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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 >> Smith & Nephew Plc v Convatec Technologies Inc [2012] EWCA Civ 1638 (14 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1638.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1638, [2013] RPC 9 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (PATENTS COURT)
His Honour Judge Birss QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
____________________
Smith & Nephew plc |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Convatec Technologies Inc (a company incorporated under the laws of the State of Nevada, USA) |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
for the Appellant
Piers Acland QC (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP)
for the Respondent
Hearing date: 30 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
The skilled team and the expert evidence
Technical background and the common general knowledge
The patent
"A method of preparing a light stabilized antimicrobial material, characterised in that the method comprises the steps of:
a) preparing a solution comprising an organic solvent and a source of silver in a quantity sufficient to provide a desired silver concentration in said material;
b) subjecting a material which includes gel-forming fibres containing one or more hydrophilic, amphoteric or anionic polymers to said solution for a time sufficient to incorporate said desired silver concentration into said polymer, wherein said polymer comprises a polysaccharide or modified polysaccharide, a polyvinylpyrrolidone, a polyvinyl alcohol, a polyvinyl ether, a polyurethane, a polyacrylate, a polyacrylamide, collagen, or gelatin or mixtures thereof; and
c) subjecting said polymer, during or after step (b) to one or more agents selected from the group consisting of ammonium salts, thiosulphates, chlorides and peroxides which facilitate the binding of said silver on said polymer, the agent being present in a concentration between 1% and 25% of the total volume of treatment, which material is substantially photostable upon drying, but which will dissociate to release said silver upon rehydration of said material."
The prior art – Kreidl
"This invention is based on the discovery that disinfectant silver halide preparations of an increased stability, more particularly with respect towards the action of light, may be obtained by having the silver halide protected by an excess of halide."
"Although the theory of the action of the excess halide is not quite understood, and the actual molecular structure of such combination products do not form part of this invention, it may be assumed that the silver halide products, according to this invention owe their increased stability to a complex formation of the simple silver halide (AgC1, AgBr, AgI) with other halides. It appears that in this protected state, the silver is more tightly bound to the halogen and thus not readily reduced by the solarizing influence of light. Regardless of any possible theory, our invention may be more clearly defined by the actual methods of carrying it out and by the description of the products resulting therefrom."
"According to one modification of our invention, stable solutions of the silver halides of chlorine, bromine and iodine which are highly suitable for disinfectant and the like purposes, but which are also of advantage for the preparation of solid silver halide preparations of limited solubility, as will be discussed more in detail in later parts of this specification, may be obtained by having the silver halides in solution in the presence of an excess of halide in the form of soluble halides of the halogen acids of chlorine, bromine and iodine, or in the form of the halide acids themselves. Without restricting this invention to any theory it may be assumed that the stability of such solutions may be due to the formation of complex silver halide compounds as described above. It need not be mentioned that not all of the excess halide will or need participate in the said complex formation, but, as appears to be witnessed by the increased solubility of the silver halides in more concentrated halide solutions, the formation of complex-like silver halides seems to be favored by increasing concentration of the halide type compounds. It was found, and this forms an important part of our invention, that such stable soluble silver halide compounds will not coagulate proteins and thus will not have any of the undesirable properties of the hitherto known silver disinfectants or other protein coagulating antiseptics. This property of the silver halide solutions according to this invention renders them particularly useful where they are to be used for bacteriostatic action in the treatment of the human body."
"According to another modification of our invention solid disinfectant halide preparations may be prepared which are only slightly soluble and, accordingly, at any given time will give off only small, though effective, amounts of the active silver and, accordingly will have a more or less permanent disinfecting property. Such solid products, according to our invention, will be characterized by the fact that they contain more halogen than corresponds to the stoichiometric composition of the simple silver halide (AgC1, AgBr, AgI) the excess halogen being present in the form of a halide type compound of chlorine, bromine, and iodine, the excess halogen, however, being not great enough as to increase the solubility of the formed stabilized compound substantially over that of the simple silver halide or that of the theoretical halogen compounds. The stability of such solid slightly soluble silver halide preparations according to this invention will be greatly increased by having them truly adsorbed on carrier such as on natural vegetable fibres, such as cotton fibres, or on adsorbent minerals, such as clays, and other adsorbent silicates and aluminium compounds. It is believed, although the invention is not limited by the theory, that the adsorption forces have a similar favorable effect on the stability of the solid, slightly soluble silver preparations, according to our invention, as the much greater excess of halides in the case of our liquid preparations. The increased stability of such adsorbed silver halide products is evidenced by the fact that only such adsorbed silver halide products of a slightly soluble character are not split by water but will give off gradually small amounts of the silver halide compound to a solvent without being affected by their light stability."
Obviousness – general principles
"(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?"
"90. One of the matters which it may be appropriate to take into account is whether it was obvious to try a particular route to an improved product or process. There may be no certainty of success but the skilled person might nevertheless assess the prospects of success as being sufficient to warrant a trial. In some circumstances this may be sufficient to render an invention obvious. On the other hand, there are areas of technology such as pharmaceuticals and biotechnology which are heavily dependent on research, and where workers are faced with many possible avenues to explore but have little idea if any one of them will prove fruitful. Nevertheless they do pursue them in the hope that they will find new and useful products. They plainly would not carry out this work if the prospects of success were so low as not to make them worthwhile. But denial of patent protection in all such cases would act as a significant deterrent to research.
91. For these reasons, the judgments of the courts in England and Wales and of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO often reveal an enquiry by the tribunal into whether it was obvious to pursue a particular approach with a reasonable or fair expectation of success as opposed to a hope to succeed. Whether a route has a reasonable or fair prospect of success will depend upon all the circumstances including an ability rationally to predict a successful outcome, how long the project may take, the extent to which the field is unexplored, the complexity or otherwise of any necessary experiments, whether such experiments can be performed by routine means and whether the skilled person will have to make a series of correct decisions along the way. Lord Hoffmann summarised the position in this way in Conor at [42]:
"In the Court of Appeal, Jacob LJ dealt comprehensively with the question of when an invention could be considered obvious on the ground that it was obvious to try. He correctly summarised the authorities, starting with the judgment of Diplock LJ in Johns-Manville Corporation's Patent [1967] RPC 479, by saying that the notion of something being obvious to try was useful only in a case where there was a fair expectation of success. How much of an expectation would be needed depended on the particular facts of the case."
92. Moreover, whether a route is obvious to try is only one of many considerations which it may be appropriate for the court to take into account. In Generics (UK) Ltd v H Lundbeck, [2008] EWCA Civ 311, [2008] RPC 19, at [24] and in Conor [2008] UKHL 49, [2008] RPC 28 at [42], Lord Hoffmann approved this statement of principle which I made at first instance in Lundbeck:
"The question of obviousness must be considered on the facts of each case. The court must consider the weight to be attached to any particular factor in the light of all the relevant circumstances. These may include such matters as the motive to find a solution to the problem the patent addresses, the number and extent of the possible avenues of research, the effort involved in pursuing them and the expectation of success."
93. Ultimately the court has to evaluate all the relevant circumstances in order to answer a single and relatively simple question of fact: was it obvious to the skilled but unimaginative addressee to make a product or carry out a process falling within the claim. As Aldous LJ said in Norton Healthcare v Beecham Group Plc (unreported, 19 June 1997):
"Each case depends upon the invention and the surrounding facts. No formula can be substituted for the words of the statute. In every case the Court has to weigh up the evidence and decide whether the invention was obvious. This is the statutory task.""
"178. These articles [Arts. 52 and 56 EPC] find their domestic equivalent in sections 1 and 3 of the Patents Act 1977. As Jacob LJ pointed out in Actavis UK Ltd v Novartis AG [2010] EWCA Civ 82 [2010] FSR 18 (§ 17):
"So at bottom the question is simply whether the invention is obvious. Any paraphrase or other test is only an aid to answering the statutory question."
179. The same point is made in Johns-Manville Corporation's Patent [1967] RPC 479, which is the starting point in domestic law of the idea of "obvious to try". In that case Diplock LJ said:
"I have endeavoured to refrain from coining a definition of "obviousness" which counsel may be tempted to cite in subsequent cases relating to different types of claims. Patent law can too easily be bedevilled by linguistics and the citation of a plethora of cases about other inventions of different kinds. The correctness of a decision upon an issue of obviousness does not depend upon whether or not the decider has paraphrased the words of the Act in some particular verbal formula. I doubt whether there is any verbal formula which is appropriate to all classes of claims."
180. In the same case Willmer LJ said:
"I would, however, desire to associate myself particularly with what Diplock, LJ said as to the undesirability of coining phrases for the purpose of paraphrasing the words of the Act."
