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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> London General Holdings Ltd & Ors v USP Plc & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 931 (22 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/931.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 931 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
OF THE HIGH COURT (MASTER PRICE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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LONDON GENERAL HOLDINGS LTD & ORS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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USP PLC & ANR |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Peter Leaver QC and Mr Thomas Mitcheson (instructed by DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary UK LLP) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
INTRODUCTORY
THE FACTS
"…Undoubtedly Unicorn had, and USP now has, the copyright in the draft CAA which was supplied to LGH on 19 February 1998 and handed out at the meeting on 24 February. Equally clearly, USP and Scottish Power, and possibly LGH, have the copyright in the final version of the CAA. It is common ground that when a work goes through successive stages in writing, copyright continues to subsist in the earlier versions. It is also common ground that one joint owner cannot exploit his copyright without the consent of the others,…"
" 15. My conclusion therefore is that the claimant should receive £15,000 by way of compensation for the labour and skill involved in producing the template CAA as an appropriate notional royalty in respect of all of the uses to which the defendants have put it, apart from the question of Powerhouse…."
However, it is clear from his judgment on costs that he did not find an infringement in relation to Tesco.
"The major cause for concern surrounding the validity of a trust arrangement for our ring-fenced service fees held within the offshore service company has not yet been satisfactorily resolved…
We need to take into account that no precedent… has been set in law and therefore no proof exists that the trust solution presented to Powerhouse by AON would have any legal weight. It would seem only wise to secure further independent advice…"
Accordingly it was resolved that Mr Turner should obtain further advice from Powerhouse's solicitors, Messrs Biddle & Co, and I shall refer shortly to some of Biddle's correspondence.
"…In the conversation Mr Turner told Mr Borrill inter alia that 'LGH has cracked it' and that 'LGH's collections account agreement would do the trick'; and that as a result of the Cains advice and the promise of the CAA the defendants' scheme was now sufficiently robust. The factors which Mr Borrill said caused him to reduce his price included the content of the Cains' advice, the fact that LGH had sent this advice to Powerhouse, Mr Turner's apparently genuine belief that the defendants' scheme was sufficiently robust and/or as robust as the claimants' scheme, the fact that Powerhouse had gone so far as to take advice from Biddles, the fact that Powerhouse were requiring Mr Mian to provide a physical copy of the CAA and the fact that Mr Mian had promised to provide Mr Turner with a copy of the defendants' CAA."
"It has to be appreciated that Mr Turner was a skilled negotiator and as such he would have played his cards quite carefully to his best advantage. He agreed that he may well have used poetic licence, and it would be surprising if he had not done so. He would hardly have revealed his personal doubts about the robustness of the defendants' scheme, since that would have undermined his own position. It has also been suggested that he misrepresented the defendants' price but I do not see how that is made out on the evidence. It is certainly the case that Mr Turner revealed the costings which he had produced on the basis of the competing quotes he had from the defendants and the claimants. However, I do not think that there is any evidence that he misrepresented the position or suggested the defendants had made a concession which they had not done."
"I do not think it necessary or appropriate therefore to go into a line by line comparison of the two documents. It is clear to me that the substance of the draft is reproduced in the final version and that, by using the final version in an attempt to advance their case with Powerhouse, LGH wrongly appropriated the labour and skill of Cooper Chan and so infringed the copyright of Unicorn which had been assigned to USP."
"Aon have made the point that this [CAA] would need to be tailored to the specific situation with Powerhouse. Aon have also emphasised the confidentiality and commercial sensitivity of the [CAA] which has been disclosed only for use by Powerhouse legal advisers in advising Powerhouse.
I would be grateful if you could consider the enclosures and advise whether, as a matter of principle, it would be possible adequately to protect the position of Powerhouse customers in the event of the insolvency of the off-shore service company. At this stage, Powerhouse are looking for clear advice that they can safely go forward with the type of scheme being promoted by Aon (which may be a more cost effective alternative to the [SPV] scheme promoted by USP)."
There is a note from Dickinson Cruickshank in reply, which includes this:
"We have not seen the entirety of the arrangement and, certainly, no proposed documents (apart from the example draft [CAA])…
We, like Cains, have seen no actual proposed documentation."
Mr Reardon wrote to Mr Turner on 16 March, advising that:
"[a] trust of the nature proposed by Aon, if properly drafted and constituted, would be effective under English law to protect the trust funds…
In conclusion it is our view that, in relation to English law, with careful document drafting under the Aon arrangements, monies in the Trust Fund can be protected from claims by creditors of the offshore service company…"
THE MASTER'S DECISION
"30 The starting point is therefore the question of causation. In my judgment on the findings I have made the availability of a trust mechanism was important to Powerhouse in the context of the negotiations. In order to demonstrate the availability of a trust mechanism in the context of their proposals the defendants made use of the infringing copy they had sent to Cains in April 1999 and subsequently infringed the defendants' copyright again when they sent a copy of the CAA to the claimants on the 7 March 2000. It is necessary to distinguish these two stages of the negotiation in consideration of this issue. On the 1 March 2000 when the first price reduction was agreed the only infringements in issue were the infringements by Mr Brimacombe when he made an electronic copy and the subsequent infringement involved in sending the document to Cains. These two infringements enabled the defendants to obtain the two pieces of advice from Cains in the context of the negotiations with Powerhouse, although those pieces of advice did not persuade Mr Turner on their own. However the availability of the CAA which had been copied enabled Mr Mian to promise a copy to Mr Turner. The advice from Cains together with that promise strengthened his negotiating position and enabled him to persuade Mr Borrill that the claimant was vulnerable to competition from the defendants. But for the infringement I have mentioned I do not consider that Mr Turner would have been in a position to do this. The defendants argue that it was not the infringements that caused this chain of events but the fact of legitimate competition involving the concept of a trust mechanism over which the claimants have no monopoly, a fact quite apart from the infringement of copyright in the CAA. In a sense this is true but it only operates if one conceptualises what happened at too high a level of abstraction. The reality is that it was the infringements that I have mentioned which put the defendants in a position to rely on the trust concept in the bargaining with Mr Turner and which he could then use against Mr Borrill. The fact that the defendants could at relatively little expense have avoided this by devising their own scheme is nothing to the point…
31 The defendants rely upon Work Model Enterprises Limited –v- Eco System Limited [1996] FSR 356 in this context. That case involved an admitted infringement of copyright by a competitor who copied the claimant's brochure. It was held that the infringement did not cause the lost sales which were the result of legitimate competition. This neatly illustrates the principle of causation but it is not in my view applicable on the facts. In this case it was the infringements which enabled the claimants to lay claim to be able to put into place a trust mechanism, and it was that which led to the prejudice to the claimants' negotiating position.
32 The defendants further argued that Mr Turner's conduct of the negotiations involved misrepresentations and breaches of Powerhouse's confidentiality agreement with the defendants, so that there was a break in the chain of causation. In this respect Mann J has held that there was a breach of the confidentiality agreement in imparting the Cains advice to the claimants, and this must be accepted as correct. Mr Turner also prepared an analysis of costings based on information supplied to him and I accept that in imparting these analyses to the claimants he was again in breach of the confidentiality agreement. I do not however accept that there was ever any misrepresentation by the way he represented his impression of the robustness of the defendants' scheme although he may have used poetic licence to the extent that he did not reveal his reservations. However, all this is part of the course [sc 'par for the course'] in the context of commercial negotiations. Even were it to be categorised as wrongful, it does not in my view break the chain of causation: see for example Stansbie v Troman [1948] 2 KB 48. In that case it was the defendant who created the opportunity for the burglar to enter the house which he should have guarded against. In my judgment in this case it was the defendants' infringements of the claimants' copyright which facilitated Mr Turner's actions in the context of the negotiations, which involved breaches of the confidentiality agreement. All this was moreover, in my view, a perfectly foreseeable consequence of the initial and subsequent infringements of the copyright in making an electronic copy and sending this to Cains for advice. It was foreseeable that once the defendants began to make use of the CAA and to infringe the claimants' copyright this would cause loss to the claimant. It matters not whether the precise concatenation of events is foreseeable: see Jolley v Sutton LBC [2000] 1 WLR 1082. The general risk which was foreseeable was that infringement of copyright would lead to losses to the claimants by undermining their special competitive position. In effect, the claimants' actions were steps taken acting reasonably in mitigation of their losses in reducing their price in response to the tortious actions of the defendant.
33 My conclusion therefore is that the defendants are liable in respect of the initial price reduction which occurred on the 1 March 2000…."
THE APPEAL
"Ideas as such are not the subject matter of copyright, but only the form in which ideas are expressed."
This is exemplified by the decision of Jacob J (as my Lord then was) in Work Model Enterprises Ltd v Eco System Ltd [1996] FSR 356, and many other cases. With respect I need not give the details. The proposition is perfectly elementary.
"The advice from Cains together with that promise [sc. to supply the CAA] strengthened [Mr Turner's] negotiating position and enabled him to persuade Mr Borrill that the claimant was vulnerable to competition from the defendants… The reality is that it was the infringements that I have mentioned [sc of April 1999] which put the defendants in a position to rely on the trust concept in the bargaining with Mr Turner and which he could then use against Mr Borrill."
This altogether loses sight of the difference between the text and the idea which it represents.
"There is therefore no uniform causal requirement for liability in tort. Instead, there are varying causal requirements, depending upon the basis and purpose of liability. One cannot separate questions of liability from questions of causation. One is never simply liable; one is always liable for something and the rules which determine what one is liable for are as much part of the substantive law as the rules which determine which acts give rise to liability… [T]he question of causation is decided by applying the rules which lay down the causal requirements for that form of liability to the facts of the case."
Then in South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd [1996] 3 WLR 87, 92 – 94:
"Before one can consider the principle on which one should calculate the damages to which a plaintiff is entitled as compensation for loss, it is necessary to decide for what kind of loss he is entitled to compensation… Rules which make the wrongdoer liable for all the consequences of his wrongful conduct are exceptional and need to be justified by some special policy. Normally the law limits liability to those consequences which are attributable to that which made the act wrongful."
THE CROSS-APPEAL
Jacob LJ:
Lord Justice Waller: