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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 >> E Mishan & Sons, Inc v Hozelock Ltd & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 871 (08 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/871.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 871, [2020] RPC 19 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD), PATENTS COURT
Nugee J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
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E. MISHAN & SONS, INC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) HOZELOCK LIMITED (2) BLUE GENTIAN LLC (3) TELEBRANDS CORP |
Respondents |
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Michael Hicks and Nick Zweck (instructed by Wiggin LLP) for the First Respondent
Hearing dates: 8-9 June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
The Patents
"21. The patent is not complicated and technical terms are not used. After describing the field of the invention in general terms, without reference to garden water hoses, the background section (paragraphs [0003] and [0004]) describes problems encountered with garden hoses. The problems identified relate to storage, such as the need for a reel or a container and relate to tangling, kinking and the weight of the hose. The patent states that it would be of great benefit to have a hose that is light in weight, contractable in length and kink resistant.
22. Following a lengthy section listing numerous items of prior art, a summary of the invention starts at paragraph [0022]. The detailed description section including figures 1 to 11 runs from paragraphs [0031] to [0063]. Although the specification is written in general terms and contemplates that other fluids apart from water could be used, the claims are clearly limited to a garden water hose. The skilled reader would understand that while the inventor no doubt has contemplated that his idea might be applicable in other fields, the invention claimed is directed to a garden water hose.
23. The invention is a hose with an inner tube inside an outer tube. The outer tube is secured to the inner tube only at the ends. The hose expands when connected to a pressurised water supply such as a water tap (faucet). The hose can expand longitudinally up to six times its length and width. On release of the pressurised water from the inner tube, the inner tube will contract. The inner tube could be made of rubber while the outer tube could be made of a non-elastic relatively soft fabric like woven nylon. Figures 9 and 5 and figures 10 and 6 show the invention in its unexpanded and in its expanded states:
24. 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.
25. When the water is allowed to flow along the hose the pressure inside will drop to some extent but there will be enough pressure remaining in the hose to keep it expanded in use (described in paragraph [0050]).
26. The patent describes how the invention meets the objectives referred to. The savings in weight are addressed in paragraph [0053]. A conventional 50 foot garden hose is said to weigh 12 lb (5.4 kg) whereas an equivalent hose of the invention weighs 2 lbs (0.9 kg). The hose also does not contain any metal components such as springs along the length of the hose between the connectors.
27. The fact that the hose has a reduced length when there is no pressure in the inner tube is addressed in paragraph [0054]. An empty hose of the invention can be readily stored without kinking or becoming entangled as most conventional hoses do. The hose can be stored in a very small space. There is no need for a hose reel (paragraph [0055])."
The claims in issue
"[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
[G] and 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,
[I] and wherein a water flow restrictor is provided in or is connected to the second coupler."
"[A] A garden water hose assembly comprising a hose (10) and a water flow restrictor, wherein the hose (10) comprises:[B] an outer tube (12) formed from a non-elastic, soft, bendable, tubular webbing material having a first end and a second end;
[C] a flexible, elastic, hollow inner tube (14) having a first end and a second end;
[D] a first coupler (18) secured to said first end of said inner and said outer tubes (14, 12);
[E] a second coupler (16) secured to said second end of said inner and said outer tubes (14, 12);
[F] said first coupler (18) arranged in use to couple said hose (10) to a source of pressurized water, said second coupler (16) being connected to the water flow restrictor, wherein the water flow restrictor includes a nozzle having an internal valve that permits, limits, and stops a flow of water through the nozzle;
[G] whereby said outer tube (12) and said inner tube (14) have a substantially shortened first length in a non-water flow contracted state with said outer tube (12) extending about an outer surface of said inner tube (14) in a undulating state, and a substantially longer second length with said outer tube (12) capturing said inner tube (14) in an expanded state when water flows through said hose assembly
[H] whereby, when water under pressure is introduced into the first end of the hose (10), said elongated inner tube (14) expands longitudinally along a length of said inner tube (14) and laterally across a width of said inner tube (14) thereby increasing a length of said hose (10) to an expanded condition; and
[I] wherein the water flow restrictor is configured to vary the amount of water under pressure that is released from the water flow restrictor."
"The garden water hose assembly of Claim 1, wherein said inner and outer tubes (14, 12) are unattached, unbonded, unconnected and unsecured to each other except at the couplers (16, 18)."
The expert witnesses
The person skilled in the art
The common general knowledge
"(1) The basic design of a garden water hose did not really change between the 1950s/1960s and 2011. The traditional design was a multilayer hose with some reinforcement, comprising between 3-5 layers. In such multilayer hoses, the hose is always a combination of layers, usually bonded together into a composite.(2) Garden water hoses had low technical demands. They operate at low pressures, transport water only and are used relatively infrequently.
(3) There have been some developments in the materials used for garden hoses (for example, the use of plastic rather than rubber, the introduction of knitting techniques as a reinforcement, the use of PVC foam as a layer for a garden hose). …
(4) To the extent there was any innovation, this was all in accessories such as hose reels and nozzles. Hose reels for example were a way of solving the problems of heaviness and storage of hoses.
(5) Before 2011, there were no examples of [multilayer] hoses where the layers were not bonded together. The skilled person would not be aware of expandable hoses …
(6) … the skilled person would have a background in material science, and that although they would not have direct experience of using highly elastic materials for hoses, they would have a knowledge of materials in general, and experience of using rubber in particular. Rubber was formerly used for garden hoses until it was replaced by plastics, and is still used for many technical hoses … however … those would be stiff rubbers, not highly elastic ones.
(7) There were a number of long-standing problems with garden hoses that were very well known. They were typically heavy, difficult to store and prone to kinking.
(8) Technical hoses have much more demanding requirements than garden water hoses. They … might have to operate … at much higher pressure. In some cases they have to be more resistant to extremes of temperature. … They [may] have to be resistant to chemicals, oils and harsher liquids that are being transported, and often have to be in frequent or even constant use.
…(11) There were corkscrew or helix hoses, but these are not different types of hose. They are monolayer hoses that have been given a secondary spiral structure. The way they … extend … is by being pulled. They are not designed to expand under pressure.… corkscrew hoses … look quite different to conventional hoses and have different qualities, but … the technology of the hose material itself (as opposed to the way the hose is configured) is not different from other hoses.…(15) The usual range for water pressure in the UK is 1 to 6 bar. 2.5 to 3.5 bar is about the average pressure for the domestic water supply. In London it can often be much lower, perhaps even down to 1 bar."
"(3) A hose of a particular structure may be useful for a wide variety of applications.[There are] numerous examples of this. I need not detail them. One … will suffice: Tricoflex's catalogue includes a hose called Tricoclair which is described as a multipurpose hose whose applications include supplying compressed air, carrying industrial gases, and carrying foodstuffs, chemical products and water.… some hoses are multipurpose but others are not, being designed for specific applications. One should not assume that because there are hoses which can be used for both gases and liquids, all hoses can be so used.…(6) The same hose can be made in a range of diameters.Again [there are] a number of examples … of which one will suffice. The Tubclair, a single layer multipurpose hose used for non-pressurised liquids and powdered foodstuffs, could be supplied in diameters from 2mm to 60mm.…(9) A hose designer would be familiar with the fact that a hose without reinforcement will expand under pressure. Reinforcement is present to limit that expansion to acceptable levels.…
(11) A fluid tight hose can in principle and in practice carry a gas or a liquid (subject to questions of chemical compatibility). There is no hard and fast distinction between hoses for gases and hoses for … liquids … including water. A hose that is suitable for a gas is (subject to chemical compatibility) likely to be suitable for carrying liquids; a hose that is suitable for a liquid could carry a gas (but with some risk of leakage if the wrong material is selected). Designers would be familiar with the fact that hoses for gas can carry water because it is necessary for safety reasons to use water when pressure-testing them.
(12) In practice hoses of types used for air can be and are used for carrying water, including garden hoses. Examples are corkscrew hoses which are used for air as well as garden hoses, and the Tricoclair hose already referred to.
(13) The skilled person would be aware of the problem of hose storage and various solutions to that problem. Saving of space can be a concern for some users. The same space saving techniques are applicable to technical and garden hoses, such as corkscrew hoses, hoses on reels and flat hoses."
McDonald
"A supplemental gas assembly (10) such as used for aircraft crews is provided which includes a mask adapted to fit over at least the nose and mouth of a wearer, together with a flexible, self-elongating hose assembly (14) and a stowage box (16) for receiving the mask (12) and hose assembly (14); the assembly (14) is designed so that when the mask (12) is pulled from the box (16), pressurized gas passing through the hose assembly (14) serves to inflate and axially expand the assembly (14) to a deployed length greater than the relaxed length thereof. The assembly (14) preferably includes an inflatable elastomeric inner tube (30) together with an exterior sheath (36) of woven or braided material which restricts radial expansion of the tube (30) while permitting axial expansion thereof. In preferred forms, the deployed length of the assembly (14) is up to three times greater than the relaxed length thereof."
"The present invention is broadly concerned with supplemental gas assemblies such as supplemental oxygen units typically used in aircraft for supplemental oxygen to aircraft crew in the event of a cabin depressurisation or other emergency. More particularly, the invention is concerned with such assemblies wherein a self-elongating gas hose assembly is employed which, when pressurized, axially expands to a significant extent. This gives the user a relatively long effective hose length, while avoiding the problems of handling and stowage typical with conventional hoses."
This confirms that the inventive feature of the assembly is the self-elongating hose which axially expands when pressurised. It also makes it clear that the advantage of this new hose is that it gives the user a relatively long effective length while avoiding the handling and stowing problems of conventional hoses.
"[0006] In recent years, available flight desk space has become even more precious, lea[d]ing to efforts to reduce the volume of components. However, very little reduction in mask stowage box volume has been achieved, owing to the fact that the oxygen delivery hoses coupled with the mask must be of a certain minimum length to allow and facilitate crew use. That is, these stowage boxes, because they must receive a relatively long length of hose, cannot readily be reduced in size.[0007] There is accordingly a need in the art for improved supplemental gas assemblies which can be made in a more compact design, while still achieving the utility and rapid donning characteristics required for crew oxygen equipment."
In short, the problem is that the prior art hoses are too bulky when stored. It is nothing to do with the gas mask.
"[0008] … In accordance with the invention, the hose assembly comprises a length-expandable hose which, when a user grasps the mask and pulls it from the stowage box, will inflate and axially expand to a deployed length greater than the relaxed length thereof. In this way, the stowage requirements for the hose assembly are reduced, or alternatively a hose having a substantially longer effective length can be used in a standard stowage box designed to accommodate a much smaller length conventional hose assembly.
[0009] In preferred forms, the hose assembly includes an inflatable elastomeric inner tube together with an exterior sheath formed of woven or braided material which in use restricts the radial expansion of the inner tube upon pressurization thereof, while allowing the tube to expand axially. The hose assembly may have a deployed length of at least about 1.5 times the relaxed length thereof, and more preferably greater than about two times the relaxed length."
"[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 box-mounted 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."
"[0018] The use of assembly 10 is similar to that of standard crew oxygen emergency equipment. That is, in the event of a cabin depressurization, the pilot may grasp the upper end of mask 12 and pull it upwardly. … The pilot then pulls the mask to his or her face with seal 20 surrounding the nose and mouth area of the pilot's face, so that the mask may be quickly donned. …
[0019] … during mask deployment the hose assembly 14 comes into play in order to self-elongate from a relaxed condition (e.g. FIG. 2) to a fully extended position (e.g. FIG 3). This effectively gives an additional length of hose to facilitate donning of the mask. At the same time the hose in its relaxed condition allows easy storage of the mask assembly, both originally and after use of the mask. Furthermore, given that the hose is secured to a connector within the box 16, after use the hose will 'retract' itself and the oxygen mask back into box 16. This aids significantly in restowage, since the hose does not require the extent of gathering and coiling typical of conventional hose assemblies."
The judge's assessment of obviousness
"I have accepted [counsel for Emson]'s formulation, … which I repeat for convenience here:
'An expandable hosepipe comprising of a non-elastic outer [and] an elastic inner, that are joined together at their ends and that between the ends are unattached.'
I think there should be added to that a reference to it being a garden water hose. This is part of the claims."
The judge was right to make that qualification. As he went on to say, it is important when one comes to McDonald. Without it, the inventive concept would be anticipated by McDonald. In any event, this conclusion is not challenged.
"… the difference between McDonald and the inventive concept of the Patents is that McDonald is not a garden water hose assembly. As such it does not expand by the operation of water pressure and does not have a water-flow restrictor."
Again, this conclusion is not challenged.
"186. I have now considered all the detailed points made by Mr Hinchliffe, and can return to the overall question whether it would have been obvious to the skilled hose designer to take the McDonald hose and adapt it for use as a garden water hose. Mr Hinchliffe submitted that it would not be as the McDonald hose is in a specialist and remote field, does not look remotely like a garden hose, is made in part from an elastomeric and unfamiliar material, and has numerous details unexplained. But standing back from the detailed points, I am left with Mr Doosterlinck's evidence, which I accept, that the general hose designer would be well used to designing hoses for both liquids and gases, and would have no difficulty in appreciating that the way in which the McDonald hose works, that is by being pressure-actuated, does not depend on the type of fluid used – nor, I would add, on the particular application which McDonald describes. In those circumstances I also accept his conclusion that the skilled person would indeed immediately see that the construction described in McDonald could also be used to make expandable hoses for other fluids in other situations, including a water hose for use in gardens. That conclusion does not seem to me to be based on an impermissible use of hindsight. Once he has made that connection, the skilled person would, as Mr Hinchliffe accepted in closing, readily be able to make all the necessary adaptations to turn the McDonald hose into a garden water hose without doing anything inventive.187. In those circumstances, I answer the fourth Pozzoli question by saying that the differences between McDonald and the claims in the Patents do constitute steps which would have been obvious and that the Patents are therefore invalid for obviousness. That may seem hard on Mr Berardi who is undoubtedly inventive and who I have no reason to doubt came up with his idea entirely independently of McDonald, but if there is prior art, however obscure, which discloses either the same invention, or something which would lead the skilled person to the same invention, then patent protection is for good reasons unavailable."
The grounds of appeal
Hindsight
"… With the knowledge of the XHose and the benefit of hindsight (not of course the statutory test), it is striking how closely the invention anticipates the elements of the XHose, and these are not hidden away in obscure asides but placed upfront and exemplified in the embodiment described."
"… A fiction in patent law is that the notional uninventive skilled man in the art is deemed to have read and assimilated any piece of prior art pleaded by the party attacking the patent claim. If the invention is obvious to that person in the light of a particular piece of prior art, the claim in invalid. It is no answer to say that in real life the prior art would never have come to the attention of a worker in the field, for example because it was tucked away on the top shelf of a public library or because it was in a language which nobody in the art knew. The notional skilled person is assumed to have read and understood the contents of the prior art. However that does not mean that all prior art will be considered equally interesting. The notional skilled person is assumed to be interested in the field of technology covered by the patent in suit, but he is not assumed to know or suspect in advance of reading it that any particular piece of prior art has the answer to a problem he faces or is relevant to it. He comes to the prior art without any preconceptions and, in particular, without any expectation that it offers him a solution to any problem he has in mind. Some pieces of prior art will be much more interesting than others. A document directed at solving the particular problem at issue will be seized upon by the skilled addressee. Its very contents may suggest that it is a worthwhile starting point for further development. But the same may not be the case where a document comes, say, from a distant and unrelated field. For example, in theory a notional skilled person engaged in trying to improve the operation of an internal combustion engine is assumed to know, have read and assimilated the contents of all published material including those, say, in the baking field. It may be that a document in the latter field discloses something which, if applied to the internal combustion art, would produce a marked improvement in performance. However, the person skilled in the art is not deemed to read the baking document in the knowledge, or even with a suspicion, that it is of significance to the problems he has to deal with. It may be that it is written in such a way that, although he understands it, the skilled person will dismiss it as irrelevant to his work. The more distant a prior art document is from the field of technology covered by the patent, the greater the chance that an intelligent but uninventive person skilled in the art will fail to make the jump to the solution found by the patentee."
"… I have found that the skilled person is not specifically a garden hose designer but a designer of hoses in general; and I accept Mr Doosterlinck's evidence that such a hose designer is familiar with the idea of transposing a hose structure from one application to another, and that he only has to read the title of McDonald with its reference to 'Self-elongating oxygen hose…' to conclude that this might be of interest to him even though the hose is designed for use in a very particular and very different field. And, again as Mr Doosterlinck said, McDonald contains two drawings showing the relaxed and expanded state which clearly illustrate the expanding hose. I find that the skilled person would not in those circumstances read McDonald in the expectation that because it was concerned with aviation it was likely to be of no interest; on the contrary he would read it with an interest in how this novel type of hose worked."
"… On the other hand, McDonald also refers (at [0006]-[0007]) to the fact that available flight deck space has become more precious and that there is a need for a hose assembly to be made in a more compact design. In fact I think these two issues are really treated by McDonald as facets of the same problem: what McDonald seeks to provide is a hose that is long enough to facilitate donning of the mask (see [0019]) but which when not in use can be stored compactly (see [0008]). Mr Doosterlinck naturally accepted that garden hose designers were not operating under the same severe space constraints. But that does not mean that a space-saving hose would be regarded by a hose designer as irrelevant to garden hoses. On the contrary it is one, indeed the first, of the problems that the Patents are expressed to address: GB 276 starts off with a reference to the fact that a notable problem with conventional garden hoses relates to their storage, with many consumers not having room for a garden hose storage device [0003], and there being many situations where it is beneficial to store a hose in as little a space as possible [0004]. Indeed the corkscrew or helix garden hoses, although entirely different in design from the XHose, were also intended to address the need for a compact but extendable hose. Admittedly GB 276 also refers to two other problems with conventional hoses, their weight and tendency to kink, which are not referred to in McDonald (although McDonald at [0019] does refer to the hose not requiring the extent of gathering and coiling typical of conventional hose assemblies), but I do not think this undermines the fact that the skilled person would regard the space-saving advantages of McDonald as not limited to the particular demands of a flight deck but as potentially applicable more widely."