181. These sentiments seem to have been largely ignored by the profession. It cannot be said too often that the statutory question is: was the invention obvious at the priority date? It is not: was it obvious to try? In my judgment too much elaboration of the statutory question has been attached to it. The questions of the degree of expectation of success and the length of time thought to be needed to undertake a trial have taken on lives of their own. I think that this happened in our case. Insistence on the statutory question is not a novel thought. It is also an obvious one: see Conor Medsystems Inc v Angiotech Pharmaceuticals Inc [2007] EWCA Civ 5 [2007] RPC 20 (§§ 44, 45 per Jacob LJ, approved on appeal: [2008] UKHL 49 [2008] RPC 28 § 42 per Lord Hoffmann; § 49 per Lord Walker; § 55 per Lord Neuberger). In Generics (UK) Ltd v H Lundbeck A/S [2007] EWHC 1040 (Pat) [2007] RPC 32 (§72) Kitchin LJ (as he then wasn't) said:
"The question of obviousness must be considered on the facts of each case. The court must consider the weight to be attached to any particular factor in the light of all the relevant circumstances. These may include such matters as the motive to find a solution to the problem the patent addresses, the number and extent of the possible avenues of research, the effort involved in pursuing them and the expectation of success."
182. This statement of principle was also approved by the House of Lords in Conor Medsystems Inc v Angiotech Pharmaceuticals Inc. One of the important points, to my mind, is that all these considerations interact with each other. In short, it all depends. MedImmune's argument proceeded on the basis that Novartis needed to establish (a) a fair prospect of success (b) within a reasonable time, as if these were two independent conditions that had to be satisfied. They are not successive hurdles to be jumped; they are no more than aspects of the statutory question: was the invention obvious? We should stick to the statutory question, which has to be applied in all sorts of circumstances and in all sorts of different fields of endeavour."
Obviousness - the issue
The judgment
"… turning now to the value of [Kreidl] to me in 2000. If I had the objective of making a high tech moist wound dressing, and was given [Kreidl], I would not have read it in its entirety but would have put the document on one side as low interest and low priority given: i) its age; ii) its lack of understanding of anything in terms of high tech dressings; iii) applying only to a cotton gauze; and iv) my view that it is only a possibility that the silver might have an association with the cotton gauze, which is by no means definitely the case. [Kreidl] largely teaches sterilising solutions. It also teaches the use of those solutions to impregnate a material, which itself then becomes a sterilising material. Notice that it is to sterilise and not to prevent microbial attack or to deal with an existing microbial infection on or in a human. The emphasis is on sterilising. I do not think that someone skilled in the art in 2000 and with the already stated quest of developing high-tech wound dressings would have paid a lot of attention to [Kreidl] for these reasons."
"[Kreidl] theorises that the "adsorption forces" of the carrier which have a similar effect on stability as the excess halide in the liquid preparations (page 3, left hand side lines 48-54). Perhaps the authors of [Kreidl] envisaged that some kind of non-specific interaction between the cellulose hydroxyl groups and the silver halide was at work. However in the absence of a clear explanation of the underlying mechanism, I believe that the skilled person would conclude that if there was any stabilization, it was most likely being achieved by physical shielding of the silver halide from the light. As I explained above, cotton fibres have an internal capillary running through the fibre. During the process, it is highly likely that a significant amount of the silver chloride that is formed (or the solid silver complexes) will be retained within these capillaries. If this is the case then they will be physically well shielded from light by the rest of the cotton fibre. This may well have a significant effect on the ability of the silver to discolour the surrounding organic material. Also, if there were to be a reaction between the silver and the internal surfaces of the capillary, the resulting discolouration may not be evident."
"i) He accepted that shielding would occur to the skilled person as possible in Kreidl but did not accept that shielding was the only rational explanation.
ii) Although the skilled person would understand that Kreidl will be producing silver complexes, it was not common general knowledge that complexes were light-stable. Prof Burrell's view was that the reader may believe that it is the adsorbed form of complex which gives stability. This probably involved Van der Waals forces acting on complexes but the effect of this was not known to the skilled person."
"i) He maintained his view that he would have put Kreidl aside.
ii) He accepted that the key teaching of Kreidl was to create silver halide preparations with an excess of halide to bring about light stability and that the stability of such halides could be further increased by having them truly adsorbed on the material.
iii) He accepted that the teaching of Kreidl was not limited to cotton. Clays are offered as alternatives.
iv) He accepted that Kreidl forms silver chloride complexes and they will be adsorbed onto cotton by Van der Waals forces.
v) He did not accept that the term "adsorption" used in Kreidl would be understood by a skilled person in 2001 in its normal technical meaning."
i) The skilled person would not simply put Kreidl aside (at [184]).
ii) This was not a case in which the age of Kreidl in and of itself gave rise to an inference of non-obviousness; it was only with the more recent increase in antibiotic resistance that interest in silver had returned (at [185]). Nevertheless, a skilled person reading Kreidl in 2001 would notice that it dated from 1946 and would take that into account (at [186]).
iii) The skilled person reading Kreidl in 2001 would not think that adsorption was being used other than in its usual sense (at [187]).
