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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Fraser & Ors v Oystertec Plc & Ors [2003] EWHC 2787 (Ch) (08 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/2787.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 2787 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) MICHAEL BRUCE FRASER | ||
(2) AGATHA SHUK-YEE WONG-FRASER | ||
(3) DAVIDSON TOOLS LIMITED | ||
(4) SANKEY PRODUCT DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED | Claimants | |
and | ||
(1) OYSTERTEC PLC | ||
(2) PAUL ANTHONY DAVIDSON | ||
(3) ADRIAN PHILIP BINNEY | ||
(4) EASYRAD LIMITED | Defendants |
____________________
Mr John Baldwin QC and Mr Philip Marshall QC, instructed by Berg & Co, appeared for the First Defendants.
Mr Mark Platts-Mills QC and Mr Andrew Henderson, instructed by Norton Rose, appeared for the Second Defendant.
Miss Fiona Clark, instructed by Lockett, Loveday, appeared for the Third Defendant.
Hearing dates: 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 12th and 13th May 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
I. INTRODUCTION
The Applicants
The Respondents
The Oystertec Flotation
The Company was incorporated in October 1999 and was set up to exploit the commercial opportunities of the Oyster Converter, which has been invented and developed by Paul Davidson since 1996. Significant expenditure has been incurred by the Company in the development and marketing of this product.
The Directors believe that the Oyster Converter will have applications in the following markets:
industrial and commercial piping systems;
industrial and domestic heating and plumbing; and
automotive, space and marine.
The Directors intend to generate revenues by granting licences to leading manufacturers who will then manufacture, market and distribute the Oyster Converter in the U.K.
The Oyster Converter was granted a UK patent in July 2000 and is an approved product under the Water Regulations Advisory Scheme which enables it to be marketed within the U.K. heating and plumbing industry.
It has received a number of awards including a gold medal at the 2000 Geneva International Exhibition of Inventions and "the invention with the most commercial potential" at the 2000 INPEX XVI exhibition in Pittsburgh USA.
Patent applications have been made in relation to the Oyster Converter in a number of jurisdictions including Europe, North America and Japan. Further information on these applications is contained in the Patents Agents' Report set out in Part III of this document. The Company has acquired the rights to patent applications for the Oyster Converter and certain other products, which are still in the development phase, further information in relation to which is set out below. At this state, the Oyster Converter is the principal product which the Company intends to exploit.
The company had no ongoing business or turnover; the company had an overdraft of around £1.25 million which was guaranteed by Mr Davidson. The only assets comprised the intellectual property. The most important item of intellectual property was the UK patent in relation to the Oyster/BSP Converter ("the Patent"). Accordingly, in order to be able to sell the company to the City, I had to be sure that Mr Davidson had a valid title to the Patent and other intellectual property.
The Company's success will depend on the Company's ability to obtain and enforce patent and design registration in its key markets.
I would agree with Mr Fraser that it was the BSP Converter which led to the success of the Oystertec flotation...
The Principal Ground of Complaint
It was contrary to public policy since it was founded on an attempt to contract out of the insolvency laws.
The document which purported to create the power of divestiture
- was not effective in the circumstances of this case because no court had made a finding of insolvency
- did not apply to this particular Patent anyway.
A Derivative Action
An Alternative Ground of Complaint
Other Claims
Defences
II. THE LEGAL STANDARD
The Rule
The court may give summary judgment against a ... defendant on the whole of a claim or a particular issue if -
(a) it considers that -
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial.
Rationale
it is important that it is kept to its proper role. It is not meant to dispense with the need for a trial where there are issues which should be investigated at trial the proper disposal of an issue under Part 24 does not involve the judge conducting a mini-trial, that is not the object of the provisions; it is to enable cases, where there is no real prospect of success either way, to be disposed of summarily.
Fanciful or Unduly Vague Defences
If the Evidentiary Materials Are Incomplete
The difficulty in the application of the criterion used by Part 24 is that it requires an assessment to be made in advance of a full trial as to what the outcome of such a trial would be. The pre-trial procedures give the claimant an opportunity to obtain additional evidence to support his case. The most obvious of these is discovery of documents but there is also the weapon of requesting particulars or interrogatories and the exchange of witness statements may provide a party with additional important material. Therefore the courts have ... recognised that they must have regard not only to the evidence presently available to the plaintiffs but also to any realistic prospect that that evidence would have been strengthened between now and the trial.
If the Law is Uncertain
If on an application to strike out it appears that a prolonged and serious argument will be necessary there must at the least, be a serious risk that the court time, effort and expense devoted to it will be lost since the pleading in question may not be struck out [after all] and the whole matter will require to be considered anew at the trial. This consideration ... justifies a general rule that the judge should decline to proceed with the argument unless he not only considers it likely that he may reach the conclusion that the pleading should be struck out, but also is satisfied that striking out will obviate the necessity for a trial or will so substantially cut down or simplify the trial as to make the risk of proceeding with the hearing sufficiently worth while.
III. THE COURSE OF THE PROCEEDINGS BEFORE ME
IV. THE SPECIFIC DEFENCES
Accord and Satisfaction
Acquiescence and Laches
All equitable remedies are, in an appropriate sense, discretionary. In the auxiliary jurisdiction of the court, for example, equitable discretions are exercised by taking into account all relevant matters that tend towards the justice or injustice of granting the remedy that is sought, such as hardship, laches, unfairness, the lack of clean hands, and so on, and by weighing them against each other in order to decide whether the particular relief that is in question should be granted in an absolute, partial or conditional form or else refused. Any particular discretionary matter may be subject to countervailing matters of equal or greater weight. Indeed, as to any particular set of circumstances that would induce the court to exercise its discretion in a particular way it is possible to postulate additional circumstances that would lead to the exercise of that discretion in a different way. It is therefore incorrect to say, for example, that an equitable remedy will be refused if to grant it would give rise to a hardship to the defendant. A more correct statement would be, that in the auxiliary jurisdiction of the court an equitable remedy will be refused by reference to hardship if it appears that the hardship that would be caused to the defendant through granting it would be so great that, when there are taken into account the degree of injury and inconvenience that would be caused to the plaintiff by its refusal and by confining him to such remedies as damages and all the other material circumstances before the court, the case is one in which the grant of relief would be unjust. [My emphasis.]
V. CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING UP TO THE 'VOID TRANSFER'
The Register of Patents
6 June 1997 21 November 1997 20 July 1998 20 November 1998 11 January 1999 21 April 1999 12 October 2001 12 March 2002 |
Patent applied for by Artform International Limited Lancashire Fittings Limited registered as owner in succession. Easyrad Limited registered as owner in succession. Paul Davidson registered as owner in succession. Order of High court in the Lancashire Fittings action, preventing disposal of Patent, registered. Discharge of High Court order, registered. Oystertec PLC registered as owner in succession. Notice of application to revoke patent, registered. |
The Events Before Easyrad Limited Acquired the Patent
That LF Ltd had or would have paid £50,000 plus VAT to Artform in order to extract the intellectual property therefrom.
That LF Ltd would shortly pay £10,000 to Mr Davidson "to cover all the patent fees incurred to date".
That a new Company ("Newco") was to be used for all other shareholders to have their share of profitability from it.
That LF Ltd should be repaid its £60,000 when sufficient profit had been earned.
It contains the following assertion: "IP Ownership. IP currently in LF name. This is effectively "on trust" for all the shareholders [my emphasis].
Easyrad Limited
Reference Companies and Patents
I am one of the worlds leading product designers and you have had the privilege of investing time and money in my products. As a group of individuals you should be able to work together to exploit the opportunities that I have given you as you all have different skills. Fraser marketing and systems, Barker high level negotiating and directing. Binney, financial and commercial, Waklin [sic] manufacturing and distribution, Sankey value engineering and prototyping and Rice sales.
I have done my job and got some of the products finished and either on trial or certificated by a National body fit for purpose. The rest of the products are on their way to the same conclusion. All the companies that we are dealing with have been introduced by me and all the market intelligence has been supplied by me.
I am disappointed that as individuals we can not work together for various reasons. Unlike some of you I will not blame or look for retribution ... It is apparent from all that has gone on that none of you has a clue how to work together to accomplish a sale of intellectual property or to trade as you all pull in different directions to protect your own position.
As inventor, I am the only person who is able to break this dead-lock and I have done so. The patents are now all registered at the patent office in my name in a totally legal and proper way.
The Easyrad Assignment
The Easyrad Insolvency Agreement
AGREEMENT
Parties
Paul Anthony Davidson, of 18 Ploughmans Way, Tytherington, Macclesfield, Cheshire, SK10 2UN ("Davidson")
Easyrad Limited, whose registered office is Aldby House, Stackhouse Lane, Stackhouse, Settle, North Yorkshire, BD24 0DW ("Easyrad").
Preamble
Davidson is a product inventor and wishes Easyrad to commercially develop a number of products, both products already invented and those he may invent in future for Easyrad to commercially exploit. This agreement covers the terms that Easyrad may have the exclusive rights to such products [sic].
Agreement
1. Davidson hereby agrees that the pipe fitting product known as "The Easyrad Swing-Down Radiator Fitting" and all future products invented by him which it is agreed should be commercially exploited by Easyrad, should be legal owned [sic] for a consideration of £1:00 each, subject to the terms herein.
2. Easyrad, or its nominee, must secure all appropriate patent rights, which must be on a full international basis unless otherwise agreed with Davidson in writing and pay for all patent fees and disbursements.
3. Davidson may terminate this agreement in the event of Easyrad being unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s.123 of the Insolvency Act 1986 or shall convene a meeting of its creditors or if a proposal shall be made for a voluntary arrangement within Part 1 of the Insolvency Act 1986 or a proposal for any other composition, scheme or arrangement with (or assignment for the benefit of) its creditors or a receiver, administrative receiver or similar officer is appointed over all or a substantial part of its undertaking or assets or if a petition is presented for the winding up of the Company.
4. Davidson may terminate the agreement in accordance with clause 3 above by issuing a notice in writing to The Company Secretary at the Registered Address of Easyrad and the consequences of termination are agreed to be that all rights and legal ownership of the products covered by this agreement shall pass immediately to Davidson for a price that represents the cost actually paid by Easyrad upto [sic] the date of termination of securing patent protection for such products, which shall be evidenced only by the receipted invoices, representing patent office fees and agents time plus VAT where appropriate only.
5. Easyrad hereby appoints either The Company Secretary or Davidson as Attorney of the Company with full power to sign any required assignment or transfer of ownership document on behalf of The Company, as may be required to register the transfer of ownership with any Patent Office resulting from Davidson initiating the above termination rights.
6. It is further agreed that should Easyrad wish to hold the legal ownership of any patent relating to any product covered by this agreement by any nominee of Easyrad then it is hereby agreed that such nominee will be legally required to fulfil any action required of Easyrad as set out in this agreement.
Dated: . 16 October 1997 [date in manuscript]
Executed by the parties hereto as of the date first above written:
Signed by Paul Anthony Davidson [autograph of Mr Davidson]
Signed on behalf of Easyrad Limited .. [autograph of Mr Binney]
Director
VI. WAS THE TRANSFER VOID?
Some Observations About the Easyrad Insolvency Agreement.
Contentions on the Easyrad Insolvency Agreement
Clause 3 of the Easyrad Insolvency Agreement was a deprivation provision which was void and unenforceable as being contrary to public policy.
In any case, and on the true construction of the Agreement, the deprivation provision could not be exercised unless and until a court had determined that Easyrad Limited was insolvent.
The Patent was not within the scope of the Easyrad Insolvency Agreement.
'No Court Determination of Insolvency'
Whether Void as Contrary to Public Policy
There cannot be a valid contract that a man's property shall remain his until his bankruptcy, and on the happening of that [event] go over to someone else, and be taken away from his creditors... There can be no doubt that the principle exists, and has been applied to defeat provisions which have that purported effect.
The principle is essentially based on a common law rule of public policy, which is itself based on the long-established approach of the English law to the treatment of assets and creditors on insolvency.
It was argued, that, the limitation being to take effect in the event of 'bankruptcy or insolvency' [emphasis in original] - in the alternative, it took effect in this case immediately the partner was unable to pay his debts, and consequently before any act of bankruptcy under which his assignees could claim. But it would be impossible to allow that argument to prevail. A bankrupt is usually insolvent before he commits an act of bankruptcy... Besides, I observe that in several of the cases before Lord Redesdale, the limitation is worded in the same alternative form [yet led to the same result]...
though the contract is good as between the parties to it, it is on principle void in the event of the builder's bankruptcy.
Whether the Patent Was Within the Easyrad Insolvency Agreement Anyway
Davidson agrees that the pipe fitting product known as "The Easyrad Swing-Down Radiator Fitting" and all future products invented by him which it is agreed should be commercially exploited by Easyrad, should be legal owned for a consideration of £1:00 each, subject to the terms herein.
VII. CONCLUSION