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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Fontem Holdings 1BV & Anor v Ten Motives Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 2752 (Pat) (02 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2015/2752.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2752 (Pat) |
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HP-2015-000027 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
The Rolls Building Fetter Lane EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Fontem Holdings 1BV Fontem Ventures BV |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Ten Motives Limited 10 Motives Limited And Nicocigs Limited Claimants - and - Fontem Holdings 1BV Fontem Ventures BV Defendants |
Defendants |
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Alastair Wilson QC and Matthew Kime (instructed by Beeston Shenton Solicitors Limited) for the Ten Motive Parties
James Abrahams (instructed by Powell Gilbert LLP) for Nicocigs
Hearing dates: 20 and 21 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
"The purpose of this invention is fulfilled with an aerosol electronic cigarette comprising a battery assembly, an atomiser assembly, a liquid storage component and a hollow shell having one or more through-air-inlets. The battery assembly connects electrically with the atomiser assembly, and both are located in the shell. The atomiser assembly includes a porous component and a heating body in the form of a heating wire. The atomiser assembly includes a support member having a run-through hole. The porous component is mounted on the support member and is wound with the heating wire in a part that is on the side in the axial direction of the run-through hole. The liquid storage component fits with the porous component of the atomiser assembly and is located in one end of the shell which is detachable"
"This invention will bring the following benefits…..(2) For this invention, the battery assembly and atomiser assembly are directly installed inside the shell, and then connected with the cigarette bottle assembly. That is, there is just one connection between two parts, resulting in a very simple structure. For use or change, you just need to plug the cigarette holder into the shell, providing great convenience. When the nicotine liquid in the cigarette bottle assembly is used up or the cigarette bottle assembly is damaged and needs to be changed, the operation will be extremely easy."
"…this patent provides an aerosol electronic cigarette, which includes a battery assembly, an atomiser assembly and a cigarette bottle assembly, and also includes a shell (a) which is hollow and integrally formed. The battery assembly connects with the atomiser assembly and both are located in the shell. The cigarette bottle assembly is located in one end of the shell, which is detachable. The cigarette bottle assembly fits with the atomiser assembly. The shell has through-air-inlets."
"[1] An aerosol electronic cigarette comprising
1.1 a battery assembly,
1.2 an atomizer assembly,
1.3 a liquid storage component (9) and
1.4 a hollow shell (a,b) having one or more through-air-inlets (a,1);
[2] wherein the battery assembly connects electrically with the atomizer assembly, and both are located in the shell (a,b);
[3] the atomizer assembly includes a porous component (81) and a heating body in the form of heating wire (83);
characterised in that:
[4] the atomizer assembly includes a support member (82) having a run-through hole (821);
[5] the porous component (81) is mounted on the support member (82) and is wound with the heating wire (83) in a part that is on the side in the axial direction of the run-through hole (821); and
[6] the liquid storage component
6.1 fits with the porous component of the atomiser assembly and
6.2 is located in one end of the shell (b) which is detachable."
The designations in Claim 1 appear on the figures below:-
" ..it is not uncommon for an application under Part 24 to give rise to a short point of law or construction and, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it."
"However it is necessary to proceed with caution given that the court is not being called upon, when construing a patent, to decide what the words of the patent mean to it, but what they would have been understood to mean by the person skilled in the art. Such an exercise is dependent upon the identity of the person skilled in the art and the knowledge and assumptions which one attributes to him or her… That said, it remains the law that expert evidence is not admitted as to the meaning of ordinary English words which have no special or technical meaning in the art…. It follows from what I have said that, on a summary judgment application … it is necessary for a party who claims that the court is inadequately equipped to decide an issue of construction to identify, perhaps in only quite general terms, the nature of the evidence of the common general knowledge which he proposes to adduce, and to be in a position to explain why that evidence might reasonably be expected to have an impact on the issue of construction."
The point of producing such evidence is to disable 10 Motives from demonstrating to the Court that there is an absence of reality about Fontem's case.
