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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lufthansa Technik AG v Astronics Advanced Electronic Systems & Ors [2023] EWCA Civ 1306 (09 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1306.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1306 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD), PATENTS COURT
Mr Justice Morgan and Recorder Douglas Campbell KC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
LORD JUSTICE PHILLIPS
____________________
LUFTHANSA TECHNIK AG |
Claimant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) ASTRONICS ADVANCED ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS (2) SAFRAN SEATS GB LIMITED (3) PANASONIC AVIONICS CORPORATION |
Defendants/Respondents |
____________________
Tom Mitcheson KC, Miles Copeland and Alice Hart (instructed by Hogan Lovells International and Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 31 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
Split trials in patent cases
The proceedings
"We believe it would be sensible to limit the witnesses at trial to the 2 experts ... The factual issue of knowledge of the internal design of the product, which will require cross examination of the PPD fact witnesses can then be left to the damages enquiry (if any, and if needed), along with the contributory infringement [actually joint tortfeasance] and continuing offers for sale arguments which were adjourned by Mr Justice Nugee's Order of 14 January 2020."
"We agree that it is sensible to limit the witnesses at trial to the two expert witnesses … only and adjourn any cross-examination of the remaining fact witnesses until any damages enquiry."
"Further issues concerning infringement – in relation to particular infringing acts that are alleged, and in relation to joint tortfeasorship between AES and PAC – have been adjourned to the financial relief action, should one take place."
"In any event, the issue of joint tortfeasorship is adjourned so that [it] will only arise on any inquiry or account in the event that Lufthansa establishes liability and starts an action for financial relief."
Morgan J's order
"The parties have liberty to apply for further directions on the Inquiry/Account and (insofar as may be necessary following any appeal) in relation to the determination of the Adjourned Issues."
"The Defendants shall pay the Claimant 98% of its costs in both HP-2017-000085 and HP-2019-000019, save as already provided for by court order (and save for its costs of the Adjourned Issues), together with interest at the rate of 1.5% from the date on which those costs were paid by the Claimant, such costs to be assessed on the standard basis if not agree."
"AND UPON the Adjourned Issues no longer needing to be determined in the light of the Court's judgment
The parties shall have liberty to apply for further directions on the Inquiry/Account."
"2. … the Claimant wishes the order to provide for there to be permission to apply in relation to the determination of what are defined in the order as 'the Adjourned Issues' if that should prove to be necessary following a successful appeal by the Defendants. It is not said by the Claimant that, absent a successful appeal, it might wish to seek a determination of the Adjourned Issues in order to allow it to argue for a wider remedy than the remedy it will be entitled to on the basis of the findings as to infringement in the first judgment.
3. I consider that it is not appropriate for the order to provide for permission to apply in relation to the Adjourned Issues following a successful appeal by the Defendants. The order I will make will record the position following my decision at first instance. In accordance with that decision the Adjourned Issues do not need to be determined. If there were to be a successful appeal against my order, then the Court of Appeal can be asked to make whatever order is appropriate to give effect to the consequences of its judgment on appeal. …
4. In any case, I do not see how a successful appeal by the Defendants would make it appropriate to determine the Adjourned Issues. The Grounds of Appeal which have been put forward by the Defendants challenge the validity of the Patent. … There is no separate appeal as to infringement if any claim in the Patent were held to be valid."
"13. I will deal first with the [Defendants'] suggestion that the Claimant has not abandoned the Adjourned Issues but wishes to keep them alive. That is not my understanding of the Claimant's position. I will make an order to the effect that the Adjourned Issues do not need to be determined. Whatever the position might be following an appeal will not affect the order as to costs that it is appropriate to make following judgment at first instance. In any case, as I have already explained, I do not see how the Adjourned Issues will become material following an appeal in relation to the validity of the Patent, if they are no longer material at first instance.
14. As to the wider considerations relied upon by the Defendants, I consider that it is appropriate for the Claimant to recover the costs of the Adjourned Issues. Those issues were put forward as alternative ways in which the Claimant sought to establish that each Defendant had infringed the Patent. The Claimant established that each Defendant had indeed infringed the Patent although it was able to do so in a fairly straightforward way and without needing to rely on the Adjourned Issues. Overall, the Claimant succeeded and the Defendants failed on infringement. I consider that the just result is that the Claimant should recover all of its costs in relation to infringement and that those costs should include not only the costs incurred in relation to the arguments which succeeded but also in relation to arguments which did not need to be decided and in relation to the Adjourned Issues."
The genesis of the application before Recorder Campbell
Recorder Campbell's judgment
"(1) The sole question for the Court is what the Order means, so that issues as to whether it should have been granted and if so in what terms are not relevant to construction ….
…
(3) The words of the Order are to be given their natural and ordinary meaning and are to be construed in their context, including their historical context and with regard to the object of the Order ..."
"…the construction of a judicial order, like that of any other legal instrument, is a single coherent process. It depends on what the language of the order would convey, in the circumstances in which the Court made it, so far as these circumstances were before the Court and patent to the parties. The reasons for making the order which are given by the Court in its judgment are an overt and authoritative statement of the circumstances which it regarded as relevant. They are therefore always admissible to construe the order. In particular, the interpretation of an order may be critically affected by knowing what the Court considered to be the issue which its order was supposed to resolve."
"36. Counsel for Lufthansa pointed out that there was no order refusing liberty to apply to raise the Adjourned Issues on an inquiry or account. That is literally correct, since paragraph [11] contains no such language. However the first recital identifies the Adjourned Issues and the fourth recital says in terms 'UPON the Adjourned Issues no longer needing to be determined in the light of the Court's Judgment'. To my mind this implies there is no such liberty in paragraph [11], since none would be needed for issues which no longer needed to be determined. Paragraph [11] still makes sense, since it is merely setting up a liberty to apply for all other directions on the inquiry or account.
37. The Defendants submitted that the combination of paragraph [11] and the fourth recital discharged the liberty to apply which had been granted previously in respect of adjourned issues. It seems to me that this is no more than a different route to the same conclusion as I have just reached."
"41. By 'a wider remedy than the remedy it will be entitled to on the basis of the findings as to infringement in the first judgment' the Judge must in my view have meant a wider remedy than those remedies referred to in his Order. …
42. In the above passage the Judge's primary focus was plainly on the possibility of appeal by the Defendants. However the Judge still concluded that:
a) absent a successful appeal Lufthansa did not want a determination of the Adjourned Issues in order to allow it to argue for a wider remedy than the Judge was prepared to (and did) grant, and
b) Lufthansa did not want to keep the Adjourned Issues alive.
43. This is why the Judge ruled that the Adjourned Issues no longer needed to be determined and why he crossed out the words 'in relation to determination of the Adjourned Issues'. In order words, my conclusion as to what the Judge's Order implied is a correct one."
"I now draw the above together.
a) It seems to me, for the reasons I have given, that the Order does prevent Lufthansa raising the Adjourned Issues on the account. Furthermore the Order gives effect to the Judge's intention, as set out in his reasons.
b) Therefore if Lufthansa wants to raise the Adjourned Issues, it needs to appeal against Morgan J's Order."
Lufthansa's application for permission to appeal against Recorder Campbell's order
Lufthansa's application for relief from sanction
Lord Justice Phillips:
Lord Justice Peter Jackson: