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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> HTC Corp v Nokia Corp [2013] EWCA Civ 1759 (12 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1759.html Cite as: [2014] RPC 31, [2013] EWCA Civ 1759 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURTOF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
On appeal from Order of Arnold J.
HC12A02048, HC12C02909
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
HTC CORPORATION |
Appellant/Claimant and Counteraction Defendant |
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- and - |
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NOKIA CORPORATION |
Respondent/Defendant and Counteraction Claimant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. Michael Tappin QC and Mr. Miles Copeland (instructed by
Bird & Bird LLP) appeared for the Respondent/Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN :
"In my judgment, in the case of the One, the balance comes down in favour of granting a stay. The potential harm to HTC outweighs that to Nokia, the One has been on the market for some time and the impact of HTC's apparent lack of contingency planning is less significant. In the case of the One Mini, the balance comes down in favour of refusing a stay. In this case the potential harm is more evenly weighted, but importantly the phone was launched much more recently and HTC designed and launched it at a time when HTC knew it was facing a claim for infringement of the Patent and apparently without making any contingency plans."
"It is not in dispute that where a plaintiff has at first instance established a right to a perpetual injunction, the court has a discretion to stay the operation of the injunction pending an appeal by the defendant against the judgment. On what principles ought such a discretion to be exercised. The object, where it can be fairly achieved, must surely be so to arrange matters that, when the appeal comes to be heard, the appellate court may be able to do justice between the parties, whatever the outcome of the appeal may be. Where an injunction is an appropriate form of remedy for a successful plaintiff, the plaintiff, if he succeeds at first instance in establishing his right to relief, is entitled to that remedy upon the basis of the trial judge's findings of fact and his application of the law. This is, however, subject to the defendant's right of appeal. If the defendant in good faith proposes to appeal, challenging either the trial judge's findings or his law, and has a genuine chance of success on his appeal, the plaintiff's entitlement to his remedy cannot be regarded as certain until the appeal has been disposed of. In some cases the putting of an injunction into effect pending appeal may very severely damage the defendant in such a way that he will have no remedy against the plaintiff if he, the defendant, succeeds on his appeal. On the other hand, the postponement of putting an injunction into effect pending appeal may severely damage the plaintiff. In such a case a plaintiff may be able to recover some remedy against the defendant in the appellate court in respect of his damage in the event of the appeal failing, but the amount of this damage may be difficult to assess and the remedy available in the appellate court may not amount to a complete indemnity. It may be possible to do justice by staying the injunction pending the appeal, the plaintiff's position being suitably safeguarded. On the other hand it may, in some circumstances, be fair to allow the injunction to operate on condition that the plaintiff gives an undertaking in damages or otherwise protects the defendant's rights, should he succeed on his appeal. In some cases it may be impossible to devise any method of ensuring perfect justice in any event, but the court may nevertheless be able to devise an interlocutory remedy pending the decision of the appeal which will achieve the highest available measure of fairness. The appropriate course must depend upon the particular facts of each case."
"i) The court must be satisfied that the appeal has a real prospect of success.
ii) If the court is satisfied that there is a real prospect of success on appeal, it will not usually be useful to attempt to form a view as to how much stronger the prospects of appeal are, or to attempt to give weight to that view in assessing the balance of convenience.
iii) It does not follow automatically from the fact that an interim injunction has or would have been granted pre-trial that an injunction pending appeal should be granted. The court must assess all the relevant circumstances following judgment, including the period of time before any appeal is likely to be heard and the balance of hardship to each party if an injunction is refused or granted.
iv) The grant of an injunction is not limited to the case where its refusal would render an appeal nugatory. Such a case merely represents the extreme end of a spectrum of possible factual situations in which the injustice to one side is balanced against the injustice to the other.
v) As in the case of the stay of a permanent injunction which would otherwise be granted to a successful claimant, the court should endeavour to arrange matters so that the Court of Appeal is best able to do justice between the parties once the appeal has been heard."
(i) the judge found that the Patent was infringed by the circuitry in the Broadcom BCM4329 and BCM4334 chips and the Qualcomm WTR1605(L) chip. There is also probably no material difference, according to the judge, between the Broadcom BCM4329 and BCM4330 chips. The HTC One phone uses the WTR1605(L) and the BCM4335 chips. The One Mini phone, which was launched in August 2013, contains the WTR1605(L) and the BCM4334 chips. HTC also launched the One Max phone in October this year, which uses the WTR1605(L) chip;
(ii) on 2nd May 2012 Nokia sued HTC in Germany for infringement of the Patent based on its use of the BCM4329 and BCM4330 chips. The claim was supported by a circuit diagrams showing the features of the claims. HTC then commenced these English proceedings seeking revocation of the Patent on 17th May 2012 and Nokia counterclaimed for infringement. The One phone was launched against the background of the proceedings in March 2013;
(iii) by the time of the trial in October 2013 HTC had therefore known of the allegations of infringement in respect of the BCM4329 and BCM4330 chips for almost 18 months and of the claims in respect of WRT1605(L) and BCM4334 chips for six months;
(iv) the relevant market is the UK smartphone market which is valuable and has grown rapidly. The HTC One family of phones is HTC's flagship range on which its principal advertising is focussed and which is promoted as its leading brand image. It accounts for a large part of its UK sales and, within that range, the One phone significantly out-sells the One Mini. It also has proposals for the launch of phones referred to as the Desire 300 and Desire 601, one of which at least appears to be likely to use one of the infringing products. We were also told by Mr. Tappin QC for Nokia this morning that a new range of phones, one or some of which may also employ the infringing chips is imminent;
(v) most of the sales of HTC smartphones are to network operators such as Vodaphone and Orange or to specialist phone shops, such as the Carphone Warehouse. There appear to be only limited direct sales;
(vi) the permanent injunction over all models using one of the infringing chips will inevitably terminate HTC's participation in the smartphone market and cause other problems in relation to its UK operation. It will also, or is likely also, to have long-term economic effects in that, in a highly competitive market, its market position and share will be taken up by its competitors, including Nokia, and it will be difficult, if not impossible, it says, for it to re-enter the market.
(vii) The injunction may also lead to a significant collapse or reduction in public interest and confidence in its product and in the brand name. It will not, it says, be possible to calculate the value of its lost business;
(viii) HTC is able to keep records of the number and type of phones with infringing chips which are sold so as to be able to account to Nokia for its profits or the loss of licence fees;
(ix) HTC will need between four and 12 months in which to develop a useable chip which will not infringe the Patent;
(x) Nokia's flagship range of smartphones is the Lumia range which competes with the HTC One family of phones. Sales have been lost but not, as the judge found, on a one-to-one basis. The HTC One phone is the main competitor in the One range that is identified in Nokia's evidence;
(xi) Nokia has entered into an agreement to sell its mobile phone handset business to Microsoft, which, subject to regulatory approval, should be completed in the first quarter of next year. Until then, however, it will continue to be in direct competition with HTC. And after that it will continue as the patentee and licensor of the Patent.
(1) as already mentioned, the judge accepted that although the One phone was the most serious competitor to the smart phone sold by Nokia, the potential damage to HTC from being injuncted from continuing to sell it outweighed any foreseeable loss to Nokia from sales continuing until after the appeal. Consistently with this, the judge was wrong, he says, to refuse to allow HTC to sell its other infringing phones such as the One Mini which, on the judge's own findings, did not pose the same level of risk of damage to Nokia but were nonetheless part of HTC's core business;
(2) the judge is said to have ignored or given insufficient weight to the fact that the One Mini is an important part of the One flagship range of phones sold by HTC and that its ability to sell only one of the phones in the range would have a serious effect on its business as a whole; and
(3) he submits that the judge's order, by restricting HTC's product range up to the appeal, will create practical problems in terms of eventual outcome because on any assessment of damages (whether on Nokia's cross-undertaking or in relation to Nokia's claim for infringement) it will be necessary for the court to conduct separate inquiries for the period from trial to appeal based on HTC having been allowed to sell only part of its product range.