![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> SCI Games Ltd. v Argonaut Games Plc & Ors [2005] EWHC 1403 (Pat) (05 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2005/1403.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1403 (Pat) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISON
(PATENTS COURT)
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge)
____________________
SCI GAMES LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) ARGONAUT GAMES PLC (2) ARGONAUT SOFTWARE LIMITED (in administration) (3) ASHER MILLER (4) DAVID RUBIN |
Defendant |
____________________
Robert Onslow and Nicholas Briggs (instructed by Norton Rose) appeared on behalf of the 2nd – 4th defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background
(1) Plc as Developer shall ensure that the Development Team will comprise appropriately qualified and experienced people employed by Plc on a full-time basis on the game (clause 6.1) The members of the team are specified in Schedule 3 of the agreement and clause 6.2 provides that in the event of any change, the claimant will be notified immediately and will have the right to approve of any replacement.
(2) Subject to certain Subroutine Technology (as defined) all intellectual property rights in and to the game shall belong to the claimant (clause 8).
(3) The claimant shall have an exclusive, irrevocable, royalty free licence to exploit and enhance the Subroutine Technology for the purposes of or in connection with the development and exploitation of the game (clause 7.1).
(4) In consideration of Plc developing the game, the claimant shall pay to Plc by way of an advance of royalties (35 per cent of the claimant's net receipts in respect of the exploitation of the game) certain sums specified in the Milestone Schedule (Schedule 1) on the dates therein specified (clause 4). Such payments shall be paid directly to Plc's bank account, which somewhat perplexingly is named as that of Software (the second defendant).
(5) By clause 10.1 Plc warrants inter alia:
10.1.2 that the Developer has the full power and authority … to enter into this agreement and to grant the rights and to perform its obligations under this agreement …
10.1.8 the Software Materials and the Materials (as defined) are original copyright works developed by the Developer or the Developer's employees.
(6) Clause 13.2.3 provides that either party shall have the right to terminate the agreement forthwith at any time by giving notice in writing if the other party shall cease to carry on its business permanently.
(7) In the event of termination of the agreement by the claimant clause 14.1 provides inter alia:
14.1.2 SCi (the claimant) shall have no further obligation to pay any advance sums to the Developer.
14.1.3 Plc shall hold all computer software and hardware relating to the relevant versions of the game in respect of which the claimant has exercised its right to terminate as the claimant's bailee and the claimant shall have the right to immediate access to all such materials.
14.1.5 Plc shall deliver to the claimant within two working days after written notice of termination any materials created by Plc pursuant to the agreement including all Software materials, Materials, Subroutine Technology, Engines and Third Party IPR's whether completed or not for the purpose of completing the game only.
(8) Provision is also made whereby Plc shall co-operate with the claimant in placing the Source Code in escrow (with the claimant's appointed escrow agent) during the development and in the event that Plc ceases to trade Plc would procure the escrow agent to release the Source Code to the claimant. (clause 8.3).
(9) Finally it is provided that neither the benefit nor the burden of the agreement can be transferred or assigned without the prior written agreement of the other (clause 16.2). However this provision is subject to clause 16.3 which allowed the claimant to perform any of its obligations or exercise any of its rights through any other Group Company. It is to be noted that there was no reciprocal provision for Plc to operate the agreement through any of its Group companies.
(a) assign the copyright in the SCi materials and the game to Plc; and
(b) otherwise at all times act in such a manner as to ensure (so far as possible) that Plc complied with its obligations under the agreement.
"As the question whether or not any such contract is to be implied is one of fact, its answer must depend upon the circumstances of each particular case – and the different sets of facts which arise for consideration in these cases are legion. However, I also agree that no such contract should be implied on the facts of any given case unless it is necessary to do so: necessary, that is to say, in order to give business reality to a transaction and to create enforceable obligations between parties who are dealing with one another in circumstances which one expect that business reality and those enforceable obligations to exist."
Unlawful interference
(a) Software, which has possession of the SCi materials, has prevented Plc from delivering up those materials to SCi. Secondly, with regard to the unlawfulness of such act:
(b) Software's acts are unlawful in that they are in contravention of SCi's rights as against Plc, which rights (as is alleged in paragraphs 12 and 13 of the particulars of claim) Software is obliged (as against Plc) to respect.
"The passage in the judgment of Jenkins LJ in Thomson & Co Ltd v Deakin which identifies most clearly the need for knowledge, and the nature of the knowledge required is, I think, that at [1952] 2 All ER 361 at 377–78:
'But the contract breaker may himself be a willing party to the breach, without any persuasion by the third party, and there seems to be no doubt that if a third party, with knowledge of a contract between the contract breaker and another, has dealings with the contract breaker which the third party knows to be inconsistent with the contract, he has committed an actionable inference …'"
Chadwick LJ (in paragraph 28) goes on as follows:
"The present case, as it seems to me, is one in which – if the purchase of tied products from the defendant company by one of the claimant's tenants was or would be in breach of the terms of trading in the lease under which that tenant held – the tenant (as the contract breaker) is a willing party to that breach. It is a case which falls within the second class to which Jenkins LJ referred in the passage which I have just set out. In such a case the tort of actionable interference will not be made out unless the breach of contract by the tenant is brought about by some act of the defendant company which is itself unlawful but that requirement will be satisfied where the defendant with knowledge of a contract between the contract breaker and another, has dealings with the contract breaker which the third party knows to be inconsistent with the contract. It is the defendant's knowledge that the supply of tied product to the tenant is inconsistent with the tenant's contract with the claimant that makes the act of supply unlawful. And it is the knowledge that the supply of tied product is inconsistent with the tenant's contract with the claimant, coupled with the supply made in that knowledge, which satisfies the requirement that the defendant must act with the intention of bringing about a breach of the tenant's contract."
Strike out of third and fourth defendants
"I will deal first with the claim for damages against the administrators for wrongful interference with goods. The applicant's case is as follows. (1) An officer of a company is liable if he procures the commission of a tort by the company (2) On this basis a receiver may be liable in damages for conversion see Clough Mill Ltd v Martin [1985] 1 WLR 111. Neither of these propositions is in dispute. (3) It is implicit in section 234(3) and (4) of the Act that an administrator may be liable in tort. (4) There is no reason in principle why an administrator should not be liable for unlawful interference with goods if he procures the company to commit acts which amount to that tort. Subject to the effect of section 11 of the Act (the moratorium provisions), none of those contentions is challenged."
"If a servant acting bona fide within the scope of his authority procures or causes the breach of contract between his employer and a third person, he does not thereby become liable to an action of tort at the suit of the person whose contract has thereby been broken."
Dillon LJ (at pages 288 to 290) whilst himself having grave reservations over the reasoning of McCardie J nevertheless accepted that the rule has stood the test of time. As Dillon LJ stated:
"In exercise of the powers given to him by the debenture a receiver can, without incurring any tortious liability for interference with contract, close down the mortgage company's business not withstanding that he thereby causes the company to break its contract made before the receiver's appointment... ."
Dillon LJ went on to dismiss the defendant's counterclaim against the receivers on the ground that they could not be held liable for the tort of wrongful interference with any contract made by the company in receivership and a third party, namely the defendant.
"If a servant or agent acting bona fide within the scope of his authority, procures or causes the employer or principal to break a contract which the employer or principal has made with a third party, the third party cannot sue the servant or agent for interference with the contract; for he is the alter ego of the employer, and the employer cannot be sued for inducing himself to break a contract."
Ralph Gibson LJ went on to consider whether such a rule should be extended to afford protection to a receiver where the receiver procures someone other than his or her principal to break its contract when the company under receivership was not a party to the contract in breach (referred to as a tripartite situation rather than the bipartite situation the subject of the rule in Said v Butt). It does not appear that Ralph Gibson LJ accepted such an extension of the rule in Said v Butt. Certainly the ratio decidendi was that Said v Butt applied to a breach of contract to which the company in receivership (Parrot) was a party (a bipartite situation).
"I am not aware of any case where the tort (of wrongful interference with contractual relations) has been held to apply to an act of a third party who, although aware of a contract between the contracting parties, was not intending to procure a breach of the contract or other actionable wrong or to prevent or hinder the performance of the contract …"
Conclusion
(1) The second to fourth defendants have failed to establish that there is no real prospect of the claimant's claim for unlawful interference with its contractual relations with Plc succeeding at trial.(2) The third and fourth defendants have failed to establish that there is no real prospect of a claim for damages against them succeeding at trial.