[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 >> Vestergaard Frandsen A/S & Ors v Bestnet Europe Ltd & Ors [2013] EWCA Civ 428 (25 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/428.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 428 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY)
The Hon Mr Justice Arnold
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
(1) VESTERGAARD FRANDSEN A/S (now called MVF 3 Aps) (a company incorporated under the laws of Denmark) (2) VESTERGAARD FRANDSEN SA (a company incorporated under the laws of Switzerland) (3) DISEASE CONTROL TEXTILE SA (a company incorporated under the laws of Switzerland) |
Claimants/Respondents |
|
- and – |
||
(1) BESTNET EUROPE LIMITED (2) 3T EUROPE LIMITED (3) INTECTION LIMITED (4) INTELLIGENT INSECT CONTROL LIMITED (5) TORBEN HOLM LARSEN |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
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 Mark Platts-Mills and Mr Tom Moody-Stuart (instructed by Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP) for the Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Floyd:
"23. Overall I conclude that there was ample material here to justify the Judge's finding in the Main Judgment that the Fence database was in fact used as the basis for the first NetProtect recipes. It was not just a matter of Dr Skovmand using his general skill and knowledge or matter in the public domain (such as the use of information as referred to in [188] of the Main Judgment). It was a case of his using the detailed results in the Fence database so as to choose recipes for NetProtect which, based on those results, were likely to be successful, as indeed they were and were predicted to be from the outset. Indeed I cannot imagine any good reason why the defendants should have lied and forged to cover their tracks if the Fence database had not been used.
24. I am not shifted from this opinion by the passages from the cross-examination of Mr Gary Howe (VF's expert) upon which Mr Howe relied. They show that Mr Gary Howe accepted that scientifically the defendants could have reached their initial formulation of NetProtect by their own research. But that does not mean that they actually did that rather than taking the short-cut of using the information in the Fence database. Quite how much time and trouble they saved is a matter for debate (perhaps in the inquiry as to damages). It may not amount to a vast amount. But save time and trouble they did."
"107. I accept VF's case to the extent that I consider that the manufacture and sale of the Netprotect product launched by the Defendants in October 2005 did amount to misuse of VF's trade secrets. This is because it was made in accordance with the [REDACTED] formulation (that is to say, a formulation which was close to some of the VF recipes in the Fence database and which the information in the database indicated would be well worth trying, which formed part of the October 2004 trials and which was the Defendants' reference formulation for their development work) and differed little from VF's recipes in terms of polymer composition and other additives.
108. By contrast, I consider that the manufacture and sale of mosquito nets made in accordance with the formulation submitted by Bestnet for WHOPES II evaluation does not amount to misuse of VF's trade secrets, although that formulation derived from such misuse. This is partly because it was a [REDACTED] formulation, which is further away from VF's recipes. More importantly, as counsel for the Defendants submitted, I have already found that this formulation differed from any of VF's recipes, in particular in terms of its polymer composition, inclusion of [ADDITIVE L] and inclusion of [ADDITIVE M]. Counsel for VF relied upon Dr Skovmand's evidence that it was "not very different"; but in my judgment it was different enough." (redactions as in redacted judgment, emphasis supplied)
"The passage of time is likewise relevant. After all what the defendants did was to cut a corner, getting on the market earlier than if they had not misused confidential information. Mr Gary Howe, in cross-examination, had accepted that scientifically the defendants could have developed their product independently – time was saved and perhaps not a very great deal of it. By the time of the WHOPES I product the head start had much less significance. That was a matter which the Judge was properly entitled to take into account."
"Before considering whether in this case it would be appropriate to restrain the defendants from using their current technology or running their business, it is right to consider precisely what the injunction is going to stop and how that relates to the plaintiffs' rights which have been breached. In particular what is the effect of an injunction, as sought here, which prohibits a defendant from "making any use of" the confidential information? Where the defendant continues to possess the confidential information and his products incorporate or disclose it or their manufacture continues to use it, an injunction against use will automatically restrain continued operation of the process and sale of products. But what would be the effect of an injunction in those terms where the defendant's products or process do not themselves continue to incorporate or disclose confidential information although they were brought into existence or were perfected or owe their commercial success to the fact that confidential information was used in the past? Such products or processes can be referred to conveniently as "derivative" or "derived". If exploitation by the defendant of such derived products and processes is considered to be continued use of the information employed in their creation or development, an injunction against use would have the effect of prohibiting further exploitation of the derived matter. If that is so, the court should consider whether injunctive relief which goes that far is intended and appropriate."
"3. The Claimants are entitled to recover compensation in respect of the following classes of harm caused to them by reason of the Defendants' acts of breach of confidence:
(i) Loss of profit wherever in the world resulting from the Defendants' sale and offer for sale and tender for contracts for the supply of products manufactured in accordance with a formulation derived in whole or in part from the misuse by the Defendants of the Claimants' trade secrets. In particular the Claimants will seek their lost profit caused by the sale or offer for sale or tender for contracts for the supply of the following of the Defendants' products ("the Defendants' Unlawful Products"):
(a) Products made to the formulation of the Netprotect product launched by the Defendants in October 2005.
(b) Products made to the formulation of the Netprotect product in respect of which the Defendants obtained WHOPES I recommendation in December 2007.
(c) Products made the formulation of the Netprotect product in respect of which the Defendants obtained WHOPES II recommendation in December 2007.
(d) Products sold … under or by reference to or in reliance upon the WHOPES I and WHOPES II evaluations obtained by the Defendants in respect of the Netprotect products referred to under (b) and (c) above
(e) Products manufactured in accordance with any formulation derived in whole or in part from the misuse by the Defendants of the Claimants' trade secrets as held at trial.
(ii) Loss of profit wherever in the world resulting from the sale and offer for sale and tender for contracts for the supply of products by third parties under licence from or with the permission of the Defendants which are manufactured in accordance with a formulation derived in whole or in part from the misuse by the Defendants of the Claimants' trade secrets ("Third Party Unlawful Products").
4. The Claimants' primary case is that its lost profits in respect of the sale, offer for sale and tender for contracts for the supply of both the Defendants' Unlawful Products and Third Party Unlawful Products stand to be quantified as follows:
(i) The Claimants' lost profits from sales which would otherwise have been made and contracts which would otherwise have been entered into had the said unlawful products not been on the market. The Claimants' case is that such lost profits are to be quantified according to the principles set out under paragraphs 6 to 9 below in respect of a notional volume of lost sales calculated by reference to the market share of the Claimants' Permanet products as set out under paragraph 10 below; and
(ii) A notional royalty on sales of and contracts for the supply of unlawful products which would not otherwise have been made by the Claimants. For the avoidance of doubt it is the Claimants' case that such royalty would be payable on the proportion of the actual number of sales of such unlawful products in respect of which the Claimants are not entitled to claim lost profits under paragraph (i) above. The rate of such royalty is to be calculated in accordance with the principles set out under paragraph 11 below.
" 6. As a further alternative, if and insofar as the Claimants are not entitled to damages caused by the sales of the Defendants' Unlawful Products and/or Third Party Unlawful Products by reason [of] the manufacture of such products not themselves constituting an ongoing misuse of VF's trade secrets or otherwise, the Claimants will seek damages caused by the accelerated entry of the Defendants' Unlawful Products and/or Third Party Unlawful Products onto the market as a result of the misuse of the Claimants' trade secrets. The Claimants' case on the period by which the Defendants entry onto the market has been accelerated through their unlawful acts is set [out] in paragraph J above."
"Further and in any event, the development, production and testing of a PE LLIN product is an expensive process that requires sophisticated PE manufacturing equipment and access to chemical and biological testing facilities. If the Defendants had sought to engage an independent contractor to create the Netprotect product without misusing the Claimants' trade secrets the research programme would have taken at least 8 years and cost significantly in excess of £1 million. In support of the foregoing the Claimants will rely on the cost and duration of its own research programme by which the trade secrets misused by the Defendants (as recorded in paragraphs 339 to 355 of the Main Judgment) were obtained. The Claimants will rely in particular on the Claimants development programme over the period 1996 to 2004 as recorded in paragraphs 141 to 304 of the Main Judgment."
"that sum of money which will put the injured party in the same position as he would have been if had not sustained the wrong."
"It is at this stage of the case … that a second principle comes into play. It is not exactly the principle of restoration, either directly or expressed through compensation, but it is the principle of price or hire. It plainly extends - and I am inclined to think not infrequently extends - to patent cases. But indeed, it is not confined to them. For wherever an abstraction or invasion of property has occurred, then, unless such abstraction or invasion were to be sanctioned by law, the law ought to yield a recompense under the category or principle, as I say, either of price or hire. If A, being a liveryman, keeps his horse standing idle in the stable, and B, against his wish and without his knowledge, rides or drives it out, it is no answer to A for B to say: 'Against what loss do you want to be restored? I restore the horse. There is no loss. The horse is none the worse; it is better for the exercise.'"
"the loss suffered by the plaintiffs which falls to be assessed according to their loss of profits resulting from the wrongful disclosure and use of the confidential information referred to in the [consent order]."
"a strong indication that there is no difference in the measure of damages in the two types of breach of confidentiality which [counsel for the appellants] has suggested".
"So, in the present case the defendants saved themselves time and trouble; how much time and trouble is a matter which no doubt will have to be determined."
"These elemental principles have been applied in numerous cases of infringements of patents. Naturally their application varies from case to case. Reported authorities, many of which were cited in argument, may be useful examples of judicial reasoning, but are capable of misleading if decisions on particular sets of facts and observations in judgments leading up to such decisions are later relied upon as establishing a rule of law."
"If [the appellants'] submissions are correct and the district registrar's formula is an incorrect one, the plaintiffs will not be in a position to recover that loss of profit even though they may prove it." (original emphasis)
Lord Justice Tomlinson:
Lord Justice Lloyd: