[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lifestyle Equities CV & Anor v Royal County of Berkshire Polo Club Ltd & Ors [2019] EWHC 2413 (Ch) (19 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2413.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2413 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
____________________
(1) LIFESTYLE EQUITIES C.V. (2) LIFESTYLE LICENSING B.V. (both companies incorporated under the laws of the Netherlands) |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
(1) ROYAL COUNTY OF BERKSHIRE POLO CLUB LTD (2) GRETA MAE MORRISON (3) JAMES TARA MORRISON (4) THE PARTNERSHIP (LICENSING) LIMITED (5) JONATHAN ERIC BOWER TOWNSEND (6) MAYS ZONA LIBRE S.A. (a company incorporated in Panama) (7) EMPRESAS LA POLAR S.A. (a company incorporated in Chile) (8) EMPRESAS HITES S.A. (a company incorporated in Chile) (9) TIENDAS PERUANAS S.A. (a company incorporated in Peru) (10) SEARS OPERADORA MEXICO, SA DE CV (a company incorporated in Mexico) (11) ABDUL GHANI MAMOUN TR LLC (a company incorporated in the UAE) |
Defendants |
____________________
MR. MICHAEL SILVERLEAF QC (instructed by Gateley Plc) appeared for the Fourth and Fifth Defendants.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
DEPUTY JUDGE TREACY:
Introduction
• dismissed the Claimants' application;
• awarded an interim sum of £47,600 on account of costs to be paid by the Claimants to the Fourth and Fifth Defendants;
• required both parties to provide written submissions on matters relevant to the final order on a sequential basis by 31 July 2019;
• required the Claimants to identify portions of the Defence and Counterclaim in respect of which they sought further particulars or amendment, and to submit draft grounds of appeal, if any;
• stayed the commencement of time for appeal; and
• ordered the Fourth and Fifth Defendants to make various amendments to their pleadings as had been agreed between the parties at the beginning of the hearing of the application.
Costs
Attribution
Quantum – introduction
• unreasonably incurred;
• unreasonable in amount;
• disproportionately incurred; or
• disproportionate in amount.
(i) the sums in issue in the proceedings;
(ii) the value of any non-monetary relief in issue;
(iii) the complexity of the litigation;
(iv) any additional work generated by the conduct of the paying party; and
(v) any wider factors involved in the proceedings such as reputation or public importance.
(i) conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings; and
(ii) efforts made, if any, before and during the proceedings to try to resolve the dispute.
Quantum – assessment
(i) the conduct of the Fourth and Fifth Defendants;
(ii) the fact that the Fourth and Fifth Defendants served their evidence for the application only shortly before the application was due to be heard and, the Claimants submit, late; and
(iii) various specific criticisms of the reasonableness of the costs incurred.
Criticisms of costs incurred
(i) that reasonableness and necessity are objective standards;
(ii) that the Court must apply a sensible standard, having regard to the inherently imprecise nature of summary assessment, sometimes described as "relatively rough and ready"; and
(iii) that any reasonable doubt must be decided in favour of the paying party.
Insufficient delegation
Unspecified research
Excessive time preparing evidence
"… much, if not all, of the material contained in the evidence is matter with which the claimants have long been acquainted. It comprises a variety of such materials. There are judgments of courts and tribunals in other jurisdictions in relation to the same or similar issues as those raised by the present pleading, to which many of the claimants or related parties were themselves parties. Some if not all of these could be referred to without being in evidence. They are in evidence for convenience. There are pleadings in a parallel action brought by the present claimants in relation to the sale of Greenwich Polo Club merchandise. There are witness statements filed earlier in the present proceedings by other defendants. …"
Excessive time preparing a costs schedule
Counsel's brief fee
The conduct of the parties
(i) the general conduct of the Fourth and Fifth Defendants; and
(ii) their conduct in serving evidence just before the hearing.
(i) General conduct of the Fourth and Fifth Defendants
(ii) Time of service of evidence
(i) no significant additional costs appear to have been incurred by the Fourth and Fifth Defendants as a result of the time at which the evidence was served;
(ii) the time of serving the evidence was unlikely to involve significant additional work for the Claimants: if the evidence was relevant, it needed to be dealt with; and
(iii) given the interplay between CPR 24 and CPR 3, as explained by the Fourth and Fifth Defendants' Counsel before the hearing and by the Fourth and Fifth Defendants in correspondence, the evidence would have needed to be dealt with in any event.
Permission to appeal
(i) the amendment to the Fourth and Fifth Defendants' Defence and Counterclaim necessitated by the Claimants' amendment of its Conspiracy claim; and
(ii) the amendments necessitated by the failure of the strike out applications of the First to Third Defendants against the allegations of Foreign Infringement.
(i) that the Judgment was substantively flawed in refusing to strike out or award summary judgment in respect of those paragraphs, because they require amendment or clarification; and
(ii) that the order requiring the Claimants to identify the amendments or clarifications to the pleadings they believe to be required is wrong in principle.
• Paragraph 39 records an observation that if technical criticisms of the details of the pleading were made (implicitly not sufficient to require strike out or summary judgment), it would be feasible for amendments to be requested, and made if necessary, given the need for both parties to amend in any event in view of the judgment of Morgan J in December 2018.
• Paragraph 74 notes that certain pleading amendments would be required in any event, consequential on the judgment of Morgan J as reflected in paragraphs 19 and 39, and also noted that further information might be sought.
Future pleading amendments
Costs of post-hearing submissions
Claim ?. IL-2018-000115
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Ms Pat Treacy, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
BETWEEN:
Claimants
Defendants
A. Attribution of costs/success and failure
B. Behaviour of the Defendants
C. Exact relief to be ordered
D. The amount ordered to be paid on account
29 July 2019