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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Global Flood Defence Systems Ltd & Anor v Johan Van Den Noort Beheer BV & Ors [2016] EWHC 189 (IPEC) (05 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2016/189.html Cite as: [2016] 1 Costs LR 137, [2016] EWHC 189 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GLOBAL FLOOD DEFENCE SYSTEMS LIMITED UK FLOOD BARRIERS LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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JOHAN VAN DEN NOORT BEHEER BV JOHANN HEINRICH REINDERT VAN DEN NOORT FLOOD CONTROL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Tom Alkin (instructed by DTM Legal LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 1 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
45.31 (1) Subject to rule 45.32, the court will not order a party to pay total costs of more than –
(a) £50,000 on the final determination of a claim in relation to liability; and
(b) £25,000 on an inquiry as to damages or account of profits.
(2) The amounts in paragraph (1) apply after the court has applied the provision on set off in accordance with rule 44.12(a).
(3) The maximum amount of scale costs that the court will award for each stage of the claim is set out in Practice Direction 45.
"What happens to the costs cap in a preliminary issue case? It seems to me the position is clear. This will be a trial and the PCC stages that apply to and include a trial will apply. I realise that that means that if the rest of the case goes forward in the PCC one could end up with two costs caps on one issue of liability. That seems to me to be inevitable as a result of ordering preliminary issues and needs to be taken into account. If that is the right way for this case to go then, in my judgment, that is the correct way to approach the costs cap."
"[13] Ms May's submission is that the rule refers to the final determination of "a claim" and that the answer to this problem can be found in the manner in which the CPR uses the word "claim". It is true that in some places in the CPR the word claim is used to refer to different claims in a single proceeding which was started by a single claim form, with a "claim" against one defendant and a separate "claim" against another defendant. But the expression is also used in a similar way to refer to separate claims brought against the same defendant. If Ms May's submission were right then a claimant with two claims against a single defendant would be entitled to two cost caps. I do not believe that is correct and I reject this submission. Moreover if one took a formalistic approach to the rule then a normal case for infringement of a registered right like a registered design or patent, which consists of a claim for infringement and a counterclaim for revocation, could be regarded as two claims for the purposes of the rule. I do not think that is right. In my judgment the claim referred to in r.45.42(1) means a single set of proceedings.
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[19] I conclude that r.45.42(1) protects the paying party and means that the court cannot award total costs of more than £50,000 in the Patents County Court."
"[40] … I believe what is really happening in this case is an example of a psychological phenomenon I have become familiar with in the PCC. When the risk was in the future, the claimant wished to litigate in the Patents County Court to protect herself against the risk of an adverse costs award. That is why proceedings were brought and pursued in this court with this costs regime. The impact of the PCC cap on the claimant's actual costs if she won was predictable. If the claimant had lost, the costs cap would have been strongly relied on. The claimant was able to enforce her intellectual property rights in this case because of the predictability of the costs cap remaining in place. She was relying on it. Now that the claimant has won, the uncertainty has evaporated. The balance of risk and reward is now entirely different. In today's circumstances it now seems to the claimant quite unfair that the cap prevents her from recovering a higher share of her costs. But that is because the position after judgment is very different."