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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 >> NGPOD Global Ltd v Aspirate N Go Ltd [2016] EWHC 3105 (Ch) (02 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/3105.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3105 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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NGPOD Global Limited |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Aspirate N Go Limited |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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James Abrahams QC (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing date: Friday 11th November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The alleged sources of the competing entitlement claims
The law section 37
"If it appears to the comptroller on a reference under this section that the question referred to him would more properly be determined by the court, he may decline to deal with it and, without prejudice to the court's jurisdiction to determine any such question and make a declaration, or any declaratory jurisdiction of the court in Scotland, the court shall have jurisdiction to do so."
It is common ground that the main application before the hearing officer was a reference under the section, so that subsection applies.
"19. Quite apart from that, Mr Thorley submits that the hearing officer applied the wrong test to s37. The hearing officer did not need to be able to say with certainty that the question would more properly be heard by the court: it only needed to appear to him that that was so. Further, it is not necessary to show that the Comptroller is incapable of resolving the issues; the question is whether the question would more properly be determined by the court. I agree with those submissions. It seems to me that, to adopt the language of the standard of proof, certainty requires something like "beyond all reasonable doubt" whereas appearance requires only something more akin to "a balance of probabilities". Further, it is clear that the test is not that the Comptroller is unable to determine the issue; it is whether the court can more properly do so."
(a) The fact that a different costs regime applied before the hearing officer in the court full adverse costs orders could be made against a losing party, but far lower adverse costs are payable in the IPO (paragraph 49).
(b) Technical issues ordinarily a hearing officer would be equipped to deal with those (paragraph 55(a), implicitly adopting the submissions of counsel).
(c) Factual issues unrelated to technical issues. "Factual issues unrelated to technical issues: these are bread-and-butter matters for a judge. Of themselves, they may not merit a referral to the court. But the issues may be seen to be sufficiently complex to merit a transfer, especially, I would observe, if findings of fraud or breach of fiduciary duty are to be found against a party or a witness, a factor which, whilst not by itself conclusive, one might normally expect to be more appropriate for a judge" (paragraph 55(b)).
(d) Patent law issues normally the hearing officer would be expected to deal with those (paragraph 55(c)).
(e) Non-patent law issues these would normally be regarded as the province of the judge, but that did not mean that any case which involved such an issue would be more properly dealt with by a judge. This struck Warren J as an important factor. (Paragraph 55(d)).
(f) The test was not whether a matter could be described as "highly complex"; nor was the jurisdiction one which should be exercised cautiously, or with great caution or sparingly. (paragraph 65).
(g) All relevant factors must be weighed in the balance (paragraph 66).
"68. So, provided that one recognises that what is complex is not an absolute standard, I do not think that the Comptroller can go far wrong if he were to consider exercising his discretion whenever a case is complex; he is to be the judge of what is and what is not complex in this context. What he should not do is start with a predisposition to exercise his discretion sparingly, cautiously or with great caution. Complexity can be manifested in various aspects of a question or the matters involved in a question "
" I was looking to see whether the issues in these consolidated cases would more properly be determined by the High Court. I understood that this might be the case, even if the Comptroller could perfectly well deal with them."
No particular issue was taken with this formulation. It was not suggested that the hearing officer did not acknowledge the correct test.
The test and other considerations on this appeal
"As I said at the commencement of this judgment, this appeal raises a familiar question. The court hears numerous appeals originating from decisions of tribunals of fact, not infrequently where the tribunal of fact is not a person with legal qualifications. Even when the tribunal has a legally qualified chairman, such as is the case with an industrial tribunal, this court has repeatedly said that when giving their decisions such tribunals are not required to create elaborate products of refined legal draughtsmanship, and those decisions should not be subjected to detailed legalistic analysis or gone through with a fine-tooth comb. The decisions must be read in a common-sense manner and looked at in the round. Of course the parties are entitled to know from the decision the tribunal's basic factual conclusions and the reasons which have led the tribunal to its conclusions on those basic facts. But this court and other appellate courts read such decisions with a degree of benevolence which may not be accorded to the decisions of qualified judges. I see no reason why a different approach should be adopted in relation to appeals from hearing officers."
The decision appealed from
The importance of the patents
"18. Reviewing the arguments under this heading, I did not consider that there was enough here to persuade me that the issues in these proceedings would more properly be determined by the High Court. Most people who file patent applications consider that they are of significant importance if it were otherwise, they wouldn't spend time and money filing them in the first place.
19. In relation to the issues of fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, the basis of these supposed allegations is, in my experience, common fare in entitlement proceedings before the comptroller. They certainly do not convince me that the issues in this case would more properly be determined by the High Court."
Nature of the issues in dispute
(i) Mr Gallagher's normal working duties at Westco.
(ii) The circumstances of Mr Gallagher's creation of a device (called "the ANG device" in accordance with the patent) and a second ANG device.
(iii) The disclosure of the ANG device to Westco and a proposal to licence the ANG device to Westco.
(iv) The treatment of intellectual property rights when Westco entered administration.
(v) The disclosure of the ANG device to the administrators and the duties of the administrators during the Westco administration process.
(vi) The assignment of intellectual property rights from GMD to ANG.
(vii) The development of the second ANG device (over which rights are claimed).
"I don't think it would be unusual in inter partes proceedings before the Comptroller. More importantly, there is nothing here that makes me think that the case would more properly be determined by the High Court."
"24. I thought this was Mr Abrahams' strongest argument, but ultimately it also failed to persuade me. Non-patent law issues, including those indicated by Mr Abrahams, arise from time to time in patent and trademark proceedings, but they do not of themselves cause the Comptroller to decline to deal (or, as the Registrar of trademarks, to refer an application to the court). In this particular case, I consider that any non-patent law issues that are likely to arise should involve no more than brief excursions into well trodden byways. Consequently I do not accept that the non-patent law issues are such as to make this case one that would more properly be determined by the High Court."
Procedural complexity
"30. I was left with the impression that this case will be as long and as complex as the Hearing Officer allows it to be. Moreover it seems to me that in the end, the successful party is usually the one that succeeds in making the issues look simplest and most straightforward.
31. In any event, I did not find that the procedural complexity of the issues in this case were such that they would more properly be determined by the High Court."
Different costs regimes
"35. On the basis of the facts that have been pleaded and/or established so far in this case, and also having regard to the overriding objective, it seemed to me that the claimant is fully justified in wanting to keep these proceedings before the Comptroller."
That does not seem to me to be a relevant matter. Whether or not the desires of the claimant were justified is not the point. The question is how the potential imbalance of costs and liabilities impacted on where the proper venue for the dispute was. In my view this is another error on the part of the hearing officer. He should have dealt with the question in the context of what it said about the appropriate venue for the determination of the dispute. There is, in my view, much to be said for Mr Abrahams' analysis.
The hearing officer's summary
"39. Taking each of Mr Abraham's points in turn, under the four headings, I found that none of them (individually) caused me to believe that the issues in these proceedings would more properly be determined by the High Court. Considering all of them together clearly makes a stronger case for declining to deal; but even so it is not strong enough to outweigh the arguments for keeping these proceedings before the Comptroller especially those arguments based on the overriding objective."
Conclusion