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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Blue Gentian LLC & Anor v Tristar Products (UK) Ltd & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 746 (22 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/746.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 746 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (PATENTS COURT)
THE HON MR JUSTICE BIRSS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
____________________
Blue Gentian LLC E Mishan & Sons Inc (trading as Emson) |
Claimants/ Respond-ents |
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- and - |
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Tristar Products (UK) Ltd Tristar Products Inc |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
for the Claimants/Respondents
Roger Wyand QC and Jonathan Hill (instructed by Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP)
for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing date: 16 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
i) in relation to Ragner, he wrongly construed the document and that his errors of construction led him to conclude, wrongly, that their obviousness attack should be rejected as reliant upon hindsight;ii) in relation to McDonald, he again wrongly construed the document and relied upon evidence from Blue Gentian's expert, Mr Sinclair, which he should not have accepted.
The patent
"In the unexpanded state, when not connected to water pressure, the inner tube is in a relaxed condition. There are no forces being applied to expand or stretch it. It has a relatively narrow diameter. In this state the outer tube is ruffled. When the hose is connected to a water supply and the supply turned on, water pressure expands the rubber inner tube. The inner tube will expand laterally (also referred to as radially or circumferentially) and will also expand axially (i.e. along the length of the hose). As the inner tube expands the wall thickness of the inner tube material reduces, in other words the material gets thinner. The radial expansion is constrained by the diameter of the outer tube. The axial expansion is constrained by the length of the outer tube. As the water inflates the inner tube, the hose expands lengthways and the ruffles of the outer tube unfurl until it is smooth (see fig 10). In this state the hose can be used. The hose contains a flow restrictor, which can be a small disc with a narrower bore than the bore of the hose."
"A garden water hose assembly comprising:
(a) A garden water hose assembly comprising:
(b) an outer tube formed from a non-elastic and flexible material and no metal;
(c) an inner tube constructed from an elastic material,
(d) said outer tube and said inner tube each having a first end attached together by a first coupler and a second end attached together by a second coupler;
(e) said outer tube being unattached from said inner tube between said first and second couplers;
(f) said outer tube and said inner tube having a substantially shortened first length in a non-water flow contracted state with said outer tube extending about an outer surface of said inner tube in an undulating state and
(g) [said outer tube and said inner tube having] a substantially longer second length with said outer tube capturing said inner tube in an expanded state upon the application of water pressure to the interior of the elastic inner tube as water flows through the assembly
(h) said inner tube having a larger wall thickness in the contracted state than in the expanded state and the wall thickness decreasing as the hose moves from the contracted to the expanded state, and
(i) wherein a water flow restrictor is provided in or is connected to the second coupler."
Ragner
"[0060] FIG. 4 shows a graph of the different pressure states for the disclosed linearly retractable hose. For the discussion of the graph in FIG. 4, the term "longitudinal bias force" or simply "bias force" is defined to include both the spring bias and any biasing caused by the flexible cover material that actually makes up the hose. In most designs the biasing of the flexible cover material of the hose is designed to be small compared to the biasing caused by the spring. However, in some designs, for special purposes, the cover material may represent a significant portion of the bias force. In fact, if desired, the hose may obtain all its biasing force from the cover material, and not need a separate metal or composite spring at all.
[0061] In FIG. 4, when the interior pressure and exterior pressure of the hose are the same (zero gauge pressure), the hose is in what is called its "natural state", where the spring bias determines whether the hose is extended or retracted. This zero gauge pressure is signified by "0 ambient pressure" at the middle of the graph. Pressures to the left of "0" are vacuum pressure (pressure less-than ambient) and pressures to the right of "0" have positive pressure (pressure greater-than ambient). In general, a pressure hose will only experience pressure values to the right of "0" and vacuum hoses will only experience pressures to the left of "0". However, in some applications, pressure fluctuations may extend outside this range for each type of hose.
[0062] As pressures within the hose change, the state or mode that the hose is in, also changes. Reading from left to right on the graph in FIG. 4, [description re vacuum hose omitted] The pressure hose remains retracted until pressure within the hose increases to gauge pressure P1. At a pressure of P1 the pressure hose is still fully retracted (net longitudinal force negative, trying to retract hose), but the force exerted by the bias force exactly cancels the force exerted by the internal pressure P1. As the hose gauge pressure increases from P1 to P2, the pressure hose extends and reaches its full length at a pressure of P2. Again, if fluid is flowing through the hose, restrictions in the hose (fluid friction) may result in significant differences in pressure at different sections of the hose. At the pressure of P2 the bias force still exactly matches the pressure force (net longitudinal force equals zero), but it can be now fully extended. Above pressure P2 (net longitudinal force positive-tending to extend hose) the pressure hose remains fully extended and cannot extend significantly further because it is restrained by the hose cover material itself. Thus, the hose maintains substantially its fully extended length between pressure P2 and up to its "Max. pressure" which is the maximum pressure the hose can withstand."
"In addition, many types and styles of biasing springs can be used for the hose design. For example, plastic or composite materials can be used for the spring. Even the hose cover material itself can be used as the biasing means if made of a resilient material that provides a consistent restoring force. The biasing spring(s) can also be placed on the interior or exterior of the hose. Even elastic bands can be used to bias a linearly retractable hose."
"60. The skilled person would be interested in Ragner since it is concerned at least in part with garden hoses. The main disclosure of Ragner is a spring based hose extendable and retractable hose. The reader would see the two references to the cover material providing the biasing force in paragraph [0060] and [0107]. The skilled person would not dismiss these passages and would consider them. They might think that using an elastomeric material as the cover material was an idea worth considering further. However there is nothing in Ragner itself which teaches that two distinct cover materials would need to be used in that context.
61. The function of the outer cover material 32 disclosed in the document is to cover the spring and hold inner cover 34 in place on the coils. If there is no spring, there is no need for the outer cover material. With hindsight knowledge of the invention we can see that replacing the spring with an elastomeric cover material might create a problem because there will be nothing to restrain the radial expansion of the inner tube. However I do not think it would be obvious to employ a second, inelastic cover material outside the putative elastic inner material to restrain its radial expansion. The function of that outer layer would be different from the outer cover in Ragner.
62. Moreover it seems to me to involve a further element of hindsight to combine into this reasoning the aspect of paragraph [0057] which discloses an alternative design in which the spring can slide freely with respect to the hose material. The disclosure of sliding freely is the basis for the argument that Ragner implicitly discloses the idea of using two cover materials which are not bonded together along their length. However this teaching about sliding freely and the necessary implication of it has nothing to do with taking forward the reference to using the cover material as the biasing means. They are not linked by Ragner and I see no reason why it was obvious to link them."
McDonald
"[0015] The hose assembly 14 is best illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 and is designed so that the end thereof remote from mask 12 may be coupled with a conventional connector within box 16. The assembly 14 includes an inner, resilient, expandable tube 30 secured to endmost threaded hose fittings 32 and 34, together with an outer sheath 36 formed of woven or braided material. The sheath 36 is secured to the ends of the hose assembly by means of crimp ferrules 38. Thus, the fitting 32 is secured to coupler 24 of mask 12, whereas the opposite fitting 34 is threaded onto the boxmounted gas fitting (not shown).
[0016] In more detail, the tube 30 may be formed of an elastomeric material, and particularly those selected from the group consisting of silicone rubber materials. The sheath on the other hand is preferably formed of "Nomex" flexible fabric; the sheath could also be formed of other suitable materials such as Kevlar, Nylon, or monofilament. The sheath 36 has a length which is two to three times the length of the inner tube 30. As best seen in FIG. 2, in the relaxed condition of the assembly 14, the sheath 36 is in a gathered or shirred condition along the length of the unexpanded tube. However, as depicted in FIG. 3, when a pressurized gas such as oxygen is delivered into the tube 30, it expands in both radial and axial directions. However, the presence of the sheath 36 serves to inhibit and restrict the extent of radial expansion of the tube 30, but permits axial elongation thereof. Preferably, the deployed length of the hose assembly 14 is at least about 1.5 times the relaxed length thereof, and more preferably at least about two times the relaxed length."
"98. Although a garden water hose designer would understand at a conceptual level how the hose in McDonald is supposed to expand in length as a result of gas pressure, I accept Mr Sinclair's evidence that it would not be immediately apparent to a garden water hose designer that the hose would be suitable for use as a garden hose. He said that a garden water hose designer would see McDonald as being small bore, gas-actuated and without a valve. I agree. The garden water hose designer does not know how the mask and regulator works and they do not know what the gas pressure or flow rate would be. Although that information would be readily available to a manufacturer of aircraft equipment, it is not part of the common general knowledge of a garden water hose designer. I have accepted that a hose made according to McDonald by an aircraft equipment manufacturer would in fact expand under domestic water pressure but I am not satisfied this would be obvious to a garden water hose designer reading the document.
99. Tristar submitted that the skilled person would recognise the principle of hose construction exhibited in McDonald and see that it could be adapted with choice of appropriate ready to hand materials, to the field of garden hoses. However in cross-examination Mr Sinclair was doubtful that a practical hose designer would use McDonald as the basis for a new product. I think that is right. Details will be important to a product designer.
100. I think a garden water hose designer presented with McDonald and reading it with interest would be interested in the space saving quality of the idea but the designer would also see a document which was not addressed to him or her. The teaching is concerned with something used in an environment and context a very long way from garden water hoses and subject to considerations which the garden water hose designer would know they knew little about. For all they would know the idea is only realistic because of specific details relating to aircraft oxygen supplies and oxygen masks. They would not be confident the idea would be practical if applied to a garden water hose. Although it is undoubtedly the case that a person skilled in the art could arrive at a product within claim 1 if presented with McDonald, given that the hoses function in the same way, I am not satisfied the unimaginative skilled person working without hindsight would do that. I find that claim 1 is not obvious over McDonald. The same therefore follows for claim 14."
"Tristar submitted that Mr Sinclair accepted that McDonald would be of interest to the garden water hose designer if he was presented with it. However that is not how I understood his evidence (at Day 2 p155 ln5 to 156 ln25). Mr Sinclair's view was that the garden water hose designer would be interested if they thought McDonald did explain how a hose could replace itself back in the box but he thought the skilled person would not understand how it did that. I agree. Just as a manufacturer of aircraft equipment would be concerned that the proposal had not been thought through and might not be practical as I have held above, so a garden water hose designer would have the same concern."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Tomlinson:
Lady Justice Hallett: