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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 >> Aylo Premium Ltd & Anor v Aylo Premium Ltd & Ors [2024] EWHC 1310 (Pat) (27 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2024/1310.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1310 (Pat) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
PATENTS COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) DISH TECHNOLOGIES LLC (a company incorporated under the laws of the state of Colorado, USA) (2) SLING TV LLC (a company incorporated under the law of the state of Colorado, USA) |
Claimants / Applicants |
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- and -
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(1) AYLO PREMIUM LTD (a company incorporated under the laws of Cyprus) (2) AYLO FREESITES LTD (a company incorporated under the laws of Cyprus) (3) AYLO BILLING LIMITED (a company incorporated under the laws of Ireland) (4) AYLO BILLING US CORP (a company incorporated under the laws of the state of Delaware, USA) |
Defendants / Applicants |
And between:
Claim No. HP-2024-000009
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(1) AYLO PREMIUM LTD (a company incorporated under the laws of Cyprus) (2) AYLO FREESITES LTD (a company incorporated under the laws of Cyprus) |
Claimant |
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- and -
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(1) DISH TECHNOLOGIES LLC (a company incorporated under the laws of Colorado, USA) |
Defendant |
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2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. IAIN PURVIS KC and MS. ISABEL JAMAL (instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) appeared for Aylo.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE MEADE:
"17. Thus, as the judge was well aware from the authorities that had been placed before him, expedition will only be justified on the basis of real, objectively viewed, urgency. It is against that background that Neuberger LJ's four factors from W.L. Gore, supra, are to be considered, namely (1) whether the applicants have shown good reason for expedition; (2) whether expedition would interfere with the good administration of justice; (3) whether expedition would cause prejudice to the party; and (4) whether there are any other special factors."
"11. In my view, it is important to give Takeda at least the opportunity of obtaining a judgment from the UK court, which may have some influence on the Düsseldorf court hearing the infringement action. By a decision of the Bundesgerichtshof, dated 15th April 2010, Xa ZB 10/09, Roll-Forming Machine, the Federal Supreme Court held that:
"The German courts are required to consider decisions rendered by organs of the European Patent Office and courts in other EPC contracting states and pertaining to a largely similar issue and, where appropriate, address the reasons leading to a diverging result in the earlier decision. Insofar as points of law are concerned, this also applies, for instance, to the question of whether the subject-matter of a property right was obvious in the light of prior art."
12. The UK courts are always very interested to see decisions of our German colleagues and judges of other EPC Contracting States pertaining in particular to equivalent patents. If I were hearing an infringement case in the UK, I would be very interested to see what decision the German courts had reached.
13. I give no guarantee that the UK court will be able to render judgment before the German court reaches its decision. Indeed, it may well not be possible to do so in what appears to be quite a complicated case. It may be, given the state of the court's diary, that the parties in this case will be given a deputy judge. That is a matter for listing. Furthermore, it may be that a judge will consider this is an appropriate case in which to give a result, plus relatively brief reasons for the result, and to give a full judgment later."
"9. The case to start with is the decision of the Court of Appeal in James Petter v EMC Europe Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 480. That case considered a previous judgment of Neuberger LJ in the well-known (in this context) Gore v Geox litigation. The James Petter judgment put it into some context and also restated with approval the principles in Gore v Geox, which came down to four factors which the court will take into account when considering applications for expedition. Also notable in James Petter was that the court reviewed a number of earlier authorities. That included, at paragraph 11, the decision of Lloyd J in Daltel Europe Ltd (In Liquidation) v Makki [2004] EWHC 1631 (Ch) in which the judge had identified a need for real urgency as the justification for expedition.
10. The four factors in Gore v Geox are set out in James Petter at paragraph 12 and I refer also to paragraphs 15, 16 and 17, where the Court of Appeal discuss them.
11. There are three particular matters which I want to pick up. First, an observation by Warren J at paragraph 52 of Eli Lilly & Company v Human Genome Sciences [2012] EWHC 2857 (Pat), cited in James Petter at paragraph 14. The point is that there are likely to be a large number of litigants in the Business and Property Courts who would like their cases to be tried earlier, therefore granting expedition involves an inevitable degree of queue-jumping and therefore there has to be a good reason for it. What I want to add is that the way the court takes this point into account is by deciding this applications according to the relevant principles and not simply by approaching them on the basis that someone who happens to come to the court wishing for their case to be speeded up will get it.
12. That takes me to the second point, something I said in a previous case and I maintain. I do not believe it is really controversial, but it bears repetition that a mere wish for commercial certainty is not enough to justify expedition. The phrase that is used in Gore v Geox and in James Petter is that there needs to be a "good reason". That has to be established in evidence.
13. The third factor is specific to patent cases. A common situation is that there may be with parallel proceedings concerning the same patent family. In Europe, the parallel proceedings may well concern the other designations of the same European patent itself. A frequent occurrence is that there is a parallel German infringement claim. In Germany patent actions are bifurcated whereas they are not in many other European states, including the United Kingdom. Bifurcation refers to the idea that the infringement aspect of the dispute is decided at a different time and a different place from validity. In Germany, as is well-known, patent infringement claims are decided at the regional courts, whereas validity is decided at the Federal Court.
14. A party who has sued for infringement in Germany often seeks to schedule the UK validity action or, rather, to be accurate the UK action which will involve both validity and infringement, in such a way that the outcome relating to validity is likely to be available and public before the German infringement court decides the matter.
15. There have been different words used by different judges of the Patents Court over the years relating to the emphasis that this factor bears in the context of listing decisions and expedition. In a number of decisions between 2011 and 2017, and I refer in particular to HTC v Europe Ltd v Apple Inc [2011] EWHC 2396 (Pat), ZTE (UK) Limited v Telegonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson [2011] EWHC 2709 (Pat), and Garmin (Europe) Limited v Koninklijke Philips N.V. [2017] EWHC 8165 (Pat), Arnold J consistently expressed the view that it was a factor to take into account, however as he put it, it is not a strong factor and will never be sufficient on its own, but it is a factor.
16. In the Takeda UK Ltd v F Hoffmann-La Roche Ag [2018] EWHC 2155, Henry Carr J said at paragraphs 11 and 12:
"In my view, it is important to give Takeda at least the opportunity of obtaining a judgment from the UK court, which may have some influence on the Düsseldorf court hearing the infringement action. By a decision of the Bundesgerichtshof, dated 15th April 2010, Xa ZB 10/09, Roll-Forming Machine, the Federal Supreme Court held that:
'The German courts are required to consider decisions rendered by organs of the European Patent Office and courts in other EPC contracting states and pertaining to a largely similar issue and, where appropriate, address the reasons leading to a diverging result in the earlier decision. Insofar as points of law are concerned, this also applies, for instance, to the question of whether the subject-matter of a property right was obvious in the light of prior art.'
The UK courts are always very interested to see decisions of our German colleagues and judges of other EPC Contracting States pertaining in particular to equivalent patents. If I were hearing an infringement case in the UK, I would be very interested to see what decision the German courts had reached."
17. An important point of detail is that the decision of Henry Carr J was not about expedition as such but with the decision to list the case within the listing window, but nevertheless, in my judgment, he was making an important point that is generally relevant.
18. Despite what was suggested in argument, albeit it was never put quite as starkly as this, there is no conflict between the various statements by these judges. I agree with what was said by Henry Carr J and I also agree with what Arnold J said. As Arnold J said, this factor on its own is not enough. If a party did simply come to court and raised that as the only reason, no doubt they would get short shrift.
19. A party should, if it wishes to seek expedition, put forward evidence of the commercial context in which the dispute arises in order to establish why there is a good reason in commercial terms, if true, that the UK validity trial should be timetabled in the way that is sought. In other words, and I am probably repeating myself, if a party seeks expedition it will always need to support its application with evidence of a commercial context to explain why, in the words of James Petter and Gore v Geox, there is a good reason for expedition.
20. Mr. Speck mentioned comity and a concern about whether taking this factor into account involved the UK court expressing some sort of implicit view about the way patents were litigated in other countries such as Germany. That is not right and is not the position at all.
21. It is clear in this jurisdiction that the courts will take this factor into account as a factor, but it is never enough on its own for the reasons I have already explained. Doing this is not in any sense a criticism of any other legal system.
"22. There was argument about the details of German law relating to the utility of foreign judgments. It is not necessary to get into the detail of that issue. The position is adequately summarised by Henry Carr J in paragraphs 11 and 12 above. All contracting states of the European Patent Convention take a similar view. They are interested in the decisions of their colleagues in other EPC States. Precisely how these decisions are taken into account does not matter. What does matter is that we are all applying a common law -- common with a small c -- to patents, based on a common legal framework, and it is of interest to courts in the EPC how other courts have taken a decision on the very same patent. The claims are usually identical and the patent specifications will be identical."
"Where it will enable a case to be tried within 12 months, or shortly thereafter, the Court may list a trial up to one month earlier than the applicable Trial Window without the need for any application for expedition."