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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> MacDermid Offshore Solutions Llc v Niche Products Ltd [2013] EWHC 1493 (Ch) (05 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/1493.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1493 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE PATENTS
COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MACDERMID OFFSHORE SOLUTIONS LLC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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NICHE PRODUCTS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Michael Hicks (instructed by Gateley LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
"3. MacDermid and Niche are rivals in the oil business. Niche is based in Lancashire, has about 17 employees and a turnover of £5 million. MacDermid is incorporated in the USA with a turnover of between £24 million to £30 million. Both companies sell hydraulic fluids for use in subsea production control systems. These fluids are used to control the functions of oil and gas wells via remote hydraulic systems at a considerable distance, perhaps as many as tens or even hundreds of kilometres. Once installed the systems have to remain functional for a long time, perhaps in excess of 25 years. These are obviously demanding requirements.
4. Niche has a product called Pelagic 100 and MacDermid has a product called Oceanic HW 443. They are directly competitive products. As I understand it the main ingredients of these fluids are water and ethylene glycol but they also contain other ingredients such as lubricant and corrosion inhibitor additives.
5. The issue at the heart of this dispute is a new formulation of MacDermid's Oceanic HW 443 fluid. Niche says that Oceanic HW 443 has been supplied for more than 20 years but in 2009/2010 MacDermid changed the formulation of its Oceanic HW 443 product in order to comply with European Regulation No 1907/2007 concerning the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals. This regulation is known as "REACh". I will refer to the new formulation as Oceanic HW 443 v2".
6. Niche says that MacDermid was telling customers that it was appropriate to consider that Oceanic HW 443 v2 had the same characteristics as Oceanic HW 443 v1 because none of the chemical or performance properties of the product had been changed. Niche conducted comparative tests of Oceanic HW 443 v1 and v2 in April/May 2012 and produced a report setting out the results.
7. The Niche report contends that Oceanic HW 443 v2 is a different product from Oceanic HW 443 v1. It contends that the two products contain different lubricant and corrosion inhibitor additives, have different physical properties and perform differently in various tests. The Niche report contends that Niche considers the major cause of the changes observed was that the corrosion inhibitor has been changed. In Oceanic HW 443 v1 the corrosion inhibitor which Niche believes is present is a tertiary sulphonamide whereas in Oceanic HW 443 v2 Niche believes the corrosion inhibitor is a secondary sulphonamide. Whereas the relevant nitrogen in a tertiary sulphonamide has two alkyl groups and a sulphonyl group connected to it, the relevant nitrogen in a secondary sulphonamide has only one alkyl group in addition to the sulphonyl group bonded to it, and so has a hydrogen atom at its third bond, which, Niche contends, is a chemically active acidic hydrogen, with the potential to undergo further reaction. The original tertiary sulphonamide did not have the same potential. Niche argues that MacDermid has contended that the two corrosion inhibitors have the same chemical formula. Niche accepts that they have the same chemical composition but argues that they have different structures and therefore different chemical properties. The structures are given in the Niche report. The methyl group on the tertiary sulphonamide in the inhibitor believed to be in Oceanic HW 443 v1 is not present on the secondary sulphonamide believed to be in Oceanic HW 443 v2 but an extra methyl group is present elsewhere in the molecule. This would explain why the chemical compositions of the two inhibitors are the same but their chemical structures are distinct.
8. Of course even if Niche is right and there are differences in the additives in Oceanic HW 443 v2 as opposed to v1, it by no means follows that there is any material difference in the properties of these fluids. Niche contends the differences exist and they are material. MacDermid has not yet addressed whether it accepts the underlying differences exist at all but in any case, crucially, it does not accept that Oceanic HW 443 v2 has materially different properties from Oceanic HW 443 v1.
9. Since MacDermid did not agree with the Niche report, MacDermid issued a rebuttal letter on 18th June 2012. The rebuttal states that MacDermid has "received notification regarding the distribution of misleading information from a specific competitor on Oceanic HW 443 Series v1 verses v2". It states that the chemical specifications and performance of Oceanic HW 443 remain unchanged and that "there has been no change in either the important chemical or the performance properties of Oceanic HW 443, the v2 merely relates to the UK environmental registrations. Further, MacDermid has been producing Oceanic HW 443 under the v2 designation for over two years in the UK and the fluid has been through the rigorous testing at leading subsea OEM's yielding the same performance results as v1, as would be expected".
10. Both the Niche report and the MacDermid rebuttal have been sent to customers.
11. The disagreement is clear and English solicitors acting for Niche and MacDermid exchanged correspondence between about June and August 2012.
12. One of the sub-issues arising is whether the correspondence has a bearing on the fact that MacDermid sued Niche in Texas (on 20th August 2012) four weeks before Niche sued MacDermid in the Patents County Court (PCC) in London. Niche says that when it looked like Niche was going to sue (in England) MacDermid said in correspondence that "time was not of the essence" so that Niche relaxed. Then, in the meantime, MacDermid suddenly started proceedings in Texas. So, says Niche, MacDermid tactically induced Niche to delay filing proceedings in England and its tactics are the only reason the action in Texas started a few weeks before the action here. MacDermid does not accept this characterisation of the correspondence. It says that the last message from Niche terminated the correspondence, using the phrase "see you in court" and so there was no tactically induced delay. This sub-issue is discussed at some length between the parties' US attorneys since it appears to have a bearing as far as US Federal law is concerned in dealing with jurisdiction between US states. In the USA MacDermid contends it could rely on a "first to file" rule as founding jurisdiction whereas Niche contends it could rely on an exception to the "first to file" rule when the first case was filed in anticipation of the second case.
13. In any event each has started proceedings against the other which are broadly equivalent, making allowances for the different laws of the USA and the UK. In the UK, Niche sued MacDermid for malicious falsehood, arguing that the MacDermid rebuttal letter is a malicious falsehood. Although MacDermid is a foreign company, no leave to serve the proceedings outside the jurisdiction was needed because MacDermid's trading name is registered as the name of a UK Establishment pursuant to the Overseas Companies Regulations 2009 with an address in Wigan and as conducting the business of the sales and marketing of offshore drilling chemicals. In Texas, MacDermid sued Niche under the Lanham Act (false and misleading advertising). MacDermid argues that the Niche report is false and misleading. In the Texas proceedings MacDermid sued both Niche itself and a US company called Niche LLC of which Niche is a part owner. I will return to Niche LLC below. Although there was a disagreement in Texas about whether Niche was duly served, that point is no longer live. The Texas proceedings are properly on foot.
14. At the heart of this dispute is a simple question - whether Oceanic HW 443 v2 is materially different from Oceanic HW 443 v1. If "yes" then Niche are right, if "no" then MacDermid are right. Both torts (malicious falsehood and, so far as I can see from the pleadings, infringement of the Lanham Act) have more to them than this question, such as the issue of malice in the UK, but in truth the centre of gravity of this dispute depends on that relatively simple factual question. To resolve the issue will require expert evidence, will involve a bit of chemistry and no doubt evidence about the performance of hydraulic fluids and their additives, but it is not an unduly complex technical issue. It is the kind of technical question decided in patent cases on a regular basis.
15. The UK proceedings also include two further claims by Niche, for copyright infringement and breach of confidence. These allegations relate to certain videos of the tests undertaken by Niche to produce the report. The videos were only available on a private part of Niche's website, accessible only to persons who had been given a username and password by Niche. Niche says that MacDermid (from an IP address in Wigan) downloaded the videos and therefore infringed copyright in them and misused Niche's confidential information. These claims are clearly secondary to the main dispute. It may be that the real motivation for their inclusion is for them to play a part in the parties' jockeying for positions in relation to jurisdiction as between the English court and the Texas court. In my judgment they have peripheral relevance to the questions I have to decide because the real dispute is the one I have described already. I also bear in mind that MacDermid has expressly agreed that Niche could bring those claims as counterclaims in Texas if it wishes to do so."
Ground 1 of the Appeal
i) First, the court should determine whether the foreign proceedings should be taken into account as relevant. In some cases, they would not be relevant, as where they have been initiated only in order to demonstrate the existence of a competing jurisdiction, or where they have not passed the early stage of initiation of proceedings.ii) Secondly, if consideration of the foreign proceedings is not ruled out, the court should determine whether the foreign court is, to use the phrase used by Lord Diplock in The Abidin Daver at p 411, "a natural and appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute".
iii) Thirdly, if the foreign court is such a forum, the question is whether the claimant in the English proceedings "can establish objectively by cogent evidence that there is some personal or juridical advantage that would be available to him only in the English action that is of such importance that it would cause injustice to deprive him of it": see again Lord Diplock at p 412.
"In my view as in that of Sheen J., not only was Turkey the country with which the matter litigated had the closest connections but also the natural and appropriate forum from the point of view of convenience and expense has, from the outset, been and still remains: the District Court of Sariyer in Turkey, where proceedings were promptly started by the Turkish shipowners against the Cuban shipowners as defendants and were proceeding with all due despatch when the writ in the English action was issued by the Cuban shipowners."
