Date: 20121220
Docket: A-477-11
Citation: 2012 FCA 333
CORAM: NADON
J.A.
GAUTHIER J.A.
MAINVILLE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
WENZEL DOWNHOLE TOOLS LTD.
AND WILLLIAM WENZEL
Appellants
and
NATIONAL-OILWELL CANADA LTD.,
NATIONAL OILWELL NOVA SCOTIA
COMPANY,
NATIONAL OILWELL VARCO INC.,
DRECO ENERGY SERVICES LTD.,
VECTOR OIL TOOL LTD. AND
FREDERICK W. PHEASEY
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
GAUTHIER J.A.
[1]
Wenzel
Downhole Tools Ltd. (Wenzel Ltd.) and William (Bill) Wenzel appeal from the
decision of Snider J. (the Judge) (public reasons reported at 2011 FC 1323)
dismissing their patent infringement action against the Respondents and
allowing the counterclaim invalidating Canadian Patent No. 2,026,630 (the ‘630
Patent) on the basis of anticipation and obviousness.
[2]
The
Appellants contest the Judge’s finding that the rental and use of a tool incorporating
what is referred to as the “3103 assembly” made the
invention claimed in the ‘630 Patent available to the public. In the
alternative, the appellants submit the judge misconstrued Claim 2 of the ‘630 Patent
by failing to recognize the parallel shoulders in the bearing assembly amounted
to an essential element. Consequently, the 3103 assembly lacking this
element could not be held to anticipate the ‘630 Patent.
[3]
Finally,
the Appellants say that the Judge applied the wrong test in her obviousness
analysis and therefore the matter should be sent back to her for re-determination.
[4]
For
the reasons that follow, I do not believe that the Judge made an error that
would justify this Court’s intervention.
Factual Background
[5]
Bill
Wenzel, the inventor named in the ‘630 Patent, has four brothers. He worked for
his older brother Kenneth (Ken) in a machine shop connected to the oil field
industry in the 1970’s, before proceeding to work in the same field with his
other brothers Doug and Bob.
[6]
In
1984, the Wenzel brothers all worked together. At some point, Ken left the
company to work with one of the Respondents, Dreco Energy Services Ltd. (Dreco).
In their memorandum, the Appellants refer to a dispute between the brothers
relating to the use of certain components in a downhole tool.
[7]
On
October 1, 1990, Bill Wenzel applied for a patent relating to a “method of
increasing the off-bottom load capacity of a bearing assembly”. His application
was published on April 2, 1992. The ‘630 Patent, which contains only 3 claims,
was issued on May 17, 1994. It was assigned to Wenzel Ltd. in 1997 at a time
when it operated under another corporate name.
[8]
Ken
Wenzel provided Dreco with services in the design and development of drilling
tools through his consulting company. Once such design was a bi-directional
thrust bearing assembly for use in a downhole drilling motor referred to as the
3103 assembly. This was a shorter than usual drilling motor better suited for
tighter turns with a shorter radius (Appeal Book Volume 10 at page 3011).
[9]
The
Judge found that such tool was designed in the fall of 1989. This is no longer
in dispute. It was used on a job in Dilley, Texas in early 1990 (the Dilley job),
that is, prior to October 1, 1990, when Bill Wenzel filed his application. More
particularly, the 3103 assemblies (three of them) were constructed by Griffith
Oil Tools (Griffith), a company in which Ken Wenzel was a shareholder with
Dreco until about 1980 when Dreco became the sole owner. These tools were
rented through a Griffith rental office in Rosenberg, Texas, to Ensco
Technology Company (Ensco), which used them on the Dilley job for Orynx Energy
Co.
[10]
By
statement of claim filed July 29, 2005 (Federal Court File no. T-1327-05), the
Appellants claimed that the Respondents were infringing their rights through
the manufacture and sale or rental of bearing assemblies identical in all
material respects to those protected by the ‘630 Patent.
[11]
At
that time, the Appellants knew that the Respondents would rely on the rental
and use of the 3103 assembly to dispute the novelty of the invention claimed in
the ‘630 Patent. This same defence was raised by Schlumberger, one of Vector’s clients
in the United States, when the Appellants (or their predecessor in title)
attempted to enforce the US equivalent to the `630 Patent, and sent
Schlumberger a cease and desist letter in respect of similar downhole drilling
motors.
[12]
Except
for some additional drawings, it appears that the documentary evidence in relation
to the rental and use of the 3103 assembly tools by Ensco was limited to what
had been obtained by Schlumberger’s lawyer in the fall of 1993.
The Federal Court Decision
[13]
In
her 88 page public reasons (the reasons) the Judge reviews in some detail the
evidence put forward in the 9-day trial, including the testimony of various
experts who testified about issues of construction, anticipation, obviousness
and utility.
[14]
After
summarizing the law applicable to the construction of patent claims and defining
the person of ordinary skills in the art (the POSITA) (the reasons at paragraphs
42-46), the Judge went on to construe the two independent claims at issue. She
addressed in particular the four points that were in dispute at the time
between the parties (the reasons at paragraph 54).
[15]
I
will only refer to her findings in respect of the third point, which is the
only one contested in this appeal: the significance of the use of the words
“generally aligned” in claim 1 as opposed to “generally parallel” in claim 2.
[16]
In
that respect, the Judge acknowledged that the word “parallel” ordinarily has a
precise mathematical meaning while “aligned” does not. Referring to the
evidence of one of the Respondents’ experts, Mr. Miller, she noted that the
use of different words in the two claims was somewhat of a mystery given that
parallelism without alignment would not be enough to form the containment
chamber as envisioned in claim 2. In fact, with respect to the latter, all the experts
agreed.
[17]
According
to Mr. Miller, whose evidence the Judge clearly accepted, when one considers
the claims with the drawing and after sketching the claimed elements, a POSITA
would come to the conclusion that “parallel” means the same thing as “aligned”
in this context. The Judge adopted this interpretation, noting that both
expressions were further qualified by the word “generally” and were meant to
describe that the shoulders in the outer and inner tubular members are
positioned in such a manner as to form a containment chamber.
[18]
At
paragraph 77 of her reasons, the Judge summarized the essential elements of the
two claims as follows:
[77] In summary on the issue of claims
construction, I conclude that Claim 1 (the method) and Claim 2 (the
improvement) are directed to a downhole drilling motor that includes an outer
tubular member, an inner tubular member and bearings between the inner tubular
member and outer tubular member to facilitate relative rotation of the outer
tubular member and inner tubular member while accommodating radial and axial
loads. The inner tubular member is a cylinder with a hollow centre. The
essential elements of the invention disclosed by Claims 1 and 2 are as follows:
1. first shoulder and a
second shoulder in opposed spaced relation on an interior surface of the outer
tubular member.
2. A first shoulder and a
second shoulder in opposed spaced relation on an exterior surface of the inner
tubular member.
3. The shoulders on the
inner tubular member being generally aligned (or parallel) with the shoulders
on the outer tubular member in such a manner as to define a containment
chamber.
4. At least one thrust
bearing in the containment chamber.
5. The thrust bearing
having a first side race and a second side race such that:
(a) when the bearing
assembly is placed in compression the first shoulder of the outer tubular
member bears against the first side race and the second shoulder of the inner
tubular member bears against the second side race; and
(b) when the bearing
assembly is placed in tension the second shoulder of the outer tubular member
bears against the second side race and the first shoulder of the inner tubular
member bears against the first side race.
[19]
Turning
to anticipation, the Judge considered the relevant authorities from the Supreme
Court of Canada (Apotex Inc. v. Sanofi-Synthelabo Canada Inc., 2008 SCC
61(Sanofi); Lac Minerals Ltd. v. International Corona Resources Ltd.,
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 574, [1989] S.C.J. No. 83 (QL)) and from this Court (Baker
Petrolite Corp.v. Canwell-Enviro Industries Ltd., 2002 FCA 158 (Baker
Petrolite); Bauer Hockey Corp v. Easton Sports Canada Inc., 2011 FCA
83 (Bauer); Weatherford Canada Ltd. v. Corlac Inc., 2011 FCA 228
(Weatherford)).
[20]
She
expressly noted that the core issue in respect of the 3103 assembly was whether,
on the facts before her, one could conclude that the claimed invention became
available to the public. She was guided in this respect by the analysis of
Rothstein J.A. (as he then was) in Baker Petrolite of the concept of
“became available to the public” within the meaning of the section 28.2 of the Patent
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-4. In that case, the learned judge made a non-exhaustive
list of relevant principles developed in Europe, including England, which, in
his view, was relevant given that the same criteria (available to the public)
was applicable in Europe since the adoption of the European Patent
Convention 1973 (EPC), and in England since at least 1977 when a new Patents
Act 1977 was adopted.
[21]
The
Judge found items 3 and 6 in the above-mentioned list particularly relevant.
These two items, set out at paragraph 86 of her reasons, are as follows:
3. The prior sale or use of a chemical
product will constitute enabling disclosure to the public if its composition
can be discovered through analysis of the product ….
6. It is not necessary to demonstrate that a
member of the public actually analyzed the product that was sold. In Lux,
supra, Aldous J. stated at page 133:
Further it is settled law that
there is no need to prove that anybody actually saw the disclosure provided the
relevant disclosure was in public. Thus an anticipating description in a book
will invalidate a patent if the book is on a shelf of a library open to the
public, whether or not anybody read the book and whether or not it was
situated in a dark and dusty corner of the library. If the book is available
to the public, then the public have the right to make and use the information
in the book without hindrance from a monopoly granted by the State. [Emphasis
added]
Although the comments of Aldous
J. use the example of prior publication to make the point, Lux was a
prior use case and the principle derived from his example is equally applicable
to prior use or sale as well as prior publication.
[Underlining and italics in original.]
[22]
Relying
on Aldous J. in Lux Traffic Controls Limited v. Pike Signals, [1993] R.P.C.
107 (Pat Ct) at 134 (Lux), the Judge further acknowledged at paragraph
87 of her reasons that to invalidate a patent, the description a POSITA could
write after examining a machine must be a clear and unambiguous description of
the invention claimed. It must also be sufficient to enable the POSITA to
practice the invention.
[23]
She
further recognized at paragraph 89 of the reasons that the public has been
defined as “a person who is free at law and in equity to use the information”.
This would thus exclude information disclosed on a confidential basis or in
circumstances giving rise to an implicit duty of confidentiality. She also
properly instructed herself as to the meaning of “experimental use”.
[24]
Applying
such law to the facts before her, the Judge found that the only difference
between the 3103 assembly and the claims of the ‘630 Patent is that the
shoulders in the 3103 assembly were bevelled whereas the ‘630 Patent does not
explicitly refer to bevelled shoulders, or to a specific design for such
shoulders. Having considered the expert evidence before her, she was satisfied
that the ‘630 Patent did not prohibit bevelled shoulders.
[25]
Relying
on the analysis of Dr. Wooley and Mr. Nelson, the Judge agreed that the 3103
assembly contains all the essential elements of the independent claims in the ‘630
Patent (the reasons at paragraph 100). She found that a person making a bearing
assembly in accordance with the design of the 3103 bearing assembly would be
making a bearing assembly that falls within the scope of claims 1 and 2 of the
‘630 Patent, if this had taken place after the issuance of the patent.
[26]
In
her analysis as to whether the rental of the drilling tools to Ensco constituted
sufficient disclosure to anticipate the ‘630 Patent, the Judge acknowledged
that the 3103 bearing assembly, like the other parts of the motor, was encased
in a steel tube, and thus a visual inspection of the three units rented to
Ensco would not have disclosed their inner workings (particularly of the 3103
assembly).
[27]
However,
she held that the tools rented to Ensco were available for more than a visual
inspection (the reasons at paragraph 119). Although the Judge also acknowledged
that, as a matter of fact, the tools were intact when they were returned to Griffith, she noted that the tools could be dismantled (the reasons at paragraph 121).
[28]
Moreover,
in her view, the fact that the tools were rented rather than sold did not
detract from the fact that there were opportunities for examination of those
tools (the reasons at paragraph 121). She then found that Ensco was free at law
and in equity to use whatever information could be gathered during the rental. Further,
the use of these tools for drilling at the Dilley site was not an experiment.
[29]
In
addition to the above, the Judge made an alternative finding that the drawing
of the 3103 assembly could be considered as anticipation by publication. In
that respect, she had noted earlier that the said drawing was available
(although not necessarily reviewed) to Ensco when Ken Wenzel attended the
Dilley site at the beginning of the rental (the reasons at paragraph 120). She
also considered that this drawing and any additional information requested from
Ken Wenzel by Ensco were available to Ensco had the need arisen, for example, if
the drilling tool had broken down the hole and so-called “fishermen” had to be
called to retrieve it (the reasons at paragraph 121).
[30]
Before
turning to the Judge’s finding in respect of obviousness, it is worth noting
that the Respondents had argued that the claimed invention was also anticipated
by a type of core barrel which was readily available and well-known at the time
(As noted in the reasons at paragraph 79, a core barrel is a device used in
coring, an operation often part of drilling in oil and gas wells). Remarking on
the differences between those tools, the Judge concluded that the core barrel
did not anticipate the subject matter defined in claims 1 and 2 of the ‘630
Patent, noting, however, that the impact of such art would be discussed at
greater length in her analysis on obviousness (the reasons at paragraph 190).
[31]
After
setting out the four-step approach developed in Windsurfing International
Inc. v. Tabur Marine (Great Britain) Ltd., [1985] R.P.C. 59 (CA) and Pozzoli
v. BDMO SA, [2007] F.S.R. 37, [2007] E.W.C.A. Civ. 588, and adopted in Sanofi
(the reasons at paragraph 150), the Judge identified the POSITA and the common
general knowledge that POSITA would possess at the relevant time (the reasons
at paragraphs 152-172). Of particular relevance is the fact that she accepted
that the construction of core barrels described in the World Oil Composite
Catalog was part of that common general knowledge, which included core
barrels of the type relied upon by the Respondents in respect of anticipation,
and discussed in the reasons under “obviousness”.
[32]
The
Judge found that such knowledge also included the so-called Geczy Patent for a
“thrust and radial bearing assembly” in a downhole drilling tool. This was a
patent in the same field as the ‘630 Patent (the reasons at paragraph 163).
[33]
In
the Judge’s view, the inventive steps in the claims of the ‘630 Patent (an
aspect not disputed before this Court) was the inventor’s placement of one or
more bi-directional thrust bearings into a single containment chamber with
shoulders placed within the chamber such that the same bearings could handle
both off-bottom and on-bottom loads during a drilling operation.
[34]
She
found that the common general knowledge included the use of bi-directional thrust
bearing in such a single container chamber in the context of core barrels, and
that the purpose for using a single barrel thrust bearing described in the
Halvorsen Patent (a core barrel patent also part of the Canadian general
knowledge) bore a striking resemblance to the purpose described in the ‘630
Patent.
[35]
The
Judge adopted the Respondents’ experts’ analysis of the essential elements of
the ‘630 Patent found in the Halvorsen Patent (the reasons at paragraph 181). She
noted, however, that there were two differences acknowledged by all experts in
respect of core barrels. First, a core barrel is not part of a drilling motor. Second,
the inner core barrel remains stationary as the coring bit digs deeper, while
in a downhole drilling motor, the inner tubular member is not fixed. She also
expressly rejected the additional differences presented by Mr. Thicke, the
Appellant’s expert (the reasons at paragraphs 184-190), noting that some were
not borne out by the evidence while others were minor or irrelevant.
[36]
In
respect of the Geczy Patent, the Judge acknowledged that the differences were
such that she could not see how, without anything else, the POSITA could apply
this teaching to come up with the ‘630 Patent. She noted, however, that this
patent could have a role as part of a mosaic in making the ‘630 Patent obvious.
[37]
At
the fourth step of her analysis, the issue was whether the two differences
between the ‘630 Patent and the core barrels discussed above would constitute
steps which would have been obvious to the POSITA or if they required a degree
of inventive skill (the reasons at paragraph 192).
[38]
It
is at this step of her analysis that the Judge allegedly erred at law when she
reviewed, at paragraphs 193-195, Rothstein J.’s comments in Sanofi with
respect to the so-called “obvious to try” approach, which may be part of the analysis
at the fourth step of the Sanofi test. She noted that in such
cases, a judge must be convinced on a balance of probabilities that it was more
or less self-evident to try to obtain the invention and that it was more or
less self-evident that what is being tried ought to work. She then listed the
factors referred to in paragraphs 69-71 of Sanofi: number of identified
predictable solutions; extent and nature of efforts required; nature of the
experimentation involved, motivation to find a solution; and actual course of
action followed by the inventors.
[39]
Having
said at paragraph 197 of her reasons that the “obvious to try” analysis was warranted in this case,
the Judge referred to the expert evidence before her, with which she agreed, to
conclude that it would be obvious to apply the elements of the bearing assembly
in a core barrel to one in a downhole drilling motor.
[40]
As an alternative
finding, she also held that even if one assumed that some residual inventiveness
would be required to transfer the teaching from a core barrel to a drilling
motor, the POSITA would know that one could use a bi-directional bearing as
part of a downhole drilling tool from the Geczy Patent. This, in her view, would
alleviate any doubt that the teaching from the core barrel could be applied to
a downhole drilling tool.
[41]
On
a final note, the Judge observed that the invention came quickly and apparently
with little effort to the inventor. Even accounting for the fact that Bill
Wenzel was more than the POSITA, she found that the short time frame involved here
was quite remarkable. She concluded at paragraph 205:
In sum, in light of the general knowledge from the
combination of the core barrel and the Geczy Patent, it is more or less
self-evident that the skilled person would have come to the '630 bearing
assembly for use in a drilling motor, with the essential elements of the '630
Patent as set out in paragraph 77 of these Reasons.
[42]
In light of
her findings in respect of anticipation and obviousness, the Judge held that it
was not necessary to discuss the other issues raised in this case, such as lack
of utility, and she declared the ‘630 Patent invalid.
Analysis
Standard of Review
[43]
This is an
appeal from a decision of a court of first instance. Questions of law are to be
reviewed on the correctness standard while questions of fact and mixed fact and
law (apart from extricable errors of law) are to be reviewed on the standard of
reasonableness (Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235,
at paragraphs 8, 10, and 36 (Housen)).
[44]
The
construction of the claims of a patent is a question of law. However, the
weight to be given to the expert evidence as to how particular words would be
understood by the POSITA is a question where the trier of facts is entitled to
deference. Anticipation and obviousness are usually considered to be questions of
fact or mixed fact and law. The Appellants argue that in respect of
obviousness, the Judge here made an extricable error of law as she applied the
wrong test.
