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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 >> Molavi v Hibbert & Ors [2020] EWHC 121 (Ch) (27 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/121.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 58, [2020] 4 WLR 46, [2020] EWHC 121 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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DR. DONNA MOLAVI |
Claimant/ Applicant |
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- and – |
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GUY HIBBERT THE FORGE ENTERTAINMENT LIMITED -and- NIGEL MCCRERY BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION |
Defendants |
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EDWARD CRONAN (instructed by Judge Sykes Frixou) for the First Respondent
ANDREW NORRIS (instructed by the IP Litigation Dept of the BBC ) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 27 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
John Kimbell QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court):
Introduction
The Proceedings as presently constituted
Works 3,4 and 5
i) 'Work 3': A 22-page screenplay.ii) 'Work 4': A 7-page synopsis
iii) 'Work 5': A 61-page screenplay (incorporating Work 3).
Pre-action protocol letters and commencement of proceedings
"The Claimant's claim against the First Defendant is in breach of the express and implied terms of an oral contract, estopple (sic), infringement of the Claimant's copyright in 2 works concerning the plot of a television broadcast and breach of confidence concerning the said plot.
The Claimant's claim against the Second Defendant is in inducing breach of the said oral contract infringement of the Claimant's copyright in said 2 works and breach of confidence concerning the said plot"
The broadcast of Betrayal
Nikki's competence is called into question in a court case where a second post-mortem has a finding contrary to hers. Amanda Long, the pathologist providing the second finding had a previous relationship with Prof Chamberlain and is prepared to take advantage of that. Two rowers find a floating body in a wetsuit, a research chemist employed by a pharmaceutical company: Nikki does the post-mortem. Because of the previous court case, the senior investigating officer is reluctant to accept Nikki's finding. Nikki is excluded from internal discussions, becomes defensive and feels increasingly isolated. The investigation into the researcher's death raises questions about drug use in the company. The company CEO encourages staff to discredit the Lyell Centre. Nikki surreptitiously repeats and extends her original postmortem, with an independent observer reporting on camera.
Nikki's repeat post mortem produces a surprising result, which Thomas shares with Amanda. Things start to go further wrong at the pharmaceutical company. The court recognises that something has gone seriously wrong in the case, and orders that a new investigation be carried out, independent of the two previous labs. Another researcher at the pharma company is found dead, with a suicide note implicating himself and the previous dead chemist. Clarissa confronts the CEO while Jack checks the crime scene. Nikki discusses the basis of her decisions with a junior colleague: the discussion clarifies her thoughts on presentation to the court. An unexpected relationship is exposed, and the solution falls into place, albeit not completely satisfactorily for Nikki.
The Betrayal claim
The order of 31 July 2019
The application
CPR 19.2
"CPR r 19.2 confers a discretion on the court to join a party if the conditions in rule 19.2(2)(a) or (b) are satisfied".
"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.
"In considering whether or not it is desirable to add a new party pursuant to CPR r 19.2(2) the lodestars are the policy objective of enabling parties to be heard if their rights may be affected by a decision in the case and the overriding objective in CPR Pt 1."
i) The ITV claim would, if tried as presently constituted, be suitable for trial in the short and flexible trial scheme. It would be at most a 2-3 day claim with factual evidence from at most four witnesses, limited disclosure and no expert evidence.ii) The Betrayal claim would involve between nine witnesses of fact, would involve far more disclosure than the ITV claim and may require expert evidence (on word clusters / comparative script analysis).
iii) The Betrayal claim would not be suitable for trial in the short and flexible trials scheme. It followed that joining the Betrayal claim to the ITV claim would inevitably take the ITV claim out of the short and flexible trial scheme.
iv) The ITV claim is of uncertain value but it is not a high value claim. The Betrayal claim had the potential to be worth significantly more than the ITV claim because of the success of the Silent Witness brand
v) If joinder were ordered, progress in the combined action would not be swift. Although the Claimant had produced a draft amended Particulars of claim, no application had been issued for permission to amend. The draft Amended Particulars of Claim was said to be merely indicative of how the claim might be put but the Claimant wished to reconsider the draft if joinder were ordered.
The application under CPR r 19.2(2)(a)
CPR 19.2(1)(b)
i) There is no significant degree of overlap in the factual issues or evidence. The ITV claim is concerned with events in 2017. At the heart of the ITV claim is the pitch at the meeting on 19 April 2017. The Betrayal Claim by contrast concerns a serious of events in 2018 and 2019 culminating in the broadcast of the allegedly infringing work in February 2019. The trial of the Betrayal claim requires consideration of the development of the script for Betrayal following Victoria Gilbert's pitch to the BBC in May 2018 on the one hand and the Claimants own development of Works 3 – 5 in the course of 2018 together with consideration of how if at all there was any connection between the two. The only minor evidential overlap is that fact that Works 3 – 5 had their origin in the ideas expressed briefly in Works 1 – 2.ii) Although the Claimant is the author of all the works, the works in issue in each of the claims are distinct. The ITV dispute is confined to Works 1 and 2. The Betrayal claim is concerned with comparing Works 3 – 5 (but mainly Work 5) with the allegedly infringing work, Betrayal as broadcast.
iii) The BBC has no interest in the outcome of the ITV claim and the Defendants to the ITV claim have no interest in the outcome of the Betrayal Claim. There is no sense in which make sense for the BBC to be bound by the outcome of the ITV claim.
iv) The centre of gravity of the two disputes are different. The centre of gravity of the ITV claim is an alleged breach of contract and/or breach of confidence by Mr Hibbert and/or Forge. The Betrayal claim has as its centre of gravity an infringement of copyright claim. The focus of the evidence will be on the BBC's case of lack of access / independent generation.
v) Whilst Mr McCrery plays a role in both the ITV claim and the Betrayal claim his roles in both claims are peripheral. In the former, he is at the critical pitch to ITV; in the latter he is said to be a potential route by which the BBC came to have access to the Claimant's work. His involvement in both claims is in my judgement a connection but an insignificant one.
Conclusion on joinder application
Directions
The alternative argument: no reasonable prospects of success
i) Any views I might express on the strength or otherwise of the claims as presently set out in the draft Amended Particulars of Claim would not only be obiter but would not give rise to a res judicata estoppel for the benefit of the Claimant, the BBC or Mr McCrery. This is because in the absence of an order for joinder, there is no lis between the Claimant and either the BBC or Mr McCrery which is an essential requirement for res judicata to operate – see Phipson on Evidence 19th edition (2017) para 43-24.ii) It became clear in the course of the hearing that in light of the evidence served by the BBC and Mr McCrery, the Claimant needs to reconsider the claim as presently drafted in any event. It is possible that having now heard the case for the BBC and Mr McCrery the claim will not proceed at all. Whether it does or not and if so on what new or different basis, is a matter for the Claimant.
iii) If the Claimant does decide to advance the Betrayal claim in the form of proceedings against the BBC and Mr McCrery, it will be for the Defendants to decide whether to seek a summary dismissal of that claim or not and if they do so the court's judgment would be then binding on all the parties.
iv) The evidence of how the Claimant's ideas developed in the course of 2018 and how Betrayal came into existence is not straightforward. It is a more appropriate use of the court's resources to wait to see whether formal proceedings are issued against the BBC and Mr McCrery before a full factual and legal analysis is carried out.
v) It is fairer to the Claimant to give her a chance to reflect on the evidence served to date and to give her an opportunity to set out her claim in a fully pleaded form before the court adjudicates on its prospects of success whether on an application for summary disposal or at trial.