"I accept that the 'mindset' of the skilled person can be a factor preventing him from seeing something as obvious: see Dyson Appliances Ltd v Hoover Ltd [2001] RPC 27 (and on appeal [2001] EWCA Civ 1440) where the mindset in the vacuum cleaner industry was such that no-one would think of dispensing with a bag, and the skilled person would approach the suggestion of using cyclonic action instead with reserve if not scepticism. But I do not think the present case is quite like that. In Dyson the skilled person would be aware in a general sense of cyclone technology but would fail to make the connection with vacuum cleaners; here a hose designer would not have seen any hose, whether a garden hose or any other, that was anything like the hose in McDonald and would therefore have immediately appreciated that McDonald was showing him an entirely new type of hose. Whatever his mindset as to how garden hoses were usually constructed, I do not see that this would put him off seeing that this new type of hose might have wider application, including to garden hoses."
"… Mr Doosterlinck accepted that the garden hose designer would not be familiar with the diameters used for crew oxygen masks; and he accepted a suggestion that the garden hose designer would be thinking, if anything, of the tubes for cabin oxygen masks provided for passengers. Mr Hinchliffe submitted that such narrow tubes would be unlikely to make the hose designer think of garden hoses. But Mr Doosterlinck also said that the same hose often comes in different sizes (something confirmed by the catalogues); that Tricoflex makes, among other things, hoses for breathable air which range from 6mm to 19mm; and that this is not very different from garden hoses which are typically around 12mm to 19mm, but can be smaller. Moreover, I do not think the skilled person would see the teaching of McDonald as tied to any particular diameter. What McDonald discloses is the idea of having an expandable hose consisting of two tubes: that idea is not dependent on the tubes being of any particular size. The real question is whether it would be obvious to apply the same idea to a garden hose; if it would, the hose designer would also think it obvious to adapt it by selecting a diameter suitable for a garden hose."
"… Mr Doosterlinck accepted that; but said that he would be familiar with materials such as rubber and synthetic rubbers. It is as set out above common ground that the skilled person would have a grounding in material science and experience of working with various materials. McDonald tells the skilled person quite a bit about what is needed for the inner tube, and I do not think that the fact that he might not have direct experience of making a hose from such a material would be a significant factor."
To this there should be added the point, recorded by the judge at [186] (quoted above), that the skilled person would be readily able to make the necessary adaptations to turn McDonald into a garden hose.
"… Mr Doosterlinck accepted a number of propositions put to him in cross-examination, the upshot of which was that when the oxygen reached the pilot, it should be at 1 atmosphere (atm) or thereabouts, but that the pressure in the hose between wherever the oxygen was stored and the mask would be higher, although not too high as that might be dangerous. I agree that McDonald does not give any details on any of this, possibly because they would be familiar to a person designing oxygen masks for aircraft; and that they would not be familiar to ordinary hose designers. Mr Hurst suggested that this would be one of the factors causing the skilled person to put McDonald down as of no interest. But I do not understand why. The skilled person does not need to understand the correct gas pressures to make McDonald work safely and effectively in the context of crew oxygen masks as he is not interested in making such an assembly. All he needs to understand, as Mr Doosterlinck said, is that there is a higher pressure in the hose than 1 bar (or 1 atm, the two measures being very nearly the same) to enable pressure-activation to function. McDonald has a reference (at [0014]) to the mask including a 'regulator' (no 22 in Fig 1), and I see no reason to doubt Mr Doosterlinck's evidence that although the skilled hose designer would not know the details of how this worked, he would understand that a regulator is a type of valve commonly used to restrict gas pressures, so that a higher pressure in the hose would be consistent with the regulator reducing the pressure of the oxygen reaching the pilot to about 1 atm. What is relevant is whether the skilled person would think it obvious to adapt the teaching to a water-filled garden hose. For that purpose he no doubt needs to understand that if you fill a hose with water and restrict the water leaving the hose, there will be a pressure inside the tube which will cause the tube, if made of an elastomeric material, to expand, but that requires no particular technical knowledge and seems to me well within most people's everyday experience, and certainly that of a hose designer who is used to testing hoses."
"… [Mr Doosterlinck] accepted that neither he, nor more importantly the skilled person, would understand this. I think this point is similar to the last one. As Mr Hinchliffe himself said, the lack of detail might well be because McDonald's target audience, the oxygen mask designer, would understand how it worked. The skilled hose designer however would not need to understand quite how it worked as he is not going to make an oxygen mask assembly. All he needs to understand is that the McDonald hose does expand when the gas pressure is initiated however that happens. The question is whether he would think it obvious to apply this teaching to a garden water hose. For that purpose he no doubt needs to understand how to initiate the water pressure in a garden hose; but that is done by attaching it to a tap and turning it on. That he would undoubtedly understand and I do not see that he needs any more detail than that, or that the lack of it would put him off."
"… Mr Hinchliffe suggested that the pressure in the hose might be 1.5 atm, and at one stage got Mr Doosterlinck to accept this (although the general thrust of Mr Doosterlinck's evidence was that the skilled person is not trying to understand quite what the pressure in the McDonald hose is). He then suggested that if this was sufficient to expand the hose, it must have very little resilience; and if it had very little resilience it would not self-retract. Mr Doosterlinck said he did not know, and the skilled person would not know, but that did not matter as McDonald teaches that it does self-retract. Overall, Mr Doosterlinck did not accept that the skilled person would find it all very confusing; he would understand that the hose would be actuated by a pressure in the range used in garden hoses. I accept Mr Doosterlinck's evidence. I am not sure I have quite understood the technical point Mr Hinchliffe was here making: I would have thought that if an elastomeric material expands under pressure like a balloon, it would be likely to deflate when the pressure is removed, and that this is not dependent on how much or how little pressure is needed to expand it. Be that as it may, the relevant question is whether the lack of detail on this point in McDonald would be a factor causing the skilled person to put McDonald aside as too confusing. I do not see that it would."
"Q. So I suggest to you that it would be very clear to such a person, indeed to any reader with some technical ability, that the hose in McDonald expands when the gas, under pressure, enters the inner tube and will retract when that pressure falls. That is how it works.
A. Yes.
Q. Assume the skilled person might not know the details of oxygen systems for aircraft or exactly how a mask on an aircraft would work, but I want to suggest to you that the principle as to how the hose expands and contracts is perfectly clear to such a person.
A. Yes."
"The question 'why was it not done before' is always a powerful consideration when considering obviousness, particularly when all the components of a combination have been long and widely known."
It is not clear that this submission was made to the judge, but in any event I do not accept it. McDonald was not "long and widely known". On the contrary, as I shall discuss when I come to the question of commercial success, there is no evidence that it was known to persons in the hose industry, and such evidence as there was pointed the other way.
Commercial success
"What prior art would have been likely to be known to all or most of those who would have been expected to be involved in finding a solution? A development may be obvious over a piece of esoteric prior art of which most in the trade would have been ignorant. If that is so, commercial success over other, less relevant, prior art will have much reduced significance."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Henderson:
Lord Justice Floyd:
"However, there is one issue which is of signi?cance to one of the pieces of prior art relied on in this action. A ?ction in patent law is that the notional uninventive skilled man in the art is deemed to have read and assimilated any piece of prior art pleaded by the party attacking the patent claim. If the invention is obvious to that person in the light of a particular piece of prior art, the claim in invalid. It is no answer to say that in real life the prior art would never have come to the attention of a worker in the ?eld, for example because it was tucked away on the top shelf of a public library or because it was in a language which nobody in the art knew. The notional skilled person is assumed to have read and understood the contents of the prior art. However that does not mean that all prior art will be considered equally interesting. The notional skilled person is assumed to be interested in the field of technology covered by the patent in suit, but he is not assumed to know or suspect in advance of reading it that any particular piece of prior art has the answer to a problem he faces or is relevant to it. He comes to the prior art without any preconceptions and, in particular, without any expectation that it offers him a solution to any problem he has in mind. Some pieces of prior art will be much more interesting than others. A document directed at solving the particular problem at issue will be seized upon by the skilled addressee. Its very contents may suggest that it is a worthwhile starting point for further development. But the same may not be the case where a document comes, say, from a distant and unrelated field. For example, in theory a notional skilled person engaged in trying to improve the operation of an internal combustion engine is assumed to know, have read and assimilated the contents of all published material including those, say, in the baking field. It may be that a document in the latter field discloses something which, if applied to the internal combustion art, would produce a marked improvement in performance. However, the person skilled in the art is not deemed to read the baking document in the knowledge, or even with a suspicion, that it is of significance to the problems he has to deal with. It may be that it is written in such a way that, although he understands it, the skilled person will dismiss it as irrelevant to his work. The more distant a prior art document is from the field of technology covered by the patent, the greater the chance that an intelligent but uninventive person skilled in the art will fail to make the jump to the solution found by the patentee."
"To say that all this would have been obvious without hindsight to an unimaginative skilled man on the basis of the old proposal of Spatz is quite, quite untenable. That would be so even if Spatz had been a real machine. But as far as anyone knows it was a "mere paper proposal." Patent law has for a long time, and rightly, regarded with particular suspicion arguments based on a suggestion that long disregarded unused proposals render later inventions obvious, see e.g. Blanco White Patents for Inventions 4th edn. (1974) at §4-220."
