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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Jushi Group Co, Ltd v OCV Intellectual Capital, LLC [2017] EWHC 171 (IPEC) (06 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2017/171.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 171 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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JUSHI GROUP CO., LTD (a company registered in the People's Republic of China) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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OCV INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL, LLC (a company registered in the United States of America) |
Defendant |
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Tom Alkin (instructed by Mewburn Ellis LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 5-6 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
A short summary of the technical background
The claimed invention
"1. A glass reinforcement strand whose composition comprises the following constituents in the limits defined below, expressed as percentages by weight:
SiO2 58-63%
Al2O3 12-20%
CaO 12-17%
MgO 6-12%
CaO/MgO = 2, preferably =1.3
Li2O 0.1-0.8%, preferably = 0.6%
BaO + SrO 0-3%
B2O3 0-3%
TiO2 0-3%
Na2O + K2O ? 2%
F2 0-1%
Fe2O3 ? 1%
wherein the composition has an Al2O3 + MgO + Li2O content equal to 23% or higher."
"The object of the present invention is to provide such glass reinforcement strands that combine the mechanical properties of R-glass, in particular its specific Young's modulus, with improved melting and fiberizing properties, approaching those of E-glass."
The issues in summary
The prior art
"TABLE IV
Ingredients Percent
SiO2 55-61
Al2O3 12-18
MgO 4-10
CaO 14-18
Na2O 0.1-1.5
Li2O 0.1-1.5
BaO 0.0-1.0"
"In the glass composition of Table IV other substituents may also be present in small amounts typically below 1 percent each. In general, Fe2O3 is present in quantities of 0.1 to 0.5 percent, TiO2 between 0.2 to 0.8 percent, K2O between 0.1 and 0.5 percent and also if the glass composition desired is only a boron-free composition, then a small amount of fluorine up to 1 weight percent can be used in the composition."
Jushi's pleaded arguments on invalidity
Claim 1 lacked novelty
Neely example 5
Neely Table IV
Neely Table VI
Claim 1 lacked inventive step
Neely examples 1 and 5
Claims 4 and 5
Claim 6
The skilled person
Common general knowledge
Further arguments
The breadth of claims of the Patent
Selection invention
The Conventional Case - Novelty
Numerical ranges
The law
"[18] It seems to me that all of these principles are just as applicable to a claim containing a numerical range as they are to a claim containing descriptive words or phrases. In both cases the critical question is what the skilled person would understand the author to have been using the words or numerals appearing in the claim to mean."
The numerical ranges in this case
The parties' contentions
"There is normally no reason to suppose the patentee when he set the limits of his monopoly knew of a particular piece of prior art which is therefore irrelevant in deciding what those limits are. Of course the position is different if the prior art is specifically acknowledged in the patent. The purposive construction would lead to a construction of a claim which did not cover that acknowledged prior art: it can hardly have been the inventor's purpose to cover that which he expressly recognises was old."
Discussion
Overlapping ranges
The law
"[9] It appears to the Board, therefore, that a realistic approach in assessing the novelty of the invention under examination over the prior art in a case where overlapping ranges of a certain parameter exist, would be to consider whether the person skilled in the art would in the light of the technical facts seriously contemplate applying the teachings of the prior art document in the range of overlap. If it can be fairly assumed that he would do so it must be concluded that no novelty exists."
"[7] Clearly, the decision on this issue will depend on the facts of each case. Nevertheless, the Boards' jurisprudence has generated certain general principles and broadly applicable concepts, sometimes (erroneously) referred to as 'tests'. Thus it is clear, (cf. G 02/88 cited above), that matter that is hidden, not in the sense of being deliberately concealed but rather in the sense of being reconditely submerged in a document, will not have been 'made available' in the above sense. In the case of overlapping ranges of physical parameters between a claim and a prior art disclosure, what will often help to determine what is 'hidden' as opposed to what has been made available, is whether or not a skilled person would find it difficult to carry out the prior art teaching in the range of overlap (T 124/87, OJ EPO 1989, 495, para.3.4). A similar approach adopted by a Board of Appeal (cf. T 26/85 OJ EPO 1990, 22) for assessing the novelty of a claim in a case where overlapping numerical ranges of certain parameters exist between a claim and a prior art document, is to consider whether a person skilled in the art would, in the light of all the technical facts at his disposal, seriously contemplate applying the technical teaching of the prior art document in the range of overlap. Provided the information in the prior art document, in combination with the skilled person's common general knowledge, is sufficient to enable him to practise the technical teaching, and if it can reasonably be assumed that he would do so, then the claim in question will lack novelty.
[8] In the Board's view, there is no fundamental difference between examining novelty in situations of so-called 'overlap' or 'selection', and in doing so in other situations, although it may be helpful, in order to verify a preliminary conclusion of a novelty examination in cases of overlap, to investigate whether or not a particular technical effect is associated with the narrow range in question. It needs to be stressed, however that such a particular effect is neither a prerequisite for novelty nor can it as such confer novelty: its existence can merely serve to confirm a finding of novelty already achieved (following T 198/ 84, OJ EPO 1985, 209, para.7)."
"[8] … The above concept of 'seriously contemplating' moving from a broad to a narrow (overlapping) range, while seemingly akin to one of the concepts used by the Boards for assessing inventive step, namely, whether the notional addressee 'would have tried, with reasonable expectation of success' to bridge the technical gap between a particular piece of prior art and a claim whose inventiveness is in question, is fundamentally different from this 'inventive-step concept' because in order to establish anticipation, there cannot be a gap of the above kind.
In summary, and in dealing with the respondent's submission outlined previously, under the EPC novelty must be decided by reference to the total information content of a cited prior document, and in assessing the content for the purpose of deciding whether or not a claim is novel, the Board may employ legal concepts that are similar to those used by them in deciding issues of obviousness, without, however, thereby confusing or blurring the distinction between these two separate statutory grounds of objection."
"[88] I derive the following guidance from this passage of relevance to this case:
(a) The term 'available' goes beyond the strict literal meaning and includes what is implicit as well;
(b) On the other hand, matter may be contained in a document but so submerged in it as not to be available (compare Dr Reddy's Laboratories (UK) Ltd v Eli Lilly and Co Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 1362, [2010] RPC 9);
(c) Novelty in the case of overlapping ranges is no different from novelty in other circumstances.
[89] What I find, with great respect, more difficult to follow is the notion that it may be legitimate to find lack of novelty because the skilled person would 'seriously contemplate' moving from a broad range to a narrow range. Merely by stating the proposition in that way one can see that it is inconsistent with the approach approved by the House of Lords in Smithkline Beecham plc's (Paroxetine Methane Sulfonate) Patent. There is no disclosure of the narrower range. Moreover, assuming no specific individual value is disclosed, there are no clear directions to use a value within the narrower range. A person carrying out the disclosure of the prior range will not inevitably fall within the claim of the later patent. If the 'serious contemplation' approach is indeed the correct approach in the case of overlapping ranges, then overlapping ranges are a special case in the law of novelty, a proposition which is inconsistent with the third proposition derived from T666/89 itself.
[90] As will appear, however, I have not found it necessary to reach a concluded view on whether the cited EPO decision is correct."
"[22] If I may summarise the effect of these two well-known statements, the matter relied upon as prior art must disclose subject-matter which, if performed, would necessarily result in an infringement of the patent. That may be because the prior art discloses the same invention. In that case there will be no question that performance of the earlier invention would infringe and usually it will be apparent to someone who is aware of both the prior art and the patent that it will do so. But patent infringement does not require that one should be aware that one is infringing: "whether or not a person is working [an] … invention is an objective fact independent of what he knows or thinks about what he is doing": Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc v H N Norton & Co Ltd [1996] RPC 76, 90. It follows that, whether or not it would be apparent to anyone at the time, whenever subject-matter described in the prior disclosure is capable of being performed and is such that, if performed, it must result in the patent being infringed, the disclosure condition is satisfied. The flag has been planted, even though the author or maker of the prior art was not aware that he was doing so."
Claim 1 and Table IV
"Slight fluctuations of the glass composition from day to day would not interfere with the production process as such but would cause variations in the physical properties of the fibre and the production rates of given fibre-forming furnaces (bushings). Therefore, for consistency of products being manufactured, all factors which contribute to this objective must be controlled. Such factors include the glass composition, the temperature of the furnace, the melting rate, and the temperature/time schedule to which the glass will be subjected between melting and fibre forming."
"To consider a change in glass composition is a very serious undertaking since it involves changes to a large number of parameters all of which have been, up to then, considered as an established part of a production process. Many problems are likely to surface downstream in the production line and all unexplained faults will tend to make the suitability of the new glass composition suspect. Despite these problems, economic pressures and pollution regulations, the high cost of some materials and a better understanding of the factors interlinking glass composition with process engineering and the properties of glass fibres has given some manufacturers sufficient courage to experiment with and undertake changes in the composition of E glass."
Claim 1 and Table VI
Claim 6 and Table IV
The Conventional Case – Inventive Step
Obviousness over examples 1 and 5 of Neely
"Before a step from the prior art can be held to be obvious there must be some reason why the man skilled in the art would wish to take it. If he has a problem and the step would occur to him as a solution to it, then he has a reason. But there is no requirement that it be demonstrated that the step would have been expected to produce significant commercial advantages. The problem might be very small. The courts will assume that he may just want an alternative way of achieving essentially the same result as in the prior art. Thus were workshop modifications, none of which would be expected to produce significant technical or commercial benefits are still obvious. To adopt an example sometimes given by Jacob J., if it is known to make a 5-inch plate, it is obvious to make a 5¼-inch plate. Technicians and businessmen frequently want to make trivial variations in established or known products. Similarly, if the prior art discloses two wooden parts held together by screws it would be obvious to glue them, even if so doing would not be expected to advance the industry. The notional addressee is likely to want to use materials readily at hand to make essentially the same thing as is disclosed in the prior art. That is sufficient motivation and the use of those materials is, accordingly, obvious."
Q. I see. So, you have come up with this figure looking at the patent?
A. I have come up with this figure, really, looking at the variations on side of -- obviously it does relate to the patent.
Q. You looked at the examples in the patent and thought how far can I vary those?
A. Exactly. In other words, if you were a fibre glass manufacturer operating according to one of the examples in the patent, it would be expected that you might be able to deviate each of these compositions by something of the order of approximately 6%, and I apologise for being vague on this, but I think it is necessary to be vague, because there is some variability in that.
Q. Your evidence is that the person skilled in the art would look at any particular fibre glass composition and say it will not [make] any material difference if I vary of these values by plus or
minus 6%?
A. Once again, I am going to qualify that with a wooly answer and say probably not.
Obviousness over Table IV of Neely
Q. The skilled person reading this would expect to be able to make boron and fluorine-free glass fibres if he uses the compositions described in column 5.
A. I am sorry, could you repeat the question, please, sir?
Q. Yes. We have established the context of this disclosure now, and the skilled person reading Loewenstein would expect, if he follows the recipe in column 5, that anything within those ranges will produce boron and fluorine-free glass fibres with E-glass performance characteristics.
A. I think the skilled addressee would expect that there was a reasonable chance of forming fibres within that range with the specific characteristics required of E-glass, for example, the electrical properties.
Q. Perhaps we can agree on a fair expectation of success?
A. I think there will be a reasonable expectation to be able to fiberise.
The selection invention case
"[31] It is not necessary here to go into what is sufficient to amount to an 'individualised description.' Obviously the question may partly be one of degree, but other considerations may come in too, for instance the specificity of any indicated purpose for making the compounds. A mere woolly indication of the possible use of the prior class may require less specificity than a precise one."
Conclusion