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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Bodo Sperlein Ltd v Sabichi Ltd & Anor [2015] EWHC 1242 (IPEC) (08 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2015/1242.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1242 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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BODO SPERLEIN LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SABICHI LIMITED SABICHI HOMEWARES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Graham Cunningham (instructed by Jurit LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 10-11 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
How the Red Blossom design came to be created – the first account
Late applications to introduce further evidence
"I've always enjoyed researching and am very thorough. As a designer I produced five seasons of trend stories, which involved producing image boards and trend packs with descriptions. The research always started with a stimulating visual trip to Maison & Objet in Paris (homewares trade show) and meetings with trend prediction companies to see their books. Comp shows in London and lots of magazines and photocopying. The internet is always a wonderful up to date source but by no means the be all and end all."
The amended account of how Red Blossom came to be created
The issues
(1) Whether Hayley Adams copied the Red Berry design when she created the Twiggy design.
(2) If so, whether she copied the Red Berry design in substantial part.
(3) Whether the Red Blossom design is a copy of the Red Berry design.
(4) If so, whether it is a copy in substantial part.
(5) If Sabichi are found liable for infringement of copyright, whether the court should exercise its discretion to allow an account of profits.
(6) If so, what costs are deductable from Sabichi's gross profits so as to arrive at the sum due to BSL?
Knowledge
The witnesses
The law
Whether the designs on BSL's Red Berry collection were copied
Do the similarities in design create a prima facie inference of copying?
"I do realise that the Court may look at these designs and have difficulty telling them apart."
Ms Adams is right about that. I can see there are differences but I would struggle to say which was which without close inspection and this is after comparing them for some time.
Has the prima facie inference of copying been rebutted?
Whether the Red Berry work was copied in substantial part
Whether an account of profits should be refused in the court's discretion
"…a successful claimant may seek an account of profits made by the infringer. This is an equitable remedy and the court has a discretion whether to order it. It may be refused if, for example, the infringer was entirely innocent or the trade mark owner has delayed in bringing proceedings."
Mr Cunningham also relied on paragraph 69 of the same judgment. There Kitchin LJ was considering whether an account of profits satisfied the criterion of proportionality which, among other criteria, the European Court of Justice (in Case C-348/04 Boehringer Ingelheim KG v Swingward Ltd [2007] ETMR 71) required to be satisfied in the context of the facts of Hollister:
"As for proportionality, an account of profits does not compensate the trade mark owner for the losses he has suffered. It simply deprives the infringer of the profits he has made from an activity in which he should never have engaged. It therefore ensures the infringer does not profit from his wrong, but it contains no element of punishment. Moreover, as an equitable remedy, it may be refused if for any reason it would produce an unjust result."
Mr Cunningham said that an account in the present case would produce an unjust result because Sabichi was 'entirely innocent' within the meaning contemplated by Kitchin LJ in paragraph 55 of Hollister.
Quantum
The law
"[38] … (1) Costs associated solely with the defendant's acts of infringement are to be distinguished from general overheads which supported both the infringing business and the defendant's other businesses.
(2) The defendant is entitled to deduct the former costs from gross profits.
(3) A proportion of the general overheads may only be deducted from gross profits in two circumstances:
(a) if an overhead was increased by the acts of infringement (i.e. the increase would not have occurred but for the acts of infringement), that increase may be deducted;
(b) if the defendant was running to maximum capacity such that the infringing business displaced an alternative business which otherwise would have been conducted, the apportioned overheads incurred by the infringing business (and which would have been incurred by the displaced business) may be deducted.
(4) The evidential burden is on the defendant to establish any of the above.
[39] The logic of the principle which I have numbered (3)(b) (adopted from the judgment of the High Court of Australia in Dart Industries Inc v Decor Corp Pty Ltd [1994] FSR 567) is that while a defendant may not deduct the profit that it would have made from the displaced business (i.e. the loss of profit from an opportunity forgone, called the 'opportunity cost') it would be unfair to deprive the defendant of both the opportunity cost and the apportioned overheads which would have sustained the displaced business (and which sustained the infringing business).
[40] The corollary of (3) as a whole is that if the overheads would have been incurred anyway in the absence of the infringing business and also no opportunity cost was incurred by the defendant, no overheads may be deducted from its gross profits."
This case – Sabichi Retail
This case – Sabichi Homewares
Conclusion