Dart Industries Inc v Décor Corporation
Pty Ltd [1993] HCA 54
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
MASON CJ, DEANE, DAWSON, TOOHEY AND MCHUGH JJ
MASON CJ, DEANE, DAWSON AND TOOHEY JJ:
The appellant
("Dart") was the successful plaintiff in an action in the Supreme
Court of Victoria against the respondents ("Decor" and
"Rian") for infringement of a patent in respect of press button
seals, or lids, used to seal plastic kitchen canisters.[1] Rian
manufactured, with tooling provided by Decor, and Decor produced and sold,
plastic kitchen canisters with the press button seals.
Dart having
elected between damages and an account of profits, the trial judge, King J.,
ordered an account of profits by Decor and Rian. In giving directions, King J.
dealt with two questions, the first of which falls to be determined upon this
appeal and the second of which is raised in an application by Decor and Rian
for special leave to cross-appeal. The first is whether any part of general
overhead costs is allowable as a deduction to Decor or Rian in the
determination of the profits made by them from the infringement. The second is
whether Decor and Rian must account for profits arising from the manufacture
and sale of the composite product, consisting of both the body of the canister
and the press button seal, or merely for those profits attributable to the
manufacture and sale of the press button seal alone, that being the patented
invention.
King J. answered
the first question by directing that costs categorized as general overhead
costs, in the sense that no part of them can be shown by Decor or Rian to be
directly attributable to the manufacture or sale of canisters incorporating the
patented invention, should not be taken into account as a deduction from gross
profits. He directed that only costs which are directly attributable to
manufacture or sale of the infringing product should be taken into account.[2] In answer to the
second question, King J. directed that the profits for which Decor and Rian
must account are the profits from the manufacture and sale of the complete
canisters, including the press button seals.[3]
Upon appeal from
the interlocutory orders made by King J., the Full Court of the Federal Court
held that the first direction was in error and that Decor and Rian should be
"at liberty to show that various categories of overhead costs contributed
to the obtaining of the relevant profit, and to show how and in what proportion
they should be allocated in the taking of the account of profits".[4] The Full Court
upheld the second direction given by the trial judge.[5] Dart now appeals,
pursuant to special leave, against the rejection by the Full Court of the first
direction given by the trial judge and Decor and Rian seek special leave to
cross-appeal against the second direction upheld by the Full Court.
Damages and an
account of profits are alternative remedies.[6] An account of
profits was a form of relief granted by equity whereas damages were originally
a purely common law remedy.[7] As Windeyer J.
pointed out in Colbeam Palmer Ltd. v
Stock Affiliates Pty. Ltd.,[8] even now[9] an account of
profits retains its equitable characteristics in that a defendant is made to
account for, and is then stripped of, profits which it has dishonestly made by
the infringement and which it would be unconscionable for it to retain. An
account of profits is confined to profits actually made, its purpose being not
to punish the defendant but to prevent its unjust enrichment.[10] The ordinary
requirement of the principles of unjust enrichment that regard be paid to
matters of substance rather than technical form[11] is applicable.
But it is
notoriously difficult in some cases, particularly cases involving the
manufacture or sale of a range of products, to isolate those costs which are
attributable to the infringement from those which are not so attributable.[12] Whilst it is
accepted that mathematical exactitude is generally impossible, the exercise is
one that must be undertaken, and some assistance may be derived from the
principles and practices of commercial accounting.[13] Unfortunately,
neither the Australian nor the English authorities contain any precise analysis
of the problem.
Leplastrier & Co. Ltd. v
Armstrong-Holland Ltd.[14] involved an
account of profits arising from the manufacture and sale of concrete mixing
machines in breach of a patent. Harvey C.J. in Eq. drew a distinction between
the profits made from the manufacture and sale of the infringing machines,
which were to be accounted for, and the profits of the business in connexion
with the sale of those machines, which were not.[15] He expressed the view
that the defendant bore the onus of establishing that the costs were incurred
in the manufacture of the machines and observed:[16]
Under no circumstances can he, in my opinion, deduct interest on his
capital employed in the business. Under no circumstances can he claim any
remuneration to himself, nor under any circumstances can he claim in my opinion
any director's fees for carrying on the business. I have no desire at the
present stage to say exactly what can be taken into account as the costs of manufacture.
It is clear that costs of material can be taken; it is clear that costs of
wages can be deducted. It is possible that other costs may be taken, but I
think the test which is to be applied is that the only expenses which can be
deducted are those which were solely referable to the manufacture of the
machines. If, for instance, for the purpose of manufacturing these machines the
defendant found it necessary to install a particular piece of machinery which
was useful for making these machines and for nothing else, then it might be
that depreciation of this machinery would be a proper item to allow him as part
of his costs of manufacturing the machines; if his machinery is used partly for
the purpose of making these machines and partly for the purpose of other
machines it may be proper to allow him such depreciation for wear and tear on
the value of his machinery as may be properly allocated to the work which has
been done on the infringing machines as compared with the work done on other
machines.
In giving the
first direction, King J. relied upon this passage in the judgment of Harvey
C.J. in Eq. and adopted the language of his Honour, saying that only costs
which are "solely referable" to manufacture or sale of the infringing
article may be deducted.[17]
Dart relies upon
the same passage to support its submission that the correct accounting
principle to employ in the taking of an account of profits is incremental
costing rather than absorption costing. Incremental costing takes account only
of the change in costs incurred by the manufacture or sale of a particular
product and does not seek to apportion to the manufacture or sale of that
product any part of general overheads, such as rent, light, heating or office
expenses, which cannot be identified as a direct result of producing that
product. Absorption costing on the other hand is a costing method whereby
general overheads are apportioned by some appropriate means, often by sales or
volume, to the manufacture or sale of each product.
Dart's argument, based
on incremental costing as the proper method for taking an account of profits of
infringing activities, is as follows. The profit should be calculated by taking
the gross revenue received from the manufacture and sale of the infringing
product and deducting from it direct costs, such as materials or labour, solely
due to the manufacture or sale of the infringing product, and also deducting
overheads, but only to the extent that they were increased by the manufacture
or sale of the infringing product. Otherwise, the defendant would be able to
deduct expenditure which it would have incurred in any event. This should not
be allowed because if any of the revenue from the sale or manufacture could be
set off against general overheads which would have been incurred without the
infringing activities, the defendant would profit from the infringing
activities. The defendant would gain by reducing the cost of its overheads, but
would not have to account to the plaintiff for this gain.
Not only does Dart
rely on the passage cited from the judgment of Harvey C.J. in Eq. but it
maintains that the same principle is to be seen in the judgment of Windeyer J.
in Colbeam Palmer Ltd. v Stock
Affiliates Pty. Ltd. That was a case of infringement of a trade mark
in which Windeyer J. ordered an account of profits. In doing so, he directed
that the cost of selling and delivering the infringing articles be taken into
account. But he added:[18]
This will include any costs directly attributable to such sales and
deliveries. But it should not, I think, include any part of the general
overhead costs, managerial expenses and so forth of the defendant's business,
as it seems that all these would have been incurred in any event in the
ordinary course of its business in which as it was put in evidence the painting
sets were a "side line".
The explanation of
the direction given by Windeyer J. is that mentioned by him, namely, that the
infringing articles were a side line. There appears to have been unused
capacity in the defendant's business in the form of overheads which would have
been incurred whether or not the infringing articles had been sold and
delivered. The sale and delivery of the infringing articles took up that
surplus capacity or some of it, and none of the overhead costs was attributable
to the infringing activities because those costs would have been incurred in
any event.
But there was no
evidence in this case that Decor or Rian had unused or surplus capacity. There
was evidence that the infringing canisters were an integral part of one
consistent product range produced, marketed and sold according to a common
system. From this it might be inferred that, had those companies not been
engaged in the manufacture and marketing of the infringing press button seal
canisters, their capacity for those activities would have been taken up in the
manufacture and marketing of alternative products.
Thus the cost of
manufacturing and marketing the press button seal canisters may have included
the cost of forgoing the profit from the manufacture and marketing of
alternative products. The latter cost is called an opportunity cost.
"Opportunity cost" can be defined as "the value of the
alternative foregone by adopting a particular strategy or employing resources
in a specific manner As used in economics, the
opportunity cost of any designated alternative is the greatest net benefit lost
by taking an alternative."[19] The practical
reality of this concept was recognized in Schnadig
Corp. v Gaines Manufacturing Co. Inc.,[20] where the Court
stated: "The alternative available uses of the facilities devoted to the
infringement must be considered, and these too will vary."
In calculating an
account of profits, the defendant may not deduct the opportunity cost, that is,
the profit forgone on the alternative products. But there would be real
inequity if a defendant were denied a deduction for the opportunity cost as
well as being denied a deduction for the cost of the overheads which sustained
the capacity that would have been utilized by an alternative product and that
was in fact utilized by the infringing product. If both were denied, the
defendant would be in a worse position than if it had made no use of the
patented invention. The purpose of an account of profits is not to punish the
defendant but to prevent its unjust enrichment.
Where the
defendant has forgone the opportunity to manufacture and sell alternative
products it will ordinarily be appropriate to attribute to the infringing
product a proportion of those general overheads which would have sustained the
opportunity. On the other hand, if no opportunity was forgone, and the
overheads involved were costs which would have been incurred in any event, then
it would not be appropriate to attribute the overheads to the infringing
product. Otherwise the defendant would be in a better position than it would
have been in if it had not infringed. It is not relevant that the product could
not have been manufactured and sold without these overheads. Nor is it relevant
that absorption method accounting would attribute a proportion of the overheads
to the infringing product. The equitable principle of an account of profits is
not to compensate the plaintiff, nor to fix a fair price for the infringing
product, but to prevent the unjust enrichment of the defendant.
Of course, further
possibilities may in some cases be open on the evidence. Overhead costs might
have been increased by the manufacture and sale of the infringing product, or
overhead costs might have been reduced had the infringing product not been
produced. In either case it may be appropriate to attribute the difference in
overhead costs to the infringing product.
It does not appear
that in Leplastrier & Co. Ltd. v
Armstrong-Holland Ltd. the concept of opportunity cost played any part
in the reasoning of Harvey C.J. in Eq. In allowing the deduction only of
expenses "solely referable" to the manufacture of the infringing
product, he seems to have intended to exclude overheads except to the extent
that they were increased by the manufacture of the infringing product. The
examples that he gave indicate such an approach. But this is hardly surprising
since the English authorities, even the more recent ones, have not grappled
with the concept. Whilst they recognize[21] that the purpose
of ordering an account of profits is not to inflict punishment, but is limited
to compelling the defendant to surrender profits improperly made, there is
little examination of the principles to be employed in ascertaining which
profits were derived from the infringement.[22]
In the United
States the position is otherwise. It was early recognized in The Tremolo Patent[23] that in the
ascertainment of profits arising from the infringement of a patented tremolo
attachment to musical instruments, an apportionment of general overheads was
required. Strong J. in delivering the judgment of the Supreme Court said:[24]
We cannot see why the general expenses incurred by the defendants in
carrying on their business, such expenses as store rent, clerk hire, fuel, gas,
porterage, &c., do not concern one part of their business as much as
another. It may be said that the selling [of] a tremolo attachment did not add
to their expenses, and therefore that no part of those expenses should be
deducted from the price obtained for such an attachment. This is, however, but
a partial view. The store rent, the clerk hire, &c., may, it is true, have
been the same, if that single attachment had never been bought or sold. So it
is true that the general expenses of their business would have been the same,
if instead of buying and selling 100 organs, they had bought and sold only
ninety-nine. But will it be contended that because buying and selling an
additional organ involved no increase of the general expenses, the price
obtained for that organ above the price paid was all profit? If, therefore, in
estimating profits, every part is not chargeable with a proportionate share of
the expenses, no part can be. But such a result would be an injustice that no
one would defend.
Employing a
similar line of reasoning, Decor and Rian contend that in an account of
profits, if overheads are disregarded save to the extent that they were
increased by the manufacture of the infringing product, then in a case where
every product produced by a defendant infringed a patent, there would be no
allowance at all for overheads, even though they would clearly be expenses
incurred by the defendant in making the total profit from all the
infringements.[25] Such a result is,
they contend, unacceptable and indicates that a proper allowance for general
overheads should be made.
Some caution is to
be exercised in the use of United States authorities dealing with accounts of
profits because, in some instances, both damages and an account of profits are
available, and because a distinction is drawn between wilful and non-wilful
infringement which may affect the profits recoverable. Moreover, the approach
adopted in the cases varies to some extent. But it is clear enough that the
guiding principle in the United States, as here, is that an account of profits
aims to have the defendant account for the actual profit, no more and no less,
which it has gained from the infringement.
In Levin
Bros. v Davis Manufacturing Co.,[26] which was a
patent infringement case, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a ruling
which disallowed any deduction for fixed costs — that is, costs already
incurred for plant and the like which did not vary with the volume of
production — in determining the profits made from the infringement. But the
Court made it clear that it was laying down no invariable rule:[27]
The patent law gives the right to recover all profits from an
infringement. "Profit", as so used, is no mysterious phrase. It means
simply all financial gains. Such gains are the difference between expenditures
made to produce and sell the infringing articles and the receipts therefrom.
Obviously, the application of this rule — the ascertainment of such actual
profits — will occasion separate accounting and fact problems in each case
because items entering into cost or into receipts will differ. Always, however,
the task is to see that the patentee recover every dollar of advantage realized
by the infringer from the infringement and no more. No fast and hard rules
should or can be stated to guide application of this general rule to the
infinite variety of fact situations developed in different cases. Because a
recurring item, like overhead, is handled a certain way in a given case such is
no statement of a rule of law that the same item must be similarly dealt with
in all cases. The "rules" contended for by the parties here are not
rules of law. They are but illustrations of applications of the above single
broad rule to different fact situations.
The Court went on
to observe:[28]
It often happens that overhead expenses are
applicable to and should be spread over the entire business but where a
business is established and in operation and another line is taken on without
increase of overhead expenses it is just to the patentee that the actual
situation be applied and none of such overhead be charged as an expense of the
added line except as it participated in manufacture or sale of the infringing
article.
Not
surprisingly, Levin Bros. v Davis Manufacturing Co. has been
relied upon in the United States as an authority both for and against the
deduction of overheads in an account of profits.[29] But that decision
accepted the view, in our opinion correctly, that in some cases profit can only
be properly assessed by deducting a proportion of at least some of the
overheads, including fixed costs. The overheads, if any, to be deducted and the
basis of apportionment will depend upon the facts of each case, bearing in mind
always that the aim of the exercise is to arrive as closely as possible at the
true profit.
The basis of
apportionment may vary from case to case. Thus in Sheldon v
Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.[30] the Supreme Court
of the United States upheld the decision of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
allowing the apportionment of overheads in the computation of profits. The
Supreme Court said[31] that the
questions involved were questions of fact which had been determined on the
evidence. In that case the production of a motion picture infringed copyright.
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals allowed the allocation of overheads between
the infringing movie and other movies upon the basis of the cost of production.
It observed that it was "more likely that a given picture required that
proportion of the general services represented by its cost of production, than
that each picture shared those services equally".[32]
Sheldon v
Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. may be contrasted
with Wilkie v Santly
Bros. Inc.[33] in which
there was infringement of copyright in a song. The music publisher's overheads
were allocated upon the basis of the number of songs published within a given
period, without regard to the number of copies sold of each song, because the
publisher was unlikely to incur a greater proportion of overheads for a hit
song than for other published songs.
The guiding
principle would seem to be that the onus is on the infringer to provide a
reasonably acceptable basis for allocation.[34] This may be the
basis of allocation typically used by a manufacturer in that industry.
In My Kinda Town Ltd. v Soll[35], Slade J. was
inclined to think that in the taking of an account of profits the onus of proof
fell upon neither party. As we have said, a different view was taken by Harvey
C.J. in Eq. in Leplastrier & Co.
Ltd. v Armstrong-Holland Ltd.[36] where he
expressed the opinion that the onus is on the defendant to establish that any
item of costs was incurred in relation to the manufacture of the infringing
articles. The view of Harvey C.J. in Eq. would seem to be the preferable one,
at least so far as it requires that the defendant establish that the overheads
in any particular category are attributable to the manufacture or sale of the
infringing product. It is a view which is supported by the United States
authorities[37] and may also be
justified because the relevant facts are likely to be peculiarly within the
knowledge of the defendant.
In the present
case, the trial judge accepted that the manufacture and sale of the infringing
goods was not a side line. He found that Decor's range of canisters with press
button seals formed part of a much larger range of container systems, storage
systems and canisters.[38] On the evidence,
the share of sales of the canisters with press button seals varied from 3.1 per
cent to 1.3 per cent over a six-year period after they were added to Decor's
existing range, and that percentage was similar to the percentage of sales of
other types of containers in Decor's range.
Decor contends
that it is possible to identify some overheads as direct costs which may be
attributed to the press button seal canisters as actually incurred in respect
of them, namely, the cost of product development/royalty expenses, media
advertising, industrial design registration, legal fees and tooling expenses.
It seeks to allocate all remaining overheads which are indirect costs by
reference to the proportion which sales of canisters with press button seals
bear to total sales.
Whether Decor and
Rian should succeed in their contentions depends upon whether, as a matter of
fact and substance, the overheads which they seek to have deducted are
attributable to the manufacture and sale of the infringing product. In arriving
at an answer, the Court must consider such questions as whether the overheads
in any particular category were increased by the manufacture or sale of the
product, whether they represent costs which would have been reduced or would
have been incurred in any event, and whether they were surplus capacity or
would, in the absence of the infringing product, have been used in the
manufacture or sale of other products. Dealing with the last of these questions
may require the use of the concept of opportunity cost. If any of the
categories are to be brought into account, the proportion to be allocated to
the infringing product must be determined and it is here that approximation
rather than precision may be necessary. But such an approach has long been
accepted. As was said in Colburn v Simms:[39]
The Court, by the account, as the nearest approximation which it can
make to justice, takes from the wrongdoer all the profits he has made by his
piracy, and gives them to the party who has been wronged.
It follows that we
consider that King J. was in error in directing that "no part of general
overhead costs is allowable as a deduction" and that the Full Court was
substantially correct in directing, as it did, that "the appellants are at
liberty to show that various categories of overhead contributed to the
obtaining of the relevant profit, and to show how and in what proportion they
should be allocated in the taking of the account of profits". But it would
be better, we think, if the word "contributed" were replaced by the
words "are attributable".
The application by
Decor and Rian for special leave to cross-appeal may be dealt with more
shortly. In considering whether the profits for which an account was ordered
should include those arising from the manufacture and sale of the canisters as
well as the press button seals which were fitted to them, the trial judge
correctly identified the problem when he said:[40]
The basic legal principle is that the relevant
profits are those accruing to the defendants from their use and exercise of the
plaintiff's patented invention. Where the defendants' products are, as here,
composites of the invention and other features the determination of such a
question is one of fact.
In answering the
question which he posed, King J. found that "sales of press button
canisters are for present purposes attributable to use of the patented
invention" and for that reason directed that the profits for which Decor
and Rian had to account included the profits from the containers to which the
press button seals were fitted.[41]
The Full Court
identified the same question in somewhat different terms:[42]
The respondent cannot gainsay that it is only
entitled to the profits obtained by the infringement. If, for example, a
patented brake is wrongfully used in the construction of a motor car, the
patentee is not entitled to the entire profits earned by sales of the motor
car. He must accept an appropriate apportionment. But the question is how that
principle shall be applied to a situation where the patent relates to the
essential feature of a single item. it seems to us
that it was open to the judge to find, and he correctly found, that what
characterised the infringing product was the press button lid, without which
this particular container would never have been produced at all.
The questions
posed by the trial judge and the Full Court concerning the apportionment of a
total profit both accurately reflect the correct principle which was expressed
in this Court by Windeyer J. in Colbeam
Palmer Ltd. v Stock Affiliates Pty. Ltd. as follows:[43]
The true rule, I consider, is that a person who wrongly uses another
man's industrial property — patent, copyright, trade mark — is accountable for
any profits which he makes which are attributable to his use of the property
which was not his.
If one man makes profits by the use or sale of some
thing, and that whole thing came into existence by reason of his
wrongful use of another man's property in a patent, design or copyright, the
difficulty disappears and the case is then, generally speaking, simple. In such
a case the infringer must account for all the profits which he thus made.
It is true that
there is some divergence between King J. and the Full Court in relation to
whether, in the circumstances of this case, primary emphasis should be placed
on reason for sale or reason for production. Nonetheless, the overall approach
of both accurately reflects the application of the correct general principle in
the resolution of what is ultimately a question of fact.
It follows from
what has been said above that, if special leave were granted, the cross-appeal
would necessarily turn upon a question of fact upon which there are concurrent
findings by the trial judge and the Full Court against Decor and Rian. It would
for that reason be inappropriate to grant special leave to cross-appeal.[44]
For these reasons
we would dismiss the appeal and refuse special leave to cross-appeal.
MCHUGH J:
Two questions
arise in this appeal against an order of the Full Court of the Federal Court
made in an action arising out of the infringement of a patent. First, is any
part of an infringer's general overheads deductible in the taking of an account
of profits ordered as the result of the infringement? Second, if it is, what is
the principle or rule which determines what proportion of the overheads is
allocated to the infringing product?
The appellant is
Dart Industries Inc. ("Dart") which is the licensee of a patent for
an invention called "three-part press type seal" (or
"lid"). When the lid is fitted to a container, the resulting product
is commonly referred to as a press button seal canister. The Decor Corporation
Pty. Ltd. ("Decor"), the first respondent, designs and markets, but
does not manufacture, plastic homeware and gardenware.
