Injunction to restrain publishing a Magazine as a continuation of the Plaintiff’s Magazine in numbers, and as to communications from correspondents, received by the Defendant while publishing for the Plaintiff ; not preventing the publication of an original work of the same nature, and under a similar title. The Plaintiff was proprietor of a work, published in monthly numbers under the title ‘The Wonderful Magazine’.
Held: In assessing damages in a passing off case, the court said, ‘what is the consequence in Law and in Equity? . . a Court of Equity in these cases is not content with an action for damages; for it is nearly impossible to know the extent of the damage; and therefore the remedy here, though not compensating the pecuniary damage except by an account of profits, is the best: the remedy by an injunction and account.’ The reason for the general rule in courts of equity that an injunction would be granted as a matter of course to restrain infringements of property rights was the inadequacy of damages as a remedy.’
Judges:
Lord Eldon LC
Citations:
[1803] EngR 513, (1803) 8 Ves Jun 215, (1803) 32 ER 336 (B)
Links:
Jurisdiction:
England and Wales
Citing:
See Also – Hogg v Kirby 1789
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Cited by:
Cited – HM Attorney General v Blake (Jonathan Cape Ltd third Party intervening) HL 3-Aug-2000
Restitutionary Claim against Pofits from Breach
The author had written his book in breach of his duty of confidence. Having signed the Official Secrets Act, he accepted a contractual private law duty. After conviction as a spy, the publication of the book was in breach of the undertaking by not . .
Cited – Ludlow Music Inc v Williams and others ChD 2-Oct-2000
The claimant sought damages for copyright infringement in respect of two works which parodied a song to which they owned the rights.
Held: The amount copied, being as much as a quarter of the original work, meant that the claim was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Intellectual Property, Damages, Equity
Updated: 27 April 2022; Ref: scu.180887