Readers may recall that last
September I contributed to an IPKat
article on court fees which considered the possibility that a claimant in
an IP case could pay the non-monetary issue fee at the commencement of
proceedings (£480 at the time, now £528), and then if liability was established
at the point of election, if damages were elected for, pay the monetary element
of the court fee depending on the level of damages. I suggested that if an account of profits
were elected for then no further fee would be payable because there was authority
that suggested such a claim was non-monetary. (Other IPKat articles on court fees are available)
The issue has now had direct
consideration in an IP case (in which Brandsmiths are involved) by Master Clark: Lifestyles
Equities CV & Anor v Sportsdirect.com Retail Ltd & Ors [2016] EWHC 2092 (Ch). The claim is
for trade mark infringement but also inducement of breach of contract. We issued
the claim on the basis I had suggested, and given an undertaking in the claim
form to pay an appropriate fee if an enquiry was elected for. At the CMC the
Defendant had asked for the claim to be stayed until (in its view) the correct
fee had been paid. Master Clark asked for written submissions and a formal
application which the Defendant then made.
In her judgment Master Clark
decided that because there was a free standing contract claim, then a further
fee should be paid. However, she then went on to consider the position as if
the claim had been for trade mark infringement alone. She confirmed that an
account of profits claim was a non-monetary claim (in line with Page v Hewitt).
At paragraphs 15 and 16 she then said:
15. The Defendants' third argument was that
even if an account of profits is a non money claim, the claim includes a money
claim (damages) as an alternative, so that fee 1.1 is payable. I agree with
Hildyard J that the Fees Order is not easy to construe, and the logic operating
in the distinctions contained in it can be difficult to discern. I also agree
with the claimant's counsel that it would be anomalous if a claimant with
sufficiently early information about the defendant's activities to enable it to
elect for an account of profits in its claim form could pay only the fee 1.5,
but a defendant without that information must pay the higher fee. Further, the
two forms of relief are not mere alternatives, but are mutually exclusive; and
it is not until a claimant elects for an inquiry (which it may not do) that it
can be said that its claim is to recover money
16. If, therefore, this claim
had been only for trade mark infringement, then I would have held that the
appropriate fee had been paid.
Master Clark’s key point was that
until the claimant elects to pursue an inquiry as to damages no claim to
recover money is brought. Owing to the split nature of IP claims this is not
until liability is established, Island v Tring disclosure is provided, and an election made. Therefore, if there had
only been a free standing trade mark claim the correct fee would have been
paid.
This should therefore be the position with any
IP claim because of the split nature. It will be interesting to see how this is
applied in practice. As I mentioned in my first post, when the maximum fee was
around £2100 it was unsurprising that this issue had not surfaced. However,
once the fee was raised to £10,000 (for a claim over £200k) that was a
significant rise in the cost of bringing a claim and potentially access to
justice. That was even more so when a value of an IP claim is very rarely known
at the start. Paradoxically, therefore, by raising the court fees to such an
extent, the fee income may actually be reduced.
A similar argument was made before Judge Hacon in a CMC earlier this year for registered design infringement in the IPEC. Hacon took a dim view and said that it was plainly a monetary claim. The Claimant was ordered to pay a court fee to reflect its best estimate of the value of the claim.
ReplyDeleteI'm not convinced whether it's worth the possibility of a judge's dim view; or even the time/hassle/submissions/cost of considering a stay until the correct fee has been paid.
ReplyDeleteAnon @1554 which case? Also, is this slightly different in the IPEC as they like to have quantum heard at the same time if possible.
ReplyDeleteAs a Defendant, probably worth coughing up level of infringement early so that this wheeze can be avoided.
It's an unreported and ongoing case. At one point Hacon did threaten to transfer the claim to the small claims track, so beware!
ReplyDelete