The discretionary defences
311 Putting to one side the question of any issues estoppel or res judicata arising from the Dutch decisions, it is convenient to now address the other discretionary defences raised by Spirits.
312 In Spirits' defence to the cross-claim it is pleaded in [65]:
In further answer to the whole of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim, the Cross-Respondent says that:
(a) during the period January 1992 to 2000, the Government of the Russian Federation represented that:
(i) Sojuzplodoimport was transformed into VAO-SPI in accordance with applicable law;
(ii) VAO-SPI was the legal successor to Sojuzplodoimport; and
(iii) all assets and liabilities of Sojuzplodoimport had vested in VAO-SPI by operation of law with effect from 20 January 1992.
(b) acting in reliance on the representations pleaded in sub-paragraph (a) above and induced by those representations, VAO-SPI, ZAO and the Cross-Respondent assumed that VAO-SPI acquired ownership of the House Mark, the Stolichnaya Label Mark and the Moskovskaya Label Mark with effect from 20 January 1992;
(c) acting in reliance on the representations pleaded in sub-paragraph (a) above and induced by those representations, the Cross-Respondent assumed that it acquired ownership of the Stolichnaya Label Mark, the Moskovskaya Label Mark, the Stoli Word Mark, the Stolichnaya Word Mark, the Ohranj Label Mark and the Ohranj Word Mark from ZAO in or around April 1999;
(d) on the basis of the assumptions referred to in sub-paragraphs (b) and (c) above, VAO-SPI, ZAO and Cross-Respondent have used and registered the trade marks referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) above in Australia and throughout the world, or alternatively have authorised the use and registration of those trade marks in Australia and throughout the world;
(e) the allegations made by the Cross-Claimants in paragraphs 4(f), 4(h), 14, 24, 35, and 54-58 of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim are contrary to the representations pleaded in sub-paragraph (a) above;
(f) the claims made by the Cross-Claimants in this proceeding are made on behalf of the Government of the Russian Federation;
(g) by reason of the matters pleaded in sub-paragraphs (a) to (f) above, it is unconscionable for the Government of the Russian Federation, through the Cross-Claimants, to now assert, and the Cross-Claimants are estopped from asserting, that the Cross-Claimants, or either of them, have any right or interest in any of the trade marks referred to in the Cross-Claimant's prayer for relief; and
(h) in the premises, the Cross-Claimants are not entitled to any of the relief sought in their prayer for relief.
(Particulars not reproduced.)
313 We should note that the bulk of the particulars which we have not set out refer to identified documents, although there is the usual catch all of further particulars being provided after discovery.
314 It is then pleaded in [66]:
In further answer to the whole of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim, the Cross-Respondent says that:
(a) all of the claims made by the Cross-Claimants in the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim relate to the validity of the transformation of Sojuzplodoimport into VAO-SPI on or around 20 January 1992;
(b) since 1992, VAO-SPI has held itself out as the legal successor to Sojuzplodoimport with the full knowledge and, until 2000, acquiescence of the Government of the Russian Federation;
(c) since 1992, VAO-SPI and its successors in title have held themselves out as the owners of all rights in the STOLICHNAYA and MOSKOVSKAYA trade marks throughout the world with the full knowledge and, until the dates specified in sub-paragraphs (d) and (e) below, acquiescence of the Government of the Russian Federation.
(d) the Government of the Russian Federation did not assert any right or interest in the STOLICHNAYA and MOSKOVSKAYA trade marks, or any claim regarding the Cross-Respondent's ownership of those trade marks, until 2000;
(e) the Government of the Russian Federation did not assert any right or interest in the House Mark, the Stolichnaya Label Mark, the Moskovskaya Label Mark, the Stolichnaya Word Mark, the Stoli Word Mark, the Ohranj Label Mark and the Ohranj Word Mark, or any claim regarding ownership of those Australian trade marks, until 2004;
(f) the Cross-Claimants did not assert any right or interest in the House Mark, the Stolichnaya Label Mark, the Moskovskaya Label Mark, the Stolichnaya Word Mark, the Stoli Word Mark, the Ohranj Label Mark and the Ohranj Word Mark, or any claim regarding ownership of those Australian trade marks, until 2004;
(g) the claims by the Cross-Claimants in this proceeding are made on behalf of the Government of the Russian Federation;
(h) by reason of the matters pleaded in sub-paragraphs (a)-(e) above, the Government of the Russian Federation is guilty of laches;
(i) by reason of the matters pleaded in sub-paragraphs (a)-(g) above, the First Cross-Claimant is guilty of laches;
(j) by reason of the matters pleaded in sub-paragraphs (a)-(g) above, the Second Cross-Claimant is guilty of laches; and
(k) by reason of the acquiescence and/or laches of the Government of the Russian Federation, or further or alternatively the Cross-Claimants (or either of them), the Cross-Claimants are not entitled to any of the relief sought in their prayer for relief.
(Particulars not reproduced.)
315 It is unnecessary to reproduce [67A]. But the defence goes on in [67] to plead:
In further answer to the whole of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim, the Cross-Respondent says that if (which is denied) either or both of the Cross-Claimants is an "aggrieved person" within the meaning of section 88 of the Trade Marks Act and if (which is denied) any of the grounds specified in section 88 of the Trade Marks Act is made out by either or both of the Cross-Claimants, the Court should in its discretion refuse to grant the relief sought in the Cross-Claimants' prayer for relief.
Particulars
The Cross-Respondent refers to paragraphs 15 to 51 of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim and to paragraph 67 of this Defence and says that the Government of the Russian Federation, or alternatively the Cross-Claimants, are guilty of gross delay in bringing any application for rectification pursuant to section 88 of the Trade Marks Act.
The Cross-Respondent refers to the matters pleaded in paragraph 66(a) of this Defence and says that the allegations made by the Cross-Claimants in paragraphs 4(f), 4(h), 14, 24, 35, and 54-58 of the Third Further Amended Cross-Claim are contrary to representations made by the Government of the Russian Federation to VAO-SPI, ZAO and the Cross-Respondent during the period 1992 to 2000.
The Cross-Respondent also refers to the matters pleaded in paragraphs 61, 62, 63, 64 and 65 of this Defence.
Further particulars made by provided following discovery.
316 It is appropriate at this point to say something about the parties' submissions before the primary judge concerning the relevance of discovery to the discretionary defences. The primary judge was brief in his description of such matters in the form of orders reasons. To be more specific, as to the defences concerning laches, the estoppel by representation and discretionary considerations relevant to s 88 of the Trade Marks Act, Spirits made the following submissions to the primary judge in writing on 3 October 2019 (at [17]-[19]):
The defences … raise facts in issue concerning the RF's state of mind and internal motivations at various points of time. Those facts are peculiarly within the knowledge of the RF; discovery by the RF (as opposed to by FKP) is the primary process available to Spirits to obtain evidence about those facts. The failure by the RF to give discovery going to those matters goes to the heart of Spirits' ability to propound a defence: see Permanent Stay Judgment at [157].
The following classes of documents falling within the discovery categories, and the subject of the Court's findings in Federal Treasury Enterprise (FKP) Sojuzplodoimport v Spirits International B.V. (No 4) [2017] FCA 1345 (Interim Stay Judgment), relate to the defences …:
(a) as to: (1) the monthly reports referred to in Acting President Putin's order of 13 March 2000 (Interim Stay Judgment at [2], [50]-[53]); (2) correspondence and documents created or received by the interdepartmental working group (Interim Stay Judgment at [55]-[56]); (3) documents leading to the creation of FGUP (Interim Stay Judgment at [57]-[58]); and (4) documents relating to steps taken by entities within the RF to assert VAO-SPI's title to the trademarks (Interim Stay Judgment at [59]), as Spirits submitted at paras 78 and 79 of its Outline of Submissions filed 27 October 2016 (Spirits 2016 Submissions) in respect of Spirits' application for a stay (emphasis added):
"[These] largely internal documents of the Russian Federation are highly relevant to Spirits' defences of estoppel, laches and discretion… They will show the Russian Federation's evolving and fluctuating internal position, at various points in time, as to who is or should be the true owner of the STOLICHNAYA trade marks… [The documents would] allow the Court to be better informed about how the change in position of the Russian Federation in around 2000 in relation to ownership of the STOLICHNAYA marks came about. That change of position is of vital importance in assessing Spirits' equitable defences, and in the exercise of the Court's discretion under s 88 of the TM Act."
