The Facts
2 The applicants in this proceeding are Australian Mud Company Pty Ltd and Reflex Instruments Asia Pacific Pty Ltd, and the respondents are Globaltech Corporation Pty Ltd, Globaltech Pty Ltd, Boart Longyear Limited and Boart Longyear Australia Pty Ltd. The proceeding involves a claim by the applicants that the respondents have infringed claims in Australian Standard Patent No 2010200162 entitled "Core Sample Orientation" (the Patent). The fourth respondent, Boart Longyear Australia Pty Ltd, has brought a cross-claim in which it alleges that the Patent is invalid.
3 Globaltech Corporation Pty Ltd and Globaltech Pty Ltd (the Globaltech respondents) are represented by one firm of solicitors (Watermark Intellectual Property Lawyers), and Boart Longyear Limited and Boart Longyear Australia Pty Ltd (the Boart Longyear respondents) are represented by a different firm of solicitors (Bird & Bird). However, on these applications, all four respondents were represented by the same counsel.
4 I have previously considered a claim by the applicants against the Globaltech respondents that they have infringed claims in the Patent and a cross-claim by the Globaltech respondents that the Patent is invalid (the previous proceeding). On 26 November 2018, I delivered reasons in which I indicated that I had reached the following conclusions: (1) the Priority Date of the claims in suit is 3 September 2004 and the claims in suit are valid; (2) each of the respondents has infringed the claims in suit; and (3) the applicants are not entitled to additional damages under s 122(1A) of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) (Australian Mud Company Pty Ltd v Globaltech Corporation Pty Ltd [2018] FCA 1839 (the previous reasons)).
5 I made orders in the previous proceeding on 14 December 2018 and those orders were as follows:
THE COURT DECLARES THAT:
1. The respondents and each of them have infringed claims 1-4, 7-10, 16-17, 21-24, 27-28, 33-40, 46-48, 54 and 65 of Australian Standard Patent No. 2010200162 entitled "Core Sample Orientation" (the Patent).
2. Reflex Instruments Asia Pacific Pty Ltd, the second applicant, is the exclusive licensee of the Patent.
THE COURT CERTIFIES THAT:
3. Pursuant to s 19 of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth), the validity of each of claims 1-4, 7-10, 16-17, 21-24, 27-28, 33-40, 46-48, 54 and 65 of the Patent was questioned in this proceeding.
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
4. The respondents and each of them be permanently restrained, whether by themselves, their directors, officers, servants, agents or however otherwise from infringing the Patent in Australia during the term of the Patent, including without limitation by, without licence of the applicants:
(a) making, hiring, selling or otherwise disposing of, offering to make, hire, sell or otherwise dispose of, using, importing, exporting, or keeping for the purpose of doing any of those things, any core sample orientation tool or system according to any of claims 33-40, 46-48, 54 or 65 of the Patent, including without limitation the core sample orientation tools developed and sold under the names "Orifinder v3A", "Orifinder v3B", "Orifinder v5" or "TRUCORE" (the Orifinder Tools);
(b) using any method of providing an indication of the orientation of a core sample according to any of claims 1-4, 7-10, 16-17, 21-24, 27-28 or 65 of the Patent;
(c) supplying or offering to supply any core sample orientation tool or system capable of being used in a method of providing an indication of the orientation of a core sample according to any of claims1-4, 7-10, 16-17, 21-24, 27-28 or 65 of the Patent;
(d) doing the acts referred to in sub-paragraph (c) above together with the giving of, or the publication of advertisements containing, instructions or inducements for the use of such a core sample orientation tool or system in a method of providing an indication of the orientation of a core sample according to any of claims 1-4, 7-10, 16-17, 21-24, 27-28 or 65 of the Patent; or
(e) authorising, procuring, inducing or joining in a common design with any person to do any act referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) to (d) above.
5. The first respondent's Cross-Claim filed on 24 August 2016 be dismissed.
6. Subject to orders 14 to 16 below, within 28 days each of the respondents, or their nominated agents, are to destroy all Orifinder Tools, and any other core sample orientation tools or systems referred to in orders 4(a) and (c) above, and all advertising, instructional and promotional material relating thereto or referred to in order 4(d) above, in the possession, custody, power or control of the respondents.
7. By 4pm on 25 January 2019, the first respondent is to file an affidavit (by an officer with sufficient knowledge of the affairs of the company) setting out the total number of Orifinder Tools that the respondents have sold or supplied (including by way of export) to date, annexing supporting documents.
8. There be an inquiry as to damages or profits in respect of the respondents' infringement of the Patent by the Orifinder Tools, such inquiry to be listed for directions before Justice Besanko on a date and time to be fixed at the convenience of the Court.
9. The respondents pay the applicants' costs of the proceeding to date, including any reserved costs, as agreed or assessed.
10. The applicants file any interlocutory application and supporting affidavits seeking a lump sum costs order by 19 January 2019.
11. The respondents file and serve any affidavits in answer to the affidavits of the applicants by 1 February 2019.
12. The parties file and serve any written submissions (which are not to exceed 5 pages in length) in respect of any interlocutory application filed in accordance with Order 11 by 8 February 2019.
13. There be liberty to restore on 3 days' notice in writing.
THE COURT NOTES THE FOLLOWING UNDERTAKING TO THE COURT:
A. The Respondents undertake to quarantine and hold proper and discrete accounting records for revenue made from the sale of the 16 Orifinder v5 kits currently on order, as well as any further orders the Respondents receive, between 11 December 2018 and 23 January 2019 or, if an application for a stay is made in accordance with paragraph 16, the end of the period referred to in paragraph 16.
THE COURT FURTHER ORDERS THAT:
14. Orders 4 and 6 be stayed until 4pm on 23 January 2019.
15. On or before 4pm on 23 January 2019, the respondents are to file and serve any application for a stay pending appeal of these orders, together with evidence in support of that application.
16. Orders 4 and 6 be stayed until the determination of respondents' application for a stay pending appeal, provided that the application for a stay is made on or before 4pm on 23 January 2019.
The orders in paragraphs 4 and 6 above were stayed until 4 pm on 23 January 2019. The Globaltech respondents did not seek to stay the orders beyond that date.
6 The respondents' respective applications are supported by affidavits. The applicants oppose an order that I disqualify myself and they have two filed affidavits in response to the applications. It will be convenient if I refer to the parties by reference to their status in the proceeding, even though it is the respondents who are making the present applications.
7 In the previous proceeding, the applicants called two experts at the trial, Professor Jonathan Tapson and Mr Kelvin Brown. Professor Tapson's evidence and my findings in relation to it are at the centre of the respondents' primary submission on these applications. I described Professor Tapson's qualifications in my previous reasons (at [44]-[57]).
8 The Globaltech respondents called two experts, Mr Michael Ayris and Mr Adrian Edmonds. I refer to Mr Edmonds later in these reasons. I described Mr Edmonds' qualifications in my previous reasons (at [98]-[103]).
9 The infringing articles or tools in the previous proceeding were known as "Orifinder" tools and they consisted of an OriTool and an Oripad. As I noted in the previous reasons, there are and have been various versions of the Orifinder tool and those said to infringe the claims in suit in the previous proceeding were known as the Orifinder v3A, Orifinder v3B and Orifinder v5 respectively (at [6]).
10 On 23 January 2019, the Globaltech respondents appealed from the orders I made in the previous proceeding. On 13 September 2019, the Full Court of this Court dismissed the appeal (Globaltech Corporation Pty Ltd v Australian Mud Company Pty Ltd [2019] FCAFC 162; (2019) 145 IPR 39). On 11 October 2019, the Globaltech respondents filed an Application for Special Leave to Appeal to the High Court of Australia. That application was heard and determined on 20 March 2020. The application was dismissed.
11 I turn to describe the events leading to this proceeding.
12 The applicants allege that since on or about 23 January 2019, the Globaltech respondents have been selling an Orifinder UPIX tool. I will refer to the tool in this way, although some of the witnesses referred to the tool as the Orifinder v6. They issued an application under r 7.23 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) which enables a prospective applicant to apply to the Court for an order for discovery by a prospective respondent of documents in circumstances in which the prospective applicant reasonably believes that the prospective respondent has or is likely to have or has had or is likely to have had in the respondent's control documents directly relevant to the question of whether the prospective applicant has a right to obtain the relief he or she reasonably believes it may have a right to obtain. That application was supported by two affidavits. The first affidavit was an affidavit of Sarah Lorne Standish affirmed on 24 June 2019. Ms Standish is the general counsel of Imdex Limited (Imdex) and that company is the parent company of the two applicants. Ms Standish describes the tool, which was the subject of the application, as the Orifinder v6. She states that in her opinion it is not clear if, on the basis of the correspondence between the applicants and Globaltech's solicitors, precisely how it is alleged Globaltech has changed the Orifinder tool from v5 to v6 to avoid infringing the claims in the Patent. The second affidavit is an affidavit of Professor Tapson affirmed on 20 June 2019. He expresses the opinion that the v6 Orifinder tool appears to operate in a very similar manner to the v5 Orifinder tool. Having regard to the correspondence between the applicants and Globaltech's solicitors, he focuses on a particular integer in claims 1 and 33 of the Patent and that integer is as follows:
Claim 1: "recording the orientation of the inner tube at predetermined time intervals during said drilling"; and
Claim 33: "means for recording the orientation of the inner tube at predetermined time intervals during drilling by the core drill".
13 The effect of Professor Tapson's affidavit is that the applicants seek access to material relating to the Orifinder v6 tool in order to determine whether the above integer is present.
14 On 31 July 2019, the Globaltech respondents issued an interlocutory application seeking an order that the application for preliminary discovery be allocated to a judge other than myself. On 9 August 2019, the Globaltech respondents filed an affidavit of Mr Edmonds sworn on 9 August 2019. In that affidavit, Mr Edmonds expressed the opinion that it was clear from the UPIX documents how the Orifinder UPIX tool operates and the manner in which the time intervals for recording the orientation of the inner tube are being determined, including how the number of watchdog cycles are created or generated. Mr Edmonds considers that because the time intervals for recording the operation of the inner tube are dependent on an unpredictable time, the Orifinder UPIX tool does not "record the orientation of the inner tube at predetermined time intervals" as required by claims 1 and 33 of the Patent.
15 On 9 August 2019, the Globaltech respondents filed an affidavit affirmed by Mr Khaled Hejleh. Mr Hejleh is the managing director of Globaltech Corporation. He states that Globaltech developed a new product from December 2018 known as the Orifinder UPIX. He expresses the opinion that the Orifinder UPIX is a core orientation system that works in a very different way to other core orientation systems previously and currently available in the market and that it does not have and does not require orientation data to be taken at predetermined time intervals. It accordingly has, in Mr Hejleh's opinion, significant advantages over other products available in the market.
16 Although the parties prepared for an argument on the application for preliminary discovery and the interlocutory application for disqualification, ultimately such an argument did not proceed because the parties resolved their dispute as to the preliminary discovery application and orders were made on 5 September 2019. The application for disqualification issued by the Globaltech respondents was dismissed by consent.
17 This proceeding was commenced by Originating application dated 27 November 2019.