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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Interdigital Technology Corporation & Ors v Lenovo Group Ltd & Ors [2021] EWHC 3192 (Pat) (26 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2021/3192.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3192 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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INTERDIGITAL TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION INTERDIGITAL PATENT HOLDINGS, INC. INTERDIGITAL, INC. INTERDIGITAL HOLDINGS, INC. |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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LENOVO GROUP LIMITED LENOVO (UNITED STATES) INC. LENOVO TECHNOLOGY (UNITED KINGDOM) LIMITED MOTOROLA MOBILITY LLC MOTOROLA MOBILITY UK LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Daniel Alexander QC, James Segan QC, Ravi Mehta and William Duncan (instructed by Kirkland & Ellis International LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 25th November 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
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 Friday 26th November 2021 at 4pm.
Mr Justice Mellor:
Introduction
10.1 There should be a limited number of disclosees, so called Specified Persons, who should be named with the counterparties having the right to object to them;
10.2 There should be a licensing bar in place i.e. the disclosees should not be involved in any licensing negotiations for a specified period.
Applicable principles
'39 Drawing all this together, I would identify the following non-exhaustive list of points of importance from the authorities:
(i) In managing the disclosure of highly confidential information in intellectual property litigation, the court must balance the interests of the receiving party in having the fullest possible access to relevant documents against the interests of the disclosing party, or third parties, in the preservation of their confidential commercial and technical information: Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 at p.356; Roussel [1990] R.P.C. 45 at p.49.
(ii) An arrangement under which an officer or employee of the receiving party gains no access at all to documents of importance at trial will be exceptionally rare, if indeed it can happen at all: Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 at p.360; Al-Rawi [2011] UKSC 34 at [64].
(iii) There is no universal form of order suitable for use in every case, or even at every stage of the same case: Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 at p.358; Al-Rawi [2011] UKSC 34 at [64]; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)].
(iv) The court must be alert to the fact that restricting disclosure to external eyes only at any stage is exceptional: Roussel [1990] R.P.C. 45, p.49; Infederation at [42].
(v) If an external eyes only tier is created for initial disclosure, the court should remember that the onus remains on the disclosing party throughout to justify that designation for the documents so designated: TQ Delta [2018] EWHC 1515 (Ch) at [21] and [23];
(vi) Different types of information may require different degrees of protection, according to their value and potential for misuse. The protection to be afforded to a secret process may be greater than the protection to be afforded to commercial licences where the potential for misuse is less obvious: compare Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 and IPCom 1; see IPCom 2 at [47].
(vii) Difficulties of policing misuse are also relevant: Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 at p.360; Roussel [1990] R.P.C. 45 at pp.51–52.
(viii) The extent to which a party may be expected to contribute to the case based on a document is relevant: Warner-Lambert [1975] R.P.C. 354 at p.360.
(ix) The role which the documents will play in the action is also a material consideration: Roussel [1990] R.P.C. 45 at p.49; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)];
(x) The structure and organisation of the receiving party is a factor which feeds into the way the confidential information has to be handled: IPCom 1 at [33].
40 To this I would add that the court must be alert to the misuse of the opportunity to designate documents as confidential. It remains the case that parties should not designate such material as AEO, even initially, unless they have satisfied themselves that there are solid grounds for establishing that restricting them in that way is necessary to protect their confidential content.'
Application to the facts
15.1 The first and perhaps the most important concerns whether I should establish yet another tier of confidentiality, but one where Specified Persons at Lenovo are able to see all the financial information which is currently LEO only.
15.2 The second concerns the status of certain anonymised data, in which the identities of IDC's licensees are concealed, but a full range of unpacked royalty rates are presented.
15.3 The third concerns three particular extracts from conclusions set out in the Expert Report of one of Lenovo's experts, Mr Meyer. Lenovo suggest that the information in these extracts is not confidential at all.
17.1 Whilst accepting that Lenovo must be able to see the end product of the analysis of the comparables, one counterparty suggested that Lenovo did not need to see the underlying licence agreements or their specific financial details. Lenovo's representatives could be provided with abstracted or anonymised data representing the rates that can be derived from the various comparables. It was suggested that in several cases brought by Philips, the in-house representatives for the Defendants received only anonymised, abstracted details of the comparable licences in the case, without needing to see the underlying documents themselves.
17.2 One counterparty had agreed, back in July 2020 and at a time when a small number of licences were said to be involved, to the disclosure of its royalty rate at the AP level. Now that a large number of licences are involved, this counterparty objects to the Approved Persons having unrestricted access to all the rates of each counterparty. It says that Lenovo will gain an unfair competitive advantage by having access to the full range of IDC's confidential SEP rates. It points out that the basis of its concerns were recognised by Sir Alastair Norris in Sisvel v Xiaomi [2020] EWHC 2641 at [49]:
"Having failed to agree a licence in arm's length negotiations with the Claimants or certain other counterparties they are now to be provided with a wide range of highly sensitive confidential information about the Claimants' and those other parties' pricing structures. Such a dynamic creates a perverse disincentive to reach an arm's length settlement and a perverse encouragement of FRAND litigation."
17.3 The same counterparty also warns of the risk of third parties being able to put "2 and 2 together" from pieces of information made public. It concludes by suggesting that if any re-designation is made, it should be done in accordance with [14]-[16] of IP Bridge.
17.4 Finally, I need to keep in mind that at least some of IDC's counterparties may have licences with Lenovo or may seek to negotiate such licences in the future or, indeed, they may have such negotiations ongoing at the moment. I am reminded that I need to be astute to avoid Lenovo obtaining an unfair advantage in any such negotiations via disclosure in this action, albeit those concerns need to be balanced against the requirements for Lenovo to be able to have meaningful participation in this important FRAND trial.
The proposed Specified Persons tier
The Anonymised Schedule 2
The extracts from Mr Meyer's Report
Two final points