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Intellectual Property Enterprise Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Intellectual Property Enterprise Court >> Saertex France SAS v Hexcel Reinforcements UK Ltd [2016] EWHC 966 (IPEC) (04 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/IPEC/2016/966.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 966 (IPEC) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENTERPRISE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SAERTEX FRANCE SAS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HEXCEL REINFORCEMENTS UK LIMITED (formerly FORMAX (UK) LIMITED) |
Defendant |
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Henry Ward (instructed by Gowling WLG (UK) LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22-23 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Hacon :
Introduction
The Patent
The claims
Claim 1 as granted
(i) A method of manufacturing a fibre-based armature intended to be embedded in a matrix or a mixture of matrices, characterised in that it comprises performing the following steps(ii) preparing a fibre-based material, and
(iii) depositing a repositionable adhesive on at least one of the surfaces of the material thus obtained.
This is broader than the method summarised at paragraph [0021] of the specification, there being no mention of a removable insert being placed on the adhesive. The insert appears in claim 2.
Claim 2 as granted
(i) A method of manufacturing a fibre-based armature according to claim 1,(ii) characterised in that it comprises a supplementary step that comprises pressing a removable insert on the face that received said layer of repositionable adhesive.
Claim 1 as conditionally proposed to be amended
This claim adds to claim 2 as granted the requirement that the adhesive is present only on the surface of the fibre-based material (integer (iv)). The fibre-based material is now stated to be "a fibre-based reinforcement material" (see integer (ii)) but it was not suggested by either side that this made any difference.
(i) A method of manufacturing a fibre-based armature intended to be embedded in a matrix or a mixture of matrices characterised in that it comprises performing the following steps(ii) preparing a fibre-based reinforcement material,
(iii) depositing a layer of repositionable adhesive on at least one of the surfaces of the reinforcement material thus obtained
(iv) wherein the adhesive is present only on the surface, and
(v) pressing a removable insert on the face that received said layer of repositionable adhesive.
Claim 5 as conditionally proposed to be amended
The use of a hot-melt glue as the adhesive is added as a further feature (ii):
(i) A method of manufacturing a fibre-based armature according to any one of the preceding claims,(ii) characterised in that the adhesive is chosen from hot-melt glues.
"[0021] The process consists in preparing a fibre-based armature, in depositing on at least one of the surfaces of the armature thus obtained a repositionable adhesive, and in pressing a removable insert on the face that received said layer of repositionable adhesive."
The skilled person
The law
The evolution of the skilled person in this case
The experts
Common general knowledge
Infringement
Hexcel's products
Construction
Pressing a removable insert on the face of the reinforcement that has received adhesive
Adhesive present only on the surface of the reinforcement
"[0028] In this arrangement with the armature according to the invention, the thickness of the reinforcement is maintained over all its surface because only the face is fixed without causing the fibres to adhere constituting the armature together, which could have the result of decreasing in places the thickness. The adhesive is in effect present only on the surface."
"f) Present only on the surface
13. Saertex say that the adhesive being present only on the surface should be construed as meaning that it does not extend far enough into the surface to cause the fibres constituting the reinforcement to adhere together, in reliance on [0028] (Skeleton ¶83). In principle this construction is understandable. In practice, however, given that the Patent says that adhesive can be applied with spray, it is not clear how such a result is achievable with any precision, and the Patent gives no assistance.
14. We assume that in their reliance on [0028], Saertex also take into account the last sentence, namely that "The adhesive is in effect present only on the surface." (emphasis added).
15. If so, i.e. if Saertex's construction encompasses the adhesive extending sufficiently far into the material that it has no practical effect on the performance of the reinforcement, then no difficulty arises. On that basis Hexcel would accept that this integer is fulfilled by the products said to infringe."
"Saertex's case is that ['present only on the surface'] should be construed in accordance with [0028]: the claims require that the repositionable adhesive is present on one of the surfaces of the fibre-based material such that when placed in the mould "only the face is fixed without causing the fibres to adhere constituting the armature together, which could have the result of decreasing in places the thickness"."
Hot-melt glues
Conclusion on infringement
Validity
Free beer
The law
(i) PCT Application WO 02/42548 A2 ('Cytec'),(ii) US Patent No. 4,349,599 ('Crystic'), and
(iii) An article entitled 'Working with Fibreglass' by Bill Anderson, published in the August 1996 issue of Model Aviation ('Working with Fibreglass').
The prior art in summary
Cytec
Crystic
Working with Fibreglass
Claim 1 as granted
Cytec and novelty
Cytec and inventive step
Crystic and novelty
Crystic and inventive step
Working with Fibreglass and novelty
Inventive step generally: technical prejudice
"[25] … There is an intellectual oddity about anti-obviousness or anti-anticipation arguments based on 'technical prejudice.' It is this: a prejudice can only come into play once you have had the idea. You cannot reject an idea as technically unfeasible or impractical unless you have had it first. And if you have had it first, how can the idea be anything other than old or obvious? Yet when a patent demonstrates that an established prejudice is unfounded – that what was considered unfeasible does in fact work, it would be contrary to the point of the patent system to hold the disclosure unpatentable.
[26] I put it this way in Union Carbide Corp v BP Chemicals Ltd [1998] RPC 1, 13:
"Invention can lie in finding out that that which those in the art thought ought not be done, ought to be done. From the point of view of the purpose of patent law it would be odd if there were no patent incentive for those who investigate the prejudices of the prior art."
[27] Patentability is justified because the prior idea which was thought not to work must, as a piece of prior art, be taken as it would be understood by the person skilled in the art. He will read it with the prejudice of such a person. So that which forms part of the state of the art really consists of two things in combination, the idea and the prejudice that it would not work or be impractical. A patentee who contributes something new by showing that, contrary to the mistaken prejudice, the idea will work or is practical has shown something new. He has shown that an apparent 'lion in the path' is merely a paper tiger. Then his contribution is novel and non-obvious and he deserves his patent.
[28] Where, however, the patentee merely patents an old idea thought not to work or to be practical and does not explain how or why, contrary to the prejudice, that it does work or is practical, things are different. Then his patent contributes nothing to human knowledge. The lion remains at least apparent (it may even be real) and the patent cannot be justified.
[29] This analysis does not require a different way of looking at the inventive concept depending on whether or not the patentee has shown the prejudice is unjustified as the judge thought at [67]. It is simply that in the former case the patentee has disclosed something novel and non-obvious, and in the latter not. The inventive concept, as I have said, is the essence of what is in the claim and not dependent on any question about a prejudice being overcome."
Working with Fibreglass and inventive step
Claim 2 as granted
Cytec: novelty and inventive step
Crystic and inventive step
Working with Fibreglass: novelty and inventive step
Claim 1 as conditionally proposed to be amended
Cytec and inventive step
Crystic and inventive step
Working with Fibreglass and inventive step
Claim 5 as conditionally proposed to be amended
Conclusion
(i) Claim 1 as granted lacks novelty over Cytec and Working with Fibreglass and lacks inventive step over Crystic.(ii) Claim 2 as granted lacks novelty over Working with Fibreglass and lacks inventive step over Cytec and Crystic.
(iii) Claim 1 as proposed to be amended lacks inventive step over Crystic.
(iv) Claim 5 as proposed to be amended lacks inventive step over Crystic.