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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Yours Naturally Naturally Yours Ltd v Kate McVier Skin Ltd & Anor [2023] EWHC 890 (IPEC) (20 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2023/890.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 890 (IPEC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Yours Naturally Naturally Yours Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Kate McIver Skin Limited (2) Christopher John McIver (Personal representative for the estate of Kate Eleanor Dyment (deceased)) |
Defendants |
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Michael Smith (instructed by AI Law) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 28 February – 1 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely at 11.30 on 20 April 2023 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and released to the National Archives.
Judge Hacon:
Introduction
The chronology of events
"…its easier, if you have a range so you can say, you now have your own skin care range for your treatment. Promote it on Facebook and your website too…".
"Possibly say it's your own label made by an ethical, cruelty free, local company in Liverpool, what do you think? Don't mention about being exclusive because I am the creator, so copy right stays with me."
"To get through this I needed to have a focus, something I loved, something I was obsessed with to take my mind from the pain...Kate McIver skin was born [original ellipsis] and I literally put my life and soul it too [sic] researching and training, creating bespoke treatment and tailor making the ingredients for each session meaning treatments that I could be remembered for. …
The Kate McIver serum was designed to turn my skin around to help my cells recover and rejuvenate, it also healed all my scars. Fast forward 7 months and I'm in remission, my skin and hair is healthy and glowing and it's safe to say the business is thriving."
"I made this with my very own hands [to] remove a scar last year & yes it worked!!!!
This serum is still hand made but unfortunately the cost of making it has increased so there will be a small increase at the end of the month."
"My first Guinea Pig for my serum back when it was a case of making up the serum in my back room at home."
"I am currently feeling very threatened by investors and companies wanting to jump on the back of the product success and use my brand to resell for themselves. Obviously as I currently do not own the copy write or IP of my best selling product I am in a very vulnerable position and my business is massively at risk."
"The next steps now we need to add in a few ingredients so the serum is not identical to the original product by my current lady. I would also like to use this as a chance to increase the quality and effectiveness of the serum.
Would it be possible to connect with a lab tech who may able to advise what ingredients would really enhance the serum?"
"I was in my twenties, and it was just heartbreaking to see my body deteriorating so rapidly from the pharmaceuticals … I threw myself into researching and creating bespoke treatments that could be used on all skin types, and this was where the 'magic' serum was born."
The announcement added:
"Following months of intensive research and experimentation, Kate's new wonder serum began to take shape, offering to rejuvenate skin cells, heal scars and remove the harsh dark circles she struggled with."
"Created by stage 4 cancer thriver Kate McIver."
"Mum creates 'secret weapon' serum that's transforming the lives of cancer patients"
The article began:
"A mum battling stage four cancer has created a 'secret weapon' serum that's helping other people suffering with cancer feel good about themselves."
After saying more about Ms McIver's illness and gruelling treatments, it continued:
"But Kate decided to fight back and using her skincare knowledge from her job in skin aesthetics, created a serum using ingredients that specifically target the problem and promotes the rejuvenation of skin cells.
Within weeks Kate's skin was transformed and she started to share it with other cancer patients – who she knew from giving facials too [sic]"
The article quoted Ms McIver:
"I gave it to my friends and family and they also started to notice a huge difference in their skin – so I knew I was on to something."
"… I think I had a lot of time on my hands, so I threw myself into my passion for skin, um and I did a lot of training and skin science courses and I started to sort of delve quite deep into the ingredients side of things, um, and product development because I knew one day that was my sort of end goal, you know, to produce a skincare range."
The witnesses
Passing Off
The Law
"[52] As to what amounts to a sufficient business to amount to goodwill, it seems clear that mere reputation is not enough… . The claimant must show that it has a significant goodwill, in the form of customers, in the jurisdiction…"
…
[62] If it was enough for a claimant merely to establish reputation within the jurisdiction to maintain a passing off action, it appears to me that it would tip the balance too much in favour of protection. It would mean that, without having any business or any customers for its product or service in this jurisdiction, a claimant could prevent another person using a mark, such as an ordinary English word …"
"A passing-off action is a remedy for the invasion of a right of property not in the mark, name or get-up improperly used, but in the business or goodwill likely to be injured by the misrepresentation made by passing-off one person's goods as the goods of another. Goodwill, as the subject of proprietary rights, is incapable of subsisting by itself. It has no independent existence apart from the business to which it is attached."
"My Lords, A. G. Spalding & Bros. v. A. W. Gamage Ltd., 84 L.J.Ch. 449 and the later cases make it possible to identify five characteristics which must be present in order to create a valid cause of action for passing off: (1) a misrepresentation (2) made by a trader in the course of trade, (3) to prospective customers of his or ultimate consumers of goods or services supplied by him, (4) which is calculated to injure the business or goodwill of another trader (in the sense that this is a reasonably foreseeable consequence) and (5) which causes actual damage to a business or goodwill of the trader by whom the action is brought or (in a quia timet action) will probably do so."
"Custom Built, by their misrepresentations, were seeking to induce customers to purchase conservatories from them in order to get a conservatory from the commercial source which had designed and constructed the conservatories shown in the photographs. … If a customer ordered a conservatory from Custom Built in response to the misrepresentation – as it was the invention of Custom Built that he should – Custom Built would supply conservatories not of the stated commercial source but of their own manufacture."
"It is perfectly true that there is no evidence that a single person who purchased an economiser from the defendants had ever heard of the plaintiffs; but in passing off there is no necessity that the person who is deceived should have known the name of the person who complains of the passing off. In many cases the name is not known at all. It is quite sufficient, in my opinion, to constitute passing off in fact, if a person being minded to obtain goods which are identified in his mind with a definite commercial source is led by false statements to accept goods coming from a difference commercial source."
"In respect of each of the Dawnay Day members the necessary ingredient of damage, or the likelihood of damage, is, in my judgment, present. The damage is of two varieties. First, the Dawnay Day members, collectively and individually, have no control over the activities of the proprietors of Dawnay Day Securities. The Dawnay Day reputation will suffer if those activities become in any respect reprehensible. The Dawnay Day companies will be unable to prevent that happening. Secondly, the use of Dawnay Day as a trading style by a company that is not a member of the Dawnay Day group will dilute and, potentially, may destroy the distinctiveness of the name. (See Taittinger SA v. Allbev Ltd [1993] F.S.R. 641, per Peter Gibson L.J. at page 669.)"
Discussion
Malicious Falsehood
"30. Here the duty of the judge at trial is to indicate the reasonably available meanings, decide if a substantial number of persons would reasonably have understood the words to have such a meaning and then decide, in respect of a meaning which is in fact false and damaging, whether the author was actuated by malice.
31. The first question therefore is whether the imputation of criminal corruption is a meaning which reasonable persons could read into the articles. Although I feel certain that the single meaning required by the law of libel does not carry that imputation, I cannot feel certain that a number of reasonable people would not have understood the articles as making an imputation of criminal corruption. I would therefore reject Mr Rampton's invitation that we should declare that, for the purpose of the malicious falsehood claim, the imputation of criminal corruption is a meaning which is not available for the purposes of malicious falsehood.
32. It might appear that there is a tension, even an incompatibility, between the proposition that a particular meaning is plainly wrong and the proposition that it is nevertheless a possible meaning. The reason why it is not necessarily so lies in the difference between libel and malicious falsehood. In malicious falsehood every reasonably available meaning, damaging or not, has to be considered. In libel, the artifice of a putative single meaning requires the court to find an approximate centre-point in the range of possible meanings. If, instead, a court of first instance selects as the single meaning for libel purposes one of the peripheral meanings in the range relevant to malicious falsehood, an appellate court may very well be satisfied that it has erred, because the single meaning has, generally speaking, to be the (or a) dominant one."
"The essentials of this tort are that the defendant has published about the plaintiff words which are false, that they were published maliciously, and that special damage has followed as the direct and natural result of their publication. As to special damage, the effect of section 3(1) of the Defamation Act 1952 is that it is sufficient if the words published in writing are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff. Malice will be inferred if it be proved that the words were calculated to produce damage and that the defendant knew when he published the words that they were false or was reckless as to whether they were false or not."
"[204] Mr Rampton has submitted, and it has not been disputed, that for the purposes of malicious falsehood malice means the same as it does in libel in relation to qualified privilege: Spring v Guardian Assurance plc [1993] 2 All ER 273 (CA), and Gatley para 21.7.
[205] On this definition a claimant is required to prove that the defendant was actuated by some wrong or improper motive, and knowledge that the words complained of were false will generally be conclusive of malice (other than in those exceptional cases where a person may be under an obligation to pass on information which he knows to be false or does not believe to be true). See Horrocks v Lowe [1975] AC 135, 149–151."
"[193] In the present case no actual damage is pleaded. Mr Cruddas relies on 3(1) of the 1952 Act. In Tesla Motors [v British Broadcasting Corporation [2011] EWHC 2760] it was common ground that the words 'calculated to cause pecuniary damage' mean 'more likely than not to cause pecuniary damage'. See IBM v Websphere Limited [2004] EWHC 529 (Ch) at para 74. …
…
[195] Mr Rampton submits that the meaning of 'likely' given in Tesla is correct. I did not hear oral submissions on the law. I adopt that meaning for the reasons given in that case."
Causing loss by unlawful means
"[47] The essence of the tort therefore appears to be (a) a wrongful interference with the actions of a third party in which the claimant has an economic interest and (b) an intention thereby to cause loss to the claimant. …
…
[49] In my opinion, and subject to one qualification, acts against a third party count as unlawful means only if they are actionable by that third party. The qualification is that they will also be unlawful means if the only reason why they are not actionable is because the third party has suffered no loss. …
…
[51] Unlawful means therefore consists of acts intended to cause loss to the claimant by interfering with the freedom of a third party in a way which is unlawful as against that third party and which is intended to cause loss to the claimant. It does not in my opinion include acts which may be unlawful against a third party but which do not affect his freedom to deal with the claimant."
"[62] Finally, there is the question of intention. In the Lumley v Gye tort, there must be an intention to procure a breach of contract. In the unlawful means tort, there must be an intention to cause loss. The ends which must have been intended are different. South Wales Miners' Federation v Glamorgan Coal Co Ltd [1905] AC 239 shows that one may intend to procure a breach of contract without intending to cause loss. Likewise, one may intend to cause loss without intending to procure a breach of contract. But the concept of intention is in both cases the same. In both cases it is necessary to distinguish between ends, means and consequences. One intends to cause loss even though it is the means by which one achieved the end of enriching oneself. On the other hand, one is not liable for loss which is neither a desired end nor a means of attaining it but merely a foreseeable consequence of one's actions."
Copyright
Conclusion