"Thirdly and most importantly, I consider that the argument is based on a fallacy, which is that the recipes can be divorced from the experimental results. Whatever the position might have been if samples 7-16 had remained mere paper proposals, that is not this case. In fact they were bioassayed, and a number of them gave promising results, including samples 8, 9 and 13. That is why the recipes were of value …"
"If the apparatus be valuable by reason of its simplicity there is a danger of being misled by that very simplicity into the belief that no invention was needed to produce it. But experience has shown that not a few inventions … have been of so simple a character that once they have been made known it was difficult … not to believe that they must have been obvious to everybody."
"Whether there has or has not been an inventive step in constructing a device for giving effect to an idea which when given effect to seems a simple idea which ought to or might have occurred to anyone, is often a matter of dispute. More especially is this the case when many integers of the new device are already known. Nothing is easier than to say, after the event, that the thing was obvious and involved no invention. The words of Moulton LJ in British Westinghouse v Braulik (1910) 27 RPC 209 at 230 may well be called to mind in this connection: 'I confess' (he said) 'that I view with suspicion arguments to the effect that a new combination, bringing with it new and important consequences in the shape of practical machines, is not an invention, because, when it has once been established, it is easy to show how it might be arrived at by starting from something known, and taking a series of apparently easy steps. This ex post facto analysis of invention is unfair to the inventors and, in my opinion, it is not countenanced by English patent law … ."
i) The basic design of a garden water hose did not really change between the 1950s/1960s and 2011. The traditional design was a multilayer hose with some reinforcement, comprising between 3-5 layers. In such multilayer hoses, the hose is always a combination of layers, usually bonded together into a composite.ii) There have been some developments in the materials used for garden hoses (for example, the use of plastic rather than rubber, the introduction of knitting techniques as a reinforcement, the use of PVC foam as a layer for a garden hose). These are changes in the materials of which the hoses are made rather than a fundamentally new design of hose (such as the XHose represented).
iii) To the extent there was any innovation, this was all in accessories such as hose reels and nozzles. Hose reels for example were a way of solving the problems of heaviness and storage of hoses.
iv) There were no examples of hoses where the layers were not bonded together.
v) The skilled person would not be aware of expandable hoses, a category that has only existed since the XHose.
vi) The skilled person would not have been familiar with or used silicone rubber in hose design. None of the known hoses in 2011 used highly elastic materials.
vii) The skilled person did, however, have a background in materials science, and although they would not have direct experience of using highly elastic materials for hoses, they would have a knowledge of materials in general, and experience of using rubber in particular. Rubber was formerly used for garden hoses until it was replaced by plastics, and is still used for many technical hoses, but all such rubber was stiff.
viii) There were a number of long-standing problems with garden hoses that were very well known. They were typically heavy, difficult to store and prone to kinking. The skilled person would be aware of various solutions to the problem of hose storage. Saving of space can be a concern for some users. The same space saving techniques are applicable to technical and garden hoses, such as corkscrew hoses, hoses on reels and flat hoses.
ix) Although there were others, three basic types of hose at the priority date were (i) the basic multilayer hose with reinforcement, the layers being bonded together and forming a composite; (ii) the spiral reinforced hose, originally designed because canvas hoses could not be used as suction hoses as they collapsed under vacuum; and (iii) the monolayer hose without reinforcement.
x) There were corkscrew or helix hoses which are monolayer hoses that have been given a secondary spiral structure. The way they extend is by being pulled. They are not designed to expand under pressure.
xi) The usual range for water pressure in the UK is 1 to 6 bar. 2.5 to 3.5 bar is about the average pressure for the domestic water supply. In London it can often be much lower, perhaps even down to 1 bar.
xii) A hose of a particular structure may be useful for a wide variety of applications. A hose called Tricoclair is described as a multipurpose hose whose applications include supplying compressed air, carrying industrial gases, and carrying foodstuffs, chemical products and water. Although some hoses are multipurpose, others are designed for specific applications. One should not assume that because there are hoses which can be used for both gases and liquids, all hoses can be so used.
xiii) The same hose can be made in a range of diameters.
xiv) The skilled person would be aware of metal hose fittings and their use. Although plastic hose fittings are now widespread in Europe, metal hose fittings are widely available, and used in professional applications; and they are used when conducting burst testing.
xv) The skilled person would know that fittings may include a valve to stop water escaping when the hose is not in use.
xvi) A hose designer would be familiar with the fact that a hose without reinforcement will expand under pressure. Reinforcement is present to limit that expansion to acceptable levels.
