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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 >> Handi-Craft Company & Anor v B Free World Ltd & Ors [2008] EWCA Civ 868 (30 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/868.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 868 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE FYSH QC
HC 05C No 00847
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
THE HON MR JUSTICE LEWISON
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(1) Handi-Craft Company (2) New Vent Designs Inc |
Claimants/Part 20 Defendants (Appell-ants) |
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- and - |
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(1) B Free World Ltd (2) Yasmin Berkovitch (3) Mothercare (UK) Ltd (4) The Boots Company plc (5) Baby B Free Ltd (6) Action Trading Ltd (7) Amikam Berkovitch (8) Piero Alberici (9) Tamir Berkovitch (10) TTY General Trade Lines Ltd (an Israeli Company) (11) Dvora Berkovitch (12) Tamir Tirosh |
Defendants and Nos 1, 5 and 6 also Part 20 Claimants (Defendants Nos 1,5 6, 7, 8, 10, 11 and 12 are the Respond-ents) |
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for the Appellants
Dominic Hughes (instructed by Short Richardson & Forth LLP)
for the Respondent Defendants (1), (7), (10), (11) and (12)
The other Respondent Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 22 July 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jacob:
The Patent in suit
As the baby sucks harder on the nipple [English, "teat"] ambient air inadvertently and inevitably enters the mouth and stomach [4].
A nursing bottle comprising:
i. a container adapted to contain a quantity of liquid, an air passage and nipple, characterised in that the bottle further comprises:
ii. a reservoir tube having a proximal first end and an open second end,
iii. the second end of the reservoir tube projecting sufficiently downwardly so that when the bottle is inverted, the second end of the reservoir tube is above the level of the liquid trapped in the inverted bottle,
iv. the air passage between the outside of the bottle and a point in the reservoir tube above the level of the liquid trapped inside the reservoir tube when the bottle is inverted,
v. the air passage and the reservoir tube allowing atmospheric air to flow into the bottle to prevent the formation of a vacuum within the bottle when liquid is withdrawn.
As seen in Fig. 2, as a result of the displacement of fluid from the bottle, a partial vacuum is created in the air cavity above the fluid, 4. Air, 5 is forced into the air inlet hole, 12, and flows through the unfilled end of the reservoir, 13, of the reservoir 7. The air then flows, 10, up the tube 9, to the air cavity above the fluid, 4. This air creates a pressure on top of the fluid, 14. The tube, 9, is affixed to the end of the reservoir, 7, at an angle, such that when the bottled is inverted, the open end of the tube, 15, is located at the corner which contains air, 14, thereby allowing the air from outside the bottle, 5, to combine with air in the corner, 14. Thus, none of the liquid can flow out of the bottle through the tube, 9. Only the small amount of the liquid which had already been within the tube when it was standing upright will now flow down to the top of the reservoir, 23, and remain there, below the level of the air inlet tube, 12, allowing a free passage for incoming air.
[122] One thus quickly arrives at the last stage of the Windsurfing enquiry; one is in truth considering an analogous application of a bottle working in the same way as that proposed in the Patent. The essential question on obviousness is therefore: Would it have been obvious to the skilled addressee at the priority date, looking for improvement in nursing bottles, with Offman to hand and without knowledge of the invention, to consider fitting a standard teat / teat cap combination onto the Offman bottle?
[127]….. Neither of them [i.e. the experts] apparently appreciated that for the purpose of assessing obviousness, Offman (alone) had been given to the addressee by a notional but unseen hand, that he was assumed to take a practical interest in it whether he liked it or not and then, with the mentality of constructive optimism, he had to express an informed technical view on it in the light of the common general knowledge.
And, by way of conclusion:
[137] In my judgment, the Offman citation would at the priority date give the skilled addressee all he required to design a nursing bottle falling within claim 1 of the Patent using no more than his common general knowledge. The fitting of a nipple/nipple cap to the Offman bottle (which is anyway not part of the invention of claim 1) could be effected using commercially available products to fit on the Offman liquid container- which in the fig 6 embodiment, was already threaded to take a detachable cap. More likely however, the neck of Offman would be modified in accordance with current nursing bottle design thinking. This could be done in association with a plastics blow moulder if necessary. I do not think that any of this involves any degree of invention and thus the attack on the Patent based on Offman succeeds.
(1) The legal approach was wrong – the Judge wrongly attributed to the skilled man an attitude of "looking for improvement", a "mentality of constructive optimism", and applied the wrong test in saying Offman gave the skilled man "all he required" to design a claim 1 bottle.
(2) A baby-bottle designer would have a mind-set against any product which had "fiddly-bits" such as internal tubes. "How would they be cleaned?" would be his immediate and instant reaction.
(3) So assuming (as the law requires one must) that a notional uninventive person skilled in the art were given Offman, it would be rejected as the basis for a baby bottle design.
(4) What the judge should have asked is whether the skilled person would have seen that the Offman idea could be applied in the field of baby bottles, either generally or more specifically to Offman's actual embodiment.
Lord Justice Wall:
Mr Justice Lewison: