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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BASF AG v Smithkline Beecham Plc [2003] EWCA Civ 872 (25 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/872.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 872, [2003] RPC 49 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE PUMFREY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY
____________________
BASF AG |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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SMITHKLINE BEECHAM PLC |
Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr R. Wyand QC and Mr M. Tappin (instructed Addleshaw Goddard) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aldous:
"1. Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol.
1.2.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound organic solvent.
2.3.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol with the proviso that it is other than Form Z.
3.8.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-olas defined in claim 1in Form A; which is characterised in that
4.9.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-olas defined in claim 1in Form B; which is characterised in that
5.10.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol asdefined in claim 1in Form C; which is characterised in that
6.11.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-olas defined in claim 1in Form D which is characterised in that
7.12. Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate as defined in claim 38, which is in the form of needles.
8.13.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate as defined in claim 49, which is in the form of needles.
9.14.Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate as defined in claim 510, which is in the form of needles or prisms.
10.16.A process for the preparation of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol which comprises crystallising paroxetine hydrochloride in either:
(i) an organic solvent or mixture of organic solvents which form a solvate with the paroxetine hydrochloride and which are not removable by conventional vacuum oven drying techniques; or
(ii) an organic solvent or mixture or organic solvents which do or do not form a solvate with the paroxetine hydrochloride but which are removable by conventional vacuum oven drying;
thereafter in the case of (i) displacing the solvated solvent or solvents using a displacing agent and in the case of (ii) by removing the solvent.
11.18.A process for the preparation of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound organic solvent which comprises displacing the solvated solvent or solvents from a paroxetine hydrochloride solvate using a displacing agent.
12.19.A pharmaceutical composition comprising a compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-93 or 7-15and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
13.20.The use of a compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-93 or 7-15in the manufacture of a medicament for the treatment and/or prevention of the Disorders as defined herein."
"Subsequent repetition of the preparation described in Example 8 has failed to yield any type of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate, and there is no clear teaching elsewhere in the document of any alternative route or modification to the process which would generate the anhydrate.
Paroxetine hydrochloride is also purported to be disclosed in the International Journal of Pharmaceutics 42, (1988) 135 to 143, published by Elsevier. The anhydrate is said to be produced by crystallising paroxetine hydrochloride from anhydrous propan-2-ol. Subsequent repetition of this process has resulted in a propan-2-ol solvate of paroxetine hydrochloride. That is to say that there is bound propan-2-ol in the product. This bound propan-2-ol cannot be removed by conventional drying techniques such as vacuum oven drying.
Paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol has not been described in the literature, nor has any method been disclosed which would yield such a product as an inevitable result. A method for preparing paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol has now been found. Furthermore, surprisingly, four new forms of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate have been found as have processes for their preparation. These forms are hereinafter referred to as A, B, C and D respectively. The characterising data for Forms A, B, C and D do not correspond to the characterising data provided in Example 8 of EP-A-223403.
Accordingly, the present invention provides paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound organic solvent.
The present invention also provides paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol with the proviso that it is other than Form Z.
Substantially free of bound organic solvent is to be interpreted to be less than the amount of propan-2-ol which would remain solvated, i.e. bound, within the crystal lattice of the product under conventional vacuum oven drying conditions."
"It should be understood that the present invention comprising paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol may contain unbound water, that is to say water which is other than water of crystallisation."
"Typically the amount of bound organic solvent on a weight for weight basis would be less than 2.0% preferably less than 1.8%, more preferably less than 1.5%, even more preferably less than 1.0%, yet more preferably less than 0.5% and most preferably less than 0.1%.
Preferred forms of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound propan-2-ol or substantially free of bound organic solvent include:
i) paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate in Form A; (as hereinafter defined)
ii) paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate in Form B (as hereinafter defined)
iii) paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate in Form C; (as hereinafter defined)
iv) paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate in Form D; (as hereinafter defined)."
"The present invention also provides a process for the preparation of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of propan-2-ol which comprises crystallising paroxetine hydrochloride in either
i) an organic solvent or mixture of organic solvents which form a solvate with the paroxetine hydrochloride and which are not removable by conventional drying techniques; or
ii) an organic solvent or mixture [of] organic solvents which do or do not form a solvate but which are removable by conventional vacuum oven drying;
thereafter in the case of i) displacing the solvated solvent or solvents using a displacing agent and in the case of ii) by removing the solvent.
The present invention also provides a process for the preparation of paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate substantially free of bound organic solvent which comprises displacing the solvated solvent or solvents from a paroxetine hydrochloride solvate using a displacing agent."
"1. - Patentable inventions.
(1) A patent may be granted only for an invention in respect of which the following conditions are satisfied, that is to say -
(a) the invention is new;
(b) it involves an inventive step;
and references in this Act to a patentable invention shall be construed accordingly.
"
"2. - Novelty.
(1) An invention shall be taken to be new if it does not form part of the state of the art.
(2) The state of the art in the case of an invention shall be taken to comprise all matter (whether a product, a process, information about either, or anything else) which has at any time before the priority date of that invention been made available to the public (whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere) by written or oral description, by use or in any other way.
..."
"3. Inventive step.
An invention shall be taken to involve an inventive step if it is not obvious to a person skilled in the art, having regard to any matter which forms part of the state of the art by virtue only of section 2(2) above (and disregarding section 2(3) above)."
"14. For the purposes of this appeal, there is no dispute of substance between the parties as to the principles that have to be applied when considering whether a prior published document renders a claim invalid on the ground of novelty (see sections 2(1) and 2(2)). A classic statement of the law is contained in the judgment of the Court of Appeal in General Tire and Rubber Company v Firestone Tyre and Rubber Company Ltd [1972] RPC 457 at 485:
"When the prior inventor's publication and the patentee's claim have respectively been construed by the court in the light of all properly admissible evidence as to technical matters, the meaning of words and expressions used in the art and so forth, the question whether the patentee's claim is new for the purposes of section 32(1)(e) falls to be decided as a question of fact. If the prior inventor's publication contains a clear description of, or clear instructions to do or make, something that would infringe the patentee's claim if carried out after the grant of the patentee's patent, the patentee's claim will have been shown to lack the necessary novelty, that is to say, it will have been anticipated. The prior inventor, however, and the patentee may have approached the same device from different starting points and may for this reason, or it may be for other reasons, have so described their devices that it cannot be immediately discerned from a reading of the language which they have respectively used that they have discovered in truth the same device; but if carrying out the directions contained in the prior inventor's publication will inevitably result in something being made or done which, if the patentee's patent were valid, would constitute an infringement of the patentee's claim, this circumstance demonstrates that the patentee's claim has in fact been anticipated.
If on the other hand, the prior publication contains a direction which is capable of being carried out in a manner which would infringe the patentee's claim, but would be at least as likely to be carried out in a way which would not do so, the patentee's claim will not have been anticipated, although it may fail on the ground of obviousness. To anticipate the patentee's claim the prior publication must contain clear and unmistakable directions to do what the patentee claims to have invented: Flour Oxidizing Co. Ltd v. Carr & Co Ltd. ((1908) 25 RPC 428 at 457 line 34, approved in B.T.H. Co. Ltd v Metropolitan Vickers Electrical Co. Ltd (1928) 45 RPC 1 at 24, line 1). A signpost, however clear, upon the road to the patentee's invention will not suffice. The prior inventor must be clearly shown to have planted his flag at the precise destination before the patentee."
15. To that can be added the statement of Lord Oliver in Asahi Kasei Kogyo KK's Application [1991] RPC 485 at 539 line 22:
" for anticipation under subsection (2), published information requires to contain an enabling disclosure "
16. In that statement Lord Oliver was concluding that for matter to be "made available to the public" and therefore to form part of the state of the art, it had to enable the public to implement the disclosure.
17. It is I believe also apposite to cite passages from the speech of Lord Hoffmann in Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc v H.N. Norton & Co Ltd [1996] RPC 76 at 89:
"My Lords, I think that on this point the Patents Act 1977 is perfectly clear. Section 2(2) does not purport to confine the state of the art about products to knowledge of their chemical composition. It is the invention which must be new and which must therefore not be part of the state of the art. It is therefore part of the state of the art if the information which has been disclosed enables the public to know the product under a description sufficient to work the invention.
Other decisions of the EPO seem to me to make it clear that, at least for some purposes, products need not be known under their chemical description in order to be part of the state of the art. In BAYER/Diastereomers Decision T12/81 [1979-85] E.P.O.R. Vol. B. 308, 312, the Technical Board of Appeal said:
" ... [T]he concept of novelty must not be given such a narrow interpretation that only what has already been described in the same terms is prejudicial to it. The purpose of Art. 54(1) EPC is to prevent the state of the art being patented again. Art. 54(2) EPC defines the state of the art as comprising everything made available to the public before the date of filing in any way, including by written description. There are many ways of describing a substance in chemistry and this is usually done by giving its precise scientific designation. But the latter is not always available on the date of filing ... [It] is the practice of a number of patent offices to accept the process parameter, in the form of a product-by-process claim, for closer characterisation of inventions relating to chemical substances. To the Board's knowledge this is also the practice at the European Patent Office. If inventions relating to chemical substances defined by claims of this kind are patented, it necessarily follows that the resulting patent documents, once they enter the state of the art, will be prejudicial to the novelty of applications claiming the same substance although in a different and perhaps more closely defined form.
Anticipation by disclosure relies upon the communication to the public of information which enables it to do an act having the inevitable consequence of making the acid metabolite. The terfenadine specification teaches that the ingestion of terfenadine will produce a chemical reaction in the body and for the purposes of working the invention in this form, this is a sufficient description of the making of the acid metabolite. Under the description the acid metabolite was part of the state of the art.""
"Accordingly the present invention provides crystalline paroxetine hydrochloride as a novel material, in particular in pharmaceutically acceptable form.
It has been discovered that crystalline paroxetine hydrochloride can exist in at least two different pseudo-polymorphic forms,
1) a hemihydrate
2) an anhydrate
It has also been discovered that paroxetine hydrochloride can form crystalline solvates with certain solvents such as certain lower alcohols and acetone, in particular isopropyl alcohol.
Accordingly the present invention provides as novel forms of crystalline paroxetine hydrochloride:
1) paroxetine hydrochloride hemihydrate
2) paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate
3) paroxetine hydrochloride isopropanol solvate.'"
"The solvent is fairly weakly bound and may be removed by heating under vacuum. The solvate contains approximately 1 mole of isopropanol per mole."
"The crystalline anhydrate form of paroxetine hydrochloride may be prepared via the initial formation of a crystalline solvate e.g. propan-2-ol or acetone solvate, of the hydrochloride and followed by removal of the solvating solvent. The IPA [propan-2-ol] solvate may be conveniently obtained by crystallisation from propan-2-ol, ideally under anhydrous conditions, by adding gaseous or concentrated hydrochloric acid to a solution of the free base or acetate in propan-2-ol., or by crystallising or recrystallising preformed paroxetine hydrochloride from propan-2-ol solution. The solvent of solvation may be removed by drying, typically under vacuum at high temperature e.g. 60ΊC, to give the hygroscopic anhydrate.
[Page 6 lines 19-25] In practice the earlier described procedure for producing the anhydrate may result in the formation of some hemihydrate. The proportion of anhydrate to hemihydrate can be increased by drying at elevated temperatures.
[Page 6 line 35] To obtain the anhydrate by crystallisation/recrystallisation the solvent of choice is anhydrous isopropanol."
"The acetate salt was dissolved in isopropanol (2.4 litres) and treated with a mixture of concentrated hydrochloric acid (75ml) and more isopropanol. After standing at 0ΊC for about 16 hours, the crystals of the hydrochloride salt containing isopropanol were filtered off and dried. The salt was stirred in distilled water (0.5 litres) for about 20 minutes, filtered off and dried, giving paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate (m.p. 118ΊC)."
"The solvate of solution was fairly weakly bound and could be removed by drying at high temperatures."
"57. If it is desired to make paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate, Example 1 of '407 has a problem. The production of the hydrochloride in propan-2-ol solution is carried out using concentrated hydrochloric acid, which as I have indicated is aqueous. There is obviously a risk of making a hydrate or hemihydrate rather than the paroxetine hydrochloride anhydrate propan-2-ol solvate. SB say that if you carry out the experiment fairly, that is what you get. In my judgment, the experimental evidence as a whole failed to demonstrate that production of the anhydrate substantially free of bound isopropanol was an inevitable result of following these directions. The facts are as follows."
"59. The common feature of BASF's experiments are variations designed to enhance the anhydrous nature of the conditions under which the procedure is conducted. The direction to use concentrated hydrochloric acid, a bench reagent, necessarily involved the addition of some water. The instruction to add with it a further unspecified quantity of isopropanol ('more isopropanol') was followed by the addition of a very substantial quantity of isopropanol indeed (Dr Lee, with some hyperbole, described it as a swimming-pool-full), the effect being to dilute the water present substantially. In Experiment 3, the problem of the concentrated hydrochloric acid is overcome by varying the reagents so as to add HCl gas, which can be obtained substantially anhydrous.
60. BASF Experiment 3 persuaded me that in the production of anhydrate, the problem is really the use of concentrated hydrochloric acid. I have to say that the instruction at page 5 of the specification in respect of the crystalline anhydrate, ideally to use anhydrous conditions, seems to me a clear teaching that the anhydrate is achievable, and that if a hydrate is obtained the right thing to do is to change the conditions to make them more anhydrous. But this is not anticipation. I am quite satisfied that there is no question of inevitable result in this case. If Example 1 of '407 is repeated, the hemihydrate, not the anhydrate, will be obtained."
"The test to be applied for the purpose of ascertaining whether a man skilled in the art can readily correct the mistakes or readily supply the omissions, has been stated to be this: Can he rectify the mistakes and supply the omissions [without] the exercise of any inventive faculty? If he can, then the description of the specification is sufficient. If he cannot, the patent will be void for insufficiency."
"The law regarding anticipation derives from Lord Westbury's statement of it in Hills v Evans (1862) 4DeG., F&J. 288. There are two branches of this statement. The first is that "a person of ordinary knowledge of the subject would at once perceive and understand and be able practically to apply the discovery without the necessity of making further experiments". The appellants maintain that even if the skilled man could perceive in the photograph all the integers in claim 1 he could not apply the discovery without making further experiments. But Lord Westbury must have meant experiments with a view to discovering something not disclosed. He cannot have meant to refer to the ordinary methods of trial and error which involve no inventive step and are generally necessary in applying any discovery to produce a practical result. That view appears to have been generally accepted, and I need only refer to the speech of Lord Maugham in No-Fume Limited v. Pitchford (1935) 52 RPC 231. The other requirement is that "the information given by the prior publication must for the purposes of practical utility be equal to that given by the subsequent patent." There may be cases where the skilled man has to have the language of the prior publication translated for him or where he must get from a scientist the meaning of technical terms or ideas with which he is not familiar, but once he has got this he must be able to make the machine from what is disclosed by the prior publication. This part of Lord Westbury's statement appears to have been universally accepted, and I need only refer to the latest authority in this House, Martin v. Millwood [1956] RPC 125."
"Now the question is, what must be the antecedent statement? I apprehend the principle is correctly thus expressed: the antecedent statement must be such that a person of ordinary knowledge of the subject would at once perceive, understand and be able practically to apply the discovery without the necessity for making further experiments and gaining further information before the invention can be made useful. If something remains to be ascertained which is necessary for the useful application of the discovery, that affords sufficient room for another valid patent."
"Whatever therefore is essential to the invention must be read out of the prior publication. If specific details are necessary for the practical working and real utility of the alleged invention, they must be found substantially in the prior publication.
Apparent generality, or a proposition not true to its full extent, will not prejudice a subsequent statement which is limited and accurate, and gives a specific rule of practical application.
The reason is manifest, because much further information, and therefore much further discovery, are required before the real truth can be extricated and embodied in a form to serve the use of mankind. It is the difference between the ore and the refined and pure metal which is extracted from it.
Again, it is not, in my opinion, true in these cases to say, that knowledge, and the means of obtaining knowledge, are the same. There is a great difference between them. To carry me to the place at which I wish to arrive is very different from merely putting me on the road that leads to it. There may be a latent truth in the words of a former writer, not known even to the writer himself: and it would be unreasonable to say that there is no merit in discovering and unfolding it to the world.
Upon principle, therefore, I conclude that the prior knowledge of an invention to avoid a patent must be knowledge equal to that required to be given by a specification, namely, such knowledge as will enable the public to perceive the very discovery, and to carry the invention into practical use."
"78. The starting point is to assume that the skilled man has performed Example 1, and has obtained the hemihydrate. What would he do? The evidence (not least of BASF's experiments) is that he would take all steps to remove the water, following the clear teaching at page 5 line 32 that the ideal conditions are anhydrous. Principally this means that he would use gaseous hydrogen chloride rather than concentrated hydrochloric acid, and BASF's Experiment 3 shows, I think, that his efforts would be crowned with success. I am less impressed by Experiments 1 and 2. I do not think he would consider that the natural thing to do would be to increase the quantities of propan-2-ol so as to swamp the water unless lawyers were telling him that he had to use concentrated hydrochloric acid and the only freedom left to him was in the words 'more isopropanol'. The crucial question is whether the final washing step would survive the drive to anhydrous conditions, or whether it would be retained.
79. Dr Lee was satisfied that it would not. Dr Fishwick was consistent with Dr Lee in his criticisms of the SB experiments purporting to repeat Example 1 in pointing to their deficiencies in maintaining anhydrous conditions, but he thought the skilled man would retain the washing step even though he agreed that its employment was bizarre in the production of the anhydrate.
80. Although a great deal of evidence was directed to the point, I think the answer is rather clear. Unless the skilled man were to appreciate that the particular significance in the washing step was that it was converting the propan-2-ol solvate, obtained by the hydrochlorination and crystallisation in propan-2-ol, to the anhydrate, he would obviously drop it. The specification provides him with other suggestions for the elimination of solvents in general and propan-2-ol in particular. The passages I have quoted from pages 4 and 5 of the specification (paragraphs 47 and 49 above), and the concluding words of Example 5, are clear teaching that the propan-2-ol can be removed by drying, albeit not necessarily at conventional temperatures but at high temperatures. It was not suggested that in point of fact this was true, in the sense that the propan-2-ol remaining would be in sufficiently small quantities to satisfy the claim. Thus the skilled man is taught how to remove the solvent if present, and has no need to retain the odd step of washing a material in water with a view to obtaining an anhydrate.
81. I conclude, therefore, that the invention of claims 1 and 10 of the patent in suit are not invalid in the light of '407."
"The question of whether an invention was obvious had been called "a kind of jury question" (see Jenkins L.J. in Allmanna Svenska Elektriska A/B v. The Burntisland Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. (1952) 69 R.P.C. 63, 70) and should be treated with appropriate respect by an appellate court. It is true that in Benmax v Austin Motor Co Ltd. [1955] A.C. 370 this House decided that, while the judge's findings of primary fact, particularly if founded upon an assessment of the credibility of witnesses, were virtually unassailable, an appellate court would be more ready to differ from the judge's evaluation of those facts by reference to some legal standard such as negligence or obviousness. In drawing this distinction, however, Viscount Simonds went on to observe, at page 374, that it was "subject only to the weight which should, as a matter of course, be given to the opinion of the learned judge". The need for appellate caution in reversing the judge's evaluation of the facts is based upon much more solid grounds than professional courtesy. It is because specific findings of fact, even by the most meticulous judge, are inherently an incomplete statement of the impression which was made upon him by the primary evidence. His expressed findings are always surrounded by a penumbra of imprecision as to emphasis, relative weight, minor qualification and nuance (as Renan said, la vιritι est dans une nuance), of which time and language do not permit exact expression, but which may play an important part in the judge's overall evaluation. It would in my view be wrong to treat Benmax as authorising or requiring an appellate court to undertake a de novo evaluation of the facts in all cases in which no question of the credibility of witnesses is involved. Where the application of a legal standard such as negligence or obviousness involves no question of principle but is simply a matter of degree, an appellate court should be very cautious in differing from the judge's evaluation."
