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Burden v ESR Group (NZ) Limited [2020] NZCA 560 (12 November 2020)
Last Updated: 17 November 2020
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
|
|
|
BETWEEN
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IAN JAMES BURDEN First Appellant
PGT-RECLAIMED
(INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED Second Appellant
PLANTATION GROWN TIMBERS
(VIETNAM) LIMITED Third Appellant
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AND
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ESR GROUP (NZ) LIMITED Respondent
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CA594/2019
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BETWEEN
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ESR GROUP (NZ) LIMITED Appellant
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AND
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IAN JAMES BURDEN First Respondent
PGT-RECLAIMED
(INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED Second Respondent
PLANTATION GROWN TIMBERS
(VIETNAM) LIMITED Third Respondent
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Hearing:
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23 September 2020
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Court:
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Kós P, Brown and Courtney JJ
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Counsel:
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A H Brown QC and J Oliver-Hood for Appellants in CA577/2019 and
Respondents in CA594/2019 J G Miles QC and A J Pietras for Respondent in
CA577/2019 and Appellant in CA594/2019
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Judgment:
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12 November 2020 at 11.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
- The
appeal in CA577/2019 is allowed conditional upon the amendments specified in
[50].
B The appeal in CA594/2019 is allowed.
C Costs lie where they fall.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Brown J)
Introduction
- [1] In the
liability phase of this litigation[1]
ESR Group (NZ) Ltd (ESR) was held
liable[2] for secondary infringement
of the copyright works of the Plantation
interests[3] by the importation into
New Zealand on 28 August and 5 and 12 September
2014[4] of a range of furniture known
as the Roseberry Collection.[5] In
addition to injunctive and declaratory relief, leave was reserved to pursue
damages or an account of profits at a separate hearing
in respect of the
infringing Roseberry items.[6]
- [2] In the
subsequent discovery process the Plantation interests realised that there had
been earlier importations by ESR from May
2013. They also became aware of ESR
having imported other infringing items, being the Roseberry shoe shine box and
some furniture
from the Westbury Collection. Hence on 17 December 2018 the
Plantation interests filed a new
proceeding[7] alleging both primary
infringement (the issue of copies of their copyright works to the public by the
offering for sale or sale by
ESR of both the Roseberry and Westbury Collections
in New Zealand)[8] and secondary
infringement of copyright by ESR in respect of the Roseberry and Westbury
Collections since at least 2013.
- [3] On 4 March
2019 ESR applied to strike out the 2018 proceeding on the grounds that the
claims of the Plantation interests in relation
to the Roseberry Collection had
already been adjudicated upon in the 2014 proceeding and that claims in relation
to both furniture
collections could and should have been raised in the course of
the 2014 proceeding.
- [4] The
Plantation interests then applied on 15 May 2019 for leave to amend the 2014
proceeding not only to include the Westbury Collection
items but also to add a
new cause of action of primary infringement in respect of both furniture
collections. ESR opposed the application
to amend.
- [5] In a
judgment dated 3 July 2019 Venning J declined the application for leave to amend
the 2014 proceeding and declined ESR’s
application to strike out the 2018
proceeding.[9]
- [6] The
Plantation interests appeal against the refusal to grant leave to amend the 2014
proceeding (CA577/2019). ESR appeals against
the refusal to strike out the 2018
proceeding (CA594/2019).
Relevant background
- [7] On 20 May
2013 Mr Burden issued copyright border enforcement notices under s 136(1) of the
Copyright Act 1994 (the Act) giving
notice of his claim to copyright and
requesting the New Zealand Customs Service (Customs) to detain any pirated
copies. However
it was not until August 2014 that Customs first seized
containers of furniture imported by ESR.
- [8] On 18
September 2014 the 2014 proceeding was
commenced[10] in respect of the
items found and detained in the containers seized by Customs, namely the
Roseberry Collection furniture and the
Westbury Collection shoe shine
box.[11] It alleged that the
second, third and fourth defendants had manufactured or arranged for the
manufacture of infringing products
for importation into and ultimate sale within
New Zealand by ESR.
- [9] In respect
of ESR the pleading relevantly stated:
- [ESR]
has infringed the Plaintiffs’ copyright in the Plaintiffs’ Copyright
Works by:
25.1 Importing into New Zealand an infringing
copy of one or more of the Plaintiffs’ Copyright Works knowing or having
reason
to believe that the object was an infringing copy;
25.2 Possessing or intending to possess an infringing copy of the
Plaintiffs’ Copyright Works, knowing or having reason to believe
that the
object was an infringing copy;
[25.3] Issuing or intending to issue an object infringing the
Plaintiffs’ Copyright Works to the public in New Zealand, knowing
or
having reason to believe that the object was an infringing copy.
- [10] On 6 March
2015 Associate Judge Bell made an order for a split trial in the following
terms:
[7] For this proceeding, determination of liability and
quantum of monetary relief will be dealt with separately. The trial judge
will
be able to make all appropriate directions under s 141 of the Copyright Act (as
to discharge of the notice, release of detained
goods and a determination
whether imported goods are pirated copies). The judge will also be able to make
declarations, issue injunctions,
and give like equitable relief but will not
order monetary relief (by way of damages, account for profits or otherwise).
Matters
of monetary relief will be dealt with separately.
- [11] The claim
proceeded to trial against ESR alone, the claims against the second, third and
fourth defendants being deferred because
of difficulties in serving them with
the proceedings.[12] Duffy J found
there had been copyright infringement only in respect of the items of furniture
listed in the schedule to the third
amended statement of claim,
explaining:
[308] The relief I have granted is narrower than that
sought by Mr Burden in the statement of claim. He sought declarations and
injunctions
that would cover other products that were a substantial reproduction
of his copyright works, or that otherwise infringed his copyright
works. I
consider that language to be too general. Until such time as a judicial
determination is made on whether products other
than the infringing Roseberry
products are a substantial reproduction of his copyright works my view is
that he has no entitlement
to legal orders that go so far.
- [12] In addition
to declaratory and injunctive relief and an order for delivery up,
the Judge made an order for discovery against
ESR in the following
terms:[13]
(e) an order
that ESR makes and serves upon Mr Burden’s solicitor an affidavit:
(i) detailing quantities of the infringing Roseberry products that have been
imported into New Zealand by itself or in concert with
any other party,
including but not limited to the second and third defendants; and
(ii) detailing the name, address and contact details of each person, firm
or company to whom ESR has supplied or offered to supply
the infringing
Roseberry products; and listing and exhibiting copies of all documents relating
to each such importation, supply or
offer to supply;
- [13] With
reference to a subsequent monetary relief hearing the Judge
stated:
[309] Mr Burden has acted promptly to protect his rights.
I am satisfied that he is entitled to the relief sought in the statement
of
claim. Leave is reserved to Mr Burden (as requested) to come back to Court to
pursue the relief by way of damages (including
additional damages pursuant to s
121 of the Copyright Act) or an account of profits with interest should he
choose to do so.
- [14] Subsequent
to the delivery of this Court’s judgment on appeal from the liability
judgment, it came to the attention of
the Plantation interests that ESR was
continuing to advertise infringing Roseberry furniture on its website together
with items of
Westbury Collection furniture which had not been shipped in the
container initially seized that formed the basis for the 2014 proceeding.
The
Plantation interests claim that it was not until this period that they learned
there had been importations by ESR of Roseberry
and Westbury Collection
furniture as early as at least
May 2013.[14] In the present
appeal the Plantation interests explained:
- Solicitors
for the parties then engaged in protracted correspondence from July 2017 until
November 2018 on the question of remedies.
After 18 months had been
pursued to provide full disclosure, ESR finally provided a spreadsheet
which included all sales of the
infringing Roseberry furniture and Westbury shoe
shine box on 22 November 2018. It was this disclosure that precipitated
the commencement
of [the 2018 proceeding].
(Footnotes
omitted.)
- [15] By
memorandum dated 2 May 2019 the Plantation interests made a formal election to
pursue an account of profits.
The judgment under appeal
The application for leave to amend the 2014 proceeding
- [16] The
amendments sought fell into three categories:
(a) to reflect this
Court’s findings as to copyright ownership;
(b) to include the new items of the Westbury Collection furniture and the
Roseberry shoe shine box; and
(c) to add what was said to be a new cause of action, namely the infringing
act of issuing copies (the furniture) to the public contrary
to s 31 of
the Act.
- [17] ESR
accepted that a number of the new furniture items not considered in the
liability hearing could fall within the existing
finding of secondary
infringement and so be the subject of an amended claim for loss of profits.
However it challenged the proposition
that the Plantation interests could amend
their claim to pursue damages either for primary infringement at all or to claim
in respect
of acts of secondary infringement prior to the “reason to
believe” date of 28 August 2014 identified by this
Court.[15]
- [18] An
important consideration in Venning J’s analysis was whether the proposed
amendment fell within the scope of the orders
made by Duffy J following the
liability trial.[16] Noting the
acknowledgement by the Plantation interests that the case pursued before Duffy J
in the 2014 proceeding was limited to
a claim for secondary infringement and
that a s 31 infringement was not pleaded, the Judge rejected the submission that
the order
of Duffy J encompassed issuing copies to the
public.[17]
- [19] Venning J
considered there was good reason to distinguish between permitting an amendment
to enable all possible infringements
that may follow from an initial liability
phase and amendments which seek to plead and raise a different and separate
basis for liability:
[36] ... The first should be permitted (and
indeed as much is acknowledged by ESR in this case), the second should not. The
Court
has resolved the issue of the Plantation interests’ ownership of the
copyright and found ESR has been liable for secondary
infringement from 28
August 2014, but, as yet, there has been no finding that ESR has committed
primary infringement.
[37] While it is open and consistent with the rules to allow an amendment to
identify new infringing items consistent with the infringement
found following a
liability trial, it is quite a different issue to suggest that a fresh cause of
action requiring the proof of different
elements should be permitted. For
example, there may be an argument that the items it is said ESR issued had
previously been put
into circulation, and thus it was not the first entity to do
so.
- [20] The Judge
also rejected the submission that the Plantation interests were not aware ESR
had made actual sales of the infringing
items, noting an admission by ESR in an
amended statement of defence of acts of offering for sale and sale of the
furniture within
New Zealand.[18]
- [21] While
noting that the efficient use of judicial resources was at most a neutral
factor, the Judge considered that ESR would be
unfairly prejudiced in having to
face a new cause of action at the inquiry into damages phase of the 2014
proceeding.[19] The Judge also
recognised that, while the evidence necessary to prove primary infringement
might be limited, issues could arise
concerning the meaning of “issue to
the public” under s 9 of the
Act.[20]
- [22] The
amendments sought to plead primary infringement and secondary infringement prior
to 28 August 2014 were declined. However
leave was granted to include at the
inquiry a claim for damages for secondary infringement in relation to the
additional items of
furniture now identified but confined to the period post
28 August
2014.[21]
The
application to strike out the 2018 proceeding
- [23] The claim
against ESR for primary infringement was the sole issue, the Judge accepting
that other aspects of ESR’s abuse
of process challenge were
justified.[22] The application
to strike out was advanced on the basis of:
(a) res judicata;
(b) abuse of process; and
(c) insufficient particulars to establish a cause of action.
- [24] Noting the
discussion of the Henderson v Henderson principle by Lord Bingham in
Johnson v Gore Wood &
Co,[23] Venning J considered it
was too dogmatic an approach to hold that because a matter could have been
raised in earlier proceedings
it was necessarily abusive to raise it in later
proceedings. The Judge stated that a broad merits-based judgement is required,
the
issue being whether in all the circumstances the claim is an
abuse.[24]
- [25] Venning J
concluded that it would not be an abuse of process to permit the Plantation
interests to pursue ESR with a claim for
primary infringement:
[71] The issue of primary infringement was not before this Court or
the Court of Appeal in the 2014 proceedings. While there may
have been
information available to the Plantation interests and their advisers which
should have put them on notice that such a claim
might be available, the focus
of the pleading in those 2014 proceedings was on the ownership of the copyright
and then on the importation
and secondary infringement. ... It would be
draconian to prevent the Plantation interests from pursuing a claim for primary
infringement
merely on the basis that they failed to seek leave to amend their
pleadings in the 2014 proceedings to add a claim of primary infringement.
[72] To deny the Plantation interests the right to pursue a claim for primary
infringement in the circumstances of this case would
be to deny them their right
under s 27 New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 to access the Court to have that
claim heard.
CA577/2019: leave to amend the 2014 proceeding
Submissions
- [26] Mr Brown QC
for the Plantation interests proceeded from the premise it is elementary that an
inquiry as to damages or an account
of profits in an intellectual property case
should correspond to the width of the injunction and declaratory orders granted
after
the liability trial. He submitted that the amendment sought fell squarely
within the declaratory and injunctive orders granted by
Duffy J as
follows:[25]
(a) a
declaration that infringing items of Roseberry furniture as itemised in the
schedule to the third amended statement of claim
(hereafter the infringing
Roseberry products) reproduce the first plaintiff’s copyright works and
therefore each is an infringing
copy for the purposes of s 12 of the Copyright
Act;
(b) a declaration that the infringing Roseberry products reproduce the first
plaintiff’s copyright works and therefore each
is a pirated copy imported
other than for private and domestic use within the meaning of s 141(3) of the
Copyright Act;
(c) an injunction to restrain ESR, its servants, officers, marketers,
distributors or agents, from reproducing, importing, distributing,
advertising,
offering for sale, selling or otherwise dealing with the infringing Roseberry
products or otherwise infringing the plaintiffs’
copyright or converting
the same for its own use;
...
- [27] In reliance
on the number of English
authorities[26] and statements in
leading intellectual property
textbooks[27] Mr Brown then advanced
the proposition that the remedies phase of a proceeding will extend to all
infringements of the “type”
proved at the liability trial and the
Court may permit it to extend to “related” infringements which
amount to new causes
of action if it is fair and convenient to do so. Finally
he submitted that such a principle should guide the exercise of the
Court’s
power to permit an amendment to the statement of claim after the
close of pleadings pursuant to r 7.7 of the High Court Rules 2016.
- [28] ESR’s
analysis of the cited authorities suggested that their effect had been
overstated by the Plantation interests and
observed that none of them supported
the introduction for the first time of a new claim of primary infringement
subsequent to a liability
hearing. Warner Music UK Ltd v TuneIn Inc
concerned further internet radio stations additional to the representative
sample of less than 40 at the
trial.[28] Similarly in General
Tire and Rubber Co v Firestone Tyre and Rubber Co Ltd, discussed in
Unilin Beheer BV v Berry Floor NV, the Court was dealing with
tyres with extra tread than those in issue at
trial.[29] Mr Miles QC suggested
this was analogous to the addition in the present case of the Westbury items,
identical in shape to the Roseberry
items, as secondary infringements. AP
Racing Ltd v Alcon Components Ltd was distinguished on the basis that, as
the defendant refused to consent to the joinder of the new items in the original
proceeding,
the second proceeding was allowed to
run.[30]
- [29] Mr Miles
emphasised that the ability to claim damages at a remedies hearing should be
confined to instances of infringement of
the type determined at the liability
hearing. He argued that there is a strong public interest in the finality of
litigation, that
it is much better for a plaintiff to understand that the first
litigation is the time and place to present his or her best case and
that there
is no second chance. He urged caution in the adoption of the practice advocated
by Mr Brown and he took strong issue
with the proposed test of fairness and
convenience.
Discussion
- [30] Although
the potential difficulties associated with split trials for liability and
assessment of monetary relief[31]
are well known,[32] separate
hearings are commonplace today, particularly in intellectual property cases,
because of their potential to achieve significant
savings in time and cost.
