Docket: T-496-11
Citation:
2016 FC 320
Ottawa, Ontario, March 16, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Manson
BETWEEN:
|
UPONOR AB
|
Plaintiff
|
And
|
HEATLINK GROUP
INC. AND PEXCOR MANUFACTURING COMPANY INC. AND CROSSLINK FINLAND OY AND INOEX
GMBH AND INOEX LLC
|
Defendants
|
AND
BETWEEN:
|
PEXCOR
MANUFACTURING COMPANY INC. AND HEATLINK GROUP INC.
|
Plaintiffs by Counterclaim
|
And
|
UPONOR
AB
|
Defendant by Counterclaim
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Background. 3
A. The Parties and Pleadings. 3
B. Technical and Background
Information to Understanding the ‘376 Patent 6
(a) Polyethylenes &
Crosslinking. 6
(b) Infrared Radiation,
Equipment & Spectra. 8
II. Canadian Patent 2,232,376
(the ‘376 Patent) 8
A. Claims in Issue: 1-38
(Counterclaim relates to validity of all the Claims) 8
B. Claim Construction. 9
(a) Principles, Relevant Date. 12
(b) Claim Terms Needing
Construction. 13
(i) Elimination. 14
(ii) Filtered out 14
(iii) Wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks of polymer material 15
(c) The Person Skilled in the
Art (POSITA) 15
(d) Common General Knowledge. 16
III. Preliminary Issues. 18
A. Relevant Dates for
Anticipation, Obviousness: claim date (priority documents) 18
B. Inventors’ Liability under
Section 53 of the Patent Act 19
IV. Fact Witness Evidence. 21
A. Bill Gray. 21
B. David Harget 22
C. Jan Rydberg. 22
D. Michael Sjöberg. 23
E. Jan Robertson. 23
V. Expert Witness Evidence on
Claim Construction and Validity. 24
A. Plaintiff’s Expert Witnesses. 24
(1) Dr. Gene Palermo. 24
(2) Dr. Robert Kimmel 27
B. Defendants’ Expert
Witnesses. 35
(1) Dr. Glenn Boreman. 35
(2) Dr. John Dutcher 39
(3) Franz Seydel 42
C. Plaintiff’s Responding
Reports on Validity. 45
(1) Dr. Robert Kimmel 45
(2) Dr. Mohamad Al-Sheikhly. 46
VI. Validity Analysis. 47
A. Unpatentable Subject Matter 47
B. Utility. 48
C. Insufficiency of the
Disclosure. 52
D. Anticipation. 61
(1) The IR Handbook. 63
(2) Electric IR Heating. 66
(3) Polymer Processing. 66
(4) The ‘624 Patent 67
E. Obviousness. 68
VII. Expert Witness Evidence on Infringement 78
A. Plaintiff’s Expert Witnesses. 78
(1) Dr. Gene Palermo. 78
(2) Dr. Robert Kimmel 80
B. Defendants’ Expert
Witnesses. 80
VIII. Infringement Analysis. 81
A. Pexcor 81
B. Heatlink. 82
C. Crosslink. 82
(1) Direct 82
(2) Indirect (Inducing) 83
D. Laches and Acquiescence. 88
E. Unclean Hands. 89
IX. Remedies. 89
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This action concerns the infringement and
validity of a number of claims of Canadian Patent 2,232,376 [the ‘376 Patent].
[2]
The ‘376 Patent, entitled “Method for Heating and/or Cross-Linking of Polymers and Apparatus
Therefor”, relates in general terms to a uniform, fast, and contactless
method of crosslinking polymers using infrared [IR] radiation, wherein the
wavelengths corresponding to absorption peaks for the polymer material are
eliminated in the IR radiation. The invention also relates to an apparatus used
for the polymer crosslinking.
[3]
The ‘376 Patent was assigned a filing date of
September 20, 1996, by the Canadian Intellectual Property Office, was published
on March 27, 1997, and was issued on November 19, 2002. It claims priority from
three foreign applications; 9503272-8 (Sweden), filed September 20, 1985;
9600091-4 (Sweden), filed January 11, 1996; PCT/EP96/02801 (PCT), filed June
26, 1996. The ‘376 Patent continues to be in good standing.
[4]
The Plaintiff in this action is a Swedish
company, Uponor AB [Uponor], who is owner of the ‘376 Patent. Wirsbo Bruks AB [Wirsbo],
a predecessor company to Uponor, was the first company to manufacture
crosslinked polyethylene [PEX] pipes. PEX has significant product performance
advantages over non-crosslinked polyethylene pipes, and is also highly
marketable by virtue of it being less expensive and quicker to install than
non-crosslinked polyethylene.
[5]
The Defendants Pexcor Manufacturing Inc. [Pexcor]
and Heatlink Group Inc. [Heatlink] are affiliated companies based in Calgary, Alberta
that manufacture and sell PEX pipe. Garry Schmidt and Manfred Schmidt are the key
executives for management and operations of Pexcor and Heatlink. The third
Defendant, Crosslink Finland OY [Crosslink], is a Finnish company that
supplies, operates, imports, services and provides support for the IR ovens
used by Pexcor. Mr. Aarne Heino is the principal and sole operator of
Crosslink.
[6]
Uponor claims that the Defendants Pexcor,
Heatlink and Crosslink have infringed certain process claims (claims 1, 2, 3,
4, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17) and apparatus claims (claims 19, 22,
23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38) of the ‘376 Patent.
[7]
Between 2000 and 2012, Crosslink supplied Pexcor
with six IR radiation ovens. Using the ovens, Pexcor started commercial
manufacture of PEX pipe in 2003. Uponor asserts that Pexcor is unauthorized to
use the patented process and apparatus in the ‘376 Patent to make PEX pipe, and
thereby directly infringed the patent.
[8]
Uponor asserts Heatlink is also liable for
infringing the ‘376 Patent, as Heatlink markets, sells and distributes PEX pipe
manufactured by Pexcor’s infringing process.
[9]
Crosslink’s subcontractor attended Pexcor’s
facilities in Alberta, Canada, between 2005 and 2012 to add more IR units to
the crosslinking ovens. Uponor claims that Crosslink’s reconstruction of the ‘376
patented apparatus for Pexcor’s use in the ‘376 patented process renders
Crosslink liable for direct infringement for having “made”
the ovens in Canada.
[10]
Uponor also alleges Crosslink induced
infringement of the ‘376 Patent. They claim that “but-for”
Crosslink’s activities, Pexcor would not have directly infringed the patent’s
process and apparatus claims. Crosslink provided Pexcor with instructions,
advice, services, warranties and training, which enabled Pexcor to achieve the
desired crosslinking of polyethylene by using the ‘376 Patent process. Uponor
claims this infringement was knowingly induced by Mr. Heino of Crosslink.
[11]
The Defendants denied all allegations of
infringement and counterclaimed, challenging the validity of all 50 claims of
the ‘376 Patent on the basis of anticipation and obviousness, insufficiency of
description and indistinct claims, lack of utility, overbreadth, unpatentable
subject matter and non-entitlement to priority claims. They also alleged the
‘376 Patent is void under section 53(1) of the Patent Act, RSC 1985, c
P-4, on the basis that untrue material allegations were wilfully made for the
purpose of misleading during the prosecution of the ‘376 Patent.
[12]
Pexcor and Heatlink also allege Uponor is guilty
of laches and acquiescence in bringing the action, as Uponor knew or ought to
have known that manufacture by Pexcor and sale by Heatlink commenced in 2003.
Uponor formed the belief the ‘376 Patent was being infringed in 2005, yet did
nothing to raise allegations of infringement until commencement of this action
in January 2011.
[13]
The experts provided technical and background
information they considered important for understanding the ‘376 Patent in
context, and which they find would have been known by a person of skill in the
art [POSITA] at the relevant time.
[14]
Polyethylenes are repeating units of two carbons
and four hydrogens. They have diverse applications by virtue of their good
thermal insulating properties, tensile strength, and relatively low melting
points. The type of polyethylene used for a given application depends on how
their repeating units are arranged. High density polyethylene [HDPE] is used in
pipe manufacture, and is characterized by a high number of densely-packed
polyethylene chains that form crystalline structures resulting in greater
stiffness, strength and superior barrier properties.
[15]
Crosslinking of polyethylene causes bond
formation between adjacent polymer chains, which restricts the movement of
chains relative to each other, resulting in increased strength, chemical, and
heat resistance as compared to un-crosslinked polyethylene.
[16]
There are several ways to crosslink
polyethylene. The ‘376 Patent specification states the process taught in the
patent is faster and provides superior quality products than previously widely-used
polyethylene crosslinking processes: the Engel method and PEXEP Process.
[17]
The Engel method, developed in the early 1970’s,
involves mixing polyethylene resin pellets with organic peroxides prior to
heating and extrusion. The ‘376 Patent varies this method by using IR radiation
as the heat source.
[18]
In the PEXEP process, an extruded tube of
polyethylene is heated by direct contact with heated wheels in order to
initiate crosslinking. The background description of the ‘376 Patent invention
states the disadvantages of the PEXEP process are reduced dimensional
stability, inferior surface quality and non-uniform crosslinking throughout the
entire tube wall.
[19]
IR radiation is a type of electromagnetic
radiation. It is used in a wide variety of industrial equipment to heat, cure
or dry products. Such equipment usually permits temperature regulation of the
IR-generating source, which correlatively adjusts the desired wavelengths
transmitted. IR radiation follows a characteristic distribution of wavelengths:
shorter wavelengths [short-wave IR] are emitted at higher temperatures and
longer wavelengths [long-wave IR] are emitted at lower temperatures.
[20]
A material’s molecular structure causes it to
better absorb different wavelengths of IR radiation, referred to as a
material’s absorption profile. The IR spectrum for a given material, measured
using IR spectroscopy, can be shown as a plot of either absorbance or
transmittance versus wavelength. Polyethylene optimally absorbs IR radiation at
3.2 to 3.6 microns [µm], 6.6 to 6.8 µm (the absorption peaks).
[21]
A short description of the alleged inventive
concept of the ‘376 Patent is set out in pages 4 to 5 of the specification:
The object of the present invention is to
set forth a process and an apparatus making possible a fast, contactless and
uniform heating of a polymer or polymer mix (which in the following will be
called polymer material), inter alia for cross-linking, so that manufacture of
objects made of cross-linkable polymers can be carried out at high speeds and
with a good surface finish.
In accordance with the invention this is
achieved in that the polymer material is irradiated with infrared radiation
having wave lengths which differ from the wave lengths which are absorbed by
the polymer material in question. This means that the infrared radiation
penetrates through the polymer and in this way quickly heats the moulding
throughout its entire thickness. In cross-linking this means that a high speed
of manufacture is made possible. Since the heating is carried out by means of
infrared radiation the heating can be done entirely without contact, which
results in a high surface finish. In a preferred embodiment, primarily used for
cross-linking after extrusion, the zone with infrared radiation is arranged in
a vertical direction from the extrusion nozzle, preferably upwardly, so that
the moulding after the extrusion is fed vertically upwards through the said
zone. Because of the fast and uniform heating the cross-linking proceeds
quickly and the extruded moulding rapidly retains a high rigidity (that is the
material in the body or moulding passes from having been mainly viscous to
being mainly visco-elastic). Since the cross-linking zone at the same time can
be made short this results in that the risk for deformation or local thickening
due to vertical yielding caused by gravitational forces will be small. Both the
dimensional and the thermal stability thus will be high. To the extent peroxide
for instance is used as a cross-linking agent, the agent does not have time to
evaporate from the surface.
The above-mentioned objects of the invention
are also achieved by means of an apparatus for heating mouldings provided with
at least one zone with at least one source of infrared radiation, particularly
for cross-linking of polymers which are cross-linkable by means of heat, the
infrared radiation having wave lengths that mainly differ from the absorption
peaks of the polymer in question.
[22]
The two independent claims that are the focus of
this action are claims 1 and 19:
a)
Claim 1:
•
Process for heating a polymer material,
comprising irradiation of said polymer material with infrared radiation,
wherein wave lengths corresponding to the absorption peaks for the polymer
material in respect of infrared radiation, have been eliminated in the infrared
radiation irradiating the polymer material.
b)
Claim 19:
•
Apparatus for heating polymer material,
comprising at least one zone with at least one source of infrared radiation for
Irradiation of the polymer material with infrared radiation in which the wave
lengths corresponding to the absorption peaks of the polymer material in respect
of infrared radiation have been eliminated.
[23]
While claim 1 covers a process for heating a
polymer material and claim 19 covers an apparatus for heating a polymer
material, the essential features defining the invention claimed are the same:
a)
irradiation of the polymer material with IR radiation;
b)
such that the wavelengths corresponding to the
absorption peaks for the polymer material in respect of the IR radiation have
been eliminated.
[24]
Claim 19 requires that the apparatus used have
at least one zone with one source of the IR radiation.
[25]
A useful diagram of an embodiment of the process
covered by narrower claims is shown in Figure 1 of the ‘376 Patent (labelling
added):
[26]
The process, commencing at the left of the above
diagram, is as follows: the peroxide (3) and polymer (2) are mixed in a hopper,
and then enter the extruder. The extruded polymer pipe (4) then travels around
a wheel and is directed 90° upwards through four IR zones (7, 8), it then turns
180° over and around a large wheel at the top (9), and travels vertically
downwards through a further four IR zones (10, 11). The pipe is then guided by
another wheel (12) to make another 90° turn and enters a water bath (13) to
cool and calibrate the pipe. Additional coatings are added, the pipe travels
through a second water bath and is finally coiled, cut and bundled (15).
[27]
Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent depicts the IR
absorption profile of polyethylene. The large dips (labelled A and B) portray
polyethylene’s main absorption peaks at 3.3 to 3.6 µm and 6.6 to 6.7 µm. It was
the topic of much discussion at trial and is included herein for ease of
reference:
[28]
While there are multiple claim dependencies,
necessitating a claim by claim analysis for purposes of determining both the
validity and infringement issues, the Expert Report of Dr. Kimmel on behalf of
the Plaintiff provided a useful grouping of the general types of claims:
a)
Group A (claims 1, 4-7, 14, 18, 19, 24, 28,
29-32, 38, 47-50): relates to irradiating polymer material with IR radiation in
which absorption peaks of the polymer material have been eliminated. Dr. Kimmel
included in this group dependent claims describing additional subject matter for
use in manufacturing, such as use of reflecting devices, use of inert gases
such as nitrogen, and the manufacture of oriented pipe and composite pipes;
b)
Group B (claims 2, 3, 26, and 37): relates to elimination
using filters;
c)
Group C (claims 33, 34): relates to elimination
using IR lamps;
d)
Group D (claim 22): involves regulating IR
radiation to achieve the desired degree of crosslinking;
e)
Group E (claims 8-13): relates to the use of
polyethylene, organic peroxides or azo-compounds as crosslinking additives, and
to specific wavelengths;
f)
Group F (claims 15-17, 23, 25-27, 35): relates
to the continuous extrusion of pipe, fed vertically through IR zones;
g)
Group G (claims 20-21): relates to a transparent
forming tool for shaping the polymer product;
h)
Group H (claims 39-46): relates to processes and
products to recondition pipes.
[29]
The Plaintiff of course argues that all of the
claims asserted are valid and infringed. However, if the Court is to find that
independent claims 1 and 19 are invalid, the Plaintiff asserts that at least the
claims relating to vertical orientation within the manufacturing process (some
of the Group F claims above), although built up from multiple claim dependencies,
are nevertheless valid and infringed.
[30]
The relevant date for construing claims is the
date of publication of the ‘376 application, March 27, 1997. Construction is a
question of law for the Court and should be done before considering
infringement or validity; the same issues of construction apply for both
validity and infringement (Pfizer Canada Inc v Canada (Minister of Health),
2005 FC 1725 at para 10, aff’d 2007 FCA 1).
[31]
The parties agree that the canons of claim
construction have been determined in the leading Supreme Court of Canada
decisions of Whirlpool Corp v Camco Inc, 2000 SCC 67 at paras 49-55 [Whirlpool];
Free World Trust v Électro Santé Inc, 2000 SCC 66 at paras 44-54 [Free
World Trust]; and Consolboard Inc v MacMillan Bloedel (Saskatchewan) Ltd,
[1981] 1 S.C.R. 504 at para 27 [Consolboard]. They are:
a)
Claims are to be read in an informed and
purposive way with a mind willing to understand, viewed through the eyes of a
POSITA as of the date of publication having regard to the common general
knowledge;
b)
Adherence to the language of the claims allows
them to be read in the manner the inventor is presumed to have intended and in
a way that is sympathetic to accomplishing the inventor’s purpose, which
promotes both fairness and predictability;
c)
The whole of the specification should be
considered to ascertain the nature of the invention, and the construction of
claims must be neither benevolent nor harsh, but instead should be reasonable
and fair to both the patentee and the public.
