BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> HTC Corporation v Nokia Corporation [2013] EWHC 3247 (Pat) (30 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2013/3247.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3247 (Pat), [2014] RPC 19 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
HTC CORPORATION |
Claimant |
|
-and- |
||
NOKIA CORPORATION |
Defendant |
____________________
Michael Tappin QC, Nicholas Saunders and Miles Copeland (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7-11 October 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Contents
Topic |
Paragraphs |
Introduction | |
The witnesses | |
Technical experts | |
Experts on US law | |
Technical background | |
Mobile telephone networks | |
Transceivers | |
Modulation | |
IQ modulators | |
Low-pass filters | |
Anti-aliasing filters | |
Transmit chain architecture | |
Filtering prior to modulation | |
Transistors | |
Current mirrors | |
Gilbert cells | |
Gilbert cells with current mirrors | |
The Patent | |
The claims | |
The person skilled in the art | |
Common general knowledge | |
Construction | |
Claims 1: general points | |
A modulator | |
A modulator using a Gilbert cell, the modulator comprising | |
A switching arrangement for coupling a carrier wave to the modulator | |
A driver arrangement to couple an information signal to the modulator | |
At least one low-pass filter arrangement located between the pair of transistors | |
To filter the information signal to the modulator before the information signal is mixed with the carrier wave | |
The prior art | |
Itakura | |
Tan | |
Novelty | |
Novelty of claim 1 over Itakura | |
Novelty of claim 6 over Itakura | |
Obviousness | |
The law | |
Obviousness of claim 1 | |
Obviousness of claims 6 and 7 | |
Infringement | |
HTC's licence defence | |
Summary of conclusions | |
Annex 1 | |
Confidential Annex 2 |
|
Confidential Annex 3 |
|
Introduction
The witnesses
Technical experts
Experts on US law
Mobile telephone networks
Transceivers
Modulation
IQ modulators
Low-pass filters
frequency. The steepness of the slope can be increased by combining filters to produce a second-order filter, a third-order filter and so on.
Anti-aliasing filters
Transmit chain architecture
Filtering prior to modulation
Transistors
In simple terms, a voltage applied at the base with respect to the emitter will allow a current to flow between collector and emitter.
Current mirrors
i) "folding" a circuit to avoid "stacking" of multiple levels of components, and so allow it to use a lower voltage power supply;
ii) biasing (setting up components to their operating condition); and
iii) duplicating a current which has different associated voltages.
Gilbert cells
Gilbert cells with current mirrors
"In modulation a carrier frequency is modified in a certain way so that the data to be transmitted using the radio signal is carried, for example, in the changes of the phase or amplitude of the carrier frequency. There are many modulation methods, which differ in the sense which properties of the carrier wave are modulated and how they are modulated. The arrangement that performs the modification of the carrier wave is called a modulator. There are also many types of modulators. A direct conversion modulator, for example, may be used in mobile stations. In a direct conversion modulator the modulation is performed directly in the carrier frequency; there is no intermediate frequency in the modulation process."
"[0008] Previously there is also known a so called Gilbert cell, which is generally used in integrated multiplicator circuits of telecommunication systems, particularly in mobile stations. Multiplicator circuits are used for instance in integrated RF (radio frequency) and intermediate frequency sections, such as in the modulator, the mixer and the regulated amplifier.
[0009] US patent US 5,172,079 describes a modulator using a Gilbert cell with current mirrors in its driving arrangement."
It is common ground that [0008] should more accurately refer to multiplier circuits.
"[0018] A problem in known devices is that a mobile station operating at two or three frequency bands, i.e. a dual-band or triple-band mobile station, requires many filters, which occupy too much space in a mobile station. In practice the realization of a small-sized RF section in this way is impracticable, and therefore there is a tendency to avoid filtering. However, when filtering is omitted the modulator must be of a particularly high quality.
[0019] A further problem of known devices is that they require separate filters between the modulator and the transmitter.
[0020] Against this background, the invention resides in minimizing in the modulator the noise accumulated to the modulated signal."
"[0024] The noise that a modulator causes to the receiver frequency range comprises the noise of the switch transistors in the modulator, the noise of the local oscillator, and the noise of the signal carrying the information to be transmitted. In a balanced modulator structure the noise due to the switch transistors is dampened so that it is not the dominating component in noise. Current state-of-the-art bipolar transistors nowadays usually have low enough noise level.
[0025] The noise in the information signal can be a dominating factor, especially in direct conversion modulators. Therefore it is advantageous to filter the possible noise component away from the signal carrying the information to be transmitted. In a modulator according to the invention, this filtering is carried out in the modulator.
[0026] A modulator here refers to an arrangement where the information signal, i.e. the signal carrying the data to be transmitted, and the signal having the carrier frequency interact. …"
This shows a current mirror consisting of a pair of transistors Q23 and Q24 and a low-pass filter in box 9 consisting of resistor R5 and capacitor C1.
The claims
"[A] A modulator using a Gilbert cell, the modulator comprising
[B] a switching arrangement for coupling a carrier wave to the modulator
[C] and a driver arrangement to couple an information signal to the modulator
[D] wherein said driver arrangement comprises current mirrors and at least one of said current mirrors comprises a pair of transistors
[E] characterised by at least one low-pass filter arrangement located between the pair of transistors to filter the information signal to the modulator before the information signal is mixed with the carrier wave."
"6. A modulator according to claim 1, comprising a direct conversion modulator.
7. A mobile station comprising a transceiver having a modulator according to any one of claims 1-6."
The person skilled in the art
Common general knowledge
Construction
Claim 1: general points
A modulator
A modulator using a Gilbert cell, the modulator comprising
A switching arrangement for coupling a carrier wave to the modulator
A driver arrangement to couple an information signal to the modulator
At least one low-pass filter arrangement located between the pair of transistors
To filter the information signal to the modulator before the information signal is mixed with the carrier wave
The prior art
Itakura
"The present invention relates to electronic circuits including signal current reflecting means such as current mirror circuits, reflection cascode circuits and the like, and more specifically to an electronic circuit including feedforward means for compensating operational speed of the signal current reflecting means. A multiplier is suggested as an example of the electronic circuit including the signal current reflecting means."
"In order to achieve the above object, an electronic circuit according to the present invention and including signal current reflection means having an input portion and an output portion, comprises voltage-current conversion means for generating an output current in proportion with an input current; the signal current reflection means including the input portion having an input terminal for receiving the output current from the voltage-current conversion means and the output portion for outputting the current after reflection, and including low frequency signal passing means provided between a control electrode of a transistor constituting the input portion and a control electrode of a transistor constituting the output portion and for passing through a low frequency signal component occurring in the control electrodes of the transistors; and feedforward means provided between the input terminal of the input portion of the signal current reflection means and an output stage of the electronic circuit and for causing a high frequency signal component supplied to the signal current reflection means to flow into the output stage.
It is required that the electronic circuit comprises a low pass filter for limiting a bandwidth of a control signal which is supplied to a gate or base of at least a transistor through which an input current flows in a current mirror circuit as the signal current reflection means, and a feedforward signal path provided by a capacitance between an input terminal of the current mirror circuit and other terminal of the electronic circuit including the current mirror circuit."
i) the circuit includes a low-pass filter which limits the bandwidth of the feedback signal which is supplied to the gate of the input transistor; and
ii) the circuit also includes a feed-forward signal path between the input terminal of the current mirror and the other terminal of the circuit.
"As configured in the above construction, even though the current mirror circuit has a low input impedance with respect to the low frequency signal component because the low pass filter which is provided at the gate of the transistor in which the input current flows in the current mirror circuit supplies the control signal in which the high frequency signal component is limited, the electronic circuit including the current mirror has a high input impedance because the current mirror circuit operates as a constant current source with respect to the high frequency signal component.
At this time, since the feedforward signal path is provided by a capacitance between an input of the current mirror circuit and other terminal of the electronic circuit, the signal is transmitted through the current mirror circuit in the low frequency, while the signal is transmitted through the feedforward signal path in the high frequency. Accordingly, since the signal of the high frequency is transmitted without passing through the current mirror circuit, it is impossible [sic – it is common ground that this should say "possible"] to improve the characteristics of the signal in the high frequency.
As described above, since the input impedance in the current mirror circuit becomes larger in accordance with the frequency being higher, the high frequency signal component of the input current is fed forward to the output or the node near the output through the capacitance constituting the feedforward signal path. Since the signal in the high frequency can be transmitted by bypassing the current mirror circuit which is configured of a P-MOS FET, it is possible to prevent the deterioration of the performance caused by a gain in the current mirror circuit which is configured by the P-MOS FET."
Tan
"Unlike in a traditional voltage-mode filter, the voltage change at the gates of M1 and M2 in the circuit of FIG.3 are small and the demand on the linearity of passive components is significantly reduced."
This has benefits in terms of the components that can be used, the chip area required, the fabrication techniques that can be used and the power consumption that is needed.
Novelty
Novelty of claim 1 over Itakura
Novelty of claim 6 over Itakura
Obviousness
The law
"(1)(a) Identify the notional 'person skilled in the art';
(b) Identify the relevant common general knowledge of that person;
(2) Identify the inventive concept of the claim in question or if that cannot readily be done, construe it;
(3) Identify what, if any, differences exist between the matter cited as forming part of the 'state of the art' and the inventive concept of the claim or the claim as construed;
(4) Viewed without any knowledge of the alleged invention as claimed, do those differences constitute steps which would have been obvious to the person skilled in the art or do they require any degree of invention?"
Obviousness of claim 1
Obviousness of claims 6 and 7
Infringement
Devices | Chips |
One SV (non-LTE) | Qualcomm WTR1605 |
One, One SV (LTE) | Qualcomm WTR1605L |
Wildfire S | Broadcom BCM4329 |
One SV (LTE), | Broadcom BCM4334 |
One SV (non-LTE) |
HTC's licence defence
"… a person infringes a patent for an invention if, but only if, while the patent is in force, he does any of the following things in the United Kingdom in relation to the invention without the consent of the proprietor of the patent …"
"But where a man carries on the two manufactories himself, and himself disposes of the article abroad, unless it can be shewn, not that there is some clear injunction to his agents, but that there is some clear communication to the party to whom the article is sold, I apprehend that, inasmuch as he has the right of vending the goods in France or Belgium or England , or in any other quarter of the globe, he transfers with the goods necessarily the license to use them wherever the purchaser pleases. When a man has purchased an article he expects to have the control of it, and there must be some clear and explicit agreement to the contrary to justify the vendor in saying that he has not given the purchaser his license to sell the article, or to use it wherever he pleases as against himself."
"The difference in the two theories is that an implied licence may be excluded by express contrary agreement or made subject to conditions while the exhaustion doctrine leaves no patent rights to be enforced."
"It is the law that where the patentee supplies his product and at the time of the supply informs the person supplied (normally via the contract) that there are limitations as to what may be done with the product supplied then, provided those terms are brought home first to the person originally supplied and, second, to subsequent dealers in the product, no licence to carry out or do any act outside the terms of the licence runs with the goods. If no limited licence is imposed on them at the time of the first supply no amount of notice thereafter either to the original supplyee (if that is the appropriate word) or persons who derive title from him can turn the general licence into a limited licence. "
"In my opinion the license to use a patented invention under a foreign patent stands in a very different position from the sale of an article manufactured under either a foreign or an English patent. When an article is sold without any restriction on the buyer, whether it is manufactured under one or the other patent, that, in my opinion, as against the vendor gives the purchaser an absolute right to deal with that which he so buys in any way he thinks fit, and of course that includes selling in any country where there is a patent in the possession of and owned by the vendor. Here, as is pointed out, it is simply a license to manufacture. "
"In the case of a sale by a licensee the matter must depend on the extent of the authority conferred on the licensee by the licensor under the licence or other agreements between them. In this case the American or Panamanian patents are not the same patents as the patents registered in Kenya, and it follows that a release or discharge from the monopoly of United States or Panamanian patents does not necessarily imply a release from the Kenya patent. Whether there is such a release from the Kenya patent must depend on the contract. The mere ownership of the patented articles does not imply a discharge from foreign patents."
"The 1971 agreement, exhibit PJT. 3, now governs the matter and this, it is stated, must be construed according to the law of New York State. As such it is the subject of the evidence of Mr. Schoemer, a New York lawyer. He makes it clear that no right by that agreement is given to Union Carbide to license anyone under the plaintiffs' English patent here in question. This being the position, Union Carbide cannot pass on to Rhodes any rights which they themselves have not got, and Rhodes equally cannot pass on any such rights to the defendants. The latter, therefore, though they could presumably use or sell the goods in question in the U.S.A., cannot import them into this country without running foul of the plaintiffs' English letters patent. As I see it, all that is involved here is straightforward enforcement of rights under United Kingdom letters patent …."
"(6) … the proprietor of a registered trade mark cannot use it to prevent authorised external goods from entering the EEA if he has agreed, expressly or otherwise, to such entry or he has, directly or otherwise, placed the goods in the hands of a third party under conditions which give the third party a right to distribute and onward sell them without restriction.
(7) In deciding whether the third party has a right to distribute and onward sell them without restriction regard must be had to all the relevant circumstances including the nature of the goods, the circumstances under which they were put on the market, the terms of any contracts for sale and the provisions of any applicable law.
(8) In particular, the rights of the third party can be determined by the law of the contract of supply to that customer or the law of the non-EEA country in which the sale to the third party takes place. Where that law includes a rebuttable presumption that, in the absence of full and explicit restrictions being imposed on purchasers at the time of purchase, the proprietor is treated as consenting to the goods being imported into and sold in the EEA, courts within the EEA are free to recognise the effect of that law and to allow importation of the authorised external goods accordingly."
"Clear and unambiguous language in an insurance policy should be given its ordinary and usual meaning. … "[W]hen the language of an insurance contract is clear and unequivocal, a party will be bound by its plain meaning because creating an ambiguity where none exists could, in effect, create a new contract with rights, liabilities and duties which the parties had not assented. ... Courts will not torture contractual terms to impart ambiguity where ordinary meaning leaves no room for uncertainty. … The true test is not what the parties to the contract intended it to mean, but what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would have thought it meant."
"The longstanding doctrine of patent exhaustion provides that the initial authorized sale of a patented item terminates all patent rights to that item."
In section IIIA, he considered and rejected LG's argument that the doctrine did not apply to method claims. In section IIIB, he considered and rejected an argument by LG to the effect that the doctrine only applied where the article sold embodied all the features of the patented invention, holding that the doctrine applied even if the article substantially embodied the patented invention and its only and intended use was in accordance with that invention. In section IIIC, he considered LG's argument that there was no authorised sale in the instant case because the licence did not permit Intel to sell its products for use in combination with non-Intel products. He rejected this argument on the ground that nothing in the licence agreement restricted Intel's right to sell its microprocessors and chipsets to purchasers who intended to combine them with non-Intel parts. He also pointed out that Quanta did not claim the benefit of an implied licence, but of the doctrine of exhaustion.
"Defendants assert that Quanta created a rule of 'strict exhaustion', that the Court's failure to recite the territoriality requirement eliminated it. That case, however, did not involve foreign sales. Defendants rely on Quanta's footnote 6 because it contains the phrase '[w]hether outside the country. … Read properly, the phrase defendants rely on supports, rather than undermines, the exhaustion doctrine's territoriality requirement."
Summary of conclusions
i) claim 1 of the Patent is novel over Itakura;
ii) claim 1 is not obvious over either Itakura or Tan;
iii) each of the representative HTC devices falls within claim 1; and
iv) HTC has not established its defence of licence.
Annex 1