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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> MMI Research Ltd. v Cellxion Ltd & Ors [2009] EWHC 1938 (Pat) (31 July 2009)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2009/1938.html
Cite as: (2009) 32(8) IPD 32060, [2009] EWHC 1938 (Pat)

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Neutral Citation Number: [2009] EWHC 1938 (Pat)
Case No: HC 2006 C02649

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
31/07/2009

B e f o r e :

THE HON MR JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________

Between:
MMI RESEARCH LIMITED
Claimant
- and -

CELLXION LIMITED
CELLXION NETWORKS LLC
MARK BRUMPTON
DATONG ELECTRONICS PLC
ROHDE & SCHWARZ GMBH & CO. KG.
(6) ANTHONY TIMSON





Defendants

____________________

Martin Howe QC and Henry Ward (instructed by Charles Russell LLP) for the Claimant
Alastair Wilson QC and Simon Malynicz (instructed by Edwin Coe LLP) for the Defendants
Paper Application
Further infringement point

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    Mr Justice Floyd :

  1. I handed down my judgment in this patent infringement action on 11th March 2009. There was a first hearing on the form of order on 16th March 2009, when all matters relating to the scope of the injunction, and certain other matters were adjourned to come on at a further hearing. That further hearing was held before me on 26th June 2009, and I handed down a further reserved judgment on the 3rd July 2009. In that judgment I dealt with a question of infringement of the patent by the UGX device. The UGX was a device described in a further Product and Process Description which had not been considered at the trial and which the first to fourth and sixth defendants contended did not infringe the patent. In the course of that further hearing Mr Wilson QC raised the question of a yet further variant: see the judgment of 3rd July 16 [26]. I declined to deal with that variant, as it had not been properly described in the evidence, and Mr Howe for the claimant rightly objected to my hearing it without notice. The parties have, however, agreed that it would be desirable for me to decide the matter now and to do so without a hearing. As the device has apparently been sold, the issue would have to be determined in the enquiry as to damages in any event. Each side has made one set of submissions in writing on this further variant, which I have considered.
  2. In my judgment of 3rd July 2009, at [13] to [26] I considered infringement by the UGX device. That device uses a combination of a scanner and an ordinary mobile phone as the "test mobile phone" or TMS of claim 1. I held that the UGX infringed claim 1, because the combination met the requirement for a test mobile phone, as that term would be understood by a person skilled in the art. The proposed device which I now have to consider is a variant of the UGX in which no mobile phone properly so called is included at all. The device therefore has none of the normal mobile phone functions, such as the ability to make and receive calls. My judgment on this point should be read in conjunction with my judgments of March 11th and July 3rd 2009.
  3. The principles which apply to the construction of patent specifications are not in dispute. They are set out at [47] of my judgment of 11th March 2009. It would be rare for those principles to justify ignoring a requirement in a claim altogether, simply because it appears to make no difference to the inventive concept: see per Hoffmann LJ in STEP v Emson [1993] RPC 513 at 519.
  4. Mr Howe submits that the need for the normal functions of a mobile phone is not immediately apparent from claim 1 of the patent: everything which is required by claim 1 can be done by the scanner in the modified UGX. It is not until one gets to claim 4 that one requires the mobile phone to have these further functions, which are useful in the context of call interception.
  5. The fundamental problem with this approach is that it requires the court to give the term "test mobile phone" a different meaning in claim 1 from that which it possesses in claim 4. Moreover, whilst I have held that the skilled person would understand the patentee to be using the term "test mobile phone" to include a combination of items which together perform the functions of a test mobile phone, I cannot see my way to holding that such a person would regard the term as extending to an item or combination of items which do not perform those functions at all.
  6. Mr Howe's approach regards the term "test mobile phone" as an empty vessel to be filled only by those functions expressly required by the claim. In my judgment that approach is incorrect. The skilled person would understand that the patentee was calling for a device which could operate as a mobile phone. The absence of anything which fits that description takes the device outside the scope of claim 1, and I will declare accordingly.
  7. I should only add that I should not be regarded as giving my seal of approval to this piecemeal approach to the consideration of alternative versions of the alleged infringing device. Parties who wish the court to consider such variants should do at the trial of the action, particularly where, as here, they are on the market and being sold. It is obviously in the interests of the efficient management of litigation that, so far as reasonably practical, all the issues between the parties are determined at a single hearing: see CPR Part 2 para. 1.2(i). If parties do not reveal alternative embodiments until after the trial, this objective is frustrated.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2009/1938.html