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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 [2015] EWCA Civ 607 (24 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/607.html Cite as: [2015] RPC 32, [2015] EWCA Civ 607 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION (PATENTS COURT)
The Hon Mr Justice Birss
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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Smith & Nephew plc |
Respondent/Appellant |
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- and - |
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ConvaTec Technologies Inc -and- (1) T J Smith & Nephew Ltd (2) Smith & Nephew Medical Ltd |
Appellant Third Parties |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of the Appellant
James Mellor QC and Charlotte May QC (instructed by Bristows LLP)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent/Appellant and Third Parties
Hearing dates: 16/17 April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
i) the correct construction of the phrase "the agent being present in a concentration of between 1% and 25%". As I have mentioned, both sides have mounted a spirited attack on the judge's conclusion. ConvaTec contends that he ought to have found that it encompasses all concentrations greater than or equal to 0.5% and less than 25.5%. Smith & Nephew contend that he ought to have found that it encompasses all concentrations greater than or equal to precisely 1% and less than or equal to precisely 25%. However, and despite their assault on the judge's reasoning, Smith & Nephew's fall back position is, once again, that the judge's conclusion was correct. This would obviously be a more palatable result for them than the interpretation for which ConvaTec contends;
ii) whether the judge fell into error in rejecting the empirical approach to the calculation of carryover. As both sides accept, this issue falls away if the judge fell into error on the first issue. If ConvaTec is right on that first issue then both the Modified Process and the Original Process infringe. If, on the other hand, Smith & Nephew are right on that issue then neither process infringes.
The approach to interpretation of a numerical range
"(i) The first overarching principle is that contained in Art.69 of the European Patent Convention;
(ii) Art.69 says that the extent of protection is determined by the claims. It goes on to say that the description and drawings shall be used to interpret the claims. In short the claims are to be construed in context.
(iii) It follows that the claims are to be construed purposively—the inventor's purpose being ascertained from the description and drawings.
(iv) It further follows that the claims must not be construed as if they stood alone—the drawings and description only being used to resolve any ambiguity. Purpose is vital to the construction of claims.
(v) When ascertaining the inventor's purpose, it must be remembered that he may have several purposes depending on the level of generality of his invention. Typically, for instance, an inventor may have one, generally more than one, specific embodiment as well as a generalised concept. But there is no presumption that the patentee necessarily intended the widest possible meaning consistent with his purpose be given to the words that he used: purpose and meaning are different.
(vi) Thus purpose is not the be-all and end-all. One is still at the end of the day concerned with the meaning of the language used. Hence the other extreme of the Protocol—a mere guideline—is also ruled out by Art.69 itself. It is the terms of the claims which delineate the patentee's territory.
(vii) It follows that if the patentee has included what is obviously a deliberate limitation in his claims, it must have a meaning. One cannot disregard obviously intentional elements.
(viii) It also follows that where a patentee has used a word or phrase which, acontextually, might have a particular meaning (narrow or wide) it does not necessarily have that meaning in context.
(ix) It further follows that there is no general "doctrine of equivalents."
(x) On the other hand purposive construction can lead to the conclusion that a technically trivial or minor difference between an element of a claim and the corresponding element of the alleged infringement nonetheless falls within the meaning of the element when read purposively. This is not because there is a doctrine of equivalents: it is because that is the fair way to read the claim in context.
(xi) Finally purposive construction leads one to eschew the kind of meticulous verbal analysis which lawyers are too often tempted by their training to indulge."
"There is no evidence that the 75 per cent limitation, as opposed to, say, 76 per cent or 74 per cent, was crucial, nor that it would be seen to be crucial by the skilled addressee. Thus, variants close to 75 per cent limitation for a minor part of the junctions would not have a material effect upon the way the invention worked and that would have been obvious to the skilled addressee. Further the patentee would not be thought to have intended to exclude such variants from his monopoly. The skilled addressee would realize that the manufacture of plastics net structures by biaxially stretching was a process in which variations of thickness were certain and that the edges of the junctions could not be vertical. Thus, there would be some variation apparent when measuring the strands and the junctions, and also the measurements taken at the extreme edge would not be the place contemplated for the patentee."
"… It is a descriptive word or phrase to which the concept of an immaterial variant applies. In the cited case [Catnic Components v Hill & Smith Ltd [1982] RPC 183 (HL)] the 'descriptive' phrase was "extending vertically". If, instead, the claim had said "extending at an angle between 87.0º and 93.0º", this would not have been a descriptive phrase, but a specification of a precise range. It would be a unilateral statement in words of the patentee's own choosing informing the reader what he claimed to be an essential feature of his invention. If a product fell outside that range it would not be a question of a 'variant' at all, minor or otherwise. It would be a failure to adopt an essential feature. Even if an angle falling somewhere outside that range would work just as well, and this were obvious to all concerned, to hold non-infringement would not be to deny 'a fair protection for the patentee' in terms of the Protocol to the Convention; for the range he chose to specify was one which he himself must have considered to be fair at the relevant date. On the contrary, to hold otherwise would be to deny 'a reasonable degree of certainty for third parties'…"
"… Where the patentee has expressed himself in terms of a descriptive word or phrase there may be room for supposing that he was using language figuratively, and did not intend to restrict himself to the purely literal meaning. But where the patentee has defined an integer of his claim in terms of a range with specified numerical limits at each end, his purpose must be taken to have been to claim thus far and no further. His reason for doing so may not be apparent, but it may exist all the same, for instance it may lie 'buried in the prior art'. Further, in this case I believe that there are evident reasons of convenience and certainty which would have led him to claim in this way, as I have observed."
"That does not quite end the dispute over construction of integer H. Quixotically there is a dispute over the number 1.3 itself. What about a case where the SR [succination ratio] is, say 1.27 (on either party's formula)? Lubrizol say that 1.27 is, by the ordinary conventions of scientists, 1.3. The convention is simple: you should only refer to numbers to the number of figures which are reliable – "significant" as the scientists say. Thus in giving the ratio to only two figures the patentee must be regarding only those two figures as significant. A scientist would say there is a difference between "1.3" and "1.30", the latter being more exact.
Exxon say that this is contrary to the language of the claim: 1.27 is simply not "at least" 1.3. I do not agree. I think Lubrizol are right here. The ratio is a lower limit. There is no reason why that should be particularly precise – the effects of oversuccination increase with the ratio, but the exact cut-off below which a monopoly is not worth claiming need not be that precise. I think the patentee, by "1.3", means what a scientist would conventionally mean, namely "1.3 to two significant figures"."
"The notional skilled man would read the claim and the specification using conventions adopted by scientists, one of which was that numbers are given to the number of figures that are significant. It follows that in giving the ratio in two figures, the patentee was indicating that only those two figures were significant."
"The evidence is that pH is generally measured by a pH meter and in an industrial plant to one decimal point. The pH values for each of the examples in the patent are also recorded to one decimal point. This is to be contrasted with the claimed pH range of from 5 to 8."
"… I see no reason to construe 31 per cent and 35 per cent as meaning anything other than the specified number to two significant figures, so including 30.5 per cent to 35.4 per cent, or 30.50 per cent to 35.49 per cent, or 30.500 per cent to 35.499 per cent. These are implied statements about the precision of the measurement, no more. They are not statements about its accuracy."
"It is evident that the true meaning of a specific disclosure cannot be influenced by the units used to express it and that the present objection of lack of novelty relies on an ambiguity introduced artificially by the Appellant [opponent]."
The Patent
"The quantity of silver should be sufficient to provide a desired silver concentration in the material. The final concentration of silver in the material is between 0.1% and 20% by weight, for example, by weight of the resultant dressing. In some embodiments, the concentration of silver is between 0.1-10%, 1-10%, 10-20%, 5-20% or 0.1-1%. In one preferred embodiment, the final concentration of silver is between 1 and 5% by weight of the dressing. Preferably, the concentration in the treatment solution is from 0.001 g/g of polymer to 0.2 g/g of polymer, more preferably from 0.01 g/g of polymer to 0.2 g/g of polymer, more preferably from 0.01 g/g of polymer to 0.05 g/g of polymer. Preferably, where the source of silver is most facilely initially dissolved in water rather than the neat organic solvent, then added in an appropriate amount to give the desired concentration of silver in the final weight of the polymer."
"The quantity of agent used will depend upon the amount of polymer-containing material being prepared and the total volume of solution. Preferably, the agent is present in a concentration between .01 and 50% of the total volume of treatment. In some embodiments, the concentration of agent is between .01-25%, .01-10%, .01-5%, .1-5%, .1-25%, .1-10%, 1-25%, 1-10%, 1-5%, 5-25%, 10-25%, or 25-50% of the total volume of treatment. "
1. 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.
Exact values
Decimal places or significant figures?
i) non-zero digits are always significant;
ii) zeros between non-zero digits are always significant;
iii) leading zeros are never significant; if a decimal point appears in a number then trailing zeros are significant (before or after the decimal point);
iv) in the absence of a decimal point, trailing zeros are not generally significant unless stated otherwise either expressly or with a bar over the zero.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke: