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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 >> Alan Nuttall Ltd v Fri-Jado UK Ltd & Anor [2010] EWHC 1966 (Pat) (30 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2010/1966.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1966 (Pat), [2010] FSR 37 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ALAN NUTTALL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) FRI-JADO UK LIMITED (2) FRI-JADO BV |
Defendants |
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Mr Michael Tappin QC and Mr Tim Powell (instructed by Powell Gilbert LLP) for the Defendants.
Hearing dates: 22 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
Background
i) an open front with an air curtain to act as a thermal barrier between the heated cabinet and the external environment;ii) a heater;
iii) a duct at the rear of the cabinet which contains outlets to enable air to flow from the duct into the chamber;
iv) one fan causing air to pass over the heater, upwardly through the duct and then through the outlets into the chamber; and
v) a second fan being arranged to draw air from the other end of the chamber and use it in the formation of the air curtain at the front of the cabinet.
General principles
"1. Generally, interim payment procedures are not suitable where factual issues are complicated, or where difficult points of law arise;
2. This does not prevent an award from being made even in respect of part of a complex claim if that part can be identified as what Mr Justice Robert Walker calls "an irreducible minimum part without venturing too far into the disputed area of fact or law";
3. It may well be appropriate simply to ignore certain heads of claim altogether whilst concentrating on those parts of the claim which can be assessed on established principles with some confidence;
4. While a broad brush approach to detail may be appropriate to an enquiry as to damages (see, for example, Gerber v Lectra [1997] RPC 443), at this stage it is also necessary to take a conservative view, however broad the brush employed is.
5. Even though the rule contains provision to accommodate over-payment, the extent to which comfort can be derived from the thought that even if the amount awarded under heads that are considered at the interim stages excessive, the other unconsidered heads can make up for it is strictly limited. Hence Mr Justice Robert Walker's reference to "irreducible minimum" reflects a fundamental feature of the jurisdiction. All the same, I do not think the phrase merely suggests that the sums awarded must be undisputed. There is room for a degree of uncertainty provided that it is treated in a conservative manner."
The basis of the application
i) loss of profits on sales made by Fri-Jado that Nuttall would have made, alternatively to the extent that Nuttall cannot establish that it would have made any particular sale, a reasonable royalty on each such sale;ii) price depression;
iii) loss of profit on the sale of spare parts;
iv) losses arising from the time spent by key employees dealing with the infringement;
v) springboard damages;
vi) loss of sales on complementary and ancillary products.
i) whether Nuttall would have made any of the sales made by Fri-Jado, and if so, how many;ii) the amount of lost profit on any sale which Nuttall would have made;
iii) the appropriate notional reasonable royalty to be applied to Fri-Jado sales which would not have been made by Nuttall;
iv) whether Nuttall should recover any damages accrued after proceedings commenced, given the manner in which Nuttall's case was advanced until shortly before trial.
Lost profits – number of sales
MD35
MD60
The remaining sales
Recoverable profit
Notional reasonable royalty
Mitigation
"It appears that your client has purchased a pre-series MD60 sample ("pre-series sample"). Our clients have distributed very few pre-series samples since, as a result of extensive internal testing and field results in relation to the first prototypes, Fri-Jado has improved its MD cabinets."
Conclusion