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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 >> Global Coal Ltd v London Commodity Brokers [2010] EWHC 1347 (Ch) (11 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1347.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1347 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GLOBAL COAL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON COMMODITY BROKERS |
Defendant |
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for the Claimant
Mr Duncan Matthews QC and Mr Nicholas Saunders (instructed by Ince & Co, International House, 1 St Katharine's Way, London E1W 1AY)
for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th, 21st & 24th May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs:
INTRODUCTION
THE BACKGROUND - TRADING IN COAL
THE PLA
"THIS AGREEMENT is made on
THE PARTIES AGREE as follows
WHEREAS
(A) globalCOAL has developed certain products, indices and standards to facilitate the trading of coal both in physical form and by means of various financial instruments..
(B) The Licensee wishes to use these products, indices and standards on the terms set out in this Agreement for the purpose of entering into or arranging transactions for the trading of coal with third parties licensed on the same terms as in this Agreement.
AGREED TERMS
1.1 "globalCOAL Licensees" means any third party who is licensed by globalCOAL on the same terms as set out in this Agreement and who is listed as such by globalCOAL on its website at "www.globalcoal.com/general/marketmembers.cfm"
"globalCOAL Products" means any instrument, data, standard, price, graph, product, index, contract, agreement, methodology or quality specification developed and published by globalCOAL and intended to facilitate the trading of coal (whether in physical form or by means of a financial instrument);
"Intellectual Property Rights" means patents, trade marks, service marks, registered designs, applications for any of those rights, trade and business names (including internet domain names and e-mail address names), unregistered trade marks and service marks, copyrights, database rights, know-how, rights in designs and inventions, trade secrets, rights in confidential information and rights of the same of similar effect or nature in each case in any jurisdiction;
"Purpose" means the use of globalCOAL Products as the basis for, or as an integral part of, arranging, broking or entering into a Transaction;
"Trade Marks" means SCoTA, RB, RB1, RB2, ARA INDEX, BOL, RB INDEX, NEWC INDEX and NEWC and such other trade marks as globalCOAL may use from time to time in connection with globalCOAL Products;
"Transaction" means a transaction for the trading of coal in any form of instrument involving globalCOAL Products or Trade marks with a globalCOAL Licensee.
1.2 In this Agreement, unless the context requires otherwise, the following words shall have the following meanings:
1.2.1 the clause headings are included for convenience only and shall not affect the construction of this agreement;
1.2.2 words denoting the singular shall include the plural and vice versa;
1.2.3 words denoting a gender shall include a reference to each gender;
1.2.4 a person includes a corporate or unincorporated body;
1.2.5 a reference to a party is a reference to globalCOAL and/or the Licensee;
1.2.6 a reference to writing or written includes faxes but not email.
2, Grant
2.1 globalCOAL hereby grants to the Licensee on the terms set out in this Agreement, a non-exclusive, non-assignable license (the "Licence") under its Intellectual Property Rights in the globalCOAL Products to use the globalCOAL Products and the Trade Marks:
2.2 The Licensee undertakes that it will not:
2.2.1 use the globalCOAL Products or the Trade Marks other than for the Purpose;
2.2.2 grant any sub-licences in relation to the globalCOAL Products or the Trade Marks;
2.2.3 use the globalCOAL Products in an on-screen trading environment other than globalCOAL's;
2.2.4 use the globalCOAL Products to enter into, arrange or facilitate any Transaction with third parties who are not globalCOAL Licensees.
3. Duration
3.1 This Agreement shall commence on the date of this agreement and shall continue unless terminated in any of the circumstances in Clause 7.
3.2 globalCOAL agrees to add the Licensee to the list of globalCOAL Licensees at www.globalcoal.com/general/marketmembers.cfm as soon as reasonably practicable following receipt of a signed copy of this Agreement from the Licensee.
4. Intellectual Property Rights
4.1 The rights of the Licensee to use globalCOAL's Intellectual Property Rights in the globalCOAL Products and Trade Marks are limited to the permitted use of the globalCOAL Products and Trade Marks set out in clauses 2.1 and 2.2. For the avoidance of doubt, the Licensee shall not obtain any right of ownership or title to the globalCOAL Products or Trade marks.
