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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Automotive Latch Systems Ltd v Honeywell International Inc [2008] EWHC 2171 (Comm) (30 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/2171.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2171 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AUTOMOTIVE LATCH SYSTEMS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC |
Defendant |
____________________
Ewan McQuater QC, David Head and James MacDonald (instructed by Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 April to 18th July 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction
Chronology of events
The List of Issues
The factual witnesses
Mr Chevalier
Mr Kettle
Mr Bur
Other ALS witnesses
Honeywell witnesses
Dealings between the parties prior to entering the JCA
Detailed chronology of dealings
"[Since the meeting in January] Jean Chevalier has held further meetings with car manufacturers and finalised the details of the door latch assembly… the drawings comprise the 'final design' of the door latch. ALS is in the process of building and testing sample latches using production standards materials… If testing is successfully completed by end of July [2000], ALS expects to be in a position to commence production assembly machine development. This is expected to take nine months with production capability two to three months thereafter…"
"Jean Chevalier advised that he had been fully responsible for design analysis and design for manufacture studies on the Mercedes S-class door latch system and had carried out similar studies for this product. Analysis results and full FMEAs can be made available for review. "
"Clearly, at the time I drafted this plan, Honeywell understood the design itself to have been verified and ready to progress at least to prototype production stage. "
Although Mr Douglas asked a series of detailed questions at some length about the Honeywell Business Plan which Mr Cummings had prepared, that particular piece of evidence was not challenged by Mr Douglas in cross-examination.
Reliance on misstatements by Mr Chevalier
"(Not to be a negative sorter but…) Tell me you had a door system guy review the contract/spec BEFORE it was signed. When reviewing Exhibit 1 Product Specification, I saw no mention that any Door System testing has been completed.
…..
My concern is that this slick little game changing device has a great many shafts bearings and gears. Based on what little I know about this ALS unit, it would not surprise me if a redesign on materials, shaft structure and supports along with housing structure and geometry will be required (if door level testing has not been done)."
The legal effect of the misstatements
Misrepresentation
"Perhaps we need to disavow them of this blind optimism, "back up the hearse and let them smell the flowers" as it were."
Interpretation of the Joint Collaboration Agreement
The obligations of Honeywell under Article 4.5 and Exhibit 4 of the JCA
"The subject of the co-operation is the further development, manufacture and sale of products satisfying all requirements pertinent to the Product as presently contemplated and future development of successive revisions as further described in the Scope of Work, Exhibit 4."
The standard of performance under Article 4.5
Matters relevant to the assessment of reasonable time
"The consideration of whether there has been a breach of an obligation to perform within a reasonable time is not limited to what the parties contemplated or ought to have foreseen at the time of the contract. In my judgment, the correct interpretation of authorities such as Hick v. Raymond & Reid [1893] AC 22 is that adopted by His Honour Judge Richard Seymour QC in Astea (UK) Ltd v. Time Group LTD [2003] EWHC 725, [2003] All ER (D) 212, where he said that the question whether a reasonable time has been exceeded is
"a broad consideration, with the benefit of hindsight, and viewed from the time at which one party contends that a reasonable time for performance has been exceeded, of what would, in all the circumstances which are by then known to have happened, have been a reasonable time for performance. That broad consideration is likely to include taking into account any estimate given by the performing party of how long it would take him to perform; whether that estimate has been exceeded and, if so, in what circumstances; whether the party for whose benefit the relevant obligation was to be performed needed to participate in the performance, actively, in the sense of collaborating in what was needed to be done, or passively, in the sense of being in a position to receive performance, or not at all; whether it was necessary for third parties to collaborate with the performing party in order to enable it to perform; and what exactly was the cause, or were the causes of the delay to performance. The list is not intended to be exhaustive. "
I do not seek to improve upon that formulation. It shows that, even if the contract had required Peregrine to complete the installation within a reasonable time, the fact that the parties had contemplated at an earlier stage that completion would be effected by a certain date would not necessarily mean that a failure to complete by that time would involve a breach of the obligation to complete within a reasonable time."
Overview of ALS's case on breach
"Honeywell's obligations and performance after the JCA was signed
...
Honeywell's performance … addressing in particular the following issues:
The steps Honeywell should have taken after the JCA was signed;
Project management;
Staffing, resources timing and plans…"
Honeywell resisted that and the learned judge ruled against ALS and excluded those areas from the Scope of Expert Evidence. There was no appeal from her Order.
First twelve months of the collaboration from May 2001 to May 2002
The ALS Business Plan
"Schedule of Product Development
The principal aspects of product development include:
1. organising an extensive comparative study of the available competitive products (completed);
2. obtaining the necessary feed back from the customers (completed);
3. adapting the product designs to customer specifications (completed);
4. fine-tuning the prototypes to comply with specific customer requirements (to be performed);
5. producing a number of testing prototypes to perform the necessary statutory and product lifecycle tests (partly completed);
6. setting up the process of assembly (to be performed) and finally
7. the launching of the process of production in series (to be performed),
The business has successfully completed phases 1 to 3 and partly phase 4. Phases 5 to 6 are still to be performed.
Stages of Product Development (28 to 38 months)
The stages of product development are outlined, in what follows, with reference to Kiekert's Annual Report 1998, refer to document N° 16.
Concept development stages (16 - 22 months)
Definition Phase
During this phase, the gathering of information relevant to the projects is effected. This phase is completed in 2 months.
Concept Phase
During this phase, the First Concept Prototype is produced to validate the concept. This phase is completed in 8 to 12 months.
The first concept prototype is by no means a product ready for the market.
Draft Phase
During this phase, the First Concept Prototype is transformed into a virtual prototype by means of computer assisted drawing "CAD" and virtual animation. This method of further development facilitates design modifications and saves time and cost. When this method is not used, a number of prototypes or improvements on their components had to be produced before reaching the required development level. This phase is completed in 6 to 8 months.
Product Development (12 - 16 months)
Prototype and Testing Phase
The virtual prototype is developed into a real prototype incorporating all of the tolerances and features as specified by the customer. This prototype is intended to validate and prepare the product for the market. The process of validation is effected through intensive testing and culminating in the "Pre-production Prototype". This phase is completed in 12 to 16 months.
Important note
The business has completed the above phases of the product development. This means that 28 to 38 months of research and development have already been completed. This has particular importance, since it means that the business of the joint collaboration has no more than 12 to 18 months to wait before becoming self-financing.
Implementation Phase
The Customer approves the final prototype "Pre-production Prototype" as well as the production tools and facilities. A small production run is effected. Only at this stage can the product be considered as being ready for the market.
Production in Series
The testing of the production facilities is completed. A trial run production will be effected followed by full production"
"The latch is developed to an advanced level but may still require further testing and fine-tuning. This may be effected while the tools of production and the assembly line are being produced. To complete the manufacture and trial of the tools of production and the assembly line it is assumed that 9 to 12 months may be required."
Letters of invitation to OEMs
"Universal Latch System
1997 Filing of Patents
1998 Production of Concept Prototype
2001 Completion of Testing & Pre-production Prototype of the Universal Latch & Electronic Control System"
Mr Chevalier's evidence about this was also extremely unsatisfactory. No doubt recognising that the last item was misleading, Mr Chevalier promptly disavowed it in his evidence claiming that although it was inaccurate, he had not seen it, otherwise he would have commented. In fact of course that text was essentially the same as he had stated in the letters to BMW. Even if he did not write the text on the picture, the information clearly came from him and was not simply made up by Mr Kettle. The idea that Mr Chevalier had not checked the text before sending it back to Mr Kettle is fanciful in the extreme.
"Customer Approval & Production in Series
This is expected to be completed within 9 to 12 months from confirmation of development contract
Production parameters
All production parameters are in place
Materials and Tolerances
Supply chain (subcontractors)
Assembly process
One fully automated assembly line with 10 million units a year capacity is ready to order
Tools of Production
Soft tooling is in place
Hard tooling is awaiting the result of fine-tuning"
ALS contention that state of design obvious from beginning of drawing transfer
Initial meetings with OEMs
"Although VW "recognised that [the] latch is a completely new concept worthy of further investigations"… its enthusiasm was not without reservation. VW raised concerns over the newness of Honeywell to the latch industry. It also raised concerns regarding the ability of the ULS to withstand various external forces (water, ice, dust ingress etc). These concerns were put to the Honeywell team, and at the same time, VW emphasised the need for low noise levels"
The Work Breakdown Structure
"Freeport would typically expect a gestation period of three years between concept and production for the' first product with production capability available 12 months in advance of first production delivery to the customer. Based on preliminary work already done by ALS and on the response so far from vehicle OEMs, Newhouse expects a production requirement early in 2003."
That passage seems to tie in with a page of the Excel spreadsheet sent by Mr Cummings with his 9 August e-mail. This is headed "Project Metrics" and shows a truncated timeline with production introduced by February 2003. Interestingly, the first two phases (the second of which is shown as "concept dev[elopment]" have "n/a" against them, suggesting again that it was not thought that they required that much extra work.
Building prototypes for the Frankfurt Motor Show
Mr Chevalier's attitude to experts and testing
"The questions and concerns raised by Dan are irrelevant to our project in many respects
...
Testing
The question of testing of the mechanical assembly of the latch has been addressed in the best possible manner from the moment of putting pen to paper.
Excluding the electronics, every element or mechanism in the latch was designed to the mathematical optimum possible within the constraints of size and weight.
The Individual mechanical elements of the latch, when tested or analysed carefully, will prove far superior to any latch ever put on the market or in patent.
The individual mechanisms in the latch have been in development and testing since 1995.
The issue of testing is routine and particular to each specific car or car maker.
Whatever tests that we may undertake now will be just a waste of time and money and will not mean anything to any potential customer.
The question often asked by customers during presentations is mainly rhetorical.
....
The customers know that this process has to be performed hand in hand with them to be considered of any value.
The issue of testing become relevant after the signing of a development contract.
Conclusion
We have as a first priority to produce the soft tools of production and to advance in our engagement with the potential customers.
Having produced the soft tools we will then tie able to supply any potential customer with the required number of test latches. Only then would we be able to proceed with the issue of meaningful and valuable testing and only as far as the one particular customer concerned.
Design changes consequent to testing
[In this section Mr Chevalier identified potential changes to springs and materials dependent on such matters as the individual OEM's requirements and specification and price. He then continued]
Conclusion
Our priority is to engage and interact with each customer in as many aspects of the development of the latch as possible. We need to do so constantly and on a regular basis to gain their confidence. Such regular consultation would have the effect of producing a sense of ownership of the product on the part of the customer concerned This will also produce a unique version of the universal latch that each customer can claim their own.
Finally
It is very critical not to lose time in pursuing our hard earned leads. We have a clear programme of what needs to be done. This includes:
Setting up of a dedicated team
Fitting the car doors suggested by the customers
Producing the soft tools
Meeting with the assembly line producers - and getting fresh quotations
Engaging the customers as much as possible in all sorts of questions and
Fine-tuning the development of the electronic system
Preparing for the already set product presentations
Calling back on our already established leads with further presentations
Writing back with replies to the questions raised by the customers, etc.
The initial engagement with customers and the outcome of the trade exhibition indicate clearly the value of what we have. This also evidently indicates that we are not doing anything wrong except.
Finally, it is very clear that we do not need "experts". We need people like Mike Shelly, James Hughes and Hugh Gibson - people to do the needed and outstanding work. We certainly do not need confusion when we know what needs to be done."
Follow up meetings with OEMs
Fitting of prototype latches to the Volkswagen doors and the Rover door
The issue of resources and lack of progress in the first year of the project
"Employing potential staff from the industry is totally unnecessary as the present product is totally dissimilar to anything on the market today except in name. Having to change a system of values deeply held by one from the industry will prove much more difficult than to train someone with clean mechanical or electromechanical drive engineering skill"
Drawing transfer
The project from May 2002 until January 2003
Changes to the design
"Although you properly show outlines of each part and compare the changes visually, the changes appear to be subject to Mike's or HW's interpretation. These parts are extremely critical in the latch design...
...
I am very concerned over the way we are making changes extremely late in the game, and also the fact that these changes do not seem to be tracked under document revision control"
"If you can envisage the changes that are going to happen in the future you will be okay, but if you can't envisage the changes, you don't know what the changes are going to be because it affected more than one dimension. You could change other areas and it could have a knock-on effect. So then you have to go through the model and say what's the knock-on effect and you have to start building it up from there...".
I see no reason not to accept that evidence. It seems to me to demonstrate that the whole process of transferring design changes which were being made, into the ProE 3D model and then the drawings, was nothing like as straightforward as Mr Chevalier sought to suggest in his evidence. Furthermore, an obvious consequence of even minor changes would be that there could not be a design freeze and that it would not be possible to order components for the soft tooled build.
"Summary (3 bullets only) of project.
- 6-8 weeks late against plan
- Just starting to order prototype materials-6 weeks late v plan and limited to what can be ordered
- Design release now looking like wk 47-impacting prototype ordering, process development etc."
The reference to design release in week 47 seems to have been to a proposed meeting with Mr Chevalier for him to sign off the drawings.
The housing
Resources and contractual responsibility
Further meetings with OEMs
Process development
"I think it's important to clarify something. It's a common misconception that Six Sigma is a quality process or a quality system. That's not the case at all. You've heard people talking about QS9000, TS16949, these are quality systems, the demand that you document things in certain ways and that you can prove to an auditor that you have followed what you say.
Someone once put it very succinctly to me. These processes say document what you do, and do what you document. Whereas Six Sigma is different. It's a set of tools, there's nothing new under the sun. A set of tools, many of which have existed for a long time. Some statistical, analytical, some more organisational, which you can use if and when appropriate in order to move any process or design forward. So they're the means to an end.
Q. Right. For the sake of example -- I don't want to run ahead on this -- something like a DFMEA which appears to be part of the Six Sigma process would also be part of a QS9000 process, and I just wondered where Six Sigma, as it were, distinguished itself, or where do you distinguish what's Six Sigma and what's --
A. It's a very good point. I think QS for example clearly dictates that you should have -- you should use DFMEAs and PFMEAs and so on. What's unique about Six Sigma is that rather than just applying certain tools because QS says it's the right thing to do, in Six Sigma, as I said, all the tools in Six Sigma are actually pretty old tools, FMEAs were developed by NASA on the Apollo missions in the 1960s. But what Six Sigma does is it gives you a very logical path to follow in order to employ the tools at the right time in a project in order to solve certain problems or to answer certain questions. So there's a Six Sigma process that helps you decide when to apply certain tools, and the outcome of those tools will help you achieve the requirements of, for example, TS16949.
Q. So they're there to assist in a way in complying with or fulfilling the quality standards which are necessary; they're there to assist?
A. They help you do it, and they help you do it, I think more efficiently."
"While the mechanical engineers have pushed to complete the part drawings, there has been very little time for detailed analysis (tolerancing, motion, stress). The main reason for this has been the influence of JP Chevalier. Constant requests for modifications to the parts have severely limited the engineers' progress. Some of the changes are important although many others are either cosmetic or to do with mechanical noise reduction. While JP clearly wants the latch to be the very best, a great deal of time has been lost on these modifications which could have been undertaken once prototype parts were ordered."
Since Mr Shannon was not cross-examined about this report, it was never suggested to him that this was in any way inaccurate and I accept it as accurate.
"We were being strapped for time to get this latch manufactured, so sometimes you have to take intelligent risks in these projects to keep them moving, as we had been presented with a concept latch, Mr Chevalier had manufactured it was fully functional in the lower half, and we would like to believe it had been tested and it met most of the specifications, we could say, well, on that side it should be okay."
Mr Shelley also said that a full tolerance analysis would have taken another two to three months. This was somewhat longer than the 22 days allowed in Mr Cummings' plan in May 2002 and may have been a more cautious assessment based on Mr Shelley's experience of the ULS and of Mr Chevalier in the meantime. It was certainly not suggested to him that he was exaggerating.
Conclusion on the progress of the project as at January 2003
"I believe that we're going to hit a lull in activity now. We have a design freeze and await components arriving. During this time we have an opportunity to work on the following:
1. Modelling and statistical tolerance analysis. DFSS.
2. Understanding the design in detail - making models and really getting into the guts of the movements, forces, torques, etc using engineering analysis and ProE.
3. Putting together a kind of guidebook to the latch showing the outputs of 2 in particular that can be used for training.
4. Starting to capture ideas for cost reduction. FMEA score improvement etc"
The soft tooled prototype build
Quality Control
Tolerance analysis and first attempted prototype build
Second attempted prototype build
"Yesterday we were almost there but got a kick in the guts at the very end of the day. We had a full functional (very smooth action) latch at 5pm last night. We then fitted on the plastic lower half housing and went to fit the G4 registration gear. At this point we suffered disaster - the PP pin bent when we were fitting the gear - the pin is supposed to spread open to clamp the gear internal diameter. Unfortunately this screwed up our whole latch unit completely so we're back at square 1 again on building the base latch."
"1. Metals used on sliders and goose neck components are too soft and malleable!
2. Method of fixing gear 4 is no good.
3. Springs need redesigned in general and spring material is too hard and brittle -using old springs instead!
4. Clearances need to be worked on to make a producible item. The difference between working units and non working is minimal leading to worry re producibility in volume
5. Tolerances needed to be tightened on all pins and washers before unit worked. As per 4 above this gives us longer term issues re producibility.
6. BMW latch has very wide tolerancing and clearance in its construction. It is very much designed for assembly. We've studied it fully and continue to do so but this much is obvious from the start!"
Delay in producing revised drawings and problems with resources
Conclusion on breach of the JCA as at March 2003
Technical difficulties with the design and their resolution by Honeywell after March 2003
Seriousness of the difficulties Honeywell faced with the design
Tolerance and clearance issues
Springs
Assembly issues
The issue of noise
"I believe that this must have been either when the ULS was not under load or running at low voltage (or possibly with clearances increased to levels not appropriate for production), which were not realistic operating conditions. The ULS Project team never assembled a latch that produced less than 60dB, and certainly Mr Chevalier never disclosed to the team or introduced to the design the manner in which he said that he had been able to reduce noise to such an extent."
Conclusion on difficulties faced and solutions adopted
Progress of project after the failed soft tooled build
Further prototype builds and design development prior to July 2003
"Revision 'BVW' referred to the ongoing effort to build a one-off working prototype that would be suitable to demonstrate to VW (and that would be quiet enough for VW's purposes). As for this:
i. In early May, i.e. during Mr Chevalier's absence, there was a successful build of the lower (mechanical) part of this version of the ULS, and there was a successful build of an entire demonstration latch in late May 2003. This was the first time that a complete latch (i.e. a latch including the housing and motor mounting etc) had been put together and had functioned properly."
"In addition, we knew that a reduced size latch was a possibility in future, which would in any event necessitate modifications to the housing and upper half generally. It was also recognised that the whole upper half concept would require revision in order to improve noise, reduce cost, improve sealing and ease final assembly and test, especially considering that the Bowden cables that were attached to, and operated, the latch would be different in each application and were better assembled as late as possible in the assembly process."
The development of the Rev D smaller latch and design developments before termination
Resources and project management after the soft tooled build
"I saw the good future, the positive future of the project, based on the progress in the last months, and I tried to adopt the organisation accordingly to be right equipped for the ongoing things afterwards, after these steps here."
"Q. The team itself -- we can look at it now -- felt that it was underresourced, didn't it? There is a design review in June, I think, of 2003 where the team itself raised the question of resource, didn't it?
A. The team was concerned about making sure the right resources were in place to move the project forward from that point. In particular the people available to construct -- to build prototypes and undertake the necessary testing.
Q. So what were the concerns of the team? You help me. I've looked at figures. I've looked at numbers of people who were required. But what were the concerns of the team, then, about that?
A. The team felt at that time, if I recall correctly -- I'm basing this on recollection now -- that we had a product that, okay, we may be just about to completely change the design, in effect of the design, so it was agreed to go off in the direction of Revision D and focus on it, but we knew we could design a product, the necessary expertise was developing nicely in the team to do that, and the next challenge was to make sure we could undertake a rigorous and thorough and professional verification, design verification process forward, and for that we identified we'd need an adequate number of technicians and also bringing in other people in the team…"
Control electronics
"Development to date has been performed with initial latch prototypes that were provided to HW. These latches did not perform consistently and did not allow for complete software development."
The solution to that problem which Mr Suknaich devised was what Mr Wenham explained as creating flexibility in the software to allow it to be easily modified from one latch to another, to allow it to work for demonstration purposes. I accept Honeywell's submission that developing the software under these conditions must have been very challenging.
"Functional code set (software algorithm) is performing as designed on the prototype latches. The electrical/software platform allows for reprogramming of prototypes on the fly and for data acquisition and analysis during latch operation."
Breakdown of the relationship and termination
Introduction
Breakdown of the relationship
"JP was in Newhouse during the 'door investigation' along with Curt Johnson, Nigel Spurr, Pete Suknaich, Stuart Thomson and I believe Duncan Murchie. Therefore, I have no idea how he can say this, unless there is an alternative motive.
These types of events/behavior are common daily when dealing with JP. Therefore due to this mode of operation, most of the Program Management is to conduct 'damage control' due to JP's unique behavior."
Designing round patents and the e-latch
"Any failure by either party with respect to any of its contractual obligations shall entitle the other party to terminate the agreement thirty (30) days after receipt of a registered letter with acknowledgement of receipt setting forth the reasons for the termination, the said letter not having achieved its purpose during this period, unless the defaulting party satisfies its obligations within this period or has provided truth that the non-execution of its obligations was subsequent to a case of force majeure."
"This Agreement does not exclude either Party from future development, manufacture or sale of similar or competitive products providing such development does not materially breach the terms and conditions of this Agreement or the joint Confidentiality Agreement signed by both Parties."
"Where neither power release or closure are required, we are at a disadvantage. I hope this is not seen as negative or pessimistic. Rather, I am encouraging thoughts "outside the box" that will allow us to grow the business volume. There were some ideas at the brainstorm meeting that require much further work to realise a paradigm shift to give a low cost power unlatching system that could give us as good as an advantage in the lower specification high volume market as we have today in the full function market."
"Clearly the response from VW together with the work being undertaken by Aisin Seiki and doubtless others indicates that there is considerable interest in a latch with no mechanical connections. The ULS does not have any advantage in this area over our competitors. It does retain its advantage to offer power closing and release in a small package.
In parallel to the ULS development it is recommended that an innovative design to achieve power unlatch without mechanical back up is created. This permits coverage at customers who wish to retain mechanical connections using the ULS and those who are willing to dispense with them".
"The ULS has advantages but these are limited to the market that requires power closure and/or power release with full mechanical redundancy. It is too complex and expensive for other applications or where power release is required without manual back-up. If power closure is not required, the ULS must be cost competitive with existing power release systems which it probably is considering the lack of products in existence that have been designed to include power release. Market pricing studies are required to determine this.
An alternative retention system under initial investigation provides the potential to realise a small, low cost, power release system with power back up yet no manual control. It is recommended that the development of this system to a working model is formalised and invention disclosures completed. If initial verification is successful, a product launch in 2006 is likely to be of interest to VW at least.
Many latch manufacturers are spending considerable resource to graft power release onto existing latch systems where this is required to accommodate passive entry. They will be under extreme cost pressure
to provide new technologies to realise tower cost power release. Their ability to develop cost effective alternatives is severely limited due to their existing workload. This provides Honeywell with a window of opportunity.
-Or-
Vehicle manufacturers may realise the application of power release to realise passive entry is more expensive than adding a sensor to the door handle. In this case they will be more likely to adopt the Renault type system.
The SVS group should focus its efforts on providing a complete patented system solutions for passive entry, remote keyless entry and latching. It is then free to partner with other companies who do not possess the technologies in these areas but do provide door system solutions. It must be obvious that the Honeywell system is a complete integrated system, not a series of components."
"Perhaps more importantly, the promotion of the e-latch entailed the accentuation of problems or potential problems with the ULS. There is no doubt that the market views of Mr. Spurr, which he set out in [the various documents referred to] were undermining people's confidence in the ULS. Mr. Kettle certainly understood the 8 August 2003 e-mail as suggesting that the ULS did not have an obvious target market, and as contradicting the corporate latch strategy Honeywell had at the forefront of its sales.."
Conclusion on breach
"Any delay or failure to enforce any rights, or remedies available to either Party under this Agreement or at law for a material breach of, or a repeated failure to perform, any obligation hereunder will not constitute a waiver of such right or remedy in respect of the same or similar or subsequent breach or failure."
I agree with Mr McQuater that this provision is of no avail to ALS if, as I have concluded, Article 10.1 does not entitle ALS to terminate for past breaches of the JCA as opposed to present breaches. The short answer is that ALS has no right or remedy capable of being waived in those circumstances, so that Article 12.2 is irrelevant. The question of affirmation or waiver does not arise. Rather, on the correct construction of Article 10.1, ALS cannot terminate in September or December 2003 for breaches committed in or before March 2003.
Events post-collaboration
Shivani
"...your latch design was not a good design for manufacturing. This needs a total review and they have the opinion that a lot of problems are going to come during the manufacturing process, which means we need continuous design support…Your contract does not guarantee design and we have to revisit the design again and again for the concerns raised by our manufacturing team."
Nanjing Automotive and Chinese latch manufacturers
Dealings with other OEMs
Issues of noise and testing
Conclusion in relation to events post-collaboration
Causation
Rev D
Article 10.3
"HONEYWELL shall be entitled to terminate immediately the Agreement in case of the determination by HONEYWELL, in its sole discretion, that the continued performance of the Agreement is not commercially viable. No penalty or other consequence shall result in the event that such determination is made."
": ...if the defendant has under the contract an option which would reduce or extinguish the loss, it will be assumed that he would exercise it."
To like effect in the same case is the judgment of Davies LJ:
"The assumption has to be made that, had there been no anticipatory breach, the defendant would have performed his legal obligation and no more."
"It is established law that, at any rate if the option has not already been exercised at the date of the breach, the charterer must be assumed to have exercised that option in a way most favourable to himself."
"The general rule as stated by Scrutton LJ in Abrahams v Herbert Reiach Ltd [1922] 1 KB 477…that in an action for breach of contract a defendant is not liable for not doing that which he is not bound to do, has been generally accepted as correct, and in my experience at the Bar and on the Bench has been repeatedly applied in subsequent cases…if the contract is broken or wrongly repudiated, the first task of the assessor of damages is to estimate as best he can what the plaintiff would have gained in money or money's worth if the defendant had fulfilled his legal obligations and done no more.
Where there is an anticipatory breach by wrongful repudiation, this can at best be an estimate, whatever the date of the hearing. It involves assessing that what has not occurred and never will occur has occurred or will occur, i.e. that the defendant has since the breach performed his legal obligations under the contract, and if the estimate is made before the contract would otherwise have come to an end, that he will continue to perform his legal obligations thereunder until the due date of its termination. But the assumption to be made is that the defendant has performed or will perform his legal obligations and nothing more. What these legal obligations are and what is their value to the plaintiff may depend upon the occurrence of events extraneous to the contract itself and, where this is so, the probability of their occurrence is relevant to the estimate."
"No doubt it was a necessary step to that conclusion [in The Mihalis Angelos] that the ship would beyond doubt have missed her cancelling date. But I cannot find any suggestion in the judgments of the Court of Appeal that it was also an essential step to prove that the charterers would beyond doubt have exercise the right to cancel, rather than that they could have exercised it."
"22. Mr. Sumption Q.C., who appeared for the appellant, said that the court should choose the highest figure, which on the information reasonably available at the time of the forecast, could without negligence have been put forward as the mean. He said that a court should assume that the vendor would have performed the contract in the way least onerous to himself, that is to say, the way calculated to secure for himself the highest possible price consistent with his warranty. In support of this argument he relied upon cases such as Lavarack v. Woods of Colchester Ltd. [1967] 1 QB 278 and Paula Lee Ltd. v. Robert Zehil & Co. Ltd. [1983] 2 All E.R. 390 in which the courts had to calculate the damages payable upon a wrongful repudiation or termination of a contract. In order to compensate the plaintiff for what he has lost, the court must in such cases determine what benefits the plaintiff would have derived from the performance by the defendant of his outstanding obligations under the contract. It is well settled that the court will assume that the defendant would have performed those obligations in the way least onerous to himself. If his duty was to act reasonably, it will be assumed that from various reasonable methods of performance he would have chosen the one least unfavourable to himself: see Mustill J. in Paula Lee Ltd. v. Robert Zehil & Co. Ltd. [1983] 2 All E.R. 390 at page 394.
23. All this makes perfectly good sense when damages depend upon a prediction of how the defendant would have performed outstanding contractual obligations which gave him a choice of what to do. But this is not such a case. Paragraph 32 did not allow the vendor to choose from the range of figures which would have counted as reasonable forecasts and put forward the highest figure in the range in order to obtain the highest possible price. The PRS had to be "calculated in good faith" and therefore had to be a bona fide estimate made without regard to whether it would have produced a higher or lower price. There is accordingly no basis for calculating the damages on the assumption that the vendor was contractually entitled to choose the highest figure. All that can be said is that there would have been a range of possible figures. But there is no legal basis for assuming that the hypothetical figure would have been at the upper rather than the lower end of the range. So far as the estimates which could reasonably have been made differed from the mean of those estimates, it would have been on a random basis and not because the vendor was entitled to choose the highest figure. In those circumstances, the only rational course open to a court is to choose the figure which it considers that a forecast made with reasonable care was most likely to have produced. "
"It would vary with how quickly the project would end. I mean, it would say that we can get our 25 per cent on these other projects, let's stop, it's not financially viable, let's take our money and put it on something else. Good money after bad does not usually work."
Quantum
Introduction
i) The model simply assumes that Honeywell's profit share was 15% and calculates ALS's share of the lost profits accordingly. However, as I have already found there was never any agreement between the parties as to the profit sharing. In those circumstances, the whole claim put forward on this basis faces the fundamental stumbling block that it is impossible for ALS to say what its share of any profits made would in fact have been.ii) The claim based on this model is entirely predicated upon Honeywell having obtained contracts for the supply of the ULS for two specific models, the Volkswagen Passat and the Jaguar XK. Even if the ULS had been fully developed by early 2003, I have considerable doubts whether those contracts would in fact have been obtained.
iii) Thereafter, the model and the claim depend upon an assessment of the level of market penetration with OEMs which is not in any sense grounded in reality and which seems to me to disregard the nature of the automotive market and, specifically, the latch market within that overall market.
iv) It also depends upon an assessment of the competitiveness of the ULS in that market which seems to me to be wholly unrealistic. I will consider this issue in more detail below, but I should say without more ado that I do not accept that the ULS is a "ground breaking product". It is interesting and innovative and certainly has advantages over other latches at the limited premium end of the market. However, as Mr Mitchell recognised in October 2003, it simply cannot compete with the sort of basic latches which sell for around $8 and which make up the vast preponderance of the latch market. Mr Henry fairly and candidly accepted in evidence that his case for market penetration of some 20% by the ULS, on which the quantum model was based, could not stand if I did not consider that the ULS was a ground breaking product. On that ground alone, it seems to me that the claim based on the Mathew-Jones/Henry model founders.
Absence of agreement as to profit share
"Honeywell and ALS shall establish a separate legal entity…whose sole purpose shall be to receive payment for Product from a Customer and distribute such revenue according to the schedule attached as Exhibit 6. Either party may request a change to said schedule once in any twelve (12) month period, except by mutual consent…In the event that the parties cannot mutually agree to a change, then the schedule in force prior to the requested change will continue. Notwithstanding any suggestion to the contrary and except as explicitly provided herein, the Parties agree that each shall bear its own costs and expenses in carrying out the terms of this Agreement."
"The law is concerned with legal obligations only and the law of contract only with legal obligations created by mutual agreement between contractors – not with the expectations, however reasonable, of one contractor that the other will do something that he has assumed no legal obligation to do. And so if the contract is broken or wrongly repudiated, the first task of the assessor of damages is to estimate as best he can what the plaintiff would have gained in money or moneys worth if the defendant had fulfilled his legal obligations and had done no more.
...
I know of no principle upon which he can claim as damages for breach of one service agreement compensation for remuneration under which might have become due under some imaginary future agreement which the defendants did not make with him but might have done if they wished. If this were right, in every action for damages for wrongful dismissal, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover not only the remuneration he would have received during the currency of his service agreement but also some additional sum for loss of chance of it being renewed upon its expiry."
The latch market
"...each of the OEMs has a network of tier 1 suppliers, and the ability of an OEM to produce a competitive and high quality vehicle, rich with technological features, is in part driven by a contribution of its tier 1 suppliers. It relies upon them to bring them new technologies, high quality product, competitive prices and so on. And that relationship between the OEM and its collection of tier 1 suppliers is a mutual interdependency, that the tier 1 supplier can only be successful if he has a long-term supply partnership with the OEM which brings him long-term stable supply positions which allows him to invest in technology and in capacity and in return for which he brings technology to the OEMs.
…. the relationship between the OEM and the tier 1 is a mutual interdependency. The OEM cannot survive without its network of tier 1s and the tier 1s cannot survive without their OEM customers, and although there is an intensity of negotiation between those two, they are mutually interdependent upon each other, and they are broken -- those relationships get broken very rarely.
They are constantly under stress, on occasions they reach breaking point in some of those discussions, but generally speaking, those mutual interdependencies remain intact for extremely long periods of time. For example, Kiekert's relationship with Volkswagen will go back many decades."
Competitiveness
"…there's a fundamental cost/benefit equation here which I'm just speculating about for a moment. If we take Volkswagen as a manufacturer, most of Volkswagen's products are in the low priced competitive end of the marketplace, and they have very few product offerings in the very expensive D&E segments as we would call them. The Phaeton is their very much top end product made in extremely low volume… whereas the Polo, Golf, Passat are their very high volume models. So my hypothesis is they wouldn't accept some form of disadvantage in those extremely high volume low margin products in order to secure some incremental benefit at the very top end of its product range.
Now, that analysis might be different in Jaguar where [all] its products are at the D&E end of the range, but in a manufacturer such as Volkswagen, I have to leave it open as a question whether that would be a worthy decision."
"I don't think it's actually a problem selling it. I think you'd have a problem selling it profitably or as profitably as anticipated. A low function latch will be competing against many other products in that end of the market which may be a lot cheaper, and the high function latch, if it's perceived to be little different, then the customers may not wish to pay such a high premium for it."
"An interesting question will be whether to peruse [pursue] the high volume low return business for it will require us to make considerable investment in tooling and assembly equipment for what? Also, the OEM are no fools, they will see the small difference between high and low spec. product and not expect to pay much more for the high spec. is there enough high spec business between BMW, VW and PAG to make the venture pay??? Food for thought. Best regards, Nigel."
Volkswagen and Jaguar
"I completely accept that if the court decided that this was not a ground-breaking product, then the case that I'm making for its adoption would largely not stand, I have to accept that, yes.
If the perceived benefits were not there or marginal, then I would accept it also calls into question whether the latch would be used."
"…If the expression of interest that's conveyed by Mr Kettle transcended into Volkswagen, I would have expected a whole number of other things to be happening in parallel, and none of those things were happening…I would expect, for example, the supplier quality engineers to be visiting the Honeywell facilities, to be writing program of manufacturability. I would expect finance and supply chain and all of the other dialogues to have been advanced. I would have expected these people to be put in front of the chief program engineer. So I would have expected a whole number of parallel activities to have been taking place. Equally, it's worth saying that the engineers in all of these car companies spend their lives encouraging suppliers to spend money to develop new technologies and new ideas and bring them to them for free, and they do that by continually dangling the carrot of potential future business. It's an enormous leap to take an expression of interest from one of those people and make it into a business model."
"..you should not work with the start of production time plan of the Passat B6 because there are several other cars, where we can use your latch. The Passat B6 will start in the end of 2004. Please show us a serial like latch and then we will think about the usage."
"...strategically from a supply position I cannot imagine that they would take a mainstream model such as Passat and put a new supplier with a new product on to a safety critical item on to a vehicle of that scale. I just do not believe that those steps would ever happen."
Mr Henry did not dissent from that general proposition, although he took issue on the facts of the case, presumably because of his belief that the ULS was ground breaking. I cannot see any good reason why a major OEM like Volkswagen would risk its reputation for producing reliable vehicles by using the untried ULS on a mainstream product like the Passat and I reject the suggestion that they would have done so.
"Further, as a member of this committee for three years, I am firmly of the view that, in the unlikely event any recommendation to incorporate a new latch from a new and unestablished supplier were made, the committee would almost certainly have rejected it. The only situation in which I can imagine the incorporation of an unproven latch would be if our present latch supplier, or another well established latch supplier was offering their new generation latch. Even then, such approval would be predicated on Jaguar having already undertaken an extensive testing programme in respect of that latch. "
The claim in relation to follow-on business
"The only lost opportunity which [ALS] has sought to prove is that embodied in Mr Henry's model: the VW and Jaguar opportunities and follow-on business. It cannot invent another opportunity based on different assumptions."
Mr Maher's alternative model
Mitigation
Overall conclusion