[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Woolley & Anor v Up Global Sourcing UK Ltd & Anor [2014] EWHC 493 (Ch) (27 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/493.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 493 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
____________________
(1) NIGEL WOOLLEY (2) TIMESOURCE LIMITED |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
(1) UP GLOBAL SOURCING UK LIMITED (Formerly ULTIMATE PRODUCTS LIMITED) (2) THE LACMANDA GROUP LIMITED (Formerly HENLEYS CLOTHING LIMITED) |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Mark Platts-Mills QC and Mr Thomas Moody-Stuart (instructed by Kuits Steinhart Levy LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 17-20 February 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Pelling QC :
Introduction
"The HENLEYS Licences demonstrate both parties intention to:
(a) use the mark HENLEYS mark in relation to watches and jewellery;
(b) cooperate and collaborate closely in the exploitation of the HENLEYS mark in relation to watches and jewellery;
(c) benefit financially from the exploitation of the HENLEYS mark in relation to watches and jewellery
Under the HENLEYS licences all goodwill deriving from use of the mark in relation to watches accrues to the Second Defendant"
The "HENLEYS Licences" referred to in the Re-amended Particulars of Claim are defined in Paragraph 11 of that pleading as being the HCL 2007 Licence and the licence that replaced in dated 1 November 2009. It was not alleged in terms against either Defendant that the grant of the HCL 2007 Licence (or indeed the licence that replaced it dated 1 November 2009) constituted either trade mark infringement or passing off. The Defendants' case concerning the allegation of joint tortfeasorship is pleaded at Paragraph 19 of the Amended Defence in these terms:
"Insofar as the court finds the First Defendant liable for infringement of the First Claimant's CTM in respect of goods sold under licence from the Second Defendant, it is admitted that the Second Defendant is jointly liable therefore. Save as aforesaid, paragraphs 17 and 18 are denied."
i) HCL's core business was selling its clothing products wholesale see [7];
ii) During the period relevant to these proceedings Henleys' products were sold retail by a HCL subsidiary called Henleys Retail Limited ("HRL") at some 18 stores but they had closed by the time of the trial and HRL had been placed in administration see [7];
iii) TSL had established a substantial goodwill in the sale of watches under the Henley name see [35];
iv) The Henley and Henleys marks were virtually the same and the addition of the letter "s" was of little or no significance; the brand names were overtly presented on the dials of watches in a very similar fashion with the same typeface frequently being used; the way in which the watches were marketed, the retail prices and the outlets through which they were sold "substantially" overlapped; and both Henley and Henleys watches were marketed as "fashion" watches see [38];
v) HCL had established considerable goodwill under its Henleys name in the clothing market, however " I cannot accept that the Henleys clothing brand will be known to buyers of watches generally. Nor can I accept that purchasers will buy without regard to the reputation of the watches themselves and are simply interested in external associations" - see [39];
vi) " sales of watches under the brand name HENLEYS engenders the belief that the watches are or are associated with HENLEY watches I emphasise that there is no question here of any deliberate deception of the public. But that is not the issue. The question is whether or not there has been a misrepresentation, and in my view there has" see [40]; and
vii) Damage had been suffered by the Claimants in consequence and in the result there had been passing off in relation to watches. see [43].
Mr Englehart did not make any findings concerning the joint tortfeasorship issue. He did not make any findings concerning the allegation of conspiracy made in Paragraph 18.1 of the Re-amended Particulars of Claim.
" The judge was greatly influenced by the similarity between the HENLEY name and the HENLEYS name. They are in truth virtually identical. The judge was entitled to reach the view that they would be perceived as such by all, or almost all, prospective purchasers. It followed that a substantial number of members of the public would be involved. "
" IT IS ADJUDGED that the Claimant succeed in their claim against the Defendants for passing off in relation to watches and judgment be entered for the Claimant on the said claim
AND IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Defendants be restrained from advertising, offering for sale, selling or supplying any watch bearing the name HENLEYS or any name colourably similar thereto or otherwise passing off watches not being those of the Claimants as and for such watches;
2. Nothing in this Order shall prevent the Defendants from advertising offering for sale, selling or supplying any watch bearing the words HENLEYS CLOTHING on the face thereof provided that the word CLOTHING is of equal prominence to the word HENLEYS
4. The Defendants do on or before 4 p.m. on 15 May 2012 at their option deliver up to the Claimants or destroy or obliterate upon oath, all goods, labels, advertisements, and other material in their possession, custody or control the use of which would breach the terms of the foregoing injunction
6. It is declared that the Claimants are entitled at their option to either:
a. An enquiry into damages, if any, suffered by the Claimants by reason of the Defendants acts of passing off in relation to watches or
b. An account of profits, if any, made by the Defendants or either of them as a result of the said acts of passing off "
The Issues
"By contrast with joint liability as tortfeasors for damages, including damages on a royalty basis, an account of profits operates against each defendant separately, requiring him or it to disgorge such profits as are shown to have been derived by that defendant from the relevant infringements the measure of liability is the profit derived by the defendant from the infringement."
i) As between UPL and the Claimants:
a) Whether the whole of the profit otherwise attributable to the sale by UPL of Henleys watches should be adjusted to take account of the fact that (on the Defendants'' case) a substantial number of the sales of Henleys watches was or would have been attributable to the concurrent goodwill that HCL established existed at trial. I refer to this issue as the "proportionality Issue" below;
b) Whether in striking the profit made by UPL there falls to be deducted from sales revenue:
i) Any element of central costs incurred by UPL;
ii) An apportioned amount of the costs incurred by UPL's watches division calculated by reference to the proportion of Henleys watches sales value or volumes bore to the total value or volume of sales generated during the relevant period by the Watches division (the position preferred by the Claimants' expert) or by references to the number of purchase and/or sales orders relevant to Henleys watches as a proportion of the whole of the number of purchase or sales orders generated by the watches division;
iii) Whether profits are to be calculated on a financial year by year basis with the year to 31 July 2012 being treated as a year that did not generate a profit (as the Claimants contend) or whether the account should be taken over the whole period of infringing activity as a single period with losses being set off against profits to arrive at the sum payable by UPL to the Claimants (as the Defendants contend);
iv) Whether losses made after the date of judgment in these proceedings (1 March 2012) should be ignored on the basis they are attributable to the proceedings rather than arising in the ordinary course of business;
ii) As between HCL and the Claimants:
a) Whether the royalties are properly recoverable as profit made from passing off;
b) Whether any sum is recoverable from HCL in respect of direct sales made through the Henleys shops operated by HRL given that it is common ground that the watches so sold were purchased by HCL from UPL and supplied to HRL at cost, that there is no evidence of what if any dividends were ever paid by HRL to HCL and that HRL is not and never has been a party to these proceedings and as to the calculation of the profit made from the direct sales other than those made by HRL.
The Profits Claim as against UPL
The Proportionality Issue
"The difficulties created by the plaintiff's pleaded case become I think only too apparent when one sees the form of the account that was finally ordered in this case, and which appears to me to be one that is virtually impossible to take and which emphasises what Mr Hoffmann has contended is an impermissible distinction between relevant and irrelevant confusion."
In my judgment therefore the correct approach is this first the Claimant must establish misrepresentation such as I have described. That has been established by the Claimants in this case. Once that is established then the appropriate account to be taken is one that is not qualified in the manner attempted by Slade J in My Kinda Town (ante) and which the Defendants urge me to adopt here.
" the six cases relied on afford authority for the proposition that in ordering an account of profits in a passing off case the court will ordinarily direct the account in a form wide enough to include all profits made by the defendant from his tortious acts "
Thirdly, whatever might have been the position in relation to earlier cases, by the time Weingarten v. Charles Bayer & Co [1905] 22 RPC 341 came to be decided there was no such qualification articulated see the speech of Lord McNaughten at 351 and Lord Lindley at 352.
The Central Costs Issue
i) An infringer is entitled to deduct any direct costs associated with the infringement and also any overheads to the extent that they have been increased by the infringement see [74];
ii) It is not permissible for a defendant to allocate a proportion of its general overheads to an infringing activity see [85];
iii) The evidential burden rests on the infringer to show that the relevant overheads are properly attributable to the infringing activity see [85]; and
iv) It followed that in any case where a defendant seeks to deduct an element of general overheads it will be for it to prove its business was running to capacity or that but for the infringement it would have sold other products or that its overheads would have been lower if it had not infringed see [87].
i) The reduction in UPL's global turnover that is the subject of Mr Screawn's calculation was of 28% - a drop that she describes as being " a level which one would ordinarily expect to lead to major restructuring in any business "and
ii) By contrast the Henleys watch business accounted for only 1.1 to 1.4% of UPL's global turnover, the loss of which in her opinion " would not automatically be expected to trigger dramatic action in normal business".
Apportionment of Direct Costs.
" this gives a more direct correlation to the activity involved. If there is a greater volume of orders this requires more staff time, testing, samples and travel expenditure to secure and process this business"
The Third Year Points.
The Profits Claim as against HCL
"The gist of the 2008 judgment was that the first defendant was liable for trademark infringement and passing off by carrying on a restaurant business in Central London under the name Cipriani London and the second and third defendants were liable as joint tortfeasors. The second defendant was the sole director of the first defendant and the third defendant was a Luxembourg corporation which, for reward, licensed the first defendant to use the name Cipriani."
Briggs J rehearsed the terms of the third defendant's licence to the first defendant at [10] and then turned to a suggestion that there ought to be some discount from the profits otherwise recoverable because the mark that had been licensed contained a logo and a word that did not feature in the Claimant's name. This argument was rejected at [12] and the Judge concluded that " all the royalties payable under the licence derived from the infringement". The royalties were 11.5% of gross sales of the restaurant. The Claimants submit that Briggs J concluded as he did because there as here the royalties were a percentage of the proceeds of the infringing trading. However, if that was the basis of Briggs J's conclusion he does not say that is so and it could as easily have been because of the conclusion reached at the end of the liability trial that each were to be treated as if they were joint tortfeasors.
Conclusions