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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Anan Kasei Co. Ltd & Anor v Neo Chemicals & Oxides (Europe) Ltd & Ors (Confidentiality No. 2) [2021] EWHC 3295 (Pat) (06 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2021/3295.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3295 (Pat) |
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Neutral Citation Number: [2021] EWHC 3295 (Pat)
Case No: HP-2016-000018
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (CH D)
PATENTS COURT
Royal Courts of Justice
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings
Fetter Lane
London EC4A 1NL
Date: 6th December 2021
Before :
THE HON MR JUSTICE MELLOR
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Between :
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(1) ANAN KASEI CO. LTD (2) RHODIA OPERATIONS S.A.S
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Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) NEO CHEMICALS & OXIDES (EUROPE) LTD (2) NEO PERFORMANCE MATERIALS, INC. (3) NEO CAYMAN HOLDINGS LTD |
Defendants |
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Tom Mitcheson QC and Miles Copeland (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Claimants
Hugo Cuddigan QC and Adam Gamsa (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Defendants
Party B provided written representations from Baker & Mackenzie LLP
Hearing date: 29th November 2021, further brief written submissions and decision on 30th November, draft Judgment distributed 2nd December 2021
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Approved Judgment
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
COVID-19: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties’ representatives by email. It will also be released for publication on BAILII and other websites. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Monday 6th December 2021 at 10am.
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THE HON MR JUSTICE MELLOR
Mr Justice Mellor:
(a) That there was a distinction in principle between the types of confidentiality regime which the Court can order at an interim stage and the types of confidentiality regime which should be applied at trial.
(b) That the judgment of David Richards J in McKillen v Misland [2012] EWHC 1158 (Ch) (‘McKillen’) established that (a) the Court had no jurisdiction to deny a party access to the evidence at trial or (b) that any such jurisdiction was so exceptional to be of largely theoretical interest only. I will refer to this as the ‘no jurisdiction’ contention.
(c) That it was only if I rejected both those propositions that reference could be made to the competing interests (i.e. of Rhodia, Neo and Party B).
(a) First, that Neo is a small lean organisation such that there is no person other than Mr Kevin Morris who is suitable to have access to the EEO information in this inquiry.
(b) Second, that no conditions should be imposed in an attempt to preserve the confidentiality of the EEO material or prevent its misuse (whether deliberate or inadvertent) other than the undertakings already offered by Mr Morris.
(c) Third, that despite the advice contained in paragraph 57 of my previous judgment (where I acknowledged that I had put in place an interim solution and the matter would be likely to have to be reconsidered), the advice being that ‘Neo’s team would be well advised to bring concrete examples of the difficulties being experienced and proposals to limit the quantity of information which they wish to be disclosed to Mr Morris (or possibly some other representative of Neo)’, Neo produced no proposals to limit the quantity of information for disclosure to Mr Morris, nor did they nominate any other possible candidate. In other words, Neo are insisting that Mr Morris should have access to all the EEO information disclosed in this case - and apparently without regard to the relevance or importance of the information for the trial of this inquiry. I will refer to this as the ‘all EEO’ contention.
‘For six months from trial [to take place in January 2022] not to have any involvement (either directly or indirectly) in commercial negotiations or discussions with Party B relating to high surface area cerium oxide products or any substitute for such products in diesel applications’
(1) For the avoidance of doubt, I confirm I will not play any part in discussions or decisions relating to: (i) the setting of the price of high surface area cerium oxide products or any substitute for such products for use in diesel catalyst engines either alone or as part of a portfolio of products; (ii) the allocation of manufacturing capacity for such products, or the time within which such products are to be supplied from the date of the request for supply. [It will be noted this first undertaking is that proposed in KM-1, paragraph 1(v) and recited in [19] of my previous judgment].
(2) I will not play any part in discussions or decisions relating to the setting of the price of mixed oxide products.
(3) The undertakings in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall cease to have effect 5 years from the end of the trial in the damages inquiry in this matter.
(4) The activities restricted in paragraphs 1 and 2 are activities involving Party B.
“…I need to keep in mind that at least some of IDC’s counterparties may have licences with Lenovo or may seek to negotiate such licences in the future or, indeed, they may have such negotiations ongoing at the moment. I am reminded that I need to be astute to avoid Lenovo obtaining an unfair advantage in any such negotiations via disclosure in this action, albeit those concerns need to be balanced against the requirements for Lenovo to be able to have meaningful participation in this important FRAND trial.”
39. Drawing all this together, I would identify the following non-exhaustive list of points of importance from the authorities:
i) In managing the disclosure of highly confidential information in intellectual property litigation, the court must balance the interests of the receiving party in having the fullest possible access to relevant documents against the interests of the disclosing party, or third parties, in the preservation of their confidential commercial and technical information: Warner Lambert at page 356; Roussel at page 49.
ii) An arrangement under which an officer or employee of the receiving party gains no access at all to documents of importance at trial will be exceptionally rare, if indeed it can happen at all: Warner Lambert at page 360: Al Rawi at [64].
iii) There is no universal form of order suitable for use in every case, or even at every stage of the same case: Warner Lambert at page 358; Al-Rawi at [64]; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)].
iv) The court must be alert to the fact that restricting disclosure to external eyes only at any stage is exceptional: Roussel at [49]; Infederation at [42].
v) If an external eyes only tier is created for initial disclosure, the court should remember that the onus remains on the disclosing party throughout to justify that designation for the documents so designated: TQ Delta at [21] and [23];
vi) Different types of information may require different degrees of protection, according to their value and potential for misuse. The protection to be afforded to a secret process may be greater than the protection to be afforded to commercial licences where the potential for misuse is less obvious: compare Warner Lambert and IPCom 1; see IPCom 2 at [47].
vii) Difficulties of policing misuse are also relevant: Warner Lambert at 360; Roussel at pages 51-2.
viii) The extent to which a party may be expected to contribute to the case based on a document is relevant: Warner Lambert at page 360.
ix) The role which the documents will play in the action is also a material consideration: Roussel at page 49; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)];
x) The structure and organisation of the receiving party is a factor which feeds into the way the confidential information has to be handled: IPCom 1 at [33].
40. To this I would add that the court must be alert to the misuse of the opportunity to designate documents as confidential. It remains the case that parties should not designate such material as AEO, even initially, unless they have satisfied themselves that there are solid grounds for establishing that restricting them in that way is necessary to protect their confidential content.
‘The number of persons referred to in paragraph 5(a) or (b) must be no greater than necessary to ensure compliance with the right of the parties to the legal proceedings to an effective remedy and to a fair trial, and must include, at least, one individual from each party and the lawyers or other representatives of those parties to the proceedings.’ (emphasis added).
“39. Not only does Mr. McKillen apply for the hearing to be in private, but it was until the letter yesterday put on the basis that the defendants would be excluded from it. The wholesale departure from the principle of natural justice, which this would involve, would be highly exceptional if indeed it is permissible at all. Mr. Marshall cited a number of decisions which, as in the present case, excluded or heavily restricted a party's access to documents on disclosure. In addition to the patent cases to which I later refer, these included Church of Scientology of California v Department of Health and Social Security [1979] 1 WLR 723 and Porton v 3M [2010] EWHC 114 (Comm). Such regimes, as I mentioned in my judgment of 28th February, are not uncommon in intellectual property cases involving secret and valuable formulae processes and so on.
40. Lord Dyson referred to this in Al Rawi at paragraph 64 where he says:
"Similarly, where the whole object of the proceedings is to protect a commercial interest, full disclosure may not be possible if it would render the proceedings futile. This problem occurs in intellectual property proceedings. It is commonplace to deal with the issue of disclosure by establishing 'confidentiality rings' of persons who may see certain confidential material which is withheld from one or more of the parties to the litigation at least in its initial stages. Such claims by their very nature raise special problems which require exceptional solutions. I am not aware of a case in which a court has approved a trial of such a case proceeding in circumstances where one party was denied access to evidence which was being relied on at the trial by the other party."
41. In patent and similar cases it may be necessary to limit severely the officers or employees of a party who may have access to the evidence. But as Lord Dyson said, he was not aware of any case in which the trial had proceeded without any access by a party to the evidence, and Mr. Marshall was unable to cite one.
42. As I mentioned in court on Tuesday, 24 April 2012, I asked the current specialist patent judges, Kitchin LJ, Floyd J and Arnold J, whether they had any experience, either at the bar or on the bench, of such a trial. None of them could remember any instance of it.
…
48. That [i.e. the difficult, if not impossible position of the special advocate], it may be observed, would be precisely the effect of the regime which Mr. McKillen was proposing in this case. The lawyers for the defendants would have access to the evidence, but they would be unable to discuss it with their clients and would be unable to take instructions from their clients on it. The only feature of the special advocate regime proposed in Al Rawi which is not present here is that the special advocates in question were separate from the lawyers regularly acting in the case for Mr. Al Rawi. But in my judgment the essential feature was the inability of Mr. Al Rawi to know the evidence against him or to give instructions to his lawyers.
49. If such a departure from the principles of natural justice is not permitted in a case where there are good grounds for considering that serious issues of national security arise, it can hardly be supposed that it would be available in a case concerning the financial circumstances of a party.
50. In the light of the decision and discussion in Al Rawi, it is my view that at common law the court has no jurisdiction to deny a party access to the evidence at trial. But if the jurisdiction does exist, it is in my judgment so exceptional as to be of largely theoretical interest only…
…
74. It will be apparent therefore that there was no conceivable basis for an order that the defendants are not to have full access to all the evidence at trial, even assuming that I had jurisdiction to make such an order. Nor is there any basis for a continuation of a regime which denies the defendants access to the documents disclosed by Mr. McKillen which are, as I have mentioned, until used in court, subject to the duty not to use otherwise than for the purposes of the proceedings.”
“Whatever the position may be in intellectual property cases, in competition cases there are certainly cases when evidence is heard in private and some of the parties do not have access to parts of it. David Richards J does not refer to competition cases. Indeed, given that parties to a competition reference will be business competitors, the position could hardly be otherwise. [fn 34 reads: The Pay TV cases, one of the biggest competition appeals in recent years before the Competition Appeal Tribunal, involved significant parts of the evidence being dealt with in confidence from other parties to the reference. The passage to this effect in the previous edition was referred to by Roth J in …..Infederation..] In BMI Healthcare [v Competition Commission [2013] CAT 24] the Competition Appeal Tribunal dealt with position rather more robustly: (at [44]-[45])
“Taken to their logical extremes, Al Rawi and Bank Mellat might be taken to express extreme disapprobation of the Commission’s use of confidentiality rings and data rooms— and, indeed, this Tribunal’s use of confidentiality rings. After all, confidentiality rings tend to be limited to external advisers (generally). We are very confident that the Supreme Court did not have in mind market investigation references in the Commission in either Al Rawi or Bank Mellat, and certainly these were not considered by the Supreme Court. Before us, none of the parties suggested that these decisions did anything more than highlight the fact that closed material procedures—and we use that term widely to embrace both confidentiality rings and data rooms—have to be justified by the circumstances, and should be as narrowly used as is possible in those circumstances. But, what those circumstances are is of enormous significance.”
In Infederation [[2020] EWHC 657 (Ch)] Roth J …. declined to express a view as to whether the comments of David Richards J required some qualification. However, he did say that (i) such arrangements are exceptional; (ii) they must be limited to the narrowest extent possible; and (iii) they require careful scrutiny by the court to ensure that there is no resulting unfairness.
In Commercial Bank Privatbank [v Kolmoisky [2021] EWHC 1910 (Ch) at [41]] Trower J said:
“the specific points considered by David Richards J [i.e. at [31]-[33]] are of general application, albeit tempered by a recognition that the balance may be struck differently depending on the stage of the proceedings at which the imposition or continuation of a confidentiality club order is sought. The reason for this is that David Richards J treated the continuation of a confidentiality club as an interference with the overarching principle of open justice, partly because the relief sought in those proceedings was concerned with the question of whether certain parts of the trial should be heard in private but also because it might involve a situation in which lawyers for one party would have access to the evidence but would not be able to have fully informed discussions with or take comprehensive instructions from their own client.”
“But the law badly needs to be clarified. Is the proper approach in civil cases that adopted in BMI Healthcare? Such an approach makes obvious sense, represents what most people have always thought to be the law, and enables a flexible approach to be adopted. The problems may be more acute in competition litigation, but it is hard to see how there could be a blanket rule in other litigation but not in competition litigation. And if there was a blanket rule applicable to competition litigation, how could that sort of litigation ever be conducted? If the law is as David Richards J indicated in McKillen, then the sooner everyone knows the better, because anyone agreeing a confidentiality club at an interlocutory stage will need to do so in full knowledge as to the position if the matter goes to trial. If the confidentiality club can in principle only last through the interlocutory period, then it may become a much less attractive vehicle than has previously been thought to be the case, and thought will need to be given in particular cases whether there should be, or needs to be disclosure of the confidential material at all.”
“29 The reference there [i.e. in Al Rawi [64]] to the special problems raised by intellectual property proceedings may, in my view, similarly apply to competition law proceedings where rival commercial interests are involved.
30 The application of such protection in intellectual property cases has subsequently been considered by judges of the Patents Court, both before and after the Al Rawi case. In Roussel Uclaf v ICI (No.2) [1990] R.P.C. 45, Aldous J explained, at 48:
“In patent actions it is not unusual that documents disclosed on discovery include matters which a party considers contain valuable confidential information. The procedure normally adopted is that disclosure is first made in confidence to counsel, solicitors, independent patent agents and independent experts. In many cases this enables the parties to prepare and argue their cases properly. Further, the parties can often agree that all that is necessary to preserve the confidential information is that certain parts of the documents are blanked out.”
31 However, in that case after disclosure had taken place the plaintiffs sought to have two patent attorneys working in their patent department admitted to the confidentiality ring, which the defendants strongly opposed. Aldous J stated (at 49):
“Each case has to be decided on its own facts and the broad principle must be that the court has the task of deciding how justice can be achieved taking into account the rights and needs of the parties. The object to be achieved is that the applicant should have as full a degree of disclosure as will be consistent with adequate protection of the secret. In so doing, the court will be careful not to expose a party to any unnecessary risk of its trade secrets leaking to or being used by competitors. What is necessary or unnecessary will depend upon the nature of the secret, the position of the parties and the extent of the disclosure ordered. However, it would be exceptional to prevent a party from access to information which would play a substantial part in the case as such would mean that the party would be unable to hear a substantial part of the case, would be unable to understand the reasons for the advice given to him and, in some cases, the reasons for the judgment. Thus what disclosure is necessary entails not only practical matters arising in the conduct of the case but also the general position that a party should know the case he has to meet, should hear matters given in evidence and understand the reasons for the judgment.”
32 After balancing the various considerations for and against admitting the two attorneys, Aldous J came down in favour of admitting them subject to strengthened undertakings. The appeal against his decision was dismissed by the Court of Appeal.
33 In IPCom GmbH & Co KG v HTC Europe Co Ltd [2013] EWHC 52 (Pat), Floyd J (as he then was) considered which persons should be entitled to see confidential documents being disclosed in two related proceedings concerning the determination of the appropriate royalty and other FRAND terms of licences under IPCom’s standard essential patent. A previous order of the court had provided for the establishment of a confidentiality club “to include as a minimum: external counsel, experts and one other person elected by each of the parties”. When the court ordered disclosure of some of the licences entered into by the defendants, HTC and Nokia, with third parties, which IPCom argued could serve as comparators, the defendants did not object to these documents being seen by external lawyers and experts but they objected to IPCom’s wish to disclose them to the two individuals who ran IPCom or to a Dr Roman Sedlmaier and Mr Philipp Kahlenberg.
34 It was not disputed that the licence agreements were regarded as highly confidential and that knowing the terms on which Nokia and HTC were prepared to grant such licences would be of commercial value to IPCom. The judge quoted the above passage from Aldous J’s judgment in Roussel Uclaf and observed, at the above passage from Aldous J’s judgment in Roussel Uclaf and observed, at [21]:
“The court does not normally operate on the basis that a party will wilfully misuse information disclosed to it. But it is recognised that disclosure of information to a party who is or may become involved in collateral commercial activities may place that party in a difficult position where there was a risk of use or disclosure … .”
35 As regards the individuals, Mr Kahlenberg was said to be an external commercial adviser of IPCom who had been involved in developing IPCom’s licensing strategy since 2003. Dr Sedlmaier was an external lawyer working for a German law firm of which the principal was also a member of IPCom, and he had been involved in coordinating IPCom’s legal strategy since 2007. Floyd J stated, at [30]:
“It is clear that both individuals are close to IPCom in the sense that they form an important part of IPCom’s licensing team.”
36 Floyd J referred to the principles set out in Al Rawi and the need to strike a balance. He took account of the fact that although the material was confidential, it was “not at the high end of the scale represented by secret process cases”. The extent to which it was relevant to the issues in the proceedings was at that stage unclear and the litigation was still at an interim stage. But Floyd J significantly added, at [31(iii)]:
“Nevertheless, points of a very broad brush nature have been made in the pleadings about the relevance or lack of it of Nokia’s and HTC’s licences, a matter on which IPCom have the right to respond.”
37 Floyd J noted that the case was unusual in the field of patent litigation in that IPCom was a very small company in terms of personnel. He refused to permit inspection of the documents by the two members of IPCom or by Mr Kahlenberg, whom he regarded as being in a very similar position, since there would be real risk that the confidential information would prove of value to them in licensing IPCom’s portfolio of patents. But by contrast he held that inspection by Dr Sedlmaier should be allowed, stating (at [32(v)]):
“Dr Sedlmaier, on the other hand is an external lawyer bound by a professional code of conduct. I accept that he is, as the evidence shows, extremely close to IPCom, and has been involved in commercial negotiations. Whilst that fact is relied on by HTC, Nokia and the interested parties to make a case for his exclusion, it shows also that, if he is included, the prejudice to IPCom is significantly mitigated. To the extent that he is involved in future negotiations he will have to shut out from his mind anything learned from the confidential documents.”
38 The use of “legal eyes only” (LEO) confidentiality rings was addressed by Henry Carr J in TQ Delta LLC v Zyxel Communications UK Ltd [2018] EWHC 1515 (Ch); [2018] Bus LR 1544. The judge summarised previous decisions on confidentiality restrictions in the patents field, including in particular the IPCom judgment, and concluded as follows:
“21. In my judgment, the authorities discussed above establish that it is exceptional to limit access to documents in the case to external eyes only, so that no representative from the party which is subject to the restriction can see and understand those documents. An external eyes tier does not require justification for the restriction by reference to individual documents. It enables one party to decide to exclude all representatives of the opposite party from access to any document that it chooses, and places the onus on the party seeking access to apply to court to obtain it. That approach, in my judgment, is wrong in principle.
