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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Excel-Eucan Ltd v Source Vagabond Systems Ltd [2019] EWHC 3175 (Pat) (21 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2019/3175.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3175 (Pat) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PATENTS COURT (ChD)
SHORTER TRIAL SCHEME
New Fetter Lane London |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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EXCEL-EUCAN LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SOURCE VAGABOND SYSTEMS LIMITED (A Company incorporated in Israel) |
Defendant |
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Mr Ben Longstaff (instructed by Asserson Law Offices) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 16 and 17 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Her Honour Judge Melissa Clarke:
INTRODUCTION
PROCEEDINGS
i) A declaration that the Licence Agreement remains in force and was not repudiated by any action of Excel;ii) Unpaid royalties and/or damages for breach of contract. Excel no longer asserts any positive case that royalties are outstanding. Instead it seeks damages for breach of contract by, inter alia, the purported wrongful termination of the Licence Agreement;
iii) Contractual costs.
i) A declaration that the Licence Agreement was repudiated by Excel and properly terminated by Source. However, very shortly before trial, by an open letter from Source to Excel of 4 June 2019, Source abandoned its case that Excel had repudiated the Licence Agreement and, in consequence, accepted that the Licence Agreement had always been and remained in force. Accordingly it no longer seeks this declaration;ii) A declaration that the Licence Agreement was not enforceable absent a valid patent. However, Source abandoned this aspect of the counterclaim after service of the Re-Amended Defence and Counterclaim and so no longer seeks this declaration;
iii) A declaration of non-infringement of GB'116 and GB'562 by the 2017 Bag. This remains in issue;
iv) A declaration that the 2017 Bag is not royalty bearing. Source's original case on this point was that only variants that fall within the footprint of GB'116 are royalty bearing, and its case is that the 2017 Bag does not infringe GB'116. However, at trial, Source accepted that as a point of contractual interpretation it is possible for the 2017 Bag to be royalty bearing pursuant to the Licence Agreement, even if it does not fall within the footprint of patent GB'116. Source's case that the 2017 Bag is nonetheless not royalty bearing remains in issue.
i) Admits that the 2017 Bag does not infringe GB'562;ii) Maintains that the 2017 Bag is an improvement or alteration of the "Licensed Products" under clauses 3.3 and/or 5 of the Licence Agreement, such as to be royalty bearing.
ISSUES
i) whether Source is entitled to a declaration that the 2017 Bag does not infringe the amended claim in GB'116;ii) whether or not the 2017 Bag is royalty bearing under the Licence Agreement; and
iii) whether Excel is entitled to an inquiry as to damages.
WITNESSES
i) Mr Robert Maclean, the founder and director of Excel and inventor of the Link-Tail. He filed two witness statements and was cross-examined and re-examined. Mr Longstaff for Source expressed no criticism of his evidence and I found him to be a straightforward, professional, credible and reliable witness. I thank him for his attendance at trial to give oral evidence so shortly after the sad loss of his father.ii) Mr Andy Lynch. He filed a short witness statement and Source elected not to cross-examine him. Accordingly his evidence is not disputed.
i) Mr Yoki Gill, co-founder and Managing Director of Source. He has filed one witness statement. He intended to attend court to give oral evidence at trial, but unfortunately his mother was taken very seriously ill and so he was unable to do so. Source filed a civil evidence act notice in respect of his evidence. Much of his evidence overlaps with that of Mr Clee, albeit not all of it. Much is also documented in contemporaneous correspondence. However, undoubtedly there are questions that Excel would have liked to have asked him if he had been able to attend, and I have not had the benefit of seeing him give oral evidence, which might have assisted me in assessing his credibility. For those reasons I give those aspects of his evidence which are disputed and not supported by other credible and reliable evidence commensurately less weight.ii) Mr Charles Clee, a former Colonel in the British Army who now runs a consultancy assisting private clients wishing to work in the defence and humanitarian sectors. He worked with Source to help it become prime contractor for Virtus. He was cross-examined and re-examined. I also found him, like Mr Maclean, to be straightforward, professional, credible and reliable. Mr Lomas submits that Mr Clee's admission that he may have required, but did not obtain, an export licence to send to Source in Israel a sample of the Link-Tail which he had bought on eBay should damage his credibility in the eyes of the Court as it shows that he has "played fast and loose without regard to how things should be done". The questions are whether such an export licence was required at the relevant time, which was shortly before changes in the regulations which the parties accept now provide that such equipment does not require an export licence, and, if so, whether Mr Clee knew that it was. It is not a question that I need to determine, in my judgment. If Mr Clee was in breach of export licence requirements then of course I do not condone it. However I accept that if he was, he did not breach them knowingly and I do not think it adversely affects my assessment of his credibility when giving evidence under oath in this court. Nor do I consider it appropriate to accept Mr Lomas's invitation to use that conduct, if any, as a prism against which Source's conduct should be viewed.
