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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stretchline Intellectual Properties Ltdv H&M Hennes & Mauritz UK Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 516 (22 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/516.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 516 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (PATENTS COURT)
THE HON MR JUSTICE SALES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
____________________
Stretchline Intellectual Properties Ltd |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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H&M Hennes & Mauritz UK Ltd |
Defendant/Appellant |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
for the Claimant/Respondent
Guy Burkill QC and Geoffrey Pritchard (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP)
for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing date: 30 April 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
Background
"A. Proceedings have been commenced by the Claimant against the Defendants by way of High Court Claim No. HC10C00278 filed on 30 July 2010 in the High Court of Justice (the "UK Proceedings") arising out of the Claimant's claim for infringement of United Kingdom Patent Number GB 2,309,038 (the "UK patent") by the UK Defendant (the "UK Dispute") and US Civil Action no. 2:10-CV-371 (EDVA) filed on July 20 2010 in The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia (the "US Proceedings") again arising out of the Claimant's claim for infringement of U.S. Patent Number 6,071,578 (the "US Patent") by the US Defendant (the "US Dispute"). In both the UK and US dispute the Defendants have denied all claims and liability.
B. Following mediation between the Parties on 31 May 2011, pursuant to a Mediation Agreement dated the same date, the Parties agree to compromise the UK and US Proceedings on the terms set out in this Settlement Agreement.
C. The Parties intend that this Agreement bring finality to this dispute worldwide with respect to the claims asserted or those that could have been asserted with regard to the products at issue."
"1.1 "Claims" shall mean any claim made in either the UK Proceedings or the US Proceedings (including any claim for damages, interest and cost) and any other potential claims in relation to the subject matter of those proceedings elsewhere in the World.
1.2 "H&M Low Volume Fabric" shall mean any wire casing product with a volume of fusible yarn of approximately 0.3-0.7% of the total volume of yarn in any tubular fabric component, including but not limited to the samples provided the Defendant to the Claimant under cover of a letter of 16 May 2011 from Shoosmiths Solicitors to the Claimant c/o Potter Clarkson.
1.3 "Accused Product" shall mean:
1.3.1 any product which falls within any of the claims of any of the Patents;
but does not include the H&M Low Volume Fabric.
"Patents" shall mean:
1.4.1 United Kingdom Patent Number GB 2,309,038;
1.4.2 United States Patent Number 6,071,578;
1.4.3 European Patent Number 0,802,269;
1.4.4 German Patent Number DE 69700104;
1.4.5 United Kingdom Patent Number 2,336,574.
1.5 "Party" shall mean a party to this Settlement Agreement.
1.6 "Prohibited Acts" shall mean:
Making, disposing of, offering to dispose of, using, importing or keeping (whether for disposal or otherwise) in any of the Prohibited Jurisdictions any Accused Product; during the duration of the terms of the Patents in their respective jurisdictions so long as each Patent remains enforceable in that jurisdiction;
1.7 "Prohibited Jurisdictions" shall mean the United Kingdom, the United States of America, Germany, France, Belgium, and/or Italy.
…
1.13 "UK Proceedings" has the meaning set out in paragraph A of the Background to this Settlement Agreement.
1.14 "US Proceedings" has the meaning set out in paragraph A of the Background to this Settlement Agreement.
1.15 "Supply Agreement" shall mean an agreement of even date hereof between Stretchline (UK) Limited and H&M Hennes & Mauritz AB."
"3.1 In consideration of the Claimant agreeing to compromise the Claims against the UK Defendant and the US Defendant (together the "Defendants") the Defendants each agree:
3.1.1 between them to pay, by way of costs, to the Claimant the sum of £235,000 (the "Settlement Sum") in full and final settlement worldwide of all Claims present and future made by the Claimant and/or its subsidiaries/associate companies;
3.1.2 not now, or at any time in the future to do, or procure or authorise the commission by any third party to do any of the Prohibited Acts, nor collude with any company within the same group of companies in relation to the commission of any of the Prohibited Acts, whether by their directors, officers, servants or agents or any of them or otherwise whatsoever.
3.1.3 to ensure that by the date of the expiry of the Sell-Through Period no H&M retail stores in the United Kingdom, the United States of America, Belgium, Germany, France and Italy will at that time or in the future dispose or, offer to dispose of, use, or keep (whether for disposal or otherwise) any Accused Product.
…
3.3 If after the sell-through period has expired, the Claimant does discover a product in an H&M Store within the territory referred to in 3.1.3 above which it believes to be a violation of this Agreement, the Claimant will promptly bring such product to the attention of the UK and US Defendants who shall promptly investigate matters and thereafter the Parties hereto shall, without prejudice to the Claimant's rights as set out in this Agreement or generally, work together to resolve the situation to each other's satisfaction."
"4.1 Subject to clause 4.2 below, agreement to these terms and payment of the Settlement Sum is in full and final settlement of the Claims or any other claim relating to the subject matter referred to in the litigation in the US and/or UK, and/or anywhere in the world, and the Parties are forever discharged from liability in relation to such Claims or any other claim whether the same have been intimated to the UK or the US Defendant or not."
"5.1 Subject to receipt of the Settlement Sum in accordance with clause 3.2 of this Settlement Agreement, the Parties each agree, on behalf of themselves, their successors or assigns, not to commence or pursue, or voluntarily assist the pursuit of, any further proceedings relating to or arising from the Claims against the other Parties, or their parents, subsidiaries, assigns, transferees, principals, agents, officers or directors, in this jurisdiction or elsewhere (otherwise for the purpose of carrying into effect the terms of this Settlement Agreement)."
"Subject to receipt of the Settlement Sum in accordance with clause 3.2 of this Settlement Agreement, the parties consent to the stay of the UK Proceedings and shall take all necessary steps, via their legal representatives, to obtain a Consent Order staying the UK Proceedings, in the form set out in Annex 1 to this Settlement Agreement. The Claimant's solicitors will file the Consent Order with the UK court within 7 days of the receipt of the Settlement Sum by the Claimant's solicitors."
The present action and the judgment of Sales J
"In my view, on a proper interpretation of the Settlement Agreement, all matters in dispute between the parties in the first action – including the issues raised by the Defendant in relation to the validity of the Claimant's patent – were settled definitively between them by the terms of that agreement …"
"In my view, reading the Settlement Agreement as a whole, there is no sound basis on which any distinction can be drawn between the question of the invalidity of the patent raised by way of a defence and the same question of the invalidity of the patent on the same grounds raised by way of a counterclaim for revocation of the patent. The parties intended all issues to be settled between them by the terms of the Settlement Agreement, covering both those dimensions of the Defendant's case in the first set of proceedings."
"In my view, however, this feature of the case does not assist the Defendant; nor does it bring this case into that special category of case contemplated by the House of Lords in Bank of Credit and Commerce International. I consider it is clear that the parties knew perfectly well when they entered into the Settlement Agreement in 2011 that issues had arisen in relation to the validity of patent and that issues in relation to the true interpretation of the claims as set out in the patent would arise at the trial of the first action. It was all of those issues which the parties intended finally to settle and dispose of by their agreement. In my view, upon proper interpretation of the agreements in line with the approach identified in Bank of Credit and Commerce International, the matters which the parties agreed to resolve between themselves included all matters relating to the validity of the patent (as properly construed according to the objective standard that a court would bring to issues of interpretation of the patent). On proper interpretation of the terms that they used in the Settlement Agreement, the parties did not intend only to resolve between themselves issues relating to questions of construction and validity of the patent turning upon, and limited to, the precise way in which the parties at that juncture happened to be putting their cases. In my view, as I have already said, the issue of the validity of the claimant's patent was raised squarely on the pleadings in the first action by the terms of the Defendant's pleading, and the parties by their agreement intended finally to resolve that question of validity in favour of the Claimant."
Appeal
Invalidity as an answer to the claim for breach of contract
Invalidity as an answer to the claim for infringement
A different case on construction?
"You also raise questions about the pin penetration results and how they relate to the results described in the patents. The simple answer to your question is that the results are not directly comparable. As you know the pin penetration test was developed to replicate the force of a brassiere underwire pushing against the fabric in the wire casing, to establish that the force required is substantially higher than it would be for an underwire casing that does not contain melted fusible yarn. In the Patents the results are shown in relation to underwire casings that are not currently used in Stretchline's commercial products. The results show pin penetration resistance in hundreds of grams, rather than kilograms. They are not results that can be directly compared."
"But a long and in my view salutary line of authority shows that, in the absence of clear language, the court will be very slow to infer that a party intended to surrender rights and claims of which he was unaware and could not have been aware."
"Neither the bank, even when fixed with such knowledge, nor Mr. Naeem could realistically have supposed that such a claim lay within the realm of possibility. On a fair construction, of this document, I cannot conclude that the parties intended to provide for the release of rights and the surrender of claims which they could never have had in contemplation at all."
"The parties wanted to achieve finality. When, therefore, a claim whose existence was not appreciated does come to light, on the face of the general words of the release and consistently with the purpose for which the release was given the release is applicable. The mere fact that the parties were unaware of the particular claim is not a reason for excluding it from the scope of the release. The risk that further claims might later emerge was a risk the person giving the release took upon himself. It was against this very risk that the release was intended to protect the person in whose favour the release was made."
"28 …. It does not mean that, once the possibility of further claims has been foreseen, a newly emergent claim will always be regarded as caught by a general release, whatever the circumstances in which it arises and whatever its subject matter may be. However widely drawn the language, the circumstances in which the release was given may suggest, and frequently they do suggest, that the parties intended, or, more precisely, the parties are reasonably to be taken to have intended, that the release should apply only to claims, known or unknown, relating to a particular subject matter. The court has to consider, therefore, what was the type of claims at which the release was directed. For instance, depending on the circumstances, a mutual general release on a settlement of final partnership accounts might properly be interpreted as confined to claims arising in connection with the partnership business. It could not reasonably be taken to preclude a claim if it later came to light that encroaching tree roots from one partner's property had undermined the foundations of his neighbouring partner's house. Echoing judicial language used in the past, that would be regarded as outside the "contemplation" of the parties at the time the release was entered into, not because it was an unknown claim, but because it related to a subject matter which was not "under consideration".
29 This approach, which is an orthodox application of the ordinary principles of interpretation, is now well established. Over the years different judges have used different language when referring to what is now commonly described as the context, or the matrix of facts, in which a contract was made. But, although expressed in different words, the constant theme is that the scope of general words of a release depends upon the context furnished by the surrounding circumstances in which the release was given. The generality of the wording has no greater reach than this context indicates."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lord Justice Aikens: