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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 >> Reckitt Benkiser UK v Home Pairfum Ltd & Ors [2004] EWHC 302 (Pat) (13 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2004/302.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 302 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
The Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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RECKITT BENKISER UK |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HOME PAIRFUM LIMITED HUBERT WILLEM MAAT JOSEPHINE BERNADETTE McCARTHY |
Defendants |
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appeared on behalf of the Claimant.
Mr Jonathan Hill (instructed by Messrs Lewinson Gray)
Appeared on behalf of the Defendants.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LADDIE:
"21(1) Where a person threatens another with proceedings for infringement of a registered trade mark other than -
(a) the application of the mark to goods or their packaging,(b) the importation of goods to which, or to the packaging of which, the mark has been applied, or(c) the supply of services under the mark,any person aggrieved may bring proceedings for relief under this section.
(2) The relief which may be applied for is any of the following -
(a) a declaration that the threats are unjustifiable,(b) an injunction against the continuance of the threats,(c) damages in respect of any loss he has sustained by the threats;and the plaintiff is entitled to such relief unless the defendant shows that the acts in respect of which proceedings were threatened constitute (or if done would constitute) an infringement of the registered trade mark concerned.
(3) If that is shown by the defendant, the plaintiff is nevertheless entitled to relief if he shows that the registration of the trade mark is invalid or liable be revoked in a relevant respect.
(4) The mere notification that a trade mark is registered, or that an application for registration has been made, does not constitute a threat of proceedings for the purposes of this section."
"(1) Motive and intention as such are irrelevant (save only where 'malice' is a relevant plea): the fact that a party who asserts a legal right is activated by feelings of personal animosity, vindictiveness or general antagonism towards his opponent is nothing to the point. As was said by Glass JA in Champtaloup v Thomas (1976) 2 NSWLR 264, 271 (see Rajski v Baynton (1990) 22 NSWLR 125 at p.134):
'To impose the further requirement that the donee [of a legal right] must be actuated by a legitimate purpose, thus forcing a judicial trek through the quagmire of mixed motives would be, in my opinion, a dangerous and needless innovation.'
(2) Accordingly the institution of proceedings with an ulterior motive is not of itself enough to constitute an abuse: an action is only that if the Court's processes are being misused to achieve something not properly available to the plaintiff in the course of properly conducted proceedings. The cases appear to suggest two distinct categories of such misuse of process:
(i) The achievement of a collateral advantage beyond the proper scope of the action – a classic instance was Grainger v Hill where the proceedings of which complaint was made had been designed quite improperly to secure for the claimants a ship's register to which they had no legitimate claim whatever. The difficulty in deciding where precisely falls the boundary of such impermissible collateral advantage is addressed in Bridge LJ's judgment in Goldsmith v Sperrings Limited at page 503 D/H.(ii) The conduct of the proceedings themselves not so as to vindicate a right but rather in a manner designed to cause the defendant problems of expense, harassment, commercial prejudice or the like beyond those ordinarily encountered in the course of properly conducted litigation.
(3) Only in the most clear and obvious case will it be appropriate upon preliminary application to strike out proceedings as an abuse of process so as to prevent a plaintiff from bringing an apparently proper cause of action to trial.'
"… where Simon Brown LJ speaks in paragraph (2)(ii) of the conduct of the proceedings, this is not confined as Mr Price submitted, to the conduct of proceedings after the issue of the claim, but includes the initiation of the claim itself."
"… there is nothing in practical terms to be gained from such proceedings continuing (other than perhaps those matters touched on below), but rather such proceedings will duplicate and add to those matters litigated as part of the claim and the remainder of the counterclaim, thereby adding both in time and expense to both parties and to the court."