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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 >> Nestec S.A. & Ors v Dualit Ltd & Ors [2013] EWHC 2737 (Pat) (05 September 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2013/2737.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2737 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
The Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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NESTEC S.A. NESTLÉ NESPRESSO S.A. NESPRESSO UK LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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DUALIT LIMITED PRODUCT SOURCING (UK) LIMITED MR. LESLIE ALEXANDER GORT-BARTEN |
Defendants |
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1st Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane London WC2A 1HP.
Tel No: 020-7067 2900 Fax No: 020-7831 6864
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. CHRIS AIKENS (instructed by Jensen & Son) for the Defendants
MR. GEOFFREY PRITCHARD (instructed by Bristows LLP) for DEMB Holding B.V. (Intervening)
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE BIRSS:
(1) the schedule to the final order, dated 5th June 2013;
(2) photos showed to Donald Smith on day 1 of the trial and in bundle 10, tab 26;
(3) photographs shown to Donald Smith on day 1 of the trial and bundle X1;
(4) printout of the video presentation which Nespresso made of the conference in Venice showed to Donald Smith on day 1 and in bundle X2;
(5) the letter shown to Ms. Bonnet on day 1 and in bundle 13.1/33;
(6) all photographs exhibited to the witness statements of Ms. Drohan and referred to in court;
(7) the eight video clips from the DVD which were disclosed to Dualit Limited and which were shown to Ms. Drohan on day 2 of the trial and in bundle X/7;
(8) two e-mails from Marc Linders, shown to Ms. Drohan on day 2 of the trial and in bundle 13.1/41
(9) the two experts' reports of Martin Nicholson (including the written corrections) in bundle 7.1 and 7.2; and,
(10) Dualit Limited's opening and closing skeleton arguments.
"Anyone with a legitimate interest in having access to a copy of a document which has been read or treated as being read by the judge should normally be allowed to have it".
However, he accepts that that statement by Keith J was in the context of CPR r.5.4C and was not concerned with the court's inherent jurisdiction. I have mentioned already the problem DEMB has under r.5.4C.
"It is thus important to appreciate that when, in the course of the reported decisions relied on by Mr. Leveson, documents have been described as being 'in the public domain' use of that expression has meant in context no more than that any other person present in court may report without restriction and/or that the inter partes confidentiality which previously attached to the document has been lost by reference to it in court: cf. Plant v. Plant [1998] B.P.I.R 243, 251 per Carnwath J. In the latter respect it is to be noted that R.S.C. Ord. 24, r. 14A was introduced to put the position beyond doubt, following the decision of the House of Lords in Home Office v. Harman [1983] 1 A.C. 280. References to the 'public domain' go no further than that, and certainly do not have the effect of transforming such a document into one to which the public has a right of access, as opposed to one in respect of which access and the right to copy depends upon the consent of the party entitled to the document."
"It should be noted that the authorities I have quoted and other leading statements on the question of public justice (see for example Scott v. Scott [1913] A.C. 1417, per the Earl of Halsbury, at pp. 440-443, and per Lord Shaw, at p. 482, Rex v. Governor of Lewes Prison, Ex parte Doyle [1917] 2 K.B. 254, 271, per Viscount Reading C.J. and Hodgson v. Imperial Tobacco Ltd. [1998] 1 WLR 1056, 1069-1070, 1071E and 1072A-C, per Lord Woolf M.R.) deal with the matter in broad terms of 'open doors', the right of the press and the public not to be excluded, and the need for public announcement of the court's decision. They do not condescend to greater particularity than that and they certainly do not seek to suggest that, in devising and applying its procedures for the expeditious dispatch of judicial business, the public should be given access to such documentary material as may be before the court by way of evidence".
"So far as concerns documents which form part of the evidence or court bundles, there has historically been no right, and there is currently no provision, which enables the member of the public present in court to see, examine or copy a document simply on the basis that it has been referred to in court or read by the judge. If and in so far as it may be read out, it will 'enter the public domain' in the sense already referred to, and a member of the press or public may quote what is read out, but the right of access to it for purposes of further use or information depends upon that person's ability to obtain a copy of the document from one of the parties or by other lawful means. There is no provision by which the court may, regardless of the wishes of the parties to the litigation, make such a document available to a member of the public. Nor, so far as such documents are concerned, do I consider that any recent development in court procedures justifies the court contemplating such an exercise under its inherent jurisdiction".
I note in particular the reference to inherent jurisdiction by Potter LJ at H.
"That said, the issues canvassed upon this appeal plainly raise matters appropriate for consideration in the course of the revision of the rules of court currently being conducted in relation to the proposed introduction of various civil justice reforms in the wake of Lord Woolf's report, Access to Justice: Final Report to the Lord Chancellor on the Civil Justice System in England and Wales (July 1996), whether by way of some specific provision in the rules, or as the subject of a practice direction. It is of great importance to the beneficial saving in time and money which it is hoped to bring about by such new procedures should not erode the principle of open justice."
"20. Exhibits are not covered by 32.13 and, correspondingly, they are not covered by 32.12. Although Ms. Thornley says the rule is cast very widely, it only refers to witness statements and I am simply not prepared to accept that it covers exhibits to witness statements as well. Ms. Thornley also seeks to put her application under rule 5.4, but that is only concerned with court records and given that witness statements do not form part of the court record or court file in the Commercial Court, a fortiori exhibits to those statements do not either. So Ms. Thornley is really driven to fall back on the concept of the inherent jurisdiction of the court.
"21. In those circumstances, what Potter LJ said in GIO seems to me to be clearly against any suggestion that the court has some inherent jurisdiction to order access to documents which have not been read or referred to in open court. At 995 F, Potter LJ said:
[… cited above]
"22. It seems to me that in that last sentence the learned Lord Justice may have in mind by way of 'recent development in court procedures' the fact that in Commercial Court litigation by the 1990s, (and, as it transpires now under the Civil Procedure Rules, in most civil litigation) the court is often invited to read a great deal of material before the trial begins, including documents from trial bundles, rather than having those documents read out in the old fashioned way in open court. I did point out during the course of argument that it may be that there is a tension between different parts of Potter LJ's judgment, because in one sense, if one is looking in that context at the short circuiting of the necessity to read out documents in open court in the old fashioned way, because the judge is being invited to read them, one might say, what difference is there in terms of principle between that and the fact that the evidence-in-chief of the witness is taken as read from their witness statements. In a sense, one has the same lacuna in terms of open justice."