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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Permavent Ltd & Anor v Makin [2021] EWHC 467 (Ch) (02 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/467.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 467 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PATENTS COURT
SHORTER TRIALS SCHEME
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1L |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PERMAVENT LIMITED (2) GREENHILL INDUSTRIAL HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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STEPHEN JOHN MAKIN |
Defendant |
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Mr Jonathan Lester (instructed by The Commercial Law Practice Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17 and 18 February 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
COVID-19: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email. It will also be released for publication on BAILII and other websites. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10.30 pm on 2 March 2021.
MR JUSTICE ZACAROLI:
Background
"The patents applications that I filed were done whilst I was a director of Permavent and [it] was my understanding that … because of this and because Permavent has paid for these applications then they automatically belonged to Permavent. As you explained this is not the case then I would like to correct that error in filing. Ownership of these patents should be placed into the name Permavent Ltd should they be granted."
"My clients had concerns that your client may challenge the patents in the future, and giving him an interest in those patents was seen to be a way of giving him an interest in the success of the patents."
The Settlement Agreement
"2.10.1. claim entitlement or other right, title, licence or other interest to or in any of the Assigned IP Rights;
"2.10.2. challenge GIHL's sole legal or beneficial ownership title to any of the Assigned IP following completion of the IP Assignment Agreement; or
"2.10.3. challenge the validity of or seek to revoke or invalidate any of the Assigned IP Rights"
"The Easy Roof System Payment has been calculated upon an assumption that none of the circumstances in clauses 2.10.1, 2.10.2 and/or 2.10.3 arises. If after the date of this Settlement Agreement there is:
2.11.1. any claim made of entitlement to or other right, title, licence or other interest to in any of the Assigned IP Rights;
2.11.2. any challenge made to GIHL's sole legal or beneficial ownership title to any of the Assigned Patent Rights following completion of the IP Assignment Agreement; or
2.11.3. any challenge made to the validity of or seek to revoke or invalidate any of the Assigned Patent Rights
by Stephen Makin, any Related Party of Stephen Makin (or any other person, firm or company in which he or a Related Party has an interest), or any third party to whom Stephen Makin or any Related Party of Stephen Makin has provided assistance or encouragement, then without prejudice to any rights or remedies available to any Party for a breach of clause 2.10:
2.11.4. the amount of the Easy Roof System Payment shall immediately be reduced to zero per cent. (0%) of Gross Turnover and Licence Fee and no further Easy Roof System Payment shall become due or payable;
2.11.5. the Easy Roof System Payment shall be adjusted retrospectively as if no Easy Roof System Payment had ever been due and as such:
(a) any amount of Easy Roof System Payment previously due but not yet paid to Stephen Makin in accordance with this Settlement Agreement shall no longer be due and payable to him; and
(b) Stephen Makin shall within 7 (seven) days pay a sum to Permavent in the same amount as the total amounts of Easy Roof System Payments paid to him as at that date; and
2.11.6. Stephen Makin shall become immediately liable to pay the sum of £616,667 to GIHL."
Breach of the Settlement Agreement
Summary Judgment
"The court declares that by recording an 'equitable interest' in the Patents on the Register of Patents at the UKIPO the Defendant has acted in breach of clause 2.10.1 of the Confidential Settlement Agreement between the Claimants and others and the Defendant executed on 8 September 2017."
The Law
"The true test is whether the impugned provision is a secondary obligation which imposes a detriment on the contract-breaker out of all proportion to any legitimate interest of the innocent party in the enforcement of the primary obligation. The innocent party can have no proper interest in simply punishing the defaulter. His interest is in performance or in some appropriate alternative to performance. In the case of a straightforward damages clause, that interest will rarely extend beyond compensation for the breach, and we therefore expect that Lord Dunedin's four tests [in Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Company v New Garage and Motor Company Limited [1915] AC 79, at p.87] would usually be perfectly adequate to determine its validity. But compensation is not necessarily the only legitimate interest that the innocent party may have in the performance of the defaulter's primary obligations."
"…the court has to be careful not to set too stringent a standard and bear in mind that what the parties have agreed should normally be upheld…"
"I therefore conclude that the correct test for a penalty is whether the sum or remedy stipulated as a consequence of a breach of contract is exorbitant or unconscionable when regard is had to the innocent party's interest in the performance of the contract. Where the test is to be applied to a clause fixing the level of damages to be paid on breach, an extravagant disproportion between the stipulated sum and the highest level of damages that could possibly arise from the breach would amount to a penalty and thus be unenforceable. In other circumstances the contractual provision that applies on breach is measured against the interest of the innocent party which is protected by the contract and the court asks whether the remedy is exorbitant or unconscionable."
"What is necessary in each case is to consider, first, whether any (and if so what) legitimate business interest is served and protected by the clause, and, second, whether, assuming such an interest to exist, the provision made for the interest is nevertheless in the circumstances extravagant, exorbitant or unconscionable. In judging what is extravagant, exorbitant or unconscionable, I consider (despite contrary expressions of view) that the extent to which the parties were negotiating at arm's length on the basis of legal advice and had every opportunity to appreciate what they were agreeing must at least be a relevant factor."
"In a negotiated contract between properly advised parties of comparable bargaining power, the strong initial presumption must be that the parties themselves are the best judges of what is legitimate in a provision dealing with the consequences of breach."
