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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Philips Domestic Appliances & Personal Care BV v Salton Europe Ltd & Ors [2004] EWHC 2092 (Ch) (30 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2092.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2092 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PHILIPS DOMESTIC APPLIANCES AND PERSONAL CARE B.V. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SALTON EUROPE LIMITED -and- SALTON HONG KONG LIMITED -and- ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONICS LIMITED |
Defendant Part 20 Defendant (1st Claim) Part 20 Claimant (2nd Claim) Part 20 Defendant (2nd Claim) |
____________________
and Personal Care BV.
MR. JAMES ST. VILLE (instructed by Messrs. Eversheds) for Salton Europe Limited.
MR. ROBERT ONSLOW (instructed by Messrs. Hammonds) for Electrical & Electronics Limited.
Hearing date: 26 - 28 July, 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Laddie:
"36. Jurisdiction.
This Agreement and any modification or renewal thereto shall be governed by the laws of Hong Kong. All disputes under the Agreement shall be settled in the courts of Hong Kong."
(a) that the sequence of "operators" and "operands" – that is, lines which explain what the code does and the data and its location which is to be utilised – was too similar to be coincidence.
(b) He and Mr. Nicolai had chosen in which memory location to store various "flags" and "variables". Which of these is put in which location is a matter on which the programmer has a free hand. In substance the same locations are used for the same flags and variables in the one:one software.
(c) The Senseo software contains a series of commands to control a valve which was present in an early prototype. Since the valve is no longer present the retention of these commands perform no function. Indeed, it only uses up memory. In the one:one there is also no valve, yet the same functionless commands are present.
(d) the Senseo software contain lines of code which perform no function in controlling the coffeemaker but act rather like notes to help a programmer to understand what the various functional parts of the program are doing. The content, number and placement of these lines of code are said to be arbitrary. The one:one software contains nearly identical code in nearly identical places
(e) There are three minor errors in the Senseo software, two of which are reflected in slight malfunctioning (but in an insignificant way) of the coffeemaker itself. All three errors are to be found in the one:one software, which malfunctions in the same way.
Service out
"6.20 In any proceedings to which rule 6.19 does not apply, a claim form may be served out of the jurisdiction with the permission of the court if ….
(3) a claim is made against someone on whom the claim form has been or will be served and -
(a) there is between the claimant and that person a real issue which it is reasonable for the court to try; and
(b) the claimant wishes to serve the claim form on another person who is a necessary or proper party to that claim.
(3A) a claim is a Part 20 claim and the person to be served is a necessary or proper party to the claim against the Part 20 claimant."
"The court's power to permit service out of the jurisdiction under rule 6.20(3) is no less wide than the court's power to add or substitute a party under rule 19.1(2)(sic) (United Film Distribution v. Chabria, The Times, April 5, 2001 CA.)"
"The court may order a person to be added as a new party if –
(a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings, and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue."
"33. Mr. Auld QC for the claimants submitted that the father and Fairdeal are necessary or proper parties to the claims being brought by both claimants against persons on whom the proceedings had been duly served. Put shortly, he submitted that the claims against the father and Fairdeal arise out of the same facts, transactions and arrangements as do the claimants' claims against the other defendants.
"34. Mr. Page [counsel for the party outside the jurisdiction] initially submitted that paragraph (c) only applies where the party to be served is a necessary or proper party to the very cause of action against a person who has been duly served. He later accepted that this was too narrow but submitted that it was not sufficient merely that there was a close connection between the claims against the person already duly served and the claims against the person to be served if the claims – i.e. the facts giving rise to the claims – were not the same. He submitted that the claims by UPIE against the father and Fairdeal failed to meet this requirement.
"35. I consider that Mr. Page stated the position too narrowly.
"36. The meaning of the expression 'proper party' in the phrase 'necessary or proper party' appearing in paragraph (c) of Order 11 rule 1(1) was explained by Lord Esher in Massey v. Heynes [1881] 21 QBD 330 at 338:
'The question, whether a person out of the jurisdiction is a "proper party" to an action against a person who has been served within the jurisdiction, must depend on this, -- supposing both parties had been within the jurisdiction would they both have been proper parties to that action? If they would, and only one of them is in this country, then the rule says that the other may be served, just as if he had been within the jurisdiction.'
"In the same case Lindley LJ said (at 338):
'Where the liability of several persons depends upon one investigation, I think they are all 'proper parties' to the same action and, if one of them is a foreigner residing out of the jurisdiction, rule 1(g) of Order XI applies.'
"That was said in reference to rule 1(g) of Order XI which was the then equivalent of what later became paragraph (c) or Order 11 rule 1(1) and what is now rule 6.20(3) of the Civil Procedure Rules. I am not aware that any doubt has ever been cast on the accuracy of that approach to the meaning of 'proper party' as used in Order 11 rule 1(1)(c)."
"38. Although the Rules of the Supreme Court have been replaced by the Civil Procedure Rules, it is not suggested that the power of the court to give permission for service out under rule 6.20(3) is narrower than under Order 11 rule 1(1)(c) or that the circumstances in which a person may properly be joined as a defendant to a claim are narrower under rule 19.2(2) of Civil Procedure Rules than under its relevant predecessors, namely Order 15 rules 4(1) and 6(2)(b) of the Rules of the Supreme Court. Rule 19.1(2) of the Civil Procedure Rules provides that the court may order a person to be added as a new party if (a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings or (b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings, and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue. The court's power to add or substitute a party is wide. Although the expression 'necessary or proper party' to the claim does not appear in that rule it can scarcely be supposed that the court would order a person to be added or substituted as a party on the ground that it is 'desirable' to do so if that person were not either a necessary or a proper party to the claim in question. In my judgment the court's power to permit service out under what is now rule 6.20(3) (formerly Order 11 rule 1(1)(c)) is not less wide than the court's wide power to add or substitute a party under rule 19.1(2)."
"5. E&E authorised Salton Europe and/or Salton Hong Kong to issue to the public in the United Kingdom copies of the said software in the said coffee makers and authorised members of the public to copy that software when the coffee makers are used.
"6. Accordingly in so far as Salton Europe is liable in respect of any damage suffered by Philips, E&E is liable in respect of the same damage and Salton Europe is entitled to an indemnity, alternatively a contribution pursuant to section 1(1) of the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978."
"Particulars of Authorisation.
(a) E&E developed the software for the uno:uno coffee maker and/or had that software developed for it.
"(b) In particular E&E allege in paragraph 13 of the Witness Statement of Paul Harris dated 22 July 2004 that the said software was developed on its behalf by its employee Mr. Sao Min Hai.
"(c) E&E was well aware that the coffee machines including the said software were to be sold by Salton Europe in the UK and therefore authorised the issue of the software used in those coffee machines to the public in the United Kingdom.
"(d) In particular the machines were packaged in boxes which were branded 'Uno:Uno', were fitted with English plugs (which E&E was responsible for fitting) prior to being shipped to the UK, were shipped with an instruction leaflet inserted into individual boxes of the Uno:Uno which carried a UK telephone number 0845 658 9700 for customer requests for spare parts, a request for a cheque/postal order referring to pounds sterling, Salton Europe's address in Failsworth in the UK and were shipped with other leaflets including a guarantee and customer survey leaflet which was to be completed by customers and returned, freepost, to an address in Kent, a promotional leaflet for coffee and tea pods which stated the prices of the pods in sterling and a leaflet for the 'Uno:Uno pod brewing system' which refers to Salton Europe's address in Manchester.
"(e) By supplying the Salton Group (including Salton Hong Kong and Salton Europe) with the software within the uno:uno coffee makers for distribution in the United Kingdom from about October 2003 onwards having designed or purported to have developed that software, E&E were authorising Salton Europe and Salton Hong Kong to issue copies of that software to the public in the United Kingdom and authorising customers who used the coffee machines to copy that software when it was used in the microcontroller in the uno:uno coffee maker."
"In Falcon v. Famous Players Film Co. [1926] 2KB 474, the defendants hired to a cinema a film based on the plaintiff's play. It was held that the defendants infringed the plaintiff's exclusive right conferred by the Copyright Act 1911 to authorise a performance of the play. Here again, the hirer sold the use which was only capable of being an infringing use. Bankes LJ at page 491, following Monckton v. Pathe Frere Pathephone Ltd. and Evans v. Hultin, accepted that for the purpose of the Act of 1911 the expression 'authorise' meant 'sanction, approve and countenance.' Atkin LJ said at page 499:
'to "authorise" means to grant or purport to grant to a third person the right to do the act complained of, whether the intention is that the grantee shall do the act on his own account, or only on account of the grantor;….'
"In the present case, Amstrad did not sanction, approve or countenance an infringing use of their model and I respectfully agree with Atkin LJ and with Lawton LJ in the present case [1986] FSR 159, 207 that in the context of the Copyright Act 1956 an authorisation means a grant or purported grant, which may be express or implied, of the right to do the act complained of. Amstrad conferred on the purchaser the power to copy but did not grant or purport to grant the right to copy.
"In Moorhouse v. University of New South Wales [1976] RPC 151 in the High Court of Australia, where the facilities of a library included a photocopying machine, Gibbs J said at page 159:
'a person who has under his control the means by which an infringement of copyright may be committed – such as a photocopying machine – and who makes it available to other person, knowing, or having reason to suspect, that it is likely to be used for the purpose of committing an infringement, and omitting to take reasonable steps to limit its use to legitimate purposes, would authorise any infringement that resulted from its use.'
"Whatever may be said about this proposition, Amstrad have no control over the use of their models once they are sold. In this country the duties of some libraries are defined by the Copyright (Libraries) Regulations 1957 (S.I. 1957 No. 868) made under section 15 of the Act of 1956.
"In CBS Inc. v. Ames Records & Tapes Ltd. [1982] Ch. 91, Whitford J held that a record library which lent out records and simultaneously offered blank tapes for sale at a discount did not authorise the infringement of copyright in the records. He said, at page 106:
'Any ordinary person would, I think, assume that an authorisation can only come from somebody having or purporting to have authority and that an act is not authorised by somebody who merely enables or possibly assists or even encourages another to do that act, but does not purport to have any authority which he can grant to justify the doing of the act.'
"This precisely describes Amstrad. In RCA Corporation v. John Fairfax & Sons Ltd. [1982] RPC 91 in the High Court of Australia, Kearney J, at page 100, approved a passage in Laddie, Prescott & Vitoria, The Modern Law of Copyright (1980), para 12.9, page 403, in these terms:
'a person may be said to authorise another to commit an infringement if the one has some form of control over the other at the time of infringement or, if he has no such control, is responsible for placing in the other's hands materials which by their nature are almost inevitably to be used for the purpose of infringement.'
"This proposition seems to me to be stated much too widely. As Whitford J pointed out in the Ames case, at page 107:
'you can home tape from bought records, borrowed records, borrowed from friends or public libraries, from the playing of records over the radio, and indeed, at no expense, from records which can be obtained for trial periods on introductory offers from many record clubs who advertise in the papers, who are prepared to let you have up to three or four records for a limited period of trial, free of any charge whatsoever.'
"These borrowed records together with all recording machines and blank tapes could be said to be 'materials which by their nature are almost inevitably to be used for the purpose of an infringement.' But lenders and sellers do not authorise infringing use."
The application for a stay