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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> AP Racing Ltd v Alcon Components Ltd [2016] EWHC 116 (IPEC) (28 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2016/116.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 116 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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AP RACING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ALCON COMPONENTS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Douglas Campbell (instructed by Withers & Rogers LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15-16 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
The law relating to the broad principles of an inquiry
The heads of damage
(1) Lost profits from sales of calipers that AP Racing would have made had Alcon not infringed.(2) Lost profits from lost 'convoyed sales', i.e. other goods that would have been sold by AP Racing had the infringing sales of calipers not been made.
(3) To the extent that Alcon made sales of calipers which did not result in AP Racing losing any sales, damages equivalent to the royalty that Alcon would have paid under the Patent according to the user principle.
Lost profits from reduced caliper sales by AP Racing
(1) the number of infringing calipers sold by Alcon which are relevant to AP Racing's claim for damages;(2) the number of extra calipers that AP Racing would have sold had there been no infringement by reason of Alcon's sales under (1); and
(3) the average sales price for AP Racing's calipers.
The number of sales by Alcon of relevant infringing calipers
(i) 242 calipers supplied before the application for the Patent was published (see ss.25(1), 60(1) and 69(1) of the Act);(ii) 70 calipers which remain unsold and are subject to an undertaking in writing dated 16 December 2015, provided by Alcon during the trial, to destroy them;
(iii) 132 calipers which were supplied by Alcon as free-of-charge replacements for defective calipers sold earlier;
That leaves 735 calipers,
Section 69
69 Infringement of rights conferred by publication of application.
(1) Where an application for a patent for an invention is published, then, subject to subsections (2) and (3) below, the applicant shall have, as from the publication and until the grant of the patent, the same right as he would have had, if the patent had been granted on the date of the publication of the application, to bring proceedings in the court or before the comptroller for damages in respect of any act which would have infringed the patent; and (subject to subsections (2) and (3) below) references in sections 60 to 62 and 66 to 68 above to a patent and the proprietor of a patent shall be respectively construed as including references to any such application and the applicant, and references to a patent being in force, being granted, being valid or existing shall be construed accordingly.
(2) The applicant shall be entitled to bring proceedings by virtue of this section in respect of any act only—
(a) after the patent has been granted; and
(b) if the act would, if the patent had been granted on the date of the publication of the application, have infringed not only the patent, but also the claims (as interpreted by the description and any drawings referred to in the description or claims) in the form in which they were contained in the application immediately before the preparations for its publication were completed by the Patent Office.
(3) Section 62(2) and (3) above shall not apply to an infringement of the rights conferred by this section, but in considering the amount of any damages for such an infringement, the court or the comptroller shall consider whether or not it would have been reasonable to expect, from a consideration of the application as published under section 16 above, that a patent would be granted conferring on the proprietor of the patent protection from an act of the same description as that found to infringe those rights, and if the court or the comptroller finds that it would not have been reasonable, it or he shall reduce the damages to such an amount as it or he thinks just.
(i) Section s.69(3) speaks of a reasonable expectation, from a consideration of the patent application, that a patent would be granted covering the infringing acts. This is a reasonable expectation on the part of the skilled person who must be deemed to have read not only the patent application, but also anything else which he would reasonably consult.(ii) The further materials which the skilled person would have reasonably consulted included (a) the search published by the United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office in relation to the application and (b) the search published by the European Patent Office in relation to the closest European equivalent to the application, that is to say European Patent Application, publication no. 2022999.
(iii) The claims of EP 2022999 were equivalent to claims 1, 3-6, 9, 11-13, 15-18, 27 and 29-31 of the UK application.
(iv) Between them, the UK and European searches cited prior art against all the UK claims except 7, 8, 10, 14 and 19-26.
(v) It was therefore reasonable for the skilled person to expect that any patent granted pursuant to the UK application would contain, at the most, claims 7, 8, 10, 14 and 19-26.
(vi) The only models of Alcon's calipers complained of which fell within claims 7, 8, 10, 14 and 19-26 were PC1106 and PC1111/12.
(vii) Therefore damages are only available in relation to those two models of caliper.
Joe Gibbs
"Sponsor shall use its best efforts to develop and supply JGR with the best available products together with all necessary technical advice, materials, and support services. JGR shall provide all reasonable support and feedback to help Sponsor improve the performance of its products and services. If JGR notifies Sponsor that any non-Sponsor product offers a material performance benefit over Sponsor's products then JGR shall have the right to purchase and use such products; provided that JGR has first given Sponsor notice and reasonable opportunity to investigate such non-Sponsor product and its performance; provided further that JGR shall cease using such non-Sponsor product if and when Sponsor manufactures and delivers replacement Sponsor product which at least matches the performance of the non-Sponsor product(s)"
AP Racing argued that in the counterfactual world it would have been clear to Joe Gibbs that AP Racing's RadiCal calipers offered a material performance benefit over any non-infringing calipers that BPI could offer. No amount of investigation by BPI could change that, so Joe Gibbs would have been permitted to buy, and would have bought, RadiCal calipers from Essex without breaching the Sponsorship Agreement – Alcon's infringing calipers being unavailable.
Calipers supplied to Roush-Fenway and RPM
Exclusive supply agreements
Conclusion on the number of relevant sales by Alcon
The number of sales lost by AP Racing caused by Alcon's 735 infringing sales
Conclusion
Profits lost from reduced convoyed sales
The law
"[31] … The point made by Exclusive was that it is not enough to allege or even prove that sales of so many chairs and so on were made when a Canberra or Strasbourg table was sold. Alfrank had to satisfy the burdens of causation and remoteness generally (see Abbott, [[2014] EWHC 2924 (IPEC)], at [23]-[25]).
[32] I agree. By way of an example, even if a supermarket claimant were to prove beyond doubt that for every packet of its own-brand cornflakes sold, statistically 0.23 tins of beans are sold to the same customer, together with 0.11 large wholemeal sliced loaves and so on, sales of the latter would not on that evidence have been caused by the sale of the cornflakes. In my view, to make good any claim to damages for loss of sales of convoyed goods, the claimant must prove that, assessed objectively, there was a causative link in the mind of the purchaser between his or her purchase of the infringing product and their purchase of one or more other specific products. Only then will the sale of the infringing product have caused the sale of those other products (within the legal sense of causation) – as opposed to the latter sales being merely statistically linked as a matter of probability. If causation is proved, subject to unusual facts being raised by the defendant, losses related to the latter sales will be expected to satisfy the requirements of the law on remoteness generally."
This case
Damages according to the user principle
Interest
(1) The starting point is that the pre-judgment rate of interest should be the rate at which claimants like the particular claimant in the action could, in general, borrow money, taking into account the general attributes of the class of claimants to which the claimant belongs, see Tate and Lyle Food and Distribution Limited v Greater London Council [1982] 1 WLR 149, at 154-5.(2) Although historically there was a presumption that the appropriate rate was 1% over base rate, which could be displaced in favour of a higher rate in an appropriate case, there is no longer any such presumption. See in particular para. J14.1 of the Admiralty and Commercial Courts Guide.
(3) Where appropriate the court may reach a view as to the appropriate rate of interest, even in the absence of evidence, see Lindsay v O'Loughnane [2010] EWHC 529 (QB), at [143].
(4) Generally speaking public companies of some size and prestige will be required to pay less to borrow money than smaller and less prestigious concerns, see Tate and Lyle at p.154.
Conclusion