Date: 20090303
Docket: T-824-04
Citation: 2009 FC 58
Ottawa, Ontario, March 3, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Keefe
BETWEEN:
UVIEW
ULTRAVIOLET SYSTEMS INC.
Plaintiff
and
BRASSCORP LTD.
(d.b.a. CLIPLIGHT MANUFACTURING COMPANY)
Defendants
REASONS FOR THE
JUDGMENT OF DECEMBER 23, 2008
AND AMENDED JUDGMENT
O’KEEFE J.
[1]
This
is an action brought by Uview Ultraviolet Systems Inc. (the plaintiff) against
Brasscorp Ltd. (defendant) for infringement of Canadian Patents 2,235,673 (‘673
Patent) and 2,224,024 (‘024 Patent). The defendants on the action have
counterclaimed.
[2]
With
respect to the original action, the plaintiff requests the following relief:
a) a declaration as between the plaintiff
and the defendant that the ‘673 Patent and the ‘024 Patent are owned by the
plaintiff and are valid and subsisting;
b) a
declaration that the defendant has infringed claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10,
14, 15 and 16 of the ‘673 Patent and claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12,
13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 38 of the ‘024 Patent and has induced and
procured the infringement of claims 1, 2 and 3 of the ‘673 Patent and claim 9
of the ‘024 Patent by others;
c) interim,
interlocutory and permanent injunctions to restrain the defendant by itself or
by its shareholders, directors, officers, agents, servants, employees,
affiliates, subsidiaries, or any other entity under its authority or control
from:
i) directly
or indirectly infringing any claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent; and
ii) inducing
or procuring others to infringe claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent;
d) an
order directing the defendant to forthwith deliver up to the plaintiff all
articles in its possession or power, used, made or being made in infringement
of the said ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent, or that such articles be destroyed;
e) damages
in an amount to be ascertained;
f) or,
in the alternative to the order sought in (e), an accounting of the profits
made by the defendant as a result of its unlawful activities;
g) reasonable
compensation for acts on the part of the defendant after the applications for
the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent became open to public inspection and before
the grant of the said patents, that would have constituted an infringement of
the respective patents if they had been granted on the day the application
became open to public inspection;
h) pre-judgment
and post-judgment interest; and
i) its
costs of this action on a solicitor and client basis plus GST.
[3]
With
respect to the counterclaim, the defendant requests the following relief:
a) a
declaration that the claims of the ‘673 Patent and the ‘024 Patent are and
always have been, invalid and void;
b) an
interim, interlocutory and permanent injunction restraining the plaintiff, its
officers, directors, agents, employees and all those over whom it exercises
control, either directly or indirectly, from making false or misleading
statements tending to discredit the business, wares and services of the
defendant, contrary to subsection 7(a) of the Trade-marks Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. T-13;
c) pre-
and post-judgment interest on any and all monetary relief or costs at a rate
exceeding the prevailing consumer lending rate; and
d) costs
on a solicitor client scale or at the high end of Column V of Tariff B of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106.
Background
[4]
Uview Ultraviolet
Systems Inc. (the plaintiff, defendant in the counterclaim) is a corporation
incorporated under the laws of Ontario that manufactures and distributes
air-conditioning leak detection systems. The plaintiff is the owner of the ‘673
Patent and the ‘024 Patent.
[5]
The ‘673 Patent was
laid open to public inspection on March 26, 1998 and was granted to the
plaintiff on August 13, 2002 for an invention entitled Method and Apparatus for
Charging Pressurized Systems. The claims of the ‘673 Patent includes a method,
apparatus and canister used in charging a closed, pressurized air-conditioning
system with a secondary fluid as per the invention. The ‘673 Patent grants the
plaintiff the exclusive right, privilege and liberty of making, constructing,
using and vending to others to be used in Canada, the invention as described in
the specification of the ‘673 Patent.
[6]
The ’024 Patent was
laid open to public inspection on June 8, 1999 and was granted to the plaintiff
on November 21, 2006 for an invention entitled Apparatus and Process for
Charging a Pressurized System. The claims of the ‘024 Patent includes an
apparatus, a canister and a method used in charging a closed, pressurized air
conditioning system with a secondary fluid. The ‘024 Patent grants the
plaintiff exclusive right, privilege and liberty of making, constructing, using
and vending to others to be used in Canada, the invention as described in the
specification of the ‘024 Patent.
[7]
Brasscorp Ltd. (the
defendant, plaintiff in the counterclaim) carries on business as Cliplight
Manufacturing Company. The defendant makes, constructs and/or vends to others
to be used in Canada an apparatus and cartridges for charging
a closed pressurized air conditioning system with a dye under the name THE
CLIPLIGHT REVOLVER UV DYE SYSTEM. The defendant also makes, constructs and/or
vends to others, two apparatuses to be used in Canada,
for charging a closed pressurized air conditioning system, one with a dye sold
under the brand, THE DYE STICK, and one with an oil sold under the brand, THE
RETRO STICK.
Prior Art
[8]
Infusion
methods were the most common way to inject secondary fluids into pressurized
air conditioning or refrigeration (AC) systems prior to the filing of the ‘673
Patent. Infusion methods used pressurized refrigerant to carry fluid into the
AC systems. The 701 infusion system which is exhibit 9 is an example of an
infusion device.
[9]
Paragraphs
5 to 7 of the plaintiff’s closing argument summarizes the other prior art.
These paragraphs read as follows:
5. Prior to the filing of the
‘673 patent, the most common methods used to inject secondary fluids into AC
systems were infusion methods that used pressurized refrigerant to carry fluid
into the AC systems. The 701 infusion system (Exhibit 9) is an example of such
an infusion device.
6. the prior art also includes
three hand operated mechanical injector implements adapted for injecting
secondary fluids into AC systems. US patent 4,467,620 (“Bradley”) which issued
August 28, 1984 disclosed a hand operated tool for injection of oil into AC
systems in respect of which there is no evidence of any commercialization. In
the early to mid-1990’s, two mechanical injectors for injecting fluids into AC
systems were introduced in the market. The Quest injector was a patented
disposable “Do It Yourself” hand operated mechanical injector prefilled with
red non-fluorescing dye that saw limited distribution in Canada, and that has been
discontinued as a listed product by its manufacturer. The Classic injector was
a reusable, hand operated mechanical injector that required filling of a
reservoir prior to each use. The Plaintiff’s predecessor P & F Technologies
(“P&F”), distributed the Classic tool in Canada for a short time and did not find it to
be a commercially successful product. Notwithstanding introduction of the Quest
and Classic products, infusion devices that used pressurized gas remained the
most commonly used AC fluid injection methods for carrying secondary fluids into
AC systems.
7. Bradley, Quest and Classic are
all unitary or one-piece injectors, comprising:
·
a housing
for containing a secondary fluid
·
a piston
in the housing, and
·
a threaded
ram engaged with threads in the housing to drive
the piston.
In each case, the ram is rotated to drive
the piston into the housing to expel fluid from the housing. Bradley provides a
cross bar and Classic provides a hand grip to enable manual rotation of the
ram. Quest differs from Bradley and Classic in that a wrench is required to
facilitate rotation of the ram. Bradley and Classic were refillable and Quest
was disposable.
[10]
The
president of Uview Ultraviolet Systems and the sole inventor named on the
plaintiff’s patents in issue (the ‘673 Patent and ‘024 Patent), Phil Trigiani,
was trained and worked as an automotive mechanic and has experience in
servicing automotive air conditioners. He also has a masters degree in business
administration. Mr. Trigiani and his cousin, Tony Ferraro, who is also an
experienced automotive technician, established P & F Technologies to
manufacture refrigerant recovery implements. The business expanded to include
recovery and recycling implements and the distribution of other automotive
servicing equipment and materials.
[11]
There
were concerns about the depletion of the ozone layer in the 1980s. This
resulted in the adoption of the Montréal Protocol in the early 1990s. This
resulted in a requirement for the phasing out and eventual elimination of refrigerants
released into the atmosphere. As a result, before an AC system could be topped
up to enable it to function properly, the system had to be checked for leaks
and the leaks repaired.
[12]
As
well, the existing coolant R12 was replaced with a coolant known as R134. The
R134 had a smaller molecule than the R12 coolant. This made leak detection more
difficult. As a result, the demand for effective leak detection tools and
methods increased. In response to this demand, the use of UV fluorescing dye as
a leak detection method in pressurized AC systems became popular (see
paragraphs 6 and 7 of the agreed statement of facts).
[13]
Mr.
Trigiani and Mr. Ferraro formed the plaintiff, Uview Ultraviolet Systems Inc., and
began to design, develop and blend their own dyes and manufacture their own UV
lights and injection devices.
[14]
In
an effort to develop a better injector product, Mr. Trigiani states that he
thought of a device which was an injector product which would have a disposable
container that could be prefilled with a fluid that could be injected into an
AC system. He would need to invent some type of mechanical advantage to
overcome the pressure of the AC system instead of the infusion method.
[15]
In
or around March 1996, Mr. Trigiani and Mr. Ferraro applied for US patent
protection.
[16]
Mr.
Trigiani continued to make changes to his idea which resulted in a prototype
injector being produced in the summer of 1996. His US patent
attorney told him the US application would not cover the prototype
injector. As a result, the ‘673 priority application was prepared.
[17]
In
1996, two more prototypes were produced and although they worked, they were too
expensive to be a viable commercial product.
[18]
After
more thought, Mr. Trigiani decided to replace his prototype injector with a
commercial caulking gun. The commercial caulking gun he adapted had sufficient
power to overcome the pressure of the AC system so as to allow the dye to be
injected into the system.
[19]
In
late 1996, the design of the prefilled cartridges to be used with the caulking
gun injector was completed.
[20]
A
European patent was also obtained for the caulking gun injector.
[21]
The
plaintiff named its caulking gun injector the “SPOTGUN”.
[22]
Paragraph
11 of the agreed statement of facts describes the SPOTGUN and when it was first
sold:
11. The Plaintiff first sold its
commercial product under the SPOTGUN brand on February 4, 1997. The injector was a modified
caulking gun style injector; the cartridge included a threaded nozzle; and the
charging conduit included a connector adapted to engage the threaded nozzle, a
check valve at the connection to the nozzle and a connector having a valve
adapted to open upon engagement with and close upon disengagement from charge
ports on AC systems.
[23]
Paragraph
12 of the agreed statement of facts states:
12. The Plaintiff’s SPOTGUN product
was recognized by Motor magazine as one of the “Top 20 Tools That Rule” in the
September 1997 edition.
[24]
The
plaintiff’s SPOTGUN was adopted by General Motors within a year of its
commercial launch. Every General Motors dealer in North America was provided
with the SPOTGUN for injection into AC units.
[25]
Around
the same time as the plaintiff started to sell SPOTGUN, a product called the ROBINAIR
injector was marketed. The ROBINAIR injector was a plastic syringe connected to
a conduit for connection to AC systems through a two piece metal nozzle
containing an anti-back flow valve attached through the end of the syringe
barrel.
[26]
Also
around this same time, the defendant tried to develop a prototype injector that
used a separate injector and cartridge. Part of the cartridge had a foil top
that was punched in the injector to open communication with a nozzle on the
injector that included an anti-back flow valve. No evidence was presented to
show that the drawings or any prototype was disclosed to the public by the
defendant.
[27]
Paragraphs
14, 16, 18, 19, 20, 24, 27, 28, 29 and 30 of the agreed statement of facts
outline the defendant’s products and its activities. These paragraphs read as
follows:
14. On November 4, 1997 the
Defendant filed U.S. provisional application No.
60-064,172 (the provisional application) entitled precision liquid injection
system with the USPTO.
. . .
16. On November 3, 1998 the
Defendant filed Canadian patent application No. 2,252,329 (the ‘329
application) in the Canadian Patent Office claiming priority to the provisional
application filed November 4, 1997. The ‘329 application was open to public
inspection on May 4, 1999 and was allowed on February 29, 2008.
. . .
18. The Defendant commenced
marketing and sales of its DYE STICK and THE RETRO STICK products in 1998.
19. The Defendant has sold its DYE
STICK injector separately and as part of kits including hoses, lights, and
related apparatus. The Defendant has marketed its DYE STICK injector as a
disposable dye injector for use to inject dye through a hose into an
air-conditioning system and as working with SPOTGUN hoses.
20. The Defendant has sold its
RETRO STICK injector separately and as part of kits including hoses in Canada and internationally. The
Defendant markets the RETRO STICK for use in injecting conditioning oil into a
closed air-conditioning system through a hose.
. . .
24. The Defendant commenced sales
of the REVOLVER dye injection system in Canada about 2003. The Defendant sells REVOLVER
injectors, cartridges and hoses separately, and as part of kits that may also
include UV lights, adapters and other related items, for the express purpose of
injecting a UV dye into a closed pressurized AC system.
. . .
27. On June 6, 2006 the Defendant
entered into an agreement entitled “Supply Agreement” with Spectronics (“the
Spectronics Agreement”). Prior to execution of the Spectronics agreement the
Defendant obtained the components for its REVOLVER dye injection system
directly from specified suppliers and assembled and filled the cartridges with
dye itself.
28. Pursuant to the Spectronics
Agreement, Spectronics purchases REVOLVER injectors and components for
cartridges from “Cliplight’s Suppliers”. These suppliers are the same suppliers
the Defendant previously obtained its products from, and continue to
manufacture the products and components using tooling owned by the Defendant.
Spectronics assembles the cartridges and fills them with dye supplied by
Spectronics. Aside from the dye, the REVOLVER injectors and cartridges supplied
by Spectronics are identical to the REVOLVER injectors and cartridges that the
Defendant sold prior to entering into the Spectronics Agreement. The Defendant
does not obtain the hoses it sells for the REVOLVER dye injection system from
Spectronics.
29. The REVOLVER injectors and dye
cartridges supplied through Spectronics are identical in form and structure to
those sold by the Defendant prior to entering into the Spectronics Agreement.
30. On November 7, 2007, the
Defendant provided Spectronics with a written request for indemnification in
this litigation pursuant to paragraph 5.3 of the Spectronics Agreement.
[28]
The
plaintiff’s dealings with Spectronics is summarized in paragraphs 21, 22 and 23
of the agreed statement of facts which state:
21. In May 2000, the Plaintiff
commenced discussions with Spectronics Corporation (“Spectronics”) to address
infringement of the Plaintiff’s patent rights by Spectronics, a leading
manufacturer of mobile AC service tools. On October 13, 2000, the Plaintiff
entered into a confidential license agreement with Spectronics providing
Spectronics a license under the Plaintiff’s patents.
22. Canadian Patent Nos. 2,235,673
and 2,224,024 are covered by the definition of Licensed Patents in the license
granted to Spectronics.
23. The license to Spectronics is a
valid and subsisting license.
Plaintiff’s Other
Enforcement
[29]
The
plaintiff initiated a patent infringement action against Bright Solutions Inc.
in the United
States
to restrain the sale of infringing products. As a result, the plaintiff and
Bright Solutions Inc. signed a confidential settlement agreement in May 2001.
[30]
The
plaintiff, in paragraphs 36, 37 and 38 of its closing argument outlines three
further enforcement efforts by it:
36. The Plaintiff commenced a
patent infringement action seeking to restrain the sale of infringing products
by R.J. Doran & Company Ltd. (R.J. Doran) in the United Kingdom in 2004. The Plaintiff alleged
infringement of products sold by R.J. Doran, including the Defendant’s REVOLVER
dye injection system that was purchased from the Defendant and sold by R.J.
Doran as a private branded product. The Plaintiff entered into a confidential
Settlement Agreement in January 2005 settling the dispute with R.J. Doran.
37. In late 2002, the Plaintiff
alleged that certain products sold by Supercool Tire Seal Inc. infringed the
Plaintiff’s patents. In response to the Plaintiff’s complaint, Supercool agreed
to discontinue sales of its cartridge based injection system in November 2002.
38. As a result of the Plaintiff’s
enforcement efforts, the Plaintiff entered into supply agreements with two
infringers.
[31]
The
plaintiff called as expert witnesses, Tony Ferraro who is a co-owner of the
plaintiff and Jerome Lemon.
[32]
The
defendant called Professor Thomas Brown and Dr. Peter Frise as expert
witnesses. The defendant also called Jonathan Cooper and James Ferris as
witnesses.
[33]
The
defendant has filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff, the nature of which
is stated in paragraph 26 of the agreed statement of facts:
26. On February 14, 2006, the
Plaintiff issued a press release advising that it was prosecuting an action in
the Federal Court of Canada against the Defendant and that allegations included
that REVOLVER dye injection system products infringe one or more claims of the
‘673 patent. The Defendant claims the Plaintiff breached s. 7(1) of the Trade-marks
Act as a result of the press release and claims damages in the Counterclaim
in these proceedings.
[34]
The
plaintiff summarized the issues as follows:
1. Who is the person skilled in
the art?
2. Does the REVOLVER product as
sold by the Defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the Defendant,
infringe any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 patent
and/or any of claims 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 19, 20 or 38 of the ‘024 patent?
3. Does the DYE STICK product as
sold by the Defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the Defendant,
infringe any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 patent
and/or any of claims 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 or 9 of the ‘024 patent?
4. Does the RETRO STICK product
as sold by the Defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the Defendant
incorporate the invention claimed in any of claims 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 or 10 of the
‘673 patent?
5. Does the agreement between the
Defendant and Spectronics provide the Defendant with a defence to infringement
of the ‘673 or ‘024 patent in respect of the REVOLVER injectors and REVOLVER
cartridges obtained from suppliers by Spectronics and then provided by
Spectronics to the Defendant pursuant to the terms of the agreement?
6. Are any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4,
7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 patent invalid on the basis that:
(a) The claim is anticipated by
the Quest reference;
(b) Claim 14 is anticipated by the
Bradley, Classic or Robinair references respectively;
(c) The claim is obvious as a
result of the references and common general knowledge identified by the
Defendant’s experts;
(d) The claim is over broad or
lacking utility as a result of the failure to specify a means for retaining the
piston in the cylinder;
(e) the application that issued
into the ‘673 patent failed to comply with section 37 due to a lack of drawings
in the specification;
(f) The Plaintiff failed to
comply with section 73(1)(a) of the Patent Act in view of the fact that
the Plaintiff filed minutes from a hearing before the EPO in respect of the
corresponding European application; or
(g) The ‘673 patent is void
pursuant to s. 53(1) of the Patent Act on the basis that:
the petition contains an
untrue material allegation, namely that Michael Kroll and Phil
Trigiani were the owners of the invention; or
as a result of the omission
of drawings of the apparatus in the specification, it contains more or
less than is necessary for obtaining the end for they purported to be
made.
7. Are any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 or 38 of the ‘024
patent invalid on the basis that:
(a) The subject-matter defined by
the claim is not patentably distinct from the subject-matter defined by any of
the claims in the ‘673 patent;
(b) In respect of any of claims 1,
5, 6, 7 or 9, the claim was anticipated by Canadian patent application no.
2,252,329;
(c) In respect of any of claims 1,
4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 20, 21 or 38, the subject-matter defined by the claim was
anticipated by the Quest, Classic or Robinair references respectively;
(d) The claim is obvious as a
result of the references and common general knowledge identified by the
Defendant’s experts;
(e) The claim is ambiguous as a
result of the use of the term “release valve”?
8. Is the Defendant liable for
infringement or inducing infringement of the identified claims of the ‘673
patent or the ‘024 patent?
9. Is the Plaintiff liable for
making false and misleading statements contrary to section 7(a) of the Trade-marks
Act?
[35]
Issue
1
Who is the person skilled in
the art?
In order to construe a patent,
there must be a review of the patent specification through the eyes of an
“ordinary person skilled in the art”. Mr. Justice Binnie put it this way in Whirlpool
Corp. v. Camco (2000), 9 C.P.R. (4th) 129 at 153 (S.C.C):
53. A
second difficulty with the appellants' dictionary approach is that it urges the
Court to look at the words through the eyes of a grammarian or etymologist
rather than through the eyes and with the common knowledge of a worker of
ordinary skill in the field to which the patent relates. An etymologist or
grammarian might agree with the appellants that a vane of any type is still a
vane. However, the patent specification is not addressed to grammarians,
etymologists or to the public generally, but to skilled individuals
sufficiently versed in the art to which the patent relates to enable them on a
technical level to appreciate the nature and description of the invention: H.
G. Fox, The Canadian Law and Practice Relating to Letters Patent for
Inventions (4th ed. 1969), at p. 185. The court, writes Dr. Fox, at p. 203,
must place itself
·
in the position of some person acquainted with the
surrounding circumstances as to the state of the art and the manufacture at the
time, and making itself acquainted with the technical meaning in that art or
manufacture that any particular word or words may have. . . .
[36]
The
‘673 patent is directed to devices which are used to inject fluids such as dye
into pressurized AC systems and the method to do so.
[37]
The
‘024 patent is directed to an apparatus and process for injecting a fluid such
as dye into a pressurized system such as a pressurized AC system and the method
to do so.
[38]
Put
another way, the claims in this case are whether the cartridge and
cartridge/injector combination and method of using this apparatus is novel. I
would agree that the method claims are addressed to users of the apparatus such
as automotive service technicians with experience in relating to pressurized
automotive AC systems. The apparatus claim would be addressed to persons who
could make the apparatus.
[39]
I
am of the opinion that the person with the common knowledge of a worker of
ordinary skill in the field to which this patent relates would be a
mechanical/manufacturing engineer or a technician with experience in the field
of automotive air-conditioning.
Patent Construction
[40]
In
Whirlpool above, Mr. Justice Binnie, speaking for the Court, stated at
pages 145 to 148:
1. The Principles of Patent Claims
Construction
42. The
content of a patent specification is regulated by s. 34 of the Patent Act. The
first part is a "disclosure" in which the patentee must describe the
invention "with sufficiently complete and accurate details as will enable
a workman, skilled in the art to which the invention relates, to construct or
use that invention when the period of the monopoly has expired": Consolboard
Inc. v. MacMillan Bloedel (Sask.) Ltd., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 504, at p. 517.
The disclosure is the quid provided by the inventor in exchange for the quo of
a 17-year (now 20-year) monopoly on the exploitation of the invention. The
monopoly is enforceable by an array of statutory and equitable remedies and it
is therefore important for the public to know what is prohibited and where they
may safely go while the patent is still in existence. The public notice
function is performed by the claims that conclude the specification and must
state "distinctly and in explicit terms the things or combinations that
the applicant regards as new and in which he claims an exclusive property or
privilege" (s. 34(2))". An inventor is not obliged to claim a
monopoly on everything new, ingenious and useful disclosed in the specification.
The usual rule is that what is not claimed is considered disclaimed.
43. The first step in a
patent suit is therefore to construe the claims. Claims construction is
antecedent to consideration of both validity and infringement issues. The
appellants' argument is that these two inquiries -- validity and infringement
-- are distinct, and that if the principles of "purposive
construction" derived from Catnic are to be adopted at all, they
should properly be confined to infringement issues only. The principle of
"purposive construction", they say, has no role to play in the
determination of validity, and its misapplication is fatal to the judgment
under appeal.
44. It is
true that in Catnic itself there was no attack on the validity of the
patent. The litigation turned on issues of infringement. The patent in issue
dealt with galvanized steel lintels for use in building construction. Lintels
are structural members placed over openings such as doors and windows to
support the building above. The patent taught an ingenious new type of lintel
of sheet metal bent into a box-like "lazy Z" shape that was light to
handle and inexpensive to manufacture. The defendant knew of the plaintiff's
product but was not familiar with the plaintiff's patent. The claims (of which
they were unaware) taught that the lintel must have "a second rigid
support member extending vertically from or from near the rear edge of the
first horizontal plate" (underlining added; italics in original deleted).
Vertical alignment would maximize the load-bearing capacity. For reasons
unrelated to patent avoidance, the rigid support member in the defendant's
product was inclined about eight degrees off vertical. The trial judge
concluded that there was no literal infringement because the support did not extend
precisely "vertically", but that, since there was no material
difference in function of the component part, there was, viewing the
defendant's lintel as a whole, infringement of the "pith and marrow"
of the plaintiff's invention. The trial judge was reversed by a majority in the
Court of Appeal but was subsequently avenged by restoration of his judgment by
a unanimous House of Lords. Lord Diplock's description of purposive
construction was as follows, at pp. 242-43:
My Lords, a patent specification is a
unilateral statement by the patentee, in words of his own choosing, addressed
to those likely to have a practical interest in the subject matter of his
invention (i.e. "skilled in the art"), by which he informs them what
he claims to be the essential features of the new product or process for which
the letters patent grant him a monopoly. It is those novel features only that
he claims to be essential that constitute the so-called "pith and
marrow" of the claim. A patent specification should be given a purposive
construction rather than a purely literal one derived from applying to it the
kind of meticulous verbal analysis in which lawyers are too often tempted by
their training to indulge. The question in each case is: whether persons with
practical knowledge and experience of the kind of work in which the invention
was intended to be used, would understand that strict compliance with a
particular descriptive word or phrase appearing in a claim was intended by the
patentee to be an essential requirement of the invention so that any variant
would fall outside the monopoly claimed, even though it could have no material
effect upon the way the invention worked. [Emphasis in original.]
45. The
key to purposive construction is therefore the identification by the court,
with the assistance of the skilled reader, of the particular words or phrases
in the claims that describe what the inventor considered to be the
"essential" elements of his invention. This is no different, I think,
than the approach adopted roughly 40 years earlier by Duff C.J. in J. K.
Smit & Sons, Inc. v. McClintock, [1940] S.C.R. 279. The patent
in that case related to a method of setting diamonds in devices such as rotary
drill bits for earth boring. Duff C.J., citing the earlier jurisprudence, put
the focus on the inventor's own identification of the "essential"
parts of his invention, at p. 285:
Obviously, the invention, as described by the
inventor himself, involves the use of air suction to hold the diamonds in place
while the molten metal is being introduced into the mold. There can be no
doubt, in my mind, that as the inventor puts it, that is an essential part of
his process. That part of his process is clearly not taken by the appellants.
Adapting the language of Lord Romer, it is not the province of the court to
guess what is and is not of the essence of the invention of the respondent. The
patentee has clearly indicated that the use of air suction at that stage of the
process is an essential, if not the essential, part of the invention described
in the specification. [Emphasis added.]
46. To the same effect is
the judgment of Thorson P. in McPhar Engineering Co. of Canada v. Sharpe
Instruments Ltd., [1956-60] Ex. C.R. 467, at p. 525:
Thus it is established law that if a person takes
the substance of an invention he is guilty of infringement and it does not
matter whether he omits a feature that is not essential to it or substitutes an
equivalent for it. [Emphasis added.]
47. The
"essential" elements approach was established in earlier English
cases such as Marconi v. British Radio Telegraph and Telephone Co. (1911),
28 R.P.C. 181 (Ch. D.), at p. 217, referred to by Duff C.J. in J. K. Smit,
supra, and more recent pre-Catnic decisions in that country such
as Birmingham Sound Reproducers Ltd. v. Collaro Ltd., [1956]
R.P.C. 232 (Eng. C.A.), and C. Van Der Lely N.V. v. Bamfords Ltd.,
[1963] R.P.C. 61 (H.L.), where Lord Reid, dissenting on the result, said at p.
76: "you cannot avoid infringement by substituting an obvious equivalent
for an unessential integer" (emphasis added).
48. The Catnic
analysis therefore was not a departure from the earlier jurisprudence in the United
Kingdom or in this country. It is no disrespect to Lord Diplock to
suggest that at least to some extent he poured some fine old whiskies into a
new bottle, skilfully refined the blend, brought a fresh clarity to the result,
added a distinctive label, and voilà "purposive construction".
In Catnic, as in the earlier case law, the scope of the monopoly remains
a function of the written claims but, as before, flexibility and fairness is
achieved by differentiating the essential features ("the pith and
marrow") from the unessential, based on a knowledgeable reading of the
whole specification through the eyes of the skilled addressee rather than on
the basis of "the kind of meticulous verbal analysis in which lawyers are
too often tempted by their training to indulge" (Catnic, supra,
p. 243).
49. As
stated, the Federal Court of Appeal applied the "purposive construction"
approach to claims construction in O'Hara, supra, and, with
respect, I think it was correct to do so. The appellants' argument that the
principle of purposive construction is wrong or applies only to infringement
issues must be rejected for a number of reasons: . . .
Thus, a purposive construction is to be used.
The construction of a patent claim is a question of law for the Court.
[41]
It
is important to note that when applying a purposive construction, the Court
must, with the assistance of the skilled person, identify the particular words
or phrases in the clause that describe what the inventor considered to be the
“essential” elements of his invention. The construction given by the Court must
be consistent with the text of the claims. A court must interpret the claims
and not redraft them.
[42]
The
construction of a patent is a question of law and is to be done on the basis
that the addressee is a person skilled in the art.
[43]
The
language of a patent should be construed as of the date of publication.
[44]
A
patent cannot be construed with an eye on the allegedly infringing device in
respect of infringement.
[45]
The
defendant set out the following principles pertaining to claim construction at
paragraph 51 of its memorandum of fact and law:
51. The Supreme Court of Canada has identified the following
principles pertaining to claim construction:
(1) The Patent Act and
purposive construction promote adherence to the claims, which in turn promotes
fairness and predictability
(2) Canadian Courts have adopted
the “peripheral claiming” approach, which emphasizes the language of the claims
as identifying the legal boundary of the state-conferred monopoly
(3) The claims perform a public
notice function by setting out the scope of the monopoly, so that the public
may know where it may go with impunity
(4) The goals of the patent system
or promoting research and competition are undermined if the scope of the
monopoly lacks precision and certainty
(5) The ingenuity of a patent does
not normally lie in the identification of a desirable result, but in the
teaching of a particular means to achieve it
(6) The claims cannot be stretched
to allow the patentee to monopolize anything that achieves the desired result
(7) The claim language must be
read in an informed and purposive way
(8) Claim interpretation is
neither literal nor based on vague notions such as the “spirit of the
invention”. The more scope for searching for the “spirit of the invention”, the
less the claims can perform their public notice function
(9) A patent falls within the
definition of “regulation” in the Interpretation Act, and as such merits
construction that best assures attainment of its objects
(10) The inventor’s intention is
manifested in the patent claims as interpreted by a person skilled in the art
(11) The knowledge of the ordinary
worker should be brought to bear on the interpretation
(12) A claim contains essential and
non-essential elements. The task of the court is to separate the essential from
the non-essential elements of the monopoly claimed by the patentee
(13) In identifying the essential
and non-essential elements, the inventor’s intention is preferred over the
understanding of the addressee
(14) The identification of essential
and non-essential elements is made on the basis of the common knowledge of the
worker skilled in the art to which the patent relates, as the date the patent
was published
(15) The words chosen by the
inventor will be read in the sense the inventor is presumed to have intended at
the date the patent was published, and in a way that is sympathetic to the
accomplishment of the inventors’ purpose expressed or implicit in the claims
(16) The public is entitled to rely
on the words used, provided they are interpreted fairly and knowledgeably; a
mistake or unnecessary limitation in the claims is unfortunate, but a
“self-inflicted wound” on the part of the inventor
(17) There is no resort to extrinsic
evidence of the inventor’s intention. Allowing extrinsic evidence for the
purpose of defining the monopoly would undermine the public notice function of
the claims, and is inconsistent with a purposive construction, which focuses on
the claim language
(18) An element is essential if the
inventor’s intention, as discerned from the claims, is that the element is
essential irrespective of its practical effect
(19) An element is considered
non-essential if the patentee can show:
(a) That on a
purposive construction of the words of the claim the element was clearly not
intended to be essential; or
(b) At the date of publication
of the patent, it would have been known to be obvious to a skilled reader that
a particular element could be substituted without affecting the working of the
invention; in other words, that the variant would perform substantially the
same function in substantially the same way to obtain substantially the same
result
(20) The onus is on the patentee to
establish known and obvious substitutability at the date of publication of the
patent. If the patentee fails to discharge that onus, the descriptive word or
expression in the claim is to be considered essential unless the context of the
claims language otherwise dictates
[46]
The
claims in issue in the ‘673 Patent are:
1. A method of charging a closed,
pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration fluid system with a secondary
fluid comprising the steps of:
a. sealably and releasably
connecting to said system a closed, unpressurized container containing a
predetermined amount of said secondary fluid, said container having a piston
sealably disposed therein and having two ends, a first end of said container
being sealably secured to a first end of a charging conduit with a second end
of said charging conduit being sealably and releasably connected to said
system.
b. mechanically forcing said
secondary fluid out of said container through said conduit and into said fluid
system via displacement of said piston within said container
c. disconnecting said container
from said system,
characterized in that said container is a
cylindrical cartridge received by a cartridge receiver having piston driving
means and in that said piston driving means is mechanically operated to drive
said piston through said cartridge and thus force said secondary fluid into
said system.
2. A method according to claim 1
characterized in that said secondary fluid comprises a dye.
3. A method according to claim 1
or 2 characterized in that said secondary fluid comprises an oil.
4. An apparatus for performing
the method according to one of the claims 1-3 comprising:
a. a closed, unpressurized
container containing a predetermined amount of said secondary fluid, said
container having two ends and having a piston sealably disposed therein, a
first end of said container being for connection to said system, said system
and said first end of said container being sealably and releasably connectable
by a charging conduit having two ends, a first end sealably securable to said
first open end of said container and a second end sealably connectable to said
system,
b. means for mechanically forcing
said secondary fluid out of said container through said conduit and into said
fluid system via displacement of said piston within said container
characterized in that
said container is a cylindrical cartridge
received by a cartridge receiver having piston driving means and in that said
piston driving means is mechanically operated to drive said piston through said
cartridge.
. . .
7. The apparatus of any of claims
4-6 characterized in that the secondary fluid within the cartridge comprises a
dye.
8. The apparatus of any of claims
4-7 characterized in that the secondary fluid within the cartridge comprises an
oil.
9. The apparatus of any of claims
4-8 characterized in that said cartridge and its connections are capable of
withstanding pressures in the range of -30 psi to 300 psi (-2x105
N/m2 to 2x106 N/m2).
10. The apparatus of any of claims
4-9 characterized in that said cartridge is disposable.
. . .
14. A canister for charging a
closed, pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a fluid,
comprising:
a. a closed, non-pressurized
cylindrical canister, wherein said canister has two ends, a first open end
which connects to the system being charged and a second open end,
b. a predetermined amount of said
fluid, wherein said fluid comprises a lubricant and a fluid dye for said air
conditioning or refrigeration system, and wherein said fluid is maintained in
said canister at about ambient pressure; and
c. a piston sealably disposed
with said second open end of said canister, wherein said canister is adapted to
sealably and releasably connect to said pressurized air conditioning or
refrigeration system to form a closed binary system.
15. The canister of claim 14
characterized in that the canister and its connections are capable of withstanding
pressures in the range
of -30 psi to 300 psi (-2x105
N/m2 to 2x106 N/m2).
16. The canister of any of claims
14-15 characterized in that said canister is disposable.
[47]
The
claims in issue in the ‘024 Patent are as follows:
1. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a secondary fluid,
comprising:
a) a canister containing a
secondary fluid, wherein said secondary fluid comprises a fluid dye and wherein
said canister includes:
i) a tubular casing
for holding the secondary fluid therein,
ii) a nozzle integral
with and extending out from a first end of said tubular casing to engage with
one end of a fluidly coupling means, and
iii) a piston
inserted within an open second end of said tubular casing to engage with a
secondary fluid forcing means;
b) means for fluidly coupling
said canister to the pressurized system,
wherein said fluidly coupling means is a
connector assembly having a first end connected to said nozzle of said canister
and a second end connected to a service valve of the pressurized system,
wherein said connector assembly includes:
i) a flexible
conduit,
ii) a connector on a
first end of said flexible conduit, to engage with said nozzle of said
canister, and
iii) a release valve
on a second end of said canister, through said fluidly coupling means and into
a service valve of the pressurized system.
2. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said tubular casing is
fabricated out of transparent material and includes a plurality of gradient
markings to aid in accurately dispensing a predetermined amount of the
secondary fluid therefrom.
3. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said canister further
includes a cap, to engage with said nozzle when said canister is not in use, so
as to prevent leakage of the secondary fluid through said nozzle.
4. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said release valve includes a
closeable valve, which prevents any material from back flushing into said
flexible conduit from the service valve of the pressurized system, and to allow
said release valve to disconnect from the service valve of the pressurized
system, to prevent leakage of the secondary fluid therefrom.
5. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said release valve includes a
snap lock fitting to engage with the service valve of the pressurized system.
6. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said secondary fluid forcing
means is an injection device.
7. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 6, wherein said injection device
includes:
a) a housing having a receptacle
portion to receive the canister therein; and
b) a drive mechanism to force
said piston into said tubular casing, to cause the secondary fluid to exit said
nozzle through said fluidly coupling means, past the service valve and into the
pressurized system.
8. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 7, wherein said drive mechanism
includes:
a) a hand grip integral with and
extending downwardly on said housing;
b) a trigger pivotally mounted to
said housing adjacent to said hand grip;
c) a central drive shaft
extending longitudinally through said housing and transversely past a pivotal
portion of said trigger;
d) a cylindrical head on an inner
end of said central drive shaft, to engage with said piston of said canister;
e) a first pawl spring biased on
said central drive shaft forward the pivotal portion of said trigger; and
f) a second pawl spring biased
on said central drive shaft rearward the pivotal portion of said trigger, and
second pawl having a tongue extending out through a rear wall of said housing
above said hand grip, so that when said trigger is squeezed said first pawl
will move into contact with said central drive shaft, to push said central
drive shaft forward with said cylindrical head making contact with said piston,
while said second pawl prevents reverse movement of said central drive shaft,
until the tongue disengages said second pawl, allowing said central drive shaft
to be pulled back to a desired position.
9. A method of charging a
pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a secondary fluid,
comprising the steps of:
a) fluidly coupling the canister
of the apparatus of claim 1, via a connector assembly, to a service valve of
the pressurized system; and
b) forcing secondary fluid out of
said canister, via the means for forcing the secondary fluid out of said
canister of the apparatus of claim 1, through said connector assembly, past the
service valve and into the pressurized system.
10. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a secondary fluid,
comprising:
a) a canister containing a
secondary fluid, wherein said secondary fluid comprises a fluid dye, wherein
said canister includes a tubular casing for holding the secondary fluid
therein, a nozzle integral with and extending out from a first end of said
tubular casing and a piston inserted within an open second end of said tubular
casing;
b) means for fluidly coupling
said canister to the pressurized system by engagement of one end of said
fluidly coupling means to said nozzle, wherein said fluidly coupling means is a
connector assembly having a first end connected to said nozzle of said canister
and a second end connected to a service valve of the pressurized system,
wherein said connector assembly includes:
i) a flexible
conduit,
ii) a thread on a
first end of said flexible conduit, to engage with said nozzle of said
canister, and
iii) a release valve
on a second end of said flexible conduit, to engage with the service valve of
the pressurized system,
wherein said connector assembly further
includes a valve at one end of said flexible conduit, which prevents any
material from back flushing into and contaminating the secondary fluid in said
canister, and wherein said release valve includes a closeable valve, which
prevents any material from back flushing into said flexible conduit from the
service valve of the pressurized system, and to allow said release valve to
disconnect from the service valve of the pressurized system, to prevent leakage
of the secondary fluid therefrom; and
c) means for forcing secondary
fluid out of said canister, through said fluidly coupling means and into a
service valve of the pressurized system.
11. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 10, wherein said tubular casing is
fabricated out of transparent material and includes a plurality of gradient
markings to aid in accurately dispensing a predetermined amount of the
secondary fluid therefrom.
12. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 11, wherein said canister further
includes a cap, to engage with said nozzle when said canister is not in use, so
as to prevent leakage of the secondary fluid through said nozzle.
13. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 10, wherein said release valve includes
a snap lock fitting to engage with the service valve of the pressurized system.
. . .
17. A canister for charging a
closed, pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a fluid,
comprising:
a) a closed, non-pressurized
cylindrical canister, wherein said canister has two ends, a first open end
which connects to the system being charged and a second open end, and wherein
said first open end comprises a nozzle;
b) a predetermined amount of said
fluid,
wherein said fluid comprises a lubricant
and a fluid dye for said air conditioning or refrigeration systems, and
wherein said fluid is maintained in said
canister at about ambient pressure; and
c) a piston sealably disposed
with said second open end of said canister,
wherein said canister is adapted to
sealably and releasably connect to said pressurized air conditioning or
refrigeration system via fluidly coupling means to form a closed binary system,
wherein said fluidly coupling means is a
connector assembly having a first end connected to said nozzle of said canister
and a second end connected to a service valve of the pressurized system,
wherein said connector assembly
comprises:
i) a flexible
conduit,
ii) a thread on a
first end of said flexible conduit, to engage with said nozzle of said
canister, and
iii) a release valve
on a second end of said flexible conduit, to engage with the service valve of
the pressurized system, and
wherein said connector assembly further
comprises a valve at one end of said flexible conduit, which prevents any
material from back flushing into and contaminating said fluid in said canister.
18. The canister of claim 17,
wherein said canister is fabricated out of transparent material and includes a
plurality of gradient markings; and wherein said nozzle is threaded.
19. The canister of claim 18,
wherein said first open end comprises a threaded cap for engagement with said
threaded nozzle.
20. The canister of claim 17,
wherein said piston further comprises an O-ring.
21. The canister of claim 17,
wherein said piston further comprises a recessed double O-ring.
. . .
38. An apparatus for charging a
pressurized system as recited in claim 1, wherein said connector assembly
further includes a valve at one end of said flexible conduit, which prevents
any material from back flushing into and contaminating the secondary fluid in
said canister.
The Witnesses
[48]
The
plaintiff called Philip Trigiani, Tony Ferraro and Jerome Lemon as witnesses.
[49]
Mr.
Trigiani has trained as an auto mechanic and has extensive experience working
as an air conditioning technician at an automobile dealership. He is also, as
noted earlier, the part owner of the plaintiff. As noted earlier, Mr. Trigiani
is also the inventor of the SPOTGUN.
[50]
Tony
Ferrarro was called as an expert witness. He is a licensed automotive
technician who worked as a technician at an automotive garage and car
dealership where specialties include the servicing of AC systems. Mr. Ferrarro
is the president of the plaintiff and the other co-owner of the plaintiff.
[51]
Jerome
Lemon was called as an expert witness for the plaintiff. He has a Bachelor of
Science degree in geology. After leaving the army, he joined a company which
provided air conditioning servicing for tractors, combines, buses and other
off-road equipment. He then started his own air conditioning servicing company.
His company presently provides air conditioning servicing on large equipment
for the City of Toronto and a number of large companies and equipment dealers.
He has published articles on air conditioning servicing.
[52]
The
defendant called as witnesses, Professor Thomas R. Brown, James E. Ferris,
Jonathan Cooper and Dr. Peter Richard Frise.
[53]
Professor
Thomas R. Brown has a Bachelor of Science in chemistry and physics and has
worked in the automotive air conditioning industry for about 20 years. He
teaches at Centennial College in Toronto where he
instructs students to trouble shoot and repair air conditioning systems on
cars. He also operated his own automotive air conditioning servicing shop.
[54]
James
E. Ferris was an engineer and inventor who in the early 1990s, invented a dye
injection tool to inject oil and dye into an air conditioning system in order
to detect leaks. His company’s 204 QUEST Injector was filled with oil and dye.
[55]
Jonathan
Cooper is the person at Spectronics with primary responsibility for sales,
marketing, customer service, advertising and some involvement in product
development. The plaintiff had entered into a license agreement with Spectronics
relating to the plaintiff’s patents.
[56]
Dr.
Peter Richard Frise was called as an expert witness for the defendant. He holds
a Bachelor of Science, Masters of Science and Ph. D. in mechanical engineering
and has 32 years of practical experience as a mechanical engineer.
[57]
As
stated by the defendant, he:
(f) For the past eleven (11)
years has been employed by the University of Windsor as:
(1) A Professor and Senior
Industrial Research Chair;
(2) The Executive Director of
Automotive Research & Studies; and
(3) A Professor of Mechanical,
Automotive & Materials Engineering.
(g) Was qualified by the Court as
an expert in automotive mechanical engineering and research design, in the
design and manufacture of automotive systems and an expert in systems, methods
and tools of the hydraulic type which includes air conditioning systems.
[58]
I
must now determine the essential elements of the claims in issue.
‘673 Patent
[59]
The
plaintiff’s witness, Jerome Lemon stated at paragraph 16 of his affidavit
(Exhibit 33):
Having reviewed the specification, my
understanding of the invention disclosed and claimed in the ‘673 patent is
methods and devices based on the idea of delivering a fluid into a closed and
pressurized system from a pre-charged non-pressurized cartridge using a
mechanical means to overcome the existing pressure differential between the
system and the cartridge. In my opinion this was a significant improvement on
the existing flow through reservoir style available and discussed above.
I would adopt as my own, his statement.
[60]
Claim
1
Claim 12 discloses a method for
“charging a closed pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration fluid system
with a secondary fluid”.
[61]
My
construction of claim 1 results in the following essential elements:
1. connecting an unpressurized
container containing a predetermined amount of secondary fluid to the system by
means of a charging conduit.
2. the container is a
cylindrical cartridge which has a piston sealably disposed therein. The
container has an end sealably attached to a charging conduit that is sealable
and releasably connected to the pressurized system.
3. the secondary fluid
is mechanically forced out of the said container through the charging conduit
into the fluid system by means of the displacement of the said piston within
the container.
4. disconnecting the
container from the said system.
[62]
The
defendant’s experts construed the claim to mean that the container or cartridge
had to be releasably received in cartridge receiver. I cannot see this being a
requirement of claim 1. In fact, when claim 1 is studied further, it seems that
it is stated that the charging conduit must be “releasable” from the AC system.
No such wording is used to state that the cartridge should be releasable from
the cartridge receiver. This would support the proposition that releasability
of the cartridge receiver is not an essential element of the claim.
[63]
Claim
2
Claim 2 describes a method as
set out in claim 1 in which the secondary fluid in the container is a dye. The
essential element of claim 2 is that the secondary fluid is a dye.
[64]
Claim
3
Claim 3 specifies that the
secondary fluid in the container is an oil so the essential element of claim 3
is that “the secondary fluid is an oil”.
[65]
Claim
4
Claim 4 describes the apparatus
used to carry out the method described in claim 1. After reviewing the words of
the claim, I am of the opinion that the essential elements of the claim are:
A closed unpressurized cylindrical
cartridge containing a predetermined amount of a secondary fluid between a
sealed piston and a first end sealably and releasably connectable to the
pressurized a/c or refrigeration system by a charging conduit having ends
sealably connectable to the first end of the cartridge and the system
respectively; and
A cartridge receiver having a
mechanically operated piston driving means to displace the piston in the
cartridge to move the secondary fluid out of the cartridge through the conduit
and into the system.
Again, as in my construction of claim 1, I
can see no requirement in this claim that the cartridge be releasably received
in the cartridge receiver. I am of the view that this is not an essential
element of this claim. I would adopt my earlier statements on this issue and
not accept the defendant’s position that the cartridge must be releasably
received in the cartridge receiver.
[66]
The
defendant also construed the claim as excluding any means for retaining the
piston in the cylindrical cartridge. I do not accept the defendant’s
construction. In my opinion, there is a means of retaining the piston because
the cartridge containing the piston is received in the cartridge receiver which,
contains a means to drive the piston forward to expel the fluid. If the piston
driving means is driving the piston forward, the piston is retained. The
defendant’s expert admits that the persons skilled in the art would understand
the need to stop the piston and the means by which it could be stopped or
retained in the cylinder (see Frise testimony, pages 218 to 220 and 222 to
225).
[67]
The
mechanical driving means are not detailed in the claim but I would construe the
claim to include mechanical driving means which would use mechanical advantage
to overcome the pressure differential. The devices would be a lever action
device or a screw action device.
[68]
Claim
7
The essential element of claim
7 is that the secondary fluid is a dye.
[69]
Claim
8
The essential element of claim
8 is that the secondary fluid is an oil.
[70]
Claim
9
This claim specifies the
operating parameters for the device to be in the range of -30 psi to 300 psi.
[71]
Claim
10
The essential element of claim
10 is that the cartridge is disposable.
[72]
Claim
14
My construction of claim 14
gives the following essential elements:
1. a cylindrical shaped
canister.
2. one end of the
canister is to be attached to the system being charged and is adapted for such
attachment.
3. a predetermined
amount of secondary fluid comprised of a lubricant (oil) and dye is contained
in the cylinder or canister at about ambient temperature.
4. there is a piston
sealably disposed in the second end of the said canister.
5. the canister is to
be connected to the system to form a closed binary system.
[73]
Claim
15
Claim 15 states that the
canister of claim 14 and its connections must be capable of withstanding
pressure in the range of -30 psi to 300 psi. Mr. Brown’s testimony, the
defendant’s expert, seems to indicate that he believes the cartridges in
isolation should be able to withstand the stated pressures. I do not agree.
Claim 9 includes the element that the cartridge be “received” in the cartridge
receiver. This is not “in isolation”. As well, claim 15 states that the
canisters and “its connections are capable of withstanding the stated
pressures”. Again, this is not “in isolation”.
[74]
Claim
16
The essential element of this
claim is that the canisters or cartridges be disposable.
‘024 Patent
[75]
I
will now proceed to construe the claims of the ‘024 Patent that are in issue
and give my construction of these claims.
[76]
I
have read the specification of the ‘024 Patent and I have concluded that the
invention disclosed and claimed in the ‘024 Patent is an improved apparatus of
the same general type as described in the ‘673 Patent.
[77]
The
‘024 Patent is to be construed as of June 8, 1999 which was the date on which
it was published.
[78]
Claim
1
Claim 1 teaches an apparatus
for charging a pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a
secondary fluid (dye). The secondary fluid is contained in a tubular canister
with a nozzle integral with and extending out from one end of the canister and
a piston at the other end of the canister. The canister containing the
secondary fluid is fluidly coupled to the pressurized system by means of a
connection assembly. The connector assembly has one end connected to the nozzle
of the canister and the other end is connected to the service valve of the
pressurized system. The connector assembly consists of a flexible conduit with
a connector on one end to connect with the canister nozzle and a release valve
on the on the other end to engage with the service valve of the pressurized
system. The apparatus also has to have a means of forcing the secondary fluid
out of the canister through the fluidly coupled means and into the service
valve of the pressurized system.
[79]
I
construe Claim 1 to contain the following essential elements:
1. An apparatus for
charging a pressurized air conditioning system or refrigeration system with a
secondary fluid (dye).
2. A tubular canister
containing the secondary fluid (dye) with an integral nozzle at one end and a piston
at the other end (inserted in the canister).
3. A flexible conduit
with a connector for the nozzle of the canister and a valve on the other end
adapted to couple with the service valve of the pressurized system.
4. A means for forcing
the secondary fluid (dye) out of the canister through the fluidly coupling
means into the pressurized system.
[80]
Claim
2
Claim 2 is for an apparatus for
charging a pressurized system as recited in claim 1. In Claim 2, the tubular
casing required by the apparatus is made out of transparent material and a
number of gradient markings to help in accurately dispensing a predetermined
amount of secondary fluid from the tubular casing.
[81]
The
essential element of claim 2 is:
1. A tubular canister
that has a casing fabricated from a transparent material with gradient markings
to aid in the accurate dispensing of a predetermined amount of the secondary
fluid into the pressurized system.
[82]
Claim
3
Claim 3 adds a cap to the
canister contained in the apparatus of claim 1. The cap is to engage with the
said nozzle when the canister is not in use so as to prevent leakage of the
secondary fluid through the nozzle.
[83]
The
essential element of claim 3 is a cap to engage with said nozzle when the
canister is not in use to prevent leakage of the secondary fluid through the
nozzle.
[84]
Claim
5
Claim 5 specifies that the
release valve for the apparatus described in claim 1 includes a snap locking
fitting to engage with the service valve of the pressurized system.
[85]
The
essential element of claim 5 is a snap lock fitting.
[86]
Claim
6
This claim states that the
secondary fluid forcing means for the apparatus recited in claim 1 is an
injection device.
[87]
The
essential element of claim 6 is an injection device.
[88]
Claim
7
Claim 7 states that the
injection system of the apparatus for charging a pressurized system as recited
in claim 6 includes a housing that has a receptacle portion to receive the
canister therein. The injection device also includes a drive mechanism to force
the said piston into the tubular casing to cause the secondary fluid to exit
the nozzle through the said fluidly coupling means, past the service valve and
into the pressurized system.
[89]
The
essential element of claim 7 is an injection device housing and a drive
mechanism adapted to interact with the canister so as to drive the piston into
the canister.
[90]
Claim
9
My construction of claim 9 is
that it describes a method of charging a pressurized air conditioning or
refrigeration system with a secondary fluid by:
1. Fluidly coupling the
canister of the apparatus of claim 1, by means of a connector assembly, to the
service valve of the pressurized system; and
2. Forcing the
secondary fluid out of the canister of the apparatus by the means for forcing
the secondary fluid out of the said canister of the apparatus of claim 1
through the connector assembly past the service valve and into the pressurized
system.
[91]
The
essential elements of this claim are the essential elements of claim 1 to
charge a pressurized system with fluid.
[92]
Claim
17
I construe claim 17 to describe
a canister for charging a closed pressurized air conditioning system with a
fluid. The system would include a closed non-pressurized cylindrical canister
with two ends; one end (first) which connects to the system being charged and
the other or second open end. The first open end comprises a nozzle. The
connector also has a predetermined amount of the said fluid in it. The fluid
comprises a lubricant and a fluid dye for pressurized air conditioning or
refrigeration systems. The fluid is at about ambient temperature. There is a
piston sealable disposed within the second open end of the canister. The
canister is adapted to sealably and releasably connect to the pressurized air
conditioning or refrigeration system by a fluidly coupling means to form a
closed binary system. The fluid coupling means is a connector assembly having a
one (first) end connected to the nozzle of the canister. The second end of the
connector assembly is attached to a service valve of the pressurized system.
The connector system is made up of:
1. a flexible conduit.
2. a thread on the
first end of the flexible conduit to engage with the nozzle of the canister.
3. a release valve on
the second end of the flexible conduit to engage with the service valve of the
pressurized system and the connector assembly further has a valve at one end of
the said flexible conduit which prevents any material from back flushing into
and contaminating any fluid in the canister.
[93]
I
find the essential elements of claim 17 to be:
1. A cylindrical
canister for charging a pressurized system with fluid containing a fluid dye at
about ambient temperature.
2. It is a threaded
nozzle on one end.
3. It has a piston
which seals the other end.
4. The canister nozzle
is adapted to be engaged by a threaded connection on a conduit that has a valve
to prevent material passing from the conduit into the canister and a valve
adapted to engage with the service part of the system.
[94]
Claim
18
Claim 18 describes the canister
of claim 17 as being made out of transparent material with a number of
gradient markings and with a threaded nozzle.
[95]
The
essential element of claim 18 is that the canister is manufactured of a
transparent material and it has gradient markings and a threaded nozzle.
[96]
Claim
19
The first open end of the
canister of claim 18 has a threaded cap for engagement with the threaded
nozzle.
[97]
The
essential element of claim 19 is that there is a threaded cap for the canister
which prevents leaks and contamination.
[98]
Claim
20
Claim 20 adds the feature of claim
17 that the piston has an O-ring. An O-ring makes a seal between the outer
surface of the piston and the inner surface of the canister to prevent fluid
from leaking back past the piston while under force from the piston driving
mechanism.
[99]
The
essential element of claim 20 is an O-ring.
[100] Claim 38
Claim 38 describes a connector
assembly for the apparatus for charging a pressurized system as recited in claim
1, which further includes a valve at one end of the flexible conduit, which
prevents any material from back flushing into and contaminating the secondary
fluid in the canister.
[101] The essential
element of claim 38 is an anti-back flow valve on the conduit.
[102] Issues 2, 3
and 4
Does the REVOLVER product as
sold by the defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the defendant,
infringe any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 Patent
and/or any of claims 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 19, 20 or 38 of the ‘024 Patent?
Does the DYE STICK product
as sold by the Defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the Defendant,
infringe any of claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 patent
and/or any of claims 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 or 9 of the ‘024 patent?
Does the RETRO STICK product
as sold by the Defendant, and/or used in the manner directed by the Defendant
incorporate the invention claimed in any of claims 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 or 10 of the
‘673 patent?
The Patent Act does not
define infringement but section 42 of the Act states:
42.
Every patent granted under this Act shall contain the title or name of the
invention, with a reference to the specification, and shall, subject to this
Act, grant to the patentee and the patentee’s legal representatives for the
term of the patent, from the granting of the patent, the exclusive right,
privilege and liberty of making, constructing and using the invention and
selling it to others to be used, subject to adjudication in respect thereof
before any court of competent jurisdiction.
[103] With respect
to infringement, the Supreme Court of Canada in Monsanto Canada
Inc. v. Schmeiser, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 902 at paragraphs 32 to 58 stated:
32. Three well-established rules or
practices of statutory interpretation assist us further. First, the inquiry
into the meaning of "use" under the Patent Act must be purposive,
grounded in an understanding of the reasons for which patent protection is
accorded. Second, the inquiry must be contextual, giving consideration
to the other words of the provision. Finally, the inquiry must be attentive to
the wisdom of the case law. We will discuss each of these aids to
interpretation briefly, and then apply them to the facts of this case.
33.
We
return first to the rule of purposive construction. Identifying whether there
has been infringement by use, like construing the claim, must be approached by
the route of purposive construction: Free World Trust v. Électro Santé Inc.,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 1024, 2000 SCC 66. "[P]urposive construction is capable of
expanding or limiting a literal [textual claim]": Whirlpool, supra,
at para. 49. Similarly, it is capable of influencing what amounts to
"use" in a given case.
34.
The
purpose of s. 42 is to define the exclusive rights granted to the patent
holder. These rights are the rights to full enjoyment of the monopoly granted by
the patent. Therefore, what is prohibited is "any act that interferes with
the full enjoyment of the monopoly granted to the patentee": H. G. Fox, The
Canadian Law and Practice Relating to Letters Patent for Inventions (4th
ed. 1969), at p. 349; see also Lishman v. Erom Roche Inc. (1996), 68
C.P.R. (3d) 72 (F.C.T.D.), at p. 77.
35.
The
guiding principle is that patent law ought to provide the inventor with
"protection for that which he has actually in good faith invented":
Free World Trust, supra, at para. 43. Applied to "use", the question
becomes: did the defendant's activity deprive the inventor in whole or in
part, directly or indirectly, of full enjoyment of the monopoly conferred by
law?
.
. .
37.
As a
practical matter, inventors are normally deprived of the fruits of their
invention and the full enjoyment of their monopoly when another person, without
licence or permission, uses the invention to further a business interest. . . .
.
. .
43.
Infringement through use is thus possible even where
the patented invention is part of, or composes, a broader unpatented structure
or process. This is, as Professor Vaver states, an expansive rule. It is,
however, firmly rooted in the principle that the main purpose of patent
protection is to prevent others from depriving the inventor, even in part and
even indirectly, of the monopoly that the law intends to be theirs: only the
inventor is entitled, by virtue of the patent and as a matter of law, to the full
enjoyment of the monopoly conferred.
44.
Thus, in Saccharin Corp. v. Anglo-Continental
Chemical Works Ltd. (1900), 17 R.P.C. 307 (H.C.J.), the court stated, at p.
319:
By the sale of saccharin, in the course
of the production of which the patented process is used, the Patentee is
deprived of some part of the whole profit and advantage of the invention, and
the importer is indirectly making use of the invention.
This
confirms the centrality of the question that flows from a purposive
interpretation of the Patent Act: did the defendant, by his acts or
conduct, deprive the inventor, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, of
the advantage of the patented invention?
45.
In determining whether the defendant "used"
the patented invention, one compares the object of the patent with what the
defendant did and asks whether the defendant's actions involved that object. In
Betts v. Neilson (1868), L.R. 3 Ch. App. 429 (aff'd (1871), L.R. 5 H.L.
1), the object of the patent was to preserve the contents of bottles in
transit. Though the bottles were merely shipped unopened through England, the
defendant was held to have used the invention in England
because, during its passage through that country, the beer was protected by the
invention. Lord Chelmsford said, at p. 439:
It is the employment of the machine or
the article for the purpose for which it was designed which constitutes its
active use; and whether the capsules were intended for ornament, or for
protection of the contents of the bottles upon which they were placed, the
whole time they were in England they may be correctly said to be in active use
for the very objects for which they were placed upon the bottles by the
vendors.
46.
In fact, the patented invention need not be deployed
precisely for its intended purpose in order for its object to be involved in
the defendant's activity.
47.
Moreover, as Lord Dunedin emphasized in British
United Shoe Machinery Co. v. Simon Collier Ld. [sic] (1910), 27 R.P.C. 567
(H.L.), possession as a stand-by has "insurance value", as for
example in the case of a fire extinguisher. The extinguisher is
"used" to provide the means for extinguishment should the need arise.
This is true, too, of a spare steam engine which is "intended in certain
circumstances to be used for exactly the purpose for which the whole machine is
being actually used" (p. 572). Exploitation of the stand-by utility of an
invention uses it to advantage.
.
. .
49.
The general rule is that the defendant's intention is
irrelevant to a finding of infringement. The issue is "what the defendant
does, not ... what he intends": Stead v. Anderson (1847), 4 C.B.
806, 136 E.R. 724 (C.P.), at p. 736; see also Hoechst Celanese Corp. v. BP
Chemicals Ltd. (1998), 25 F.S.R. 586 (Pat. Ct.), at p. 598; Illinois
Tool Works Inc. v. Cobra Anchors Co. (2002), 221 F.T.R. 161, 2002 FCT 829,
at paras. 14-17; Computalog Ltd. v. Comtech Logging Ltd. (1992), 44
C.P.R. (3d) 77 (F.C.A.), at p. 88. And the governing principle is whether the
defendant, by his actions, activities or conduct, appropriated the patented
invention, thus depriving the inventor, in whole or part, directly or
indirectly, of the full enjoyment of the monopoly the patent grants.
.
. .
58.
These
propositions may be seen to emerge from the foregoing discussion of
"use" under the Patent Act:
1. "Use"
or "exploiter", in their ordinary dictionary meaning, denote
utilization with a view to production or advantage.
2. The
basic principle in determining whether the defendant has "used" a
patented invention is whether the inventor has been deprived, in whole or in
part, directly or indirectly, of the full enjoyment of the monopoly conferred
by the patent.
3. If
there is a commercial benefit to be derived from the invention, it belongs to
the patent holder.
4. It
is no bar to a finding of infringement that the patented object or process is a
part of or composes a broader unpatented structure or process, provided the
patented invention is significant or important to the defendant's activities
that involve the unpatented structure.
5. Possession
of a patented object or an object incorporating a patented feature may
constitute "use" of the object's stand-by or insurance utility and
thus constitute infringement.
6. Possession,
at least in commercial circumstances, raises a rebuttable presumption of
"use".
7. While
intention is generally irrelevant to determining whether there has been
"use" and hence infringement, the absence of intention to employ or
gain any advantage from the invention may be relevant to rebutting the
presumption of use raised by possession.
[104] A patent is
said to be infringed if a person makes uses or sells, constructs an article or
method that includes each of the “essential elements “of any one of the claims
of the patent (see Free World Trust v. Électro Santé Inc., [2000] 2
S.C.R. 1024 and Canamould Extrusions Ltd. v. Driangle Inc., [2003] F.C.J.
No. 338).
REVOLVER Infringement
[105] According to
the evidence on discovery and read in, the defendant’s REVOLVER includes three
components – injectors, cartridges and hoses (Exhibit P-36, tab 3).
[106] Paragraph 24
of the agreed statement of facts states:
The Defendant commenced sales of the
REVOLVER dye injection system in Canada
about 2003. The Defendant sells REVOLVER injectors, cartridges and hoses
separately, and as part of kits that may also include UV lights, adapters and
other related items, for the express purpose of injecting a UV dye into a
closed pressurized AC system.
[107] The defendant
provides instructions on how to use the components for their intended purpose.
‘673 Patent - REVOLVER
[108] I will first
deal with the alleged infringement of claims 1, 2 and 3 of the ‘673 Patent
which are method claims.
Claim 1
[109] In my view,
the REVOLVER infringes claim 1 as all the essential elements of the claim are
present in the method of use of the products. The REVOLVER has a cylindrical
cartridge received by a cartridge receiver. In the REVOLVER, the receiver is
the part designated by the defendant as the breach. It is designed to hold both
the cartridge and the piston forcing mechanism which is called the “ram”. The
receiver is designed to be mechanically forced down over the cartridge by
rotating the receiver assembly and with an internal mechanism to drive the
piston into the cartridge forcing out the fluid. The cartridge is sealably
connected secured to a charging conduit that is sealably and releasably
connected to the pressurized system.
[110] The defendant
states that there is no infringement by the REVOLVER since the cartridge in the
REVOLVER is a significant departure from the cylindrical form. I accept the
evidence of Jerome Lemon that the REVOLVER uses a generally cylindrical
canister. In any event, the interior of the canister is certainly cylindrical.
[111] The defendant
also submits that the cartridge must be received within the cartridge receiver
rather than by the receiver. That is not my construction of claim 1 nor is it
an essential element of claim 1.
[112] The defendant
also submitted there is no infringement as the cartridge had to be “releasably”
received. Releasably is not an essential element of the claim (see my analysis
in paragraph 62 of the reasons under construction of claim 1).
Claim 2
[113] The REVOLVER
infringes claim 2 because the secondary fluid in the canister is a dye and it
includes the elements of claim 1.
Claim 3
[114] The REVOLVER infringes
claim 3 for the same reason as claim 2 except that the secondary fluid is an
oil.
Claim 4
[115] Claim 4 is an
apparatus claim. In my opinion, the REVOLVER includes all the essential
elements of claim 4. It has the injector (cartridge receiver) and hose
(charging conduit) and cartridge.
[116] The defendant
said there is no infringement because the cartridge is not cylindrical. I would
repeat my analysis from claim 1.
[117] As a result,
the REVOLVER infringes claim 4.
Claims 7 and 8
[118] The defendant
submits there is no infringement of claims 7 and 8 for the reasons stated in
Appendix “C” to the defendant’s memorandum of fact and law under claim 4. These
reasons would be because the cartridges in the REVOLVER are not cylindrical and
because the cartridge is not received in the receiver. I have dealt with these
arguments under claim 1 and did not accept them.
[119] I am of the
opinion that the defendant’s REVOLVER infringes claims 7 and 8 for the reasons
outlined in the analysis of claims 2 and 3.
Claim 9
[120] Jerome Lemon
conducted a pressure test of the cartridge and connections of the REVOLVER and
found that it could withstand the pressures stipulated by claim 9 for the ‘673
Patent for the cartridges and connections of claims 4 to 8. He found that the
defendant’s REVOLVER product could withstand these pressures.
[121] The defendant
offered the evidence of Professor Brown that he tested the REVOLVER cartridge
in isolation and not while in the REVOLVER’s breech. However, claim 9 speaks of
the “said cartridge” and its connections. In my view, testing the cartridge in
isolation does not establish that the REVOLVER product cannot withstand the
required pressures.
[122] Accordingly,
I find that the defendant’s REVOLVER infringes claim 9 of the ‘673 Patent.
Claim 10
[123] The
defendant’s REVOLVER clearly infringes claim 10 as the cartridges of the
REVOLVER are disposable. This was an essential element of claims 4 to 9.
Claims 14, 15 and 16
[124] These claims
deal with the canister part of the apparatus. I have reviewed the essential
elements of these claims and I am of the view that the defendant’s REVOLVER
infringes each of these claims.
[125] With respect
to claims 15 and 16, I would repeat the remarks contained under the
infringement of claims 15 and 16.
‘673 Patent – THE DYE
STICK
Claim 1
[126] I am of the
view that the DYE STICK infringes claim 1 of the ‘673 Patent for the same
reasons as expressed for the REVOLVER.
[127] The defendant
submitted that there was no infringement because it was an essential element of
claim 1 that the cartridge receiver “releasably” received the cartridge. My
construction of claim 1 did not include as an essential element that the
cartridge be “releasably” received but only received. I would adopt my
reasoning contained in paragraphs 62 and 112 of these reasons. I cannot accept
this argument.
[128] The defendant
also submitted that there was no infringement because in the defendant’s
products, the cartridge is not received within the alleged receiver. I adopt my
remarks in paragraph 111 of these reasons and reject this argument.
Claim 2
[129] The DYE STICK
infringes claim 2 of the ‘673 Patent for the same reasons as set out for the
REVOLVER with respect to claim 2.
Claim 3
[130] The DYE STICK
infringes claim 3 of the ‘673 Patent for the same reasons as set out for the
REVOLVER for claim 3.
Claim 4
[131] The DYE STICK
infringes claim 4 of the ‘673 Patent for the same reasons as set out for the
REVOLVER with respect to claim 4.
Claims 7 and 8
[132] The DYE STICK
infringes claims 7 and 8 for the same reasons as set out for the REVOLVER for
claims 7 and 8 respectively.
Claim 9
[133] Jerome
Lemon’s evidence is to the effect that the DYE STICK would withstand the
pressures stipulated by claim 9. I accept this evidence and accordingly, the DYE
STICK infringes claim 9. With respect to the defendant’s arguments with respect
to the claim 9 reasons, I would adopt my findings for these as set out in claim
4.
Claim 10
[134] The
defendant’s DYE STICK cartridge is not sold separately but in my view, the
cartridge as sold in the DYE STICK is not meant to be refilled or resealed. The
DYE STICK is sold as a kit without the hose assemblies. I conclude that the DYE
STICK’s cartridge is disposable. With respect to the defendant’s arguments with
respect to the claim 10 reasons, I would adopt my findings for these as set out
in claim 4.
Claim 14
[135] Claim 14
deals with the canister used to charge the pressurized refrigeration or air
conditioning system. The defendant states there is no infringement because the
canister is not cylindrical. I do not agree and would adopt my reasons for this
conclusion from the claim 1 reasons for the REVOLVER product.
[136] The
defendant’s DYE STICK infringes claim 14 as all the other essential elements of
claim 14 are taken.
Claim 15
[137] Claim 15
deals with the pressures that the canister and its connections must be capable
of withstanding. The defendant states there is no infringement by the DYE STICK
because it is not cylindrical. I do not agree and I would repeat and adopt my
reasons from claim 1 with respect to the shape of the canister. With respect to
the canister and the ability of its connections to withstand the stated
pressures, I would accept Jerome Lemon’s evidence that the DYE STICK cartridge
would withstand the required pressures.
[138] I am
satisfied that the DYE STICK takes all the essential elements of claim 15 and
that it infringes this claim.
Claim 16
[139] This claim
deals with the disposability of the canister. I would repeat and adopt my
reasoning for claim 10 with respect to the disposability of the canister. I
find that the DYE STICK has all the essential elements of claim 16 and that it
infringes this claim.
RETRO STICK Infringement
of the ‘024 Patent
[140] There is no
infringement of the ‘024 Patent by THE RETRO STICK as it does not use dye.
Infringement of the ‘024
Patent by THE REVOLVER and THE DYE STICK
[141] In his expert
affidavit, Jerome Lemon stated at paragraph 57 with respect to claims, 1, 3, 5,
6, 7 and 9 of the ‘024 Patent:
With regards to the REVOLVER and DYE
STICK products, in my opinion, the products as sold and/or used include all
elements specified in Claims 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9 . . . of the ‘024 Patent. More
specifically, both the REVOLVER and DYE STICK products as sold as kits and as
used:
·
are
apparatus for charging and a/c or refrigeration system with a secondary fluid
·
have a
tubular canister containing the secondary fluid with an integral nozzle at one
end and a piston within the second open end
·
have a
flexible conduit with a connector for the nozzle of the canister at one end and
a release valve including a valve assembly designed to open upon connection to
the service valve of the pressurized system and to close upon disconnection
·
have a
means for forcing the dye from the canister through the fluidly coupling means
into the pressurized system by engaging with the piston using a forcing means
(in this case a screw type mechanical forcing means to drive the piston)
·
when sold
and when not in use the tubular canisters have a cap threaded onto the nozzle
to prevent leakage
·
have a
coupler designed to function as discussed above as a snap lock style fitting to
engage the service valve on the pressurized system
·
are
injection devices
·
have a
housing that receives the canister and a drive mechanism to force the piston
into the tubular casing as discussed above
·
are used
according to the elements of Claim 9
·
have canisters
of cylindrical shape containing fluid at about ambient pressure
·
the
canisters have threaded nozzles adapted to be engaged by a threaded connection
on the conduit
·
have an
integral o-ring on the external surface of the piston sealed against the
internal surface of the canister
[142] At paragraph
58 of his expert affidavit, Mr. Lemon states in relation to claims 17, 19, 20
and 38 of the ‘024 Patent:
With respect to claims 17, 19, 20 and 38,
the REVOLVER product, in my opinion, includes all the elements required by this
claim. Specifically, in addition to the elements noted above, the REVOLVER
products as sold in kits also include a valve to prevent the passage of
material from the conduit to the canister at the end of the conduit to be engaged
with the nozzle of the canister using a spring loaded anti backflow sealing
plug type design.
And at paragraph 59, Mr. Lemon stated, in
relation to claim 2:
With respect to claim 2, in my opinion
the DYE STICK infringes since it includes the elements of the independent
claims and the tubular casing of the canister is manufactured of a transparent
material and has gradient markings to aid in accurately dispensing the
secondary fluid, meeting the essential element added by the claims.
[143] With respect
to the defendant’s arguments that canisters and not cylindrical, I adopt my
earlier findings.
[144] I accept the
evidence of Mr. Lemon and accordingly, I find that the REVOLVER and DYE STICK products
infringe claims 1, 3, 5, 6, 7 and 9 of the ‘024 Patent. The REVOLVER product
further infringes claims 17, 19, 20 and 38 of the ‘024 Patent and the DYE STICK
further infringes claim 2.
THE RETRO STICK
Infringement
[145] The plaintiff
at paragraph 84 of its closing argument stated:
It is only claims 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 and 10 of
the ‘673 patent that are alleged to be infringed by the RETRO STICK product
since the other claims in issue stipulate that the secondary fluid is a dye,
which was not found in the RETRO STICK. The evidence is clear that the RETRO
STICK is identical to the DYE STICK for the purposes of analyzing infringement
of claims 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 and 10. For the same reasons as discussed in respect of
infringement of the identified claims by the DYE STICK, it is submitted that
the RETRO STICK as sold by the Defendant and used by end consumers clearly
includes all elements of and infringes claims 1, 3, 4, 8, 9 and 10 of the ‘673
patent.
[146] I agree with
this statement and find that the RETRO STICK product infringes claims 1, 3, 4,
8, 9 and 10 of the ‘673 Patent.
[147] Issue 5
Does the agreement between
the defendant and Spectronics provide the defendant with a defence to
infringement of the ‘673 or ‘024 Patents in respect of the REVOLVER injectors
and REVOLVER cartridges obtained from suppliers by Spectronics and then
provided by Spectronics to the defendant pursuant to the terms of the
agreement?
Spectronics Agreement with the Plaintiff
and Spectronics’ Supply Agreement with the Defendant
[148] In order to determine
whether the defendant has a defence flowing from the agreement, it is necessary
to interpret the license agreement. In Eli Lilly & Co. v. Novopharm Ltd.,
[1998] 2 S.C.R. 129 at paragraphs 54 and 56, the Court stated:
54. The trial judge appeared to take
Consolidated-Bathurst to stand for the proposition that the ultimate goal of
contractual interpretation should be to ascertain the true intent of the
parties at the time of entry into the contract, and that, in undertaking this
inquiry, it is open to the trier of fact to admit extrinsic evidence as to the
subjective intentions of the parties at that time. In my view, this approach is
not quite accurate. The contractual intent of the parties is to be determined
by reference to the words they used in drafting the document, possibly read in
light of the surrounding circumstances which were prevalent at the time.
Evidence of one party's subjective intention has no independent place in this
determination.
.
. .
56.
When
there is no ambiguity in the wording of the document, the notion in
Consolidated-Bathurst that the interpretation which produces a "fair
result" or a "sensible commercial result" should be adopted is
not determinative. Admittedly, it would be absurd to adopt an interpretation
which is clearly inconsistent with the commercial interests of the parties, if
the goal is to ascertain their true contractual intent. However, to interpret a
plainly worded document in accordance with the true contractual intent of the
parties is not difficult, if it is presumed that the parties intended the legal
consequences of their words. This is consistent with the following dictum of
this Court, in Joy Oil Co. v. The King, [1951] S.C.R. 624, at p. 641:
. . . in construing a written document,
the question is not as to the meaning of the words alone, nor the meaning of
the writer alone, but the meaning of the words as used by the writer.
[149] Justice Aalto in Dumbrell
v. The Regional Group of Companies Inc. (2007), 85 O.R. (3d) 616 (Ont. C.A.) at pages 630 to 631
stated:
[51]
Eli Lilly, supra, instructs that the words of the contract drawn between
the parties must be the focal point of the interpretative exercise. The inquiry
must be into the meaning of the words and not the subjective intentions of the
parties. In this sense, my approach is textualist. However, the meaning of the
written agreement must be distinguished from the dictionary and syntactical
meaning of the words used in the agreement. Lord Hoffmann observed in Investors
Compensation Scheme Ltd., supra, at p. 115 All E.R.:
The meaning which a document (or any
other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the
meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and
grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words
against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean.
[52]
No doubt, the dictionary and grammatical meaning of the words (sometimes called
the "plain meaning") used by the parties will be important and often
decisive in determining the meaning of the document. However, the former cannot
be equated with the latter. The meaning of a document is derived not just from
the words used, but from the context or the circumstances in which the words
were used. Professor John Swan puts it well in Canadian Contract Law
(Markham, Ont.: Butterworths, 2006) at 493:
There are a number of inherent features
of language that need to be noted. Few, if any words, can be understood apart
from their context and no contractual language can be understood without some
knowledge of its context and the purpose of the contract. Words, taken
individually, have an inherent vagueness that will often require courts to
determine their meaning by looking at their context and the expectations that
the parties may have had.
[53]
The text of the written agreement must be read as a whole and in the context of
the circumstances as they existed when the agreement was created. The
circumstances include facts that were known or reasonably capable of being
known by the parties when they entered into the written agreement: see BG
Checo International Ltd. v. British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 12, [1993] S.C.J. No. 1, at pp. 23-24 S.C.R.; H.W. Liebig
& Co. v. Leading Investments Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 70, [1986] S.C.J.
No. 6, at pp. 80-81 S.C.R., La Forest J.; Prenn v. Simmonds, [1971] 1
W.L.R. 1381, [1971] 3 All E.R. 237 (H.L.), at pp. 1383-84 W.L.R.; Staughton,
"How Do the Courts Interpret Commercial Contracts?", supra, at
307-08.
[54]
A consideration of the context in which the written agreement was made is an
integral part of the interpretative process and is not something that is
resorted to only where the words viewed in isolation suggest some ambiguity. To
find ambiguity, one must come to certain conclusions as to the meaning of the
words used. A conclusion as to the meaning of words used in a written contract
can only be properly reached if the contract is considered in the context in
which it was made: see McCamus, The Law of Contracts (Toronto: Irwin
Law, 2005) at 710-11.
[55]
There is some controversy as to how expansively context should be examined for
the purposes of contractual interpretation: see Geoff R. Hall, "A Curious
Incident in the Law of Contract: The Impact of 22 Words from the House of
Lords" (2004) 40 Can. Bus. L.J. 20. Insofar as written
agreements are concerned, the context, or as it is sometimes called the
"factual matrix", clearly extends to the genesis of the agreement,
its purpose, and the commercial context in which the agreement was made: Kentucky
Fried Chicken Canada, a Division of Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd. v. Scott's Food
Services Inc., [1998] O.J. No. 4368, 114 O.A.C. 357 (C.A.), at p. 363
O.A.C.
[56]
I would adopt the description of the interpretative process provided by Lord
Justice Steyn, "The Intracticable Problem of the Interpretation of Legal
Texts", supra, at 8:
In
sharp contrast with civil legal systems the common law adopts a largely
objective theory to the interpretation of contracts. The purpose of the
interpretation of a contract is not to discover how the parties understood the
language of the text, which they adopted. The aim is to determine the meaning
of the contract against its objective contextual scene. By and large the
objective approach to the question of construction serves the needs of
commerce. (Emphasis added)
[150] The evidence filed in
this case shows that prior to entering this agreement Spectronics had adopted
the plaintiff’s inventive concept and developed its own product for sale. The
plaintiff informed Spectronics that it was infringing its patents. As a result,
an agreement was entered into between Spectronics and the plaintiff whereby
Spectronics under license could sell the offending products and pay a royalty
to the plaintiff. No evidence was presented to show that Spectronics was
selling other persons offending products. The evidence was that Spectronics was
only selling its own screw-type injector at the date of the agreement. Mr.
Trigiani testified that he was only aware of Spectronics manufacturing and
selling products it designed.
[151] Then in June 2006,
Spectronics entered into a supply agreement with the defendant. Before entering
into the supply agreement, the defendant obtained components for its Revolver
dye injection system directly from other suppliers and assembled and filled the
dye cartridges itself. Under the supply agreement, Spectronics obtained the
exact same components, the injectors and the components for cartridges from the
same defendant’s suppliers. The same tooling and tools are used to manufacture
the components and the tooling is owned by the defendant. In addition, the
cartridges that are sold pursuant to the supply agreement are assembled and
filled with dye by Spectronics. The dye is made according to the defendant’s
prior formulation.
[152] When the defendant
receives the Revolvers and cartridges from Spectronics, it sells them in two
ways: 1) separately for use with the other components of the Revolver dye
injection system and 2) they are packaged together in a kit which includes the
Revolver, the cartridges and a hose obtained from another supplier. As well,
there are instructions on how to use this system.
[153] Prior to entering the
supply agreement, Spectronics complained to the plaintiff about the infringing
activities of the defendant.
[154] I have reviewed the
confidential license agreement as a whole and in particular, clause 1.2 and the
remainder of the first page of the agreement and applying the principles
mentioned above for construing agreements and I am of the opinion that the
agreement is only to grant a license for Spectronics to make, use or sell
Spectronics products not products of third parties. I come to this conclusion
after reading the license agreement “as a whole and in the context of the
circumstances as they existed when the supply agreement was created” (see Dumbrell
above). The circumstances known to the parties at the time the agreement was
entered into are to be considered. For example, Spectronics was then only
selling its own screw-type injectors. As well, Mr. Trigiani testified that he
was only aware of Spectronics manufacturing and selling products is designed.
[155] I therefore find that
the Spectronics supply agreement is not a defence to infringement that is
available to the defendant with respect to the Revolver injectors and Revolver
cartridges obtained from Spectronics.
[156] Issue 6
Are any of claims 1, 2, 3,
4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15 or 16 of the ‘673 Patent invalid on the basis that:
(a) The claim is
anticipated by the QUEST reference;
(b) Claim 14 is
anticipated by the BRADLEY, CLASSIC or ROBINAIR references respectively;
(c) The claim is
obvious as a result of the references and common general knowledge identified
by the defendant’s experts;
(d) The claim is over
broad or lacking utility as a result of the failure to specify a means for
retaining the piston in the cylinder;
(e) The application
that issued into the ‘673 Patent failed to comply with section 37 due to a lack
of drawings in the specification;
(f) The plaintiff
failed to comply with paragraph 73(1)(a) of the Patent Act in view of
the fact that the plaintiff filed minutes from a hearing before the European Patent
Office (EPO) in respect of the corresponding European application; or
(g) The ‘673 Patent
is void pursuant to subsection 53(1) of the Patent Act on the basis
that:
the
petition contains an untrue material allegation, namely that Michael Kroll and
Phil Trigiani were the owners of the invention; or
as a
result of the omission of drawings of the apparatus in the specification, it
contains more or less than is necessary for
obtaining the end for they purported
to be made.
[157] Issue 6.(a)
Anticipation – The Law
Novelty (anticipation) is
governed by section 28.2 of the Patent Act which reads in part as
follows:
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;
(c)
in an application for a patent that is filed in Canada by a person other than
the applicant, and has a filing date that is before the claim date; or
.
. .
[158] The Supreme
Court of Canada in Free World Trust above, stated at paragraphs 25, 26
and 27:
25. Anticipation by publication is a
difficult defence to establish because courts recognize that it is all too easy
after an invention has been disclosed to find its antecedents in bits and
pieces of earlier learning. It takes little ingenuity to assemble a dossier of
prior art with the benefit of 20-20 hindsight. In this case, the respondents
contended that all of the essential elements of the appellant's alleged
inventions were disclosed in a single publication, the Solov'eva article, which
predated the patent application by almost 4 years. If this is correct, the
patent would be invalid.
26.
The
Solov'eva article was drawn to the respondents' attention by the appellant who
cited it as prior art in the specification of the '361 patent itself. The legal
question is whether the Solov'eva article contains sufficient information to
enable a person of ordinary skill and knowledge in the field to understand,
without access to the two patents, "the nature of the invention and carry
it into practical use without the aid of inventive genius but purely by
mechanical skill" (H. G. Fox, The Canadian Law and Practice Relating to
Letters Patent for Inventions (4th ed. 1969), at pp. 126-27). In other
words, was the information given by Solov'eva "for [the] purpose of
practical utility, equal to that given in the patents in suit"? (Consolboard
Inc. v. MacMillan Bloedel (Sask.) Ltd., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 504, per Dickson J.
at p. 534), or as was memorably put in General Tire & Rubber Co. v.
Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co., [1972] R.P.C. 457 (Eng. C.A.), at p. 486:
A signpost, however clear, upon the road
to the patentee's invention will not suffice. The prior inventor must be clearly
shown to have planted his flag at the precise destination before the patentee.
The
test for anticipation is difficult to meet:
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. (Beloit Canada Ltd. v.
Valmet OY (1986), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 289 (F.C.A.), per Hugessen J.A., at p.
297).
27. It is clear, with respect, that the
Solov'eva article does not address, let alone solve, the technical problems dealt
with in the patents in suit. It is nothing more than a four-page overview of
the history of electro-magnetotherapy. It describes some of the various systems
available in 1975 in Europe and Japan. The appellant, it must be appreciated,
does not claim to have invented electro-magnetotherapy. It obtained a patent
for a particular means. Although the various components were earlier known to
persons skilled in the art, the inventor brought the elements together to
achieve what the Commissioner of Patents considered a new, useful and ingenious
result. The claimed invention effected an ingenious combination rather than a
mere aggregation of previously known components (The King v. Uhlemann
Optical Co., [1952] 1 S.C.R. 143, per Rinfret C.J., at p. 150; Domtar Ltd.
v. MacMillan Bloedel Packaging Ltd. (1977), 33 C.P.R. (2d) 182 (F.C.T.D.),
at pp. 189-91). The ingenious combination was neither taught nor anticipated in
the Solov'eva publication. None of the other arguments against validity are
convincing. The patentee lived up to its side of the bargain by disclosing an
invention. The patents are valid.
[159] The law has
been modified somewhat by the Supreme Court of Canada in Apotex Inc. v.
Sanofi-Synthelabo Canada Inc., [2008] S.C.J. No. 63 [Apotex v. Sanofi],
Mr. Justice Rothstein, speaking for the Court stated:
23. For the reasons that follow, and in
light of recent jurisprudence, I am of the respectful opinion that the
applications judge overstated the stringency of the test for anticipation that
the "exact invention" has already been made and publicly disclosed.
24.
In
the 2005 decision of the House of Lords in Synthon, Lord Hoffmann has
brought some further clarity to the law of anticipation as understood since General
Tire. His reference at para. 20 to the "unquestionable authority"
of Lord Westbury in Hills v. Evans (1862), 31 L.J. Ch. (N.S.) 457, at p.
463, makes it plain that his analysis does not depend on any change on English
law flowing from the enactment of the Patents Act 1977 (U.K.), 1977, c.
37, or the U.K.'s adoption of the Convention on the Grant of European
Patents, 1065 U.N.T.S. 199 (entered into force October 7, 1977). He
distinguishes between two requirements for anticipation that were not
theretofore expressly considered separately, prior disclosure and enablement.
25.
He explains that the requirement of prior disclosure
means that the prior patent must disclose subject matter which, if performed,
would necessarily result in infringement of that patent, and states, at para.
22:
If I may summarise the effect of these
two well-known statements [from General Tire and Hills v. Evans],
the matter relied upon as prior art must disclose subject matter which, if
performed, would necessarily result in an infringement of the patent ... It
follows that, whether or not it would be apparent to anyone at the time,
whenever subject matter described in the prior disclosure is capable of being
performed and is such that, if performed, it must result in the patent being
infringed, the disclosure condition is satisfied.
When
considering the role of the person skilled in the art in respect of disclosure,
the skilled person is "taken to be trying to understand what the author of
the description [in the prior patent] meant" (para. 32). At this stage,
there is no room for trial and error or experimentation by the skilled person.
He is simply reading the prior patent for the purposes of understanding it.
26.
If the disclosure requirement is satisfied, the second
requirement to prove anticipation is "enablement" which means that
the person skilled in the art would have been able to perform the invention
(para. 26). Lord Hoffmann held that the test for enablement for purposes of
anticipation was the same as the test for sufficiency under the relevant United Kingdom legislation. (Enablement for the
purposes of sufficiency of the patent specification under the Canadian Patent
Act, s. 34(1)(b) of the pre-October 1, 1989 Act, now s. 27(3)(b), is not an
issue to be decided in this case and my analysis of enablement is solely
related to the test for anticipation. The question of whether enablement for
purposes of sufficiency is identical in Canada is better left to another day.)
27.
Once the subject matter of the invention is disclosed
by the prior patent, the person skilled in the art is assumed to be willing to
make trial and error experiments to get it to work. While trial and error
experimentation is permitted at the enablement stage, it is not at the
disclosure stage. For purposes of enablement, the question is no longer what
the skilled person would think the disclosure of the prior patent meant, but
whether he or she would be able to work the invention.
28.
The Beloit decision by which the applications judge rightly felt bound
dealt with only one aspect of anticipation, that is, whether or not the
invention in a patent had been disclosed in a single prior publication or
patent. In that decision, Hugessen J.A. held that it had not. He had no need to
consider the further point whether or not, had there been such a clear
disclosure, the working of the invention was also enabled by that disclosure.
That point was not in issue in Beloit. Explicitly separating disclosure and
enablement is a refinement of the approach set out in Beloit. It explains the process a person skilled in the art would
follow if the original patent anticipated the invention of the subsequent
patent. I would adopt this approach.
29.
Subject
to any limitations expressed in the Patent Act, I see no reason why the
discussion of anticipation should not apply to other prior art than merely
genus patents. Again, subject to limitations in the Patent Act, the
discussion of anticipation and obviousness would seem applicable to patents
generally.
30.
Two
questions now must be answered: (1) what constitutes disclosure at the first
stage of the test for anticipation, and (2) how much trial and error or
experimentation is permitted at the enablement stage?
My understanding of this jurisprudence is that
if no disclosure is found to have occurred in the prior art, Free World
Trust above, would still apply.
[160] The QUEST
injector is a one-piece injector (Exhibit 15). It consists of:
1. a housing containing
a secondary fluid;
2. a piston within the
housing; and
3. a ram threadably
engaged with the housing to drive the piston so that when the ram is rotated
the threads drive the piston into the housing and expel the fluid from the
housing (paragraph 102 of the plaintiff’s closing argument).
[161] The defendant
alleges that all of the claims of the ‘673 Patent are anticipated by QUEST.
[162] I wish to
first deal with claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9 and 10 of the ‘673 Patent. The issue
becomes whether the QUEST instrument would lead a person skilled in the art
directly to the use of a “cylindrical cartridge received by a cartridge
receiver having piston driving means?” The piston of the QUEST instrument is defined
by one end of the ram. If you were to remove the ram, there would be no piston
as it is attached to the ram. Thus, there would be no cylindrical cartridge as
defined by the claims of the ‘673 Patent in that there would not be any piston
in the cartridge.
[163] The defendant
submitted that the socket wrench (Exhibit 30) was a cartridge receiving device
with piston driving means. The piston in the QUEST instrument is driven forward
into the housing in order to expel the fluid. However, turning the nut on the
end of the ram engages threads on the ram with threads on the inside of the
housing. You need to have the threads on the ram to engage the threads on the
inside of the housing in order to drive the piston into the housing. If there
were no threads, the piston would not advance into the housing so as to dispel
the fluid.
[164] The
defendant’s expert Dr. Frise stated at page 190, volume 6 of the transcript:
Q. And I think you would agree
with me, sir, that if you would put that wrench on the end of the Quest
implement, and if the Quest implement didn’t have the threads here, that define
the path as you put it I think?
A. Yes.
Q. You could turn that wrench all
you want and there would be no movement of the piston, correct?
A. It would rotate.
Q. It would, you would rotate the
piston, right, it wouldn’t drive the piston forward though, would it?
A. It wouldn’t drive the piston
forward.
Q. And with respect to both the wrench
and the crossbar on Bradley, if you didn’t have your hand on it to actually
move the wrench or the cross bar, there wouldn’t be any driving of anything,
right?
A. Yeah, you would certainly have,
all these devices require your hand.
[165] From my
review of the QUEST instrument, I am of the view that the socket wrench is not
a cartridge receiver with piston driving means. In my view, the socket is
actually received in the injector because as you turn the nut on the ram with
the wrench, the socket actually advances into the injector.
[166] Jerome Lemon,
the plaintiff’s expert, stated at paragraph 8 of his expert rebuttal affidavit:
. . . It is also clear to me that
“cartridge receiver” means an assembly designed to hold the cartridge in place
so that the mechanical piston driving means may engage the piston in the
cartridge and force it through the cartridge body forcing the secondary fluid
out the other end.
[167] The design of
the socket wrench has no means to hold the housing in place so that the
mechanical piston driving means may engage the piston and drive it through the
housing as was found to be required by both the defendant’s and plaintiff’s
experts.
[168] I am of the
view that claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9 and 10 of the ‘673 Patent are not
anticipated by the QUEST references. QUEST does not teach towards these claims
or lead directly to the invention claimed in these claims. QUEST does not teach
a cartridge received in a cartridge receiver having piston driving means as
required by the claim.
[169] The next
issue to be discussed is whether claims 14 and 16 are anticipated by the QUEST
reference. I must determine whether the QUEST instrument discloses a canister
having two open ends.
[170] Claim 14
calls for:
14. A canister for charging a closed,
pressurized air conditioning or refrigeration system with a fluid, comprising:
a. a closed, non-pressurized
cylindrical canister, wherein said canister has two ends, a first open end
which connects to the system being charged and a second open end,
b. . . .
c. a piston sealably disposed
with said second open end of said canister, wherein said canister is adapted to
sealably and releasably connect to said pressurized air conditioning or
refrigeration system to form a closed binary system.
[171] As can be
seen, the first open end which connects to the system being charged. The
evidence however, shows that the end of the QUEST injector that attaches to the
system being charged has an anti-back flow valve that closes the end of the
housing between the integral connector element for connecting the QUEST
instrument to the AC system or system being charged. Claim 14 is not
anticipated by the QUEST instrument as it does not teach directly toward a
canister having a first open end and attached to the AC system.
[172] As well,
claim 14 provides for second open end having a “piston sealably disposed with
said second open end of said canister”. The second end of the QUEST instrument
has exterior threads on the ram which are engaged in interior threads on the
inside of the housing which closes the second open end and of the housing
between the second end and the piston.
[173] In my view,
the QUEST instrument uses the usual method of closing the first end of the
canister that is to be attached to the system being charged. The second or
other end of the canister has a ram extending out from it which closes that end
of the canister. The QUEST instrument does not lead directly to the canister
claimed in claim 14 of the ‘673 Patent.
[174] The experts
clearly understood that a separate cartridge was disclosed by the claim.
Professor Brown, the defendant’s expert stated at pages 86 and 87, volume 4 of
the transcript:
Q. So in any event, none of the
prior art had any particular cartridge receiver designed specifically to
receive a cartridge, a separate cartridge, is that correct?
A. Because you would naturally
assume that the 5-8 socket and ratchet would be used, because it came from a
tool box, it would be used in other applications. That’s not a specific,
specifically designed for that tool.
Q. And none of the other
implements had anything that was specifically designed that would be
characterized as a separate cartridge receiver that could receive separate
cartridges, is that correct?
A. Not that I saw.
Q. And the claims of
those, of the patent that we were just looking at, claim four, does
specifically identify that the container is a cylindrical cartridge received by
a cartridge receiver having piston-driving means?
A. Yes, that’s
correct, that’s what it says.
This is not disclosed by the QUEST
instrument.
[175] I therefore
find that the QUEST injector does not anticipate claim 14 of the ‘673 Patent
nor does it anticipate claim 15 or 16 of the same patent as these claims are
dependant claims on claim 14.
[176] Issue 6.(b)
Is claim 14 anticipated by
the BRADLEY, CLASSIC or ROBINAIR references respectively?
The evidence shows that neither
BRADLEY (Exhibit 1, volume 11, tab 60) nor CLASSIC (Exhibit 10) have or
disclose a canister with two open ends. As noted in the last section of these
reasons, that is a requirement of claim 14. As well, the end of these
instruments that attach to the AC system is closed by an anti-back flow valve
when the canister is closed with fluid in it. Both the BRADLEY and the QUEST
are refillable. Hence, they do not disclose a non-pressurized cylindrical
canister in a predetermined amount of secondary fluid kept at an ambient
pressure. Also, as I noted with respect to the QUEST instrument, they do not
lead directly to the use of a separate cartridge which is what is to be covered
by the claim according to the expert’s testimony.
[177] In the ROBINAIR
instrument, the end of the canister that engages with the AC system is closed
by a nozzle assembly that has an anti-back flow valve. Hence, it does not
disclose the canister covered in claim 14 as it does not have two open ends. As
well, I note that the ROBINAIR is refillable. This means that it does not
disclose a non-pressurized cylindrical canister in which a predetermined amount
of secondary fluid is maintained at about ambient pressure as stated in claim
14.
[178] In my view, ROBINAIR
does anticipate claim 14 of the ‘673 Patent.
[179] Issue 6.(c)
Is the claim obvious as a
result of the references and common general knowledge identified by the
defendant’s experts?
Section 28.3 of the Patent
Act applies to obviousness of a patent and states:
The
subject-matter defined by a claim in an application for a patent in Canada must be subject-matter that would not have been obvious on
the claim date to a person skilled in the art or science to which it pertains,
having regard to
(a)
information disclosed 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 information became available to the
public in Canada or elsewhere; and
(b)
information disclosed before the claim date by a person not mentioned in
paragraph (a) in such a manner that the information became available to the
public in Canada or elsewhere.
[180] Prior to the
Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Apotex v. Sanofi above, the test
for obviousness was spelled out by Mr. Justice Hugessen in Beloit Canada
Ltd. et al v. Valmet Oy (1986), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 289 (F.C.A.) at page 294:
The
test for obviousness is not to ask what competent inventors did or would have
done to solve the problem. Inventors are by definition inventive. The classical
touchstone for obviousness is the technician skilled in the art but having no
scintilla of inventiveness or imagination; a paragon of deduction and
dexterity, wholly devoid of intuition; a triumph of the left hemisphere over
the right. The question to be asked is whether this mythical creature (the man
in the Clapham omnibus of patent law) would, in the light of the state of the
art and of common general knowledge as at the claimed date of invention, have
come directly and without difficulty to the solution taught by the patent. It
is a very difficult test to satisfy.
And at page 295, Mr. Justice Hugessen states:
Every
invention is obvious after it has been made, and to no one more so than an
expert in the field. Where the expert has been hired for the purpose of
testifying, his infallible hindsight is even more suspect. It is so easy, once
the teaching of a patent is known, to say, "I could have done that";
before the assertion can be given any weight, one must have a satisfactory
answer to the question, "Why didn't you?"
[181] In Apotex
v. Sanofi above, Mr. Justice Rothstein, speaking for the Court, after
discussions of the law on obviousness in the United States and the United
Kingdom,
stated at paragraphs 60 to 67:
60. There is a similarity between the
current state of the law in the United Kingdom and the United States in respect of "obvious to
try". It is now clear that both jurisdictions accept that an "obvious
to try" test can be relevant in an obviousness inquiry. The United States
Supreme Court has now stated so explicitly in KSR. The convergence of
the United Kingdom and the United States law on this issue
suggests that the restrictiveness with which the Beloit test has been interpreted in Canada
should be re-examined.
(d)
Approach to Obviousness in Canada
61.
I
take as a starting point the words of Diplock L.J. in Johns-Manville, at
pp. 493-94:
Patent law can too easily be bedevilled
by linguistics, and the citation of a plethora of cases about other inventions
of different kinds. The correctness of a decision upon an issue of obviousness
does not depend upon whether or not the decider has paraphrased the words of
the Act in some particular verbal formula. I doubt whether there is any verbal
formula which is appropriate to all classes of claims.
Although
we are not here dealing with obviousness provided by an express statutory test,
but rather by necessary implication based on the requirement for invention in
the Patent Act, the words of Diplock L.J. are nonetheless apt because
the courts have often tended to treat the word formulation of Beloit as
if it were a statutory prescription that limits the obviousness inquiry.
62.
I do
not think that Hugessen J.A. in Beloit intended that the rather colourful
description of obviousness that he coined be applied in an acontextual manner
applicable to all classes of claims. I note particularly that "obvious to
try" is not a mandatory test in the United Kingdom or in the United States. It is one factor of a number that
should be considered, having regard to the context and the nature of the
invention.
63.
In KSR,
Kennedy J. warns against an overly rigid rule that limits the obviousness
inquiry. Rather, an expansive and flexible approach that would include
"any secondary considerations that [will] prove instructive" will be
useful (p. 1739). I read KSR as teaching that as in most matters in
which a judge or a jury is called upon to make a factual determination, rigid
rules are inappropriate unless mandated by statute.
64.
While
I do not think the list is exhaustive, the factors set forth by Kitchin J. and
adopted by Lord Hoffmann in Lundbeck, referred to at para. 59 of these
reasons, are useful guides in deciding whether a particular step was
"obvious to try". However, the "obvious to try" test must
be approached cautiously. It is only one factor to assist in the obviousness
inquiry. It is not a panacea for alleged infringers. The patent system is
intended to provide an economic encouragement for research and development. It
is well known that this is particularly important in the field of
pharmaceuticals and biotechnology.
65.
In Saint-Gobain
PAM SA v. Fusion Provida Ltd., [2005] EWCA Civ 177, Jacob L.J. stated, at
para. 35:
Mere possible inclusion of something
within a research programme on the basis you will find out more and something
might turn up is not enough. If it were otherwise there would be few inventions
that were patentable. The only research which would be worthwhile (because of
the prospect of protection) would be into areas totally devoid of prospect. The
"obvious to try" test really only works where it is more-or-less
self-evident that what is being tested ought to work.
In
General Tire, Sachs L.J. said, at p. 497:
"Obvious" is, after all, a
much-used word and it does not seem to us that there is any need to go beyond
the primary dictionary meaning of "very plain".
In
Intellectual Property Law, at p. 136, Professor Vaver also equates
"obvious" to "very plain". I am of the opinion that the
"obvious to try" test will work only where it is very plain or, to
use the words of Jacob L.J., more or less self-evident that what is being
tested ought to work.
66.
For
a finding that an invention was "obvious to try", there must be
evidence to convince a judge on a balance of probabilities that it was more or
less self-evident to try to obtain the invention. Mere possibility that
something might turn up is not enough.
67.
It
will be useful in an obviousness inquiry to follow the four-step approach first
outlined by Oliver L.J. in Windsurfing International Inc. v. Tabur Marine
(Great Britain) Ltd., [1985] R.P.C. 59 (C.A.). This approach should bring
better structure to the obviousness inquiry and more objectivity and clarity to
the analysis. The Windsurfing approach was recently updated by Jacob L.J. in Pozzoli
SPA v. BDMO SA, [2007] F.S.R. 37, [2007] EWCA Civ 588, at para. 23:
In the result I would restate the Windsurfing
questions thus:
(1) (a) Identify the notional
"person skilled in the art";
(b) Identify the relevant common
general knowledge of that person;
(2) Identify the inventive concept
of the claim in question or if that cannot readily be done, construe it;
(3) Identify what, if any,
differences exist between the matter cited as forming part of the "state
of the art" and the inventive concept of the claim or the claim as
construed;
(4) Viewed without any knowledge of
the alleged invention as claimed, do those differences constitute steps which
would have been obvious to the person skilled in the art or do they require any
degree of invention? [Emphasis added.]
It
will be at the fourth step of the Windsurfing/Pozzoli approach to
obviousness that the issue of "obvious to try" will arise.
Application of the Windsurfing
above, Questions
[182] 1.(a) Person
skilled in the art
The person skilled in the art
in the present case would be a mechanical/manufacturing engineer or a
technician with experience in the field of automotive air conditioning.
[183] 1.(b) Identify
the relevant common general knowledge of that person
The common general knowledge of
this person would be knowledge to assemble the equipment in question, practice
its methods and the person would need to have knowledge in the area of
automotive air conditioning and their operation and maintenance.
[184] 2. Identify the inventive concept of the
claim in question or if that cannot readily be done, construe it
The
inventive concept involved here is a separate cartridge filled with a
predetermined fluid to be injected into an AC system and a cartridge receiver
having mechanically operated piston driving means.
[185] 3. Identify
what, if any, differences exist between the matter cited as forming part of the
“state of the art” and the inventive concept of the claim or the claim as
construed
The prior methods for injecting
dyes (secondary fluid) into an AC system were the infusion methods. The dye in
this case was under pressure so as to force it into the AC system. Any
mechanically operated devices that were available at the time generally had
ends adapted for releasable connection to AC systems and were closed by check
valves. All except the ROBINAIR had the other (second end) closed by a
protruding ram rather than a piston. As well, ROBINAIR’s design seems to provide
less mechanical advantage than earlier threaded injectors.
[186] As noted
earlier, the Montréal Protocol of 1987 and the government regulations in the
early 1990s provided that minimal amounts of refrigeration could be released
into the air. AC systems could not be topped up without checking for leaks and
a new dye with smaller molecules that were harder to detach when leakage
occurred in the AC system was mandated.
[187] The advantage
of the new invention included the fact that it avoided mess and inconvenience, accuracy
and the introduction of contaminants into the secondary fluid improved. There
would be spillage of refrigerants when using the older methods. Another
advantage of the new invention was that the charging conduit could be kept full
of fluid all the time, thus avoiding the need to purge it between uses.
[188] 4. Viewed
without any knowledge of the alleged invention as claimed, do those differences
constitute steps, which would have been obvious to the person skilled in the
art or do they require any degree of invention?
Mr. Justice Rothstein stated in
Apotex v. Sanofi above, at paragraph 68:
i. When
Is the "Obvious to Try" Test Appropriate?
68.
In
areas of endeavour where advances are often won by experimentation, an
"obvious to try" test might be appropriate. In such areas, there may
be numerous interrelated variables with which to experiment. For example, some
inventions in the pharmaceutical industry might warrant an "obvious to
try" test since there may be many chemically similar structures that can
elicit different biological responses and offer the potential for significant
therapeutic advances.
[189] Taking in
mind the statement of the Court in paragraph 68 of Apotex v. Sanofi above,
I have come to the conclusion that the “obvious to try” test would not be
appropriate in this case as the case does not deal with the type of case the
Supreme Court of Canada said the “obvious to try test” would be appropriate.
[190] Based on the
evidence of prior art before me, I am of the view that the claimed inventions,
namely a separate cartridge filled with a predetermined amount of fluid
(secondary) to be injected into an AC or refrigeration system by means of a
cartridge receiver having mechanically operated piston driving means was not
obvious to the person skilled in the art as of the filing date of the ‘673
Patent.
[191] Issue 6.(d)
The claim is over broad or
lacking utility as a result of the failure to specify a means for retaining the
piston in the cylinder.
With respect to overbreadth and
inutility of the patent, Mr. Justice Cullen in Lubrizol Corp. et. al. v.
Imperial Oil Ltd. (1990), 33 C.P.R. (3d) 1 (F.C.T.D.) at pages 27 and 28
stated:
There
are two fundamental limitations on the extent of the monopoly that may be
validly claimed in a patent:
1)
it must not exceed the invention that has been made, and
2)
it must not exceed the invention described in the specification
If
the claim is far broader than that disclosed in the specifications so as to
include a vast range of materials that cannot all be conceived to be workable,
the claim is invalid.
However,
the Supreme Court of Canada in Burton Patsons Chemicals Inc. et al. v.
Hewlett-Packard Ltd. et al. (1974), 3 N.R. 533 (S.C.C.) warned that an
inventor is free to make his claims as narrow as he/she sees fit in order to
protect himself/herself from invalidity which will occur if the claims are too
broad.
Again,
the onus is on the defendant to establish a lack of utility or claim broader
than invention. The fact that a patent was not fully tested and proven in all
its claims is not enough. In Lovell Manufacturing Co. et al. v. Beatty Bros.
Ltd. (1962), 41 C.P.R. (2d) 18, 23 Fox Pat. C. 112 (Ex. Ct.), it was held
that it is possible to claim beyond specific examples as long as claims are
sound predictions of what will happen when the claims are followed. This is a
question of fact and the claims are to be interpreted by applying the common
vocabulary of the art. Within the specification, the phraseology, and the
drawings by their illustration, may assist, but should not be used to vary or
enlarge the claims; if the words are plain and unambiguous, it will not be
possible to expand or limit their scope by referring to the wording of the
specification: Kramer, supra, at p. 310. Here again, the courts
have been cautioned not to be too technical in their approach.
[192] In the
Supreme Court of Canada in Consolboard Inc. v. MacMillan Bloedel (Saskatchewan) Ltd. (1981), 56
C.P.R. (2d) 145 at page 160, it was stated:
.
. . To the extent that the Federal Court of Appeal held that s. 36(1) of the Patent
Act requires a disclosure of the invention, including its utility, to the
public as unskilled or uninformed laymen, such finding, in my view, is contrary
to law. There is but a single test, and that test is whether the specification
adequately describes the invention for a person skilled in the art, though, in
the case of patents of a highly technical and scientific nature, that person
may be someone possessing a high degree of expert scientific knowledge and
skill in the particular branch of science to which the patent relates. It might
be added that there was no evidence by the respondent as to any respect in
which the specifications of the two patents in issue would have been considered
deficient by a workman of ordinary skill in the art.
In
my respectful opinion the Federal Court of Appeal erred also in holding that s.
36(1) requires distinct indication of the real utility of the invention in
question. There is a helpful discussion in Halsbury's Laws of England,
(3rd ed.), vol. 29, at p. 59, on the meaning of "not useful" in
patent law. It means "that the invention will not work, either in the
sense that it will not operate at all or, more broadly, that it will not do
what the specification promises that it will do". There is no suggestion
here that the invention will not give the result promised. . . .