"There are, we think, four steps which require to be taken in answering the jury question. The first is to identify the inventive concept embodied in the patent in suit. Thereafter, the court has to assume the mantle of the normally skilled but unimaginative addressee in the art at the priority date and to impute to him what was, at that date, common general knowledge in the art in question. The third step is to identify what, if any, differences exist between the matter cited as being "known or used" and the alleged invention. Finally, the court has to ask itself whether, viewed without any knowledge of the alleged invention, those differences constitute steps which would have been obvious to the skilled man or whether they require any degree of invention."
"Q. ... So you can do a check, a rough check, at that stage to see whether you have got the solvate. You know that so far as this specification is concerned, these people believe that you can put your crystals into water and you will get the anhydrate at the end of it.
A. That is written.
Q. Yes. You may doubt that, but that is what they have told you.
A. Yes.
Q. And they have told you what they got at the end of it.
A. Yes.
Q. Would it therefore not be reasonable for someone who is interested in producing the anhydrate to try it?
A. It would be one of many things that one would try, but it would not be the first line of approach. I believe that the problem had occurred much earlier on by the water at the crystallisation stage.
Q. Yes. You would try to cure that problem first.
...
MR WYAND. ... I think your answer previously was that he would take steps to remove the water at the earlier stage. What I was saying was that that is precisely what you were doing.
A. I would try to remove water at every stage."
"A. Thank you, my Lord. I will consider that I needed to avoid water in this process. The first thing I would do would be to avoid water at every stage rather than simply at again ... we differ in terminology ... the "first stage", to use your terminology."
"MR WYAND. I will ask two more questions on this. It says "ideally anhydrous" for the reaction.
A. Yes.
Q. So that teaches you two possible things. (1) You go to a truly anhydrous system, so you put aside what it says in the first part of the example, and you use an anhydrous system instead of using example 1. That is one alternative.
A. Yes.
Q. The other alternative does that not tell you that you want to work towards what you call an anhydrous system? The way you do that, within the teaching of example 1, is to lower the water concentration.
A. It is somewhat surprising on page 5 that it says anhydrous, adding gaseous or concentrated hydrochloric acid.
Q. Yes. It is surprising, therefore you want to minimise the effect of the water. That is what the ....
A. To minimise the effect, and the way to do that is to avoid it completely.
Q. If you avoid it completely, and you get the solvate, then is it not reasonable to go back to example 1 where it tells you that if you washed it in water, you got the anhydrate?
A. Yes.
Q. You may be surprised at that, but it is a reasonable thing to go back to example 1 and try what they have told you to do.
A. Yes, I mean, with further information, I would realise that the intermediate that I obtained and attempted to dry, I could not get rid of the isopropanol completely. It would be a somewhat strange approach. I have never ever come across this approach until I became involved in this case.
Q. But it is what example 1 tells you to do.
A. It is what example 1 tells one.
Q. And perhaps you would not put all of it in because you have spent time, money and effort making the solvate, but you would try it with a sample.
A. I would try it with a sample, a sort of last resort.
Q. When you say "a last resort" it is having found you have got the solvate and you do not seem to be able to dry it you say "Well, I will go back and chuck a bit in water. I do not believe it is going to work, but that is what they told me to do so I will try it." You are not trying to say that the reasonable person would not try doing what example 1 tells you to do.
A. I accept that but.
Q. What is "but"?
A. This word "but" is that I am bothered with the words "more isopropanol", what example 1 tells me to do. My reading of that is simply that there was sufficient isopropanol to wash in the hydrochloric acid. The experiments that have been performed, in my view, have been major deviations from the teaching of example 1."
"The cross-examination of the respondent's expert followed with customary skill the familiar 'step by step' course. I do not find it persuasive. Once an invention has been made it is generally possible to postulate a combination of steps by which the inventor might have arrived at the invention that he claims in his specification if he started from something that was already known. But it is only because the invention has been made and has proved successful that it is possible to postulate from what starting point and by what particular combination of steps the inventor could have arrived at his invention. It may be that taken in isolation none of the steps which it is now possible to postulate, if taken in isolation appears to call for any inventive ingenuity. It is improbable that this reconstruction a posteriori represents the mental process by which an inventor in fact arrived at his invention, but, even if it were, inventive ingenuity laid in perceiving that the final result which was the object of the inventor to achieve was attainable from the particular starting point and in his selection of the particular combination of steps which would lead to that result."
Lord Justice Sedley:
"I entirely adopt what was said, I think, by one or two of the learned judges in the cases referred to by Mr Bousfield [Sir Richard Webster QC for the respondents had not been called upon], namely, the Skate case and the Phonograph case, that if the language of a claim be ambiguous, and it be fairly capable of two constructions, the Court would be disposed to adopt that construction which would uphold the patent, and not that which would render it invalid."
" it is the duty of the judge to construe a specification fairly with a judicial anxiety to support a really useful invention if it can be supported upon a reasonable interpretation of the patent; a judge is not to be astute to find flaws in small matters in a specification with a view to overthrow it. Any man acquainted with the patents of this county, and the patent law, knows perfectly well that is very strict, hard, and technical against inventors as it stands. The want of power to amend the specification of an invention in a trying point often prevents an excellent and useful thing, which has given the patentee the greatest trouble and anxiety and shews the exercise of remarkable powers of invention, from being secured to him merely because some slip has been made, as is too frequently the case."
" they spell every paragraph and every line in the patent, and try to persuade the court that some one line, or some one sentence in it is so bad that it makes the whole of the patent bad, and prevents the inventor from having the benefit of his invention, however useful or however great it may be. I do not hesitate to say myself, that when that is the sort of defence in such a case, the court ought to look carefully to see whether any one of those objections can be sustained. The court certainly under those circumstances ought not in any way to favour the objection. Those who take such objections must prove them strictly."
The rest of the Master of the Rolls' judgment illustrates this principle in practice. Kay LJ, agreeing, cited Frost on Patent Law:
"The court will construe the specification so as to support the patent if it can be fairly done, and will not be astute to find flaws in small matters in a specification with a view to overthrow it. Where any expression is ambiguous the court will endeavour to give effect to the intentions of the patentee."
"I do not like the expression 'benevolent interpretation'. I do not believe in it. The question is whether a given construction is the true construction; but, of course, if any patent is capable of more constructions than one, the general rule would be applied that you would put upon it that construction which makes it a valid patent rather than a construction which renders it invalid."
Even this approach leans towards the patentee, in a way which Jessel MR, despite the reasons which emerge very clearly from the passage I have cited, did not. The editors state the modern position, by contrast, as follows:
"The court does not resolve doubt in favour of the patentee, as this is not part of the purposive approach to construction [fn. Assidoman Multipack v Mead [1995] RPC 321, 332]. To do so would appear to be in conflict with the Protocol insofar as it requires there to be certainty for third parties."
They go on to cite Scanvaegt v Pelcombe [1998] FSR 786, 796 for the equal and opposite proposition that the patent is not to be construed contra proferentem.
The extent of the protection conferred by a European patent or a European patent application shall be determined by the terms of the claims. Nevertheless, the description and drawings shall be used to interpret the claims.
The Protocol importantly amplifies this provision:
Article 69 should not be interpreted in the sense that the extent of the protection conferred by a European patent is to be understood as that defined by a strict, literal meaning of the wording used in the claims, the description and drawings being employed only for the purpose of resolving an ambiguity found in the claims. Neither should it be interpreted in the sense that the claims serve only as a guideline and that the actual protection conferred may extend to what, from a consideration of the description and drawings by a person skilled in the art, the patentee has contemplated. On the contrary, it is to be interpreted as defining a position between these extremes which combines a fair protection for the patentee with a reasonable degree of certainty for third parties.
Mr Justice Lindsay: