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England and Wales Patents County Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Patents County Court >> Comic Enterprises Ltd v Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp [2012] EWPCC 13 (22 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWPCC/2012/13.html Cite as: [2012] EWPCC 13 |
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7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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COMIC ENTERPRISES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION |
Defendant |
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Simon Malynicz (instructed by Simmons & Simmons) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17th February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Birss QC :
Transfer to the High Court - principles
30. Pulling the various factors together, the points to consider are:-
i) the financial position of the parties (s289(2) 1988 Act). This includes but is not limited to considering whether a party can only afford to bring or defend the claim in a patents county court (para 9.1(1) Practice Direction 30). This factor is closely related to access to justice. The Patents County Court was set up to assist small and medium sized enterprises in enforcing and litigating intellectual property disputes. Guidance on the nature of these enterprises can be found from the Commission Recommendation 2003/361/EC.
ii) whether the claim is appropriate to be determined by a patents county court. This involves considering:
a) the value of the claim, including the value of an injunction and the amount in dispute. (para 9.1(2)(a) Practice Direction 30 and CPR 30.3(a))
b) the complexity of the issues (para 9.1(2)(b) Practice Direction 30 and CPR 30.3(d))
c) the estimated length of the trial. (para 9.1(2)(c) Practice Direction 30). Related to this is CPR 30.3(b) - whether it would be more convenient or fair for hearings (including the trial) to be held in some other court.
iii) the importance of the outcome of the claim to the public in general (CPR 30.3(e)) albeit that a case raising an important question of fact or law need not necessarily be transferred to the Patents Court (s289(2) 1988 Act).
31. A factor which does not play a role is the one in CPR Pt 30.3(c) (availability of a judge specialising in the type of claim in question) since specialist judges are available in both courts.
32. Once those factors are considered I must bear in mind what sort of cases the Patents County Court was established to handle and that its role is to provide cheaper, speedier and more informal procedures to ensure that small and medium sized enterprises, and private individuals, were not deterred from innovation by the potential cost of litigation to safeguard their rights. The decision turns on what the interests of justice require, taking into account both parties interests and interests of other litigants.
The facts relating to transfer
Transfer overall
i) The claimant is maintaining its passing off and trade mark claim on a broad and unspecific basis despite a proper request for further information. For example paragraph 7 of the Particulars of Claim pleads a case of trade mark infringement based on similar goods (inter alia) but does not say what goods of the defendant are said to be similar to what goods covered by the registration. The defendant asked about this in a Part 18 request but received no substantive answer at all even though the claimant must know at least some of the defendant's goods it alleges are similar to goods in the registration. The answer referred to the defendant's own knowledge but plainly the claimant could have formulated its case more precisely at least in part.
ii) On instances of confusion, the claimant has not pleaded all the instances it relies on and refused to give much further information in response to a Part 18 request. The stance taken is that much of the information sought is premature and detailed information will be addressed in disclosure and/or witness statements. That is not a Patents County Court approach to litigation.
iii) The claimant is putting at the forefront of its case an allegation that the defendant knowingly and calculatingly committed the acts complained of. The point is denied by the defendant. The claimant is entitled to advance this case on proper grounds but it is a highly charged issue which will inevitably require disclosure and no doubt cross-examination and will lengthen the proceedings. Although the issue is now also part of the claimant's reply to the defendant's defence under s11, it was raised at the outset by the claimant in the Particulars of Claim to justify a claim for enhanced damages.
iv) Even though the proceedings are now firmly up and running, the attack the defendant's peripheral UK cosmetics trade mark No. 2,134,389 is being maintained.