BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Patents County Court |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Patents County Court >> Beechwood House Publishing Ltd (t/a Binley's) v Guardian Products Ltd & Anor [2010] EWPCC 013 (03 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWPCC/2010/13.html Cite as: [2010] EWPCC 13, [2010] EWPCC 013 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
133-137 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1HD |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
BEECHWOOD HOUSE PUBLISHING LIMITED T/A BINLEY'S |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) GUARDIAN PRODUCTS LIMITED (2) PRECISION DIRECT MARKETING LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Lawrence Power (instructed by Ashton Bond Gigg) for the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Birss QC:
"IT IS DECLARED THAT:
a. the Claimant's claim was not settled prior to the issue of the claim form during the course of correspondence between the parties' solicitors;
b. the Claimant was at the times material to the Defendant's alleged infringements the owner of database right subsisting in the Database (as defined in the Particulars of Claim);
AND IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. Save for its first two sentences and last sentence, paragraph 17 of the First Defendant's Defence be struck out.
2. No further reference shall be made to the contents of the without prejudice correspondence in the evidence and submissions put before the trial judge.
3. The claim be stayed until 10 December 2010 for the parties to discuss settlement and/or undertake mediation.
4. The parties have permission to apply in writing to the judge on 2 days' notice for an extension of the stay referred to in paragraph 3 above.
5. On or before 14 January 2011, the parties shall give standard disclosure by list on the issue of infringement to every other party by way of exchange of lists.
6. Any requests for inspection or copies of disclosed documents shall be made within 14 days after service of the list.
7. Each party shall serve the respective witness statements of the oral evidence which the party serving the statement intends to rely on in relation to any issues of fact, those statements and any notices of intention to rely on hearsay evidence to be exchanged by 4.00 p.m. on 11 February 2011.
8. Subject to any application the parties may subsequently make, neither party has permission to rely upon expert evidence.
9. The trial of the claim shall take place between 21 March 2011 to 23 May 2011 ("the trial window").
10. The trial shall be listed for hearing with a time estimate of 1 day, with 2 hrs estimated pre-reading.
11. The Claimant shall make an appointment to attend on the Listing Officer (Room WG4, Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London WC2A 2LL; Tel. 020 7947 6816; Fax No. 0870 739 5869; email [email protected]) to fix a trial date within the trial window, such appointment to be not later than 30 November 2010 and give notice of the appointment to the Defendant.
12. The parties shall, no later than 21 days before the date fixed for trial, serve on the other parties a list of all documents they want to be included in the trial bundles.
13. The Claimant shall, no later than 14 days before the date fixed for trial, serve on the Defendant one set of the bundles for use at the trial.
14. Not earlier than 7 days or later than 3 days before the date fixed for trial the Claimant shall file with the Judge's clerk a trial bundle for the use of the Judge in accordance with Appendix 6 of the Chancery Guide.
15. The parties shall lodge copies of their Skeleton Argument not less than two clear days before the date fixed for trial.
16. The parties have permission to apply on three days' notice for further directions and generally.
17. [The Defendants / The First Defendant] shall within 14 days of the date of this order pay to the Claimant the sum of £12,000, being 75% of the Claimant's costs of the application, summarily assessed.
18. [The Defendants / The First Defendant] shall pay the Claimant's costs of the issue of whether the claim was settled (to the extent to that they do not form part of the Claimant's costs of the application, which are provided for in preceding paragraph), the aforesaid costs to be the subject of detailed assessment on the standard basis."
"17. It is averred that as regards any loss and damage arising out of the unwitting use of the seed detail that the first defendant calculated loss and damage at £3095.11. This sum was paid by the first defendant to the claimant's solicitor's account by electronic transfer on 2 February 2009. [Further or alternatively the claim has been compromised by the exchange of without prejudice correspondence and the aforesaid payment. The claim was issued on 20 February 2009.] In the circumstances the claimant is not due any further sum for the use of the seed detail in the Mailing and is estopped from claiming the same."
(I have corrected an obvious typographical error in this paragraph and paragraph 19 below)
"19. Paragraph 27 of the particulars of claim is denied. The second defendant repeats the facts set out in paragraph 17 and 18 above. [It is averred that the first defendant by way of payment of £3095.11 to the claimant's solicitors on 2 February 2009 gave full satisfaction and accord for all loss and damage arising out of the alleged Database infringement.] In the circumstances the claimants are estopped from seeking any further sums for loss and damage from the second defendant."
i) The second defendant has as much interest in the success of Mr Power's submissions on the settlement issue as the first defendant. If the court had found that the action had settled it would have been settled against both defendants.ii) The fact that no part of the second defendant's defence was struck out is immaterial. The declaration made affects the second defendant just as much as the first defendant.
iii) One of the reasons the court gave in its oral judgment dealing with the details of which paragraphs should be struck out and allowing paragraph 19 of the second defendant's defence to remain was that the main judgment had reduced the scope of the case the second defendant could in future put forward on the basis of the paragraph.