xvii) A fluid tight hose can in principle and in practice carry a gas or a liquid (subject to questions of chemical compatibility). There is no hard and fast distinction between hoses for gases and hoses for liquids including water. A hose that is suitable for a gas is (subject to chemical compatibility) likely to be suitable for carrying liquids; a hose that is suitable for a liquid could carry a gas (but with some risk of leakage if the wrong material is selected). Designers would be familiar with the fact that hoses for gas can carry water because it is necessary for safety reasons to use water when pressure-testing them.
xviii) In practice hoses of types used for air can be and are used for carrying water, including garden hoses. Examples are corkscrew hoses which are used for air as well as garden hoses, and the Tricoclair hose already referred to.
i) Copely Developments marketed the Codeflex Polyurethane Compact Coil said to be suitable to specify when "…confined areas are a limitation", and a corkscrew hose for articulated brake coils;ii) Proline marketed a hose under the name "Spring Water" with the rubric "Specials for garden" which "extends up to 20 times. For …when there are space problems".
iii) Hozelock marketed such a hose as the Spiral Hose Set shown in their 2010 catalogue. It "extends from 1 m to 15 m in length and recoils for neat and tidy storage".
"The need for appellate caution in reversing the judge's evaluation of the facts is based upon much more solid grounds than professional courtesy. It is because specific findings of fact, even by the most meticulous judge, are inherently an incomplete statement of the impression which was made upon him by the primary evidence. His expressed findings are always surrounded by a penumbra of imprecision as to emphasis, relative weight, minor qualification and nuance (as Renan said, la vérité est dans une nuance), of which time and language do not permit exact expression, but which may play an important part in the judge's overall evaluation. …. Where the application of a legal standard such negligence or obviousness involves no question of principle but is simply a matter of degree, an appellate court should be very cautious in differing from the judge's evaluation. per Lord Hoffmann in Biogen v Medeva [1997] RPC 1 at p.45."
"Finally Mr Hinchliffe referred to the fact that McDonald does not give any details as to the hose retracting itself into the box. Mr Hinchliffe suggested that the pressure in the hose might be 1.5 atm, and at one stage got Mr Doosterlinck to accept this (although the general thrust of Mr Doosterlinck's evidence was that the skilled person is not trying to understand quite what the pressure in the McDonald hose is). He then suggested that if this was sufficient to expand the hose, it must have very little resilience; and if it had very little resilience it would not self-retract. Mr Doosterlinck said he did not know, and the skilled person would not know, but that did not matter as McDonald teaches that it does self-retract. Overall, Mr Doosterlinck did not accept that the skilled person would find it all very confusing; he would understand that the hose would be actuated by a pressure in the range used in garden hoses. I accept Mr Doosterlinck's evidence. I am not sure I have quite understood the technical point Mr Hinchliffe was here making: I would have thought that if an elastomeric material expands under pressure like a balloon, it would be likely to deflate when the pressure is removed, and that this is not dependent on how much or how little pressure is needed to expand it. Be that as it may, the relevant question is whether the lack of detail on this point in McDonald would be a factor causing the skilled person to put McDonald aside as too confusing. I do not see that it would."
"Yes. But being told about something in a patent does not say if it works. There are hundreds of patents out there that do not work at all. Somebody has just come up with an idea and written a patent."
"… the perceived limits of technical practicability are a matter of mindset, and that mindset is characteristically affected by awareness of need…"
"179. Mr Hinchliffe next referred to the fact that garden hose design had not really changed in many years. The hose in McDonald looks nothing like any garden hose pipe the skilled person has ever seen. This means that the skilled person, not used to expanding hose pipes, would be unlikely to make the leap to a garden hose pipe; and that he is not used to thinking about fundamentally different designs for garden hoses as, as far as he is concerned, they do not change.180. I accept that the 'mindset' of the skilled person can be a factor preventing him from seeing something as obvious: see Dyson Appliances Ltd v Hoover Ltd [2001] RPC 27 (and on appeal [2001] EWCA Civ 1440) where the mindset in the vacuum cleaner industry was such that no-one would think of dispensing with a bag, and the skilled person would approach the suggestion of using cyclonic action instead with reserve if not scepticism. But I do not think the present case is quite like that. In Dyson the skilled person would be aware in a general sense of cyclone technology but would fail to make the connection with vacuum cleaners; here a hose designer would not have seen any hose, whether a garden hose or any other, that was anything like the hose in McDonald and would therefore have immediately appreciated that McDonald was showing him an entirely new type of hose. Whatever his mindset as to how garden hoses were usually constructed, I do not see that this would put him off seeing that this new type of hose might have wider application, including to garden hoses."