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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Bayerische Motoren Werke AG v Premier Alloy Wheels (UK) Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 2094 (Pat) (30 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2020/2094.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2094 (Pat) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
PATENTS COURT
Remote Hearing by Skype for Business
The Rolls Building 7 Rolls Buildings London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the Patents Court)
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BAYERISCHE MOTOREN WERKE AG (A company incorporated under the laws of Germany) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) PREMIER ALLOY WHEELS (UK) LIMITED (2) DEVON THOMPSON (3) DGT WHEELS AND TYRES LIMITED (4) JEROME DAVID LAYZELL (5) DAVID LAYZELL |
Defendants |
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MR. JEROME DAVID LAYZELL and MR. DAVID LAYZELL appeared In Person and were not represented.
Defendants One, Two and Three did not appear and were not represented.
Hearing dates: 6-7 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
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 2pm on Thursday 30 July 2020.
RECORDER DOUGLAS CAMPBELL QC :
Introduction
a) The Third Defendant (D3) is the main trading company. It has warehouse premises at Laindon North Industrial Estate, Basildon, retail premises in Wash Road, Basildon, and a website at www.dgtwheels.com.
b) The First Defendant (D1) is said to operate the warehouse premises and to provide logistical services such as warehousing and despatching to D3 in return for a fee of £1300 plus VAT per week). There was no evidence of actual payment but this does not matter since the Defendants did not actively distinguish between D1 and D3 in any event: see eg paragraph 18.2, 19.2 of the Amended Defence and Counterclaim dated 7 May 2019.
c) The Second Defendant (D2), Mr Devon Thomson, is sole director and shareholder of D1. He is also the stepfather of the Fourth Defendant, Mr Jerome (or Jay) Layzell (D4).
d) Mr Jerome Layzell (D4) is sole director and owner of all the voting shares in D3. D2 owned an equal non-voting shareholding which entitled him to dividends. There are no other shareholders.
e) Mr David Layzell is the Fifth Defendant (D5). He is D4's maternal grandfather.
For convenience I will often refer to the Defendants by their status in the proceedings. No discourtesy is intended to Mr Devon Thomson, Mr Jerome Layzell or Mr David Layzell by doing so.
Legal context
Trade mark infringement and passing off
Registered Community Design infringement
Liability of D4 and D5 for acts done by D1/D2/D3
a. The defendant must have assisted the primary tortfeasor to commit a tortious act (such assistance being more than trivial).
b. The assistance must have been provided pursuant to a common design between the defendant and the primary tortfeasor that the act be committed.
c. The act must constitute a tort as against the claimant.
Scope of relief where infringement established
"reproducing any substantial part of any piece of operating system computer software in which the Plaintiff owns copyright, or issuing the same to the public, or possessing, distributing, selling or offering or exposing for sale the same in the course of business, in each case without the licence of the Plaintiff."
"Since I have come to the conclusion that the defendants' assertion that they have never made or issued to the public illicit copies of Microsoft operating system software is simply not credible, this evidence suggests that infringement must have been committed knowingly. In any event, all PCs need operating system software to operate. If, as I have held, the defendants have infringed the plaintiff's copyright by making illicit copies of its operating system software, that is not because the defendants are interested in copying a particular version of that software, such as MS-DOS 6.22, but because they have decided to copy whatever operating system is currently saleable. This constitutes a general threat to infringe the copyright in this class of software. Therefore I have come to the conclusion that Microsoft is entitled to injunctions in the form set out above but limited to operating system computer software."
a) Fox analyses Columbia Records, and in particular the requirement of "knowledge" in relation to knowing infringement at [120], [130]-[135]. However the actual issue in Fox concerns a website blocking order, which was granted on behalf of various film studios against certain internet service providers pursuant to s 97A of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. The order required the ISPs to block access to a website operated by Newzbin Limited, where Newzbin had already been found by Kitchin J to have infringed the studios' copyrights on a large scale. The order granted was the only real way in which Newzbin's activities could be curtailed given the difficulties in addressing online copyright infringement. This is a very different type of situation.
b) Independiente is a case about copyright in sound recordings, brought by members of the British Phonographic Industry Ltd and/or Phonographic Performance Limited (ie trade bodies) against an internet business based in Hong Kong called CD Wow. There is some discussion of Columbia Records, again about the issue of knowledge, in paragraph [29], but the actual issue before the Vice-Chancellor was about whether the named Claimants were entitled to act as representatives of the other members of such trade bodies.
The facts
The undisputed facts
a) the Defendants' retail premises had non-BMW wheels on display which bore the BMW roundel trade mark; and
b) wheels bearing this mark and the Claimant's "M logo" trade mark were supplied via a test purchase.
The Defendants also sold similar goods via an eBay channel.
The disputed facts
D4's involvement in D3's business
D5's involvement in D3's business
Analysis
The trade mark/passing off case
The Registered Community Design case
Joint liability of D3 with D1 and D2
Liability of D4 for the infringing acts of D3
Liability of D5 for the infringing acts of D3
Relative contributions of the individual Defendants
Scope of injunction
Conclusion
a) The Claimant wins against each of D1 to D3 on each of trade mark infringement, passing off, and RCD infringement. The Claimant also wins against D2 on its breach of contract claim.
b) The counterclaim for invalidity of the RCDs is dismissed.
c) Mr Jerome Layzell is jointly liable with D3 up to 2 September 2017, but not thereafter.
d) Mr David Layzell is jointly liable with D3 at all material times.
e) The Claimant is not entitled to injunctive relief in relation to RCD infringement which goes beyond the 6 RCDs on which it has succeeded.