…
23. However, it is important to emphasise that:
i) parties may choose to agree an external eyes-only tier, as in the Unwired Planet International case [see below];
ii) confidentiality club agreements are often essential in intellectual property cases; which cases require disclosure of confidential information. In such cases, a regime for disclosure which limits access to sensitive documents to specific individuals within one of the parties, in order to protect confidentiality, is now commonplace;
iii) redactions to documents can be made to exclude material which is confidential and irrelevant to the dispute;
iv) external eyes-only access to individual documents of peripheral relevance, whose disclosure would be damaging, may be justified in specific cases; as in the IPCom case;
v) I do not exclude the possibility that in certain exceptional cases, external eyes-only access to specific documents of greater relevance might be justified, at least at an interim stage.
vi) however, in the absence of exceptional circumstances, each party must be able to see and discuss with its lawyers the relevant parts of the key documents in the case.
24. An external eyes-only tier enables a blanket exclusion of access by one of the parties to the relevant parts of key documents. This is incompatible with the right to a fair hearing under Article 6 of European Convention on Human Rights, and with the principles of natural justice. It is incompatible with the obligations of lawyers to their clients. The principles on which solicitors are obliged to act on behalf of clients instructing them require the sharing of all relevant information of which they are aware.”
(a) First, I accept the general point that technical secrets which have to be disclosed in intellectual property cases (particularly in patent cases) to a competitor may well be deserving of greater protection than commercial information, but it all depends on the character of the information in question.
(b) Second, I am not at all surprised at David Richards J’s report in McKillen at [42] that none of the very experienced specialist patent Judges he consulted were able to remember any instance of a case where the trial had proceeded without any access by a party to the evidence. I have little doubt that there were no such instances because in every case a pragmatic solution was found, either by agreement or by ruling of the Court to enable appropriate access to at least one suitable person. Floyd J’s ruling in IPCom 1 (to adopt his abbreviation from Oneplus) is a good example of a pragmatic solution being applied in the case of a company with very few candidates who might be suitable to receive the confidential information in question.
(c) Third, in a very real sense, all these cases turn on their own particular facts. I have little doubt that if the attention of the Supreme Court in Al Rawi had been drawn to the situations in the CAT in the PayTV case or in BMI Healthcare, they would have recognised those situations as exceptional and requiring the exceptional solutions which were adopted in those cases.
“Issue 4 is concerned with the chance that Rhodia would have had to sell and make profit on sales of HSA CeO had Neo not supplied HSA CeO products to Party B. Hence this issue concerns (at least) whether Rhodia had sufficient capacity to supply additional product and the associated delivery times. Mr Bennett says that over 2000 pages of disclosure have been produced. He says it is highly confidential since these materials address the commercial steps Rhodia took (in 2019) in relation to its manufacturing capabilities but they also reveal the nature of Rhodia’s commercial relationship with Party B, the persons involved, what was said in meetings between them, the commercial leverage used between them, as well as delivery times.”
‘Having reviewed Mackay III, it is clear, as Rhodia submitted, that it contains highly confidential information and in particular the pricing mechanisms which underlie the prices charged to Party B, plus granular detail on Rhodia’s costs of e.g. the raw ingredients used in manufacture, plus the volumes of non-HSA CeO products sold by Rhodia to Party B and pricing information about those products.’
‘In so far as a distinction has been drawn to date between price and ‘non-price’ terms of business, this was addressed by Dr Rohe for Rhodia. His evidence, which I accept, is that the setting of price and non-price terms in any commercial negotiation is inextricably linked such that, for example, knowledge of price or margin terms would incentivise a person to negotiate non-price terms that allowed the price terms to be set more favourably.’
“….it strikes me as the sort of information which if it was the subject of an information exchange between competitors (such as Rhodia and Neo) it would result in a breach of competition law. I recognise there is no full exchange here, because to the extent that Neo’s pricing and other information have been disclosed to Rhodia, that disclosure has been, as I understand it, to Dr Wassmann and is subject to the Wassmann undertaking. However, Rhodia’s material in issue is greater in volume and detail and third parties might well be surprised that it should be disclosed to the COO of Rhodia’s arch competitor, even in the context of this litigation and the undertakings on offer.”
“7. Rhodia and Neo are in competition with each other. Party A has therefore agreed very strict confidentiality rules with both companies. The market for HSA Cerium Oxide, mixed oxides and other raw materials with suitable quality and properties is divided between a small number of producers, Neo and Rhodia are both key players in this market. Accordingly, price negotiations with each of Neo and Rhodia are highly sensitive to Party A. However, it is not only that the price negotiations with Neo and Rhodia are of great importance for party A. It is also the case that any disclosure and any knowledge by Neo and [Rhodia] of each other's prices and quantities are of overall competition and antitrust concern and may have an impact on the market for those products. This may thus both directly and indirectly lead to damage to Party A as well as other purchasers of these products.
8. Given its independent relationship with both parties, Party A is extremely concerned about information regarding its commercial agreements and dealings with Rhodia, including its purchasing strategy, being shared with Neo (or any other competitor). The sharing of this information is likely to have a serious negative impact on Party A’s existing and future arrangements, and negotiations with these companies. Therefore, Party A considers the disclosure sought by Neo would cause Party A significant, irreparable harm if ordered.
9. Further, given that Neo and Rhodia are competitors, Party A also considers that the sharing of information about commercial arrangements, particularly as to the products, volumes and prices, between Rhodia and Party A poses a significant risk to competition in the industry.
10. Were it not for these proceedings, to which Party A is not a party, the information contained in the documents sought would never be available to another business partner, like Neo, in such a competitive market. For example, Neo would learn from the documents information about the specific products that Rhodia supplies Party A, pricing structures and terms & conditions. Neo would otherwise not usually have access to such information as the products supplied are normally very client specific and pricing is strictly confidential.”
“In relation to all this material, Rhodia draw attention to an important point made by Counsel then appearing for Neo (Mr Gamsa) at the hearing before Marcus Smith J. where it was accepted that the information then in question (relating to price) was ‘the sort of information which could…. seep …inadvertently into one’s conduct’ ‘if it was going to someone who was involved in price negotiations or signing-off of deals and that sort of thing’. That entirely realistic concession was made in the context of Neo’s principal point then which was that Mr Morris did not have any involvement in ‘those sorts of negotiations, discussions or decisions, namely negotiations involving price or supply contracts and so on.’ To the same end, Mr Bennett for Rhodia says the information in dispute here once seen will be difficult to forget. In a sense, this point goes too far because there is a significant volume of material. However, the point remains good because there are bound to be significant pieces of information which someone like Mr Morris will spot - and then it will be very difficult for him to put those out of his mind, however diligently he tries to adhere to his undertakings.”
‘15. The revised undertakings offered by Mr Morris are designed to give Mr Morris the ability to negotiate and advise on deals and commercial arrangements involving: (i) non-price terms other than allocation of capacity and lead time in respect of HSA cerium oxide products; and (ii) all terms in respect of products other than the HSA cerium oxide products in dispute in this case for use in diesel applications. Point (ii) includes mixed oxide products which form the vast majority of Rhodia’s business in ingredients for automotive exhaust catalysts. The information contained in Rhodia’s confidential disclosure that Mr Morris wishes to see relates to HSA cerium oxide products. It also discloses information directly about Rhodia’s dealings with [PARTY B] in relation to mixed oxides and discloses information that is useful to a competitor in competing against Rhodia in relation to such products. There is also information on HSA cerium oxide products that can be used to deduce what Rhodia does in relation to mixed oxides because the issues are common between HSA cerium oxide products and mixed oxide production. These include lead-time, general conditions of supply and management of customer supplies.
16. Dr Rohe informs me that the information in the table at paragraph 39 of Mackay 3, for example, would tell Neo a lot about Rhodia’s mixed oxide business. Dr Rohe believes that certain products, although their names are hidden, are identifiable by Neo based on other characteristics (such as place of manufacture) indicated in that table. It is also Dr Rohe’s understanding that Neo competes with Rhodia in relation to those products. That table describes arrangements that are still applicable between Rhodia and [PARTY B] will also tell Mr Morris the volumes Rhodia supplies to Neo (by virtue of the pricing structure). Dr Rohe informs me that knowing the total volume of products is information that would be very useful to someone at Neo that was involved in agreeing pricing structures with [PARTY B] for Neo’s portfolio competing products. Those products are predominantly mixed oxides in relation to which Neo and Rhodia compete. Although the market for HSA cerium oxide products may have peaked, as Mr Morris says, those products are only a small fraction of Rhodia’s business with [PARTY B]. The remaining mixed oxide products remain a strong and ongoing business for Rhodia with [PARTY B]. They are and will continue to be the subject of commercial discussions between Rhodia and [PARTY B]. Dr Rohe informs me that he has reason to believe that Neo continues to compete with Rhodia for mixed oxide business from customers including [PARTY B] and others.
17. I have asked Dr Rohe to consider whether, if the roles were reversed, receiving Neo’s information equivalent to the table at paragraph 39 of MacKay 3 would cause Dr Rohe difficulty. Dr Rohe informs me that if he had received that sort of information in relation to Neo’s pricing structure it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, for him to put if from his mind in carrying out his normal responsibilities. Dr Rohe is responsible for advising on and controlling Rhodia’s arrangements with its customers. As such he has to review and provide input and advice on matters that Rhodia’s key account managers report from their contact with customers (although the key account managers do not report directly to Dr Rohe). Dr Rohe, together with his boss, is responsible for giving feedback on and signing off on deals with Rhodia’s customers, such as that reflected at paragraph 39 of MacKay 3.
18. Dr Rohe says he would find it pretty much impossible to do his job in providing that input and advice whilst at the same time complying with an obligation not to use the information disclosed in this hypothetical scenario. For example, knowing how the percentages in the table at paragraph 39 of MacKay 3 are applied, would allow Dr Rohe to know that the proposal brought to him by one of his reports was more generous than needed to beat Neo’s terms. Knowing how Neo deals with the costs of the rare earth raw materials it uses would also be useful in a competitive situation and hard for Dr Rohe to put from his mind when considering a proposal for the pricing strategy with [PARTY B]. That information is revealed in the disclosure and witness statements in lieu of disclosure given by Rhodia.’
(a) Mr Morris is a lawyer by training, having practised for 17 years before joining Neo. This, I accept, is a significant consideration, since Mr Morris can be expected to have an enhanced understanding of the undertakings he offers or gives and the consequences of breach.
(b) He is responsible for the conduct of the litigation between Rhodia and Neo in the UK and elsewhere, including the Netherlands, Germany and China. In this regard, I note that it is unlikely that such detailed disclosure is available in those other jurisdictions.
(c) He does not deal directly with customers on prices (at least in relation to HSA CeO products)
(d) There is no-one else at Neo who could step into his multi-jurisdictional role in relation to this litigation.
(a) First, I accept that Mr Morris should have access to materials which will be of importance or relevance at the trial. If those materials are not already apparent, they will be by the time expert’s reports have been exchanged.
(b) However (and without being too prescriptive about these categories) from my perhaps less than fully educated review of the EEO materials, it is tolerably clear that there is a significant quantity of the EEO materials which can already be identified as being at best of peripheral relevance and perhaps more realistically as of no relevance, yet which remains highly confidential. It may be questioned why material of such low or no relevance has been served, but I am satisfied that Rhodia included such material to provide a full explanation of its complex pricing structure and terms of business with Party B. The presence of this material was necessary to resolve any questions which might otherwise have arisen.
(c) Although not limited to this, as presently advised I am inclined to place the pricing (and other terms) relating to the mixed oxide products in this category. Of course, I may be wrong and Counsel may seek to make a point at trial based on mixed oxides, although that would not automatically elevate all the data about Rhodia’s mixed oxide products to the status of important information at the trial.
(d) I also have in mind the fact that the issues of importance at the trial will be focussing on Rhodia’s internal costs, arrangements, pricing and other terms on which they conducted their HSA CeO business with Party B. Whilst Neo’s equivalents may be in part similar and in part different, Mr Morris will be able to participate in a meaningful way by having EEO material disclosed to him relating to the HSA CeO business of Rhodia. I am not persuaded that disclosure of all the EEO material to Mr Morris is required to enable him and Neo to participate in a meaningful way, and in particular EEO information relating to the mixed oxide side of the business.
(e) In relation to EEO material of lesser, peripheral or no relevance, I consider it ought to be sufficient if Neo’s lawyers advise some other representative of Neo as to their views as to the relevance of this other category(ies) of material. They can do that by showing this other representative examples of the materials and explaining their views. In that way, a representative of Neo can satisfy him or herself that these other materials are not relevant, such that Mr Morris does not need to be troubled with them. I emphasise this does not need to be a one-off exercise.
(f) I am not in a position, nor would I wish to prescribe precisely what EEO information Mr Morris should receive or what should be disclosed to the other representative. If a split is decided upon, I recognise that the perceived relevance of information may change as trial approaches and proceeds and if it is perceived that some information which has previously only been disclosed to this other representative and now needs to be disclosed to Mr Morris, that can be done on the basis of the undertakings which will be in place. If those undertakings present particular difficulties, then the issue can be raised with the trial judge.
(g) Finally, on these points, I recognise that the evidence indicates there is no clean split to be made between the HSA CeO information and the mixed oxide information (see paragraph 15 of Bennett 21, cited in paragraph 58 above) and they may be inextricably intertwined, which is why I have built flexibility into my solution.
(a) There was no response whatsoever to the detailed evidence from Dr Rohe (as relayed in Bennett 21), some of which I quoted in paragraph 58 above.
(b) I was provided with no information at all about the utility (or lack of it) of the disclosure to Mr Morris of the impacts permitted in my previous judgment (see paragraphs 51(b) and (c)).
(c) I was provided with no information from Neo as to whether any difficulties have been experienced in completing Neo’s expert report in chief. I infer that it has been possible to complete that expert report (notwithstanding the points made by Mr Ryan which I considered in my previous judgment) because the only obstacle to its service was said to be sign-off by Mr Morris. This accords with my understanding that the expert’s report should be the independent and objective view of the expert.
(d) Neo made no proposal at all to limit the quantity of information which they wished to be disclosed to Mr Morris, notwithstanding the fact that Neo’s experienced legal advisers must already have made distinctions as to the relevance and importance of large swathes of the EEO materials, even if only provisional at this stage.
My decision
(a) If the Defendants elect to nominate Mr Kevin Morris as such a representative, before he is given access to the aforesaid documents in their unredacted form, in addition to the undertakings he has already given (which, for the avoidance of doubt, includes the undertaking in KM-1, paragraph 1(v)) Mr Morris must further undertake not to play any part in discussions or decisions relating to the setting of the price of mixed oxide products for supply to Party B for a period of 5 years from the end of the calendar year in respect of which he receives details or data of Rhodia’s pricing of such products (other than HSA Cerium Oxide products) which is designated EEO Highly Confidential to Rhodia.
(b) If the Defendants elect to nominate a representative other than Mr Kevin Morris (whether Mr Randall Reid or someone else), he or she must give an undertaking in Wassmann form.
(c) All these undertakings to be reviewed by the trial Judge in due course. The trial Judge will have to decide how much of the detail to include in a public judgment and that may require adjustment to these undertakings.
(a) By way of brief explanation, the reason for the further undertaking for Mr Morris being framed as it is, is to enable distinctions to be made based on relevance of certain categories of information. From their conduct of the inquiry to date and the content of the Defendants’ own expert report, I anticipate that the Defendants’ lawyers are able to form a view as to the relevance of, in particular, the Claimant’s pricing and prices of mixed oxide products (other than HSA Cerium Oxide products) and thereby to decide that it is appropriate to limit the information disclosed to Mr Morris regarding the Claimant’s pricing of mixed oxide products other than HSA Cerium Oxide products if it appears or is anticipated that such details or data will be of no or very little material relevance to the issues at trial.
(b) To illustrate the working of the undertaking the spreadsheet exhibited by Mr Mackay includes such data from 2017 to 2020. If the last set of data disclosed to Mr Morris is from the 2017 calendar year, then the 5-year period ends at the end of 2022. Likewise, if the 2020 data is disclosed to Mr Morris, then the period runs out at the end of 2025. Equally, if the details of the 2017 pricing arrangement (but no data) are disclosed to Mr Morris, the undertaking will cease to have effect from the end of 2022.
(c) If the Defendants’ lawyers are able to decide to limit the information disclosed to Mr Morris, the parties must co-operate to agree a suitably redacted version of the data (whether contained in a witness statement, expert report or exhibit) for disclosure to Mr Morris. This must be done quickly.
(d) If the Defendants’ lawyers decide that it is not appropriate to make a decision on the point (whether in conjunction with the other representative or not), they can disclose the limited information (i.e. information other than that which would be caught by the additional undertaking) to Mr Morris and await service of the Claimants’ Expert Report to determine whether any information caught by the additional undertaking will be of relevance at trial.
(e) Ultimately, the Defendants can apply to the Court to resolve any difficulties.
(a) By the 2017 pricing arrangement, I meant the agreement dating from November 2017, as referred to in Dr Richards’ witness statement at paragraph 16.
(b) By ‘data’ I meant specific figures e.g. (a) the figures set out in the spreadsheets exhibited to Mackay III and (b) the figures set out in Mackay III (e.g. at paragraph 38).
(c) Where figures (i.e. data) represent the position in a number of different years, the 5 years runs from the last year in which the figures given represent the position, with the 5 year period ending at the latest in 2025. I recognise that certain figures are more significant than others, in terms of the protection required
(d) Finally, I inserted the word ‘relevant’ at the start of the fifth line of paragraph 79 above. As Mr Copeland for Rhodia pointed out, this application was about Neo representatives’ access to relevant information, not irrelevant and redacted information.
(a) A declaration that the Witness Statements of Dr Rohe and Dr Richards were served on 26 October 2021.
(b) Resetting the date for exchange of fact evidence in reply to 4.30pm on Friday 3rd December 2021.
(c) Resetting the date for exchange of expert’s reports in chief to 4.30pm Tuesday 7th December 2021.
(d) Resetting the date by which Rhodia is to serve list of documents for inclusion in the trial bundles to 9th December 2021
(e) Resetting the date by which Neo is to serve list of any additional documents to be included in the trial bundles to 16 December 2021.
(f) Resetting the date for exchange of expert’s reports in reply and nomination of any further documents to be included in the trial bundles to 22 December 2021.
(g) Resetting the date by which two sets of the trial bundles are to be served by Rhodia on Neo to the 4th January 2021.