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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Long v Comptroller General of Patents [2010] EWHC 2810 (Ch) (04 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2810.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2810 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LINDA LONG |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF PATENTS |
Respondent |
____________________
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan:
Introduction
The specification
"Preferably also, the indicator comprises a light source configured to illuminate an indicia (sic) in the absence of a vehicle in a parking space, and cast a shadow (e.g. of the vehicle) on said indicia in the presence of a vehicle in a parking space. More preferably, and where the car park has a ceiling, the indicia comprises a portion of the ceiling."
"1. A car park having indicators to indicate whether a parking space, or group of spaces, is occupied by a vehicle, each of said indicators being responsive to the presence of a vehicle in said space or group of spaces and comprising a light source configured to illuminate an indicia in the absence of a vehicle in a parking space and to cast a shadow on said indicia in the presence of a vehicle in a parking space.
2. A car park according to claim 1, wherein the car park has a ceiling and the indicia comprises a portion of the ceiling.
3. A car park according to either preceding claim and in which the indicator casts a shadow of the vehicle on the indicia."
The law
"The specification of an application shall disclose the invention in a manner which is clear enough and complete enough for the invention to be performed by a person skilled in the art."
"The claim or claims shall –
(a) define the matter for which the applicant seeks protection;
(b) be clear and concise;
(c) be supported by the description;
(d) relate to one invention or to a group of inventions which are so linked as to form a single inventive concept."
"Insufficiency is directed to the issue whether the description is sufficient to enable those persons to whom the specification is addressed to understand how the subject-matter of the patent, if it is for an article to be manufactured, has to be made, or, if it is a process or method, how it is to be worked. Ambiguity is directed to the issue whether the invention is sufficiently described and ascertained so as to enable the public to understand the scope of the monopoly granted by the Letters Patent."
The decision under appeal
"17 It is important to read a patent specification in the eyes of the skilled addressee. In this case I would take the skilled addressee to be a designer of car park layouts and features (rather than in the overall structural design of a car park) who is particularly skilled in internal features of a car park. In my view he would give the ordinary general meaning to the term "shadow" and the action "cast a shadow". Although this term can sometimes be used to refer to darkness (e.g. "the forest was in shadow") it is more commonly used in the context of an object blocking a source of light. In my view casting a shadow on an indicia means obscuring a light source so that an area containing the indicia which was illuminated by that light source is no longer illuminated. It does not matter whether the region around the indicia is darker than the surrounding area or is lit to the same level as the surrounding area. The indicia was lit by a light source and once a shadow has been cast on the indicia it is no longer lit by the light source. The fact that claim 1 says that the light source is configured to cast a shadow on the indicia when a vehicle is present adds support to this construction. Moreover the person skilled in the art of car park design will understand that the invention works by illuminating indicia to indicate free parking spaces. It is immaterial to the design whether, when a vehicle is present in a space, the indicia is lit to the same level as the surrounding area or to a lower level.
18 In summary I therefore conclude that the person skilled art (sic) would construe claim 1 to mean that when there is no vehicle in a parking space a light source illuminates an indicia. When there is a vehicle is (sic) present in the parking space the path the light takes from its source to the indicia is blocked in a way that the indicia is no longer illuminated by the light source. This would in my view be the construction given to the term "cast a shadow". The person skilled in the art would not limit the claim to light sources that are only partially obscured as the claim is not defined by the extent to which the light source is obscured. Rather it is defined by the indicia being no longer illuminated by the light source due to a shadow being cast on it.
19 The construction of the claim has been made more difficult for two reasons. Firstly there is little support in the description as to how the invention works, that is, how the light source is set up so that it illuminates an indicia when a vehicle is absent in a parking space and casts a shadow on the indicia when a vehicle is present in the parking space. There is therefore little in the description to guide the skilled reader on the construction of the claim. Secondly the invention is defined in claim 1 by the result to be achieved. The claim does not define the particular features of the light source or the way that it operates that would result in it illuminating an indicia in the absence of a vehicle or casting a shadow on an indicia in the presence of a vehicle. No information is given as to how the light source casts this shadow. I have inferred in my construction of the claim that the path the light takes between the light source and the indicia must be to some extent blocked but this information is not present in the claim. It would, subject to suitable disclosure of the description, have been possible to have described the invention in precise terms independent of the result to be achieved. The claim is therefore in my view unclear and does not satisfy the requirements of section 14(5)(b) of the Act. Even if I decide that the claimed invention is novel and inventive over the prior art I remain doubtful as to whether an amendment is possible which would render the claim clear because of the first difficulty I have set out in this paragraph."
The parties' submissions
Discussion
Conclusions