- [31] That
objective has long been recognised in the patent jurisdiction where
a plaintiff is required to deliver particulars of breaches
which provide at
least one instance of “each type of
infringement”.[33] As the
English Court of Appeal explained in Belegging-en Exploitatiemaatschappij
Lavender B V v Witten Industrial Diamonds
Ltd:[34]
The Rules
referred to require that the plaintiff shall particularise at least one specific
example of each type of infringement alleged.
This seems to me to be clearly
directed to restricting discovery and trial to the specific instances so
particularised. If a plaintiff
can establish one such instance, he has
established infringement of the kind of which that instance is an example and
will be entitled
to relief accordingly, which will or can include an enquiry in
how many other instances the defendants have been guilty of that kind
of
infringement. The Rule is directed to avoiding the expense in money and time of
preparing to examine and examining at the trial
a large number of instances of
infringement all of one kind.
That approach is reflected in the three patent cases cited by Mr Brown, in
particular AP Racing Ltd v Alcon Components
Ltd.[35]
- [32] However in
appropriate cases the Court may permit a new issue of liability to be raised at
a quantum hearing. That reality is
reflected in the High Court Rules relating
to patents which allow for the grant of leave to adduce evidence relating to
matters not
specified in
particulars[36] and to amend
particulars of infringement,[37] the
latter on terms which the Court considers just.
- [33] We
recognise the importance of finality in litigation and we are mindful of the
caution advocated by Mr Miles to endorsing what
he described as the unorthodox
approach whereby a plaintiff would have the benefit of what would in effect be a
second bite at a
liability hearing. However we understood his opposition to be
directed primarily to the liberal way in which the threshold for late
amendment
was expressed rather than to the Court’s jurisdiction in an appropriate
case to entertain consideration of a new
issue of liability.
- [34] Convenience
is very much in the eye of the beholder. We consider that the proposed
“fair and convenient” threshold
sets the bar too low for a departure
from a split trial direction. The cost and time savings which a split trial
affords should
not lightly be put at risk, nor the profession’s confidence
in the integrity of the procedure undermined. Transforming a remedies
hearing
into a second liability hearing would require a judge to preside (preferably the
same judge who sat on the original liability
hearing) and preclude the
appointment of an
account-taker.[38]
- [35] We conclude
that liability issues should only be permitted to be revisited at
a remedies hearing if the Court can be satisfied
that the interests of
justice so require.[39] That
accords with the standard which the High Court Rules prescribe for an amendment
of particulars in a patent infringement claim.
We record that it is unnecessary
for this decision to engage with the suggested distinction between
“types” of infringement
and “related” infringements.
The present case
- [36] There are
several factors in the present case which bear on the issue whether justice
requires the proposed amendment to the
2014 proceeding to be permitted.
- [37] First,
notwithstanding the perception of both counsel and Venning J that the pleading
was confined to secondary infringement,
we consider that paragraph 25.3 of the
pleading is fairly and properly construed as asserting a s 31 infringement.
That paragraph
reads:
- [ESR]
has infringed the Plaintiffs’ copyright in the Plaintiffs’ Copyright
Works by:
...
[25.3] Issuing or intending to issue an object infringing the
Plaintiffs’ Copyright Works to the public in New Zealand, knowing
or
having reason to believe that the object was an infringing copy.
- [38] The restricted
act of issuing copies of work to the public, as defined in s 9 of the Act, is
not an act of infringement referred
to in the secondary infringement provisions.
The wording of paragraph 25.3 prior to the point of reference to knowledge could
only
be to the restricted act referred to in s 31. As Mr Miles remarked, that
aspect of the allegation was “classic” primary
infringement. In
that respect, the pleading is more explicit than in Jeanswest Corporation
(New Zealand) Ltd v G-Star Raw
CV.[40]
- [39] The words
which follow the description of that restricted act echo the knowledge
requirement which is a component of the several
secondary infringement
provisions. In our view those additional words are otiose or, to adopt Mr
Miles’ epithet, irrelevant
to the formulation of a s 31 infringement.
Consequently we consider that paragraph 25.3 should be read as an allegation of
primary
infringement.
- [40] Secondly,
and consistent with primary infringement being in issue, Mr Hazel
cross-examined Ms McLennan on the subject of the
date of first sale of the
furniture items in New Zealand. Mr Miles fairly accepted that such
cross-examination comprised the sort
of questions which one would expect to be
posed in the course of proof of a s 31 infringement allegation.
- [41] Thirdly,
ESR filed an addendum to its closing submissions in which, under the heading
“Failure to cross examine on infringement”,
it engaged with the
s 31 allegation of primary infringement, making the point that the
proposition that ESR had issued copies to
the public had never been expressly
put to the ESR witness. Consequently it is apparent from ESR’s written
submissions that
the topic of s 31 infringement was in play.
- [42] Fourthly,
it seems to be implicit in the order for discovery which the Judge made in
relation to ESR[41] that supply of
the furniture in New Zealand by ESR was in contemplation. Again Mr Miles
fairly acknowledged that point, recognising
that it was difficult to see why the
order should so provide unless it was in issue before the Court.
- [43] Notwithstanding
the references in the liability judgment to secondary infringement, we consider
that the issue of s 31 primary
infringement was live on the pleadings, visited
in the evidence, addressed in submissions and, by implication at least, included
in the discovery order which was part of the relief granted.
The combination of circumstances is such that, subject to the consideration
of possible prejudice to ESR, we consider the interests of justice would require
that the monetary relief hearing should extend to
include the s 31 infringement
allegation.
- [44] We do not
identify any significant prejudice arising for ESR from this outcome for two
reasons. First, in an amended statement
of defence ESR admitted not only to
having imported the relevant furniture into New Zealand but to having kept it
for sale, offered
it for sale and sold it in New Zealand. Liability for primary
infringement turns on whether such sales involved putting the items
into
circulation for the first time.
- [45] A potential
area of prejudice recognised by Venning J was the fact that a fresh cause of
action may require the proof of different
elements. In particular he referred
to an anticipated argument of ESR that the furniture items had previously been
put into circulation
in Vietnam and hence ESR was not the first entity to do so
when it sold those items in New
Zealand.[42]
- [46] Mr Brown
submitted that this concern could be neutralised by additions to the proposed
amended statement of claim. He advised
that the Plantation interests would
undertake to amend paragraphs 32 to 37 of the proposed fourth amended statement
of claim to read
as follows (the italicised words being new):
- Since
at least 15 May 2013, the First Defendant distributed, sold and offered for
sale, furniture under and by reference to the names
Roseberry and Westbury (the
Roseberry and Westbury Collections) in New Zealand.
- Each
item of the Roseberry and Westbury Collections was manufactured in Vietnam by
Galaxy Home (Vietnam) Co Ltd for Morrow Marketing
Management Ltd.
- Each
item of the Roseberry and Westbury Collections was the subject of a transaction
in Vietnam between Morrow Marketing Management
Ltd or Galaxy Home Vietnam Ltd
and the First Defendant.
- The
title to each item of the Roseberry and Westbury Collections passed from Morrow
Marketing Management Ltd to the First Defendant
either in Vietnam or while the
goods were in transit to New Zealand.
- The
items of the Roseberry and Westbury Collections set out in Schedule
2:
(a) Reproduce all or a substantial part of each of the
relevant Copyright Work; and
(b) Are objectively similar to each of the relevant Copyright Works.
- Each
item of the Roseberry and Westbury Collections set out in Schedule 2 constitutes
an infringing copy of one or more of the Copyright
Works.
- [47] Mr Brown
submitted that those amendments would obviate the need for ESR to prove the fact
of earlier transactions involving the
infringing furniture being manufactured
and sold in Vietnam prior to the infringing items of furniture coming into the
hands of ESR
and being distributed by it in New Zealand. Consequently the
issue which would remain for determination on the primary infringement
allegation would be what was described by Mr Brown as the narrow legal and
factual dispute as to whether in those circumstances the
actions of ESR amounted
to issuing to the public in New Zealand.
- [48] The
circumstances of this case are unusual. Viewed with the benefit of hindsight
there appears to have been a misapprehension
as to the nature of the pleaded
case both on the part of counsel and the trial judge. For the several reasons
discussed above and
on the basis of the undertaking to amend as tendered by Mr
Brown, we are satisfied that this case is one where justice does require
that an
amendment be made to permit consideration at the monetary hearing of the claim
for primary infringement based on s 31.
- [49] Accordingly,
subject to our observations below on the terms of the amended pleading, the
appeal is allowed.
- [50] Leave is
granted to file an amended statement of claim in the form annexed to the
interlocutory application to amend, subject
to the following additional
amendments:
(a) The heading is amended to remove reference to the
Fair Trading Act 1986 as there is no cause of action under that Act in the
proposed
pleading.
(b) Paragraph 23.3 in the secondary infringement cause of action (in the
proposed fourth amended statement of claim this paragraph
is the second
paragraph numbered 23.2) is deleted as it is replaced by the new primary
infringement cause of action.
(c) The “reason to believe” date as held in this Court’s
earlier judgment is
recognised.[43]
(d) References to secondary infringement sections of the Act in the prayer
for relief in the new primary infringement cause of action
are deleted.
CA594/2019: strike out of the 2018 proceeding
- [51] The
consequence of allowing the appeal in CA577/2019 is that the appeal against the
refusal to strike out the 2018 proceeding
can be disposed of in short order.
- [52] The
amendment which we have permitted to the 2014 proceeding renders the 2018
proceeding unnecessary. It would be an abuse of
process to allow a second
proceeding to continue which advanced the same causes of action as an existing
claim.
- [53] Consequently
the appeal in CA594/2019 is also allowed.
Result
- [54] The appeal
in CA577/2019 is allowed conditional upon the amendments specified in [50].
- [55] The appeal
in CA594/2019 is allowed.
- [56] The
appellants would be entitled to costs on their respective appeals but the
outcome is cost neutral. Hence costs lie where
they
fall.
Solicitors:
James & Wells, Auckland
for Appellants in CA577/2019 and Respondents in CA594/2019
AJ Pietras &
Co, Lower Hutt for Respondent in CA577/2019 and Appellant in CA594/2019
[1] CIV-2014-404-2456 (the 2014
proceeding).
[2] Burden v ESR Group (NZ)
Ltd [2016] NZHC 1542 [Liability judgment]; and ESR Group (NZ) Ltd v
Burden [2017] NZCA 217, (2017) 14 TCLR 590 [Appeal decision]. Leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court was declined: ESR Group (NZ) Ltd v Burden
[2017] NZSC 173.
[3] The second and third
appellants in CA577/2019 and the second and third respondents in CA594/2019.
[4] Under s 35 of the Copyright
Act 1994. A prior importation on 30 July 2014 (which was apparently assumed to
be the first such importation
by ESR) was held not to infringe, as ESR was not
shown to have known or had reason to believe those goods were infringing copies.
[5] Together with one item (a shoe
shine box) from another furniture range known as the Westbury Collection.
[6] Liability judgment, above n 2,
at [309].
[7] CIV-2018-404-2775 (the 2018
proceeding).
[8] Under s 31 of the Copyright
Act.
[9] Burden v ESR Group (NZ)
Ltd [2019] NZHC 1546, (2019) 146 IPR 525 [Amendment judgment]. Leave to
appeal the strike out decision was granted on 29 October 2019: Burden v ESR
Group (NZ) Ltd [2019] NZHC 2745. There was an appeal as of right under s 66
of the Judicature Act 1908 in relation to the amendment decision.
[10] Under s 140(1)(e) of the
Copyright Act proceedings for copyright infringement must be brought within 10
working days of Customs
giving an interested party notice of goods being
detained as “pirated copies”, otherwise the goods will be
released.
[11] See [1] above. The
statement of claim stated that until discovery the plaintiffs were unable to
further particularise all of the
relevant acts of infringement by the
defendants.
[12] Liability judgment, above n
2, at [5].
[13] At [307].
[14] In that regard we note that
this Court’s earlier judgment recorded that the first importation of goods
by ESR arrived in New
Zealand on 30 July 2014: Appeal decision, above n 2, at
[62].
[15] Amendment judgment, above n
9, at [24].
[16] At [32].
[17] At [35].
[18] At [47]–[49].
[19] At [51].
[20] At [52].
[21] At [54].
[22] At [57]. These were a Fair
Trading Act 1986 cause of action, a further claim for secondary infringement
pre‑dating 28 August
2014 and a claim against Ms McLennan, a director of
ESR who was named as second defendant in the 2018 proceeding.
[23] Johnson v Gore
Wood & Co (a firm) [2002] 2 AC 1 at 30–31; and Henderson v
Henderson [1843] EngR 917; (1843) 3 Hare 100, 67 ER 313 (Ch).
[24] Amendment judgment, above n
9, at [67].
[25] Liability judgment, above n
2, at [307].
[26] Unilin Beheer BV v Berry
Floor NV [2007] EWCA Civ 364, [2008] 1 All ER 156; Fabio Perini SPA v LPC
Group Plc [2012] EWHC 911 (Ch), [2012] RPC 885; AP Racing Ltd v Alcon
Components Ltd [2016] EWHC 815 (Ch), [2016] FSR 28; and Warner Music UK
Ltd v TuneIn Inc [2019] EWHC 3374 (Ch).
[27] Gillian Davies, Nicholas
Caddick and Gwilym Harbottle Copinger and Skone James on Copyright (17th
ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2016) vol 1 at [21-280]; Adrian Speck and
others Laddie, Prescott and Vitoria: The Modern Law of Copyright (5th
ed, LexisNexis, London. 2018) vol 1 at [26.28]; Colin Birss and others (eds)
Terrell on the Law of Patents (18th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London,
2016) at [21-84]; and Phillip Johnson, Ashley Roughton and Trevor Cook The
Modern Law of Patents (3rd ed, LexisNexis, London, 2014) at [15.49].
[28] See Warner Music UK Ltd
v TuneIn Inc, above n 26, at [4]–[5].
[29] General Tire and Rubber
Co v Firestone Tyre and Rubber Co Ltd [1975] RPC 203 (CA).
[30] AP Racing Ltd v Alcon
Components Ltd, above n 26.
[31] Whether an account of
profits or an inquiry as to damages.
[32] Clear Communications Ltd
v Telecom Corporation of New Zealand Ltd (1998) 12 PRNZ 333 (HC) at 335; and
Ashmont Holdings Ltd v Jurox Pty Ltd (2000) 53 IPR 464 (HC) at [4].
[33] High Court Rules 2016, r
22.22(c).
[34] Belegging-en
Exploitatiemaatschappij Lavender BV v Witten Industrial Diamonds Ltd [1979]
FSR 59 (CA) at 63–64.
[35] AP Racing Ltd v Alcon
Components Ltd, above n 26, at [24].
[36] High Court Rules, r
22.24(2).
[37] Rule 22.25(1). This rule
has effect despite r 7.77: r 22.25(3).
[38] See High Court Rules, r
16.6; and Nicholls v Nicholls [2020] NZCA 346 at [77].
[39] This is a requirement
generally for amending a statement of claim under r 7.7 of the High Court Rules:
Elders Pastoral Ltd v Marr [1987] NZCA 18; (1987) 2 PRNZ 383 (CA) at 385.
[40] Jeanswest Corporation
(New Zealand) Ltd v G-Star Raw CV [2015] NZCA 14, 13 TCLR 787
at [83]–[84].
[41] At [12] above.
[42] Amendment judgment, above n
9, at [37].
[43] Consistent with the ruling
of Venning J in respect of the 2018 proceeding which was not challenged:
Amendment judgment, above n
9, at [24].
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