[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> A Fulton Company Ltd. v Totes Isotoner (UK) Ltd. [2003] EWCA Civ 1514 (04 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1514.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1514 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PATENTS COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE FYSH QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KENNEDY
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
A Fulton Company Limited |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
and |
||
Totes Isotoner (UK) Limited |
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
for the Appellant
Mr R Arnold QC and Mr B Brandreth (instructed by Messrs Gouldens)
for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 8 October 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jacob:
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
It is a copy of the entire Fulton article, minus the cut-out - of nearly the whole thing. And all of it comes from copying.
"Design right does not subsist unless and until the design has been recorded in a design document or an article made to the design."
s.213
"(1) Design right is a property right which subsists in accordance with this Part in an original design.
(2) In this Part "design" means the design of any aspect of the shape or configuration (whether internal or external) of the whole or part of an article.
(3) Design right does not subsist in
(a) a method or principle of construction,
(b) features of shape or configuration of an article which
(i) enable the article to be connected to, or placed in around or against, another article so that either article may perform its function, or
(ii) are dependent upon the appearance of another article of which the article is intended by the designer to form an integral part, or
(c) surface decoration."
(4) A design is not 'original' for the purposes of this Part if it is commonplace in the design field in question at the time of its creation.
(5) Design right subsists in a design only if the design qualifies for design rights by reference to [details do not matter]
i) s.226
"(1) The owner of design right in a design has the exclusive right to reproduce the design for commercial purposes
(a) by making articles to that design, or
(b) by making a design document recording the design for the purpose of enabling such articles to be made.
(2) Reproduction of a design by making articles to the design means copying the design so as to produce articles exactly or substantially to that design, and references in this part to making articles to a design shall be construed accordingly.
(3) Design right is infringed by a person who without the licence of the design right owner does, or authorises another to do, anything which by virtue of this section is the exclusive right of the design right owner."
"The Claimant is entitled to design right in the design of the whole of the Miniflat case (irrespective of its precise dimensions) alternatively in the design of that aspect of the Miniflat case which consists of the whole of it (irrespective of its precise dimensions) minus the shorter side of the cuff adjacent to the vent "
"Section 213(2) is a short subsection, but it contains most of the fundamental concepts which go to determine whether design right subsists, and, if so, what is subsists in. The words are "the design of any aspect of the shape or configuration of the whole or part of an article". So the core meaning of "design" is the shape or configuration of an article. Prima facie that would mean the shape or configuration of the whole article. But it does not have to be the whole article: the design can be the shape or configuration of the article, and apparently any part may be sufficient. And the scope of what design right may subsist in is enlarged further by the reference to "any aspect" of the shape or configuration concerned. This creates a large number of possible permutations which can arise in the case of any one article. Take an umbrella. Design right might be claimed to subsist in the whole aspect of the shape or configuration of the whole of the umbrella, or it might be claimed to subsist in one or more particular aspects of the shape or configuration of one or more particular parts of the umbrella. Then again, each of the handle and the case, distinct from the whole packaged umbrella, might be regarded as an "article" by itself for the purposes of formulating the claim to design right.
In this connection the manner in which the claimant formulates its particulars of claim in the pleadings is important. Laddie J focused on this point in Ocular Sciences Ltd v Aspect Vision Care [1997] RPC 289 at 422. He said:
"This means that the proprietor can trim his design right claim to most closely match what he believes the defendant to have taken. The defendant will not know in what the alleged monopoly resides until the letter before action, or, more usually, the service of the statement of claim. This means that a plaintiff's pleading has particular importance. It not only puts forward the claim but is likely to be the only statement of what is asserted to be the design right."
..
Fulton has formulated its claims to design rights in a number of ways. I am not going to go through them one by one. The principal claims identify the Flat Compact handle as one subject of design right, and the Miniflat case as another. The claims may be put on the basis that each is an "article", or on the basis that the article is the whole umbrella and the handle and case are "parts" of it. In relation to the handle Fulton claims design right in the shape or configuration of part of it. That part is the handle minus the protuberant rim which, in illustration 2, can be seen running round the bottom part of the handle. The illustration shows that the alleged infringing article, which is the handle on Grant Barnett's 6F Ultra Compact, does not have the protuberant rim. In relation to the Miniflat case, Fulton claims design right in the whole aspect of the shape or configuration of the whole of the case. As a matter of pleading, all of these ways in which Fulton formulates different elements in its claim seem to be to be satisfactory."
ii) The first is Volumatic Ltd v Myriad Technologies Ltd, 10 April 1995. Sir John Vinelott said
"The question is whether, when these features [must fit and must match] have been subtracted, there is anything left in which unregistered design right could be plausibly claimed.
Literally construed the Act would allow design right to be claimed in the design of an insignificant part a mere "twiddle", as it was put in argument. That cannot have been intended. It was accepted by Mr Onslow, who appeared for Volumatic, that to maintain a claim for infringement of the design of part of an article, the part copied must be visually significant."
"The design in which the plaintiff primarily claims design right is now pleaded as "the whole external shape and configuration of that part of the wall units which are used in its Cook's Kitchen comprising the front, front corners, sides and cornice" (see paragraph 3 of the reamended Statement of Claim).
Save to the extent that it is affected by the exclusions in section 213(3), the design so pleaded plainly falls within the definition of design in section 213(2) in that it is a design of an aspect or aspects of the shape or configuration of the unit."
"Therefore it is possible for design right to subsist in the design of the part of the article which is not excluded under the must match provisions"
I do not think any of the other cases cited really even touched upon the point obliquely and so do not refer to them.
"Thirdly, unlike a registered design, which protects the design applied to a whole article, unregistered design right subsists in the shape or configuration of part of an article, or indeed in "any aspect" of the shape or configuration of the whole or part of the article. Thus, a single article (or a design document recording the design of an article) will normally embody not a single design right, but a large bundle of different design rights subsisting in the whole and every part and every aspect of the shape and configuration of the article, provided that the part or aspect concerned is original and is not otherwise excluded from enjoying design right by one of the exceptions considered in the following paragraphs. This concept of a bundle of design rights becomes significant when the question of infringement is considered, because, except in the case of slaving copying of the whole article, the design right proprietor will seek to match a design right which he can contend subsists in a part or aspect of the design of his article with the features of the alleged infringing article which he contends have been copied."
"The 'design'. This definition is extremely wide. For example, in the case of a teapot, a plaintiff may choose to rely on the design of the whole pot but he may also rely on the design of one or more of its parts or aspects such as the spout, the handle, the lid or even part of the lid. Given the width of this definition, it is important to identify clearly the design being relied upon."
For this the authors rely, unquestioningly, on Ocular Science Limited.
"53.16 There is no reason why a proprietor should not claim design right in all aspects of the shape or configuration of his article which he believes could give him a commercial edge over his competitors. In particular, when it comes to suing a competitor for infringement he will be well-advised to rely, individually and collectively, upon each of those separate aspects of shape or configuration which appear to have been copied by the competitor. Needless to say, a statutory monopoly which allows the proprietor to mix and match in this way and which deprives a potential infringer of any way of knowing the scope of the exclusive rights which he faces unless and until the proprietor defines precisely what are alleged to be his design rights is ripe for abuse".
"53.19 As mentioned above, the width of the definition of designs which can be protected makes this right ripe for abuse. On the wording of the Act it would be possible to suggest that any part of the aspect of any article could be the subject of protection. However it is likely that the courts will wish to put some reasonable limit on what is protectable. If a proprietor relies upon some small part of the design of an article a court may decide that to isolate that part from the rest of the context in which the proprietor had employed it is to give it far greater visual or spatial importance and impact than it had when created by the designer. Indeed, isolation from the rest of the design features with which it was created may have the effect of producing a 'new' design. If that is so the court may decline to look at that part of the design in isolation from the rest of it."
"For the purposes of Pt III of CDPA 1988, s.213(2) defines 'design' as meaning: 'the design of any aspect of the shape or configuration (whether internal or external) of the whole or part of an article'. Thus (unlike registered designs) the right extends from the whole to any part of an article, but is restricted to aspects of shape or configuration only. The latter aspects may be internal or external, and the White Paper made it clear (at para. 3.34) that it was the government's intention that design right would be apt to cover the internal configuration of a semiconductor chip (see chapter 24). Not only, therefore, is there no requirement for 'eye-appeal' of the kind necessary for a registrable design, but it would seem that the design need not be visible, at least to the naked eye".
"2.228 Again unlike registered designs, it need not be the whole of the article with the design applied to it which is considered. Design right can reside in only aspects of an article's shape or configuration - and in only part of an article, internal or external. There is no requirement, as for registered designs, that that part be made and sold separately. Nor does "part of an article" only mean part of a complex article made up of many parts like one single part within a car or washing-machine. It can also cover what in the registered design context would be a single "feature" of a single article, whether that article is large (the "power" domes on the bonnet of a Ford car as part of the overall design of a car body) or small (one tube or stud on a LEGO brick). Several different design rights may therefore be claimed in a single article."
""Semiconductor topography" means a design within the meaning of section 213 (2) of the Act which is a design of either of the following:
(a) the pattern fixed, or intended to be fixed, in or upon
(i) a layer of a semiconductor product, or
(ii) a layer of material in the course of and for the purpose of the manufacture of a semiconductor product, or
(b) the arrangement of the patterns fixed, or intended to be fixed, in or upon the layers of a semiconductor product in relation to one another."