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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 >> Fearns (t/a Autopaint International) v Anglo-Dutch Paint & Chemical Company Ltd & Ors [2010] EWHC 1708 (Ch) (09 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1708.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1708 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
(INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division
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GARY FEARNS (trading as "AUTOPAINT INTERNATIONAL") |
Claimant |
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– and – |
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(1) ANGLO-DUTCH PAINT & CHEMICAL COMPANY LIMITED (2) DE BEER LAKFABRIEKEN BV (3) CHRISTOPHER WELCH (4) RICHARD JONGSMA (5) MARCO VAN DER WOUDE (6) THEO WEMMERS |
Defendants |
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Thomas Moody-Stuart (instructed by Faegre & Benson) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 24–28 May, 17 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr G. Leggatt Q.C.:
Introduction
Background
The Liability Judgment
(1) The Defendants infringed Mr Fearns' trade mark by selling goods to franchisees under the Autopaint mark in circumstances where the sales were not authorised by the Direct Sales Agreement;
(2) Such sales also involved passing off by the Defendants;
(3) There was also passing off by the Defendants which took the form of supplying goods which were branded "De Beer" or "Octoral" to franchisees who had ordered Autopaint branded goods without informing them of the substitution (described by the Judge as "switch selling to the trade");
(4) A further form of passing off occurred as a result of the Defendants' insistence that the franchisees to whom they supplied "De Beer" or "Octoral" branded products sell them as "Autopaint", which was done by decanting the paint into Autopaint branded tins before supplying it to customers (described by the Judge as "switch selling to the public").
(1) The Judge found that there was an agreement between Mr Fearns and De Beer ("the tin agreement") which allowed De Beer to manufacture paint tins in the Autopaint get-up but on the basis that such tins were to be supplied exclusively to Autopaint. The unauthorised supply of paint by the Defendants to third parties in Autopaint branded tins thus involved a breach of the tin agreement.
(2) In 1998 Mr Fearns entered into an oral agreement with De Beer ("the Australia agreement") to allow De Beer to supply Autopaint branded products in Australia to a business called "Issa Autopaints". There was a dispute as to the terms of this agreement and in particular as to the level of the royalty payable by De Beer on such sales. Mr Fearns contended that the agreed royalty was 3% of turnover; De Beer that it was 0.5%. The Judge held in favour of Mr Fearns.
(3) In April or May 2004 Mr Fearns made an agreement with De Beer ("the Malta agreement") which the Judge found gave De Beer a continuing permission to supply Autopaint branded products directly to a distributor in Malta at the same price as charged by Autopaint. Under this agreement De Beer was obliged to account to Mr Fearns for 90% of the gross margin on such sales, with 10% being retained in respect of distribution costs.
The Appeal
"Causation
62. This aspect I can take quite shortly. There was no direction that there should be a split trial. Furthermore, if the judge had the evidence on which he could deal with one aspect of causation, the loss of the franchisees, there is no reason why he should not have dealt with it. So much indeed was clearly conceded by Mr Lissack quite properly at the trial.
63. The problem, as it seems to me, is that, until the court knows the extent of any infringements of Mr Fearns' trade marks and the extent of any breaches of the consent agreement reached in May 2004, the court cannot finally rule as to their effect.
64. It seems to me most unlikely that Mr Fearns will be able to establish that, if the agreement made in May had been adhered to by De Beer, he would have been able to maintain his business, including supplying his franchisees. But until the extent of the breaches are clear it does not seem to me that he should be prevented from seeking to establish that, if the agreement had been complied with by De Beer, he would have been able to survive and survive with his network of franchisees intact.
Conclusion on causation
65. I would allow the appeal to the extent it prevents Mr Fearns establishing loss of his business flowing from breaches of the agreement reached in May 2004. But I stress that, in the light of what I have said in paragraph 64, Mr Fearns should not feel too encouraged by that decision."
Witnesses
The Issues
(1) What was the extent of the sales made by Anglo Dutch to franchisees which were not permitted by the Direct Sales Agreement and therefore unlawful, and what profits did Mr Fearns lose as a result of such sales?
(2) What further credits, if any, are due to Mr Fearns for sales made by Anglo Dutch which were permitted by the Direct Sales Agreement?
(3) Did the Defendants' unlawful acts cause Mr Fearns to lose his franchisee network and thereby his entire business?
(4) What further royalties are payable to Mr Fearns under the Australia Agreement?
(5) What further sum is payable to Mr Fearns under the Malta Agreement?
Legal Principles
Extent of unauthorised sales
Credits payable to the Claimant
Alleged Loss of the Autopaint Business
Loss of the Franchisees
"How can [Anglo Dutch] help
With your commitment to us now we can make plans to introduce the products you will need during the run up to 2007 and beyond
Only with your joint purchasing power on all products … will make this a possibility for everyone to benefit.
…
EVERYONE OF YOU WILL HAVE THE SAME PRICE
EVERYONE OF YOU WILL BE ANNUAL INDIVIDUAL VOLUME RELATED BONUS STRUCTURES"
"If Blank I have a bigger problem than I first believed, for a short period I could convince them but this will affect sales and they may be happier to continue purchasing commodity products from [Autopaint], this will then make it harder to make the break away from Gary [Fearns] and give him the opportunity to switch them to [Max Meyer]."
In circumstances where the Defendants with their knowledge of the trade and of the franchisees made this judgment, it seems to me that I should be very slow to conclude that their deliberate decision to make unlawful use of the Autopaint trade mark was unnecessary and without causative effect.
"… I want to make it clear to you that so far as I am able I will now provide you with a full range of Autopaint International Products at the existing prices, to the extent that I am unable to source certain products then I can provide you with a full range of updated products and somebody to familiarize you with them if required."
Was the Autopaint Business Already Doomed?
April 2004
(1) Below the operating profit line, the business was incurring increasing financing costs. Bank and hire purchase interest costs rose from £40,000 at April 2000 to £80,000 at April 2004.
(2) In the years ended April 2003 and 2004 Mr Fearns incurred VAT surcharges of, respectively, £102,000 and £73,000. According to Mr Godfrey, such surcharges are usually incurred when a business fails on two or more occasions to make its quarterly VAT payments on time and are an indication that cash is really short.
(3) Trade creditors had been increasing, from £757,000 at April 2002 to
£1,092,000 at April 2004, partly because Mr Fearns was taking longer to pay his suppliers, the main supplier being De Beer. In a joint experts' report prepared before the trial on liability by the Defendants' expert, Mr Thompson, and Mr Fearns' then expert, Mr Ballamy, the expert accountants calculated that the average time taken by Mr Fearns to pay his creditors increased from 86 days in 2002 to 134 days in 2004. Mr Godfrey did not agree with the methodology used for this calculation and made a calculation on a different basis which nevertheless indicated that average 'creditor days' were 71 days in 2002 and had reached 94 days in 2004. Mr Godfrey's experience was that periods of 70 to 90 days are not "completely unsustainable" for one or two years, but if continued for longer than this would ordinarily be expected to lead to the collapse of a business.
(4) It was agreed in the joint experts' report that one of the causes of Mr Fearns' increasing inability over this period to pay his creditors on time was the level of his drawings from the business, which over the five years to April 2004 exceeded the net profits of the business by a total of more than £500,000.
(5) Having reduced in the three years to April 2003 (to £810,000), stock levels increased to £1,363,000 at April 2004. This large stock increase reflected the fact that Mr Fearns was buying more stock from suppliers other than De Beer (after De Beer had placed him on prepay) who were willing to offer him credit; but the benefit of such credit was short term as the build-up of stock placed a substantial additional funding requirement on the business.
(6) At the April 2004 year end the business had net current liabilities of £134,000.
(7) Social security and tax creditors had increased from under £20,000 in the years to April 2001 to £334,000 at April 2004 – again evidence of insufficient working capital.
(8) In April 2004 Mr Fearns owed £211,000 in respect of overdue personal income tax which, as Mr Godfrey agreed, would negatively affect his ability to reduce his drawings from the business.
(9) There was a decline in sales in the year ended April 2004 from the level of £5.6 to £5.7 million achieved in all but one of the preceding eight years to £5.23 million. I think it likely that this decline reflected difficulties which Mr Fearns was having in maintaining supplies to his shops and franchisees, which in turn resulted from shortage of cash to pay suppliers and lack of available credit, particularly given the obligation to pre-pay for orders placed with De Beer.
(10) There is other evidence from around this time of inability to maintain supplies. For example, in an email sent to Mr Jongsma on 22 May 2004 Mr Welch reported that he had been contacted by four of Mr Fearns' shops and eight of his franchisees and that:
"All are asking what is happening and have run out of fast moving tinters. London report that they are turning down customers and might as well close the shop.
Many staff are looking for new jobs.
There is no way Gary [Fearns] can pay us 50,000 a week with such low sales volumes."
(11) I have no doubt that it was the problems caused by his lack of cash and difficulty in supplying orders that led Mr Fearns to enter into the Direct Sales Agreement with the Defendants in May 2004, despite his natural reluctance to do so. As the Court of Appeal pointed out, he had the choice between losing the goodwill of the franchisees and possibly his business, or keeping their goodwill by allowing the Defendants to supply Autopaint products which he could not while at the same time paying off part of his debt. It is understandable that he chose the latter.
(2) reducing the level of his drawings from the business; (3) reducing the salary of £40,000 plus mortgage expenses paid to Mr Fearns' father (who took no active role in the business); and (4) injecting additional working capital into the business.
May 2005
What Loss was Caused?
Australia
Malta
Conclusion