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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Glass Slipper Ltd & Anor v (Rimson Flower Productions Ltd & Ors [2019] EWHC 1273 (IPEC) (20 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2019/1273.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1273 (IPEC), [2019] Costs LR 625 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) GLASS SLIPPER LIMITED (2) RYSTAL MIRROR LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) RIMSON FLOWER PRODUCTIONS LIMITED (2) HAD INTERNATIONAL LIMITED (3) RICHARD DUNN (4) LINDSAY SWAN |
Defendants |
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Jeremy Reed (instructed by Lewis Silkin LLP) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
Background
"The assertion that the claimant's claim will be stifled by the order is directly contrary to the statement made by Ms McGuire to the judge at the hearing."
"The judge asked Ms McGuire on a number of occasions [at the hearing of 20 September 2016] whether security could be provided were it to be ordered. She told the judge that it was possible for her to raise the money. There is nothing in the transcript to suggest that Ms McGuire's ability to understand the questions put to her and to answer them was in any way impaired by her anxiety or for any other reason. The questions were straightforward and the answer to them clear."
"The reasons advanced by the Part 20 Defendants for alleging that the Part 20 Claim was fundamentally dishonest appear to be intended to serve as a means to revive by the back door [Event 1's] claim to ownership of the copyright in [the Film]".
The present applications
Application to strike out
"[6] The burden of showing that the second action is an abuse lies on the party asserting it, in this case DWHL, and it must be clearly shown to be an abuse. Whether an action is an abuse is not a question of discretion, but an evaluative assessment to which there can be only one answer. These propositions are established by several decisions of this court, including Stuart v Goldberg Linde [2008] EWCA Civ 2, [2008] 1 WLR 823 and Atkas v Adepta [2010] EWCA Civ 1170, [2011] QB 894. If it is an abuse, the court has a discretion whether to strike it out, but, as Rix LJ said in Atkas v Adepta at [53], once satisfied that the second action is an abuse of process it is likely that the court will strike it out, but it does not necessarily follow.
[8] The inherent power to strike out proceedings as an abuse of process is one 'which any court of justice must possess to prevent misuse of its procedure in a way which, although not inconsistent with the literal application of its procedural rules, would nevertheless be manifestly unfair to a party to litigation before it, or would otherwise bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people': Hunter v Chief Constable of West Midlands Police [1982] AC 529 at 536 per Lord Diplock. Lord Diplock went on to observe that 'the circumstances in which abuse of process can arise are very varied'.
[9] Where, as in the present case, the question is whether to strike out a second set of proceedings raising the same issues as in the first, the authorities establish that a proper basis for finding the second action to be an abuse will be shown if (but this is not intended to be an exhaustive list) the first action was struck out for a deliberate failure to comply with a peremptory order or for inordinate and inexcusable delay in its prosecution or for a wholesale disregard of the rules: see Janov v Morris [1981] 1 WLR 1389, Arbuthnot Latham Bank Ltd v Trafalgar Holdings Ltd [1998] 1 WLR 1426, Securum Finance Ltd v Ashton [2001] Ch 291, and Aktas v Adepta.
[10] In the present case, the first action was struck out for failure to comply with a peremptory order for the provision of security for costs. Such an order will not normally be made if security cannot be provided and the order would stifle a legitimate claim. On that basis, one would expect HCL's second action to be regarded as an abuse of the process. "
"In my judgment, it was in those circumstances a clear abuse to commence new proceedings making the same claim. Going back to Lord Diplock's words in Hunter, it would be manifestly unfair to DWHL to subject it to a second action, when HCL had chosen to abandon the first, and would bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people."
Non-party costs order
"[27] In the years which followed Aiden Shipping, a large number of decisions at first instance and on appeal have considered how the discretion conferred by s.51(3) to order a non-party to pay the costs of the proceedings should be exercised, and have identified a variety of factors which may, depending on the facts, have a material influence on the ultimate decision. Thus in a very well-known passage in Symphony Group Plc v Hodgson [1994] Q.B. 179, at pp.192-93, Balcombe LJ, with whom Staughton and Waite LJJ agreed, identified a number of 'material considerations', which were not intended to amount to an exhaustive list. One of these was that the party seeking such an order should:
'warn the non-party at the earliest opportunity of the possibility that he may seek to apply for costs against him.'
[28] Ten years later, after many intervening cases in this jurisdiction and elsewhere in the common law world, Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood, giving the opinion of the Privy Council in Dymocks Franchise Systems (NSW) Pty Ltd v Todd [2004] UKPC 39; [2004] 1 WLR 2807, summarised the main principles in the following way:
'A number of the decided cases have sought to catalogue the main principles governing the proper exercise of this discretion and their Lordships, rather than undertake an exhaustive further survey of the many relevant cases, would seek to summarise the position as follows:
(1) Although costs orders against non-parties are to be regarded as 'exceptional', exceptional in this context means no more than outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense. The ultimate question in any such 'exceptional' case is whether in all the circumstances it is just to make the order. It must be recognised that this is inevitably to some extent a fact-specific jurisdiction and that there will often be a number of different considerations in play, some militating in favour of an order, some against.
(2) Generally speaking the discretion will not be exercised against 'pure funders', described in paragraph 40 of Hamilton v Al-Fayed as 'those with no personal interest in the litigation, who do not stand to benefit from it, are not funding it as a matter of business, and in no way seek to control its course'. In their case the court's usual approach is to give priority to the public interest in the funded party getting access to justice over that of the successful unfunded party recovering his costs and so not having to bear the expense of vindicating his rights.
(3) Where, however, the non-party not merely funds the proceedings but substantially also controls or at any rate is to benefit from them, justice will ordinarily require that, if the proceedings fail, he will pay the successful party's costs. The non-party in these cases is not so much facilitating access to justice by the party funded as himself gaining access to justice for his own purposes. He himself is 'the real party' to the litigation, a concept repeatedly invoked throughout the jurisprudence see, for example, the judgments of the High Court of Australia in Knight and Millett LJ's judgment in Metalloy Supplies Ltd (In Liquidation) v MA (UK) Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1613. Consistently with this approach, Phillips LJ described the non-party underwriters in TGA Chapman Ltd v Christopher [1998] 1 W.L.R. 12 as 'the defendants in all but name'. Nor, indeed, is it necessary that the non-party be 'the only real party' to the litigation in the sense explained in Knight , provided that he is 'a real party in very important and critical respects' - see Arundel Chiropractic Centre Pty Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (2001) 179 ALR 406, referred to in Kebaro at pp. 3233, 35 and 37. Some reflection of this concept of 'the real party' is to be found in CPR 25.13(1)(f) which allows a security for costs order to be made where 'the claimant is acting as a nominal claimant'."
"[37] I consider that where there is credible evidence that a party would have acted differently if he had been warned then that evidence should be given weight in the overall assessment. The weight to be given to it is of course a matter for the judge."