(1) What legitimate business interest of the claimants is served and protected by clauses 2.11.4 to 2.11.6?
(2) Is the detriment imposed on Mr Makin as a consequence of his breach unconscionable, exorbitant, extravagant or out of all proportion to that interest?
"A party's legitimate interests may extend beyond the loss caused by the breach as measured by a conventional assessment of contractual damages. They may extend to the impact of non-performance on the broader commercial interests the parties seek to achieve or protect through the contract. Those interests may extend beyond the four corners of the contract, for example if they relate to a system of business of which the contract forms a part."
Proportionality of the Detriment to the Protected Interest
"Fourthly, I am not persuaded by Mr Bloch's argument that clause 5.1 was exorbitant because it could be triggered by a minor breach of clause 11.2, such as an unsuccessful solicitation of a senior employee. That appears to me to be unrealistic. Clause 5.1 was not addressing the loss which Cavendish might suffer from breach of the restrictive covenant, whether an isolated and minor breach or repeated and fundamental breaches. It was addressing the disloyalty of a seller who was prepared in any way to attack the company's goodwill. No question therefore arises of a presumption of a penalty where the same sum is payable on the occurrence of several events which may cause serious or trifling damages…"
The nature of the Protected Interest
"The Seller hereby acknowledges and agrees that if the Seller or any person or legal entity under his control or influence or in which he has a shared interest Challenges any of the intellectual property rights owned by the Company, or any pending intellectual property applications made by the Company, at any time after the date of this Agreement, such Challenge shall damage the interests and value of the Company. In the event of any such Challenge, without prejudice to any other claim that the Company may have against the Seller, the Seller shall immediately repay to the Company the sum of £616,667. "Challenge(s)" shall mean makes a complaint or negative representation or claim of any kind with any authority or person, whether verbally or in writing, in relation to the ownership or originality or validity or any other aspect of any of the Company's intellectual property rights."
"… Having agreed to sell his shares for £650k, in order to protect the business from any hostile attack on the patents Timo and I offered Steve a royalty payment with the thinking that it would keep him motivated to support the pending Plain Easy patent application and not to be tempted to challenge the existing patents out of malice."
"Timo and I attended an initial meeting with Stephen and yourself to discuss this new principle and at that meeting I made it very clear that if we were to proceed it would be on the basis that there would be protection built into both the agreements against a hostile challenge from Steve. Steve agreed as he stated he had no intention of attacking the patents…
…For these reasons it is not unreasonable that the company would expect to cease payment and recover any previous payments under the terms of the deed of assignment if Steve challenges the patents … It is also not unreasonable that I would expect a level of compensation under the SPA as Steve has offered no other meaningful warranties."
"Steve has demonstrated an escalating level of aggressive and unreasonable behaviour and shows a total lack of respect for due process and the law. I won't embarrass him by showing his solicitor a recent email that he sent directly to our solicitor, but it demonstrates how impossible it would be to pursue him for damages via future litigation."
"I suggest you tell Yeremeyev to ensure the deal goes through quickly because neither of you appear intelligent enough to ever know what I might or might not be doing."
"I make this promise to everyone and I bloody mean it, get this deal done by Friday or I officially remove myself from the sale and you will be shocked at what I am going to do, but this is a warning, I have had enough of this shit."
"Please be advised Lisa that when Yeremeyev goes then my battle with [sic] be with you and the financial and social fallout will be severe for you so you should tread carefully."
"Oh! and while your [sic] at it tell your oily clients, what's their name again? wood and yeremeyeva, that this has only just started for them."
"I will apply to the court to have your case struck on grounds of no real chance of success. I will apply to the court for a civil restraint order against Redd and the claimant based on grounds of vexatious actions designed to bring detriment to me and my family.
In a separate court I will also be lodging a claim for unfair dismissal and unfair prejudice. In a separate court I will be applying to set aside and return the share transfer of my companies to Alesja Yeremeyeva on the grounds of incorrect filing and non-payment of funds."
"…have the power to invalidate patents and Yeremeyev will have nothing except a large bill for the patent box they have benefitted from. He can bring whatever case he wants against me but please be warned it is not possible to liquidate my property and my funds are depleted so even in the unlikely event you were successful in your fanciful adventure the only outcome will be that he will loose [sic] the patents and I will have no choice but to go bankrupt and then he really will have nothing wont he ... The clock. Is ticking for you bully boy, I mean it and he knows I do not care for money and I am not afraid to stand up to mercenaries like you in court, I do not need legal representation to overturn your fictitious tat. Your clients is aware from a previous case that a litigant in person has protection under the law."
Proportionality of the Detriment to the Protected Interest
"As Burton J graphically observed in para 43 of his judgment, once Cavendish could no longer trust the Sellers to observe the restrictive covenants, "the wolf was in the fold". Loyalty is indivisible. Its absence in a business like this introduces a very significant business risk whose impact cannot be measured simply by reference to the known and provable consequences of particular breaches. It is clear that this business was worth considerably less to Cavendish if that risk existed than if it did not."
"It is not necessary in all cases for the court to assess the damages that would have been awarded at common law for breach, but there may be cases where such calculation is the measure of the performance interest. That is likely to be the case where the impugned clause purports to provide a pre-estimate of damage, or where the impugned clause appears in a contract where the only legitimate interest in performance is properly analysed as the monetary value of the losses which flow directly from that breach, and which are readily calculated."
Conclusion