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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Tangle Inc v One for Fun Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 217 (Ch) (10 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/217.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 217 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
SHORTER TRIAL SCHEME
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
TANGLE INC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ONE FOR FUN LIMITED (2) DAVID JONATHAN MORDECAI (3) MARK EDWARD COLLEY (4) JOANNA ELIZABETH BURTON |
Defendants |
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Mr Richard Davis (instructed by Birketts LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 December 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
David Stone (sitting as Deputy High Court Judge) :
The Pleadings
"23. In support of their case on copying, the Claimant will rely on the following:
(1) The Defendants have previously been involved in selling versions of the Claimant's Tangle products.
(2) The Claimant's Tangle products are well-known in the market place.
(3) The Jumbly Product so closely resembles the Claimant's Tangle products that it must be a copy of them."
"27. The Claimant relies on the facts and matters set out above as showing that the Defendants have committed acts of primary and/or secondary infringement.
28. The Defendants are jointly and severally liable for the acts of infringement contained herein. The Defendants have authorised, procured, facilitated and otherwise assisted in concert with each other to commit said acts.
29. Alternatively, the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants have authorised the infringement of the Claimant's copyrighted works and/or has procured the First Defendant to infringe. The Claimant will rely on the particulars of knowledge set out above at paragraph 20 [although this is a typographical error - 23 (set out above) was meant] as well as:
(1) The Defendants are, and have been, on notice that the Claimant objects to the conduct.
(2) The Second to Fourth Defendants control the First Defendant and stand to gain personally from any sales of the Jumbly Product.
(3) The Second Defendant controls and operates, through his roles as director and controlling shareholder, the First Defendant; and
(4) The Defendants, through their pre-action correspondence, have taken the view that they are entitled to conduct things in the manner that they have and as such have acted in concert with each other."
"32. The Claimant's plea of joint tortfeasance is specious, almost entirely unparticularised and is liable to be struck out.
33. Paragraph 27 of the Particulars of Claim is noted. The Defendants['] response to the facts and matters relied upon in paragraphs 1 to 26 of the Particulars of Claim is as previously set out.
34. Paragraph 28 of the Particulars of Claim is denied. Moreover it is entirely unparticularised and liable to be struck out.
35. Paragraph 29 of the Particulars of Claim is denied. In relation to the asserted reliance on particulars of knowledge, (1) it is not understood why particulars of knowledge are of relevance to the allegations made in the first sentence of the paragraph; and (2) no particulars of knowledge are set out in paragraph 20 of the Particulars of Claim or indeed anywhere in the Particulars of Claim.
36. On the assumption that the four sub-paragraphs to paragraph 29 are particulars of authorisation/procurement of the First Defendant by the Second to Fourth Defendants, the Defendants will say as follows:
(1) It is admitted that all the Defendants have been put on notice that the Claimant objects to the conduct of the First Defendant but it is not understood how this goes to the allegation of authorisation/procurement.
(2) As previously set out, the Second to Fourth Defendants act as directors to the First Defendant. In the context of the First Defendant's turnover of in excess of £16million, they do not stand to gain personally from any sales of the Jumbly Product to anything more than a de minimis degree.
(3) The Second Defendant's interest in the First Defendant is as previously set out. He is not a controlling shareholder.
(4) If the Claimant expects a responsive plea to this allegation it needs to particularise the pre-action correspondence relied upon, how that relates to authorisation/procurement of infringement and why it supports a claim to acting in concert. In the absence of such explanation, the allegation is too vague and speculative for the Second to Fourth Defendants to provide a response."
"13. As to paragraph 36(4), the Defendants are aware of the correspondence in issue and have chosen to avoid pleading back to it. The email in question is dated 28 January 2022 and was sent by the Second Defendant which stated:
"After having taken extensive legal advice we decided our Jumbly's would be a good addition to our range of product. IP checks were diligently made and included design patents and trademarks."
14. The email goes on to state that the toy was designed based on the Claimant's design patent GB2130106B.
15. In the premises, the Defendants:
15.1. Were aware IP rights could apply; and
15.2 Were aware that those rights could include copyright and other unregistered rights.
16. Furthermore, the Claimant will rely on this email as evidence that the Defendants were involved in the design and manufacture of the Jumbly based on the First Defendant's admission that:
"We have based our toy on the design patent GB2130106B"."
The Law
"31. Turning to MCA v Charly Chadwick LJ noted (in paragraph 47) that in Mentmore the question of whether and in what circumstances a director should be liable with the company was described as a difficult question of policy and that in the end a balance has to be struck between two considerations. The first consideration is the distinction between a company as a distinct legal person and its shareholders, directors and officers. The second is that everyone should be answerable for their tortious acts. The judge then made the point that because there was a balance to be struck in each case it was dangerous for an appellate court to attempt a formulation of the principles since it may come to be regarded as prescriptive (paragraph 48). Nevertheless Chadwick LJ did feel able to formulate four principles which he then set out.
32. Given their centrality to the issues on this appeal I will set them out in full:
"49. First, a director will not be treated as liable with the company as a joint tortfeasor if he does no more than carry out his constitutional role in the governance of the company—that is to say, by voting at board meetings. That, I think, is what policy requires if a proper recognition is to be given to the identity of the company as a separate legal person. Nor, as it seems to me, will it be right to hold a controlling shareholder liable as a joint tortfeasor if he does no more than exercise his power of control through the constitutional organs of the company—for example by voting at general meetings and by exercising the powers to appoint directors. Aldous L.J. suggested, in Standard Chartered Bank v. Pakistan National Shipping Corporation (No. 2) [2000] 1 Lloyd's Rep 218, 235—in a passage to which I have referred—that there are good reasons to conclude that the carrying out of the duties of a director would never be sufficient to make a director liable. For my part, I would hesitate to use the word "never" in this field; but I would accept that, if all that a director is doing is carrying out the duties entrusted to him as such by the company under its constitution, the circumstances in which it would be right to hold him liable as a joint tortfeasor with the company would be rare indeed. That is not to say, of course, that he might not be liable for his own separate tort, as Aldous L.J. recognised at paragraphs 16 and 17 of his judgment in the Pakistan National Shipping case.
50. Second, there is no reason why a person who happens to be a director or controlling shareholder of a company should not be liable with the company as a joint tortfeasor if he is not exercising control though the constitutional organs of the company and the circumstances are such that he would be so liable if he were not a director or controlling shareholder. In other words, if, in relation to the wrongful acts which are the subject of complaint, the liability of the individual as a joint tortfeasor with the company arises from his participation or involvement in ways which go beyond the exercise of constitutional control, then there is no reason why the individual should escape liability because he could have procured those same acts through the exercise of constitutional control. As I have said, it seems to me that this is the point made by Aldous J (as he then was) in PGL Research Ltd v. Ardon International Ltd [1993] F.S.R. 197.
51. Third, the question whether the individual is liable with the company as a joint tortfeasor—at least in the field of intellectual property—is to be determined under principles identified in C.B.S. Songs Ltd v. Amstrad Consumer Electronics Plc [1988] AC 1013 and Unilever Plc v. Gillette (U.K.) Limited [1989] R.P.C. 583. In particular, liability as a joint tortfeasor may arise where, in the words of Lord Templeman in C.B.S. Songs v. Amstrad at page 1058E to which I have already referred, the individual "intends and procures and shares a common design that the infringement takes place".
52 Fourth, whether or not there is a separate tort of procuring an infringement of a statutory right, actionable at common law, an individual who does "intend, procure and share a common design" that the infringement should take place may be liable as a joint tortfeasor. As Mustill L.J. pointed out in Unilever v. Gillette, procurement may lead to a common design and so give rise to liability under both heads.
33. The important principles are the first two, but before turning to them I note the careful statement by Chadwick LJ in paragraph 51 that he was stating the principle there at least in the field of intellectual property. As I said above on Lifestyle's appeal, I can see no reason why the principles applicable should differ as between those cases and others. Nevertheless every judicial statement of the law has to be understood in the context and circumstances in which it is made. Like Chadwick LJ, I am seeking to identify the applicable principles in the context of this case, which is about infringements of intellectual property rights.
34. Chadwick LJ's paragraphs 49 and 50 fit together and in my judgment they substantially answer the issue on this appeal. They explain that the grounds on which a company director may be found to be an accessory are not wider than those applicable to other people. So to be found liable one way of approaching the matter will be to ask whether the individual's conduct would make them liable as an accessory in any event, irrespective of their status as a director. Assuming that is so, then the next question is whether the fact that person is a director of the company means they have a defence open to them. They may do so but only if the conduct which has made them potentially liable amounts to their doing no more than carry out their constitutional role in the governance of the company.
35. The last three sentences of paragraph 49 contemplate that even in that circumstance then a director may be still liable, but only in rare cases. Reading Chadwick LJ's judgment as a whole (and see paragraph 54 which I deal with below), he regarded those rare cases – when a director may be liable even though they have done no more than carry out their constitutional role in the governance of the company – as the ones when the very difficult Mentmore question of policy would arise.
36. Furthermore the converse is also true. If the individual's conduct does not make them liable as an accessory, then the fact they are a director in and of itself cannot make them liable when they would not be otherwise. That was also made clear by Chadwick LJ in paragraph 37 of the same judgment in which he held that it was a correct statement of the law that a director or other officer of a company may in certain circumstances be personally liable for the company's torts, although they will not be liable merely because they are an officer: they must be personally involved in the commission of the tort to an extent sufficient to render them liable as a joint tortfeasor. Whether they are sufficiently involved is a question of fact, requiring an examination of the particular role played by them in the commission of the tort."
The Parties' Submissions
Phoenixing
Paragraph 23 of the Particulars of Claim
Paragraph 29 of the Particulars of Claim
Third and Fourth Defendants
Second Defendant
"My task is not to weigh competing evidence (such as it is) but to assess whether the allegations are sustainable in law. Whilst there is force in the submission just recorded, that is a matter for trial. The upshot is that the allegation that Mr Hogan is jointly and severally liable for the acts of the first defendant survives (just) but is likely to require supplementation by way of further particulars (either now or in due course). … Accordingly, Mr Hogan must remain as a defendant to the allegation of joint and several liability, as supported by [13(3)&(4)]."
Conclusion