[32]
While experts may aid the Court in construing
terms or elements of the claims, that assistance is only necessary when the
Court deems it helpful or useful to do so – if the meaning of terms is evident
from the patent specification, the Court does not need the advice of experts.
[33]
While there were a number of opinions expressed
by the parties’ experts on the meaning of terms used in the claims of the ‘376
Patent, as discussed below in reviewing the experts’ evidence, the terms that
introduce some question as their meaning are: (i) “elimination”,
as used in claims 1 and 19; (ii) “filtered out”,
as used in claims 2 and 3; and (iii) wavelengths corresponding to the absorption
peaks of the polymer material.
[34]
There was some divergence in opinion around “polymer material” and “filters”,
however, I do not find the experts’ views necessary to help the Court define or
construe these terms.
[35]
Independent claims 1 and 19 refer to “elimination” of the wavelengths corresponding to the
absorption peaks (also identified as “bands”) of polymer material.
[36]
The experts all agreed that elimination does not
mean complete elimination or the absence of any IR wavelengths corresponding to
the absorption peaks of the polymer material being irradiated. Some absorption
is necessary to sufficiently heat the polymer in order for crosslinking to
occur. It is agreed that eliminated means that the IR radiation wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks of the polymer are substantially
reduced. What constitutes a “substantial reduction”
is not disclosed in the patent, is disputed, and is analyzed below.
[37]
Claims 2 and 3 refer to the wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks for the polymer material being “filtered out”.
[38]
The specification teaches two ways of achieving
elimination of the wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks. One way
is to place filters between the IR sources and the object being irradiated,
such as polyethylene pipes. Filters work by either reflecting away the
undesired wavelengths, or by absorbing them before they can reach the target
surface. The ‘376 Patent’s examples of possible filters are silica glass (SiO2),
Pyrex or Crown glass.
[39]
The other manner of eliminating wavelengths
corresponding to a polymer’s absorption peaks is by using IR radiation having a
wavelength substantially located at 1.2 µm.
[40]
The parties’ experts disagreed on what a POSITA
of the ‘376 Patent would understand when reading the specification and the use
of “filtered out” in claims 2 and 3. I find that
the ‘376 Patent clearly specifies that using the four types of filters
disclosed should enable a POSITA to achieve the elimination of wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks of polymer material – which simply is not
the case. I will discuss this issue further below.
[41]
A POSITA at the date of publication of the ‘376
Patent would understand from the specification that by referring to “absorption peaks” the inventors are concerned with
the primary absorption peaks of polymers at about 3.2-3.6 µm and 6.6-6.8 µm.
[42]
Defence expert, Dr. Dutcher, argued that
absorption peaks at wavelengths around 1.5 to 1.7 µm are omitted from Figure 4
of the patent (see Figure 4 above), and that the alleged elimination or
substantial reduction of absorption peaks in the patent is thus misleading. I disagree.
The evidence shows that the primary absorption peaks for polymers are at the
two wavelength ranges of 3.3-3.6 µm and 6.6-6.7 µm, as discussed more fully
below, and that this would form part of the common general knowledge of a
POSITA at the relevant time.
[43]
The parties’ experts generally agreed on who the
POSITA would be as addressee of the ‘376 Patent. In terms of education, the
POSITA would require a university bachelor’s degree or a technical school
diploma. In terms of work experience, the POSITA would have industrial
experience in polymer processing and/or pipe manufacture.
[44]
However, the experts disagreed on the extent of
knowledge the POSITA would have relating to IR radiation and details of IR lamp
construction. While the Plaintiff’s experts agreed that the POSITA would know
fundamentals of IR radiation, Dr. Boreman on behalf of the Defendants stated
that the POSITA requires a higher level of IR science and optics to be able to
practice the invention upon reading the ‘376 specification.
[45]
I find that the POSITA, in order to understand
and be able to follow the specification and claims of the ‘376 Patent and
thereby be enabled to practice the ‘376 invention, would:
a)
have a university bachelor’s degree or technical
degree or diploma in industrial chemistry, polymer chemistry or polymer
science;
b)
have knowledge of polymer processing and
extrusion of polymer products;
c)
know how to use IR radiation in processing
polymers with 3 to 5 years industrial experience, to the extent there is a
basic understanding of IR apparatus used for crosslinking polymers; and
d)
know how to calculate a polymer’s IR absorption profiles
at different wavelengths, through personal knowledge or by accessing relevant
reference materials available at the publication date.
[46]
Common general knowledge is the knowledge
generally known by the POSITA at the relevant time. It includes what the POSITA
may reasonably be expected to know and be able to find out. One must assess
what knowledge the POSITA would have obtained through a reasonably diligent
search conducted using the means available at the relevant time.
[47]
A POSITA’s common general knowledge cannot be
assumed but must be proven with fact evidence on a balance of probabilities.
[48]
In Eli Lilly & Co v Apotex Inc, 2009
FC 991 at para 97, Justice Gauthier adopted with approval the comprehensive
description of common general knowledge from General Tire & Rubber Co v
Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co, [1972] RPC 457 (UKHL) at 482-483:
a)
The common general knowledge imputed to such an
addressee must, of course, be carefully distinguished from what in patent law
is regarded as public knowledge;
b)
Common general knowledge is a different concept derived
from a common sense approach to the practical question of what would in fact be
known to an appropriately skilled addressee - the sort of man, good at his job,
that could be found in real life;
c)
Individual patent specifications and their
contents do not normally form part of the relevant common general knowledge,
though there may be exceptions.
d)
Regarding scientific papers generally:
i.
It is not sufficient to prove common general
knowledge that a particular disclosure is made in an article, or series of
articles, or in a scientific journal, no matter how wide the circulation of
that journal may be, in the absence of any evidence that the disclosure is
accepted generally by those who are engaged in the art to which the disclosure
relates;
ii.
A piece of particular knowledge as disclosed in
a scientific paper does not become common general knowledge merely because it
is widely read, and still less because it is widely circulated;
iii.
Such a piece of knowledge only becomes general
knowledge when it is generally known and accepted without question by the bulk
of those who are engaged in the particular art; in other words, when it becomes
part of their common stock of knowledge relating to the art;
iv.
It is difficult to appreciate how the use of
something which has in fact never been used in a particular art can ever be
held to be common general knowledge in the art.
[49]
I agree. In this case, based on the evidence
before the Court, a POSITA would have understood the following as the common
general knowledge at the relevant dates for claim construction and for
consideration of validity:
a)
the features of polymers at a molecular level,
including knowing which polymer formulations are suitable for particular
purposes (such as using HDPE for pipe manufacture) and what happens upon
crosslinking of polymers;
b)
the various methods used to manufacture extruded
polymer products generally (not solely in relation to the pipe industry);
c)
that IR radiation can be used in manufacturing
of polymers;
d)
that sources of IR radiation emit a distribution
of wavelengths which peak in intensity in a given area depending on the
temperature of the IR source, and that the peak intensity shifts towards
shorter IR wavelengths as temperatures rise;
e)
the characteristic distribution curve of IR
radiation, which illustrates that there is less transmittance of wavelengths
further from the peak of the curve;
f)
that each polymer, depending on its molecular structure,
will absorb certain IR wavelengths, known as the polymer’s characteristic
absorption profile;
g)
how to determine the characteristic absorption
profile for any specific polymer;
h)
that IR absorbed at the surface of a polymer
would lead to localized and non-uniform heating of the polymer; and
i)
to use IR radiation that would not be absorbed
only at the surface, but which rather penetrates the polymer to achieve uniform
heating.
[50]
The Claim Date for each claim in the PCT
application which was granted as the ‘376 Patent is the relevant date for prior
art references for consideration of anticipation and obviousness.
[51]
The ‘376 Patent was issued in Canada following
national entry of PCT Application SE 1996/001169, which was filed on September
20, 1996, in Sweden. This PCT application claimed priority from three earlier
Uponor patent applications filed on the following dates:
a)
9503272-8 (Sweden), filed September 20, 1985;
b)
9600091-4 (Sweden), filed January 11, 1996;
c)
PCT/EP96/02801 (PCT), filed June 26, 1996.
[52]
The legal test governing priority claims to
earlier filed applications is set out in section 28.1 of the Patent Act.
This section states that the date of a claim in an application [the Claim Date]
is the filing date of the application (defined in section 28), unless a
proper request for priority to one or more earlier patent applications has been
made. To qualify, the request for priority must have (i) been made within 12
months of the earlier application, and (ii) the subject matter defined by the
claim in the application at the time of the national entry in Canada must have
been disclosed in the earlier filed application(s).
[53]
I have reviewed the subject matter of the priority
applications relied upon by the Plaintiff and find that the claim for priority
in respect of the claims in issue, as asserted by the Plaintiff, claims 1 to 4,
7 to 9, 11, 12, 14 to 17, 19, 22 to 27, 29, 30 and 32 to 38, is not justified.
There is no disclosure of the irradiation of polymer material with IR radiation
wherein the wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks for the polymer
material have been eliminated, essential elements of independent claims 1 and
19 and all dependent claims thereon. The relevant claim date for obviousness
and anticipation is therefore September 20, 1996.
[54]
However, I agree with the Plaintiff that the
application of a claim date of September 20, 1995, or September 20, 1996, is of
no consequence, as no prior art relied upon by the Defendants fall within that
window.
[55]
The Defendants, Pexcor and Heatlink, have
alleged that the ‘376 Patent is void, as the request for national phase entry
date of March 18, 1998, contains untrue material allegations wilfully made for
the purpose of misleading. In particular, that the inventors (Sjöberg, Rydberg,
and Järvenkylä), the applicant (Uponor B.V.), and all other entities claiming
an ownership interest in the ‘376 Patent prior to its date of issuance, knew or
were reckless in not knowing that the priority applications did not disclose
the subject matter defined by any of the claims of the ‘376 Patent, as issued
or as pending at any time.
[56]
For a patent to be void under subsection 53(1)
of the Patent Act, the Court must find that there is an untrue
allegation made in the petition, that it is material, and that was willfully
made for the purpose of misleading:
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.
[57]
I agree with the Plaintiff that the Patent
Act explicitly contemplates that the allegation must be made by the
application. The inventors of the ‘376 Patent, Sjöberg, Rydberg, and
Järvenkylä, were never “applicants” and as such,
no duty is imposed against them (Ratiopharm Inc v Pfizer Ltd, 2009 FC 711
at para 115).
[58]
In any event, the inventors were not involved in
patent drafting. The evidence shows that:
a)
Sjöberg testified he had no role in selecting
the priority applications;
b)
the Defendants dropped this allegation against
Rydberg prior to his testimony; and
c)
Järvenkylä may have had some input at the time,
but would not have had the authority to make the final decision.
[59]
For an allegation to be material it must somehow
affect how the public makes use of the invention taught by the ‘376 Patent. The
only effect of an improper priority claim in this case would be that the
applicant would not be entitled to the benefit of the earlier claim date of
September 20, 1995, and instead the claim date would be September 20, 1996.
This would not and does not impact how the public would make use of the
invention.
[60]
As was held by Justice Thurlow in Canadian
Marconi Co v Vera Prinzen Enterprises Ltd (1964), 46 CPR 97 at 141 (Ex Ct),
an improper claim to convention priority based on a U.S. application was not a
material allegation in the petition which renders the patent void.
[61]
As well, there is no evidence before the Court
to suggest that the priority dates claimed were made with any intent or purpose
to mislead the Canadian public.
[62]
Moreover, the Defendants should have known that
the inventors were not responsible for the claims to priority in the ‘376
Patent application.
[63]
This is not a case where the inventors are the
applicants and responsible for preparing and filing the application for the
‘376 Patent, which might in some cases lead to potential liability for an
individual inventor under section 53.
[64]
To the contrary, the applicant is a
sophisticated company who in the normal course employs qualified patent agents
or counsel to prepare such an application. To impute liability on the inventors
in this case defies logic or reasonableness. Consequences must flow in terms of
costs against the Defendants on this front.
[65]
Bill Gray has been the President of Uponor North
America since February 2012. In this role, he oversees sales marketing and
overall performance of all North American operations. Mr. Gray is also a member
of the Executive Committee of Uponor Corporation, where he makes decisions
relating to the brand, technology and people strategy. Mr. Gray testified that
the North American Uponor plants use the Engel method or a modification thereof
for manufacturing PEX pipe. The ‘376 Patent technology is only used by the Uponor
plants in Sweden and Poland. Mr. Gray also testified that Uponor AB holds the ‘376
Patent rights.
[66]
Dr. David Harget is the VP of Standardization
for the Uponor Group. He has a Bachelor’s degree in chemistry, a Master’s of
Polymer Science, a PhD in Polymer Chemistry and 40 years of industry
experience. In or around 2006, Mr. Harget was the VP of Technology for Uponor
Group and was indirectly involved in the commercialization of the invention
taught in the ‘376 Patent. He testified he reviewed disclosures of possible
patentable inventions to decide whether to proceed with patents, but the
ultimate patent decisions were made at an executive level. Mr. Harget wrote an
article in 1992 regarding the performance characteristics of PEX pipe, which
would have been read by people in the field. The article states that a major
area of application of PEX is in the power cable industry, which Mr. Harget
stated he learned from a review of the literature for the use of PEX at that
time.
[67]
Jan Rydberg, a named co-inventor of the ‘376
Patent, has an engineering degree and a Master’s of Science in material
technology. He began working for Wirsbo in 1995 as a Development Engineer,
where he reported to Michael Sjöberg as member of the High Speed PEX Project
development team that developed the ‘376 Patent. His job on the team was to
find equipment for trial runs that were carried out in Finland and which
measured speed, efficiency and crosslinking achieved. He testified that the
vertical orientation of the IR lamps was Mr. Sjöberg’s idea. Mr. Rydberg did
not know the whereabouts of notes and trial reports relating to the development
of the ‘376 invention. In fact, there is no evidence at all with respect to
what happened to lab books, trial reports, or any other documents relating to
the invention’s development.
[68]
Michael Sjöberg is a named co-inventor of the
‘376 Patent. He has a Master’s of Science in polymer processing and an MBA. He
began working for Wirsbo as a Development Engineer in 1990, and his initial
work involved developing new methods for making PEX pipes. Mr. Sjöberg was the
project leader on the High Speed PEX Project that led to the ‘376 invention. He
testified that during development of the ‘376 technology, he, and a team of
five or six others working on trials kept daily notes and made quarterly and
monthly reports, comprising approximately a meter high of lab notebooks. They
were not produced in evidence and he has no idea what happened to them. He was
not involved in the patent drafting and had no role in selecting the priority
applications; Mr. Järvenkylä was responsible for the patent activities involving
the ‘376 invention. Mr. Sjöberg left Uponor in 2001.
[69]
Jan Robertson was the sole fact witness called
by the Defendants. He has held various roles at Infrarodteknik AB [IRT], a specialized
short-wave IR supplier, between 1979 and 2001. IRT purchased their IR lamps
from Philips, which are referenced in the IR Handbook – a document he and
others at IRT referred to often in the course of their work. He testified that
IRT provided monocassettes and technical support to Aarne Heino (Crosslink). He
does not know what information Mr. Heino then conveyed to Pexcor in Canada.
[70]
All of the expert witnesses were provided with the
relevant tests for claim construction for Canadian patents based on the Supreme
Court of Canada decisions in Free World Trust, above, and Whirlpool,
above, as instructed by counsel. They were also instructed on patent
infringement and validity based on relevant patent law in Canada.
[71]
The expert evidence regarding validity centered
on issues of utility, breadth of claims, sufficient disclosure and anticipation
and obviousness. In addressing both anticipation and obviousness the Defendants
relied on the following four references:
a)
United States Patent No. 4,234,624 (1980) [the
‘624 Patent];
b)
The IR Handbook published by Philips (1974) [the
IR Handbook];
c)
Electric Infra-Red Heating for Industrial Purposes,
O’Connell JR et al (1989) [Electric IR Heating];
d)
Polymer Processing: Principles and Design Baird
Chapter 15 – Plastic Extrusion Technology (1995) [Polymer Processing].
[72]
Dr. Palermo is a polymer chemist who has worked
in the plastic pipe industry for over 40 years. He obtained a BSc in Chemistry
in 1969, and a PhD of Analytical Chemistry from Michigan State in 1973. His
industry experience encompasses manufacturing, formulation, testing, standards,
technical and regulatory approvals and marketing new plastic piping materials.
He was also Technical Director of the Plastic Pipes Institute (PPI) and is
currently an independent consultant in the plastics pipe industry.
[73]
Dr. Palermo has been qualified as an expert in
plastic pipes, including material used to make pipes, technical characteristics
and standards for pipe, pipe manufacturing and IR spectroscopy for polymer
pipes.
[74]
In Dr. Palermo’s opinion, the invention of the ‘376
Patent relates to a process and apparatus for a “fast,
contactless, and uniform heating” of a polymer or polymer mix using IR
radiation with wavelengths which differ from the wavelengths that are absorbed
by the polymer. The patent describes that the IR radiation zones are oriented
vertically to reduce deformation due to gravitational forces.
[75]
Dr. Palermo interprets the term “elimination” of wavelengths (in claims 1 and 19)
corresponding to the absorption peaks as not requiring complete absence of
those wavelengths, but rather a substantial reduction. He testified that the
skilled person would know the wavelengths have been “eliminated”
in accordance with the ‘376 Patent if the IR radiation intensity were reduced
by 50%.
[76]
He interprets that “filtered
out” in the ‘376 Patent indicates using filters between the IR source
and the object being irradiated to help eliminate wavelengths of the material’s
absorption peaks. Dr. Palermo testified that the filters “augment” or “assist”
the reduction of absorption peaks, and the examples provided in the ‘376 Patent
– silica glass, Pyrex or Crown glass – would all have this effect. During
cross-examination it was pointed out to Dr. Palermo that the ‘376 Patent
indicates that an alternative to filters is to use IR lamps having
wavelengths of about 1.2 µm (‘376 Patent, p 9, lines 37-38). The plain reading
of the ‘376 Patent specification does not support Dr. Palermo’s opinion that “the two kind of work together”.
[77]
Dr. Palermo also testified on cross-examination
that an additive, such as peroxide, is required to crosslink polyethylene: it
cannot be done by heat alone. The validity analysis of claim 7, which
stipulates crosslinking may be achieved with or without crosslinking
additives, addresses this issue below.
[78]
On cross-examination, Dr. Palermo also testified
that a POSITA in 1995, as characterized by him, would have been aware of power
cables with polyethylene coatings, but would not have been familiar with their
processing. He admitted the skilled person could have known about use of PEX
insulation in the cable industry, and could have referenced this information
prior to its use in the pipe industry. He also testified that a cable with
polyethylene coating heated by IR, as taught in the prior art (the ‘624 Patent),
would be considered “contactless” heating with respect to the outer surface of
the coating.
[79]
Dr. Palermo further testified that high, medium
and low-density polyethylene (HDPE, MDPE and LDPE) would all have similar absorption
peaks. Thus using a theoretical representation of polyethylene’s absorption
spectrum that does not disclose the type of polyethylene measured is not
misleading or problematic.
[80]
As well, he testified it is insignificant that
Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent does not depict wavelengths shorter than 2.5 µm
(4000cm-1), as polyethylene has characteristic absorption peaks in the
mid-IR range (between 500 and 4000cm-1), and typically no absorption
peaks below 2.5 µm. He admits that the equipment used to generate IR spectrum
in the short-IR range, not depicted in Figure 4, was available in 1995.
[81]
Dr. Palermo agreed that although the vertical
arrangement of the IR ovens is an option in the ‘376 Patent that does not
appear until the final two process claims 16 and 17, the benefit of the
invention would be lost if one were to use a horizontal, rather than vertical
orientation. Dr. Palermo also stated that the arrangement of lamps, depicted in
Figures 2A and 2B of the ‘376 Patent, as well as the vertical orientation of IR
zones, are “logical” arrangements for use by a
POSITA prior to 1995 in processing polymer material.
[82]
Dr. Kimmel has close to 60 years’ experience
working with polymers and polymer products. He holds four degrees from M.I.T.,
including a PhD in Materials Engineering, and has worked in the industry for
over 30 years at Hoechst North America, a diversified polymer products company.
[83]
He is currently Associate Professor of Packaging
Science at Clemson University, South Carolina, where he has worked on many
products involving extruded components and has developed and taught courses
involving principles and applications of IR heating of plastics.
[84]
Dr. Kimmel was qualified at trial as an expert
in polymer science, manufacturing with polymers and extruded polymer products,
in particular with respect to polymer films.
[85]
Although Dr. Kimmel agreed with Dr. Palermo that
“eliminated” in the context of the ‘376 Patent
signifies substantially reduced, rather than 100% removed, he did not and could
not quantify what reduction percentage constitutes “substantial
reduction”.
[86]
With respect to “filtering” described in claim
2, Dr. Kimmel testified that quartz glass (containing SiO2) used in
Pexcor’s process filters the 6.6-6.8 µm peak and partially filters the 3.3-3.6
µm peak – polyethylene’s primary absorption peaks. During cross-examination it
was pointed out that quartz glass only reduces wavelength emission by 10% or
12% in the 3.2-3.6 µm ranges, which is not “substantial
reduction”. Dr. Kimmel attempted to explain it is important to also know
the IR source, as its combination with the filter affects the result, (i.e.
claim 2 depends on claim 1). In his view, it is necessary to examine the end
product to determine if the ‘376 process was properly executed, and similarly
whether there was infringement.
[87]
Dr. Kimmel testified that filters are
unnecessary if one uses an IR lamp with 1.2 µm intensity. However, he stated filters
could be used to enhance reduction of wavelengths corresponding to
polyethylene’s absorption peaks. He qualified that the wording “suitable filters” in the ‘376 Patent does not
necessarily mean only silica glass, Pyrex or Crown glass – these are examples.
In his view, discerning which filters to use to obtain the desired result would
either fall within the common general knowledge of a POSITA, or they would find
out from a specialist.
[88]
Dr. Kimmel’s report describes that tungsten
filament lamps had been used to heat polymers prior to 1995. He opined that the
skilled person in 1995 would either know, or be able to obtain from an IR
equipment manufacturer, the peak IR wavelengths emitted by tungsten filament
lamps. Thus, as he stated on cross-examination, to determine what IR radiation
to use for achieving the claimed elimination, and thus to follow the teaching
of the ‘376 Patent and make and use its claimed invention in 1995, a skilled
person would go to others skilled in IR heating.
[89]
Dr. Kimmel testified that the most important
absorption peaks for polyethylene are at 3.2-3.6 µm, which corresponds to the
carbon-hydrogen bonds, and 6.7-6.9 µm, relating to the carbon-carbon bonds. The
‘376 Patent teaches reduction at those peaks, particularly at 3.2-3.6 µm, where
the majority of the absorption takes place in polyethylene and in any polymer.
He testified that using a lamp with a wavelength of 1.2 µm results in
substantial reduction of absorption peaks in polyethylene.
[90]
In assessing validity, Dr. Kimmel’s report
reviews each claim in light of the four references relied upon for
anticipation: the IR Handbook, Electric IR Heating, the ‘624 Patent and Polymer
Processing. He finds that to anticipate claim 1 and the dependent claims, it
would be necessary for the reference to disclose a particular polymer, direct
the POSITA to consider its absorption profile, and direct the use of IR
radiation that avoids that polymer’s absorption peaks – which is not disclosed
in any of the prior art.
[91]
I disagree with this characterization. The prior
art’s disclosure does not have to be an “exact
description” of the claimed invention, and the disclosure when carried
out may be done without a person necessarily recognizing what is present or what
is happening. Anticipation is found where performance of the prior art
necessarily infringes the patent under review (Abbott Laboratories v Canada
(Minister of Health), 2008 FC 1359 at para 75 [Abbott Laboratories],
aff'd 2009 FCA 94; Sanofi-Synthelabo Canada Inc v Apotex Inc, 2008 SCC
61 at para 25 [Sanofi] citing Synthon BV v Smithkline Beecham plc,
[2005] UKHL 59 (UK HL) at para 23). Thus, to anticipate claims 1 and 19 of the
‘376 Patent, the prior art need not specifically direct the POSITA to remove
wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks of a particular polymer, so
long as that would be an inevitable consequence of the prior art’s teachings
and understood by the POSITA as necessary to achieve the desired result in
polymer processing as taught by the ‘376 Patent.
[92]
Dr. Kimmel found that the main process and
apparatus claims 1 and 19, and the remaining dependent claims, were not
anticipated in the literature pre-1995. In fact, Dr. Kimmel described that the
concept taught in the ‘376 Patent is counterintuitive to what was known in
1997, when IR radiation was used to match the absorption peaks for the material
being irradiated so as to heat it quickly and minimize power consumption in a
process called thermoforming.
[93]
Neither the IR Handbook nor Electric IR Heating
disclose any particular polymer: these are general references explaining the
use of IR for various purposes. The POSITA would not understand the statements
in these references to indicate that the absorption peaks are being eliminated.
[94]
Polymer Processing also does not disclose the
invention: it discusses the areas of transmission of polyethylene
terephthalate, but does not direct the POSITA to use any particular wavelengths
of IR radiation to irradiate that polymer. However, Dr. Kimmel did agree with
the statement in Polymer Processing that the advantages to having the polymer
partially transparent to the incident radiation are internal absorption in the
polymer sample, which results in more uniform heating of the material, and
agreed the same information is given in the ‘376 Patent.
[95]
Dr. Kimmel’s report also finds that the ‘624
Patent does not disclose elimination of the polymer’s absorption peaks. In the
‘624 process described, the polymer layer is coated on top of the cable core,
which contains a metal wire and a carbon black layer. Dr. Kimmel explains that
the carbon black layer re-radiates IR at the frequencies it most absorbs,
resulting in the polymer being irradiated with multiple sources of IR
radiation, and no elimination of the wavelengths corresponding to its
absorption peaks.
[96]
Dr. Kimmel’s above analysis applies as well to
claims 2 to 6. Claims 7 to 18 are only analyzed with respect to the ‘624
Patent. Claims 16 and 17, pertaining to the vertical orientation of the IR
zones, are also not anticipated by the ‘624 Patent, as it does not disclose
extruded tubes or vertical feeding through IR zones.
[97]
In Dr. Kimmel’s opinion, apparatus claims 19
through 38 are also not anticipated for the reasons set out above regarding the
process claims.
[98]
On cross-examination, Defence counsel referred
Dr. Kimmel to portions of the ‘376 Patent specification relating to claims 20
and 21 (‘376 Patent, p 12, lines 35-38), which convey that the extrusion
forming tool may be made using material that is both transparent and which
filters IR radiation. Dr. Kimmel had trouble explaining what he understood to
have been intended by the inventors and could not explain how the same glass
can be transparent and also a filter for the same wavelengths.
[99]
Dr. Kimmel’s attention was also drawn on
cross-examination to an extract from “Plastics
Extrusion Technology” (1988) (Seydel Report, Exhibit G), which states
that use of PEX in the cable industry was the real impetus behind the
development of various crosslinking processes (p. 490). Dr. Kimmel has no
experience in the cable industry and could not confirm the understanding taught
in that reference.
[100]
In assessing the ‘624 Patent as prior art, Dr.
Kimmel opined that a POSITA would be confused and could not follow what is
written or reproduce what was done in the ‘624 Patent. I find this position
difficult to reconcile with the fact he apparently has no trouble understanding
the ‘376 Patent, which discloses significantly less information about how to
make or use the invention in the specification than does the ‘624 Patent
specification.
[101]
The ‘624 Patent teaches use of an inner
conductor that reflects IR radiation. Although Dr. Kimmel maintained this is a
point of distinction between the ‘376 and ‘624 Patents which renders this prior
art not anticipatory or obvious, he later agreed on cross-examination that it
would have the same scientific effect on the radiation as the aluminium
reflective layer described in the ‘376 Patent, and that the reflection
principles of IR radiation are similar between the ‘624 and ‘376 Patents.
[102]
The ‘624 Patent states that short-wave IR
radiation passes through the polyethylene, resulting in rapid through heating
of the cable conductor/inner conducting layer and rapid crosslinking of the
polymer. Dr. Kimmel did not agree that uniform crosslinking will necessarily
result from the ‘624 Patent, as additional components not present in the ‘376
process may have an unknown effect. Dr. Kimmel explained the comparison between
the ‘624 and ‘376 processes is not apt because in the ‘624 Patent the inner
tube is not hollow, which results in a complex heat transfer situation. On this
point, Defence counsel pointed out that the aluminum interior in both patents
reflects the IR radiation. Dr. Kimmel testified he did not know the effect of
the aluminum layer on crosslinking, yet, he agreed that the inventors of the
‘376 Patent claim it causes uniform crosslinking.
[103]
The ‘624 Patent describes heating a polymer
material, LDPE, using IR radiation emitting wavelengths at 1.2 µm to instigate
crosslinking. Dr. Kimmel agreed that this process involves heating a polymer
material, polyethylene, for the purpose of crosslinking by way of IR radiation
at a peak intensity of 1.2 µm. He initially did not agree that if a person
follows the ‘624 process they would be eliminating wavelengths corresponding to
the absorption peaks for polyethylene, but upon further questioning agreed that
elimination was taking place in the ‘624 Patent. His uncertain and equivocal
testimony raises doubt about the weight to be given this evidence.
[104]
Dr. Kimmel also conceded that the peroxide
mentioned in the ‘624 Patent is an organic peroxide, and that the wavelengths
of the IR used fall outside the 3.2-3.6 µm and 6.7-6.9 µm ranges, as well as
the 2-10 µm range, as required by the ‘376 Patent. As well, he admitted that
the skilled person carrying out the ‘624 process would use IR radiation having
a wavelength substantially located around 1.2 µm. The ‘624 process also requires
the use of nitrogen to prevent oxidation, and the polymer is extruded
continuously.
[105]
Dr. Kimmel disagreed that a vertical
manufacturing process for a pipe would be obvious in light of the fact it was
used for cable prior to 1995. Yet, he acknowledged that the broad application
of the ‘376 invention is not limited to pipes: it describes a process for the
manufacture of tubes which could later be heated and expanded as a liner for
another tube - such as for cable lining production.
[106]
A POSITA, as defined by Dr. Kimmel, would not have
a good understanding of how polymers respond to IR radiation, but would at
least understand Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent. Dr. Kimmel thinks the POSITA
would seek assistance from a supplier knowledgeable in IR to learn which lamps
to use for irradiating the polymer material. I disagree with this
characterization, as the invention centers on selection of IR wavelengths. The
specification and claims, along with the POSITA’s common general knowledge, must
be sufficient to enable the POSITA to carry out the invention as claimed.
[107]
Dr. Boreman is currently Professor and Chair of
the Department of Physics and Optical Science at University of North Carolina
at Charlotte and is Director of the Center for Optoelectronics and Optical
Communications. He was also professor for 27 years at University of Central
Florida. He has conducted research on IR technology, has authored numerous
texts, chapters and articles, and has been on the editorial board of a number
of journals in the field of optics. He obtained his PhD in Optical Sciences
from the University of Arizona in 1984, and obtained a Master’s in 1981 and BSc
in 1978.
[108]
Dr. Boreman has been qualified as an expert in
the physics of IR radiation and IR technology.
[109]
Dr. Boreman admitted he is not an expert in
emitter technology for polyethylene pipes and has not worked in manufacturing
plants. Thus, his expertise is limited to what a POSITA would need to know
about IR radiation to practice the patent, and does not involve heating
polymers – the second major aspect of the ‘376 Patent.
[110]
According to Dr. Boreman, the term “elimination” would require the skilled person to
first ask what is being eliminated (a qualitative issue), and would require
them to determine how much elimination is required (a quantitative issue).
