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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MMI Research Ltd v Cellxion Ltd & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 7 (24 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/7.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 7 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (PATENTS COURT)
MR JUSTICE FLOYD
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
SIR ROBIN JACOB
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MMI RESEARCH LTD |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) CELLXION LTD (2) CELLXION NETWORKS LLC (3) MARK BRUMPTON (4) DATONG ELECTRONICS PLC (5) ROHDE & SCHWARZ GMBH & CO KG (6) ANTHONY TIMSON |
Appellants/Defendants |
____________________
for the Appellants/Defendants
Mr Martin Howe QC and Mr Henry Ward (instructed by Charles Russell LLP)
for the Claimant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 22nd and 23rd November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Robin Jacob:
"Method for identifying a mobile telephone (MS) in a public digital cellular mobile telephony network,
a virtual base station (VBTS) with a test mobile telephone (TMS) connected thereto being operated in spatial proximity to the mobile telephone (MS),
the network base station (BTS1), assigned to the selected location, having the highest power being used to ascertain, through a cell monitoring by means of the test mobile telephone (TMS), the list (BA) of all base stations adjacent to the location,
there being selected therefrom a base station (BTS2), which is adjacent to the base station (BTS1) of highest power assigned to the selected location,
and the virtual base station (VBTS) being then operated on its channel frequency (BCCH) with a power which, at the mobile telephone (MS), is greater than that of the network base station (BTS1) associated with the location,
and with an area code which differs from the area code (LAC) associated with the location."
Anticipation by prior use or disclosure
Introduction
"96. The question of what the prior sale was capable of revealing to the skilled person was not a matter addressed in the evidence at all. I do not think it would be right for me to conclude without evidence that the relevant features of the method of operation according to the Patent would be apparent to the purchaser of the GA-900 from the machine or its instruction manual. "
"4. Two files (and we have seen the originals) are the instructions for the device in Italian and another file, rather thicker, with almost the same instructions in English. They were manuals. Along with the English version at least, is a floppy disk which has recently been read. There can be no doubt, and I do not think Mr Howe disputes it, that if this manual or the floppy disk had been prior disclosed to someone who was free in law and equity to use the information, the patent would lack novelty.
5. Mr Wilson particularly relies upon what he says is fairly obviously an event prior to the priority date of the patent, a certificate of compliance with an order from Rohde & Schwarz to a customer. The customer is not named but the order number is given and the document, which came in the English file, is dated 18/03/1998, which was before the priority date. Mr Wilson says the clear inference is that the recipients of this machine would have got the manual to go with it, that the document we have here is the manual that goes with it, that there is nothing about the manual being confidential, and that, accordingly, the recipient was a person free in law and equity to use the information. Likewise he says that the accompanying floppy disk also, when read, contains sufficient information to amount to an anticipation of the patent if it was part of the prior art. And the dates of the files on disk are all before the priority date."
"10. So I would admit the fresh evidence. I will also require that the defendants plead exactly what it is they intend to prove. Speaking generally it seems to me it is the following. (1) the prior sale to the customer who is named on the certificate of compliance with the order together with the supply of the training manual. I would not allow the issue of whether you can work out what the machine does from the machine itself to be re-opened. (2) the supply of manuals to the Italian and German security officers. (3) I would also allow, to this extent and this extent alone, the issue of the Australian supply to be re-opened but with no further evidence from Australia. All that can be raised is the question of the inference to be drawn from the existing evidence in the light of the further evidence which comes before the judge.
11. All these matters would have to be pleaded out with considerable precision. Any further amendment must be regarded with utmost suspicion and only allowed in the most exceptional circumstances."
"1. By 4 pm on 30 October 2009, the First to Fourth and Sixth Defendants shall serve on all the other parties a Re-Amended Grounds of Invalidity setting out precisely the nature of the said Defendants' prior use case based upon the following:
(a) The prior sale to the customer as allegedly evidenced by the certificate of compliance that was shown to the Court, together with the alleged supply of the Rohde & Schwarz GA 900 Manual and/or disk;
(b) The alleged supply of Rohde & Schwarz GA 900 Manuals to the Italian and German security officers identified in the Fifth Witness Statement of the Sixth Defendant.
2. The aforesaid Re-Amended Grounds of Invalidity shall not be amended save in the most exceptional circumstances.
3. The said Defendants to have permission to adduce fresh evidence relating solely to their case identified in the aforesaid Re-Amended Grounds of Invalidity
4. By 4 pm on 13 November 2009 the Claimant do serve a Re-Re-Amended Reply and Defence to Counterclaim (if so advised).
5. The claim be remitted to the Honourable Mr Justice Floyd for further directions and for a hearing on the issues identified in the pleadings referred to at paragraph 1 and 4 of this Order ("the remitted issues"), and for reconsideration of the issue of prior use in Australia having regard only to the evidence already given at the trial together with the facts (if they be established) that the Manuals and other material referred to above were supplied to customers (including the German and Italian personnel referred to above) without being marked with an indication of confidentiality, and such other inferences as may properly be drawn therefrom.
6. The issue of whether a user can work out what is the GA 900 machine does from the machine itself is not to be re-opened."
"(v) The prior sale of the GA 900 as evidenced by the Fifth Defendant's "Certificate of Compliance with the Order" dated 18 March 1998 … together with the prior publication of a training manual and/or a computer disk by supply therewith, and the prior publication by training using the manual and/or disk;
(vi) The prior publication of a training manual for the GA 900 (accompanied, it is to be inferred by a GA 900) by supply of such to the Italian carabinieri and the prior publication by training using the said manual as evidenced by a statement of the member of the carabinieri dated 22 July 2009 …
(vii) The prior publication of a training manual for the GA 900 (accompanied, it is be inferred by a GA 900) by supply of such to the German Federal Criminal Police ('BKA') and the prior publication by training using the said manual as evidenced by the fifth and sixth witness statements of the Sixth Defendant;
…..
(ix) Further it is a proper inference that the circumstances of prior sale (including the supply of a training manual) of the GA-900 to the Australian Department of Defence on 15 April 1998 were also made without fetter of confidence."
"33. For reasons I have already alluded to the English File is not a coherent document in the same way as the Italian Manual. It is not the sort of document one would expect to be issued with a new machine. The evidence established that all the pages had been photocopied at the same time in a rather poor quality fashion, although there is no way of telling when. It is plainly not the document supplied with the machine. The nature of the document cries out for an explanation, which, as will be seen, I never received. "
"44. My conclusions about the English File based on the documents themselves are therefore these:
i) it is an incoherent assembly of documents, unlikely to be one which was supplied with a new machine;
ii) it could not have been supplied with the machine sold and delivered to the Carabinieri in March 1998;
iii) it was compiled after May 1998: how long after is not established;
iv) it provides no internal clues as to whether it was published before the priority date."
"[38] The floppy disk is therefore tied to my satisfaction to the pleaded machine supplied to the Carabinieri, in the sense that it was supplied for use with that machine. The real question, and the one which the evidence does not give an answer to, is when it was supplied, as it cannot have been supplied with the machine."
"43. So my conclusions on the floppy disk are that:
i) it was created on about 23rd April 1998;
ii) it was not supplied with the machine supplied to the Carabinieri on 19th March 1998;
iii) there is no evidence as to how long after 23rd April 1998 it was supplied."
The appeal
i) it was not open to CellXion to rely upon the evidence in the second trial in support of their contention that a user of the GA-900 machine could discover how it worked from the machine itself;
ii) it was not open to CellXion to run a refinement of this argument developed by Mr Wilson during the course of his submissions;
iii) the Judge did not fall into error in the first trial in applying the wrong test of enabling disclosure.
Obviousness over Fox
"128. The article records the fact that the German Federal Government had revealed that it planned to operate IMSI catchers. Under the heading "Background" the article explains:
"In GSM mobile telephone systems, the encrypted transmission to the air interface (between device and base station) prevents mobile phones from being directly tapped. Due to the use of temporary, alternating subscriber identities (TMSI), which is a kind of technical "pseudonym", it is not possible to identify the mobile phone subscriber (or his telephone number)."
129. Under the heading "Functionality":
"IMSI Catchers" are devices that affect a subscriber located in the vicinity like a terrestrial mobile telephone network base station system. Every mobile phone that is switched on within the footprint is automatically registered for this "IMSI Catcher". Subscribers are not aware of such a "disguised" device, because GSM involves only one-way authentication (from the mobile phone to the mobile telephone network). A two-way authentication protocol would prevent this type of masqueraded breach, although this is not part of the GSM specification.
To identify a telephone number assigned to a mobile phone, the worldwide unique identity number (International Mobile Subscriber Identity - IMSI) of the mobile phone must be known. The "IMSI Catcher" therefore requires the mobile phone to use the IMSI instead of a TMSI."
"However their use does not only affect the subscriber at whose connection a monitoring measure, for example is aimed. Rather the IMSI [catcher, that must be] will identify all subscribers located within the device's radio cell with a mobile phone that is switched on, until the one being sought is found".
"130. Under the heading "Availability" the article continues:
"Rohde & Schwarz (Munich) has developed an "IMSI Catcher" under the name of "GA 900", which enables an IMSI to be identified…. Other manufacturers may now have developed similar devices. "
131. The article goes on to explain that encryption can be turned off so that telephone calls can be logged unencrypted."
"121. Thirdly, the notion of the false base station did not form part of the common general knowledge. I accept that test machines were, in a sense, false base stations, but there is a world of difference between these, and the sort of false base station in the real network necessary for the purpose of the invention.
122. Fourthly, the common knowledge does not supply the notion that one should actively provoke the mobile into handing over its IMSI or IMEI.
123. Fifthly, the use of a changed LAC to provoke an immediate contact from the mobile phone is not an obvious use of that feature. The reason that the mobile phone contacts the network when it receives a new LAC is because it needs to re-register into the new area into which it has moved. The idea of using an out-of-area LAC for the purpose identified in the Patent, when the mobile phone is not in that area, is an entirely different and non-obvious use of the LAC.
124. Sixthly, given that the analogue system had to wait for a call to be made by the mobile phone, there is significant hindsight involved in assuming that the skilled person would not be satisfied with a system based on the periodic update."
"134. Would the skilled person be able, without invention, to proceed from the disclosure of Dirk Fox to a method within claim 1? Certainly this is a more promising starting point than common general knowledge alone, as the skilled team would know that the target was achievable. It is also true that the Fox article gives the reader the notion of a false base station which takes active steps to require the mobile to hand over its IMSI. This is, as Mr Wilson submitted, a significant step forward. On the other hand the skilled person would not know how difficult it was going to be: Mr Timson knew of the R&S machine when he designed the MMI one, yet he still found the overall "opportunity" a difficult one.
135. Mr Anderson's evidence was that filling in the gaps in the disclosure of Fox would be obvious to the skilled GSM engineer. I found his evidence that the skilled person would know how to insert a false base station into the network convincing. He could, after all, not go wrong if he made the false base station as similar as possible to a real one.
136. Dr Maile's evidence was that the Fox article was at too high a level to make the invention obvious. He was cross examined with great skill along the lines of the argument which I have set out in the section of this judgment dealing with obviousness over common general knowledge.
137. In the end I was not persuaded that the method of claim 1 was obvious in the light of Fox. Firstly, there is nothing inherent in the idea of using a false base station to lead one to the idea of an out-of-area LAC. Although the use of LAC in the roaming capability of the mobile phone would be known to the skilled team, its use for the purpose indicated in the Patent involves the different idea of an out-of-area LAC, and is not obvious. Secondly, there is nothing in the article to indicate how quickly the device intercepts the IMSI. It follows that the device may wait for a call to be made, as in the analogue system, or use the periodic update facility. Neither leads the skilled person to a device within the claim. Thirdly, the prior analogue systems operated on the basis that a call had to be made: there is nothing in the article to indicate that this is not the case with the devices described."
"21. The Patent is addressed to an engineer with the hardware and software skills necessary to build and operate a virtual base station for collecting the IMSIs and IMEIs of mobile telephones within its footprint. In practice this would be a GSM engineer concerned with the security aspects of the GSM system.
22. Mr Wilson submitted that the skilled person would be someone familiar with "Mobility Management". Whilst I accept that the skilled person would be familiar with the basic technology which allows a mobile phone to roam in a network, there is a danger in supposing that the skilled person has too close a focus on mobility management, which is not really what the Patent is concerned with."
"135. Mr Anderson's evidence was that filling in the gaps in the disclosure of Fox would be obvious to the skilled GSM engineer."
"[135] ….I found his [i.e. Mr Anderson's] evidence that the skilled person would know how to insert a false base station into the network convincing. He could, after all, not go wrong if he made the false base station as similar as possible to a real one."
"Q. … Anyone involved with the design of GSM mobile systems must have been thoroughly aware of the significance of the location update procedure?
A. It would be. It is part of the specification, yes.
Q. But it is more than that. We are looking at certain pages in the specification, but these are fundamental pages in the specification, are they not? This is how every mobile phone performs all the time?
A. Yes.
Q. So this is an important part of the specification with which any GSM engineer would be thoroughly familiar?
A. A systems engineer would be familiar with it, certainly. Absolutely.
Q. This is absolutely basic to mobility management?
A. Yes."
"Q. Dr Maile, what I put to you is this, that the key step here, the real invention in all of this, was the idea of spoofing a base station. That was what differentiated these machines from what had been done with analogue technology? That was what really made these things work. Everything else was detail which anybody in the industry could fill in. But given the notion of a spoof base station, everything else inevitably followed, is that not right?
A. I certainly agree that it is a key step, yes.
Q. Not only is it a key step but once you have got that key step everything else, inevitably, follows? Well, subject to the point about the periodic update instead of the location area update, and subject to the point about using maps instead of the BA lists supplied to by mobile phone aerials/base stations, subject to those two points, given the idea of a spoof base station, claim 1 follows inevitably?
A. If you put the right steps in place in the right order, yes.
Q. We have been through that. You cannot put them in any other order. You have to put them in that order. Claim 1 follows inevitably?
A I think subject to those caveats about the updating of maps: yes."
"Q. This is, really giving the game away, is it not?
A. Which game?
Q. It does not, it is true, mention the BA list.
A. Yes.
Q. And it does not, it is true, mention the location update, but to anyone in the industry, a GSM engineer involved in the design of mobile equipment, on reading this, he would fill in those gaps would he not, unless he said "This is all nonsense I won't take it seriously?
A. Yes. He may well fill in the gaps."
"Q. Do you say there is some invention in choosing the location area update over the periodic update?
A. They are both alternatives.
Q. They are the only two alternatives?
A. Yes.
Q What is more, the use of the location area code to prompt that update is something which is familiar to people in this industry for the purpose we went through this morning?
A. Yes we have been through that.
Q. There is no advantage in using the periodic update facility?
A. There is no advantage, no.
Q. But there is an advantage in using the location update facility, because you get an immediate answer, virtually?
A. Yes."
Personal liability of Mr Timson
Conclusion