Decor markets over 400 products. Every aspect of its business is linked, and,
according to one witness, is highly integrated. Decor's manufacturing needs are
met by sub-contractors, one of whom was Rian Tooling Industries Pty. Ltd.
("Rian"), the second respondent. In the Supreme Court of Victoria,
King J. held that a plastic closure fitted to a container which was
manufactured by Rian and marketed by Decor infringed Dart's patent.
Pursuant to the
provisions of the Patents Act 1952 Cth,
Dart elected to take an account of profits in respect of the infringement. King
J. ordered that only costs directly attributable to obtaining, holding,
manufacturing, storing, selling and delivering the infringing product could be
included in the account. The Full Court of the Federal Court set aside that order.
The Full Court ordered that the respondents "are at liberty to show that
overheads falling within the various categories of overhead contributed to the
obtaining of the relevant profit and to show how and in what proportion such
overheads should be allocated in the taking of the account of profits".
Decor's list of
general overheads includes the expenses involved in operating its bulk storage
warehouse and other expenses, such as accounting and auditing, cartage and
wharfage, light and power, overseas representation, printing, stationery and
photocopying and seminar/training expenses, bank charges, rates and taxes, rent
and superannuation. A proportion of the total overhead is allocated to the cost
of each product in Decor's range. Allocation is made on the basis of sales to
total sales. Given the nature of Decor's business, it is impossible to directly
trace the incurring of the overhead to any particular product. Conversely,
Decor allocates sundry income items (such as discounts received, export grants,
interest received and others) to each product in its range. Rian's overheads
include electricity, delivery and cartage, insurance, rent, rates, lease
expenses, factory supervisors' wages and the cost of industrial waste removal.
Are general overheads deductible
in an account of profits for a patent infringement?
Dart contends
that, in taking an account of profits resulting from a patent infringement, no
deduction is allowable for any expenditure "which would have been incurred
had infringing manufacture not taken place". It contends that only two
categories of costs can be deducted from gross revenue. First, direct costs
"solely due" to the manufacture and sale of the product. Second,
overheads to the extent that they have been increased by the manufacture and
sale of the product. Decor and Rian, on the other hand, contend that all
general overheads which assist or contribute to the production or sale of the
infringing product are deductible.
In my opinion, the
correct rule is that, in determining an account of profits in respect of the
infringement of a patent, any part of the general overheads of the infringer
which assisted in deriving gross revenue from the infringing product is a
deductible expense. By general overheads, I mean "those general charges or
expenses, collectively, in any business which cannot be charged up as belonging
exclusively to any particular part of the work or product [such] as rent,
taxes, insurance, lighting, heating, accounting and other office
expenses".[45] An expense may be
deductible, therefore, although it did not directly increase the cost of
producing or distributing the infringing product.
A plaintiff who
establishes an infringement of its patent is entitled to an order that the
infringer account for the profits derived from the infringement.[46] The object of an
account of profits is to make the infringer give up its gains in order to
prevent its unjust enrichment.[47] No element of
punishment is involved.[48] If an infringer
has expended its own money or resources in producing or distributing the
infringing product, it is not unjust for it to recoup that expenditure before
accounting for the revenue derived from the product. With that general
proposition, Dart agrees. But it contends that the case is different when the expenditure
would have been incurred "in any event". If the infringer can claim
the cost of expenditure which would have been incurred in any event, Dart
contends that the infringer will have profited from its wrong. This argument
has a certain plausibility. But the answer to it lies in the concept of
opportunity cost.
"Opportunity
cost" can be defined as "the value of the alternative foregone by
adopting a particular strategy or employing resources in a specific manner [I]n
economics, the opportunity cost of any designated alternative is the greatest
net benefit lost by taking an alternative".[49] The relevance of
the concept of opportunity cost in an infringement action was recognized
in Schnadig Corp. v Gaines
Manufacturing Co. Inc.,[50] where the Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit said: "The alternative available uses of
the facilities devoted to the infringement must be considered, and these too
will vary."[51]
To say that
general overhead would have been incurred "in any event", does not
necessarily lead to the conclusion, as Dart asserted, that the respondents will
profit from their wrong if an allowance is made for that overhead. If a
preferred product cannot be produced or distributed (because, for example, it
infringes property rights), a rational entrepreneur will choose the next best
alternative. General overheads will then be partially absorbed in the cost of
the substitute product.[52] If the infringing
product had not been produced or sold, Decor, as a rational entrepreneur, would
have sought the next best alternative for its resources. Thus, it might have
produced another line of goods or more of its existing lines. Whatever the next
best alternative may have been, that alternative, once adopted, would have
absorbed part of the general overheads. Consequently, in so far as general
overhead or costs that would have been incurred "in any event"
assisted in the production or distribution of the infringing product, they form
a relevant cost of that product. In the event that the next best alternative to
producing the infringing product was to produce nothing, Decor still had the
option of reducing some of its overheads.
If Dart's
contention was accepted, general overhead could not form part of the cost of
the infringing product for the purpose of an account of profits. By definition,
general overhead is that part of the cost of running a business which cannot be
allocated to any specific product. Consequently, overhead would not be relevant
in determining what profit, if any, the infringer had derived from producing or
selling the product. Yet no business can be profitable if its revenues fail to
recoup its general overhead as well as the direct cost of selling its products.
That being so, no product can generate a profit unless its
selling price recoups both the direct costs of its production and distribution
and its proportionate cost of the general overhead. Overhead is part of the
cost of producing any product. As the United States Court of Appeals, Sixth
Circuit, pointed out in Schnadig:[53] "The basic
truth that no article of manufacture can be profitable in a real sense if it
cannot bear its proportionate share of the fixed costs is hardly new."
Adoption of Dart's contention might often lead to the conclusion that the
infringer had profited when commercially no profit had been made. Certainly,
adoption of Dart's contention would lead to an inflated statement of profit.
To ignore
overheads in the taking of an account of profits can also lead to absurd and
unjust results. If all the products of a defendant were infringing products,
the defendant would be out of pocket to the extent of its general overheads,
even though no product could have been produced or sold without the overheads
being incurred. If the infringing product was the first of a range of products,
Dart's contention would require that it alone should bear the cost of the
overheads. That would be to the detriment of the plaintiff.
The foregoing
considerations require the rejection of Dart's contention. But upon what
principle or rule is an allowance to be made for general overheads?
What is the principle for
allocating overheads?
In a litigious
world of unlimited time and resources, the best approach for determining the
profit derived from the infringement might be to estimate the profit of the
product after allowing a proportion of the overheads and then deduct the
opportunity cost of producing the infringing product. This would show the true
gain of the infringer from producing or distributing the infringing product
instead of the next best alternative. Another but less exact method of
determining the profit and preventing the unjust enrichment of the infringer
might be to determine what was the best alternative open to the infringer,
determine what gross revenue would have been obtained from that alternative,
and deduct that sum from the gross revenue obtained from the infringing
product. Another suggested method is that there should be a deduction for that
part of the overhead which would have been absorbed in producing or selling the
alternative to the extent that it was used in producing or selling the
infringing product. But to adopt any of these methods would make an often
complex subject more complex than it already is. Very likely, it would increase
the prospect of contested litigation over the taking of the account and the
cost and length of the hearing while the parties and their witnesses
investigated and debated the hypothetical. Depending on which method was used,
the person taking the accounts would have to estimate one or
more of the following figures: the gross revenue from the alternative, the
direct costs of the alternative and the proportion of overhead attributable to
the alternative. Lindley L.J., who knew more about accounts of profits than
most lawyers, once said[54] that he did
"not know any form of account which [was] more difficult to work out, or
may be more difficult to work out than an account of profits". The Court
should be slow to adopt a rule which might increase that difficulty.
A more practical
approach is to apply those commercial and accounting principles which are used
in business to determine what profit has resulted from the manufacture or sale
of a product. In Q.B.E. Insurance Group Ltd. v Australian Securities
Commission,[55] Lockhart J.
pointed out:
The meaning of the word "profits" is for the courts to
determine. But the identification of what in relation to the affairs of a
particular company constitutes its profits is determined by the courts with
close regard to the views of the accountancy profession. The courts are
influenced strongly by the views adopted by professional accountancy bodies and
men of business and the evidence of accountants is given great weight by the
courts.
Admittedly, the
commercial or accounting approach may mean that, in the account of profits, the
infringer is credited with an amount of overhead greater than would be the case
if no infringement had taken place. But the converse may sometimes be true.
Whatever the outcome in a particular case may be, the commercial or accounting
approach has one clear advantage over other methods: it deals with historical
facts and commercial reality and not hypotheses.
To determine the
cost of a particular product, cost accountants use the incremental method of
accounting and the absorption method of accounting. "Incremental (or
marginal) cost" has been defined as "the change in aggregate cost
that accompanies the addition or subtraction of a unit of output".[56] The incremental
method is generally used for setting short term prices and for one-time tactical
decisions.[57] It focuses on the
marginal difference in costs (or revenues) as a result of adding a unit of
production. In contrast, the "absorption (or average or full
costing)" method allocates all fixed costs between the products of the
business.[58]
Standard
accounting text books recognize that, in calculating the cost of a product for
the purpose of identifying its profitability, all costs which contribute to the
ultimate sale of the product must be included (i.e,
the absorption method should be used).[59] A decision to
initiate, continue or discontinue the production or sale of a product will not
be made solely on the data generated by incremental cost accounting. It is the
product's effect on the viability of the business as a whole which is
important. If an additional product has only a small contribution margin but
helps to defray the general overheads of a firm (e.g., by lowering the total
cost per unit of running a machine), then it is more likely to be added to the
range than if it did not absorb such costs. This concept of further spreading
or absorbing general overheads was recognized in Sammons v Colonial
Press[60] where the Court of
Appeals for the First Circuit stated:
Manufacturers are frequently glad to make a contract at a price which
yields no net profit on a strict cost accounting basis but which does yield
sufficient profit to carry a portion of the inescapable overhead.
In the present
case, the question under the incremental method of accounting would be:
"By what amount have the general overhead costs increased as a result of
the addition of the press button canisters to the respondents' range of
products?" Under this method, only that increase would be deductible from
the gross profit of the infringing product. The question under the absorption
method would be: "To what extent did the incurring of the overheads assist
in the derivation of revenue from the infringing product?"[61] Only the
absorption method will reveal whether Decor or Rian made a profit from the
infringement.
Other branches of
the law have rejected the incremental method of accounting as a basis for
determining the cost of a product. In Philip Morris Ltd. v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation,[62] Jenkinson J. held
that the adoption of the direct costing or incremental method of costing would
not reflect the "cost price" of trading stock for the purpose of s.
31(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 Cth. His Honour held that the absorption costing
method was the appropriate method. In E. I. Du Pont de Nemours &
Co. v Commissioner of Patents [No. 3],[63] Hodgson J. held
that, in determining the profits of a patentee for the purpose of s. 93(b) of
the Patents Act 1952 Cth, it
was appropriate to apportion the general overheads of the plaintiff's business.
His Honour expressly rejected[64] the submission
"that there should be charged against the income from [the] patent only
amounts by which it could be shown that the PET project increased the general
overheads of the plaintiff's business". The learned judge said that, if
that proposition was applied to every project undertaken by the plaintiff, none
of the general overheads of the business might be charged against any project
at all. Similarly in Re Application of Pfizer Inc.,[65] Hodgson J. held
that, in determining whether a patentee had been inadequately remunerated
within the meaning of s. 94 of the Patents Act 1952, it was
appropriate to charge against gross receipts derived in Australia "a
proportion of the overall expenditure on the product and of the appropriate
amount of non-productive research, on the basis of Australia's approximate
share or percentage of the overall world market".
The United States authorities
Cases in the
United States support the use of the absorption method of accounting in
determining the cost of an infringing product in an account of profits.
Differences between the intellectual property legislation of this country and
the United States mean that the United States cases must be used cautiously in
Australia. Nonetheless, as Windeyer J. pointed out in Colbeam
Palmer Ltd. v Stock Affiliates Pty. Ltd.,[66] "if used
with discrimination, American decisions on the point are illuminating and
helpful".
The main idea
which runs through the American cases is that the absorption method of
accounting should be adopted in relation to general overheads which can
reasonably be shown to have assisted in the derivation of revenue from an
infringing product. Mr. Ellicott Q.C., for Decor, referred the Court to
numerous cases (dating from 1874 to 1985) illustrating this proposition. However,
the current position in the United States is succinctly and conveniently
summarized in Nimmer on Copyright.[67] The learned
author declares that the question of which expenses will be regarded as
deductible costs:
will generally turn upon the definition of costs
under accepted accounting practices. In general it may be said that only those
expenses which are proven with some specificity to relate to the infringing
work may be deducted in determining the profits attributable to such work.
A proper allocation of that portion of defendant's overhead attributable
to the cost of the said infringing items may be deducted, at least where the
infringement was not conscious and deliberate. This determination of overhead
presents an issue of fact. The defendant has the burden of proving that each
item of general expense contributed to the production of the infringing items,
and of further offering a fair and acceptable formula for allocating a given
portion of overhead to the particular infringing items in issue. The
appropriate formula for allocation may well vary in different industries. For
example, it has been held that a music publisher's overhead should be allocated
on the basis of the number of songs published in a given period, without
reference to the number of copies sold of each such song. This is to be
compared with the overhead of a motion picture producer where it has been held
that overheads should be allocated according to the direct cost of production
of each motion picture.
It is useful to
refer to some United States cases to illustrate the application of those
principles.
In The Tremolo
Patent,[68] the Supreme Court
held that, in an account of profits arising out of the infringement of a
patent, the defendant was entitled to prove the general expenses incurred in
the business affecting the sale of all its goods and deduct a rateable
proportion from the profits made by the sale of the infringing product. Strong
J., delivering the opinion of the Court, said:[69]
We cannot see why the general expenses incurred by the defendants in
carrying on their business, such expenses as store rent, clerk hire, fuel, gas,
porterage, etc., do not concern one part of their business as much as another.
It may be said that the selling [of] a Tremolo attachment did not add to their
expenses, and, therefore, that no part of those expenses should be deducted
from the price obtained for such an attachment. This is, however, but a partial
view.
In Schnadig,[70] the United States
Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, said:
By definition, the stipulated fixed expenses would have been incurred
regardless of whether the incremental infringing production of Suite 495 had
been undertaken. Because these expenses were neither caused nor increased by
the infringing production, it may be argued that the infringer should not be
permitted to avoid the expense by passing it on [to] the patentee. The response
to this argument is that these expenses are necessary for each component of
production. Suite 495 could not have been produced without expenses for
utilities, administrative salaries, building space and the like being incurred.
Viewed in this light, the fixed expenses are as necessary to the infringing
production as are the variable expenses, and should be similarly treated.
In Sheldon
v Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.,[71] which concerned
the copyright infringement of a play, the United States Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit allowed a deduction for general overhead. Judge Learned
Hand, speaking for the Court, said:
In the case at bar
the infringing picture was one of over forty made by the defendants, using the
same supervising staff and organization, which had to be maintained if the
business was to go on at all. Without them no picture could have been produced;
they were as much a condition upon the production of the infringing picture as
the scenery, or the plaintiff's play itself.
Upon the same
principle, the Court also allowed a proportionate deduction for the cost of
pictures never exhibited, such wastage "being a condition upon all production"
and therefore "a part of the cost of production".[72] The decision was
affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States.[73]
Dart referred the
Court to a number of United States authorities where the incremental
(differential) cost accounting approach has been adopted. However, the great
majority of these decisions concerned wilful infringements of intellectual
property rights. Where infringement is wilful, courts in the United States are
less inclined (for punitive reasons) to allow deductions for overhead than
where infringement is innocent.
Thus, in Regis
v Jaynes[74] which concerned an
appeal against an accounting of profits stemming from the deliberate and
wrongful use of a trade mark, the Master, whose decision was upheld by the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts,[75] refused to allow
any deductions for general overheads. Similarly, in Carter Products
Inc. v Colgate-Palmolive Co.,[76] which concerned
an extreme form of deliberate infringement of trade marks
and trade secrets, the rejection of a deduction for general overheads was
upheld. The Court said that the cases "indicate that the Tremolo rule
should be applied unless special circumstances would make its application
unjust"[77]. The Court then
pointed to several circumstances, such as Colgate's deliberate and persistent
wrongful acts, which made the application of the Tremolo rule
unjust in that case.
Most decisions in
the United States which have applied the incremental approach to an account of
profits are, therefore, distinguishable on the basis of deliberate
infringement. They are not of direct relevance to the Australian position. If
there are United States cases which have applied the incremental approach to a
situation of innocent infringement, as I think there are,[78] they are contrary
to the mainstream approach adopted in the United States. They are also
inconsistent with the commercial and economic principles and rationales for
determining the profit derived from a product. This Court should not follow
them.
The conflict in
the United States cases can also be explained on another basis. In Schnadig,[79] the Court of
Appeals, Sixth Circuit, said:
The common thread running through the cases which have addressed this
issue is a grant of considerable discretion to the trial court. Although the
proper treatment of fixed expenses can be viewed as a question of law, most
courts have perceived the real question to be the relationship between the
particular fixed costs and the infringing production in each case, and this has
been treated as a question of fact.
The Australian cases
In support of his
argument that incremental cost accounting is the appropriate method to be used
in ascertaining an account of profits from an infringing product, counsel for
Dart relied strongly on Leplastrier
& Co. Ltd. v Armstrong-Holland Ltd.[80] In determining
the principles applicable for an account of profits, Harvey C.J. in Eq. adopted
the "sole referability" test (which
essentially corresponds to the incremental method of cost accounting). However,
Leplastrier's Case should not be regarded as
authoritative at the present day. First, I suspect that the theory and practice
of cost accounting in Australia were not as sophisticated in 1926 as they are
today. Secondly, however that may be, the decision was made without reference
to authority and without regard to the decisions in the United States. Indeed,
Harvey C.J. in Eq. said:[81]
As far as I can
find, there are no authorities in the English books — and counsel could not
find them — and I am exceedingly obliged to counsel for their forbearance in
not venturing on the maze of American authorities, where the cases are legion.
I have not embarked on an investigation of them either.
For these reasons,
Leplastrier's Case is not a persuasive authority. The
concept of "solely referable" as the benchmark for the deductibility
of overhead expenses in relation to an account of profits of an infringing
product is contrary to business theory and practice. It is also contrary to the
overwhelming weight of authority in the United States whose courts have had
long experience in this field.
Dart also relied
on the decision of Windeyer J. in Colbeam Palmer[82] which concerned
the infringement of a trade mark in relation to the painting sets. Part of his
Honour's direction to the Registrar was that in taking the account of profits,
there was to be included the total cost to the defendant of[83]:
selling and delivering the articles so sold to the
buyers of them. This will include any costs directly attributable to such sales
and deliveries. But it should not, I think, include any part of the general
overhead costs, managerial expenses and so forth of the defendant's business,
as it seems that all these would have been
incurred in any event in the ordinary course of its business in which as it was
put in evidence the painting sets were a "side line".[84]
Counsel for Dart
submits that this passage means that "one excludes "general overhead
costs, managerial expenses and so forth of the defendant's business",
because all these would have been incurred, in any event, in the ordinary
course of its business". However, it is clear that Windeyer J. was
expressly confining his statement to cases of "side line" products.
Those cases involve short term decisions to make and/or sell a product on the
basis of utilizing excess capacity or for short term promotions or gains.
Whether the side line exception is good law is debatable. However, it is
unnecessary to express any concluded view on the subject because the trial
judge found that the infringement in the present case was not a side line
activity.
The Teledyne Case
Dart also relied
on the leading Canadian case on accounting for profits.[85] In Teledyne , the Federal Court (Trial Division,
Addy J.) applied the incremental method which was referred to in that case as
the "differential or direct cost accounting method". Addy J. said[86] that to allow the
infringer to deduct "such part of all of its fixed costs as might be
attributable proportionately to the operation" would constitute in effect
unjust enrichment. For the reasons that I have given, however, this analysis,
with respect, is flawed.
The absorption method is the
proper approach for allocating overheads
Based on the above
analysis of accounting and economic principles and practice, as well as the
United States cases, the absorption method of cost accounting is the
appropriate method of accounting for general overheads in a case of
infringement. The test to be applied was concisely stated in Alfred
Bell & Co. v Catalda Fine Arts[87] where the Court
said:
The test is not
whether such an overhead item had been increased by the handling of the
infringements but whether this overhead item actually assisted in the
production of the infringing profits.
Whether the
overhead did actually assist in the production or sale, etc. of the infringing
product will be a question of fact in all the circumstances of the case. In
determining that question, the judge will need to keep two matters in mind.
First, the smallness of the sales volume of the infringing product in the defendant's
range is not a ground for refusing to allocate any proportion of overheads to
the infringing product. Thus, in Kamar
International Inc. v Russ Berrie & Co. Inc.,[88] the Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit refused to disallow a deduction for overheads
merely because the sales of the infringing items constituted a small percentage
of total sales. Secondly, the plaintiff must take the business of the infringer
as it is, as Judge Learned Hand pointed out in Sheldon.[89] The plaintiff is
confined to the profits actually made. It is irrelevant that the defendants
could have used their resources in a more efficient way and generated a higher
profit.
Onus of proof
The defendant/infringer bears the onus of
showing which overheads assisted in the production or sale of the infringing
product and of providing a fair basis for allocating the overheads. In Frank Music Corp. v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.,[90] the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
pointed out that an infringer does not need to prove its overhead expenses and
their relationship to the infringing production in minute detail, but
nevertheless:
[A] deduction for overhead should be allowed "only when the
infringer can demonstrate that [the overhead expense] was of actual assistance
in the production, distribution or sale of the infringing product" We do
not take this to mean that an infringer must prove his overhead expenses and
their relationship to the infringing production in minute detail [T]he
defendant bears the burden of explaining, at least in general terms, how
claimed overhead actually contributed to the production of the infringing work.[91]
("It is too much to ask a plaintiff who has proved infringement also to do
the defendant's cost accounting.").
In the earlier
decision of Sammons,[92] the Court of
Appeals, First Circuit, said:
The burden thus cast upon the defendant requires him to give evidence of
more than a blanket undifferentiated item of "overhead"; he must give
satisfactory evidence of each item of general expense or overhead, show that
each item assisted in the production of the infringement, and offer a
reasonably acceptable formula for allocating a portion of the general overhead
to the particular job. A theoretically perfect allocation is impossible, but
there must be a rough approximation within the limits of practicality.
Method of allocation
By definition it is not possible to allocate
general overhead specifically or with absolute precision to each product in a
range of products. In proof of the assistance which the general overhead made
to the derivation of revenue from the infringing product, "what is
required is not mathematical exactness but only a reasonable approximation".[93] Further, the appropriate method of
allocation will depend upon the nature of the business in question and the
circumstances of the cases. In Frank Music,[94] the Court stated: "Because a
theoretically perfect allocation is impossible, we require only a
"reasonably acceptable formula"." The accounting method
generally used by the producer in the ordinary course of its business will
usually be regarded by the courts as a "reasonably acceptable
formula". In Rubber Co. v
Goodyear,[95] the Court stated: "The calculation is
to be made as a manufacturer calculates the profits of business."
The sales ratio
form of allocation (proposed by the respondents in the present case) has been
endorsed as an acceptable formula in a number of United States cases[96] and by writers.[97] There is no
reason for not accepting it in the present case.
A "side line"
exception to the general principle?
One potential qualification to the general principles
stated above may be "side line" activities. The judgment of Windeyer
J. in Colbeam Palmer would support such an exception.
However, the argument that overhead is a necessary element of the production of
any good and the concept of opportunity cost are as applicable to "side
line" activities as to other activities. If the infringer can prove that
its overhead assisted the production or sale of the sideline product and can
provide a fair and reasonable method of allocation, it is difficult to see why
a proportion of overhead should not be allowed.
Order
In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed,
but I would substitute the words "assisted in" for the words
"contributed to" in the Full Court's order.
For the reasons given by Mason C.J., Deane, Dawson
and Toohey JJ., the application for special leave to
cross-appeal should be dismissed.
[1]
The patent infringement proceedings
are reported in Dart Industries Inc. v Decor Corporation Pty. Ltd. (1988),
11 I.P.R. 385 and Decor Corporation Pty. Ltd. v Dart Industries Inc. (1988),
13 I.P.R. 385.
[2]
Dart Industries Inc. v Decor
Corporation Pty. Ltd. (1990), 20
I.P.R. 144, at p. 152.
[3]
ibid., at p. 154.
[4]
Decor Corporation Pty. Ltd. v Dart Industries Inc. (1991), 33
F.C.R. 397, at pp. 405-406.
[5]
ibid., at pp. 407-408.
[6]
See Neilson v Betts (1871), L.R. 5 H.L. 1, at p. 22; Lever
v Goodwin (1887), 36 Ch. D. 1, at p. 7; Patents Act 1990 Cth, s. 122(1).
[7]
cf. Meagher, Gummow and Lehane,
Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 3rd ed. (1992), pp. 659-660.
[8]
(1968) 122 C.L.R. 25, at p. 34.
[9]
See Patents Act 1952 Cth, s.
118(1); Patents Act 1990 Cth,
s. 122.
[10]
My Kinda Town Ltd. v Soll [1983]
RP.C. 15, at p. 55; Potton Ltd. v Yorkclose
Ltd. (1989), 17 F.S.R. 11, at pp. 14, 15; Sheldon v Metro-Goldwyn
Pictures Corp. (1940), 309 U.S. 390, at p. 399.
[11]
See Baltic Shipping Co. v Dillon (1993), 176 C.L.R. 344, at p.
376.
[12]
See Siddell v Vickers (1892),
9 R.P.C. 152, at pp. 162-163; My Kinda Town
Ltd. v Soll [1983] RP.C.,
at pp. 57-58.
[13]
See Odeon Associated Theatres Ltd. v Jones [1973] Ch288, at
pp. 294, 299, 305; Federal Commissioner of Taxation v St. Hubert's
Island Pty. Ltd. (In liq.) (1978), 138 C.L.R. 210, at p. 228.
[14]
(1926) 26 S.R. (N.S.W.) 585.
[15]
ibid., at p. 591.
[16]
ibid., at p. 593.
[17]
Dart Industries Inc. v Decor Corporation Pty. Ltd. (1990), 20
I.P.R., at p. 151.
[18]
(1968) 122 C.L.R., at p. 39.
[19]
Kohler's Dictionary for Accountants, 6th ed. (1983), pp. 362-363.
[20]
(1980) 620 F. 2d 1166, at p. 1175.
[21]
See My Kinda Town Ltd. v. Soll,
[1983] R.P.C., at p. 55.
[22]
See, e.g., Crosley v Derby Gas-Light Co. (1838), 3 My. & Cr. 428 [40 E.R. 992]; Peter Pan
Manufacturing Corp. v Corsets Silhouette Ltd. [1963] RP.C. 45, at pp.
59-60; My Kinda Town Ltd. v Soll [1983] RP.C. 15; Potton Ltd. v Yorkclose Ltd. (1989), 17 F.S.R. 11.
[23]
(1874) 90 U.S. 518.
[24]
ibid., at pp. 528-529.
[25]
cf. the example given by Hodgson J. in E. I. Du Pont de Nemours &
Co. v Commissioner of Patents [No. 3] (1989), 15 I.P.R. 296, at p.
307.
[26]
(1934) 72 F. 2d 163.
[27]
ibid., at p. 165.
[28]
(1934) 72 F. 2d, at p. 166.
[29]
Schnadig Corp. v Gaines Manufacturing Co.
Inc. (1980), 620 F. 2d, at p. 1174; cf. Sheldon v
Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. (1939), 106 F. 2d 45, at p. 54; Alfred
Bell & Co. Ltd. v Catalda Fine Arts Inc. (1949),
86 F. Supp. 399, at p. 415; with Carter Products Inc. v
Colgate-Palmolive Co. (1963), 214 F. Supp. 383, at p. 403.
[30]
(1940) 309 U.S. 390.
[31]
ibid., at p. 409.
[32]
(1939) 106 F. 2d, at p. 52.
[33]
(1943) 139 F. 2d 264.
[34]
See Frank Music Corp. v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. (1985), 772
F. 2d 505, at p. 516.
[35]
[1983] R.P.C., at p. 57.
[36]
(1926) 26 S.R. (N.S.W.), at p. 593.
[37]
See, e.g., Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. v Wagner
Electric & Manufacturing Co. (1912), 225 U.S. 604, at pp.
620-622; Duplate Corp. v Triplex
Safety Glass Co. (1936), 298 U.S. 448, at p. 458.
[38]
(1990) 20 I.P.R., at p. 152.
[39]
(1843) 2 Hare 543, at p. 560 [67 E.R. 224, at p. 231].
[40]
(1990) 20 I.P.R., at p. 152.
[41]
ibid., at p. 154.
[42]
(1991) 33 F.C.R., at p. 407.
[43]
(1968) 122 C.L.R., at pp. 42-43.
[44]
See Baffsky v Brewis (1976),
51 A.L.J.R. 170, at p. 172; 12 A.L.R. 435, at p. 438; The Commonwealth
v Introvigne (1982), 150 C.L.R. 258, at pp.
262, 274; Muschinski v Dodds (1985), 160 C.L.R. 583, at p. 590.
[45]
Webster's New International Dictionary, 2nd ed. unabridged, cited in Sammons
v Colonial Press (1942), 126 F. 2d 341, at pp. 350-351 and Alfred
Bell & Co. v Catalda Fine Arts (1949),
86 F. Supp. 399, at p. 415.
[46]
Patents Act 1952, s. 118(1); Patents Act 1990, s. 122; Cartier
v Carlile (1862), 31 Beav.
292 [54 E.R. 1151]; Colbeam Palmer
Ltd. v Stock Affiliates Pty. Ltd. (1968), 122 C.L.R. 25, at p. 43.
[47]
Potton Ltd. v Yorkclose Ltd. (1989), 17
F.S.R. 11, at p. 15.
[48]
Sheldon v Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. (1940), 309 U.S. 390, at p.
399; My Kinda Town Ltd. v Soll [1983]
RP.C. 15, at p. 55; Potton (1989), 17 F.S.R., at p. 15.
[49]
Kohler's Dictionary for Accountants, 6th ed. (1983), pp. 362-363.
[50]
(1980) 620 F. 2d 1166, at p. 1175.
[51]
The concept of opportunity cost was also recognized by this Court, although in
a different context to the present case, in Hungerfords
v Walker (1989), 171 C.L.R. 125, at p. 143.
[52]
Depending upon the circumstances, however, the absorption may not be as great
as in the case where the product first chosen is capable of being added to the
range.
[53]
(1980) 620 F. 2d, at p. 1172.
[54]
Siddell v Vickers (1892), 9 R.P.C.
152, at p. 162.
[55]
(1992) 38 F.C.R. 270, at pp. 288-289; see also Odeon Associated
Theatres Ltd. v Jones [1973] Ch288, at p. 299.
[56]
Kohler , op. cit., p. 257.
[57]
Hirsch, Advanced Management Accounting (1988), pp. 50-51.
[58]
Helmkamp, Managerial Accounting (1987), pp. 165, 239,
550; Hirsch, op. cit., p. 51.
[59]
Helmkamp, op cit., p. 239; Hirsch, op. cit., p. 51.
[60]
(1942) 126 F. 2d, at p. 348.
[61]
See Alfred Bell (1949), 86 F. Supp., at p. 415.
[62]
(1979) 38 F.L.R. 383; 10 A.T.R. 44; 79 A.T.C. 4,352.
[63]
(1989) 15 I.P.R. 296.
[64]
(1989) 15 I.P.R., at p. 307.
[65]
(1986) 4 N.S.W.L.R. 566, at p. 571.
[66]
(1968) 122 C.L.R., at p. 44.
[67]
Vol. 3, §14.03[B]; see also McCarthy, Trademarks and Unfair Competition, 2nd
ed. (1984), vol. 2, §30:26B.
[68]
(1874) 90 U.S. 518.
[69]
ibid., at pp. 528-529.
[70]
(1980) 620 F. 2d, at p. 1172.
[71]
(1939) 106 F. 2d 45, at p. 54.
[72]
(1939) 106 F. 2d 45, at p. 54.
[73]
See Sheldon v Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. (1940), 309 U.S.
390.
[74]
(1904) 70 N.E. 480 (Mass.).
[75]
(1906) 77 N.E. 774.
[76]
(1963) 214 F. Supp. 383.
[77]
(1963) 214 F. Supp., at p. 402.
[78]
See, e.g., Century Distilling Co. v Continental Distilling Corp. (1953),
205 F. 2d (3d Cir.) 140.
[79]
(1980) 620 F. 2d, at p. 1174.
[80]
(1926) 26 S.R. (N.S.W.) 585.
[81]
(1926) 26 S.R. (N.S.W.), at p. 593.
[82]
(1968) 122 C.L.R. 25.
[83]
ibid., at p. 39.
[84]
cf. Leplastrier (1926), 26 S.R.
(N.S.W.) 585.
[85]
Teledyne Industries Inc. v Lido Industrial Products (1982), 68
C.P.R. (2d) 204, esp. at pp. 210-214; followed in Hutton v Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. (1989), 29 C.P.R. (3d) 398, at pp. 458-459.
[86]
Teledyne (1982), 68 C.P.R. (2d), at p. 210.
[87]
(1949) 86 F. Supp., at p. 415.
[88]
(1984) 752 F. 2d 1326, at p. 1333.
[89]
(1939) 106 F. 2d 45; approved by the United States Supreme Court in Sheldon
v Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. (1940), 309 U.S. 390.
[90]
(1985) 772 F. 2d 505, at p. 516.
[91]
See Kamar (1984), 752 F. 2d, at p.
1333; Taylor v Meirick (1983), 712
F. 2d 1112 (7th Cir.), at pp. 1121-1122.
[92]
(1942) 126 F. 2d, at p. 349. For an illustration where the defendant did not
satisfy this burden of proof, see Manhattan Industries v Sweater Bee By Banf. Ltd. (1989), 885
F. 2d 1 (2d Cir.), at pp. 7-8.
[93]
Sheldon (1940), 309 U.S., at p. 408; see also Frank Music (1985),
772 F. 2d, at p. 516; Manhattan Industries (1989), 885 F. 2d,
at pp. 7-8.
[94]
(1985) 772 F. 2d, at p. 516; see also Myers v Callaghan (1885),
24 F. 636 (C.C.N.D. Ill.), at pp. 638, 639; same case on appeal, sub nom. Callaghan
v Myers (1888), 128 U.S. 617; Sheldon (1939), 106 F.
2d, at pp. 52, 53; affirmed (1940) 309 U.S. 409; Levin Bros. v Davis
Manufacturing Co. (1934), 72 F. 2d 163 (8th Cir.); Ruth v
Stearns-Roger Manufacturing Co. (1935), 13 F. Supp. 697 (D.C.D.
Colo.); Sheldon v Moredall Realty Corporation (1939),
29 F. Supp. 729 (D.C.S.D.N.Y.), at p. 731.
[95]
(1870) 76 U.S. 788, at p. 804; cited with approval in Sammons (1942),
126 F. 2d, at pp. 348-349.
[96]
See Frank Music (1985), 772 F. 2d, at p. 516; Kamar (1984),
752 F. 2d 1326; Aitken, Hazen, Hoffman, Miller v Empire Construction
Co. (1982), 542 F. Supp. 252; Wolfe v National Lead Co. (1959),
272 F. 2d 867 (9th Cir.); Sammons (1942), 126 F. 2d 341.
[97]
See, e.g., McCarthy, op. cit., §30:26B.