Claims Construction
[45]
There
was a conflict between the evidence of Mr. Thicke, the Appellants’ expert, and
that of the other experts with regard to how the POSITA would construe claim 2.
[46]
First,
Mr. Thicke opined that the word “improvement” used in the preamble of claim 2 would
be understood as referring to the purpose or utility of the invention which is an
increase in the off-bottom load capacity. Thus, the Appellants say that the
Judge erred at law by failing to include this element in the list of essential
elements of claim 2.
[47]
Second,
Mr. Thicke testified that “generally parallel” would be understood as pure and
simple parallelism, meaning two lines that do not intersect. His view on this
point was unshakeable. Thus, according to the Appellants, this is the view the
Judge should have adopted, for it is the only one that gives true meaning to
the words used. Two different words must be assumed to mean different things.
[48]
It
is well accepted that a single invention may be claimed in different ways.
Here, claim 1 refers to a method, while claim 2 is a product claim (the reasons
at paragraphs 50 and 51).
[49]
There
are various ways of drafting a product claim. The so-called “Jepson claim” (or
“German claim”) is one. As noted in “The Art of Claiming and Reading a Claim”,
by William L. Hayhurst, Q.C. at page 210 (in Gordon Henderson, Patent Law of
Canada (Scarborough, Ont: Carswell, 1994) at pages 177-220), this Jepson
form is described as “one which attempts to recite, at the beginning of a claim,
elements that are shared with the prior art, and then to recite those features
which the applicant has contributed to the art”.
[50]
I
have no doubt that the use of the words “improvement” and “the improvement
comprising:” in claim 2 were meant to focus on the novel elements of the
product claimed as described in paragraphs (a) to (c) of the claim.
[51]
The
Judge was entitled to give little weight to Mr. Thicke’s evidence and, in my view,
she correctly found that the alleged utility (increase in the off-bottom load
capacity) in the patent was not an essential element of claim 2.
[52]
With
respect to the second argument, being that “generally parallel” means pure parallelism,
it is clear that the Judge was alert and alive to the conflict in the expert evidence
in relation to this. As mentioned, she expressly recognized the ordinary
meaning of the word “parallel”, but discarded it on the basis of the evidence
provided by the other experts who testified before her and who considered its
meaning to the POSITA in the particular context of this patent. She was
entitled to do so.
[53]
As
mentioned by the Respondents, it is interesting that the Appellants recognized
in their final argument before the Judge that it would make little sense for
claim 2 to be construed without any reference to the alignment of the shoulders,
and suggested that the Court should read both claim 1 and 2 as including the
words “generally aligned” and “generally parallel”, thereby adding words
to each claim.
[54]
Having
carefully considered the wording of the claims in the context of the disclosure
as a whole and the expert evidence accepted by the Judge, there is no reason to
interfere with the Judge’s interpretation set out at paragraph 17, above.
Anticipation
[55]
The
Appellants argue that the Judge erred in her application of the law to the
facts of the case more particularly by: (i) equating the 3103 assembly with a
book on the shelf in the public library or an engine under the hood of a car
because the Judge’s conclusion did not take into consideration the accepted
evidence that the claimed invention was encased in metal and could not have
been and was not observed at the Dilley job; and (ii) failing to consider that
there was no evidence that a POSITA was at the site or that such person would
have the skills to open the drilling tool to examine the 3103 assembly and
discern the invention.
[56]
In
the Appellants’ view, given that the rig hands were not POSITAS, the Judge
should have come to the same conclusion as the trial judge in Folding Attic
Stairs Limited v. The Loft Stairs Company Limited, 2009 EWHC 1221 (PAT) who
appears to have accepted the plaintiff’s argument (summarised at paragraph 84
of the decision) that the test unit in that case was not available to the
public because it was only shown during a tour of private premises to a
Minister and a photographer who were not POSITAS and who had not manifested any
interest in the testing unit.
[57]
Finally,
according to the Appellants, the Judge’s approach, which considered the
serendipitous broken tools (i.e., what would have happened if a rented
drilling motor had broken during the drilling operations and a “fisherman”
needed access to the drawings and those present at the site would be able to
see the inner parts of the tool), is not supported by any authority.
[58]
Essentially,
the Appellants argued that, had the Judge not made the above-mentioned errors, she
had to come to the conclusion that the Respondents had failed to establish that
the invention became available to the public, considering the facts and the
present state of the law. I cannot agree with this proposition.
[59]
As
mentioned, the Appellants no longer dispute the Judge’s findings that Ensco was
free at law and in equity to use whatever information was available from the
product it rented. Thus, if there was sufficient disclosure, it was a public
one.
[60]
Moreover,
the Appellants do not appear to take issue with the fact that if a POSITA could
observe the inner workings of the drilling motor, including the 3013 assembly, the
POSITA could then write down a complete description of the invention (the whole
subject to their arguments on proper construction discussed earlier).
[61]
There
was some suggestion that this, in turn, would not amount to an enabling
disclosure. In that respect, the Appellants submitted that the Judge failed to
take into account the evidence of Ken Wenzel that Dreco and Griffith did not
manufacture more than three of these units because they were difficult to manufacture
or to service properly (due to the bevelled shoulders). However, the Judge is
presumed to have considered all of the evidence before her (Housen
at paragraph 46).
[62]
Moreover, I am
not persuaded that the Judge made a palpable and overriding error in her assessment
of the evidence in that respect in light of a number of
factors, namely: a
skilled person is entitled to trial and error in relation to enablement; the
Judge expressly stated that to conclude that there was anticipation she needed
an enabling disclosure; and she was satisfied on the evidence that the
enablement branch of the test for anticipation had been met (reasons at
paragraph 144). She clearly preferred to rely on the fact that Griffith was able to manufacture drilling tools containing the 3103 assembly that worked
well at the Dilley job. Her finding that this branch of the anticipation test
had been met was open to her.
[63]
That
being said, the real focus in this appeal was on whether an accurate and full
description of the invention was available in this case, applying the
undisputed principles set out in the reasons at paragraphs 80-90. As noted in
the Appellants’ Outline of oral argument on Anticipation, did the judge
misapply the law when one considers her findings of facts with respect to what
actually occurred? For the Appellants , the Judge erred because “disclosure,
not hypothetical disclosure of the invention is a necessary precursor to a
determination of anticipation”
[64]
In
Lux, Aldous J. made it clear that he did not accept the argument before
him that the task of the Court was to ascertain “what actually happened during
the use of the prototype [the product embodying the claimed invention in his
case] and from that conclude what a skilled man would assimilate” (Lux
at page 134).
[65]
In
this case, I believe that the Appellants exhibit a similar misunderstanding.
[66]
The
test for anticipation by disclosure through a product (and for that matter, for
anticipation by publication) is an objective one. Whether or not a real person
fitting the description of the POSITA was actually present at the drilling site
is irrelevant, as is what actually happened at the site during the rental
period.
[67]
What
is relevant in the case of a product like the drilling tools at issue “is
that which the skilled man would, if asked to describe its construction
and operation, write down having carried out an appropriate test or
examination.[my emphasis]” (Lux
at page 134 in the passage actually cited by the Judge in her reasons at
paragraph 87).
[68]
My
understanding, based on the relevant jurisprudence, is that becoming available means
that, the public, as defined earlier, had an opportunity to access the
information that is the invention. As previously mentioned, it does not
require that one actually took advantage of this opportunity. Once the
opportunity is established as a fact (here, for example, that: (i) Dreco had
unrestricted access to the drilling tools, and any information derived from
such access was not protected by confidentiality; and (ii) a method to open such
tools and examine their internal structures was known), the Court applies the
legal test for anticipation developed in Sanofi (full disclosure of all
the essential elements of the invention and enablement) to the information that
the fictional POSITA would derive from the fictional examination.
[69]
The
Appellants disagree with the analogies used by the Judge, being: (i) a book in
a public library (the reasons at paragraph 118); and (ii) the “lifting of the
hood” (the reasons at paragraph 123). They say that the drilling tools in this
case are not analogous to a book in a library, nor was the opening of the tools
like the lifting of the hood of a car. Again, I cannot agree. Aldous J. in Lux,
later quoted by Rothstein J.A. in Baker Petrolite, referred to the book
in a public library even though he was looking at a case of prior use of a
product, not anticipation by publication. The book in the public library could
be in Japanese, even though the library is located in a remote village where no
one speaks Japanese. This would still be a disclosure that would make whatever
information it contained available, even though accessing the information that
is available requires the use of a dictionary or even an interpreter that would
not be available in that village. As for the lifting of the hood, it is true
that opening the sealed joints to examine the internal structure may be a bit
more tedious than lifting a hood but that does not detract from the validity of
the analogy. As mentioned, this is not relevant; being available does not require
that access to the information be easy, simply that it be possible using known
methods and instruments.
[70]
Again,
I reiterate that it is my understanding of the law as it stands now that even
if the library listed in a ledger all those who entered the library and
recorded each book they reviewed, and a defendant would accordingly be able to
prove that nobody had actually accessed the book in the library, my conclusion
would be the same. The presence of the book in the library is sufficient to
make the information available, and thus to meet the requirements for
anticipation within the meaning of section 28.2.
[71]
Although
this may appear harsh, it is less so than the test that was applied in Canada prior to the adoption of paragraph 28.2(1)(a), and in England prior to the adoption of
their Patents Act 1977 implementing the EPC. There is no evidence that,
by adopting this new paragraph, the Canadian legislator meant to achieve any
purpose other than harmonization with the test applied in Europe. I note that a
similar amendment will come into force in the United States in 2013 (Leahy-Smith
America Invents Act, 35 U.S.C. at §102 (coming into effect on March 16,
2013)).
[72]
As
mentioned in Baker Petrolite, paragraph 28.2(1)(a) now excludes
from anticipatory uses products the examination of which would not give an
accurate and complete description of the invention even if the most complex of
the known analytical methods were used by the POSITA (see paragraph 42,
particularly subparagraphs 1, 4, and 7, in Baker Petrolite).
Typical examples would be where the composition or internal structure of a compound
or product would not give any information as to the method used to make it
(claimed invention) or as to the starting material used (essential element of a
claimed invention). One can also think of the use of a known compound or
product for a new technical effect that may not be discernable through
examination of the product itself as it must be used in combination with
another the product (where the claim is for a new use of the combination).
[73]
It
is also worth noting that, in its opinion dated December 18, 1992, the European
Patent Office Enlarged Board of Appeal made it very clear that the composition or
internal structure of a product (and the same principle applies to all
products) is part of the state of the art “when the product can be analysed and
reproduced by a skilled person irrespective of whether or not particular
reasons can be identified for analysing the composition [my emphasis]” (G 1/92 Availability to the
Public [1993] O.J. EPO 277, [1993] E.P.O.R. 241. Note that this opinion was
referred to by the House of Lords in Synthon BV v. SmithKline Beecham plc, [2005] UKHL 59 at
paragraph 29). In the Board’s view,
there is simply no legislative requirement for a motive; it is not necessary
that the POSITA have a reason for looking for the product composition. Like
Rothstein J.A. in Baker Petrolite, I find this to also be true
in Canada. This is perfectly in line with the fact that the court does not have
consider whether the notional POSITA would be interested by a relevant prior
art publication in respect of anticipation by publication. The hypothetical
POSITA is presumed to have properly read the document.
[74]
Applying
the principles set out above to the present matter, the Judge had to determine
whether, in this case, there was an opportunity to access the relevant
information during the rental.
[75]
It
is on this question that the Judge distinguished the case before her from the
situation in Bauer. In the latter case, the products were not rented or
used by a third party, they were simply shown in an arena open to the public
during a practice, but in a manner that prevented anybody not bound by
confidentiality to do anything more than a visual inspection from afar. It was
found as a fact in that case that such inspection would not have enabled the
POSITA to write down a full description of the invention. However, on the facts
before her, the Judge concluded that the rented drilling tools were available
for more than visual inspection (the reasons at paragraph 119) and that these
tools could be dismantled (the reasons at paragraph 121). She expressly held
that the fact that the tools were rented rather than sold outright did not
detract from the conclusion that there were opportunities for their examination
(the reasons at paragraph 121).
[76]
The Judge does not discuss in her reasons the evidence she considered to
arrive at the conclusion that the 3103 assembly could be dismantled, and what
this would involve. She had several drawings of the relevant drilling motors
and their parts, as well as drawings of other similar motors. She had a picture
and an actual sample of the Plaintiffs’ own drilling motor similar to the one
in the 3103 assembly, except for the clear section of the outer casing over the
bearing assembly (used for exhibition only). Ken Wenzel indicated that the
drilling motors rented to Ensco, like the other drilling motors at issue in
this case, were built to be serviced (or maintained) (Appeal Book Volume 10 at
pages 3036, 3082, 3100). This implies that access to their inner structure was
possible. Ken Wenzel also said during his cross-examination that to take the
motor apart, one needed something to hold it while the joints were unsealed
with the appropriate tool(s). Such tool(s) would have been available at the Rosenberg shop that Ensco shared with Griffith (Appeal Book Volume 10 at pages 3024, 3099-3100).
[77]
The
fact that such appropriate tool(s) may not have been usually available at the
drilling site per se or that opening of the joints is not usually done
at a drilling site is irrelevant. There is no evidence that Ensco was
prohibited from bringing appropriate tool(s) to the drilling site or from
bringing one of the drilling motors to the machine shop.
[78]
In
the absence of express contractual provisions to the contrary, at common law, a
lessee would be entitled to use the rented equipment as he wishes so long as he
returns it in good order and condition (H.G. Beale et al., eds., Chitty on
Contracts, 30th ed. (London, England: Thomson Reuters, 2008) at
page 238, section 33-077). There was no evidence that the opening of the
drilling tools would in any way damage them. In fact, given that such tools are
made to be serviced, one could assume that the opening and closing of the
joints of the steel casing protecting the motor and bearing assembly in order
to examine the inner workings was something that Ensco could do. As mentioned,
whether they were actually interested in doing so is irrelevant.
[79]
Ken
Wenzel was clear that no information whatsoever about these rented tools was
confidential. The Judge accepted this evidence. From that, it also becomes
clear that the sealing of the joints on the drilling tools had nothing to do
with confidentiality.
[80]
When
asked before us why the rental of the tools as opposed to their sale was
significant, the Appellants replied that Ensco had possession of the equipment
for only a short period of time. Still, I cannot see how it was not open to the
Judge to hold as she did that a rental rather than a sale of the drilling
equipment had no impact.
[81]
Coming
back to the analogies used by the Judge, the reference to the engine under the
hood may not, as mentioned, be the most appropriate in terms of how one could
get to the inner workings of the drilling tools at issue. Nevertheless, this
statement indicates to me that the Judge was satisfied that it was rather
simple for the POSITA to get to the inner structure to examine and describe the
invention underlying the ‘630 Patent.
[82]
As
pointed out by the Appellants, it is true that the Judge does not expressly
discuss whether the POSITA had the necessary skill to use the appropriate tool
to open the steel casing in order to observe the 3103 assembly. It may simply
be that she did not find the Appellants’ argument (if it was actually made
before her, the transcript does not disclose anything in that respect) was
worth discussing.
[83]
In
fact, it is difficult to imagine how the POSITA described in paragraph 46 of
the reasons would not be able to open the drilling motor to get to the bearing
assembly. There was no evidence that the use of the appropriate tool to do so required
any special skills or any inventive step. Certainly, the means to open the
drilling motor were available.
[84]
I
shall now deal with the last argument raised by the Appellants in relation to
anticipation. They argue that the Judge erred in combining sources of prior art
(the drawings of the 3103 assembly and the physical tools rented to Ensco) to
reach her conclusion that there was anticipation.
[85]
I
first note that the Judge expressly stated in her reasons at paragraph
82 that to conclude that the invention was not new, she had to find that the
invention was disclosed to the public in a single disclosure.
[86]
Second,
in her reasons at paragraph 122, she made clear that, in her view, the drawing
of the 3103 assembly itself could constitute anticipation by publication, and
that this was an alternative finding.
[87]
Despite
the fact that paragraphs 120 and 121 of the reasons could have been better
structured (the Judge appears to have tried to express too many ideas at once),
in the circumstances, I have not been persuaded that the Judge in fact erred in
law by using a mosaic of prior art to reach her ultimate conclusion.
[88]
In
view of the foregoing, I conclude that the Judge made no palpable and
overriding error in concluding to anticipation based on the rental of the
drilling motors to Ensco. The evidentiary record may well be thin in respect of
some of her findings of fact but the Judge was satisfied that she had enough before
her to come to such findings. She is entitled to deference in respect of such matters.
[89]
There
is no need to deal with her alternative finding in respect of the drawing
itself. Nothing herein should be construed as an endorsement of her conclusion
in that respect.
[90]
Normally,
I would not comment on the issue relating to the Judge’s finding in respect of
obviousness, as her conclusion that the ‘630 Patent was invalid is supported by
her finding that it was anticipated. However, in light of the concerns expressed
by my colleague Mainville J.A.as to the sufficiency of the evidenciary record,
it is appropriate to deal with the Judge’s finding regarding obviousness.
Obviousness
[91]
The
Appellants’ argument here is essentially that the Supreme Court of Canada in Sanofi
made it clear that the “obvious to try” approach as part of step 4 of the
obviousness analysis is appropriate only in situations where advances are often
won by experimentation (Sanofi at paragraph 68). On this subject, the
Appellants referred this Court to an article entitled “the Supreme Court’s Sanofi
decision: three years later”, by Patrick S. Smith and Donald M. Cameron,
(2012) 27 C.I.P.R. 281.
[92]
Both
sides agree that they presented their case without any reference to the “obvious
to try” approach discussed in Sanofi. The Respondents confirmed that
their experts’ opinions were that the subject matter of the ‘630 Patent was
obvious without the need for any experimentation. In fact, if one looks
at the report of Mr. Nelson, one of the Respondent’s experts (at page 1145 of Appeal
Book Volume 4, tab 57) he states at paragraph 94 that:
94. It is my opinion that
the task of developing a method of increasing of the off bottom load capacity
of a bearing assembly (i.e. the title of the ‘630 Patent) had already been
developed and patented by Halvorsen in the ‘338 Patent on September 27, 1927
and could have been undertaken by an ordinarily skilled technician in 1990 without
any need for experimentation and without the exercise of any inventiveness.
[my emphasis]
To the same effect, see paragraphs 5.2 and 5.4 of
Mr. Wooley’s Report at page 1478 of Appeal Book Volume 5, tab 59.
[93]
Still,
the Judge stated at paragraph 197 of her reasons that “[a]n ‘obvious to try’ analysis
is clearly warranted here.” In that respect, she noted that most of the
evidence at trial focused on whether or not it was more or less self-evident
that what was being tried ought to work. In fact, she immediately followed her
statement that the “obvious to try” analysis was warranted by saying “simply
put, was the invention more or less self-evident?” She then noted that the POSITA
would not just examine the prior art; he would be able to make some non-inventive
adaptation to make the prior art solve his problem. In that respect, she commented
that even Mr. Thicke, the Appellants’ expert, acknowledged this.
[94]
Rothstein
J. in Sanofi did not restrict the “obvious to try” approach to
pharmaceutical cases involving, for example, chiral chemistry. However, considering
the case before him, Rothstein J. certainly had this particular technology in
mind, and that is what he used to exemplify what he meant by a field where
advances are often won by experimentation.
[95]
That
is not to say however that the “obvious to try” approach cannot apply in a
mechanical field. It will always depend on the facts and the evidence in each
case.
[96]
I
agree with the Appellants that before a judge can conclude that this approach is
useful in a particular field, whatever it may be, he or she should give some
indication regarding the reasons for coming to that conclusion. Ideally, a
judge should refer to the evidence on which he or she based this conclusion. In
the absence of such an express reference, the premise underlying the approach may
be apparent from the analysis carried out by the judge in applying it,
particularly when addressing the number of predictable variables that are
involved and the type of experimentation program they involve.
[97]
The
fact that a person may need to adapt in his or her mind to what he or she sees
in the prior art or knows as part of the common general knowledge does not
automatically mean that reference to the “obvious to try” approach (or “obvious
it ought to work” approach as it is called in the Smith and Cameron article cited
above) is warranted.
[98]
Here,
other than this reference to adaptation, which does not necessarily involve
experimentation on a number of variables, there is very little in the reasons
to help this Court understand the Judge’s statement at paragraph 197 that an
“obvious to try” approach was warranted.
[99]
I
note that, in his testimony, Ken Wenzel referred to the fact that all Dreco
motors were tested prior to their use (Appeal Book Volume 10 at pages 3015 and
3086). In my view, this is not the type of evidence upon which one should
conclude that advances in his particular art are won by experimentation. In
fact, Ken Wenzel appeared to be referring to the testing that one would expect
any diligent manufacturer to do before putting any product on the market,
irrespective of whether such product embodied a new invention or a proven
design.
[100] Thus, I am satisfied
that it was not appropriate to refer to the obvious to try approach in this
case.
[101] The Respondents submit
that this error could not affect the Judge’s final conclusion in this case, as
it is clear that the Judge was satisfied that the invention was more or less
self evident, that is, plain and obvious. They say that the Judge accepted the
evidence of their experts which did not involve any need for experimentation.
At paragraph 200, the Judge stated:
All of the experts, but for Mr.
Thicke, agreed that it would be obvious to apply the elements of the bearing
assembly in a core barrel to one in a downhole mud motor. I agree. It is more or
less self-evident that the bearing assembly in a core barrel can be readily
adapted for use in a downhole drilling motor. Faced with the problem identified
by Bill Wenzel, I am satisfied that the person of ordinary skill in the art
would see the use of a bi-directional thrust bearing in a different but related
application; it would have been an obvious thing to try the bearing assembly
disclosed in the Christensen core barrel or Halvorsen Patent in a downhole
motor. The adaptations required are, in my view and in the opinion of the
Defendants’ experts, minimal. The effort needed to adapt the bearing assembly
would not be prolonged or arduous.
[102] Later on, in respect
of her alternative finding, she noted at paragraph 202:
In my view, the combination of
the knowledge gleaned from an examination of the core barrel together with the
knowledge from the Geczy Patent would lead the person of ordinary skill in the
art to the ‘630 Patent with little effort.
This is the language of Hugessen J. in Beloit
Canada Ltd v. Valmet Oy, [1986] 64 N.R. 287, 8 C.P.R. (3d) 289 (FCA) – the
traditional test applied before Sanofi.
[103] As a matter of fact,
given that the Judge’s focus was on whether the invention was more or less
self-evident, I agree that her conclusion at paragraphs 200 and 202 would stand
on the basis of the evidence she accepted under the more classical approach to
the fourth step of the obviousness inquiry referred to in Sanofi.
[104] It is also worth
noting here that the factors one would normally consider under step 4 are essentially
the same as those Rothstein J. enumerated as relevant factors under the
“obvious to try” approach, except that in the latter case, the approach would
involve discussion of the numerous inter-related variables, a number of
identified predictable solutions, and a need to assess the nature of the
experimentation program involved. The actual course of action followed by an inventor,
the climate in the industry, and secondary indicia such as commercial successes
or awards are all factors that can be relevant in an obviousness inquiry in any
field.
[105] Finally, one must
recall that the Supreme Court of Canada in Sanofi clearly indicated that
there is no single or mandatory approach in the obviousness inquiry. Indeed,
accepting that the “obvious to try” approach might be useful depending on the
circumstances was part of a move away from rigid rules that had limited the
obviousness inquiry, towards a more flexible, expansive, and fact driven
inquiry (Sanofi at paragraphs 61-63). The Court only wanted to bring
more structure, clarity, and objectivity to the analysis (Sanofi at
paragraph 67).
[106] In the present case, despite
her reference to the “obvious to try” approach, the Judge undertook a careful
and objective analysis of the relevant factors, including those set out in the
first three steps of the preferred analysis in Sanofi. In the end, she
was clearly satisfied that the invention was plain or, as she said, more or
less self-evident. This means it was obvious by any standard, irrespective of
her particular approach. She accepted evidence that supported this conclusion,
and I do not believe that this Court should intervene.
Conclusion
[107] In light of the
foregoing, it is my view that the Appellants failed to establish an error that would
warrant this Court’s intervention and the appeal should be dismissed with
costs.
“Johanne Gauthier”
“I
agree
M. Nadon”
MAINVILLE J.A. (CONCURRING)
[108] I have read the
reasons prepared by my colleague Gauthier J.A., and I agree in the result she
suggests. I agree with my colleague that though the Judge had no basis for
applying the “obvious to try” test in this case, the application of that test
in this case was not fatal to the Judge’s decision. As discussed by my
colleague, the Judge nevertheless found the invention obvious under the
ordinary test for obviousness, and her finding on this issue should not be
disturbed by our Court.
[109] I however respectfully
disagree with my colleague concerning the issue of anticipation.
[110] The appellants submit
in this appeal that the Judge erred in law by modifying the test for
anticipation in an impermissible and unwarranted manner (see paras. 27, 36 and
40 of the appellant’s memorandum). They also submit that the judge made
palpable and overriding errors in her assessment of the facts relating to
anticipation. I agree with the appellants that the Judge erred in these
matters. In my view, she applied an unwarranted subjective test for
anticipation, and she made palpable and overriding errors of fact by drawing inferences
which were not supported by the evidence placed before her.
(a) The Judge’s findings on
anticipation
[111] The Judge did not
dispute that the 3103 Assembly had never been in fact disclosed to the public.
Rather, her decision on disclosure was based on the concept of constructive
disclosure, whereby a person could have obtained information by consulting Ken
Wenzel at the Texas site where it was briefly used. She applied an analogy of a
book in a library which constitutes disclosure whether or not anybody read the
book. She was of the view that the availability of Ken Wenzel for consultation
was analogous to the book in the library (at paras. 118 to 122 of the Reasons).
She viewed this not only as anticipation by use, but also as “anticipation by
publication” (at para. 122 of the Reasons).
[112] Furthermore, in the
Judge’s view, anyone at the Texas site could have “lifted the hood” and
examined the 3103 Assembly by dismantling it: at paras. 121 and 124 of the
Reasons. In the alternative, she concluded that had the 3103 Assembly broken, a
“fisherman” could have hypothetically seen its inner workings while retrieving
its pieces from the drilling hole (at para. 121 of the Reasons).
(b) The standard of review
[113] Anticipation of an
invention raises issues of mixed fact and law: Corlac Inc v. Weatherford Canada Inc., 2011 FCA 228; 422
N.R. 49
(“Weatherford”) at para. 36; Calgon Carbon Corporation v. Corporation of North Bay (City), 2008 FCA
81, 64 C.P.R. (4th) 337 at para. 6; Baker Petrolite Corp. v.
Canwell Enviro-Industries Ltd., 2002 FCA 158, [2003] 1 F.C. 49 (“Baker
Petrolite”) at para. 46.
[114] Questions of mixed
fact and law involve applying a legal standard to a set of facts: Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1
S.C.R. 748, at para. 35. Where an error can be attributed to the application of
an incorrect standard, a failure to consider a required element of a legal
test, or similar error in principle, such an error can be characterized as an
error of law, subject to a standard of correctness. An appellate court must be
cautious, however, in finding errors in law, as it is often difficult to
extricate the legal questions from the factual. It is for this reason that
these matters are referred to as questions of “mixed law and fact”. Where the
legal principle is extricable, a more stringent standard applies. However,
where the issue on appeal involves the interpretation of the evidence, it
should not be overturned absent palpable and overriding error: Housen v.
Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 at para. 36.
(c) The burden of evidence
[115] The party claiming
invalidity of the patent through anticipation bears the burden of proof on the
standard of the balance of probabilities: Weatherford at paras. 45-46. Diversified
Products Corp. and Brown Fitzpatrick Lloyd Patent Ltd. v. Tye-Sil Corp.
(1991), 125 N.R. 218, 35 C.P.R. (3d) 350 (F.C.A.) at para. 26 of the N.R.
edition.
(d) The law relating to
anticipation
[116]
Prior
to the amendments brought into force in 1989, the Patent Act, R.S.C.
1985 c. P-4 provided that a patent could be challenged on the basis of
anticipation if it had been known or used before the patentee invented it. In
the case of prior use, there was no legislative requirement that the use
actually disclose the invention. Subsection 27(1) of the Patent Act then
read as follows:
27.(1)
Subject to this section, any inventor or legal representative of an inventor
of an invention that was
(a)
not known or used by any other person before he invented it,
(b)
not described in any patent or in any publication printed in Canada or in any
other country more than two years before presentation of the petition
hereunder mentioned, and
(c) not in public use or on sale
in Canada for more than two years prior to his application in Canada
may,
on presentation to the Commissioner of a petition setting out the facts, in
this Act termed the filing of the application, and on compliance with all
other requirements of this Act, obtain a patent granting to him an exclusive
property in the invention.
|
27. (1) Sous
réserve des autres dispositions du présent article, l'auteur de toute
invention ou le représentant légal de l'auteur d'une invention peut, sur
présentation au commissaire d'une pétition exposant les faits, appelée dans
la présente loi le « dépôt de la demande », et en se conformant à toutes les
autres prescriptions de la présente loi, obtenir un brevet qui lui accorde
l'exclusive propriété d'une invention qui n'était pas:
a)
connue ou utilisée par une autre personne avant que lui-même l’ait faite;
b)
décrite dans un brevet ou dans une publication imprimée au Canada ou dans
tout autre pays plus de deux ans avant la présentation de la pétition
ci-après mentionnée;
c) en usage public ou
en vente au Canada plus de deux ans avant le dépôt de sa demande au Canada.
|
[117]
The
Patent Act was amended in 1987 by
An Act to amend the Patent Act and to provide for certain matters in
relation thereto, R.S.C. 1985 (3rd Supp.), c. 33. These
amendments were brought into force on October 1, 1989. The thrust of the
amendments was to provide that patents would be granted on a “first-to-file”
basis, thus facilitating Canada’s participation in the system of international
patent filing contemplated by the Patent Cooperation Treaty. It was in
this context that the 1989 amendments repealed the prior use rule, and
replaced it with prior disclosure rules. These disclosure rules are now set out
in paragraphs 28.2(1)(a) and (b) of the Patent Act adopted
under the 1993 amendments provided under the Intellectual Property Law Improvement
Act, S.C. 1993, c. 15, brought into force on October 1, 1996:
28.2 (1) The subject-matter defined by a claim in an
application for a patent in Canada (the “pending application”) must not have
been disclosed
(a) more than one year before the
filing date by the applicant, or by a person who obtained knowledge, directly
or indirectly, from the applicant, in such a manner that the subject-matter
became available to the public in Canada or elsewhere;
(b) before the claim date by
a person not mentioned in paragraph (a) in such
a manner that the subject-matter became available to the public in Canada or elsewhere;
|
28.2 (1) L’objet que définit la revendication d’une demande de
brevet ne doit pas :
a) plus d’un
an avant la date de dépôt de celle-ci, avoir fait, de la part du demandeur ou
d’un tiers ayant obtenu de lui l’information à cet égard de façon directe ou
autrement, l’objet d’une communication qui l’a rendu accessible au public au
Canada ou ailleurs;
b) avant la date de la
revendication, avoir fait, de la part d’une autre personne, l’objet d’une
communication qui l’a rendu accessible au public au Canada ou ailleurs;
|
[118]
Thus, since
at least 1989, prior use cannot alone lead to the invalidation of a patent.
Invalidation though anticipation rather requires prior disclosure. The
disclosure may be made by any means, such as prior publication, oral
communication, prior sale or prior use, etc. However, no matter how the
disclosure is made, it must be assessed using an objective test in order
to determine whether two essential requirements have been met: (a) prior
disclosure occurred, and (b) that disclosure allowed the enablement of the
invention. These two requirements should usually be considered separately:
Sanofi-Synthelabo Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2008 SCC 61, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 265
(« Sanofi ») at para. 28.
[119]
The first
element, whether prior disclosure has occurred, must be assessed from the
perspective of a person skilled
in the art or science to which the invention pertains (herein referred to as
the “skilled person”).
That skilled person must be in a position to understand the invention with no
room for trial or experimentation: Sanofi at paras. 24-25, citing Synthon
B.V. v. SmithKline Beecham plc, [2005] UKHL 59, [2006] 1 All E.R. 685 (“Synthon”).
At this stage, the skilled person is reviewing the disclosure to understand the
invention and to determine its special advantages: Sanofi at paras. 25
and 32.
[120]
The
second element, enablement, is assessed once it has been determined, on an
objective basis, that the subject matter of the invention has indeed been
disclosed. For the purposes of enablement, the question is no longer what the
skilled person understands from the disclosure, but whether that person would
be able to work the invention without undue burden: Sanofi at paras. 26
and 37. When considering whether there is undue burden, the nature of the
invention must be taken into account. Some trial and error or experiments are allowed at
this stage. But experiments or trials and errors are not to be prolonged,
even in fields of technology in which trials and experiments are generally
carried out: Sanofi at paras. 27 and 33 to 37.
[121]
It is
important to keep in mind that disclosure and enablement are distinct concepts
subject each to their own rules: Synthon at para. 28. The same
disclosure may however satisfy both requirements for disclosure and enablement,
as an example when a product is “available to the public” and a skilled person
can discover its composition or internal structure and reproduce it without undue
burden: Synthon at paras. 29-30. Nevertheless, the concepts of
disclosure and enablement should generally be considered distinctly.
[122]
However, some
adaptation may be required to fit the circumstances in which the anticipation
occurs. Thus the courts have recognized that anticipation by prior publication
may be adapted to fit the circumstances of anticipation by oral communication
or by prior use. As noted by Rothstein J.A. (as he then was) in Baker Petrolite at para. 35 (emphasis
added):
… below a certain
level of generality, the principles governing anticipation by prior
publication may need to be tailored to fit the particular characteristics of
anticipation by prior public use or sale. For example, the principle that
the prior publication must contain so clear a direction that a skilled person
reading and following it would be led, without error, to the invention claimed,
applies to the specific context of prior publication. In the case of prior
publication, the skilled person will read the publication. In the case of prior
use or sale, reading may not be relevant. When faced with having to decide
whether there has been anticipation by disclosure through prior use or sale
under paragraph 28.2(1)(a), it is necessary for the Court to have regard to the
circumstances of prior use or sale, in order to determine how a person skilled
in the art might be led, without error, to the invention claimed.
[123]
For the
purposes of this appeal, we must examine the principles governing anticipation
by (a) publication, (b) oral communication, and (c) use. In all these
circumstances, and as noted above, anticipation must be assessed on an
objective basis in order to determine whether prior disclosure occurred, and
whether that disclosure allowed the enablement of the invention. In any event,
evidence of anticipation must also, in all circumstances, be subjected to close
scrutiny: Baker Petrolite at para. 35.
Prior
publication
[124]
Anticipation
by prior publication requires that the invention be in fact disclosed in
written documentation made available to the public, such as patent
specifications, journal articles, and trade literature, including instruction
and repair manuals and brochures. The objective test for disclosure by prior
publication is set out as follows in Beloit Canada Ltée/Ltd. v. Valmet Oy (1986), 8 C.P.R. (3d)
289, 64 N.R. 287 (“Beloit”), at para. 30 of the N.R. edition:
One must, in effect,
be able to look at a prior, single publication and find in it all the
information which, for practical purposes, is needed to produce the claimed
invention without the exercise of any inventive skill. The
prior publication must contain so clear a direction that a skilled person
reading and following it would in every case and without possibility of error
be led to the claimed invention. Where, as here, the invention consists of
a combination of several known elements, any publication which does not teach
the combination of all the elements claimed cannot possibly be anticipatory.
(Emphasis added).
[125]
This test for
anticipation by prior publication set out in Beloit was cited with
approval by the Supreme Court of Canada in Free World Trust v. Électro Santé Inc., 2000 SCC 66, [2000]
2 S.C.R. 1024 at para. 26, which further noted that it was a difficult test to
meet. Subject to the
distinction between disclosure and enablement, the Beloit test for anticipation
by publication still applies: Sanofi at para. 28.
[126]
Since
disclosure must be assessed objectively, it suffices that the publication be
available for consultation by the public (such as in a public library or over
the internet), whether or not the publication has in fact been read: Lux
Traffic Controls Limited v. Pike Signals Limited, [1993]
R.P.C. 107 (“Lux”)
at p. 133.
However, private manuscripts which are not publicly available or papers which
are kept in filing cabinets or archives not normally accessible to the public
do not meet the threshold since such documents are not objectively “available
to the public”.
[127]
Moreover, the
publication must not only be available to the public, but it must also clearly
set out all the information required to understand the invention: General
Tyre and Rubber Co. v. Firestone Tyre and Rubber Co. Ltd., [1972] R.P.C. 457 (C.A.) at pp. 485-486.
[128]
Once
prior disclosure by publication has been established, then enablement must be
considered, i.e. would the skilled person have been able to perform the
invention without undue burden.
Prior
oral communication
[129]
An invention
may also become “available
to the public” where
it has been communicated orally to a member of the public who was free to use
it as he or she pleased, insofar as that information allowed a skilled person
to clearly understand the invention. Plainly, evidentiary difficulties will
often arise in proving what was said, and this makes anticipation by oral
communication a particularly difficult case to make out for those who bear the
burden of proof: Terrel on the Law of Patents, 15th ed. (London, Sweet & Maxwell, 2000) at para. 7.11; CIPA Guide to the Patent Acts, 7th
ed. (London, Sweet & Maxwell, 2011) at para. 2.06.
[130]
Like
anticipation by prior publication, anticipation by oral disclosure must also be
assessed through an objective test. An actual communication to the public must
have occurred in order to establish that the information is objectively
“available to the public”. Simply keeping information in one’s own mind cannot constitute a
disclosure to the public. An actual conveyance of information must occur.
[131]
Moreover, the
same requirements as for disclosure through prior publication apply in the case
of an oral disclosure, i.e. the disclosure must set out all the information
required to understand the invention: Lux at pp. 131-132. In addition, once
disclosure has been established, enablement must be made out as set out above.
Prior
use
[132]
Prior use may
still result in anticipation under subsection 28(1) of the Patent Act
despite the legislative change of 1989. However, the legislative change means
that prior use alone is now insufficient for establishing anticipation. Rather,
anticipation by prior use requires positive proof that a disclosure occurred as
a result of the use, and that this disclosure was such that the subject matter
of the invention became available to the public: Baker Petrolite at
para. 32.
[133]
In Baker
Petrolite at para. 42, Rothstein J.A. (as he then was) drew on the
jurisprudence of the United Kingdom and some European decisions under the European
Patent Convention in order to deduce eight principles relevant to
disclosure through prior use. Though these principles were developed in the
context of litigation concerning a chemical process patent, they are
nevertheless instructive and may be adapted to mechanical inventions, such as
the one contemplated by these proceedings. I will briefly set out these
principles, and proceed, inasmuch as they are useful for the purposes of this
appeal, to a closer analysis of the most pertinent cases from the United
Kingdom and the European Patent Office, which were cited approvingly in Baker
Petrolite (at para 42):
a.
Sale to the public or use by the
public alone is insufficient to prove anticipation. Disclosure of the invention
is required.
b.
For a prior
sale or use to anticipate an invention, it must amount to “enabling
disclosure”.
c.
The prior
sale or use of a chemical product will constitute enabling disclosure to the
public if its composition can be discovered through analysis of the product.
d.
The analysis
must be able to be performed by a skilled person in accordance with known
analytical techniques available at the relevant time. That skilled person,
using available analytical techniques, must be able to find the invention
without the exercise of inventive skill.
e.
When reverse
engineering is necessary and capable of discovering the invention, an invention
becomes available to the public if a product containing the invention is sold
to any member of the public who is free to use it as she or he pleases.
f.
It is not
necessary to demonstrate that a member of the public actually analyzed the
product that was sold.
g.
The amount of
time and work involved in conducting the analysis is not determinative of
whether a skilled person could discover the invention. The relevant
consideration, in this respect, is only whether inventive skill was required.
h.
It is not
necessary that the product that is the subject of the analysis be capable of
exact reproduction. It is the subject matter of the patent claims (the
invention) that must be disclosed through the analysis. Novelty of the claimed
invention is destroyed if there is disclosure of an embodiment which falls within
the claim.
[134]
In all
circumstances, in order to find anticipation, disclosure of necessary
information concerning the invention is required. This principle was taken from
Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals v. H.N. Norton & Co. Ltd., [1996] R.P.C. 76 (U.K
H.L.) (“Merrell Dow”) where Lord Hoffman found (at p. 86) that “use of a product makes the
invention part of the state of the art only so far as that use makes available
the necessary information”.
[135] In Merrell Dow,
a pharmaceutical company had patented the chemical composition of an acid
metabolite formed in the liver after ingesting an anti-histamine drug called
terfenadine. The patent was challenged on the basis of anticipation by prior
use and of anticipation by prior publication. The prior use was said to be
the fact that humans who had in the past ingested terfenadine produced the acid
metabolite in their liver. This claim of anticipation by prior use was rejected
by Lord Hoffman on the ground that such use alone, though allowing the acid
metabolite to be produced in the liver of those who ingested the drug, did not
disclose the invention since no information was conveyed by the use: Merrell
Dow at pp. 86-87. However, Lord Hoffman found that knowledge of the acid
metabolite was nevertheless made available to the public by prior publication
of the terfenadine specification under the description “a part of the chemical
reaction in the human body produced by the ingestion of terfenadine and having
an anti-histamine effect”. This finding of anticipation by prior publication
may no longer be valid in light of the enablement requirement set out in Synthon
- and in fact Lord Hoffman, writing in Synthon at para. 33, appears to
have himself questioned his prior finding of anticipation by publication in Merrell
Dow. Nevertheless, Lord Hoffman’s discussion in Merrell Dow clearly
sets out the principle that a prior use which does not disclose necessary
information concerning the invention cannot lead to a finding of anticipation.
[136]
In Lux,
the issue was whether a patent for a traffic light control system that included
a common controller responsive to the detection of moving vehicles and capable
of adjusting traffic lights accordingly was anticipated by the use of
prototypes of the invention on commercial jobs. The court interpreted “made available to the
public” as requiring that the use allow for an enabling disclosure, but that it
suffices that that such enabling disclosure could be gained by observation of
the use. In the particular circumstances of Lux, the court found that by
simply observing the operation of the lights controlled by the invention, a
person skilled in the art would have acquired enough information to allow him
or her to understand how the invention worked: Lux at pp. 134-135. Conversely, if simple observation
of an invention being used does not allow a skilled person to understand how
it works, i.e. does not provide an enabling disclosure, that use cannot
constitute anticipation.
[137]
This approach
was reiterated and expanded by the European Patent Office in both its Opinion
of the Enlarged Board of Appeal, December 18, 1992 G/92 (“Opinion G/92”)
and in FISONS PLC v. Packard Instrument BV, case number T 0952/92-3.4.1 of the European Patent
Office Technical Board of Appeal – August 17, 1994 (“Fisons v. Packard”). Both the case and the Opinion
involved the scope of Article 54(2) of the European Patent Convention
which provides that “[t]he state of the art shall be held to comprise
everything made available to the public by means of a written or oral
description, by use or in any other way, before the date of filing of the
European patent application.”
[138]
In Opinion
G/92, the Enlarged Board of Appeal found (at para. 2.1) that an objective
test must be used in all cases, including through prior use, for determining whether
an invention has been made available to the public. It further determined (at
para. 1.4) that when a product is available to the public and where it is
possible for a skilled person to discover the composition or internal structure
of the product and to reproduce it without undue burden, then both the product
and its composition are deemed available to the public.
[139]
Fisons v.
Packard added
that there is no undue burden where the analysis of the product’s composition or
internal structure
is possible in accordance with the known analytical techniques which are
available for use by the skilled person. Conversely, when a product’s
composition or internal structure are not made available for analysis or cannot
be ascertained with known analytical techniques, no public disclosure has been
established and anticipation has not been made out:
In the first place it appears to
be very well established in the case law of the Boards of Appeal that for a
claimed invention to have been “made
available to the public” in the sense of Article 54(2) EPC before the relevant
filing date, information equivalent to the claimed invention must have been
accessible to a skilled person. As stated by the Enlarged Board in Decisions G
2/88 and G 6/88 (OJ EPO 1990, 93 and 114), “The word ‘available’ carries with
it the idea that, for lack of novelty to be found, all the technical features
of the claimed invention in combination must have been communicated to the
public, or laid open for inspection”…
(Fisons v. Packard at
para. 2.1)
(e) Application of these
principles to this case
[140]
As discussed
above, the test for anticipation by prior publication requires that
“anticipation must be found in a specific patent or other published document” (Beloit at para.
30 of the N.R. edition).
The test for anticipation by oral communication also requires that an actual
disclosure must have occurred. In all cases, the disclosure must set out all
the information required to understand the invention in clear and unmistakable
directions so as to allow the skilled person to do what the patentee claims to
have invented.
[141]
In this case,
the elements considered as “publications” by the Judge were the drawing of the
3103 Assembly held by Ken Wenzel at the job site, and the availability of Ken
Wenzel for consultation: see paras. 120 to 122 of the Reasons. However, in her
assessment of the evidence, the Judge made no factual determination as to
whether the drawing amounted to a publication available to the public, or
whether any information concerning the 3103 Assembly was actually communicated
by Ken Wenzel. She simply equated the possibility of consulting Ken Wenzel –
who held the drawing - as amounting to anticipation by prior publication,
without first determining whether or not any information was in fact published
or disclosed.
[142]
Ken Wenzel’s testimony was that
the drawing was not disclosed. He also testified that he was available for
consultation for the very short time he was at the site, but he did not state
whether he was actually consulted, and if so, what was the information he would
have conveyed:
Q. MR WAKEFIELD: Were
the drawings available to Oryx or Ensco while you were down in the Dilley, Texas area in 1990?
A I don’t remember
whether I went over the assembly drawings, I wouldn’t – not with Oryx, no,
never, but with Ensco, if they would have asked me, would want assembly would
have one, but I can’t remember whether I – I don’t recall giving them a drawing
or I don’t even recall going over it with them.