[193] The defendant
submitted that the claims of the ‘673 Patent are broader than the invention
described in the specification and that the plaintiff’s SPOTGUN lacks utility.
The reason for this conclusion was that the claims do not specify a means to
hold the piston in the cartridge to safeguard against the ejection of the
piston. There are a number of problems with this submission. For example,
claims 1 and 4 and their dependant claims require that the cartridge be
“received” in the cartridge receiver. As well, claim 14 requires that the
cartridge forms a closed binary system with the AC system when connected to it.
If the cartridge is received by a cartridge receiver this will prevent the ejection
of the piston. Secondly, since claim 14 requires that the cartridge be part of
a closed binary system, this again means that there must be means to stop the
ejection of the piston from the cartridge.
[194] A review of
the testimony of Professor Brown (see pages 69 to 75 and pages 79 to 81 of the
June 16, 2008 transcript), indicates to me that he believed that persons
skilled in the art would understand the need to stop the piston and that this
would be done in a number of ways. Dr. Frise gave similar evidence (see pages
18 to 25 of the June 18, 2008 transcript).
[195] Dr. Frise
also stated at paragraph 29 of his expert affidavit that the “claims, in my
opinion, are also broader than any invention arguably disclosed in the
disclosure”. However, on cross-examination when being questioned about the ‘673
Patent, he stated:
Q. Thank you. I appreciate that,
sir. On page three, there is a discussion up near the top where it said,
“The use of non-pressurized charging
containers would avoid the expense, inconvenience and safety concerns
associated with highly pressurized containers and would consecutively represent
a significant improvement in the art.”
Do you see that, sir?
A. Yes.
Q. And those benefits would not be
limited to the use of caulking gun type implement, is that correct? Could use
any type of injector, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And there is a wide variety of
dispensing guns that were available on the market as of the mid 1990s, correct?
A. Well, there is a wide variety
of dispensing guns for one type of service or another, yes.
Q. All kinds of them, caulking
guns or glue guns or the sky is the limit, isn’t there, there’s all kinds of
dispensing guns, isn’t there?
A. There are a number, yes.
Dr. Frise was satisfied that the benefits
of the invention described in the specification would be realized by different
types of injectors other than the caulking gun type of injector.
[196] For the above
reasons, I am satisfied that the claims are not broader than the invention
described and that the invention does not lack utility. The ‘673 Patent is not
invalid on these grounds.
[197] Issue 6.(e)
The application that issued
into the ‘673 Patent failed to comply with section 37 due to a lack of drawings
in the specification.
Section 37 of the Patent Act
reads:
37.(1) In the case of a machine, or in
any other case in which an invention admits of illustration by means of
drawings, the applicant shall, as part of the application, furnish drawings of
the invention that clearly show all parts of the invention.
(2)
Each drawing must include references corresponding with the specification, and
the Commissioner may require further drawings or dispense with any of them as
the Commissioner sees fit.
[198] It can be
seen that subsection 37(2) of the Patent Act gives the Commissioner
discretion to dispense with drawings if the Commissioner sees fit. In Schweyer
Electric and Manufacturing Co. v. New York Central Railroad Co., [1934] Ex.
C.R. 31 at page 63, the Court stated at page 63:
However, in this case, the Patent Office did give the filing date
mentioned to the application in question, and in due course a patent issued, as
many others may have done in similar circumstances. I do not think I can now go
back and alter the record and hold that the true filing date was a week later,
when the drawings were supplied. I am not prepared to hold that the
specification was so incomplete that it was no specification at all, and that
Schweyer should not have been given the filing date of August 31. There was
filed a specification which may have amply described and disclosed the alleged
invention to those skilled in that art, and it may well be that the delayed
drawings, which would soon follow, would merely clarify and elaborate the
specification.
[199] I would note
that according to their evidence, neither of the defendant’s expert witnesses
had any difficulty in understanding the invention from reading the
specifications. As well, since the Commissioner issued the ‘673 Patent, the
Commissioner must have believed that the requirements of the Act were met including
the dispensing of the need for drawings pursuant to subsection 37(2) of the
Act.
[200] I cannot find
that the ‘673 Patent is invalid for failure to comply with section 37 of the
Act.
[201] Issue 6.(f)
The plaintiff failed to
comply with paragraph 73(1)(a) of the Patent Act in view of the fact
that the plaintiff filed minutes from a hearing before the EPO in respect of
the corresponding European application.
Paragraph 73(1)(a) of the Act reads as
follows:
73.(1) An application for a patent in Canada shall be deemed to be abandoned if the applicant does not
(a)
reply in good faith to any requisition made by an examiner in connection with
an examination, within six months after the requisition is made or within any
shorter period established by the Commissioner; . . .
[202] The evidence
in this case does not establish that the plaintiff failed to reply to any
requisition made by an examiner. Indeed, Dr. Frise testified that the incorrect
statements, if any, were made in the European Patent Office. The minutes filed
with the Canadian application actually show that the alleged misrepresentations
were rejected by the European Patent Office.
[203] The plaintiff
did not breach paragraph 73(1)(a) of the Act and the patent is not invalid for
this reason.
[204] Issue 6.(g)
The ‘673 Patent is void
pursuant to subsection 53(1) of the Patent Act on the basis that:
the petition contains an untrue material
allegation, namely that Michael Kroll and Phil Trigiani were the owners of the
invention; or
as a result of the omission of drawings
of the apparatus in the specification, it contains more or less than is
necessary for obtaining the end for they purported to be made.
Subsection 53(1) of the Patent
Act states:
53.(1) A patent is void if any material
allegation in the petition of the applicant in respect of the patent is untrue,
or if the specification and drawings contain more or less than is necessary for
obtaining the end for which they purport to be made, and the omission or
addition is wilfully made for the purpose of misleading.
[205] The Supreme
Court of Canada in Apotex
Inc. v. Wellcome Foundation Ltd. (2002), 21 C.P.R. (4th) 499 (S.C.C.) at
pages 538 to 539 stated:
107. The trial judge concluded that Drs.
Broder and Mitsuya were co-inventors, but that failure to include them in the
patent was not a material misrepresentation that would invalidate the patent.
In reaching this conclusion, he referred to the observation of Addy J. in Procter
& Gamble Co. v. Bristol-Myers Canada Ltd. (1978), 39 C.P.R. (2d) 145
(F.C.T.D.), at p. 157, that "it is really immaterial to the public whether
the applicant is the inventor or one of two joint inventors as this does not
got [sic] to the term or to the substance of the invention nor even to
the entitlement" (aff'd (1979), 42 C.P.R. (2d) 33 (F.C.A.)). At an earlier
date, Thurlow J. had suggested in Jules R. Gilbert Ltd. v. Sandoz Patents
Ltd. (1970), 64 C.P.R. 14 (Ex. Ct.), at p. 74, rev'd (on other grounds) [1974]
S.C.R. 1336 (sub nom. Sandoz Patents Ltd. v. Gilcross Ltd.), that
"allegations in the petition respecting anything other than the
subject-matter of the claims in the patent as granted are not material".
108.
The
appellants argue that, while as Addy J. says, it may be that the identity of
the inventor is immaterial to the public in most instances, this is not
necessarily true in all cases. Here, for example, the issue of
"entitlement" to the rewards of the AZT patent has created a
significant public controversy. There were arguably important public policy
ramifications to the issue of co-inventorship because of the contrasting
mandates, objectives and funding sources of the institutions involved, in
particular the NIH and the Glaxo/Wellcome corporate group. If indeed the NIH
researchers had been "co-inventors", and the NIH or the U.S. government had therefore held an ownership interest in the
patent, there potentially could have been a significant effect on both the
access to and the cost of the drug AZT across the world.
109.
There
is no need to consider the issue of materiality further in this case however,
not only because of the conclusion that Drs. Broder and Mitsuya were not in
fact co-inventors in this case, but also because there is no evidence
whatsoever that the omission to name them was "wilfully made for the
purpose of misleading", as required by the concluding words of s. 53(1).
[206] The
jurisprudence establishes that the alleged untrue allegation must be material
and must be “wilfully made for the purpose of misleading”. The above cited case
supports the proposition that the allegation that Michael Kroll and Phil
Trigiani were the owners of the invention is not a material allegation.
[207] Subsection
27(1) of the Patent Act reads in part as follows:
27(1) The Commissioner shall grant a
patent for an invention to the inventor or the inventor’s legal representative
. . .
Section 2 of the Patent Act defines
legal representative as:
"legal
representatives" includes heirs, executors, administrators, guardians,
curators, tutors, assigns and all other persons claiming through or under applicants
for patents and patentees of inventions;
In my view, when you consider the dictionary
meaning of the persons such as guardian and curator, Michael Kroll could be
considered the legal representative and thus, an applicant.
[208] With respect
to the omission of the drawings as being material so as to breach subsection
53(1) of the Patent Act, the invention could be understood from the
specifications.
[209] I find that
there was no breach of subsection 53(1) of the Act by naming Michael Kroll as
an applicant nor because of the omission of the drawings. The ‘673 Patent is
not void or invalid for these reasons.
[210] Issue 7.(a)
7. Are any of claims
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 or 38 of
the ‘024 Patent invalid on the basis that:
(a) The
subject matter defined by the claim is not patentably distinct from the subject
matter defined by any of the claims in the ‘673 Patent
The defendant submitted that
the above noted claims of the ‘024 Patent are invalid because of double patenting.
In Whirlpool Corp. v. Camco Inc., Mr. Justice Binnie, on behalf of the
Court, stated as follows with respect to double patenting at pages 157 and 158:
3.
If the '803 Patent Claims Properly Construed do not Include Flex Vanes, is the
'734 Patent Nevertheless Invalid Because of Double Patenting?
63.
The prohibition against double patenting relates back
to the "evergreen" problem mentioned at the outset. The inventor is
only entitled to "a" patent for each invention: Patent Act, s.
36(1). If a subsequent patent issues with identical claims, there is an
improper extension of the monopoly. It is clear that the prohibition against
double patenting involves a comparison of the claims rather than the
disclosure, because it is the claims that define the monopoly. The question is
how "identical" the claims must be in the subsequent patent to
justify invalidation.
64.
The Federal Court of Appeal has adopted the test that
the claims must be "identical or conterminous": Beecham Canada
Ltd. v. Procter & Gamble Co. (1982), 61 C.P.R. (2d) 1, at p. 22. This
verbal formulation derives from an editorial comment by Dr. H. G. Fox, Q.C., on
Lovell Manufacturing Co. v. Beatty Bros. Ltd., reported at (1962), 23
Fox Pat. C. 112, at pp. 116-17:
Letters patent are not granted at
pleasure, but for a term of years and the grant of a second patent with respect
to [page1105] the same subject-matter would be void under this statute [6 Henry
VIII, c. 15, 1514] and by the Statute of Monopolies, as well as at common law
and by the terms of section 28(1)(b) of the Canadian Patent Act. But for this
purpose the subject-matter of the two grants must be identical. A subsequent
claim cannot be invalidated on the ground of prior claiming unless the two
claims are precisely conterminous.
65.
This branch of the prohibition on double patenting is
sometimes called "same invention" double patenting. Given the claims
construction adopted by the trial judge it cannot be said that the subject
matter of the '734 patent is the same or that the claims are "identical or
conterminous" with those of the '803 patent.
66.
There is, however, a second branch of the prohibition
which is sometimes called "obviousness" double patenting. This is a
more flexible and less literal test that prohibits the issuance of a second
patent with claims that are not "patentably distinct" from those of
the earlier patent. In Commissioner of Patents v. Farbwerke Hoechst
Aktiengesellschaft Vormals Meister Lucius & Bruning, [1964] S.C.R. 49,
the issue was whether Farbwerke Hoechst could obtain a patent for a medicine
that was a diluted version of a medicine for which it had already obtained a
patent. The claims were neither identical nor conterminous. Judson J.
nevertheless held the subsequent patent to be invalid, explaining at p. 53:
A person is entitled to a patent for a
new, useful and inventive medicinal substance but to dilute that new substance
once its medical uses are established does not result in further invention. The
diluted and undiluted substance are but two aspects of exactly the same
invention. In this case, the addition of an inert carrier, which is a common
expedient to increase bulk, and so facilitate measurement and administration,
is nothing more than dilution and does not result in a further invention over
and above that of the medicinal itself. [Emphasis added.]
67.
In Consolboard, supra, Dickson J.
referred to Farbwerke Hoechst as "the main authority on double
patenting" (p. 536) which stood for the proposition that a second patent
could not be justified unless the claims exhibited "novelty or
ingenuity" over the first patent:
Judson J. for the Court said that the
second process involved no novelty or ingenuity, and hence the second patent
was unwarranted.
[211] The defendant
in the present case relies on the second branch of the test or obviousness
double patenting. This branch contemplates a situation where the claims of the
patents in issue are not identical but are not patentably distinct.
[212] According to Whirlpool
above, the question to be determined is whether the claims of the ‘024
Patent exhibited “novelty or ingenuity” over the ‘673 Patent. I am of the
opinion that they do.
[213] The claims of
the ‘024 Patent all have “a nozzle integral with and extending out from a first
end of said tubular casing”. As well, some of the claims of the ‘024 Patent
also include an anti-back flow valve in the hose. I must now determine whether
the inclusion of “a nozzle integral with and extending out from a first end of
said tubular casing” and the inclusion of an anti-back flow valve in the hose
are inventive or exhibit novelty or ingenuity.
[214] I am of the
opinion that the integral nozzle is inventive. According to the evidence, the
trend in the industry was towards structures including check valves and
non-integral connector elements in the nozzles of injector devices. The
evidence also shows that the only example of a separate cartridge and cartridge
receiver having piston driving means is the defendant’s international design
device. That device tends to show that the integral nozzle is inventive as the
cartridge in that device did not include a nozzle but included a foil cover.
[215] With respect
to the anti-back flow valve being placed in the hose, I am of the view that
this was inventive. According to the evidence, the trend was to include check
valves in nozzles rather than in the hose. This is shown by the hoses used in
the ROBINAIR, QUEST and CLASSIC injectors.
[216] There was
advantage or benefit to placing the anti-back flow valve in the hose which
included:
1. Avoiding the need to
bleed the hose before each use;
2. Avoiding back flushing
problems; and
3. Preventing leakage
from the hose after use.
[217] There was no
evidence that an anti-back flow valve had been used in a hose on a previous
occasion.
[218] For the above
reasons, I am of the opinion it was not obvious to use an integral nozzle or to
place the anti-back flow valve in the hose.
[219] In summary,
the use of the “nozzle integral with and extending from a first end of said
tubular casing” and the use of an anti-back flow valve in the hose exhibited
“novelty or ingenuity” as stated in Whirlpool above. As a result, I do
not find that double patenting exists as a result of the ‘024 Patent.
Consequently, the ‘024 Patent is not invalid for this reason.
[220] Issue 7.(b)
In respect of any of claims
1, 5, 6, 7 or 9, the claim was anticipated by Canadian patent application no.
2,252,329.
The defendant claims that the
above mentioned claims of the ‘024 Patent were anticipated by the ‘329 Patent
because it had an earlier effective filing date than the ‘024 Patent. The ‘329
Patent’s filing date in Canada was November 3, 1998 but it claimed priority
from a provisional application filed in the United States on November 4, 1997.
The filing date for the ‘024 Patent was December 8, 1997.
[221] The evidence
shows that the ‘024 Patent was listed as prior art in the ‘329 Patent. As well,
the evidence shows that the defendant was aware of the plaintiff’s SPOTGUN
commercial embodiment of the inventions claimed in the ‘673 and ‘024 Patents
when it developed the DYE STICK.
[222] Subsection 28.2(1) and section 28.3 of the Patent Act read as
follows:
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;
(c) in an application for a patent that is
filed in Canada by a person other than the applicant, and has a filing date that
is before the claim date; or
(d) in an application (the "co-pending
application") for a patent that is filed in Canada by a person other than
the applicant and has a filing date that is on or after the claim date if
(i)
the co-pending application is filed by
(A)
a person who has, or whose agent, legal representative or predecessor in title
has, previously regularly filed in or for Canada an application for a patent
disclosing the subject-matter defined by the claim, or
(B)
a person who is entitled to protection under the terms of any treaty or
convention relating to patents to which Canada is a party and who has, or whose
agent, legal representative or predecessor in title has, previously regularly
filed in or for any other country that by treaty, convention or law affords
similar protection to citizens of Canada an application for a patent disclosing
the subject-matter defined by the claim,
(ii)
the filing date of the previously regularly filed application is before the
claim date of the pending application,
(iii)
the filing date of the co-pending application is within twelve months after the
filing date of the previously regularly filed application, and
(iv)
the applicant has, in respect of the co-pending application, made a request for
priority on the basis of the previously regularly filed application.
.
. .
28.3
The subject-matter defined by a claim in an application for a patent in Canada must be subject-matter that would not have been obvious on
the claim date to a person skilled in the art or science to which it pertains,
having regard to
(a) information disclosed 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
information became available to the public in Canada or elsewhere; and
(b) information disclosed before the claim
date by a person not mentioned in paragraph (a) in such a manner that the information became available to
the public in Canada or elsewhere.
[223] The Supreme
Court of Canada in Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27
had the following to say concerning statutory interpretation at pages 40 and
41:
Although
much has been written about the interpretation of legislation (see, e.g., Ruth
Sullivan, Statutory Interpretation (1997); Ruth Sullivan, Driedger on
the Construction of Statutes (3rd ed. 1994) (hereinafter "Construction
of Statutes"); Pierre-André Côté, The Interpretation of Legislation
in Canada (2nd ed. 1991), Elmer Driedger in Construction of Statutes
(2nd ed. 1983) best encapsulates the approach upon which I prefer to rely. He
recognizes that statutory interpretation cannot be founded on the wording of
the legislation alone. At p. 87 he states:
Today there is only one principle or
approach, namely, the words of an Act are to be read in their entire context
and in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the
Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament.
[224] Section 28.2
allows the disclosure of the subject matter defined by a claim within a period
of one year before the applicant’s filing date. Applying the approach noted
above and looking at the Patent Act as a whole, it would not make any
sense to allow the subject matter of a claim to be disclosed in the period of
one year prior to the filing date and still be patentable if someone else could
use the disclosed subject matter as prior art to defeat the applicant’s
application for a patent.
[225] In my view,
it is all the more so when as in this case, the defendant’s ‘629 Patent
application cites the plaintiff’s SPOTGUN as prior art.
[226] Based on the
above, I am of the opinion that the ‘329 Patent is not citable against the
plaintiff’s application. Claims 1, 5, 6, 7 and 9 of the ‘024 Patent are not
anticipated by the ‘329 Patent.
[227] Issue 7.(c)
In respect of any of claims
1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 20, 21 or 38, the subject matter defined by the claim was
anticipated by the QUEST, CLASSIC or ROBINAIR references respectively.
I have reviewed paragraphs 166
to 170 of the plaintiff’s closing argument and I would adopt the reasoning
contained therein as my own. These paragraphs read as follows:
166. The Defendant’s experts asserted
anticipation of various claims of the ‘024 patent by the Quest, Classic and
Robinair injectors. However, it is submitted that none of the implements
disclose all of the elements making up the combination of elements claimed.
Further, it is submitted that the Defendant has not met the onus upon it to
establish that the Robinair injector was, in fact, prior art. It is also worth
noting for clarity that, while the ‘673 patent is citable for double patenting
issues, it is not otherwise citable as prior art and cannot affect the
inventiveness/disclosure of particular features disclosed in its specification.
167. Dealing first with Quest, it is
submitted that it does not include an integral nozzle extending out of the end
of the tubular casing to engage with the connector assembly. As discussed by
Dr. Frise on cross-examination , the nozzle is simply a hole in the end of the
device that is closed by a check valve held in place by the charging
conduit/connector that is integral with the end of the device. Further, the
implement does not include a release valve even if it is accepted that the hose
put in evidence was prior art since that hose did not include a check valve,
but instead included a valve depressor that did not close the end of the hose
when disengaged from the service port. Accordingly, it does not include all
elements of and does not anticipate claim 1 or any of the claims dependent
thereon. With respect to claim 17, Quest clearly did not teach a connector
assembly as required by the claim since it did not include a release valve or
an anti-back flow valve. Further it did not disclose a canister having two open
ends as discussed in respect of the ‘673 patent. Accordingly, it is submitted
that Quest clearly does not anticipate claim 17 or any of the claims dependent
thereon.
168. With respect to dependent
claims, it is further submitted that Quest does not disclose any gradient
markings (claim 2), a cap (claim 3), a separate housing and drive mechanism
(claim 7) or an anti-back flow valve in the connector assembly (claim 38).
Accordingly, it is submitted that even if it was found that the Quest product
anticipated claims 1 and 17 (which it should not be), it should not be found to
anticipate the aforesaid claims that add additional elements not found on
Quest.
169. Similarly, with respect to
Classic, it is submitted that it does not disclose an integral nozzle extending
out of the canister or an anti-back flow valve in the connector assembly as
defined in claims 1/38 and 17. It similarly does not disclose a separate
canister and housing having a drive mechanism to force the piston to inject
fluid. Similarly, it does not disclose a cap or gradient markings that would be
useful in metering (as opposed to filling) the implement and, it is submitted,
does not anticipate any of the claims.
170. Finally, with respect to
Robinair, it is submitted that it clearly does not disclose an integral nozzle
or a connector assembly including a connector on a first end of the flexible
conduit to engage with said integral nozzle (claim 1); or a predetermined
amount of fluid maintained in the canister at ambient pressure or a connector
assembly including an anti-back flow valve in the assembly (claim 17). In
addition, it does not include a cap (claim 3), a housing and drive mechanism
(claim 7) or an anti-back flow valve (claim 38). Again, it is submitted that
Robinair clearly does not anticipate any of the claims of the ‘024 patent.
I am of the opinion that claims 1, 4, 5, 6,
7, 9, 17, 20, 21 and 38 are not anticipated by the QUEST, CLASSIC or ROBINAIR
references respectively.
[228] Issue 7.(d)
The claim is obvious as a
result of the references and common general knowledge identified by the
defendant’s experts.
I would apply the same law on
obviousness as I applied for the ‘673 Patent. I am of the view that the prior
art put forward by the defendant does not cause me to conclude that the ‘024
Patent was obvious.
[229] The evidence
establishes that before the introduction of the plaintiff’s SPOTGUN, there was
no teaching of any separate canisters or canisters received in housings having
piston driving means. As well, there was no disclosure of a connector assembly
which included a release valve and anti-back flow valve as set out in the ‘024
Patent. The prior art would not lead a person skilled in the art to the
invention claimed. The claims are not obvious, as a result of the references
and common general knowledge identified by the defendant’s experts.
[230] Issue 7.(e)
The claim is ambiguous as a
result of the use of the term “release valve”.
This Court has discussed the
invalidity of claims due to ambiguity in Letourneau v. Clearbrook
Iron Works Ltd. (2005), 44 C.P.R. (4th) 345 (F.C.) at page 356. Mr. Justice
Mosely stated:
37.
A claim is not invalid simply because it is not a model
of concision and lucidity. Very few patent claims are. Claims are drafted to be
understood by people with practical knowledge and experience in the specific
field of the invention: Risi Stone Ltd. supra, at 20. If a term can be
interpreted using grammatical rules and common sense, it cannot be ambiguous: Mobil
Oil Corp. v. Hercules Canada Inc. (1995), 63 C.P.R. (3d) 473 at 484, 188,
N.R. 382 (F.C.A.).
38. The Court must
give a purposive construction to a claim without being too astute or technical.
If there is more than one construction that can be reasonably reached, the
Court must favour the construction which upholds the patent. Where the language
of the specification, upon a reasonable view of it, can be read so as to afford
the inventor protection for that which he has actually in good faith invented,
the court, as a rule, will endeavour to give effect to that construction: Lubrizol
Corp. v. Imperial Oil Ltd. (1992), 45 C.P.R. (3d) 449, 98 D.L.R. (4th) 1
(F.C.A.); Western Electric Co. Inc. and Northern Electric Co. v.
Baldwin International Radio of Canada Ltd., [1934] S.C.R. 570, [1934] 4
D.L.R. 129, Unilever PLC v. Proctor & Gamble Inc., [1995] F.C.J. No.
1005 at para 23, 61 C.P.R. (3d) 499 (F.C.A.).
[231] The issue of
ambiguity that has been raised in the present case is in respect of the meaning
of the term “release valve”. The plaintiff’s expert, Jerome Lemon, at paragraph
31 of his expert affidavit (Exhibit 33) states as follows:
. . . The term “release valve” is not one
that I would use for any particular type of connector or valve for connection
to a charge port of service valve of an a/c or refrigeration system. However,
as of June 1999, most connectors adapted for coupling with a/c and
refrigeration charge ports included a valve that could close the end of the
charging hose, and I take the use of the term “release valve” to require such a
valve in the connector. . . .
And at paragraph 19 of his rebuttal
affidavit (Exhibit 79) he stated:
The obvious difficulty of the Defendant’s
expert Frise to understand the concept of a “release valve” as that term is
used in the ‘024 patent and in relationship to an a/c system coupler appears to
me to demonstrate his lack of familiarity with a/c service techniques and
tools. . . . His later (paragraph 40) quote from my affidavit regarding the
meaning of “release valve” is taken out of context and he does not indicate
that I clearly stated that I understood the term to refer to a hose having a
valve in the hose connector to the a/c system. As will be evident already, I do
not view the term “release valve” to be ambiguous at all when considered in the
context in which it is used.
[232] Dr. Frise did
state on cross-examination as follows at page 84 of the June 19, 2008 transcript:
Q. In your affidavit, at page 22,
Paragraph 34, under the heading “Ambiguity”, you discuss your attempt to
understand the term “release valve”, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And that is in the context of
the specification, correct?
A. It appears throughout the
patent.
Q. But with that effort you made,
you could not come to any conclusion as to what words should mean?
A. I find the term ambiguous. But
by putting together the pieces of information in the patent, I concluded it is
the device at the end of the conduit, which permits connection to the air
conditioning system.
Q. It actually says that in a
sense in the claim, does it not?
A. In a sense, I guess it does. If
I could just review the claim?
[233] I am of the
opinion that, considering the evidence of the experts, the term “release valve”
is not ambiguous. My opinion is fortified by the fact that the release valve 52
shown in the specification meets the experts’ definition. The defendant’s
submission that the claims of the ‘024 Patent are invalid on the basis of
ambiguity is rejected.
[234] Issue 8
Is the defendant liable for
infringement or inducing infringement of the identified claims of the ‘673
Patent or the ‘024 Patent?
It should be noted that a
bifurcation order has been issued in this action. As a result, questions about
the extent of infringement and damages flowing from or profits arising from any
infringement are to be determined separately after trial on any remaining
issues if such issues have to be decided.
[235] The defendant
is alleged to have infringed in two ways, namely, directly and by inducing and
procuring others to directly infringe.
[236] The elements
required to be found in order to have a finding of inducing or procuring
infringement were set out by the Federal Court of Appeal in AB Hassle v.
Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare) (2002), 22 C.P.R. (4th) 1
(F.C.A.) at page 7:
Thirdly,
O'Keefe J. held that Apotex had neither induced nor procured any infringement.
He outlined the test that must be satisfied when a patentee relies on the
doctrine of induced infringement. Each of the following elements must be
proved:
(1)
that the act of infringement was completed by the direct infringer;
(2)
the completed act of infringement was influenced by the seller, to the point
where without said influence, infringement by the buyer would not otherwise
take place; and;
(3)
the influence must knowingly be exercised by the seller, such that the seller
knows that his influence will result in the completion of the act of
infringement.
[237] In paragraphs
176 and 177 of the plaintiff’s closing argument, it outlines how it believed
the defendant infringed. These two paragraphs state:
176. In the present case, the
Defendant infringes the apparatus and canister claims directly through the
sales of its impugned products in kits and of cartridges alone or, in the case
of DYE STICK and RETRO STICK, as part of the injector itself. Further, it is
submitted that the Defendant may be liable for infringement by inducing and
procuring infringement of the process claims in issue by end consumers of the
impugned products. In that regard, it may be noted that the defendant not only
sells complete kits adapted only for infringing use, but provides explicit
directions directing end consumers to use the products in a fashion that
infringes the claims.
177. It is well established that
where the Defendant alone, or in association with another person, sells all of
the components of an invention to a consumer along with instructions on how to
assemble or use the components to obtain the invention, the Defendant is liable
for inducing infringement.
I agree with the plaintiff and find both
direct and for inducing or procuring infringement. Direct infringement is also
discussed earlier in these reasons.
[238] Issue 9
Is the plaintiff liable for
making false and misleading statements contrary to subsection 7(a) of the Trade-marks
Act?
Subsection 7(1) and sections 52
and 53.2 of the Trade-marks Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. T-13 state:
7.
No person shall
(a)
make a false or misleading statement tending to discredit the business, wares
or services of a competitor;
.
. .
52.
In sections 53 to 53.3,
"court"
means the Federal Court or the superior court of a province;
.
. .
53.2
Where a court is satisfied, on application of any interested person, that any
act has been done contrary to this Act, the court may make any order that it
considers appropriate in the circumstances, including an order providing for
relief by way of injunction and the recovery of damages or profits and for the
destruction, exportation or other disposition of any offending wares, packages,
labels and advertising material and of any dies used in connection therewith.
[239] These provisions set up
a statutory cause of action for which damages may be awarded if a person is
damaged by false or misleading statements by a competitor tending to discredit
the claimants’ business, wares or services. In S. & S. Industries Inc.
v. Rowell (1966), 48 C.P.R. 193 at 197 (S.C.C.), the Court stated:
The
combined effect of ss. 7(a) and 52 of the Trade Marks Act is to create a
statutory cause of action for which damages may be awarded if a person is
damaged by false or misleading statements by a competitor tending to discredit
the claimant's business, wares or services. The essential elements of such an
action are:
1.
A false or misleading statement;
2.
Tending to discredit the business, wares or services of a competitor; and
3.
Resulting damage.
[240] The Courts
have also found that damage is a necessary element for finding liability under
subsection 7(1). In BMW Canada Inc. v. Nissan Canada Inc. (2007), 60
C.P.R. (4th) 181 at pages 192 and 193, the Federal Court of Appeal stated:
33.
With respect to the third component, i.e. damages, the
trial judge accepted the respondents' argument that, once the first two
elements are shown to exist, damages are presumed. At paragraph 109 of his
decision, the trial judge stated the following:
In the absence of evidence of damages
which, in accord with the Court's pre-trial bifurcation order will be settled
after submissions to be made by the parties, I assume, subject to further
consideration, that there will be damages, whether nominal or substantial.
34.
As indicated by the trial judge, the Bifurcation Order
dated October 5, 2006, orders that the issues of liability be severed from the
issues of extent of damages and accounting of profits, and that the production
of documents, oral discovery on the issues of extent of damages and accounting
of profits be postponed until after judgment on the issues of liability.
35.
Without commenting on the first two elements, I find
the trial judge erred in law in assuming that there would be damages. Actual or
potential damage is a necessary element in finding liability under paragraph
7(b). In the absence of evidence in this regard, the Court cannot conclude that
there is liability: Tommy Hilfiger Licensing Inc. et al. v. Quality Goods
I.M.D. Inc. et al. (2005), 267 F.T.R. 259 at paragraphs 137-138 (F.C.). A
plaintiff must "demonstrate that he suffers or, in a quia timet
action, that he is likely to suffer damage by reason of the erroneous belief
engendered by the defendant's misrepresentation that the source of the
defendant's goods or services is the same as the source of those offered by the
plaintiff": Ciba-Geigy Canada Ltd. v. Apotex Inc., supra, at
paragraph 32 citing Reckitt & Colman Products Ltd. v. Borden Inc.,
[1990] 1 All E.R. 873 (H.L.) at page 880. See also Pro-C Ltd. v. Computer
City, Inc. (2001), 55 O.R. (3d) 577 at paragraph 24.
36.
A
bifurcation order does not relieve the respondents from the necessity of
proving the existence of damage as an element of their cause of action. It
simply defers proof of the extent of the damage pending a determination as to
the appellants' liability.
[241] In the
present case, there was a bifurcation order. The defendant did not prove any
damages therefore this claim must fail. The Federal Court of Appeal spoke quite
clearly on this point. The defendant did not prove one of the essential
elements of the action, namely, resulting damage.
[242] The defendant’s
counterclaim for damages under section 7(a) of the Trade-marks Act is
dismissed.
[243] I would note
that I gave more weight to the expert testimony of Jerome Lemon than to the
evidence of the defendant’s experts because of his practical experience and
direct answers.
[244] In summary, I
hold as follows:
1. A declaration will
issue as between the plaintiff and the defendant that Canadian Patents
2,235,673 (the ‘673 Patent) and 2,224,024 (the ‘024 Patent) are owned by the
plaintiff and are valid and subsisting.
2. A declaration will
issue that the defendant has infringed claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15
and 16 of the ‘673 Patent and claims 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 38
of the ‘024 Patent and has induced and procured infringement of claims 1, 2 and
3 of the ‘673 Patent and claim 9 of the ‘024 Patent by others.
3. Interim,
interlocutory and permanent injunctions will issue to restrain the defendant by
itself or by its shareholders, directors, officers, agents, servants,
employees, affiliates, subsidiaries, or any other entity under its authority or
control from:
(a) directly
or indirectly infringing any claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent; and
(b) inducing
or procuring others to infringe claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent.
4. The
defendant is directed to forthwith deliver up to the plaintiff all articles in
its possession or power, used, made or being made in infringement of the said
‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent, or that such articles be destroyed.
5. The
defendant shall pay damages to the plaintiff in an amount to be determined or
in the alternative to the order for damages, an accounting of the profits made
by the defendant as a result of its unlawful activities. If the parties cannot
agree on the manner of determining the extent or amount of damages, I retain
jurisdiction to deal with this matter.
6. The
defendant pay to the plaintiff reasonable compensation for acts on the part of
the defendant after the applications for the ‘673 Patent and the ‘024 Patent
became open to public inspection and before the grant of the said patents, that
would have constituted an infringement of the respective patents if they had
been granted on the day the application became open to public inspection.
7. The
plaintiff is awarded pre-judgment and post-judgment interest.
8. The
defendant’s counterclaim for damages under subsection 7(1) of the Trade-marks
Act is dismissed.
9. The
parties may make submissions to me on costs either orally or in writing. This
was requested by the plaintiff at the end of its closing oral submissions. I
retain jurisdiction to deal with the costs issue.
AMENDED
JUDGMENT
UPON reading the
pleadings herein;
AND UPON considering the
evidence tendered at trial;
AND UPON reading the
submissions of the parties;
AND UPON hearing the
oral submissions of counsel for the parties;
IT IS DECLARED that:
1. A declaration will
issue as between the plaintiff and the defendant that Canadian Patents
2,235,673 (the ‘673 Patent) and 2,224,024 (the ‘024 Patent) are owned by the
plaintiff and are valid and subsisting.
2. A declaration will
issue that the defendant has infringed claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15
and 16 of the ‘673 Patent and claims 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 38
of the ‘024 Patent and has induced and procured infringement of claims 1, 2 and
3 of the ‘673 Patent and claim 9 of the ‘024 Patent by others.
IT IS ORDERED that:
1. Interim,
interlocutory and permanent injunctions hereby issue to restrain the defendant
by itself or by its shareholders, directors, officers, agents, servants,
employees, affiliates, subsidiaries, or any other entity under its authority or
control from:
(a) directly
or indirectly infringing any claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent; and
(b) inducing
or procuring others to infringe claims of the ‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent.
2. The
defendant is directed to forthwith deliver up to the plaintiff all articles in
its possession or power, used, made or being made in infringement of the said
‘673 Patent or the ‘024 Patent, or that such articles be destroyed.
3. The
defendant shall pay damages to the plaintiff in an amount to be determined or
in the alternative to the order for damages, an accounting of the profits made
by the defendant as a result of its unlawful activities. If the parties cannot
agree on the manner of determining the extent or amount of damages, I retain
jurisdiction to deal with this matter.
4. The
defendant pay to the plaintiff reasonable compensation for acts on the part of
the defendant after the applications for the ‘673 Patent and the ‘024 Patent
became open to public inspection and before the grant of the said patents, that
would have constituted an infringement of the respective patents if they had
been granted on the day the application became open to public inspection.
5. The
plaintiff is awarded pre-judgment and post-judgment interest.
6. Upon
noting that I omitted to include as part of my judgment, the dismissal of the
defendant’s counterclaim, I would correct the judgment by adding the following:
The
defendant’s counterclaim for damages under subsection 7(a) of the Trade-marks
Act is dismissed.
7. The
parties may make submissions to me on costs either orally or in writing. This
was requested by the plaintiff at the end of its closing oral submissions. I
retain jurisdiction to deal with the costs issue.
8. Reasons
for this judgment will follow and I retain jurisdiction to issue the reasons.
“John
A. O’Keefe”