4.2 The Licensee acknowledges globalCOAL's ownership of globalCOAL's Intellectual Property Rights in the globalCOAL Products and the Trade Marks and agrees to include the following notice (or any variation thereof as may be agreed between globalCOAL and the Licensee in relation to a particular document) in any material produced by it which includes any reference to a globalCOAL Product or Trademark:
"globalCOAL", "SCoTA", "RB" "RB1", "RB2", ARA Index", "BOL", "RB Index", NEWC Index" and "NEWC" are trade marks of globalCOAL. The ScoTA terms and globalCOAL's indices are the copyright of globalCOAL 2002 and have been licensed for use by the Licensee. globalCOAL accepts no liability in connection with the use of any globalCOAL product".
5. Liability
5.1 Except as set out in this Agreement, all conditions, warranties and representations, expressed or implied by (i) statute, (ii) common law or (iii) otherwise in relation to the globalCOAL Products are excluded. globalCOAL makes no warranty, express or implied that globalCOAL Products are or will be suitable for the Purpose.
5.2 globalCOAL shall not be liable to the Licensee or to any third parties for any direct or ijndirect damage including, without limitation, economic loss, loss of profit or loss of opportunity for profit, or for other indirect or consequential loss or damage which the Licensee or any third party may suffer as a result of or in connection with the Licensee's use of globalCOAL Products or the Trade Marks.
6. Waiver and Amendments
6.1 Waiver of any breach of this Agreement shall not be construed as a waiver of any other breach.
6.2 globalCOAL reserves the right to vary any of the terms of this Agreement at any time upon 20 (twenty) days prior written notice to the Licensee. The Licensee will be deemed to have accepted any amendments notified to it by globalCOAL pursuant to this clause if the Licensee continues to use globalCOAL Products after this period of notice has expired.
6.3 The Licensee acknowledges that damages would not be a sufficient temedy for a breach by it of this Agreement and globalCOAL is entitled to the remedies of injunction and specific performance and other equitable relief for a threatened or actual breach of this Agreement.
6.4 If any provision of this Agreement is determined to be null and void or unenforceable such provision shall be deemed to be severed, and the remaining provisions of this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.
7. Term and Termination
7.1 This Agreement shall come into force on the date of this Agreement and shall remain in full force and effect until it is terminated pursuant to this clause.
7.2 globalCOAL may terminate this Agreement at any time without cause by giving not less than one week's prior written notice.
7.3 globalCOAL may terminate this Agreement with immediate effect by written notice to the Licensee on or at any time after the occurrence and events specified in clause 7.4 in relation to the Licensee.
7.4 The events are:
7.4.1 the Licensee being in breach of any of its material obligations under this Agreement;
7.4.2 the Licensee passing a resolution for its winding up or a court of competent jurisdiction making an order for the Licensee's winding up or dissolution;
7.4.3 the making of an administration order in relation to the Licensee or the appointment of a receiver over, or an encumbrancer taking possession of or selling an asset of the Licensee;
7.4.4 the licensee making an arrangement or composition with its creditors generally while making an application to a court of competent jurisdiction for protection from its creditors generally;
7.4.5 the Licensee challenging the validity of (1) globalCOAL's Intellectual Property Rights in any of the globalCOAL Products or (2) the Trade Marks.
8. Consequences of Termination
8.1 All rights and obligations of the parties shall cease to have effect immediately upon termination of this Agreement except that termination shall not affect:
8.1.1 the accrued rights and obligations of the parties at the date of termination; and
8.1.2 the continued existence and validity of the rights and obligations of the parties under those clauses which are expressed to survive termination and any provisions of this Agreement necessary for the interpretation or enforcement of this Agreement
8.2 On termination of this Agreement howsoever occasioned, the Licensee shall immediately cease any use of globalCOAL Products and the Trade Marks and shall remove and destroy (as the case may be) all copies of documents containing references to globalCOAL Products or Trade Marks in its possession or control, howsoever such copies may be kept whether in hard copy, electronic or any other form including machinery readable form as soon as reasonably practicable.
9. Exclusion of Third Party Rights
9.1 A person who is not a party to this Agreement has no rights under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 to enforce any term of this Agreement but this does not affect any right or remedy of a third party which exists or is available apart from that Act.
10. Governing Law and Jurisdiction
10.1 This Agreement and all matters arising from it or connected with it shall be governed by English law.
10.2 The Courts of England have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute arising from or connected with this Agreement.
For and on behalf of the Licensee:
Authorised Signature: [signed]
Print Name and Capacity:
Date "
THE ISSUE
THE LAW – INTERPRETATION OF COMMERCIAL AGREEMENTS
"It is agreed that the question is what a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would have been available to the parties would have understood them to be using the language in the contract to mean."
"The PLA is intended to regulate the use by a licensee of the intellectual property rights of the claimant in the Global Coal products. The licensee, therefore, authorises what would otherwise be an infringement of those rights. This is made clear by cl 2.1 of the PLA, and also by cl 2.3. The existence of intellectual property rights such as trade marks, copyright or design rights in respect of particular material does, subject to certain statutory exceptions, confer a monopoly. In the context of infringement, use has an established meaning. An obvious case of use in relation to copyright material is reproduction, but there are also remedies available to restrain the use of the owner's design and work product from being incorporated into the defendant's own product or business if that would amount to passing off or a misuse of confidential information."
"30. I see the force of Mr Wilson's contention based on matching "use" in clause 2.2 to "use" in clause 2.1, and, for that matter, no doubt, tying other instances of the word "use", such as in recital B, to the same meaning. It is a neat and conventionally literal reading. It may be right. But its consequences as regards the Claimant's position seem to be remarkable and surprising, and it does seem to me that it may lead to a result which the parties cannot be taken to have intended. In my judgment there is substance in the Claimant's contention that "use" , at least in clause 2.2 (and correspondingly in recital B), should be held to refer to any kind of use made by the Licensee of material which is made available to it by the Claimant under the PLA, whether it is use which would potentially infringe IP rights or not, and that the Defendant does make use of the Claimant's NEWC Index, of SCoTA and of the specification for Newcastle coal (by inference) in presenting the relevant column of its coal screen to its clients for their use. That seems to me to be supported, in particular, by the terms of clause 2.2.1 and the broad terms of the definition of Purpose. What effect that reading would have as regards clause 8.2 is another matter. Mr Silverleaf submitted that it would not prohibit voice trading in Newcastle coal after termination of the PLA.
31. Thus, the contest seems to be between a literal and a contextual interpretation of the clause, with some clear support in the terms of the document for the literal approach, but quite strong support for the contrary contextual argument from the result which the literal reading would achieve. It seems to me that this is sufficient, by itself, to make it impossible to conclude that the Claimant's contention, in this respect, is not seriously arguable. Moreover, to test the contextual reading requires evidence as to what the relevant surrounding circumstances were. It may be that there will be no dispute as to these, at trial. But it seems quite likely, in principle, that there is more evidence that would be relevant on this than was before the judge, and this may be confirmed by the extent to which points which appear to be, at least potentially, relevant had to be clarified on instructions during the hearing before us. That seems to me to be another reason why it would be wrong to conclude that the Claimant's case on "use" is not seriously arguable."
MATRIX OF FACT – THE RELEVANT SURROUNDING CIRCUMSTANCES
"It may be said that previous documents may be looked at to explain the aims of the parties. In a limited sense this is true: the commercial or business object of the transaction, objectively ascertained, may be a surrounding fact…. and if it can be shown that one interpretation completely frustrates that object, to the extent of rendering the contract futile, that may be a strong argument for an alternative interpretation, if that can reasonably be found. But beyond that it may be difficult to go: it may be a matter of degree, or of judgment, how far one interpretation, or another, gives effect to a common intention: the parties, indeed, may be pursuing that intention with different emphasis, and hoping to achieve it to an extent which may differ, and in different ways. The words used may, and often do, represent a formula which means different things to each side, yet may be accepted because that is the only way to get "agreement" and in the hope that disputes will not arise. The only course then can be to try to ascertain the "natural" meaning. Far more, and indeed totally, dangerous is it to admit evidence of one party's objective – even if this is known to the other party. However strongly pursued this may be, the other party may only be willing to give it partial recognition, and in a world of give and take, men often have to be satisfied with less than they want. So, again, it would be a matter of speculation how far the common intention was that the particular objective should be realised."
INTERPRETATION OF THE PLA – ANALYSIS
"The rights of the Licensee to use globalCOAL's Intellectual Property Rights in the globalCOAL Products and Trade Marks are limited to the permitted use of the globalCOAL Products and Trade Marks set out in clauses 2.1 and 2.2."
If clause 2.2 merely limited the use of the Intellectual Property Rights in the Products without restricting a use of the Products in a way which did not involve any use of the Intellectual Property Rights, the first sentence of clause 4.1 would be, at best, repetition and at worst, meaningless. Even if (as Mr Matthews QC for LCB suggested) the words "permitted use of the globalCOAL Products" is just convenient shorthand for permitted use of the Intellectual Property Rights in the globalCOAL Products, the sentence is still mere repetition.
LCB'S INTERPRETATION
INTERPRETATION – CONCLUSION
"We do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents."
This is not, for the reasons which I have given, a case in which the natural interpretation of the language leads to a result which the parties could not have intended.