THE FACTS
i) Light weight, low bulk, low cost;ii) Ease of use;
iii) Ability to directly feed the ammunition into the weapon system;
iv) Snag-free delivery of the ammunition;
v) Easy and quick resupply of ammunition to the gunner;
vi) Protection of the ammunition from contaminants (dirt, stones etc.) as these are the majority of weapon stoppages.
i) Facilitate the carriage of linked ammunition;ii) Securely hold and protect ready for use 200 rounds of 5.56mm or 7.62mm linked ammunition;
iii) Allow ammunition to be fed onto the feed tray of a weapon system directly from the load carrying system;
iv) Allow ammunition to be readily available and carried over the shoulder similar to a bandolier.
"Can you please send me two final samples of your VIRTUS Link-Tail (including the additional side pouches for stowing x2 Para flares and 8x cyalume sticks). My plan is to test the function of your product once received (including live shooting) and compare it with our design. If we will find your product equal or better in performance then our design, we will follow with a royalty agreement of [redacted] GBP per unit. I will share our test results with you."
"We have already made our own design changes for 5.56/7.62 rounds and shorter length of belt as we have identified these problems in the link tail purchased on eBay… I will provide you images of the amendments we made on your product after submission date. Right now, I am trying to keep our designs out of the reach of our competitors. Please send me your proposed royalty agreement draft based on what we agreed. Let's sign it and get this action item behind us".
"The full-length closure of the pouch is removed and the cross section made rectangular rather than the current triangular".
DETERMINATION OF ISSUES
Issue (i) – Is Source entitled to a declaration that the 2017 Bag does not infringe GB'116, as amended?
"A linked round carrying bag consisting of a flexible sleeve within which is carried a linked round, the flexible sleeve being sealed at a first end, having an opening at a second end that extends across the width of the carrying bag, and having an openable closure extending substantially from the first end to the second end, wherein a width of the sleeve is greater than 12% of the length of an individual round of the linked round but is less than 150% the length of an individual round, and wherein when in use the end of the linked round can be fed into a firearm and the linked round is pulled out of the sleeve through the opening such that the firearm can be used without the need to further remove the linked round from the sleeve." ("Claim 1")
The law
"53. Any patent system must strike a balance between the two competing factors referred to at the end of article 1 of the Protocol, namely "a fair protection for the patent proprietor [and] a reasonable degree of legal certainty for third parties". The balance cannot be struck on an ad hoc case-by-case basis without any guiding principles, as that would mean that there was no legal certainty. On the other hand, striking the balance by adopting a normal approach to interpretation would risk depriving patentees of a proper measure of protection; as explained in paras 37 to 39 and 52 above, that is clear from the approach of all the courts which considered the "Epilady" patent, where it could not seriously have been suggested that, as a matter of language, a slotted rubber rod falls within the expression "helical metal spring", even if one was construing those words in the context of the claim in the patent in suit. But, if one departs from ordinary language, it is necessary to have some guidance or to draw some lines, as Lord Hoffmann implied in Kirin-Amgen [2005] RPC 9, para 37. That is why he promulgated his three questions in Improver [1990] FSR 181, 189. By means of an extended version of the ordinary concept of "construction" or "interpretation", Hoffmann J explained how our domestic law, as laid down in Catnic [1982] RPC 183, implements article 2 of the Protocol and thus, as I see it, how it gives effect to the doctrine of equivalents. That approach was (perhaps unsurprisingly) then adopted in Kirin-Amgen [2005] RPC 9.
