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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 >> Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd. v Alfred McAlpine Plc [2004] EWHC 630 (Ch) (31 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/630.html Cite as: [2004] RPC 36, [2004] EWHC 630 (Ch), (2004) 27(7) IPD 27071 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Sir Robert McAlpine Limited |
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Alfred McAlpine Plc |
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Mr Simon Thorley Q.C. and Thomas Mitcheson (instructed by Ashurst) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2, 3, 5, 8-10 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann
Introduction
History
i. On 2nd July 1982 (before the end of the geographical split) Mr Robert McAlpine (somewhat confusingly the then Vice-Chairman of Alfred) wrote to Mr Malcolm McAlpine and said :"In general we do not under any circumstances use the McAlpine name without the prefix and have recently formed two companies, Alferd McAlpine Homes and Alfred McAlpine Ceilings, with the prefix attached."Mr Malcolm McAlpine responding on 12th July stating that:"I was glad to have confirmation that the general policy remains unchanged "ii. On 16th November 1982 Mr Robert McAlpine again wrote and said that:
"I attach a piece of our letterhead and the 'Alfred' is used in all advertisements. I really do not see what else we can do indeed, if I may say so, the confusion may arise because you just use 'McAlpine' for so much of your site advertising, thus people who see your sites realise less than ever that there are two of us."iii. On 30th November 1982 Malcolm McAlpine responded:
"I agree that you do include 'Sir Alfred' in your Leicester housing operation. Maybe confusion is inevitable when either of us uses their proper title in a location where the other is dominant. The fact that this has up to now not been a real problem is that we have not operated in each other's 'exclusive territories'."iv. On 22nd February 1985 Robert McAlpine wrote to Malcolm McAlpine saying:
"We would, of course, like to see 'the Sir Robert' in front of 'McAlpine News' instead of 'The Journal of Sir Robert McAlpine and Sons Limited' underneath."v. On 27th February 1985 Mr Robert McAlpine wrote to Mr Malcolm McAlpine and said:
" sadly the bringing to an end the territorial agreement has convinced us that we must be known in our own right and that it is in both firm's interest for us to be recognised as Alfred McAlpine. I have to say that your increased use of signboards with the McAlpine name has also had an influence on my people who feel that your use of the name is not in the spirit of the agreement between us."vi. On 13th March 1985 Mr Malcolm McAlpine wrote to Mr Robert McAlpine pointing out that the "McAlpine News" would have its "paternity" even more obviously printed by means of the use of the words "Sir Robert". And on 21st March 1985 he confirmed that:
"We wish both companies to identify their separate names i.e. 'Alfred' on the one hand and 'Robert' on the other, as far as practically possible. We accept that we do have some signs with plain 'McAlpine' though our own basic policy for years has been to identify sites as 'Sir Robert' sites. Some anecdotal evidence was produced that you also have some signs with just 'McAlpine'. We propose and would be glad of your confirmation that each us should eliminate such signs as quickly as is reasonably convenient and make sure that all future contracts are properly identified."vii. On 25th March 1985 Mr Robert McAlpine responded:
"I am delighted that the Construction Board has agreed that both companies should identify their separate names as this was the largest single reason which led us to take the steps we have. I very much welcome this and will ensure that we do the same."viii. In addition to that, there is evidence at the time that both companies were sensitive to the fact that the press might not distinguish adequately between the companies, and they spoke to representatives of the press to make sure that that did not happen or at least that the occurrences of that were minimised.
"(i) Carrying on its business in the provision of construction, civil engineering, Private Finance Initiative, property development and capital projects services and services ancillary and/complimentary thereto under or by reference to the name McAlpine without the addition of the name Alfred in substantially equal prominence or some other adequate distinguishing name; or(ii) Otherwise passing off construction, civil engineering, Private Finance Initiative, property development and capital projects services and services ancillary and/or complimentary thereto not being the construction, civil engineering, Private Finance Initiative, property development and capital project services ancillary and/or complimentary thereto of the Claimant or associated in the course of trade with the Claimant as and for such services."
The nature of the parties' businesses
The Law
"First [a Claimant] must establish a goodwill or reputation attached to the goods or services which he supplies in the mind of the purchasing public by association with the identifying 'get-up' (whether it consists simply of a brand name or trade description, or the individual features of labelling or packaging) under which his particular goods or services are offered to the public, such that the 'get-up' is recognised by the public as distinctive specifically of the [Claimant's] goods or services. Secondly, he must demonstrate a misrepresentation by the Defendant to the public (whether or not intentional) leading or likely to lead the public to believe that goods offered by him are the goods or services of the Plaintiff . Thirdly, he must demonstrate that he suffers or, in a quia timet action, that he is likely to suffer, damage by reason of the erroneous belief engendered by the Defendant's mis-representation that the source of the Defendant's goods or services is the same as the source of those offered by the Plaintiff."
"The principle is this, that no man is entitled to carry on his business in such a way or by such a name as to lead to the belief that he is carrying on the business of another man or to lead to the belief the business which he is carrying on has any connection with the business carried on by the other man."
"To induce the belief that my business is a branch of another man's business may do that other man damage in all kinds of ways. The quality of the goods I sell; the kind of business I do; the credit or otherwise which I might enjoy. All those things may immensely injure the other man, who is assumed wrongly to be associated with me."
In so saying, he was not limiting the kinds of potential damage to those listed by him. Rather, he was indicating that the subtleties of the effect of passing off extend into effects that are more subtle than merely sales lost to a passing off competitor.
In Associated Newspapers Limited v- Express Newspapers [2003] FSR 909 Page 929. Laddie J cited this passage, referred to other cases and went on to say:
"In all these cases [that is to say, the Clock Limited case referred to above and Harrods v- Harrodion School [1996] RPC 679], direct sale for sale substitution is unlikely or impossible. Nevertheless the damage to the Claimant can be substantial and invidious since the Defendant's activities may remove from the Claimant his ability to control and develop as he wishes the reputation in his mark. Thus, for a long time, the common law has protected a trader from the risk of false association as it has against the risk of more conventional goods for goods confusion."
The same Judge expressed himself more picturesquely, but equally helpfully, in Irvine v- Talksport Limited [2002] 1 WLR 2355 at page 2366. Having pointed out the more familiar, and easier, case of a Defendant selling inferior goods in substitution for the Claimant's and the consequential damage, he went on to say:
"But goodwill will be protected even if there is no immediate damage in the above sense. For example, it has long been recognised that a Defendant cannot avoid a finding of passing off by showing that his goods or services are of as good or better quality than the Claimant's. In such a case, although the Defendant may not damage the goodwill as such, what he does is damage the value of the goodwill to the Claimant because, instead of benefiting from exclusive rights to his property, the latter now finds that someone else is squatting on it. It is for the owner of goodwill to maintain, raise or lower the quality of his reputation or decide who, if anyone, can use it alongside him. The ability to do that is compromised if another can use the reputation or goodwill without his permission and as he likes. Thus Fortnum and Mason is no more entitled to use the name FW Woolworth than FW Woolworth is entitled to use the name Fortnum and Mason"The law will vindicate the Claimant's exclusive right to the reputation or goodwill. It will not allow others so to use goodwill as to reduce, blur or diminish its exclusivity." (at p 2368)
In Taittinger SA v- Allbev Limited [1994] 4 All ER 75 Page 88, Peter Gibson L.J. acknowledged that:
"Erosion of the distinctiveness of the name champagne in this country is a form of damage to the goodwill of the business of the champagne houses."
The same view was expressed by Sir Thomas Bingham M.R. at page 93.
Misrepresentation
a. Mr Weekley, Robert's Director of Operations and Chief Engineer since 1999, said that in his experience Robert's name was often abbreviated to "McAlpine" or "Macs", when discussions take place in the construction industry. As far as he was concerned, this was particularly the case in Scotland, where "McAlpine" would be most likely to be taken to refer to Robert, and in London (or at least cental London).
b. Mr David Boyle, Robert's Scottish regional manager, supported that evidence in relation to Scotland. I accept his evidence in that respect even though it transpired his perception of the amount of work carried out (or not carried out) by Alfred in Scotland turned out to be wrong; he was not aware of the level of civil engineering and building work carried out by Alfred in Scotland, but that does not detract from what he said about what "McAlpines" meant in Scotland. I accept that to very many professionals in Scotland it would mean Robert.
c. Mr Saxon, an experienced architect, recognised that "McAlpines" could refer to either company, but would personally have presumed that within his firm it was a reference to Robert, because that was the company with which he was more familiar. Outside his firm any inference as to which McAlpine was being referred to would depend on the context, but that context could be misleading as was demonstrated by a press article about the building of the new Arsenal stadium which referred to the builder as "McAlpines" he thought that that was a reference to Alfred who had a reputation for building stadia, but on this occasion it was actually Robert which was involved. His immediate reaction to the re-branding exercise was that it would cause difficulty because some people would take the reference to "McAlpines" to be a reference to Robert, though others would get it right.
d. Mr Christopher Strickland, an experienced property developer operating mainly in London, would have taken a reference to "McAlpines", made in the circles in which he moved, to be a reference to Robert, but those circles tended to be central London construction projects in which Alfred had no presence.
e. Mr Lawson Clark is a director of a firm of consulting engineers who had worked with Robert in Scotland, but never with Alfred. He, too, spoke to the fact that in Scotland, and in his circles, "McAlpine", "McAlpines" or "Macs" meant Robert; though he conceded that he could understand it if it were the case that Alfred's clients or customers used the same expression to refer to Alfred.
f. Mr Brendan Kerr was a demolition and civil engineering contractor who said that in his business Robert would be referred to as "Macs" or "McAlpines", and Alfred would be referred to as "Sir Alfred McAlpine". His immediate reaction to a reference to "McAlpine" would be that it would be referring to Robert. However, I think it is fair to say that his experience is not quite that of the other witnesses, and it is perhaps a little narrower. Thus he thought that Robert was sometimes referred to as "Green Macs", a term which did not otherwise figure in the evidence before me. Nevertheless, his was additional evidence of common usage and understanding.
g. Mr Tom Haughey was a director of a steelwork supplier. Internally his company would refer to Robert as "McAlpines" and to Alfred as "AMCA"; and he took references to "McAlpines" in his supply chain to be a reference to Robert, not Alfred.
h. Mr Roger Fidgen was a partner in Gardiner & Theobald, a very large construction industry services firm. He told me that for himself, and within his firm, a reference to "McAlpine" or "McAlpines" would be taken to be a reference to Robert; Alfred would be referred to as "Alfred McAlpine". It was his view that this would be the common usage among the majority of quantity surveyors in the London market, and that the distinction grew up because of Robert's being a major contractor in the London construction market for decades, whereas Alfred did not have such a presence.
"Sir Robert gives illusion of greater size punching above weight"
This suggests that the joint goodwill of the name somehow imports a reference to both companies, creating the illusion referred to. The effect is subtle but I find it exists, and Mr Forster in his evidence accepted that it "quite possibly" existed (which in context means that he recognised it, at least in the minds of some people). That means that the expression is capable of referring to, and would sometimes be taken as referring to, Robert. Support for that notion is also gleaned from the further note under "Negatives" that :
"Risk that work may be lost to Sir Robert through confusion (but works both ways)."
"Our NameFrom now on we will focus on the brand name McAlpine.
For the time being "Alfred McAlpine plc" will continue as our legal name but we will just use "McAlpine" in common usage.
"Alfred McAlpine" will be changed to "McAlpine" where it appears in subsidiary company names.
Everyone has a role to play in helping to eliminate the old identity and apply the new one consistently.
Our Name
From now on your [sic] should refer to the company as McAlpine.
"Alfred" will only be used for formal plc requirements.
People working in Capital Projects, Infrastructure Services and Buiness Services should adopt the convention illustrated below when describing where they work:
Primary DescriptorI work for McAlpine
Secondary Descriptor
I work for McAlpine Infrastructure Services
Telephone Answering
People taking external calls should answer the phone by saying:
Good morning McAlpine
or
Good afternoon McAlpine
To whom is the misrepresentation made the relevant public
Damage
a. Robert might lose business because of an erroneous association with Alfred in the mind of a customer who has views about "McAlpine" but at that stage is not sufficiently well informed to know that there are two and that his views in fact relate to Alfred and not Robert. Alfred might sustain some adverse publicity which is in fact attributed to "McAlpine". Because the name imports an association with Robert in the minds of some people, there is a risk that Robert will not get on to a tender list which it would otherwise have got on, because the people with the power of selection (who may well be non-professionals in the industry) will make a false association.
b. Allied to this is what is said to be a general risk to its reputation and goodwill arising where Alfred does something attracting bad publicity which rubs off in a general way on Robert because of a false association between "McAlpine" (who on this hypothesis have sustained bad publicity) and Robert. An example was given involving railway maintenance if there were a railway accident involving McAlpine maintenance items then there might be general damage to goodwill and to the McAlpine name. Since Robert shares that name, and the attendant publicity is more likely to arise without the identifying "Alfred", then Robert's goodwill would suffer, as (potentially) would its business.
c. Alfred may get work it would not otherwise get (though not necessarily at Robert's expense) because of the exploitation of the joint reputation built into the name "punching above its weight".
"To induce the belief that my business is a branch of another man's business may do that other man damage in all kinds of ways. The quality of the goods I sell; the kind of business I do; the credit or otherwise which I might enjoy all those things may immensely injure the other man who is assumed wrongly to be associated with me."
Heads (a) and (b) fall within that principle if they have been adequately proved.
"In such a case [ie even where the defendant's goods are of higher quality], while the defendant may not damage the value of the goodwill as such, what he does is damage the value of the goodwill to the claimant because, instead of benefiting from exclusive rights to his property, the latter now finds that someone else is squatting on it."
"The law will vindicate the Claimant's exclusive right to the reputation or goodwill. It will not allow others so to use goodwill as to reduce, blur or diminish its exclusivity."
Because this is an action between joint owners of goodwill, those dicta cannot be directly applied. However, the underlying thesis can. It looks at the value of the goodwill to the claimant and recognises that if someone else lays claim to it, that, of itself, is damage which the law will step in to prevent. In Irvine Laddie J used the metaphor of squatting. In the case of joint ownership of goodwill a more appropriate metaphor would be elbowing out, or moving over.
Conclusions