"Where a patentee has used general language in a claim, but has described the invention by reference to a specific embodiment, it is not normally legitimate to write limitations into the claim corresponding to details of the specific embodiment, if the patentee has chosen not to do so. Specific embodiments are merely examples of what is claimed as the invention …"
a) The fact that the application is made in one of three actions already listed for trial is not in this case material: the case management direction was given at a time when this application was known about.
b) The fact that to give summary judgment in this action may affect other actions in which substantially the same issues arise is not in this case significant: JTI, Zandera and Nicocigs could if so minded have brought their own summary judgment applications, and their decision not to do so cannot affect the merits of 10 Motives' application.
c) The fact that interim injunctions have been granted in Germany (presumably on the basis that Fontem had a sufficiently arguable case) does not weigh: I am bound to make my own assessment (even if it runs the risk of producing an outcome that is irreconcilable with the judgment of another EPC Court).
The nub of 10 Motives' argument must be addressed.
a) That neither the Cirro nor the V2 products infringed Claim 1 because they divided into a battery assembly on the one hand and an atomiser and liquid storage assembly on the other, whereas Claim 1 contemplated a different sort of "detachability" ("the detachability point");
b) That the Cirro products did not infringe Claim 1 because they did not utilise a shell with a liquid storage part within the shell ("the liquid storage point"), it being accepted for the purposes of the application that it was arguable that the wadding in the brown barrel of the V2 "cartomiser" was a method of liquid storage located in a shell.
"….there is just one connection between two parts, resulting in a very simple structure. For use or change, you need to plug the cigarette holder into the shell, providing great convenience. When the nicotine liquid in the cigarette bottle assembly is used up or the cigarette bottle assembly is damaged and needs to be changed, the operation will be extremely easy."
It was suggested that in the light of that purpose the person skilled in the art would understand how crucial were the words at integer [6] of the claim that "[the liquid storage component] fits with the porous component of the atomizer assembly and is located in one end of the shell (b) which is detachable". "Detachable" is an ordinary English word. The liquid storage component has to be "detachable" from the atomiser, and this is a feature of the whole invention (not merely of a specific embodiment). In order to achieve the advantage claimed in paragraph [0032] the shell and its liquid storage component has to be "detachable" from the whole of the rest of the device including the atomiser. In the Cirro and the V2 the liquid storage component is not detachable from the atomiser.
" a technically trivial or minor difference between an element of the claim and the corresponding element of the alleged infringement [which] nonetheless falls within the meaning of the claim when read purposively."
That is an evidential point.
a) that the Cirro products do store liquid in a component that comprises the transparent plastic sidewalls of the upper part of the barrel to which the "cap" is attached, and that this falls within the words "… comprising … a liquid storage component and a hollow shell having one or more through-air inlets";
b) that Claim 1 does not require the liquid storage component to be a discrete item such as a "cigarette bottle assembly" and the attempt so to construe it is an attempt to introduce into a generally expressed Claim 1 limitations derived from specific embodiments referred to in other Claims in the Patent;
c) that Fontem is entitled to lead expert evidence as to the technical function of the liquid storage component, which evidence may inform the answer to the question whether the skilled person would understand that any form of liquid storage that fits with the porous component of the atomiser assembly would suffice, or would understand the Patent to require a discrete liquid storage component located inside a hollow shell.
"now more or less inevitable that ASSIA (sic) would have.. to undertake, as the price of resisting … a stay, to repay (in the event of revocation or amendment) any financial relief subsequently obtained."
"A cross-undertaking is appropriate to take account of the possibility that an earlier judgment is wrong (e.g. an interim injunction or an injunction pending appeal). In the present case, revocation by the EPO would not show our judgment to be wrong, or the injunction to have been wrongly granted. A subsequent EPO revocation or amendment would mean that the injunction would become ineffective or have to be discharged from the date of the revocation/amendment but not ab initio. There is no reason for ASSIA to pay for the harm during the period when the injunction was rightly granted."
So whilst the party who obtains financial relief (including, presumably, damages in lieu of an injunction) will be required to give an undertaking covering the possibility of a different conclusion eventually being reached by the EPO, the party who obtains injunctive relief will not be required to give such an undertaking.