"So I turn to the crucial question of what influence upon the exercise of his discretion whether to grant a stay of the English proceedings or not the judge should have attributed to the fact that at the time the stay was applied for there was already proceeding in a natural and appropriate forum, the District Court of Sariyer, litigation between the same parties about the same subject matter in which the roles of plaintiff and defendant were reversed.
My Lords, the essential change in the attitude of the English courts to pending or prospective litigation in foreign jurisdictions that has been achieved step-by-step during the last 10 years as a result of the successive decisions of this House in The Atlantic Star [1974] A.C. 436; MacShannon [1978] A.C. 795 and Amin Rasheed [1984] A.C. 50, is that judicial chauvinism has been replaced by judicial comity to an extent which I think the time is now ripe to acknowledge frankly is, in the field of law with which this appeal is concerned, indistinguishable from the Scottish legal doctrine of forum non conveniens."
"the plea can never be sustained unless the court is satisfied that there is some other tribunal, having competent jurisdiction, in which the case may be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and for the ends of justice."
"in order to justify a stay, two conditions had to be satisfied, one positive and the other negative: (a) the defendant had to satisfy the court that there was another forum to whose jurisdiction he was amenable in which justice could be done between the parties at substantially less inconvenience or expense, and (b) the stay was not to deprive the plaintiff of a legitimate personal or juridical advantage which would be available to him if he invoked the jurisdiction of the English court."
adding that
"If the distinction between this re-statement of the English law and the Scottish doctrine of forum non conveniens might on examination prove to be a fine one, I cannot think that it is any the worse for that."
"Thirdly, and this concept emerges most clearly from the speech of Lord Wilberforce in The Atlantic Star [1974] A.C. 436, the exercise of the court's discretion in any particular case necessarily involves the balancing of all the relevant factors on either side, those favouring the grant of a stay on the one hand, and those militating against it on the other. Such balancing may be a difficult process and some cases may be very near the line."
"Where a suit about a particular subject matter between a plaintiff and a defendant is already pending in a foreign court which is a natural and appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute between them, and the defendant in the foreign suit seeks to institute as plaintiff an action in England about the same matter to which the person who is plaintiff in the foreign suit is made defendant, then the additional inconvenience and expense which must result from allowing two sets of legal proceedings to be pursued concurrently in two different countries where the same facts will be in issue and the testimony of the same witnesses required, can only be justified if the would-be plaintiff can establish objectively by cogent evidence that there is some personal or juridical advantage that would be available to him only in the English action that is of such importance that it would cause injustice to him to deprive him of it."
"In my judgment the criticism made by the Court of Appeal, that Sheen J. erred in principle in treating the co-existence of the Turkish action as a decisive factor on the facts of the present case, is not justified. It was not a case of mere balance of convenience; it was an overwhelming case. It was not a case of mere disadvantage of multiplicity of suits, it was a case which was liable to cause, if both actions continued, much difficulty and trouble. On the footing that the Court of Appeal were wrong in holding that the judge erred in principle in the way that they thought there was, in my opinion, no valid ground for their interfering with the exercise of the discretion vested in him as the judge of first instance."
"There was ample material from which Sheen J. came to the conclusion that the Sariyer District Court of Turkey is a forum in which justice can be done between the parties at substantially less inconvenience and expense and that a stay of the English proceedings will not deprive the Cuban owners of a legitimate personal or jurisdictional advantage which will be available to the Cuban owners if they invoke the jurisdiction of the English court. In other cases, where these conditions are not satisfied, English proceedings will not be stayed merely because of the dangers and difficulties of concurrent actions. There is ample scope for a litigant to choose the exercise of English jurisdiction …… notwithstanding that proceedings have already been instituted under a foreign jurisdiction provided that the events which happen prior to the hearing of an application for a stay of the English proceedings do not demonstrate that the foreign forum is to be preferred on grounds of convenience and expense. An ugly rush to get one action decided ahead of the other is not to be replaced by an ugly rush to issue proceedings in one country before the issue of proceedings in another……."
"This passage has been quoted on a number of occasions in later cases in your Lordships' House. Even so, I do not think that Lord Diplock himself would have regarded this passage as constituting an immutable statement of the law, but rather as a tentative statement at an early stage of a period of development…"
(i) The basic principle is that a stay will only be granted on the ground of forum non conveniens where the court is satisfied that there is some other available forum, having competent jurisdiction, which is the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, ie in which the case may be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice.
(ii) In general the burden of proof rests on the defendant to persuade the court to exercise its discretion to grant a stay. If the court is satisfied that there is another available forum which is prima facie the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, the burden will then shift to the plaintiff to show that there are special circumstances by reason of which justice requires that the trial should nevertheless take place in this country (see (vi), below).
(iii) The question being whether there is some other forum which is the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, it is pertinent to ask whether the fact that the plaintiff has, ex hypothesi, founded jurisdiction as of right in accordance with the law of this country, of itself gives the plaintiff an advantage in the sense that the English court will not lightly disturb jurisdiction so established.
After some discussion of this topic, Lord Goff commented that it is significant that, in all the leading English cases where a stay has been granted (The Atlantic Star, MacShannon, Trendtex [1982] AC 679 and The Abidin Daver) there had been another clearly more appropriate forum. Lord Goff's opinion was that the burden resting on the defendant is not just to show that England is not the natural or appropriate forum for the trial, but to establish that there is another available forum which is clearly or distinctly more appropriate than the English forum. In this way, proper regard is paid to the fact that jurisdiction has been founded in England as of right.
(iv) Since the question is whether there exists some other forum which is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, the court will look first to see what factors there are which point in the direction of another forum. In that regard, Lord Goff adopted the expression used by Lord Keith in The Abidin Daver at 415, when he referred to the "natural forum" as being "that with which the action had the most real and substantial connection." So it is for connecting factors in this sense that the court must first look; and these will include not only factors affecting convenience or expense (such as availability of witnesses), but also other factors such as the law governing the relevant transaction and the places where the parties respectively reside or carry on business.
(v) If the court concludes at that stage that there is no other available forum which is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, it will ordinarily refuse a stay.
(vi) If however the court concludes at that stage that there is some other available forum which prima facie is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, it will ordinarily grant a stay unless there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted. In this inquiry, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, including circumstances which go beyond those taken into account when considering connecting factors with other jurisdictions.
"that the balance of fairness… is such that it is appropriate for the proceedings in [France] to be disposed of before further steps are taken in the proceedings [in England]."
"that the court in this country looks first to see what factors there are which connect the case with another forum. If, on the basis of that inquiry, the court concludes that there is another available forum which, prima facie, is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, it will ordinarily grant a stay, unless there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted: see [Spiliada]. The same principle is applicable whether or not there are other relevant proceedings already pending in the alternative forum: see The Abidin Daver…411, per Lord Diplock. However, the existence of such proceedings may, depending on the circumstances, be relevant to the inquiry. Sometimes they may be of no relevance at all, for example, if one party has commenced the proceedings for the purpose of demonstrating the existence of a competing jurisdiction, or the proceedings have not passed beyond the stage of the initiating process. But if, for example, genuine proceedings have been started and have not merely been started but have developed to the stage where they have had some impact upon the dispute between the parties, especially if such impact is likely to have a continuing effect, then this may be a relevant factor to be taken into account when considering whether the foreign jurisdiction provides the appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute between the parties."
"In the course of his careful and illuminating judgment Hirst J. dealt fully with the principles laid down by the House of Lords in The Spiliada [1987] A.C.460 and also made reference to the more recent decision of the Court of Appeal in Du Pont v Agnew [1987] 2 Lloyds L.R. 585. For my part I find it impossible to say that the judge erred in principle or either took into account some irrelevant consideration or ignored a relevant one. He had well in mind the general undesirability of concurrent proceedings in two different jurisdictions but nevertheless reached the conclusion that the proceedings in England should not be stayed. "
"But as I read that passage (ie the passage from Dicey referring to De Dampierre) any such dilution is confined to cases where foreign proceedings have not passed beyond the stage of being initiated and have been started merely for the sake of demonstrating that a competing jurisdiction exists. That is not the position here and while the existence of prior foreign proceedings is not, by itself, decisive, it deserves weight…"
"[Lord Goff] made no express reference to the difficulties inherent in parallel proceedings as a reason in themselves (absent anything else) to justify a stay, any more than Lord Diplock did in his speech in The Abidin Daver. The ratio of that case depends on the foreign court being a natural and appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute. Indeed it is clear from the test formulated by Lord Goff in Spiliada that the jurisdiction of the English court can only be displaced if the foreign court is the more natural and appropriate forum. The commencement of an earlier action there does not by itself establish that. This point was confirmed by Lord Goff in the later case of [De Dampierre] at page 108, where he expressly considered the effect of existing proceedings in the foreign jurisdiction [Patten J went on to cite the passage which I have already set out above]"
i) Determine whether the foreign proceedings should be taken into account in accordance with De Dampierre.ii) If they are taken into account, ask whether the foreign court is "a natural and appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute" (by which Ms Menashy means, as I understand it, whether the foreign court is a suitable forum).
iii) If it is, ask whether it would cause injustice to deprive the English claimant of some personal or juridical advantage.
Ground 2 of the Appeal
Ground 3
Conclusion