of their rebroadcast. Ciné-Vog asserted that the exclusive licence offended against Article 85. In the course of its judgment, the ECJ said:

"Although copyright in a film and the right deriving from it, namely that of exhibiting the film, are not, therefore, as such subject to the prohibitions contained in Article 85, the exercise of those rights may, none the less, come within the said prohibitions where there are economic or legal circumstances the effect of which is to ... distort competition on the cinematographic market, regard being had to the specific characteristics of that market. ...

It must therefore be stated that it is for national courts, where appropriate, to make such inquiries and in particular to establish whether or not the exercise of the exclusive right to exhibit a cinematographic film creates barriers which are artificial and unjustifiable in terms of the needs of the cinematographic industry, or the possibility of charging fees which exceed a fair return on investment ...and whether or not, from a general point of view, such exercise within a given geographic area is such as to prevent restrict or distort competition within the common market." (P. 3402.) (emphasis added).

99. Whether the fees, that is to say royalties, under a licence are anti-competitive has to be decided in the light of the economic environment in which the licence operates. I must say that I have grave doubts as to whether the defendants will be able to prove the facts behind this allegation at the trial. But this is essentially an issue of fact. I do not see how that issue can be resolved against the defendants on a strike out application. As was said in Gottrup-Klim v. DLG:

"The compatibility of the statutes of such an association with the Community rules on competition cannot be assessed in the abstract. It will depend on the particular clauses in the statutes and the economic conditions prevailing on the markets concerned." (p. 5687 par. 31.)

100. The truth may be that the agreements offend against the letter of Article 85(1) but are sufficiently for the general public good to qualify for exemption under Art. 85(3). But that is of no assistance to the plaintiff here because only the Commission has power to grant exemption and, as noted, the plaintiff has not applied for it.

101. The defendants' argument in relation to royalties has a rather unreal air about it. They say that the royalty rates were acceptable when the licences were first granted but are too high now. They have become an abuse. They ask for them to be reduced. But if that was to be done, no doubt those licensees who originally paid the high royalty will be able to argue that the reduction in favour of the defendants is the application of dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions, contrary to Article 85(1). Whichever way the plaintiff goes it is exposed to an Article 85 challenge. But the fact that both cannot be right does not mean that one or other of them is necessarily not arguable. At this stage the court is only concerned with whether the defendants' pleading is unarguable. With regard to all of the royalty related allegations, with considerable misgiving, I have come to the conclusion that they are arguable.

102. However even on this part of the case I can not see how the allegation of suppression of technology can survive. It is not said that the establishment of the international standards forces anyone to make CDs to those standards. All the standards do is establish an accepted technical specification so that manufacturers of players and discs can choose to make sure that their respective products recognise and interface with each other to the benefit of both. It is the establishment of protocols and specifications which enable the greatest numbers of manufacturers to share in and develop the market. No doubt the success of the standards makes it less attractive to develop an alternative set of protocols and specifications but this is a reflection of the success of the standards in attracting enough voluntary adherents. Neither the Philips/Sony agreement nor the Standard Licence are pleaded as forcing or encouraging licensees to adopt the standard. The standards would constitute the same commercial incentive to conformity whether or not the Philips/Sony agreement and Standard Licence exist. Furthermore the encouragement of competitors to accept standards is not anti-competitive simply because the defendants have chosen to refer to it as a suppression of technology. Notwithstanding the pejorative labels the defendants have used in their pleadings, it is not arguably anti-competitive for the plaintiff and Sony to have tried to encourage the establishment of such standards.

103. Similarly even at this stage it does not appear to me that the defendant's plea of "tying", i.e. that licensees are forced to take a licence under all the patents, is arguably anti-competitive. Taken by itself it alleges no more than that competitors who sign up are given complete freedom to make whichever types of CDs they wish. Absent special considerations, which are not pleaded here, charging a uniform price for entry to the market cannot be anti-competitive particularly when it is apparent and not disputed that the resultant market is highly competitive so that no-one is alleged to be able to control the price of goods on it. This plea should be struck out in relation to Article 85 also.

104. Finally, I have come to the conclusion that the pleaded case under Article 85 relating to the grant back clause is also unarguable. The defence does not set out clearly in what way the clause is said to be anti-competitive. It appears that there are two core allegations. The first is that the grant back is unfair to the licensee because it lasts too long and is too wide in scope. However this plea has to be read in the context of the rest of the defence. As noted above, the grant back provision entitles the granting party to impose "reasonable, non-discriminatory conditions" on the recipients. Absent any or any credible pleading that this is a sham, it completely undermines the defendants' complaint.

105. The second core allegation is expressed as follows:

"The [grant back] clause requires the licensee to grant to the Plaintiff, Sony, Associated Companies and to existing and future licensees of the Plaintiff, licences in relation to third party patents which have been licensed to the licensee where they are "pertinent" to the Licensed Products. This clause has the object and effect of both: (a) deterring third parties from granting licences to licensees of the Plaintiff and thereby it prevents third parties from obtaining any commercial advantage in developing rival or alternative technologies in relation to compact disc; and (b) deterring licensees from seeking out technology from third parties."

106. On the face of the defence, this also is not maintainable. The essence of the plea is that the grant back provision relating to third party patents would have the effect of "hijacking" those patents for the benefit of the plaintiff/Sony/licensee club. This will suppress technology licensing from parties outside the club. The relevant clause is set out in the defence (Defence par. 35.):

"2.05 For a period of ten (10) years from the effective date hereof Licensee agrees to grant Philips and its Associated Companies and to Sony Corporation of Japan and its Associated Companies and to other third parties who have entered or will enter into a Licence Agreement with Philips or an Associated Company of Philips concerning Licensed Products and who have accepted all (This, presumably, should read "or".) will accept a similar undertaking as contained in this paragraph 2.05, on reasonable, non-discriminating conditions comparable to those set out herein, non-exclusive, non-transferable licences to manufacture, use, sell or otherwise dispose of Licensed products under any or all present and future patent rights, as to which and to the extent to which Licensee or its Associated Companies may now have or may hereafter acquire the right to grant licences and which are pertinent to the manufacture, use or sale of Licensed Products." (emphasis added)

107. This does not support the allegation made. Rights in non-club patents only have to be passed on to club members to the extent that the licensee has been given the right by the non-club party to grant licences. In other words it only applies to those patents where the third party is content for the technology to be licensed on to other people. There is no material in the defence which supports the assertion that this clause will suppress patent licensing by third parties or will deter Standard Licence licensees from seeking out licenses from third parties.

Relief

108. From what has been said above, all relief sought in the counterclaim is unarguable to the extent that it is dependent on the Article 86 allegations. Mr. Lasok has also argued that the prayer for relief by way of damages based on the alleged breaches of Article 85 is unarguable. Since the defendants have not taken a Standard Licence, have not paid royalties and have not held back from making CDs it is impossible for them to say that they have suffered any loss by reason of the plaintiff's activities. Indeed, at the moment they are benefiting by not having to bear a royalty burden while all their competitors do. Although I think this argument has much to commend it, I can see no inconvenience or adverse cost consequences of leaving the prayers for relief, insofar as still pursued, in the counterclaim. It will be for the judge who hears this dispute to determine what relief is appropriate if any of the Article 85 pleas are made out on the facts.

Summary

109. For the reasons set out above, I have come to the conclusion that only that part of the Treaty of Rome pleading relating to Article 85 and the unfair royalty rates is arguable. The other paragraphs should be struck out. Similarly the prayers for relief relating to Article 86 should be struck out. Since I have held that one part of the pleading can survive, it might be said that the simpler course would be to allow all of the pleas to continue so that they can be determined at the full trial. However I do not think that is the right approach. Each discrete plea under the Treaty of Rome is likely to involve extensive discovery and evidence. If a plea is not arguable it should be struck out now rather than be left to generate extra and unnecessary costs.

110. For the reasons set out above, the surviving Treaty of Rome pleas should be tried separately from the patent issues and should be stayed pending the outcome of the defendants' complaint to the Commission.


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