[111]
Dr. Boreman agreed with Drs. Palermo and Kimmel
that the term “eliminated” does not require 100% elimination. To define
“elimination” he stated a skilled person would use the blackbody IR spectrum,
which demonstrates theoretical measurements of an idealized substance that
absorbs all radiation, to calculate that if the relative intensity of IR
radiation at a wavelength around 3.4 µm is 20% or less, “elimination” has occurred.
[112]
On cross-examination, Dr. Boreman agreed he took
an academic approach to interpreting the ‘376 Patent, as otherwise, he could
not interpret the meaning of “elimination”.
Although a POSITA would not have had access to all the scientific analytical
data Dr. Boreman did, he opined they would have had relevant resource materials
to refer to for an understanding of his interpretation of the ‘376 Patent at
the relevant date.
[113]
Dr. Boreman’s report states that the skilled
person would conclude that using any of the suggested examples of glass filter
materials in the ‘376 Patent (silica glass, Pyrex or Crown glass) would
eliminate both stated absorption peaks from IR radiation. However, this is not
the case: due to the large variance in the IR transmission of each filter, a
POSITA would be at a loss to determine what is meant by “wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks are
eliminated” based on the suggestion that these materials act as filters.
[114]
Dr. Boreman found Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent “puzzling”, given the y-axis starts at value of 1.44
rather than 0, and has top value of “T” rather than 100%, and only shows the IR
curve from the lowest wavelength value of 4000cm-1 (2.5µm). As well,
Figure 4 does not indicate the thickness of polyethylene measured, which he
states affects radiation transmission.
[115]
Dr. Boreman’s report also concludes that the
inventive concept of the ‘376 Patent is a known application of various
principles of physics. This concept along with the supposed benefits of the
elimination claimed in the ‘376 Patent were previously described in a number of
prior art documents.
[116]
In analyzing novelty of the ‘376 invention, Dr.
Boreman’s report states that the IR Handbook discloses that short-wave IR
having a peak at 1.2 µm can be used to heat a polymer rapidly and uniformly
without damaging the surface – exactly what is taught by the ‘376 Patent. In
his opinion, the IR Handbook anticipates claims 1 and 19.
[117]
Polymer Processing teaches that radiation
absorbed internally provides more uniform heating of the material relative to
radiation absorbed at the surface, which Dr. Boreman opines is the key teaching
of claims 1 and 19 of the ‘376 Patent.
[118]
The ‘624 Patent describes a method of applying
insulation of crosslinked polymer on a cable conductor. It teaches use of IR radiation
for crosslinking the polymer insulation, transmitted into the interior of the
polymer, which allows for rapid heating through its cross-section. It lists
polyethylene as a suitable polymer and teaches using peroxide as an additive to
effect crosslinking. The radiation source may consist of several IR lamps with
tungsten filaments operating at 2100°C, thus providing radiation with maximum
intensity at a wavelength of 1.2 µm.
[119]
Dr. Boreman thus finds that the ‘624 Patent
describes the invention claimed in claims 1 and 19 of the ‘376 Patent. It
involves: (i) use of an IR lamp to crosslink extruded polyethylene; (ii) that
the IR radiation should penetrate into the polyethylene material and not be
absorbed at the surface; and (iii) irradiation with an IR lamp having a peak
wavelength of 1.2 µm, which provides rapid through-heating of the polymer.
[120]
However, Dr. Boreman admitted that the ‘624
Patent’s non-optional use of pressure within a vulcanization tube is not “contactless”, and thus is not part of the ‘376
Patent. He agreed that a person reading the ‘624 Patent would have to
selectively identify aspects from that patent in order to use the process
described therein to implement the ‘376 Patent.
[121]
The final prior art reference relied on by the
Defendants, Electric IR Heating, states that “selection
of the appropriate wavelength is particularly important for processing
plastics”, and short-wave radiation is not absorbed at the surface, but
is transmitted into and penetrates the polymer material – in Dr. Boreman’s
opinion, it describes the same physical phenomena as the ‘376 Patent.
[122]
Dr. Boreman opined that the POSITA at the
relevant time would consider the inventive concept of claims 1 and 19 to be the
heating of a polymer by IR radiation in which wavelengths corresponding to the
absorption peaks have been eliminated, and that the extra details provided by
dependent claims do not change this concept in any meaningful way. The ‘376
Patent states that all parts of the described extrusion line, except the IR
zones and vertical orientation, are “quite
conventional” (‘376 Patent, p. 7, lines 12-14).
[123]
His report concludes that this inventive concept
was well known prior to 1995. With respect to IR radiation, the common general
knowledge of a POSITA as of September 1995 would have included all essential
elements, namely that heating a polymer using short-wave IR radiation would
allow it to penetrate into the polymer, leading to uniform heating without
surface damage.
[124]
I note that Dr. Boreman’s expertise is limited
to the IR radiation aspect of the patent: it does not extend to polymer
processing and extrusion of polymer products. Thus, his opinion of the
importance of dependent claims, which he did not individually assess, is
afforded little weight.
[125]
Dr. Dutcher is currently Professor in the
Department of Physics at the University of Guelph. He has taught several
graduate courses and is author of numerous articles on polymer physics. He was
appointed as Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Soft Matter Physics in 2006 and in
Soft Matter and Biological Physics in 2013. He obtained his PhD from Simon
Fraser in 1989, and has a Master’s of Science in Physics (UBC) and a Bachelor’s
of Science (Dalhousie).
[126]
Dr. Dutcher has been qualified as an expert in
polymer physics.
[127]
Dr. Dutcher’s report finds that the entire ‘376
Patent is based on incorrect data regarding the IR absorption of polyethylene,
is based on fundamentally flawed reasoning, and would mislead the skilled
person.
[128]
In his opinion, the “elimination” of wavelengths
corresponding to the polymer’s absorption peaks does not occur in the ‘376
Patent and neither does the claimed elimination occur in the Pexcor process.
Furthermore, the supposed inventive concept of the ‘376 Patent was disclosed in
a number of prior documents.
[129]
Regarding claim 1 of the ‘376 Patent, Dr.
Dutcher found it unclear what constitutes “substantial
reduction”. He estimated that applying IR radiation at around 1.2 µm,
there may be a 66% reduction at 3.3-3.6 µm peak, but he qualified that one
would have to experiment to figure out if that level of reduction is sufficient
for the purposes of the ‘376 Patent.
[130]
Dr. Dutcher agreed that a POSITA would
understand that “elimination” in the context of
the ‘376 Patent does not require complete elimination of the wavelengths
corresponding to absorption peaks. The POSITA would determine the amount of “elimination” necessary for the ‘376 claims by referencing
the information provided in the patent; by using filters and IR radiation with
specified wavelengths. He testified it is important to know all absorption peaks
of the polymer, including within the short-wave range, to be able to “eliminate” and avoid overheating the polymer.
[131]
Dr. Dutcher’s report states that the wavelengths
corresponding to polyethylene’s absorption peaks are not eliminated in the ‘376
Patent. The wide variance in “filtering”
obtained by silica, Pyrex or Crown glass would render the POSITA at a loss to
understand how to quantify the amount of filtering necessary for “elimination”, and thus whether the elimination
required by the claims of the ‘376 Patent is or is not occurring. For instance,
silica glass transmits 85% and 60% of the incident radiation at wavelengths
corresponding to polyethylene’s absorption peaks, and Pyrex transmits 45% and
10% respectively.
[132]
Dr. Dutcher also found Figure 4 of the ‘376
Patent to be misleading because it does not extend to the short-wave IR region.
His report produces a “more complete IR spectrum”
for 2 mm thick polyethylene, obtained online from an optics company, Tydex
Optics [the Tydex Graph]. He claims the Tydex Graph demonstrates polyethylene
has a “significant absorption” peak between 1.7
and 1.8 µm, and another at 1.2 µm. This is the only reference to polyethylene’s
other absorption peaks in Dr. Dutcher’s report. He opines the skilled person
would be curious as to the lack of information on smaller wavelengths, not
depicted in Figure 4.
[133]
Given that the relevant date for construction of
the ‘376 Patent was May 27, 1997, and the Tydex Graph is dated 2010, a POSITA
would not have had access to it as of 1997 and would not have been confused by
the ‘376 Patent.
[134]
While Dr. Dutcher agreed it is important to know
the conditions under which spectra are generated, he did not contact Tydex to
ask about the conditions under which the Tydex Graph was generated, nor did he
know whether a qualified person made such measurements. He relied on the fact
the graph was reproduced by a specialty optics company doing what he considers
a very standard measurement. Nevertheless, he did not investigate further to
ensure it was a standard measure.
[135]
In his view, using the lamp described in the ‘376
Patent does not “eliminate” or even “substantially reduce” the 1.2 or 1.7 µm absorption
peak for polyethylene. Dr. Dutcher opines that the entirety of the ‘376 Patent
is based on an incorrect understanding of the actual physical phenomena
occurring and the language of the claims would mislead the skilled person.
[136]
With regards to anticipation and obviousness,
Dr. Dutcher’s report claims that the ‘376 inventive concept was disclosed in
the prior art and he provides a similar analysis to Dr. Boreman, finding that:
a)
The IR Handbook essentially paraphrases the
content of the ‘376 Patent, and the skilled person would have no difficulty
understanding that it anticipates claims 1 and 19.
b)
The ‘624 Patent’s reference to the polymer
having “good perviousness” for the radiation for crosslinking would convey to the
POSITA that the radiation would be transmitted through the polymer. The ‘624
Patent also refers to using an IR source with the same peak wavelength as in
the ‘376 Patent – 1.2 µm.
c)
Polymer Processing states the advantages to
having the polymer partially transparent to the incident radiation are internal
absorption, which provides more uniform heating of the material – the same
mechanism of heating described in the ‘376 Patent.
d)
Electric IR Heating is similar to the IR
Handbook, and conveys that short-wave radiation, which generally has a peak
wavelength of 1.2 µm, will be primarily transmitted by polymer sheets, which
reduces the possibility of scorching the surface – which in Dr. Dutcher’s
opinion, discloses what is said to be the invention of the ‘376 Patent.
[137]
Mr. Seydel studied plastics engineering in
Darmstadt, West Germany and has worked in plastic pipe manufacturing and the plastic
pipe systems business for over 40 years in a variety of roles, including
quality assurance, testing, product and process development, marketing, design,
and logistics. He has been a member of international technical committees that
developed standards for PEX pipe. Since 2008, Mr. Seydel has been a consultant
relating to plastic pipe and plastic pipe systems.
[138]
At trial the Plaintiff objected to Mr. Seydel’s
qualification as expert, citing R v Mohan, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 9, and claiming
that his testimony was not necessary. I find that Mr. Seydel has specialized
knowledge beyond that of the ordinary person and that his opinion related to
material issues that are technical in nature and beyond the experience and
knowledge the Court is expected to have.
[139]
It was on this basis, and a consideration of the
other Mohan factors (as modified in R v Abbey, 2009 ONCA 624, leave
to appeal refused, [2010] 2 SCR v (note), and confirmed in White Burgess
Langille Inman v Abbott and Haliburton Co, 2015 SCC 23 [White Burgess])
that I admitted Mr. Seydel’s expert evidence. However, ultimately, I afford it little
if any weight.
[140]
Justice Phelan has recently laid out a
comprehensive review of the current law on the role of expert witnesses in Allard
et al v Canada, 2016 FC 236 at paras 103-108 [Allard], which I find
appropriate to reiterate. At paragraph 106 of that decision he quotes the
Supreme Court’s most recent commentary on expert opinion evidence in White
Burgess, above, stating:
[106] The Court went on to discuss the
nature of an expert’s duty to the court and where it fits into the [Abbey]
framework:
27 One influential statement of the
elements of this duty are found in the English case National Justice
Compania Naviera SA v. Prudential Assurance Co., [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 68 (Eng.
Comm. Ct.). Following an 87-day trial, Cresswell J. believed that a
misunderstanding of the duties and responsibilities of expert witnesses
contributed to the length of the trial. He listed in obiter dictum duties
and responsibilities of experts, the first two of which have particularly
influenced the development of Canadian law:
1. Expert evidence presented to the
Court should be, and should be seen to be, the independent product of
the expert uninfluenced as to form or content by the exigencies of litigation....
2. An expert witness should provide
independent assistance to the Court by way of objective unbiased
opinion in relation to matters within his [or her] expertise.... An
expert witness in the High Court should never assume the role of an advocate. [Emphasis
added; citation omitted; p. 81.]
(These duties were endorsed on
appeal: ["Ikarian Reefer" (The), Re] [1995] 1 Lloyd's
Rep. 455 (Eng. C.A.), at p. 496.)
As to admissibility or weight, the following
comments were provided:
45 Following what I take to be the
dominant view in the Canadian cases, I would hold that an expert's lack of
independence and impartiality goes to the admissibility of the evidence in
addition to being considered in relation to the weight to be given to the
evidence if admitted. That approach seems to me to be more in line with the
basic structure of our law relating to expert evidence and with the importance
our jurisprudence has attached to the gatekeeping role of trial judges. Binnie
J. summed up the Canadian approach well in J. (J.-L.): "The
admissibility of the expert evidence should be scrutinized at the time it is
proffered, and not allowed too easy an entry on the basis that all of the
frailties could go at the end of the day to weight rather than
admissibility" (para. 28).
…
54 Finding that expert evidence meets
the basic threshold does not end the inquiry. Consistent with the structure of
the analysis developed following Mohan which I have discussed earlier,
the judge must still take concerns about the expert's independence and
impartiality into account in weighing the evidence at the gatekeeping stage. At
this point, relevance, necessity, reliability and absence of bias can helpfully
be seen as part of a sliding scale where a basic level must first be achieved
in order to meet the admissibility threshold and thereafter continue to play a
role in weighing the overall competing considerations in admitting the
evidence. At the end of the day, the judge must be satisfied that the potential
helpfulness of the evidence is not outweighed by the risk of the dangers
materializing that are associated with expert evidence.
[Emphasis in original].
[141]
The role of an expert is to provide independent
assistance by objective, unbiased opinion. Mr. Seydel’s
evidence was not only “shredded on cross-examination”
(Allard, above, at para 108), but his opinion strayed into assuming the
role of advocate, and was neither independent nor unbiased.
[142]
Dr. Kimmel’s responding report largely responded
to and refuted assertions made in Mr. Seydel’s report on issues of whether crosslinking
agents specified in the ‘376 Patent actually work and on Mr. Seydel’s analysis
of the speeds of different extrusion processes. Given my above finding, it is
not necessary to describe this evidence.
[143]
In response to the other Defence experts, Dr.
Kimmel opined that Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent is not misleading: the spectrum is
simply used to explain the location of polyethylene’s absorption peaks.
[144]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly is currently a Professor at the
University of Maryland in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering
and the Chemical Physics program. He is Director of Radiation and Polymer
Science.
[145]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly received his PhD in 1981 from
the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne (UK). He has held positions at the
Max-Planch Institute in Germany and at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology in Maryland and has industry experience consulting in respect of
manufacturing processes involving polymers and radiation.
[146]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly has been qualified as an expert
on IR radiation, its applications in manufacturing, and its effect on polymers.
[147]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly clarifies in his report that
standard IR spectroscopy equipment cannot measure IR absorption along the
entire spectrum: different machines measure short-wave IR as compared to mid-wave
IR. It is well known that polymers primarily absorb in the mid-IR region; therefore
polymer chemists focus on that region when considering IR absorption for a
given polymer. Short-wave IR spectra are used for very narrow purposes and are
not widely consulted.
[148]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly included a graph in his report
from the Journal of Polymer Science illustrating that Dr. Dutcher’s “significant” absorption peak near 1.7 µm is not
significant at all. Thus, Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent is not misleading for its
failure to include the short-wave IR absorption profile. On cross-examination,
Dr. Al-Sheikhly admitted he does not know the machine that generated Figure 4,
the conditions under which it was generated, the statistical error, or the
scale. He stated you cannot have a negative transmittance, contrary to his
evidence in chief.
[149]
Dr. Al-Sheikhly stated filters can be made to
order. They are widely available today and were available before 1995 in
configurations that could be targeted to block virtually any desired
wavelengths of IR, including in the mid-IR region. Despite stating that a
skilled person would go to a manufacturer to select the appropriate filter for a
polymer, on cross-examination Dr. Al-Sheikhly did not agree that the skilled
person needs something more than what is written in the patent to understand
and use it. Upon further questioning, he agreed that the skilled person would
not know what filter to use for a particular polymer without going outside the
patent.
[150]
Although there were various inconsistencies in
Dr. Al-Sheikhly’s testimony, I give more weight to his evidence over that of
Dr. Dutcher’s with respect to polyethylene’s absorption peaks at the short-wave
region (near 1.7 µm), as his graph comes from a reputable and verifiable source
and does not pose the timing difficulties of Dr. Dutcher’s Tydex Graph, having
been published on February 2, 1996.
[151]
The Defendants Pexcor and Heatlink have pleaded
that the ‘376 Patent is invalid as the purported invention is not proper
subject matter under section 2 of the Patent Act.
[152]
The Defendants assert this ground on the basis
that independent claims 1 and 19 disclose “mental
steps” and not physical steps. I disagree: selection of a source of IR radiation
such that the wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks for polymer
materials have been eliminated can be a patentable process, so long as the
other criteria for patentability are met, namely sufficiency of description in
the specification, utility, novelty and non-obviousness, which are discussed
below. Moreover, the use of known equipment or apparatus in a novel and
unobvious application for crosslinking polymer pipe is also capable of being
patentable subject matter, subject to the same requirements for patentability
as for the process to carry out the invention.
[153]
Section 2 of the Patent Act requires that
the subject matter of a patent be both new and useful. To establish inutility,
one must show that the invention will not work, either not at all, or for the
purpose(s) promised in the specification. Utility is determined on a claim by
claim basis (Eli Lily Canada Inc et al v Novopharm Ltd, 2010 FCA 197 at
paras 74-75).
[154]
The Defendants allege that the ‘376 Patent lacks
utility and is invalid because:
a)
it does not provide “uniform
and fast heating of polymers or mixtures of polymer”, as promised;
b)
no heating and crosslinking of polymers will
occur if the wavelengths corresponding to all peaks of the polymeric material
have been eliminated;
c)
it is not possible to filter an IR lamp to
eliminate wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks of a polymer using
any of the filters disclosed or claimed; and
d)
a polymer material cannot be crosslinked without
a crosslinking additive.
[155]
The evidence before the Court does not establish
either (a) or (b) lack utility, given agreement that “elimination”
means substantial reduction, and there is no evidence to suggest that the
alleged inventive process does not provide uniform and fast heating. Only
issues (c) and (d) are in dispute and were substantively argued by the
Defendants at trial.
[156]
There was considerable disagreement over what “elimination” or “substantial
reduction” of the wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks for
polymer material means when “filtered out” by
the use of filters. The patent provides no useful definition or disclosure of
what constitutes a substantial reduction, and the experts’ opinions of what a
POSITA might understand that to mean creates a great deal of ambiguity in being
able to ascertain what level of reduction constitutes a “substantial reduction”, further discussed below in
assessing sufficiency of disclosure.
[157]
The ‘376 Patent states that the absorption peaks
for polyethylene (3.2-3.6 µm and 6.7-6.9 µm) can be “eliminated” using filters:
The elimination of these absorption peaks
may for instance be achieved by placing a filter filtering off these peaks
which is placed between the respective infrared radiator and the tube. A
suitable filter material is for instance silica glass, SiO2, or the
glass types known under the names “Pyrex” or “Crown glass”.
[158]
Dr. Palermo and Dr. Kimmel contended that the function
of the filters in the ‘376 Patent was to “augment”
or “enhance” the elimination achieved by
selection of an IR source. The plain wording of the ‘376 Patent states the
contrary: “elimination of these absorption peaks may
for instance be achieved by placing a filter filtering off these peaks”,
and that an “alternative to filters” is the use
of a lamp with a peak at 1.2 µm. Thus, the position put forward by Uponor’s
experts that the filters “work together” with
the IR source to provide “additional reduction”
and achieve elimination is not conveyed by the plain and ordinary meaning of
the words as used in the patent and does not have merit.
[159]
Second, Uponor’s expert Dr. Al-Sheikhly asserted
that filters made of the “suitable filter material” could be made to order and
that the skilled person would “choose a configuration
for a filter that would work to eliminate the desired wavelengths”.
However, Dr. Al-Sheikhly provided no examples and was unable to identify any
such configuration for filtering the 3.2-3.6 µm absorption peak.
[160]
Although the specification ends with the
statement that “[t]he filters may of course also be of
any optional kind” (‘376 Patent, p 16), the evidence was that a POSITA
would understand that one of the example materials provided in the patent works
as a sufficient filter (Dr. Palermo, Cross-examination). If filter materials
are detailed within the specification and the claims, a POSITA would consider
them to be enabling to carry out the invention.
[161]
The evidence of Pexcor and Heatlink’s experts,
Dr. Boreman and Dr. Dutcher, is that the “suitable
filter material” disclosed in the ‘376 Patent does not work.
Specifically, silica glass transmits anywhere from 60% to over 85% of the
incident radiation in the 3.2-3.6 µm range. Even based on Dr. Palermo’s
definition that elimination requires at least 50% reduction in relative
intensity, which I do not accept, silica glass does not “eliminate” the IR radiation at this absorption peak.
[162]
In addition, the transmission of IR radiation at
the 3.2-3.6 µm peak for BK7, a Crown glass described as “one of the most common borosilicate crown glasses used for
visible and near infrared optics”, is well over 50%. Crown glass also
does not “eliminate” the IR radiation at the
3.2-3.6 µm absorption peak.
[163]
I find that the claims providing that the
elimination of wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks of polymer
material by use of the filters disclosed in the ‘376 Patent do not work and are
invalid.
[164]
As such, claims 2 and 3 and all of claims 4 to
18, as they depend on either claim 2 or 3, are invalid on the basis of
inutility. As are apparatus claims relating to filters, 36 and 37, and claim
38, as it depends from claim 36 or 37.
[165]
Claim 21 provides that part of a forming tool of
the apparatus is made up of a material transparent to IR radiation (as set out
in claim 20) which also filters off wavelengths corresponding to the absorption
peaks of the polymer material.
[166]
A transparent material, on a plain and ordinary
reading of the disclosure and given its plain meaning, would not filter IR
radiation, and thus again lacks utility. As well, as above stated, the ‘376
Patent provides no useful disclosure of what material filters off wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks of a polymer material. The POSITA,
although having knowledge of IR and polymer extrusion processes, would not know
from the claims or the disclosure in the ‘376 Patent, or according to their
common general knowledge, of what the filters, and thus the forming tool would
be made. Claim 21 and each of claims 22 to 38 as they depend from claim 21 are
invalid for lack of utility.
[167]
Claim 7 of the ‘376 Patent claims a process “in which a polymer material, which is cross-linkable by
means of heat, with or without cross-linking additives, is cross-linked by
means of said irradiation with infrared radiation” (emphasis added). The
claim therefore includes a process for crosslinking a polymer by heat without
the use of a crosslinking additive.
[168]
The evidence shows that crosslinking requires
additives such as a peroxide or a silane, and cannot be achieved by heat alone.
Claim 7 is invalid for lack of utility and is also overbroad. Given that claim
8 wholly depends on claim 7, it is also invalid for lack of utility. Although
claims 9 and 10 also depend on claim 8 (and thus claim 7), they qualify the deficiency
in claim 7 by requiring a cross-linking additive, and thus are not invalid for
inutility.
[169]
Subsection 27(3) of the Patent Act
requires that the specification of a patent correctly and fully describe the
invention and the operation or use of the invention as contemplated by the
inventor. The steps in a process must be “set out
clearly” and the method of manufacture must be described in full, clear
and exact terms such that a POSITA could make and use the invention as claimed,
without display of inventive ingenuity (Pfizer Canada Inc v Canada (Minister
of Health), 2008 FCA 108 at paras 63-64 [Pfizer]).
[170]
Subsection 27(4) of the Patent Act
provides that the specification must end with a claim or claims that define the
subject matter of the invention in distinct and explicit terms. Sufficient
disclosure of the invention is mandatory for the inventor/applicant to be
granted a valid patent and the monopoly for an invention (Teva Canada
Limited v Pfizer Canada Inc, 2012 SCC 60 at para 32 [Teva]).
[171]
This Court and the Courts of Appeal have
repeatedly warned that patentees should take care in not over claiming what is
disclosed as the invention and in what they promise as the invention’s objects
and advantages. Overbreadth of both claims and promises as disclosed may render
some or all the claims, and perhaps the patent as a whole, invalid. As well,
adequate disclosure of the invention to enable a POSITA to both understand the
boundaries of the claimed invention and to make and use the invention once the
patent expires is a necessary prerequisite to a valid patent and valid claims
in light of the bargain struck between a patentee and the public interest in
granting the patent monopoly (Consolboard, above, at p 517).
[172]
The specification must correctly and fully
describe the invention so that the relevant public, the POSITA, from reading
the specification, is able to make and use the invention as successfully as the
inventor. The questions the Court must address are:
a)
What is the invention?
b)
How does it work?
c)
Having only the specification, can a POSITA
successfully produce the invention using only the instructions contained in the
disclosure?
Teva, above,
at paras 50-51.
[173]
The Plaintiff’s position is that the concept of
the invention is set out at pages 4 to 5 of the ‘376 Patent. Claims 1 and 19
provide the broadest claims to the invention, with the dependent claims adding
elements related to the polymer used, additives, configurations for the path
followed by the extruded pipe, and further equipment such as reflectors. The
Plaintiff argues that the inventors came up with the idea of using IR radiation
where the absorption peaks of the polymer being irradiated are substantially
reduced to avoid surface burning, and with the idea of positioning the IR lamps
in a vertical orientation to provide sufficient heating and crosslinking.
[174]
I find that the key aspects of the ‘376 Patent invention
are (i) elimination (i.e. substantial reduction) of the wavelengths
corresponding to absorption peaks of the polymer, and (ii) using the vertical
direction in the extrusion and crosslinking process. The evidence at trial
demonstrated this second aspect is not simply a preferred embodiment, but is
essential to making and using the invention, as the benefit of the invention
would be lost by using a horizontal, rather than vertical orientation.
[175]
The next matter involves determining how the POSITA
is taught by the patent to put this invention into operation. Both independent
claims 1 and 19 refer to irradiation of the polymer material with IR radiation,
where the wavelengths corresponding to the absorption peaks for the polymer
material have been eliminated. This “elimination”
of wavelengths – one of the pillars of the invention – is achieved according to
the patent specification and claims either through the use of (i) filters, or
(ii) an IR lamp emitting radiation at a wavelength which is substantially
located around 1.2 µm.
[176]
A POSITA would be unable to discern what the
inventors intended by the term “elimination” by
considering the patent’s filter examples, given the wide range of filtering the
materials provide. As well, the above discussion on utility describes why the
first mechanism does not work: the skilled reader should not have to undertake
a “minor research project” to find a suitable
filter material to determine whether the claimed invention of the patent works
(Teva, above, at para 74).
[177]
Thus, the only remaining method of achieving
elimination of wavelengths taught in the ‘376 Patent is using an IR lamp
emitting radiation at a wavelength substantially around 1.2 µm.
[178]
Even with this information, the disclosure fails
to identify what quantitatively amounts to elimination of those wavelengths,
and to what extent reduction is needed to meet the objective of the alleged invention.
[179]
The conflicting expert evidence on what a POSITA
would understand at the relevant claim date suggests a POSITA would be unable
to read the specification and ascertain to what extent reduction is needed to
meet the objective of the alleged invention. Neither expert for the Plaintiff
could meaningfully quantify substantial reduction.
[180]
In his report on infringement, Dr. Kimmel opined
that eliminated meant “substantially reduced”.
During his trial testimony however, Dr. Kimmel asserted multiple interpretations
of what “eliminated” might mean. On cross-examination, he stated that
infringement of the ‘376 Patent can only be determined after the fact by
conducting an examination of the end-product as “the
only reasonable way to know if we have elimination is to look at the pipe”.
He could not otherwise quantify elimination because it “depends
too much on the rest of the process”.
[181]
By Dr. Kimmel’s reasoning, any successful
manufacture of a sufficiently crosslinked polyethylene pipe by IR radiation
with good surface finish would infringe the ‘376 Patent, as such an end-product
is indicative in Dr. Kimmel’s opinion, that “substantial reduction” of
wavelengths has occurred. As Justice Binnie stated (writing for the Court) in Free
World Trust, above, at para 32:
The claims cannot be stretched to allow the
patentee to monopolize anything that achieves the desirable result. It is not
legitimate, for example, to obtain a patent for a particular method that grows
hair on bald men and thereafter claim that anything that grows hair on
bald men infringes [Emphasis in original].
[182]
I find the same principle applies here, and I
give Dr. Kimmel’s evidence on this issue little weight, as it cannot be that
the ‘376 Patent affords Uponor a monopoly over any successful manufacture of
PEX pipe using IR radiation that produces a good surface finish.
[183]
Dr. Palermo testified that as long as the
intensity of the radiation at the absorption peaks are more than 50% reduced,
the skilled person would know the wavelengths have been “eliminated”, in accordance with the ‘376 Patent.
[184]
I also attribute this definition of elimination
little weight. There is no basis in the ‘376 Patent for the 50% reduction
proposed by Dr. Palermo. I also find the position that “substantial
reduction” means anything over 50% reduction is not reasonable. Nor is
there any evidence before the Court that a POSITA would consider “elimination”
of the absorption wavelengths to mean that the intensity of IR radiation at the
absorption peaks was reduced by only half of the peak intensity.
[185]
Dr. Boreman on behalf of the Defendants stated a
POSITA would calculate substantial reduction as 20% by referring to a blackbody
emission curve. While theoretically, such calculations are possible, Dr.
Boreman admitted to have taken a largely academic approach to reading the ‘376 Patent.
Although 20% more reasonably corresponds to the plain meaning of the words “eliminate” or “substantially
reduce”, there is nothing within the specification or claims leading a
POSITA to this percent reduction value over any other. Furthermore, the
theoretical and academic manner in which Dr. Boreman interpreted the patent
would not have been expected of a POSITA as defined for the ‘376 invention.
[186]
The Court’s election of one of these explanations
over another seems arbitrary, given that the experts have provided no viable
interpretations of “eliminated” which find any
principled basis in the claims or specification of the ‘376 Patent (Teva,
above) or which were convincing considering the POSITA, as defined.
[187]
Despite the absence of information in the
specification on what constitutes elimination and the discrepancies in the
expert evidence, I am mindful that the Court must endeavour to give a purposive
construction to claims, without being overly astute or technical. As well, the
Court’s interpretation of the required disclosure under subsection 27(3) of the
Patent Act has been set very low (Janssen-Ortho Inc v Novopharm Ltd,
2006 FC 1234 at paras 122-127 [Janssen-Ortho], aff’d 2007 FCA 217; Pfizer,
above, at paras 63-64).
[188]
There is some indication by the inventors within
the patent specification that illuminate, at least in a qualitative sense, the
meaning of the concept of elimination. The specification uses various terms, teaching
the skilled person to irradiate with wavelengths which “substantially
are not equal” and “mainly differ” from,
or “avoid”, the absorption peaks of the polymer (‘376
Abstract; page 4, lines 30-34; page 9, lines 13-16; page 5, lines 23-25; page
9, line 37 - page 10, line 2).
[189]
I find that in approaching the patent with a
mind willing to understand, the skilled person – knowing the characteristic
distribution curve of IR radiation and how to calculate absorption profiles for
polymers – could discern that by applying IR radiation with wavelengths
substantially located around 1.2 µm, in the short-wave range, that at the peak
absorption areas for polyethylene (3.3-3.6 µm and 6.7-6.9 µm) there is
substantially reduced intensity of IR radiation being applied to the polymer pipe.
[190]
The disclosure in the ‘376 Patent is not so
insufficient so as to render it invalid. The expert evidence was that
irradiation using 1.2 µm “substantially reduces”
wavelengths at polyethylene’s absorption peaks by necessary implication, as the
intensity of IR radiation drops significantly from its peak once it reaches 3.3-3.6
µm and 6.7-6.9 µm. However, the invalidity of the filter claims means that the
only remaining preferred embodiment is applying IR radiation at 1.2 µm – the
wavelength emitted by a common tungsten filament IR lamp. This being the only
remaining means to achieve elimination has implications for determining the
appropriate breadth of certain claims and for the ‘376 Patent’s validity in
terms of anticipation and obviousness, as discussed below.
[191]
Although the filter claims have been above
invalidated for inutility, I also find that claims 2 and 3 and all of claims 4
to 18, as they depend on either claim 2 or 3, are invalid on the basis of
insufficient disclosure, as they do not enable a POSITA at the relevant date to
understand what type of filter to use in order to achieve the benefits promised
by use of filters.
[192]
The suggestion that a POSITA might have been
able to go to an outside IR lamp supplier or filter supplier to try to find out
what might work does not alleviate the inutility of the filter claims or the
insufficiency of the disclosure relating to the use of filters. The POSITA must
be able, in light of their common general knowledge, to make the same
successful use of the invention as the inventor could at the time of the
application, having only the specification (Teva, above, at para 50).
[193]
In the instant case, the specification and
claims refer to filter materials that do not filter IR wavelengths at the
desired absorption peaks to carry out the patent’s teaching of how to eliminate
wavelengths. Nor would a POSITA understand how to do so without difficulty and significant
experimentation: none of the expert evidence suggested the POSITA would have
knowledge of IR filtering characteristics of various materials; and the POSITA has
only a basic understanding of IR apparatus, which may or may not include
the presence of filters.
[194]
The ‘376 Patent states the rest of the preferred
embodiment of the invention, except the vertical orientation of the IR zones,
is “quite conventional” and the other claims
were not contentious at trial for insufficient disclosure.
[195]
I do however find that claims 1 and 19 are
broader than any invention made or disclosed. The claims teach elimination of
wavelengths corresponding to absorption peaks of the polymer. However, the only
way elimination may be achieved is by applying IR radiation substantially
around 1.2 µm, as using filters does not work. The claims omitted mention of this
essential requirement for elimination, and were therefore broader than the
invention made or described and are invalid.
[196]
Furthermore, since the evidence at trial was
that the benefits of the invention are lost without the vertical orientation in
the extrusion line, and that a crosslinking additive was essential for
crosslinking, only the claims that (i) include the vertical orientation of the
IR apparatus as an element used to achieve the promised advantage of
contactless heating, and (ii) include the use of a crosslinking additive, such
as organic peroxide, are valid, and are not broader than the invention made or
disclosed in the patent. They are:
a)
process claims 16 (as it depends on 9-15), 17
and 18;
b)
apparatus claims 25 (as it depends on 24, 23,
22, and 19), 26, 27, 28, 29 (as it depends from 25-28), 30, 31, 32, 33 (as it
depends from 25-32), 34, 35 (as it depends from 25-34), 38 (as it depends from
25-35).
[197]
While the Defendants also seek to impugn the use
of Figure 4 of the ‘376 Patent, given the uncertainty introduced by reference
to the number “1.44” at the bottom of the
y-axis, I am satisfied on the evidence that a POSITA would understand Figure 4 as
demonstrative of where the primary or highest absorption peaks are located for
polyethylene. The mid-IR spectrum being shown is appropriate and, despite some
discourse between the experts, the evidence conveys the transmission profile is
not affected by the thickness of the sample used to generate the profile.
[198]
The relevant date for determining anticipation
is September 20, 1996.
[199]
As set out by Justice Rothstein of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Sanofi, above, both disclosure and enablement are
required for a prior art reference or prior use to be held to anticipate a
claim in a patent. When considering the step of disclosure, the question is
whether the invention as claimed, including its special advantages, is
disclosed in the prior art (also see Bell Helicopter-Texton v Eurocopter,
2013 FCA 219 at para 107 [Bell Helicopter, FCA]). Once determined that
the subject matter of the invention has been disclosed in the prior art, the
question for the purposes of enablement is whether the skilled person would be
able to work the invention without undue burden (Sanofi, above, at paras
26, 37).
[200]
The Plaintiff’s position is that as a result of
experimentation under a High Speed PEX project, the team of inventors of the
‘376 Patent developed a contactless process using IR crosslinking ovens to
manufacture high quality PEX pipes. That process is allegedly much faster than
the previously used Engel method and produced a better quality pipe than the
previous PEXEP method. While some argument was made about the admissibility of
third party statements in foreign patent file wrappers, I agree with the
Plaintiff that such statements are inadmissible as hearsay, as not applying in
Canada under the doctrine of file wrapper estoppel, and as not being admissions
of the Plaintiff.
[201]
As a preliminary comment, the Defendants’
experts, Drs. Boreman and Dutcher, both admitted during cross-examination that
their opinions and analysis were based solely on consideration of claims 1 and
19 of the ‘376 Patent. Their evidence must be viewed with that limitation in
mind, and is not afforded weight in assessing the remaining claims in issue, as
they failed to consider claims 2 to 18 and 20 to 38.
[202]
As well, Plaintiff’s counsel established during
cross-examination of the Defence experts that excerpts and documents between
their respective reports were equivalent, and were chosen by and discussed with
counsel. For instance, only two of the nine documents Dr. Dutcher referred to in
his report were found by him, with the remaining seven having been provided by
counsel.
[203]
Undoubtedly, consultation and collaboration
between expert witnesses and counsel is a necessary component of litigation,
particularly in highly technical cases (Moore v Getahun, 2015 ONCA 55,
at paras 55-66). Nonetheless, I share Justice Barnes’ concern as expressed in Astrazeneca
Canada Inc v Apotex Inc, 2015 FC 322, regarding the approach taken by
experts in assessing prior art. Experts are expected to conduct their own
prior art searches, and not simply rely on documents provided by counsel. As
Justice Barnes explained at paragraph 231 of that judgment:
[a]n expert who carries out an obviousness
analysis largely or solely on the strength of prior art references selected by
retaining counsel runs a real risk of offering a hindsight opinion. A thorough
prior art review necessarily includes a search for all of the available
relevant literature whether it supports inventiveness or not. It requires
consideration of relevant art in the larger context of other possible pathways
to the patent solution or to ideas that point away from that solution.
[204]
The experts’ prevailing obligation is to
maintain impartiality while fulfilling their proper role of assisting the Court,
and the lack of independent research on the part of some experts in the present
case has been considered in assessing the weight afforded their opinions on the
issues of anticipation and obviousness.
[205]
While the Defendants refer to some 33 references
in their pleading as prior art (at least for obviousness), at trial they relied
only on the four references outlined above for both issues of anticipation and
obviousness, consisting of the IR Handbook, Electric IR Heating, Polymer Processing
and the ‘624 Patent.
[206]
For the below assessment of anticipation and
obviousness, it must be kept in mind that since the filter claims are invalid,
the only effective way the ‘376 Patent teaches the POSITA to eliminate
wavelengths is via irradiation of IR radiation emitting wavelengths
substantially around 1.2 um, otherwise characterized in the prior art as “short-wave” radiation. Although the claims above found
to be inutile will not be considered in light of the prior art below, I have
examined the claims found to be overbroad. Although I disagree with the
Defendants’ characterization of the invention as not including the vertical
orientation aspect of the extrusion process, even had such claims not been
found overbroad for failing to include vertical orientation, they were
anticipated or obvious in light of the prior art.
[207]
The evidence revealed that the IR Handbook was
consulted regularly by those in the field at the relevant time. This prior art
reference discloses various aspects of the ‘376 Patent:
a)
It describes use of short wave radiation to heat
plastics, which Defence experts find is analogous to the ‘376 process of
removing wavelengths corresponding to absorption peaks – the ‘376 Patent simply
describes the underlying physical phenomena occurring when irradiating certain
plastics with short-wave IR radiation.
b)
Figures and explanations in the IR Handbook
would allow a POSITA to determine that by irradiating with short-wave IR, there
will be a corresponding reduction of radiation at wavelengths further from this
peak, including at the 3 and 6 µm peaks (p 46).
c)
The IR Handbook also discloses the same special
advantages of applying short-wave IR radiation to heat polymers as the ‘376
Patent, namely, rapid, uniform, heating without surface damage. For example, it
states that short-wave IR is “absorbed deep down into
the material and not only on the surface”, that “rapid
heating right through the material is achieved”, and that “it is necessary to
heat the entire material evenly” (see pp 48, 10, 28).
d)
The information on selection and operation of IR
lamps would enable a POSITA to determine which to use for producing short-wave
IR radiation. For instance, the IR Handbook describes that “IR lamps work at a nominal temperature of 2400 K and 3000 K
… this provides maximum intensity at wavelengths of 1.2 and 1.0 µm
respectively” (p 6).
[208]
I find on a balance of probabilities that the
above-listed information provides the necessary disclosure such that the POSITA
would understand what is being taught and would know the special advantages as
described in the ‘376 Patent. The IR Handbook actually provides more
detail regarding selection and operation of IR lamps than does the ‘376 Patent,
and the skilled person would be able to carry out what is disclosed in claim 1
and 19 with minimal trial and error, such that by referring to the IR Handbook
a POSITA would necessarily infringe those claims.
[209]
Although the IR Handbook does not disclose the
need to substantially reduce wavelengths at the absorption peaks of a polymer,
as described in the ‘376 Patent, I agree with Dr. Boreman’s opinion that such a
characterization is simply an inevitable consequence of irradiating polymers
with short-wave IR. The POSITA also does not actively eliminate wavelengths in the
‘376 invention: he or she radiates with 1.2 µm, and achieves that as a matter
of course.
[210]
The IR Handbook discloses the temperature of the
IR lamp that provides maximum intensity at wavelengths of 1.2 µm (p 6). It also
describes regulation of radiation power (p 10). Considering the evidence that
the POSITA would refer to ASTM standards to determine the required degree of
crosslinking, claim 22 is both disclosed and enabled.
[211]
The IR Handbook describes the IR heater unit,
explaining that it consists of a reflector body and a tubular IR lamp. Figure
10 on page 6 describes the different types of reflectors, which create either a
parabolic or elliptical cross-section, and even provides further technical data
for selection of reflectors. Accordingly, claim 32 is both enabled and
disclosed.
[212]
I also find that the IR Handbook anticipates
claims 33 and 34. It discloses use of an IR lamp for radiation (claim 33) and
also discloses examples of directed radiation, which exemplify the symmetrical
arrangement of IR lamps around the irradiated material (claim 34) (IR Handbook,
p 11). The information provided in the IR Handbook is sufficiently enabling,
and indeed more detailed than the ‘376 Patent.
[213]
Thus, I find that the IR Handbook anticipates
claims 1, 19, 22, 32, 33 and 34.
[214]
I also find that this reference, when considered
alongside the ‘624 Patent, renders many of the claims of the ‘376 Patent
obvious, as discussed below.
[215]
Electric IR Heating mentions that selection of
the appropriate wavelength is particularly important for processing plastics,
such as polyethylene, as most thermoplastic polymers have similar but selective
absorption characteristics. It states that “medium or
short wave will penetrate plastic more readily and therefore reduce the possibility
of scorching the surface” (p 105), and it also describes that short-wave
tubes operate at a temperature of 2200 ºC, “corresponding
to a peak wavelength of 1.2 microns” (p 41). However, the reference does
not direct or enable a POSITA to know which wavelengths in the mid or short-IR
range to select for plastics heating, and more than simple experimentation
would be required to determine the appropriate wavelength.
[216]
The disclosure in Electric IR Heating is
insufficient to anticipate any claims of the ‘376 Patent.
[217]
Although Polymer Processing discloses elements
of the key teaching of the ‘376 invention as claimed in claim 1, it does not
disclose all of its elements, nor meet the test of enablement.
[218]
Some special advantages are described: the text
states, with regard to heating a semi-transparent material, such as
polyethylene terephthalate [PET] (p 118):
there are advantages in having the polymer
partially transparent to the incident radiation because the radiation is
absorbed internally in the polymer sample, which provides a more uniform
heating of the material relative to that produced when radiation is absorbed
only at the surface.
[219]
Figure 5.17 of the text displays the absorption
spectra for a 3.8 mm thick sheet of PET, which depicts the radiation curves at
various emitter temperatures. Although a POSITA would be able to determine from
Figure 5.17 the high areas of IR transmittance, and thus where along the IR
spectrum a polymer would be “partially transparent”
to the incident radiation, I find that Polymer Processing does not direct use
of short-wave IR radiation, or provide any reference to the 1.2 µm value
disclosed in the ‘376 Patent. Some experimentation and trial and error would be
necessary.
[220]
Moreover, Polymer Processing, while conveying a
similar principle to the teachings of the ‘376 Patent, is not directive and
cannot be said to “contain so clear a direction that a
POSITA would in every case and without possibility of error be led to the
claimed invention” (Beloit Canada Ltd v Valmet-Dominion Inc (CA),
[1997] 3 FC 497 (FCA) at para 29 [Beloit]).
[221]
Even if disclosure were adequate, I also do not
find that this prior art reference provides sufficient information to enable a
POSITA to make or use the ‘376 invention as disclosed.
[222]
The ‘624 Patent teaches crosslinking of a
polymer-coated cable by simultaneous application of IR radiation and pressure
in a vulcanization tube. It explains that the polymer must have “good perviousness” to the radiation, which according
to Defence experts, is equivalent to the supposed inventive concept of claims 1
and 19 of the ‘376 Patent.
[223]
The ‘624 Patent also discloses the same special
advantages as taught in the invention of the ‘376 Patent, namely “through-heating” and “crosslinking
through the cross-section” (column 4, lines 6-8), “rapid heating” and “rapid
cross-linking” (column 1, lines 66-68). It does not mention good surface
finish.
[224]
Although the ‘376 Patent states much of it is “quite conventional”, and the ‘624 Patent and ‘376
Patents share various parallel features and disclose a similar invention, I do
not find that the ‘624 Patent anticipates the ‘376 Patent. This is because the
claimed invention of the ‘376 Patent is directed to a use (in general,
cross-linking polymers, and in particular, the manufacture of polyethylene
tubes using vertical orientation in the extrusion process) different from that
previously disclosed and enabled in the ‘624 Patent (applying insulation of
crosslinked polymer on a cable conductor by simultaneous application of heat
and pressure in a vulcanization tube) (Abbott Laboratories, above, at
para 75). Furthermore, the essential feature of using a vertical orientation in
order to achieve the benefits of the ‘376 Patent is neither disclosed, nor
enabled in the ‘624 Patent.
[225]
The four-part test for obviousness was set down
by the Supreme Court of Canada in Sanofi, above, at para 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.
[226]
The Supreme Court found that the “obvious to try” test is appropriate in areas of
endeavour where advances are often gained by experimentation, and where
numerous interrelated variables affect the desired result (Sanofi, above,
at para 68). On the evidence before me – that it would be routine for a POSITA
to run standard experimentation by setting up a line to run the process, using
trial and error to obtain the desired results – the obvious to try
considerations apply in this instance. Accordingly, the Court is also to be
cognizant of the following non-exhaustive factors in discerning whether the
‘376 invention would have been obvious to a POSITA at the relevant time (Sanofi,
above, at para 69):
a)
Is it more or less self-evident that what is
being tried ought to work? Are there a finite number of identified predictable
solutions known to persons skilled in the art?
b)
What is the extent, nature and amount of effort
required to achieve the invention? Are routine trials carried out or is the
experimentation prolonged and arduous, such that the trials would not be
considered routine?
c)
Is there a motive provided in the prior art to
find the solution the patent addresses?
[227]
I agree with the Plaintiff that obviousness
remains a difficult test to meet, and that it is still necessary to show that
the skilled person would have come directly and without difficulty to the
invention – hindsight is 20-20, and measuring references to find an invention “obvious” should be scrutinized carefully by the Court
(Bridgeview Manufacturing Inc v 931409 Alberta Ltd (cob Central Alberta Hay
Centre), 2010 FCA 188 at paras 50-51; Sanofi, above, at para 85).
[228]
As also stated by Justice Snider for guidance in
Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc v Apotex Inc, 2009 FC 676 at para 267, aff’d
2011 FCA 300:
As expressed by Justice Rothstein in Sanofi-Synthelabo,
obviousness of the "invention" is to be measured. However, it appears
to me that the assessment must be focused on the "inventive concept of the
claim in question" and not to some larger "invention" that might
be described in the specification of the patent. Otherwise, we would have the
illogical result that a finding of obviousness could invalidate all of the
claims in a patent and not just those in issue. Thus, I will proceed with my
analysis on the basis that the "invention" or "inventive
concept" being examined is limited to those "inventions" as
identified by Claims 1, 2, 3, 6 and 12.
[229]
In applying the Sanofi test, I find that
the differences that exist between the ‘624 Patent and ‘376 Patent, for the
specific claims described below, constitute steps that would have been obvious
to a POSITA at the relevant time in light of their common general knowledge. I
say this bearing in mind the test is that for an invention to be “obvious to try” the evidence must convince the court
on a balance of probabilities that it was more or less self-evident to try to
obtain the invention (Sanofi, above, at para 66; Eli Lilly Canada Inc
v Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC, 2015 FCA 286).
[230]
The ‘624 Patent’s application to polymer
crosslinking in the cable industry is not sufficiently disparate to render its
application to the polymer processing, or even to the tube manufacturing
industries inventive. There is evidence that the cable industry provided the “impetus behind development of various crosslinking
processes” (Seydel Report, Tab G, p 490) and that a POSITA at the relevant
time could and may well have referred to crosslinking plastic methods in the
cable industry to solve the problems addressed by the ‘376 Patent (Dr. Palermo
Cross-Examination).
[231]
As well, it must be remembered that the POSITA
for the ‘376 Patent at the relevant date has knowledge of polymer processing
and extrusion of polymer products generally, not only in relation to
extruded tubes, and is familiar with IR radiation and crosslinking apparatus.
[232]
I find it persuasive that a POSITA, at the
relevant time, looking to rapidly heat and uniformly crosslink polymers to
solve the problems described in the ‘376 Patent, would reasonably consider and
be expected to know prior art references related to polymer processing in the
cable industry, including the ‘624 Patent, which describes crosslinking
polymers using convective/radiative heating. Although the invention in the ‘376
Patent finds particular application in pipe manufacture, the relevant field at
issue in considering the common general knowledge required for the ‘376 Patent
broad claims 1 and 19 is polymer processing, not pipe manufacture specifically.
[233]
In assessing obviousness, the issue is the
nature and extent of the difference between the invention and what has been
disclosed in the prior art or prior use in the relevant industrial field. In my
view, there is little, if any, inventive step by a POSITA who considers the
‘624 Patent, along with the IR Handbook (commonly referenced by those in the
field), and applies the teachings of the two references to polymer processing
generally. In other words, in reading the ‘624 Patent alone or together with
the IR Handbook, in light of the POSITA’s common general knowledge as of the
relevant date, many of the claims of the ‘376 Patent would have been more or
less self-evident to try by the POSITA (Sanofi, above, at para 66).
[234]
The ‘624 Patent renders obvious claims 1 and 19.
It requires that the polymer used must have “good
perviousness for the radiation at the temperature for the extrusion and
cross-linking” (column 2, lines 22-24). Both of the Defendants’ experts
opined that a POSITA would consider that this discloses the same information as
the ‘376 Patent; namely that the wavelengths corresponding to absorption peaks
of the polymer material be eliminated to achieve the articulated benefits of
irradiated heating.
[235]
I agree with this construction, as the POSITA
has a basic understanding of how to calculate IR absorption profiles of
different polymer material, and would know that “good perviousness” indicates
the polymer must be irradiated with wavelengths it transmits, rather than
absorbs (i.e. that the wavelengths corresponding to absorption peaks are
eliminated). As above described in assessing anticipation, the IR Handbook also
makes obvious these claims.
[236]
The ‘624 Patent also specifically directs that
to crosslink polyethylene, it is to be heated using an IR lamp emitting a peak
wavelength of 1.2 μm. This coincides with the information conveyed in the
IR Handbook. The evidence of Dr. Kimmel discloses that the claimed elimination
of the ‘376 Patent will necessarily occur by irradiating polyethylene with this
wavelength. Thus, the ‘624 Patent and the IR Handbook also render obvious
process claims 11, 12 and 13 (as they depend from 9, 10, 11 or 12) and
apparatus claims 33 and 38, which require irradiation with wavelengths outside
certain micron ranges, and which specifically direct irradiating the polymer
using an IR lamp with a wavelength substantially located around 1.2 μm.
[237]
The ‘624 Patent and IR Handbook also render
obvious the invention described in claims 4, 5, 6, 29, 30 and 31 of the ‘376
Patent. In the ‘624 process, the “radiation which
passes through the polymer is reflected back towards the polymer” (claim
4, ‘376 Patent). Dr. Kimmel’s evidence was that the carbon black layer, lining
the inner polymer surface in the ‘624 process, reflects IR at the frequencies
it most absorbs. Radiation passing through the polymer, and being “re-radiated” back through the polymer would signify
to a POSITA that the radiation is “reflected back
towards the polymer” as in the ‘376 Patent. Dr. Kimmel in fact testified
that the inner carbon layer would have the same scientific effect on the
radiation as the aluminum later in the ‘376 Patent. In my view, there is no
inventive step to apply this same principle to pipe, rather than cable, extrusion.
[238]
The ‘624 Patent does not mention that the
reflective layer consists of a mirror having a parabolic or elliptical
cross-section (claim 32), nor does it describe the specific arrangement of the
IR lamps (claim 34), yet such exact positioning was disclosed in the IR
Handbook (pp 6, 11), was “conventional”, and
would have been obvious to a POSITA at the relevant time.
[239]
Moreover, the ‘624 Patent describes polyethylene
as an example of a suitable polymer (column 2, lines 24-25) and teaches that
organic peroxides are used to effect the crosslinking (column 1, lines 11-12;
column 2, lines 30-31). I find that even notwithstanding the dependencies which
affect the validity of claim 8, both claims 8 and 9 would have been obvious to
a POSITA at the relevant time. Although the ‘624 Patent describes LDPE (column
3, line 46), Dr. Palermo testified that high, medium and low-density
polyethylene (HDPE, MDPE and LDPE) would all have similar absorption peaks and
I find the ‘376 Patent sufficiently general that the claimed invention would
also apply to crosslinking LDPE.
[240]
Application of nitrogen or another inert gas to
the extruded polymer cable-coating is also described in the ‘624 Patent (column
2, line 67 – column 3, lines 1-2), and the evidence shows that it was commonly
used to prevent oxidation during extrusion processes. There is nothing
inventive regarding its use in the ‘376 Patent, and claims 14, 24 and 28 would
have been self-evident to a POSITA.
[241]
The ‘624 process also discloses continuous
extrusion of the polymer-coated cable through the IR zones; claim 15 is
obvious.
[242]
Claim 22 describes the apparatus in which the
power of the IR zones is regulated to achieve the desired degree of
crosslinking. The ‘624 Patent directs that the temperature of the IR lamps
operate at 2100 ºC, thus providing radiation with wavelengths of 1.2 µm (column
3, lines 50-55) – this constitutes regulation of the IR zones. The IR Handbook
also provides information on selection and operation of IR lamps and describes
the temperatures that provide a maximum intensity of IR radiation at
wavelengths of 1.2 and 1.0 µm respectively (p 6). Although the ‘624 Patent and
other references do not indicate a desired degree of crosslinking, evidence at
trial indicated the ASTM standards not only suggest but require that a POSITA
understand the requisite degree of crosslinking to be achieved.
[243]
The ‘624 Patent and the other prior art
references relied on by the Defendants at trial do not specifically indicate
the means for feeding the crosslinkable polymer material through the IR zones,
as set out in claim 23 of the ‘376 Patent. Nor is there mention of an extruder
being placed before the IR zone, as in claim 35. However, the POSITA has the
common general knowledge of polymer processing and extrusion of polymer
products at the relevant date, and of IR apparatus used for crosslinking. The
‘376 Patent admits much of the invention is “quite
conventional” and I do not find either of these claims involves
inventive ingenuity.
[244]
Thus, in summary, I find that the ‘624 Patent
and the IR Handbook render obvious the following process and apparatus claims
of the ‘376 Patent. In my view, the ‘376 invention would have been more or less
self-evident to try and a POSITA at the time, in light of the state of the art
of the common general knowledge as at the claimed date of the invention, would
have come directly and without difficulty to the solution taught by the following
claims of the ‘376 Patent:
a)
Process claims: 1, 4, 5, 6, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14,
15;
b)
Apparatus claims: 19, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 30,
31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 38.
[245]
However, I also find that the ‘624 Patent and the
three other prior art references relied upon by the Defendants do not teach,
nor render obvious, the subject matter of the following claims of the ‘376
Patent:
a)
Claim 10: That the crosslinking additive
consists of azo-compounds.
b)
Claim 20: None of the prior art references
relied upon mention that the IR zone consists of part of a forming tool, made
of material transparent to IR radiation.
c)
Claims 16, 17, 18 and 25-28 relate to vertical
orientation of the IR zones, and are not alluded to in the ‘624 Patent, or in
the other prior art references analyzed. I do not find the claims obvious in
light of these references.
[246]
I note that there is reference within one of the
prior art documents, Plastics Extrusion Technology (1988), produced in Mr.
Seydel’s Report (Exhibit G, p 499) and entered as evidence, to the use and
benefits of vertical orientation of extrusion lines in the context of steam
crosslinking processes for sheathed cable. The reference describes the same
advantages as the ‘376 Patent; that the deformation of the uncrosslinked
extruded cable by gravity forces is negligible, and the process is contactless.
[247]
Mr. Seydel opined that this reference would have
made obvious the vertically oriented manufacturing process for pipe in the ‘376
Patent. Not only have I afforded his opinion little if any weight, but I
disagree. There are sufficient differences between the steam crosslinking
vertical configuration and that described in the ‘376 Patent. In the steam
process, the polymer coating of the cable is not crosslinked in both
directions, and the text describes that such vertical lines are about 75 meters
high and require appropriate tower-like buildings. The ‘376 process and
apparatus, by having the PEX pipe deflected 180º by the wheel at the top,
avoids this problem. As well, the ‘376 configuration crosslinks the polymer in
both directions using IR radiation.
[248]
Dr. Kimmel testified that the skilled person in
1995 knew that gravity forces have a reduced effect on deformation of a just-extruded
material travelling in a vertical rather than horizontal orientation. As well,
Dr. Palermo testified that having
the extruded tube travel up and then down is a straightforward, efficient and
logical design choice. However, all of the prior art
addressing extruded pipes used horizontal heating, and the steam-process did
not crosslink in both directions. Simplicity does not negate invention, and the
evidence has not explained, directly or by implication, why the vertical
orientation and apparatus as described in the ‘376 Patent was not discovered or
used by others for IR heating of polymers, or pipe extrusion processes
previously (Janssen-Ortho, above, at para 113; Bayer AG v
Apotex Inc, 2007 FCA 243 at para 25).
[249]
The ‘624 Patent’s
relevance to the POSITA for the ‘376 invention, despite its application to the
cable industry, derives from the inventions’ otherwise highly analogous
features. The broad application of the ‘376 invention,
which is not limited to pipes, does not remedy the numerous differences between
the vertical extrusion process as described in the ‘376 Patent and in Plastics Extrusion
Technology. I do not find this reference would have made obvious, or obvious to
try the vertical orientation as described in the ‘376 Patent.
[250]
While the Defendants maintained that all claims,
1-50, of the ‘376 Patent were invalid, no evidence was led regarding the
validity of any claims above 38. Given claims 39-50 are not at issue for
infringement, and my finding that some of the claims of the ‘376 Patent alleged
to be infringed are valid, there is no need to be decide validity of claims not
in issue and on which no evidence was led.
[251]
In conclusion, according to the above analysis,
the following claims of the ‘376 Patent remain valid, and are at issue for
infringement:
a)
Process claims: 16 (as it depends from claims 9-15),
17;
b)
Apparatus claims: 25 (as depends from 19, 22-24),
26, 27.
[252]
Although only the above claims are valid, the
expert evidence on infringement relating to claims upon which these valid
claims depend remains relevant.
[253]
Dr. Palermo found that all of the elements of
claims 1 and 19 of the ‘376 Patent are present in Pexcor’s manufacturing
process and the apparatus used therefor. Pexcor’s PEX pipe is a “polymer material”, being made of 99.0% HDPE, and
Pexcor uses IR radiation as the heat source in its manufacturing process.
[254]
The ovens used by Pexcor (and provided by
Crosslink) have IR zones, each comprised of four inward-facing Solaronics
monocassettes, containing IR lamps. The IR zones are operated (upon recommendation
by Crosslink) at power levels of 60-75%, with a target temperature of 1372 ºC,
such that the peak intensity of IR radiation emitted is in the range of 1.5-1.7
µm.
[255]
The skilled person would know that the
characteristic curve of emitted IR radiation declines in intensity further from
its peak at 1.5-1.7 µm. Thus, in Pexcor’s process, the IR radiation applied to
the polymer pipe at polyethylene’s absorption peaks is substantially reduced,
amounting to “elimination” of the wavelengths
corresponding to the absorption peaks for polyethylene.
[256]
Pexcor’s process also infringes other dependent
claims of the ‘376 Patent. It irradiates polyethylene using wavelengths outside
the ranges 3.3-3.6 µm and 6.7-6.9 µm, and outside the range 2-10 µm. As well, a
substantial amount of the IR radiation emitted in Pexcor’s process is located
around 1.2 µm. This analysis is based upon the curve of IR source temperature
versus wavelength, which shows that approximately 66% of IR radiation relative
to the peak is reduced at 1.2 µm in the curve corresponding to the temperature
of 1327 ºC.
[257]
Some of Pexcor’s products are flushed with
nitrogen to prevent oxidation during crosslinking, which would reach the inner
surfaces of the pipe. As well, the extrusion and feeding of pipe through the IR
zones in Pexcor’s process is continuous.
[258]
Dr. Palermo finds that claims 16, 17, 25, 26 and
27, relating to vertical orientation of the IR zones (the claims which remain
valid), are also infringed in Pexcor’s process and apparatus. The Key West video
of Pexcor’s extrusion line shows that following extrusion, pipes are fed vertically
upwards, around an upper turning wheel and travel vertically downwards through
eight IR zones.
[259]
Dr. Kimmel reviewed and described Pexcor’s
process and apparatus to manufacture PEX pipe, as outlined above at paragraphs
26 and 27 of this judgement. In his view, akin to that of Dr. Palermo, Pexcor
infringes all of the process and apparatus claims at issue.
[260]
Despite Dr. Kimmel’s opinion that Pexcor’s use of
an IR source substantially around 1.2 µm amounts to “substantial
reduction” and thus infringement of the ‘376 Patent, on
cross-examination, Dr. Kimmel agreed that various factors affect operation of
the IR lamps and the effective radiation they release, such as the type of lamp
and length of filaments. The ‘376 Patent does not specifically indicate the
type of lamp, or length of the filament: it only provides an example that lamps
having wavelengths of about 1.2 µm could be used as sources for IR radiation
(‘376 Patent, page 9, lines 37, 38).
[261]
Dr. Kimmel stated that some trial and error is
required to determine if infringement has occurred: one must determine the
degree of crosslinking and examine the surface finish properties. In his
opinion, it would be routine for a POSITA to run standard experimentation by
setting up a line to run the process, using trial and error to obtain the
desired results, notwithstanding the expense to do so.
[262]
Dr. Boreman admitted to have based his opinion
with respect to anticipation, obviousness and infringement only on claims 1 and
19 and he did not consider any other claims. These claims have been invalidated
on the basis of overbreadth, as well as obviousness and anticipation, and thus
Dr. Boreman’s opinion on the issue of infringement is not necessary.
[263]
Similarly, Dr. Dutcher admitted his infringement
analysis only assessed claims 1 and 19, and is more limited than the other
experts’ reports. I agree. For the above reasons regarding why Dr. Boreman’s
opinion is irrelevant to the present infringement analysis of the remaining
valid claims, I also conclude the same for Dr. Dutcher.
[264]
The only claims of the ‘376 Patent which remain
valid and are alleged to be infringed by Uponor are the claims relating to
vertical extrusion through the IR zones: process claims 16 and 17 and apparatus
claims 25, 26 and 27.
[265]
The evidence before the Court establishes that
Pexcor carries out a process to make, use and sell extruded PEX pipe. Pexcor
irradiates the polymer material (HDPE combined with an organic peroxide), with IR
radiation such that the most significant absorption peaks of polyethylene, at
3.3-3.6 µm and 6.7-6.9 µm, are substantially reduced, or in terms of the ‘376
Patent as properly construed, “eliminated”.