Q The drawings were
there?
A While I was there.
Q And same question about
you. Were you available for consultation?
A Oh, yes.
(Appeal Book (“AB”) v. 10 at pp.
3020-3021)
[143]
This is not
evidence of prior disclosure by either publication or oral communication.
[144]
Using an
objective test, I can only conclude that an undisclosed drawing does not amount
to a publication which is available to the public. There is no analogy here
with a published book sitting on a shelf in a public library. In the case of
the book, the disclosure can be objectively ascertained by the fact that it is
publicly available from a third party, i.e. the public library. In the
case of a drawing held by an inventor, public disclosure cannot be objectively
ascertained without evidence of it being made available to the public through a
deposit in a public library, placing it on the internet, publishing it in a
trade journal, etc., or through actual disclosure to a member of the public not
otherwise held to an obligation of confidence.
[145]
A drawing held by an individual,
and information held in the mind of an individual, are not in the public domain
until such time as they are effectively conveyed to the public.
[146]
There is no
evidence that such a conveyance of information occurred in this case. Ken
Wenzel did not testify that he disclosed the drawing or that he in fact
provided information concerning the 3103 Assembly; he simply testified that he
was available for consultation. Being available for consultation is not the
same as disclosing information. For an oral communication of information to be
effective for the purposes of anticipation, the information must be actually
conveyed. Someone like Ken Wenzel may well be sitting in an office, an airplane
or a convention hall with all the information in his mind, however, that
information cannot be deemed to have been available to the public unless it is
established by positive evidence that it was indeed conveyed to the public by
some form of communication. Simply put, “being available for
consultation” is not a form of communication. This is equivalent of saying “had
they asked me I would have told them”. This may well be true, but until someone
effectively “tells them”, no information is conveyed.
[147]
In order to
find anticipation in this case, the Judge added a subjective element to the
test., i.e. that Ken Wenzel could have disclosed information had he been
requested to do so. The introduction of such a subjective element disregards
the legislative provisions of subsection 28.2(1) of the Patent Act,
which specifically requires that the information be conveyed “in a manner that the
subject-matter became available to the public”. Moreover, due diligence
research of prior art for patenting purposes would become a difficult, if not
impossible task if this subjective element were introduced, thus adding unnecessary
uncertainty into patent practice and law. Indeed, researching what could
have been published or orally communicated to the public (but was in fact not
published or communicated) is an impossible task. Such a subjective approach
may well lead back to the discarded notions of “prior use without disclosure”
and “first to invent” which existed before the 1989 amendments to the Patent
Act.
[148]
By deciding
as she did, the Judge introduced an unwarranted subjective element into the
test for anticipation which makes it virtually impossible to assess objectively
both elements of anticipation, namely disclosure (whether necessary information
required by a skilled person to understand the invention was available to the
public) and anticipation (whether
a skilled person would have been able to perform the invention without undue
burden).
[149]
I also am of
the view that the Judge erred in finding anticipation by prior use.
[150]
The
principles for finding anticipation by prior use are notably set out in Baker
Petrolite, Merrell Dow, Lux and Fisons v. Packard, discussed above.
Drawing from these principles, in order to succeed in their anticipation by
prior use challenge in this case, the respondents had to adduce evidence
establishing on a balance of probabilities that, under an objective
determination, a person skilled in the art could have been in a position to
understand and analyze the invention so as to allow that person to work the
invention without undue burden.
[151]
To establish
disclosure by prior use entails proving that the public was free to inspect and
analyze the invention. Barring contrary evidence - such as a confidentiality
and non-disclosure agreement - this may be assumed when the equipment is sold: Baker
Petrolite at para. 42 principle 5, and paras. 96-97. Here however, the
equipment (i.e. the 3103 Assembly) was used for a short time under a
rental arrangement. Since here there is no written rental agreement, the terms
of the rental must be determined from the circumstances.
[152]
A rental or
lease of equipment is a subtype of bailment for valuable consideration, known
as hire of chattel: Chitty on Contracts, Volume 2: Specific Contracts,
30th ed. (Toronto, Thomson Ruters, 2008) (“Chitty on Contracts”) at section 33-063, p. 229. A
hirer may use the chattel only for the purpose for which it was let to him. In
this regard Chitty on Contracts provides as follows at section 33-077:
The hirer may use the chattel
only for the purpose for which it was let to him. So, in the early cases, if a
horse was let for riding, the hirer was not permitted to use it for jumping; if
a horse was let for a particular journey, the hirer was not allowed to exceed
that journey. But the authority granted to the hirer to use chattel will be
construed as conferring on him implied authority to do in relation to the
chattel anything reasonably incidental to its reasonable use, unless there is
express provision to the contrary in the contract. The hirer who uses a chattel
for a purpose not contemplated by the contract of hiring will be liable both in
contract and in tort for any loss caused by such use.
[153]
In this case,
to establish disclosure by prior use required submitting evidence that either
the operation of the equipment would itself allow for enabling disclosure (as
in the case of Lux), or that the skilled person would have been capable
of accessing and analyzing the inner workings of the equipment without undue
burden, as in the case of Fisons v. Packard.
[154] The only evidence
submitted at the trial on the issue of prior disclosure by use was the
testimony of Ken Wenzel. He testified that the 3103 Assembly was “a small
drilling motor with a sealed bearing assembly” (AB v. 10 at p. 3001,
lines 6 and 7, emphasis added). He also testified that it was not possible to
see the inner workings of the 3103 Assembly units from their use in Texas, and
that these units could only be taken apart in the repair shop and not at the
rig site:
Q And when you saw them
[the 3103 Assembly units], would they just be a piece of pipe, more or less,
from the outside?
A Yes.
Q Would you be able to
see the inner workings of them just by looking at them?
A No.
Q And do you know whether
these 3103s were disassembled at the rig site?
A I wasn’t there to see,
but normally, you – no, you don’t take a motor apart at the rig site.
They go to the repair shop for repairing.
Q To take a motor apart,
in fact, you require special tools, right?
A Yes, you got
to break the joints and somewhere to hold them, yeah, no, they are always
taken to the shop for repair. I don’t know – not aware of them ever being
taken apart in the field.
Q Okay, so if you were a
rig hand, say, and you were working on that rig in Dilley [Texas], would you
have any way to tell what the inner workings of that 3103 bearing assembly
were?
A No.
(AB at p. 3100 lines 1 to 22,
emphasis added)
[155] This testimony is
inconsistent with the Judge’s finding that “anyone at the drill site could have
“lifted up the hood’ and examined the 3103 assembly”: at para. 144 of the
Reasons. In fact, the testimony of Ken Wenzel leads to the contrary conclusion.
Since the burden of proving anticipation through disclosure by prior use fell
on the respondents, I can only conclude that this burden was not discharged and
that the Judge committed a palpable and overriding error in finding otherwise.
[156] I add that the Judge’s
reliance (at paras. 123-124 of the Reasons) on Gibney et al v. Ford Motor
Co. of Canada Ltd., [1967] 2 Ex. C.R. 279, 52 C.P.R. 140 for the “lifting
up the hood” analogy was misplaced. That decision was rendered under the old
provisions of the Patent Act under which a patent could be challenged on
the basis of prior use alone. The issue in that case was whether the use at
issue was captured under the exception of experimental use. With respect, I do
not consider that decision to set out principles which govern the modern notion
of anticipation, which requires both prior disclosure and enablement.
[157] The Judge also stated
(at para. 121 of her Reasons) that if the 3103 Assembly tool had broken while
drilling, a “fisherman” would have seen the inner workings of the 3103 assembly
as pieces were retrieved from the drilling hole. With respect, the testimony of
Ken Wenzel concerning such a hypothetical situation did not establish
disclosure leading to a finding of anticipation.
[158] The “fisherman”
evidence consisted in the testimony of Ken Wenzel found at pp. 3022-3023 of the
Appeal Book. A “fisherman” is someone who retrieves broken pieces of machinery
when a drilling tool breaks in an oil drilling hole. Ken Wenzel testified that
had the 3103 Assembly tool broke in the drilling hole (this did not in fact
occur), a “fisherman” may have been required to retrieve its pieces. He added
that in such circumstances, the owner of the 3103 Assembly (not the renter) may
have provided information to the “fisherman” as to the shape or size of the
equipment in order to facilitate it being “fished” out of the drilling hole. No
evidence was submitted as to whether information as to shape and size allowed the
“fisherman” to be in a position to understand the operation of the 3103
Assembly. Moreover, there was no evidence tendered to establish that broken
pieces of equipment “fished” out of the drilling hole would have enabled a
skilled person to understand and eventually work the invention. In the absence
of such evidence, anticipation could not be made out through the self-serving
“fisherman” testimony of Ken Wenzel. I point out once again that the burden of
proving anticipation through a hypothetical disclosure of shape and size to a
“fisherman” or though the retrieval of broken pieces of equipment fell on the
respondents.
[159] Since the elements of
anticipation, public disclosure and enablement, have not been met, I conclude
that the Judge committed reviewable errors in finding that the ‘630 Patent was
invalid on the basis of anticipation.
Conclusions and
disposition
[160] It follows that
the ‘630 Patent was not anticipated by the 3103 Assembly. However, as discussed
by colleague Gauthier J.A., the Judge’s finding of invalidity on the basis of
obviousness should be upheld.
[161] I would consequently
dismiss this appeal with costs.
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