"… in my judgment this is not a case in which the skilled person would simply try it and see. In some factual situations it might be obvious to a skilled person to have a go with an experiment even though they have no opinion about whether it will actually work. It may be obvious to test 10 different reagents in parallel with a reasonable expectation that one is likely [to] work albeit the skilled person does not know which one. That is not this case. Having heard both Professors, it seems to me that in this art the skilled person will not perform a test without thinking about the rationale for what they are doing. The skilled person in this field will consider how and why the test they are considering may or may not work before they carry it out. "
"Looking at the matter overall, it seems to me that three things will stand out to a skilled person reading Kreidl in 2001. First, the strong positive aspect is that here is a simple teaching which reports clear, successful results producing a light-stable silver impregnated wound dressing made of cotton gauze. Second however, I think the skilled person would be faced with a puzzle. He or she will certainly consider what is going on in Kreidl and see its teaching about complexes. There is nothing in his or her common general knowledge which supports Kreidl's idea that surface adsorption of complexes is the key to it. I find that the skilled person would also consider that shielding may well be the much simpler explanation. The fact that Kreidl teaches that clay can be used is clear support for the surface adsorption theory but in the end the skilled person is not interested in stabilising silver on clay, he or she is interested in stabilising silver in wound dressings. Third, the date of the document will stand out to a reader in 2001. Gel forming dressings such as Aquacel were a relatively recent invention in 2001 and did not exist in 1946. The skilled person would be aware of that. In terms of dressing materials, Kreidl focuses on cotton gauze and does not purport to refer to the modern gel forming dressing materials. The explanation why they are not referred to is obvious enough (they did not exist) but the fact remains that this is a document from the 1940s which is not concerned with modern materials. "
"195. I have no doubt that the skilled person would consider whether to test Aquacel in Kreidl's conditions (using an organic solvent) but the problem is the existence of alternative explanations for Kreidl's results. If surface adsorption of complexes is the explanation, the test on Aquacel has a prospect of achieving success. It might work. Nevertheless Aquacel is different from cotton gauze. It is one of the modern gel forming dressing materials and is not referred to in Kreidl. The skilled person would have no certainty that the test would work. It might or might not.
196. However if shielding is the explanation for Kreidl's cotton results then the method has no prospect of working with Aquacel at all. There are no places for the silver to be shielded in Aquacel. It may also be that both mechanisms are relevant in which case the skilled person will know that shielding will not provide any help with Aquacel."
"I think the key to the problem is that it would not be obvious to the skilled person which theory was right. Plainly the test could be done very simply but that is not enough. To run the test and see if the Kreidl conditions work for Aquacel, when the skilled person knows that the simpler explanation for Kreidl's results is one which will lead to certain failure and the other explanation by no means guarantees success, is not the act of an unimaginative person. I think it is the act of an inventive person. The obviousness case over Kreidl is a powerful and simple one but I am not persuaded that Convatec's claim lacks an inventive step. I find that the claim is valid over Kreidl."
The appeal
"Q. There is nothing in the skilled person's common general knowledge that would allow him to give that theory any particular credence, is there – the idea of adsorption conferring stability?
A. I would have to think of examples of that because we are here specifically talking about conferring photostability.
Q. Correct.
A. Correct. There are clearly examples where you can, through adsorption, effect other forms of stability.
Q. Indeed.
A. Again, it is not totally far-fetched, but it is something you would want to prove.
Q. Indeed. It is more than just wanting to prove, is it not, because the common general knowledge does not provide him with any support for the proposition that adsorption can confer photostability?
A. Yes. The common general knowledge would not, no.
Q. Indeed, one might say the skilled person would say, "That really cannot be right, reading this in 2001, because 50 years on after the publication of this document, or thereabouts, photoreduction of silver is a known problem with wound care products."
A. I would agree; it still is."
"In the case of cotton, physical shielding might well occur to some degree, however stabilised silver chloride would also be physisorbed to the cotton as described above."
"Q. … Let us think about what your expectation would be in relation to such a product. If you know or you assume that Kreidl's photostability is delivered by a combination of, let us call it, physical shielding, and physisorption on the surface of the fi[b]ers –
A. Yes.
Q. – given that Aquacel does not have a lumen, then your assumption must be, "I can use it in relation to Aquacel but it is not going to be particularly effective."
A. And that is the point I was trying to get to. Were both required or not? That is what I was saying. If the physisorption is an important part of it, then you might try it. But recognising that Aquacel did not have a lumen, if you believed the lumen was a significant part of it, you would be in the same position if you believed that the lumen was the only way. You probably would not do it. The only way you would do it is if you thought that physisorption was an important part of it."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jackson:
Lady Justice Arden: