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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Lantana Ltd v The Comptroller-General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks [2013] EWHC 2673 (Pat) (04 September 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2013/2673.html Cite as: [2013] Info TLR 231, [2013] EWHC 2673 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF The Patents Act 1977 and IN THE MATTER OF UK Patent application GB 1014714.8 in the name of LANTANA LTD and IN THE MATTER OF an appeal from the Decision of the Comptroller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks dated 4th February 2013 LANTANA LTD |
Appellant |
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THE COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF PATENTS, DESIGNS AND TRADE MARKS |
Respondent |
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Thomas Mitcheson (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 27th June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Birss :
The nature of the appeal
"26. How reluctant should an appellate court be to interfere with the trial judge's evaluation of, and conclusion on, the primary facts? As Hoffmann LJ made clear in Grayan there is no single standard which is appropriate to every case. The most important variables include the nature of the evaluation required, the standing and experience of the fact-finding judge or tribunal, and the extent to which the judge or tribunal had to assess oral evidence.
27. It is worth noting that Biogen was a case very close to the top end of the scale. It involved very complex biotechnology which was the subject of a lot of expert evidence given at a lengthy trial before a very experienced judge of the Patents Court. In the circumstances Lord Hoffmann's memorable reference to Renan was not (if I may respectfully say so) out of place. There are far fewer nuances to be picked up from a bundle of statutory declarations which contain a good deal of irrelevant or tendentious material and on which there is no cross-examination.
28. In this case the hearing officer had to make what he himself referred to as a multi-factorial comparison, evaluating similarity of marks, similarity of goods and other factors in order to reach conclusions about likelihood of confusion and the outcome of a notional passing-off claim. It is not suggested that he was not experienced in this field, and there is nothing in the Civil Procedure Rules to diminish the degree of respect which has traditionally been shown to a hearing officer's specialised experience. (It is interesting to compare the observations made by Lord Radcliffe in Edwards v Bairstow [1956] AC 14, 38-9, about the general commissioners, a tribunal with a specialised function but often little specialised training.) On the other hand the hearing officer did not hear any oral evidence. In such circumstances an appellate court should in my view show a real reluctance, but not the very highest degree of reluctance, to interfere in the absence of a distinct and material error of principle."
The subject matter of the application
An electronic data retrieval system comprising a local station, a remote station, a packet switched network to provide a transmission path between the local station and the remote station, and a machine-readable data storage device storing retrievable data files including machine-readable data representing at least one of a visual product and an audio product,
wherein said local station includes:
a data store storing a plurality of machine-readable data retrieval criteria identifying data files among said retrievable data files stored at said machine-readable data storage device to be retrieved;
a packet switched network interface connected to said packet switched network;
a user interface co-operable with said data store and interactable with a user, to enable selection by the user of one or more machine-readable data retrieval criteria; and
an electronic processor configured to produce, in response to the selection by the user of the one or more machine-readable data retrieval criteria, a first e-mail message including the selected one or more machine-readable data retrieval criteria together with a machine-readable instruction for retrieving data files, among said retrievable data files stored at said machine-readable data storage device, using the selected machine-readable data retrieval criteria, and to send the first email message to the remote station via said packet switched network interface and said packet switched network;
wherein said remote station includes:
a packet switched network interface connected to said packet switched network to receive the first e-mail message from the packet switched network;
a filter adapted to parse the first e-mail message to determine whether the first e-mail message includes any machine-readable instruction and any data retrieval criteria; and
an electronic processor to execute the first machine-readable instruction, and upon execution of the machine-readable instruction and in accordance with the selected machine-readable data retrieval criterion, retrieve the one or more required data files among said retrievable data files stored at said machine-readable data storage device from the machine-readable data storage device, produce one or more second e-mail messages, the one or more second e-mail messages including the retrieved one or more data files as one or more attachments, and send to said local station, via the packet switched network interface of the remote station, and the packet switched network, the one or more e-mail messages and one or more attachments.
The law
(1) European patents shall be granted for any inventions, in all fields of technology, provided that they are new, involve an inventive step and are susceptible of industrial application.
(2) The following in particular shall not be regarded as inventions within the meaning of paragraph 1:
(a) discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods;
(b) aesthetic creations;
(c) schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business, and programs for computers;
(d) presentations of information.
(3) Paragraph 2 shall exclude the patentability of the subject-matter or activities referred to therein only to the extent to which a European patent application or European patent relates to such subject-matter or activities as such.
"For the reasons given in Symbian, I believe we must continue to consider whether the invention made a technical contribution to the known art, with the rider that novel or inventive purely excluded subject matter does not count as a technical contribution. Further, in addressing that issue I believe it remains appropriate (though not strictly necessary) to follow the four stage structured approach adopted in Aerotel."
i) properly construe the claim;
ii) identify the actual contribution;
iii) ask whether it falls solely within the excluded subject matter;
iv) check whether the actual or alleged contribution is actually technical in nature.
i) whether the claimed technical effect has a technical effect on a process which is carried on outside the computer;ii) whether the claimed technical effect operates at the level of the architecture of the computer, that is to say whether the effect is produced irrespective of the data being processed or the applications being run;
iii) whether the claimed technical effect results in the computer being made to operate in a new way;
iv) whether the program makes the computer a better computer in the sense of running more efficiently and effectively as a computer;
v) whether the perceived problem is overcome by the invention as opposed to merely being circumvented.
"Next, I think it is helpful to consider the facts of some of the cases in which a computer program was held to be patentable. In IBM CORP/Data processor network (T6/83) [1990] OJ EPO 5; [1990] EPOR 91 the invention consisted of an improved method of communication between programs and files held at different processors within a known network. It was held to be patentable. In Symbian itself the patentable computer program was a new means of accessing dynamic link libraries which had potential application in a variety of devices such as cameras and mobile phones. If those inventions were patentable, why is the invention in the present case not?"
"In particular, in IBM Corp./Data processor network, the "technical" contribution identified by the Board was, as explained in [88] of Aerotel, "the removal of limitations of prior art systems with the result that the data processing system was more flexible and had … 'improved communication systems between programs and files'…""
"29(x) The manipulation of data stored on a computer (whether on the computer in use or on a remote computer) is unlikely to give rise to a contribution that exists independently of whether it is implemented by a computer (Bloomberg)"
The decision
i. The transfer of data over a network is not among the list of exclusions;
ii. Extracting data from a database has been held by the High Court to be a technical process;
iii. The transfer of data between memories in a computer has been held by the High Court to be a technical process thus by extension the transfer of data between computers must also be a technical process;
27 In respect of the fourth signpost, any increase in the reliability of the data retrieval process is solely due to the use of e-mail rather than any other communication method. There is no evidence of either of the two computers or the network being intrinsically more reliable themselves. In the case of Symbian it was accepted that an overall improvement in reliability of the computer itself was achieved. The contribution in this case does not seem to operate with anything like the same level of generality.
28 Finally, in respect of the fifth signpost, the problem addressed is that of how to retrieve data from a remote station without the usual problems associated with establishing a continuous connection to said station. The current application addresses this issue by choosing to use a well known non-continuous communication technology instead, namely e-mail. The contribution cannot be said to solve the problems identified. Rather it circumvents the problems of maintaining a good continuous connection by simply not using a continuous connection.
29 To summarise: the contribution is a better way of retrieving data from a remote station by using e-mail to transmit retrieval criteria and to receive back the corresponding data. I can see no technical effect outside of the two computers. Neither is either computer or the connecting network operating in a new way. I am therefore forced to conclude that the contribution is excluded as a program for a computer as such.
The arguments on appeal
(i) telecommunications messages are generated by computers forming part of a telecommunications network, and transmitted from one computer to another over the network;(ii) one computer remotely controls the processing performed by another via a telecommunications network;
(iii) the result of this remote control is the transmission of files and information from the remote computer over a telecommunications network to the local computer;
(iv) this remote control and transmission is achieved in a manner which does not require a continuous connection between the two computers.
Assessment
25. In respect of the second signpost, it is quite clear that the claimed technical effect does not operate at the level of architecture in either 'station'. Rather it is a way of retrieving data from the remote station by 'piggy-backing' on the operation of an e-mail application. The crux of Symbian2 was that it related to a program which allowed a computer to operate on other programs faster - in essence a generic program. That is not the case here - there is nothing to suggest that the two computers' architectures are anything other than conventional.
Conclusion