The Court referred to this submission at [53] and [56] of the Interim Stay Judgment;
(b) the seized documents (Interim Stay Judgment at [19]-[38]). The documents were "seized with a view to investigating the legality of VAO's ownership of the marks": Interim Stay Judgment at [24]. The seizure of documents commenced in 1999: Interim Stay Judgment at [19]. The seized documents "seem last to have been in the possession of the Russian Federation": Interim Stay Judgment at [38(c)]. For example, the seized documents may themselves reveal that the only reason the RF was in a position to obtain a favourable judgment from the Presidium in 2001 was because in 1999 it seized documents which deprived Spirits' predecessor of the ability to prove the true facts in 2001 - in those circumstances, the documents would be directly relevant as to whether it was unconscionable for the RF to resile from its previous representations as to successorship, which are to the contrary to the Presidium Decision. Moreover, the seized documents would also be highly relevant to another of Spirits' defences in addition to those referred to …, being that Spirits is a bona fide purchaser for value without notice, as well as the exercise of discretion under s 88 of the TM Act. This is because documents relating to the assignment of trade marks from VAO-SPI to ZAO in 1998 and from ZAO to Spirits in 1999 (relating to good faith and/or value) are potentially among the documents seized by the RF in their raids;
(c) the secret archive (Interim Stay Judgment at [40]-[47]). These documents, like those referred to in para 18(a), relate to activities of the RF aimed at reinstating the rights to the trade marks: see eg Interim Stay Judgment at [42], [47]. Accordingly, the secret archive is relevant for reasons similar to those set out at paras 18(a) and 18(b) above. For example, the documents may show that the succession claim made by FKP in these proceedings originates in a legal contrivance deliberately set up by the RF to undo a legal state of affairs as to successorship which, to the knowledge of the RF, validly existed prior to Acting President Putin coming to power at the start of 2000. For the purposes of the laches defence, that would assist Spirits to show that the delay in the assertion of rights by FKP has no proper explanation but is the direct result of that contrivance.
Category 29(d) of Spirits' discovery categories concerns documents, to the extent not covered by other categories, which support Spirits' case with respect to laches, estoppel and discretion (among other issues). This category evinces the direct relationship between discovery and Spirits' defences in the clearest possible terms. Even taken on its own, it is capable of sustaining the conclusion that no part of the proceedings is unaffected by the failure to give discovery.
317 In response to these submissions, FKP put written submissions to the primary judge on 8 October 2019 (at [102]-[109] and [114]-[121]), including the following:
Lack of relevance of the discovered documents
Spirits argues that the documents are relevant because they go to the state of mind and internal motivations of the Russian Federation at various points of time …
There is no foundation to the assertion by Spirits at [48] of its submissions that, "FKP must be taken to have accepted that discovery was relevant to Spirits' arguments in its Rejoinder, if not also to Spirits' positive defences." In fact, FKP at the time, simply responded to a suggestion by Spirits that the Separate Questions not be pursued and intimated they may make an application to that effect. FKP on balance, decided to get on with the case. It did not make the concessions Spirits seek to have inferred. On the contrary, no such concessions were made as they would have been unfounded.
The state of mind and motivations of the Russian Federation are not relevant to any of the issues in dispute.
As we have seen, on the question of estoppel raised by Spirits, they must establish:
a. Representations by VVO
b. Reasonably relied upon by Spirit;
c. As a consequence of which they suffered detriment.
The representations have already been identified by Spirits. The question as to whether they were made by VVO does not depend on the motivation or state of mind of the Russian Federation and will not be assisted by the discovery.
Similarly, the question of laches will not be dependant upon the state of mind or motivation of the Russian Federation. Thus the discovery will not be relevant to this issue either.
Finally, the question of discretion will turn upon the conduct of Spirits the subject of the final findings by the Dutch Courts giving rise to the res judicata and issue estoppels against Spirits supporting the final findings of Spirits' lack of good faith in relation to the transfers of the trade marks so, here too, the discovery will have no relevance.
The assertions of relevance by Spirits … should be rejected. They do not explain how any documents could be relevant to overcoming the findings forming the foundation of the issue estoppels on the non-transformation of VVO into VAO; the factual irrelevance of the belief of, or statements by, the Russian Federation between 1992 and 1999, and the fact that Shefler was the controller of VAO, ZVAO and Spirits prior to and at the time of the transfer of the trademarks from VAO ultimately to Spirits, a fact which deprives the assertion of Spirits being a "bona fide purchaser for value without notice" of the trade marks from ZVAO, of any force.
318 In essence, FKP sought to circumvent Spirits' points by legal argument, thereby seeking to downplay the relevance of the documents to these defences.
319 But Spirits said in its reply submissions of 10 October 2019 (at [14]-[22]):
FKP is faced with three incontrovertible propositions: (1) various of the discovery categories relate to Spirits' positive defences - laches, estoppel and the exercise of the discretion under s 88 of the TM Act …: (2) those positive defences did not arise for consideration, and were not determined, in the Dutch Decisions … and (3) even if FKP were able to establish an issue estoppel (which is denied), this would not preclude Spirits from relying on its positive defences …
These propositions establish that no part of the proceedings is "unaffected by the failure of the Russian Federation voluntarily to give discovery".
…
The question is whether they are "unaffected" by the RF's failure to give discovery.
Secondly, FKP is wrong to say that the Permanent Stay Judgment proceeded on the basis that discovery in these proceedings was "directed to the questions of transformation and good faith"… Even prior to argument on the Permanent Stay Judgment, Spirits had made it clear that the discovery it sought was directed, inter alia, to its positive defences … Spirits did not depart from that position in arguing for a permanent stay and nor does the Permanent Stay Judgment depart from it.
Thirdly … Spirits' allegation of laches concerns how VAO-SPI and its successors held themselves out from 1992 onwards … How there is res judicata with respect to that defence is not explained. The Dutch Decisions did not concern laches…
Fourthly … FKP asserts that the "state of mind and motivations of the Russian Federation are not relevant to any of the issues in dispute", such that discovery on those matters is irrelevant. This is incorrect. As to:
(a) laches, the knowledge of the party against whom laches is alleged is an important factor in determining whether laches is made out …:Spirits alleges that the RF had full knowledge of the conduct of VAO-SPI and its successors in title …
(b) estoppel, unconscionability is determined by "reference to all circumstance of the case" … This necessarily includes the RF's state of mind and motivations;
(c) discretion under s 88 of the TM Act, the discretion to cancel a registered trade mark is "at large, constrained only by the general scope and objects of the [TM] Act": Anchorage Capital Partners Pty Ltd v ACPA Pty Ltd (2018) 351 ALR 436 at [146]. This necessarily includes the conduct, state of mind and motivations of the party seeking cancellation or those standing behind it. Further, as to the exercise of the discretion, Spirits relies on the matters pleaded in relation to laches (see SPS 15(1)), which include the matters regarding the RF's knowledge set out at sub-para (a) above.
320 FKP's rejoinder submissions dated 13 October 2019 sought to grapple with Spirits' points.
321 Now we have set out more than is usual in terms of the parties' arguments before the primary judge. But we assume that his Honour considered the detailed submissions.