[266]
I largely agree with Dr. Palermo’s infringement
analysis in respect of the remaining valid claims at issue.
[267]
The Key West video footage of Pexcor’s
manufacturing line in evidence demonstrates that in the Pexcor process, the pipe
is extruded horizontally and directed 90o where it travels vertically
up through four IR crosslinking zones (claims 16, 25, 26). At the top of the
oven, the pipe is redirected 180o around a wheel, and subsequently
travels downward through four more IR zones (claims 17, 27). This is confirmed
by the read-in discovery evidence of Pexcor and Heatlink’s representatives.
[268]
In reviewing the evidence and features of the
Pexcor manufacturing process and apparatus used in Canada, I find claims 16,
17, 25, 26 and 27 of the ‘376 Patent infringed.
[269]
Heatlink sells and distributes PEX pipe
manufactured by Pexcor’s infringing process. Given my finding that Pexcor has
infringed the ‘376 Patent, Heatlink is likewise liable for selling the PEX pipe
made using an infringed patented process and apparatus.
[270]
There is no evidence of direct infringement by
Crosslink. While Crosslink sold IR ovens to Pexcor, these ovens were sold
freight-on-board [FOB] in Finland, and therefore there was no direct making,
using or selling any of the patented ‘376 apparatus or carrying out of the ‘376
patented process by Crosslink in Canada (Beloit, above).
[271]
As a preliminary argument, Crosslink takes the
position that it has no liability for any alleged activities falling outside
the six year limitation period (Patent Act, s.55.01; Federal Courts
Act, RSC 1985, c f-7, s.39(2)). Since this action was commenced on March
21, 2011, Crosslink submits that no action lies for any alleged infringing
activities prior to March 21, 2005. This includes any claim for inducing
infringement as alleged against Crosslink.
[272]
Though unfortunate to preclude success of this
argument on a procedural basis, Crosslink cannot rely on a limitation defence
disentitling Uponor to relief in the present case – notwithstanding that eleven
years passed from when Crosslink sold its first oven to Pexcor and the
commencement of this action – as Crosslink did not plead any limitation defence
(Merck & Co v Apotex, 2006 FC 524 at para 173, rev’d on other
grounds 2006 FCA 323; Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, s.183(c)).
[273]
The Plaintiff’s fact and expert witnesses
provided no evidence regarding Crosslink’s liability for induced infringement.
Thus, evidence of inducement by Crosslink must arise from the read-ins from
discovery admitted at trial.
[274]
The test for inducing patent infringement was
most recently articulated by the Federal Court of Appeal in Weatherford
Canada Ltd v Corlac Inc, 2011 FCA 228 at para 162 [Weatherford]:
It is settled law that one who induces or
procures another to infringe a patent is guilty of infringement of the patent.
A determination of inducement requires the application of a three-prong test.
First, the act of infringement must have been completed by the direct
infringer. Second, the completion of the acts of infringement must be
influenced by the acts of the alleged inducer to the point that, without the
influence, direct infringement would not take place. Third, the influence must
knowingly be exercised by the inducer, that is, the inducer knows that this
influence will result in the completion of the act of infringement: Dableh v
Ontario Hydro, [1996] 3 FC 751, paras 42, 43 (CA), leave to appeal refused,
[1996] SCCA No 441; AB Hassle v Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare),
2002 FCA 421, 22 CPR (4th) 1, para 17 (CA), leave to appeal refused, [2002]
SCCA No 531; MacLennan v Les Produits Gilbert Inc, 2008 FCA 35, 67 CPR
(4th) 161, para. 13. The test is a difficult one to meet.
[275]
To succeed in proving inducement of infringement
of the ‘376 Patent by Crosslink, the Plaintiff has the onus of proof, and must
prove all of the following elements:
a)
one or both of the Heatlink Defendants must have
directly infringed the ‘376 Patent in Canada;
b)
Crosslink must have influenced the actions of at
least one of Heatlink or Pexcor to the point that, without the influence of
Crosslink, direct infringement would not take place;
c)
Crosslink must have known that its influence
would result in the completion of at least one act of infringement of the ‘376
Patent by at least one of Heatlink or Pexcor.
[276]
The first part of this test has clearly been
satisfied: Pexcor and Heatlink have directly infringed the valid claims of the
‘376 Patent.
[277]
Regarding the second prong of the test, it is
well established that it is not an infringement to manufacture or sell a
component intended to be used for the purpose of infringing a patented process,
without more. This is so even if the alleged inducer has actual knowledge of a
component’s ultimate use as an infringement. Such activity becomes inculpatory
when the seller indicates to its clients the use to be made of the component,
and makes “its clients aware of the fact that its
product is intended to work the patented invention, which is the only reason
they are buying it” (MacLennan v Gilbert Tech Inc, 2008 FCA 35 at
para 40). Simply put, the inducer must actively do something leading the direct
infringer to infringe.
[278]
The Plaintiff submits that “but for” Crosslink’s
activities, Pexcor would not have directly infringed the patented process and
apparatus. Crosslink provided continuing advice, instructions, warranties,
service and training to Pexcor such that Pexcor was able to achieve the
required standard of crosslinking and successfully manufacture PEX pipe.
[279]
Furthermore, the Plaintiff contends the
situation is not analogous to Slater Steel Industries Ltd v R Payer Co
(1968), 55 CPR 61 (Ex Ct), in which a power imbalance between the parties led
the Exchequer Court to conclude that a “one-man show”
could not have induced a “giant power entity” or
Government agency to infringe the patent at issue. The Plaintiff submits that
Pexcor was not a sophisticated or experienced entity in the PEX manufacturing
business, and that they were wholly reliant upon Crosslink to carry out the
patented process using the Crosslink ovens.
[280]
In terms of Crosslink’s “influence”
over Pexcor and Heatlink, the evidence establishes that:
a)
between 2000 to 2012, Crosslink sold to Pexcor
IR crosslinking ovens for the purpose of manufacturing PEX pipe;
b)
Mr. Gary Schmidt stated he obtained information
regarding polyethylene’s absorption peaks and peroxide from Mr. Heino, and also
from Pexcor’s own research;
c)
Mr. Heino went to Pexcor’s facilities with an
electrician to advise on the first oven’s use – they did not produce pipe with
optimized crosslinking density or other properties at that time;
d)
Crosslink’s subcontractor attended Pexcor’s
facility to install and interface the software of the crosslinking ovens with
Pexcor’s equipment, and Crosslink provided assistance and ongoing advice to
Pexcor personnel on how to operate the Crosslink ovens;
e)
Crosslink entered into a written agreement dated
March 30, 2001, which included a warranty that Crosslink is exclusive owner of
a pipe patent (PCTF199/00570) and that Crosslink will make arrangements for
construction and assembly of ovens to produce pipes based on the patent;
f)
From 2005 to the present, various of the
crosslinking ovens were modified by Crosslink’s subcontractor;
g)
Crosslink gave Pexcor several instructive documents,
including electrical drawings, the IR Handbook (which Pexcor used to operate
and optimize the Crosslink ovens), photos, a manual pertaining to
monocassettes, and a powerpoint presentation regarding the manufacturing
process of PEX A pipe;
h)
Crosslink directed Pexcor to set the power of
the crosslinking oven at a power range of 65 to 85% to obtain the desired
degree of crosslinking (70%, as required by ASTM standards);
[281]
Although Crosslink evidently provided involved
support to Pexcor, commencing with sale of the first oven, I do not find the
evidence is sufficient to prove that Pexcor and Heatlink’s direct infringement would
not have taken place without Crosslink’s influence. Partial responsibility is
not enough.
[282]
Moreover, while Mr. Heino initially directed
Pexcor to set the power levels of the IR lamps in the crosslinking ovens at 65%
to 85%, his discovery evidence was that the power level of the ovens depends on
a variety of factors such as pipe thickness and the speed of the pipe’s journey
through the oven, which expert evidence conveyed depends on the type and
setting of extruder being used. There is not simply one power, and even the
power of the IR lamps in different zones can vary and can be set for differing
functions.
[283]
Mr. Heino also stated he had advised Pexcor that
all IR lamps be set to the same level, as a “starting
point”, but that the customer, in this instance Pexcor, through trial,
error and experimentation, learns how to optimize the power settings in
different units to achieve the desired result (P-11, p 51).
[284]
The ‘376 invention has various components: it
involves using the correct polymer and peroxide, extrusion, application of
nitrogen (etc.) and of course, irradiation with IR such that the wavelengths
corresponding to the polymer in question have been “eliminated” within the
meaning of the patent. The only portion of the ‘376 invention in which Mr.
Heino is specialized, and upon which he instructed Pexcor, is crosslinking the
pipe once it has been extruded. There are simply too many variables to the
successful execution of the patented process to find that without Crosslink’s
influence, Pexcor would not have infringed the ‘376 Patent.
[285]
It is well established that there is no
infringement of a patent in selling an article that does not in itself infringe
the patent even when the vendor knows that the purchaser buys the article for
the purpose of using it in the infringement of the patent (Beloit, above,
at para 16, citing Beloit Canada Ltée/Ltd v Valmet OY, [1988] FCJ No 103
at para 30 (FCA), leave to appeal to SCC refused, 1988 CarswellNat 1494 (WL)).
[286]
Furthermore, I have difficulty with the
proposition that by Crosslink responding to a purchase request from a customer
(Pexcor/Heatlink) and supplying one of the, albeit significant, components of
the ‘376 apparatus, this translates into Crosslink having exercised sufficient
influence over Pexcor and Heatlink to constitute inducement to the point that,
without their influence, direct infringement of the ‘376 process and apparatus would
not have taken place.
[287]
Since I have not found that the second part of
the Weatherford test has been proven, there is no need to consider
whether Crosslink knew that its influence would result in the completion of at
least one act of infringement of the ‘376 Patent by at least one of Heatlink or
Pexcor.
[288]
Likewise, given that the evidence failed to
establish that Crosslink met the stringent test for inducing infringement,
there is also no need to reflect upon the Plaintiff’s allegation that Pexcor’s
on-going direct infringement is caused by the continuum of Crosslink’s root
inducing acts.
[289]
The Defendants, Heatlink and Pexcor, also allege
that Uponor is guilty of laches and acquiescence by failing to bring this
action until March 2011, over at least six years, if not longer, from learning
of the Defendants’ alleged infringement in Canada of the ‘376 Patent.
[290]
The doctrine of laches does not apply to legal
remedies where there is a statutory limitation period and the Plaintiff
commenced its claim within that period (Remo Imports Ltd v Jaguar Cars Ltd,
2005 FC 870 at paras 51-52 [Remo]). In the case of an action for patent
infringement, the relevant limitation on the amount of damages that can be
recovered under section 55.01 of the Patent Act is 6 years:
55.01 No remedy may be awarded for an act of
infringement committed more than six years before the commencement of the
action for infringement.
[291]
As well, although there is evidence suggesting
that the Plaintiff was aware that Pexcor and Heatlink may have been infringing
the ‘376 Patent since at least September of 2005, “a
patentee is not required to sue at the first drop of the hat” (Eurocopter
v Bell Helicopter Textron Canada Ltée, 2012 FC 113 at para 401, aff’d Bell
Helicopter, FCA, above, citing Sandvik AB v Windsor Machine Co
(1986), 8 CPR (3d) 433 (Fed TD) at page 443).
[292]
To show acquiescence, there are four
requirements:
a)
something more than mere delay is required and
silence alone is not sufficient to bar a proceeding;
b)
the rights holder must know of its right and
know of the other party’s breach of that right;
c)
the rights holder must encourage the other party
to continue the breach; and
d)
the other party must act to its detriment in
reliance upon the encouragement by the rights holder.
Remo, above, at para 53.
[293]
The Defendants have asserted delay in Uponor’s
commencement of this action. There is no evidence on the record that Uponor
encouraged the Defendants to continue any breach of their patent rights, or
that the Defendants relied upon that encouragement to their detriment.
[294]
Pexcor and Heatlink’s allegations of laches and
acquiescence are inapplicable on the present facts, and provide them no
defence.
[295]
There is no evidence before the Court to sustain
the Defendants’ allegation of unclean hands.
[296]
On August 4, 2015, Prothonotary Aalto issued a
Bifurcation Order, on consent. The terms of that Order were that the issues
respecting the validity and infringement of Canadian Patent No. 2,232,376 and
the remedies – including declaratory relief, injunctive relief and delivery up,
and any entitlement to damages or an accounting of profits – be determined
separately from and prior to quantification issues.
[297]
Since I have held claims 16, 17, 25, 26, and 27
of the ‘376 Patent valid and infringed by Pexcor and Heatlink (with specific
dependencies), the Plaintiff is entitled to a declaration to that effect.
[298]
Claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,
19, 22, 23, 24, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, and 38 of the ‘376 Patent are
invalid for lack of utility, insufficient disclosure, for being broader than
any invention made or disclosed, and for anticipation and/or obviousness, for
the reasons provided above.
[299]
The Plaintiff has failed to prove that Crosslink
either directly or indirectly has infringed or infringes the ‘376 Patent.
[300]
I do not find the Plaintiff is entitled to
delivery up based on the facts of this case. I do find that the Pexcor and
Heatlink Defendants (and any subsidiary and affiliated companies, franchisees,
officers, directors, employees, agents, licensees, successors, assigns and any
other over whom they have control) are enjoined from manufacturing, using,
offering for sale and/or selling to others for their use the apparatus for
heating polymer material that infringes the ‘376 Patent and the PEX pipe made
therefrom until expiry of the ‘376 Patent.
[301]
The Plaintiff, Uponor AB, does not sell any of
the PEX pipe it produces in Canada or North America – the two countries where
Pexcor’s PEX pipe is sold. As well, the evidence is that none of Uponor’s North
American companies (not named as plaintiffs) use the ‘376 invention, nor do
they plan to. Instead, they employ the Engel Method or a modification thereof,
which is in the public domain, to produce PEX pipe.
[302]
This begs the question whether the ‘376 Patent
is an improvement over the Engel Method such that it has resulted in any real
commercial success. The evidence demonstrates that the ‘376 patented process
and apparatus were not commercialized until well over 10 years following its
development, and that other than limited use in two of Uponor’s PEX
manufacturing plants, in Sweden and in Poland, the Uponor Group of companies
does not use the ‘376 patented technology.
[303]
Despite my finding that a few claims of the ‘376
Patent remain valid and are infringed, if anything, the evidence shows that the
‘376 Patent was really only a slight improvement on the existing technology for
polymer processing.
[304]
However, I do not feel I can properly dismiss
any entitlement to damages on the part of the Plaintiff, without the Plaintiff
having the benefit of attempting to show evidentiary proof of those damages on
a reference after trial, pursuant to the bifurcation Order. Thus, the quantum
of the Plaintiff’s damages arising from Pexcor and Heatlink’s infringement will
be left for a determination on issues of quantification.
[305]
To be entitled to an accounting of profits, the
Plaintiff must show some basis for the exercise of equity (Janssen-Ortho,
above, at para 132). In the instant case, the Plaintiff has shown none, and I
will not award the requested election of profits.
[306]
Further, I find no basis whatsoever for the
Plaintiff’s claim for aggravated, punitive and exemplary damages.
[307]
In the event of any monetary award of damages,
pre-judgment interest is allowed. It should not be compounded. The rate of such
interest should be calculated separately for each year since the infringing
activity began, defined as the date of Pexcor’s first commercially successful
manufacture of PEX pipe, at the average annual bank rate established by the
Bank of Canada at the minimum rate at which it makes short term advances to the
banks listed in listed in Schedule 1 of the Bank Act, SC 1991, c 46.
[308]
Post-judgment interest, not compounded, follows
the establishment of the quantum of damages at the rate of five percent (5%)
established by the Interest Act, RSC 1985, c. I-15, s 4.
I will reserve on any judgement regarding
costs and request that the parties, within two weeks from delivery of these
Reasons, provide written submissions as to costs, addressing matters set out in
Rule 400(3) of this Court, including experts, number of counsel, disbursements,
any offer to settle and any other matter relevant to an award of costs. Those
submissions should not exceed ten (10) pages.