54. In my view, notwithstanding what Lord Diplock said in Catnic [1982] RPC 183, 242, a problem of infringement is best approached by addressing two issues, each of which is to be considered through the eyes of the notional addressee of the patent in suit, ie the person skilled in the relevant art. Those issues are: (i) does the variant infringe any of the claims as a matter of normal interpretation; and, if not, (ii) does the variant nonetheless infringe because it varies from the invention in a way or ways which is or are immaterial? If the answer to either issue is "yes", there is an infringement; otherwise, there is not. Such an approach complies with article 2 of the Protocol, as issue (ii) squarely raises the principle of equivalents, but limits its ambit to those variants which contain immaterial variations from the invention. It is also apparent that the two issues comply with article 1 of the Protocol in that they involve balancing the competing interests of the patentee and of clarity, just as much as they seek to balance the encouragement of inventions and their disclosure with the need for a competitive market. In my view, issue (i) self-evidently raises a question of interpretation, whereas issue (ii) raises a question which would normally have to be answered by reference to the facts and expert evidence."
"66. In these circumstances, given the weight that has been given by courts in this jurisdiction (and indeed in some other jurisdictions) to the three "Improver questions", I think it must be right for this court to express in our own words our reformulated version of those questions. In doing so, it is right to emphasise, as Lord Hoffmann did in Kirin-Amgen [2005] RPC 9, para 52, that these questions are guidelines, not strict rules (as indeed the Oberlandesgericht indicated in Case No 6 U 3039/16, when saying that it was "generally" true that "three requirements must be met"). While the language of some or all of the questions may sometimes have to be adapted to apply more aptly to the specific facts of a particular case, the three reformulated questions are as follows:
i) Notwithstanding that it is not within the literal meaning of the relevant claim(s) of the patent, does the variant achieve substantially the same result in substantially the same way as the invention, i.e. the inventive concept revealed by the patent?
ii) Would it be obvious to the person skilled in the art, reading the patent at the priority date, but knowing that the variant achieves substantially the same result as the invention, that it does so in substantially the same way as the invention?
iii) Would such a reader of the patent have concluded that the patentee nonetheless intended that strict compliance with the literal meaning of the relevant claim(s) of the patent was an essential requirement of the invention?
In order to establish infringement in a case where there is no literal infringement, a patentee would have to establish that the answer to the first two questions was "yes" and that the answer to the third question was "no"."
Q1 Does the variant achieve substantially the same result in substantially the same way as the invention?
Q2 Would it be obvious to the person skilled in the art, reading the patent at the priority date, but knowing that the variant achieves substantially the same result as the invention, that it does so in substantially the same way as the invention?
Q3 Would such a reader of the patent have concluded that the patentee nonetheless intended that strict compliance with the literal meaning of the relevant claim(s) of the patent was an essential requirement of the invention?
Conclusion
Issue (ii) – Is the 2017 Bag royalty bearing?
Issue (iii) – Is Excel entitled to an inquiry as to damages?
Issue (iv) – To what extent can Excel recover the costs of this action and the UKIPO action under the contractual indemnity contained in Clause 10.2 of the Licence Agreement?
"10.2 The Licensee shall indemnify the Licensor against all liabilities, costs, expenses, damages or losses (including any direct or indirect consequential losses, loss of profit, loss of reputation and all interest, penalties and legal costs (calculated on a full indemnity basis) and all other reasonable professional costs and expenses) suffered or incurred by the Licensor arising out of or in connection with:
a) The Licensee's exercise of the rights granted to it under this agreement;
b) The Licensee's breach or negligent performance or non-performance of this agreement, including any product liability claim relating to Licensed Product manufactured, supplied or put into use by the Licensee;
c) The enforcement of this agreement;
d) …"