BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Kerr v Laurence Shaw & Associates Ltd (t/a Laurence Shaw & Associates (In Liquidation)) [2010] EWHC 585 (Ch) (19 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/585.html Cite as: [2010] FSR 19, [2010] PNLR 24, [2010] EWHC 585 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ANDREW ROBERT ENGLAND KERR |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
LAURENCE SHAW & ASSOCIATES LIMITED Trading as LAURENCE SHAW & ASSOCIATES (In Liquidation) |
Defendant |
____________________
Mark Chacksfield (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the defendant
Hearing dates: 8-11 December 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman:
Retainer, breach and causation
"for some countries, it is possible to overrun the deadline and then go ahead with the application on a delayed basis, but that incurs penalties. If you were to choose the EPO and the USA as two countries where you would wish to delay, the extra penalty is likely to exceed £1,000. If you have confidence in the product you might be better off in raising the money now to get the protection instead of incurring those penalty fees."
"I refer to our telephone conversation late on Friday September 28, 2001, when you said that you wanted to have a patent application for this invention in the USA. It is necessary for you to sign certain documents for the US patent application…Please sign them and return them to me. We gave you an idea of the cost of filing the patent application in different countries including the USA. I will check with my associate whether we will get away without a penalty fee and an invoice will follow in a day or so."
Nominal or substantial damages
"…the claimant will recover substantial damages if there was a significant chance (for instance) that it might have obtained a valuable patent. This may involve considering whether the patent would have been granted, whether revocation proceedings might have been brought and what the results of those proceedings might have been, and whether a competitor could easily have avoided infringing such claims."
"In assessing damages it must be borne in mind that this is not an infringement action. What the plaintiff company suffered in consequence of the defendants' negligence or breach of contract was the loss of whatever benefits might have accrued to the company if the application had been accepted by the patent office, as it is conceded it would have been if it had been put in order by 7 July 1967. As I have already pointed out, it does not follow from that concession either that the plaintiff company would certainly have obtained a grant of a patent, or that, if the company had obtained the grant of a patent, that patent could have successfully withstood revocation proceedings. Nor can we be sure what the claims of such a patent would have been, nor whether a competitor could easily have avoided infringing such claims. One method-and it seems to me to be the logical method-of arriving at an assessment of damages might be to attempt to quantify the price at which the plaintiff company could have disposed in the open market as between willing vendor and willing purchaser of its right to pursue its application on the assumption that it had been accepted by the Patent Office without amendment, for it was of this right that the company was deprived by the defendants' negligence or breach of contract. Such a quantification cannot be an easy matter, for it necessarily involves forming a view of what the opinion of the supposed purchaser would be upon the various unknown factors which I have indicated, as well as of the value which the supposed purchaser would put upon the potential profitability of any patent he might succeed in obtaining."
Templeman LJ said (at 405),
"I agree also with my Lord that the appropriate method of assessing damages is to attempt to quantify the price at which the plaintiff company could have disposed in the open market as between willing vendor and willing purchaser of its right to pursue its application on the assumption that the application would have been accepted by the Patent Office without amendment. In my judgment it must however be assumed that the purchaser would have been prudent enough to make prior inquiries which would have revealed the Hotchkiss patent and that the purchaser would have bought the benefit of the application by the plaintiff company in the knowledge, or at least suspicion, that any patent granted in respect of Mr Andrew's machine would be vulnerable to opposition proceedings or revocation proceedings and in any event could be avoided with ease by the use of fixed spacers."
Brightman LJ agreed with both judgments.
"In my judgment damages are not nominal, because the purchaser might well have been willing to pay something for a patent, which though vulnerable to attack and avoidance, nevertheless might prove some deterrent to competitors and some convenience to the patent owner. However, the patent would have been so vulnerable to attack on the grounds of invalidity and could have been so easily avoided that it is improbable that a purchaser would have been prepared to pay a large amount."
Would the Canadian Patent office have accepted the claim?
Would the Zahl claims have been pursued?
"…my answer is really a 'Yes' and 'No'. I was attempting to make as broad a claim- for the independent claim…I was trying to make that as broad as I possibly could, and the Mustang product was a very nice example of something that looked very different, and if I could cover that, that would meet my goal."
In brief, and reading his evidence together with the Experts' Joint Statement of 1st December 2009, Mr Zahl's position is that he amended his claims with the Mustang in mind, although he did not do so solely in order to capture the Mustang.
Would the Zahl claims have been invalid, under the Canadian Patent Act 1985 or otherwise, for insufficiency, inutility or extending the scope of the protection? Would the Zahl claims have been invalid for extending the scope of protection beyond the PCT and European claims?
"…the claim must not be broader than the invention disclosed. If the claims include the essence of the invention, they cannot be broader than the invention. Overclaiming must be in relation to an essential element of the invention. If the claim fails to include an element essential to the invention disclosed, it is invalid."
"It is one object of the invention to provide an improved body protection.
According to the invention in one aspect there is provided a protective body garment containing;
i) armour resistant to ballistic and/or stab attacks;
ii) a gas inflatable bag arranged to inflate on immersion in water to provide buoyancy to the wearer;
the bag being shielded by the armour in the garment, and the garment including means for avoiding harm to the wearer by pressure on the body when the bag is inflated."
"A body garment comprising;
A vest having an internal surface and an external surface defining a space therebetween;
An inflatable floatation bladder in the form of a bag located within said space;
A pocket located within said space between said bag and said external surface, at least partially overlying said floatation bladder; and
A layer of penetration-resistant armour within said pocket at least partially overlaying said floatation bladder to provide protection against weapon damage to said bladder."
Would the Zahl claims have been invalid for anticipation or obviousness in relation to the prior art?
Conclusions