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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lappet Manufacturing Company Ltd & Anor v Rassam & Ors (Rev1) [2022] EWHC 1412 (Ch) (13 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/1412.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1412 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
SHORTER TRIALS SCHEME
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) LAPPET MANUFACTURING COMPANY LIMITED (2) SHEMAGH AL BASSAM COMPANY |
Claimants |
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- and |
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(1) MR BASIL IBRAHIM RASSAM (2) MR IBRAHIM RASSAM (3) LONDON TEXTILE INDUSTRIES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Christopher Hall (instructed by Harper James) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 3 May 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Adam Johnson:
Introduction & Background
The Claim and the Issues in Outline
"An inquiry as to damages for infringement of the Registered Trade Marks (including damages pursuant to the Intellectual property (Enforcement, etc.) Regulations 2006) or at the Claimants' option, an account of profits."
Issue of the Claim Form
"The Claimants are unable at this stage to quantify damages; however, they believe them to be substantial.
This is an intellectual property claim, and in the normal course will proceed by way of a split trial with liability being dealt with first and then quantum, should the Claimants establish liability.
If the Claimants succeed on liability, the Claimants undertake to pay the appropriate Court fee upon an order of the Court directing all due sums to be paid by an inquiry as to damages and the Claimants electing for such an inquiry (or if appropriate an account of profits save that such an account is thought to be non-monetary relief and so covered by the fee already paid)."
Other Points
" took the Counterfeit Yashmaghs from a large box, was only willing to accept cash and was unwilling to give a receipt. In the course of the visit the first defendant said that he was originally a manufacturer but was now only a wholesaler and purchased the shawls which were manufactured in Scotland. The first defendant also said he was an exporter and was sending 120 yashmaghs to a Sheikh in Dubai the following day".
"The goods obtained by your clients during their investigation in September 2021 form part of this left over stock, which regrettably, was mixed up in our clients' current inventory. There is no more of this old stock left for our clients to destroy and they estimate that fewer than 100 pieces were sold".
The Jurisdiction Application
The Parties' Positions
"1. Subject to the following provisions of this practice direction, proceedings which both the High Court and the County Court have jurisdiction to deal with may be started in the High Court or in the County Court.
Where to start proceedings
2.1 Proceedings (whether for damages or for a specified sum) may not be started in the High Court unless the value of the claim is more than £100,000.
3.6 If a claim for damages or for an unspecified sum is started in the High Court, the claim form must:
(1) state that the claimant expects to recover more than £100,000 (or £50,000 or more if the claim is for personal injuries); or
(2) state that some enactment provides that the claim may only be commenced in the High Court and specify that enactment; or
(3) state that the claim is to be in one of the specialist High Court lists (see CPR Parts 49 and 5862) and specify that list.
3.7 If the contents of a claim form commencing specialist proceedings comply with the requirements of the specialist list in question the claim form will also satisfy paragraph 3.6 above."
Discussion and Conclusion
"Subject to paragraphs 2.1 and 2.2 above [2.1 is set out above; 2.2 deals with personal injury claims], a claim should be started in the high Court if by reason of
(1) the financial value of the claim and the amount in dispute; and/or
(2) the complexity of the facts, legal issues, remedies or procedures involved, and/or
(3) the importance of the outcome of the claim to the public in general,
the claimant believes that the claim ought to be dealt with by a High Court judge".
"(a) the financial value of the claim and the amount in dispute, if different;
(b) whether it would be more convenient or fair for hearings (including the trial) to be held in some other court;
(c) the availability of a judge specialising in the type of claim in question ;
(d) whether the facts, legal issues, remedies or procedures involved are simple or complex;
".
"2.2 A claim with an estimated value of less than £100,000 will generally, unless:
(a) it is required by an enactment to be tried in the High Court,
(b) it falls within a specialist list, or
(c) it falls within one of the categories specified in 2.6 below or is otherwise within the criteria of article 7(5) of the High Court and County Courts Jurisdiction Order 1991,
be transferred to a county court".
i) As to the first point, the heading to PD7A para. 2 is "Where to start proceedings" - the same topic covered in the 1991 Order, Art 4A. PD7A, para. 3.6(1), also relied on by the Defendants, is concerned with the question of what the claim form must contain if an action is to be "started in the High Court".
ii) It is true that neither of those paragraphs refer in terms to a "claim for money" but it seems to me clear that "[p]roceedings for damages or for a specified sum" (PD7A para. 2.1), and claims "for damages or for an unspecified sum" (PD7A, para. 3.6(1)), are claims for money.
The Transfer Application
The Parties' Positions
Relevant Principles
"9.1 When deciding whether to order a transfer of proceedings to or from the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court the court will consider whether
(1) a party can only afford to bring or defend the claim in the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court; and
(2) the claim is appropriate to be determined by the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court having regard in particular to
(a) the value of the claim (including the value of an injunction);
(b) the complexity of the issues; and
(c) the estimated length of the trial."
"A party may have limited financial resources and may therefore require the lower cost of litigating in the IPEC and the protection of cost caps in order to gain access to justice. If this can be shown, it is likely to be treated as a strong (though not overriding) reason to have the case herd in the IPEC. This will be particularly the case if the court reaches the view that there is a risk of a better funded opponent being able to bring unfair financial pressure to bear should the case be heard outside the IPEC".
Discussion and Conclusion
" to safeguard parties from the risk of paying large sums in costs to the opposing party at the conclusion of the proceedings. The intention is to ensure that parties without the benefit of large financial resources are not deterred from seeking access to justice because of the high costs of litigation".
Overall Conclusion and Disposition