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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Scholes Windows Ltd v Magnet Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 532 (11 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/532.html Cite as: [2002] ECDR 20, [2002] FSR 10, [2001] EWCA Civ 532, (2001) 24(6) IPD 24036 |
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COURT OF APPEAL ( CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MR NICHOLAS UNDERHILL QC
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
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SCHOLES WINDOWS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MAGNET LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Anthony Watson QC & Mr Colin Birss (instructed by Messrs Martineau Johnson, Birmingham for the Respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY :
The Facts
The Statutory Provisions
" (1) Design right is a property right which subsists in accordance with this Part in an original design.(2) In this Part "design" means the design of any aspect of the shape or configuration (whether internal or external) of the whole or part of an article.
(3) Design right does not subsist in -
(a) a method or principle of construction,(b) features of shape or configuration of an article which-
(i) enable the article to be connected to, or placed in, around or against, another article so that either article may perform its function,or(ii) are dependent upon the appearance of another article of which the article is intended by the designer to form an integral part,or
(c) surface decoration.(4) A design is not "original" for the purposes of this Part if it is commonplace in the design field in question at the time of its creation.
(5) Design right subsists in a design only if the design qualifies for design right protection by reference to-
(a) the designer or the person by whom the design was commissioned or the designer employed (see sections 218 and 219),or(b) the person by whom and country in which articles made to the design were first marketed (see section 220),
or in accordance with any Order under section 221(power to make further provision with respect to qualification).
(6) Design right does not subsist unless and until the design has been recorded in a design document or an article has been made to the design.
(7) Design right does not subsist in a design which was so recorded,or to which an article was made, before the commencement of this Part."
The Judgment
" ....shallow S-shaped horn designs were common in the built environment in 1994. They are to be seen by anyone with eyes to see in any typical assemblage of Victorian buildings in any street or residential area. They were designed a century or more ago but they are still current in the sense that they are there to be seen and to inform the eye of designers or of anyone else interested in what horns can look like.
I believe that designs of this sort do fall to be taken into account in addressing the question of commonplaceness.To take an example of a form of design that may be more commonly identified, if egg-and-dart or Greek key motifs,which can be seen on countless eighteenth-century interiors, had been wholly out of fashion in new buildings until now, I cannot believe that any designer who created a design based closely on them (though not slavishly copied) could defend an allegation of commonplaceness simply because the designs themselves were old."
" I do not believe that the additional degree of elegance which he may well have achieved by his perfectionism would be of any real significance in the market to which the window was aimed, whether that is viewed as a market of individual home buyers or replacement window purchasers or the arguably more sophisticated market of developers and architects.
There was evidence that the Nostalgia window in general, and the integral horn feature in particular, attracted favourable attention when they were first exhibited; but there was no evidence, and it seems to me inherently unlikely, that that attention owed anything to an appreciation of the precise shape of the horn. To put it another way, I do not believe that its appeal to the market would have been in any significant way different if Mr Scholes had copied directly from, say, the Brooking collection a horn of broadly similar appearance to that which he in fact designed."
"Where, as must be the case in a number of fields, design history supplies a huge resource of typical designs (such as, in the architectural field, mouldings or cornices)--most of which are freely available for copying--- it would, it seems to me, lead to real practical difficulties if the creator of a modern pastiche, only slightly different from the rest of the available bank of designs, could obtain protection in relation to it. It would often be difficult to know whether the producer of the alleged copy had copied from a genuine original or from the claimant's pastiche, nor indeed might the copier himself always be in a position to know."
Submissions of Scholes in Outline
The Legal Position
".... more in the manner of a first instance court making original findings of fact than as an appellate court reviewing findings already made and in very important respects not challenged. It was not for the Court of Appeal to embark on the issue of substantiality afresh, unless the judge had misdirected himself....." (p.117)
" The question of substantiality is one of mixed law and fact in the sense that it requires the judge to apply a legal standard to the facts as found. It is, as I said, one of impression in that it requires the overall evaluation of the significance of what may be a number of copied features in the plaintiff's design. I think, with respect, that the Court of Appeal oversimplified the matter when they said that they were in as good a position to decide the question as the judge."
The Commonplace Point : General
The Design Field Point
" ....was the design of the Nostalgia horn commonplace in the field of window design in July 1994?"
i) the nature and purpose of the article; andii) the material structure of the article.
The Time of Creation Point.
The Comparisons.
Infringement.
Result
I would dismiss this appeal. Finally I would pay tribute to the clarity and care with which the deputy judge prepared his excellent judgment.
LORD JUSTICE RIX - I agree.
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON - I also agree.
ORDER: Appeal dismissed. We think a small discount is appropriate from the award of costs to the successful respondent. We will say that the respondent recovers 90% of the costs of the appeal; and we will make the agreed order as to the interim payment at £20,000, payable by two payments of £10,000 each, the first payment after 28 days. There will be no order on the application for further evidence.