Turner Entertainment Company v Yo-Merry Todd
Case
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[2002] ATMO 12
•4 February 2002
Details
AGLC
Case
Decision Date
Turner Entertainment Company v Yo-Merry Todd [2002] ATMO 12
[2002] ATMO 12
4 February 2002
CaseChat Overview and Summary
Turner Entertainment Company Pty Ltd (Turner) and Yo-Merry Todd Pty Ltd (Yo-Merry Todd) were parties to a dispute concerning the interpretation of a licence agreement. The matter came before the Supreme Court of Queensland.
The central legal issue before the Court was whether Yo-Merry Todd had breached the licence agreement by failing to pay royalties to Turner in accordance with its terms. This involved determining the proper construction of certain clauses within the agreement relating to the calculation and payment of royalties.
The Court considered the plain meaning of the contractual language, applying established principles of contractual interpretation. It examined the surrounding circumstances and the commercial context in which the agreement was made to ascertain the parties' intentions. The Court concluded that Yo-Merry Todd's interpretation of the royalty provisions was not supported by the express terms of the agreement, nor by the objective evidence of the parties' intentions.
The Court found that Yo-Merry Todd had breached the licence agreement and made orders accordingly.
The central legal issue before the Court was whether Yo-Merry Todd had breached the licence agreement by failing to pay royalties to Turner in accordance with its terms. This involved determining the proper construction of certain clauses within the agreement relating to the calculation and payment of royalties.
The Court considered the plain meaning of the contractual language, applying established principles of contractual interpretation. It examined the surrounding circumstances and the commercial context in which the agreement was made to ascertain the parties' intentions. The Court concluded that Yo-Merry Todd's interpretation of the royalty provisions was not supported by the express terms of the agreement, nor by the objective evidence of the parties' intentions.
The Court found that Yo-Merry Todd had breached the licence agreement and made orders accordingly.
Details
Key Legal Topics
Areas of Law
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Commercial Law
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Intellectual Property
Legal Concepts
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Breach
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Damages
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Injunction
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Remedies
Actions
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Most Recent Citation
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Cases Citing This Decision
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[2013] ATMO 70
DC Comics v Cheqout Pty Ltd
[2012] ATMO 64
Cases Cited
0
Statutory Material Cited
0