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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 >> InterDigital Technology Corporation & Ors v OnePlus Technology (Shenzen) Co & Ors [2023] EWCA Civ 166 (17 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/166.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 166 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD), PATENTS COURT
Mr Justice Mellor
HP-2021-000047
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
____________________
InterDigital Technology Corporation & Ors |
Respondent |
|
- and - |
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OnePlus Technology (Shenzen) Co & Ors |
Appellant |
____________________
Colin West KC (instructed by Taylor Wessing LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Wednesday 1 February 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Birss:
Wide Form
"I confirm that I am not presently involved in SEP licensing (excluding as may be required for the purpose of participating in settlement discussions relating to FRAND litigation) and undertake not to become so involved whilst I have access to the Highly Confidential Materials (or any part of them) in accordance with the Order or for two years after the date that I cease to have access;"
Narrow form:
"I confirm that I am not presently involved in SEP licensing negotiations with [INSERT COUNTERPARTY] or their subsidiaries or affiliates (excluding as may be required for the purpose of participating in settlement discussions relating to FRAND litigation) and undertake to [INSERT COUNTERPARTY] not to become so involved, without the consent of [INSERT COUNTERPARTY], whilst I have access to any Highly Confidential Materials (or any part of them) relating to [INSERT COUNTERPARTY] in accordance with the Order or for two years after the date that I cease to have access;"
27. One point that has struck me from the evidence in this case is that, as [counsel for InterDigital] pointed out, the evidence in relation to [OnePlus's] proposals for the membership of this highly confidential club is described as at a relatively high level, so only one particular individual has been identified and Mr. Marshall, in his third witness statement at 42, identifies this person as the person in [OnePlus] from whom he takes instructions. There is no information about the number of lawyers in the [OnePlus] organisation even though Mr. Vary, for [InterDigital], has identified that it has 40,000 employees. The amount of information I have been provided with by Mr. Marshall is strikingly light compared with the information I received in the IP Bridge and Lenovo instances.
28. The big point that [counsel for InterDigital] takes against [OnePlus's] proposal is that the more people in the highly confidential club who are involved in SEP licensing, the greater the difficulties which will arise with counterparties when they are notified that their agreements are to be disclosed to [OnePlus] and to people in [OnePlus] involved in SEP licensing. Of course, [counsel for OnePlus] points out that his proposal is that the undertaking should only prohibit individuals from being involved in licensing negotiations against the counterparties to the comparator licences. Against that, there were a number of names thrown about in argument, one being Apple, in other words, if there is a licence between [InterDigital] and Apple that is disclosed, the relevant undertakings would prevent anybody in the highly confidential club from being involved in negotiations for a licence between [OnePlus] and Apple for a period of two years from the conclusion of the litigation.
29. Apple, of course, is in some respects a well-known outlier in this industry and there are many other counterparties who some people might consider are similarly situated to other counterparties. The point is, as [counsel for InterDigital] explained, that information from these licences can be and is highly commercially valuable, and they are viewed as such, and I think there is some force in his point about the number of counterparty objections that might arise if I accede to the suggestion. [counsel for InterDigital] also made clear that if [OnePlus] do come forward and explain in more detail the roles of the up to four individuals in their highly confidential club, then there may well be a basis for the regime, which is going to be established at this relatively early stage in this litigation, to be varied in due course. On balance, I am inclined to be cautious in this regard and therefore I am going to impose the undertakings suggested by InterDigital on the basis that if [OnePlus] provide more specific evidence about the roles of the four people in the highly confidential club, they can apply to vary this regime in due course.
i) that a good reason to require the wide undertaking was that otherwise potential counterparties might be concerned about disclosure. In fact their position was already protected by the targeted undertaking offered by OnePlus;
ii) that a justification for the wide undertaking was that third parties in the market might be "similarly situated" to the counterparties to the disclosed licences. In fact whether that is so or not, the counterparty to the negotiations would not be a party to any disclosed licence the individual had seen; and the individual having seen comparable licences with other counterparties does not call into question the fairness of those negotiations.
iii) that requiring the wide undertaking was justified on grounds of caution. However such a stringent undertaking should not be required unless there are genuine, legitimate and identified concerns, none of which were identified.
The law
19 The problem which arises in this case is not a new one in intellectual property litigation. In Warner-Lambert Co v Glaxo Laboratories Ltd [1975] RPC 354 the defendants asserted that their process for the manufacture of a pharmaceutical that was alleged to infringe the claimant's patent was a valuable trade secret. They contended that disclosure should be limited to counsel, solicitors, a patent agent and an independent technical expert, but resisted disclosure to the claimant's own officers or employees. Buckley LJ, at page 356 lines 7-8, said that the court was "confronted with a balance or conflict of expedients". He asked himself at page 356 lines 12-14 "How can justice be done and at the same time effect be given to the rights of each party to the greatest possible extent?" He continued at lines 25-6 "In such a case a controlled measure of disclosure seems best calculated to serve the interests of justice."
27. That passage again recognises that what is a necessary degree of disclosure in the interests of justice may vary as a case progresses.
39. Drawing all this together, I would identify the following non-exhaustive list of points of importance from the authorities:
i) In managing the disclosure of highly confidential information in intellectual property litigation, the court must balance the interests of the receiving party in having the fullest possible access to relevant documents against the interests of the disclosing party, or third parties, in the preservation of their confidential commercial and technical information: Warner Lambert at page 356; Roussel at page 49.
ii) An arrangement under which an officer or employee of the receiving party gains no access at all to documents of importance at trial will be exceptionally rare, if indeed it can happen at all: Warner Lambert at page 360: Al Rawi at [64].
iii) There is no universal form of order suitable for use in every case, or even at every stage of the same case: Warner Lambert at page 358; Al-Rawi at [64]; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)].
iv) The court must be alert to the fact that restricting disclosure to external eyes only at any stage is exceptional: Roussel at [49]; Infederation at [42].
v) If an external eyes only tier is created for initial disclosure, the court should remember that the onus remains on the disclosing party throughout to justify that designation for the documents so designated: TQ Delta at [21] and [23];
vi) Different types of information may require different degrees of protection, according to their value and potential for misuse. The protection to be afforded to a secret process may be greater than the protection to be afforded to commercial licences where the potential for misuse is less obvious: compare Warner Lambert and IPCom 1; see IPCom 2 at [47].
vii) Difficulties of policing misuse are also relevant: Warner Lambert at 360; Roussel at pages 51-2.
viii) The extent to which a party may be expected to contribute to the case based on a document is relevant: Warner Lambert at page 360.
ix) The role which the documents will play in the action is also a material consideration: Roussel at page 49; IPCom 1 at [31(ii)];
x) The structure and organisation of the receiving party is a factor which feeds into the way the confidential information has to be handled: IPCom 1 at [33].
The nature of the risks involved
The particular circumstances
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Lord Justice Bean: