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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 >> Ferag AG v Muller Martini Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 15 (23 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/15.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 15 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
MR JUSTICE LEWISON
HC04C03993 – [2006]EWHC 225 (CH)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
FERAG AG |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MULLER MARTINI LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Christopher FLOYD Q.C. and Iain PURVIS Q.C. (instructed by Bristows) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jacob:
The Law
Principles of claim interpretation
Anticipation
"[22]… the matter relied upon as prior art must disclose subject-matter which, if performed, would necessarily result in an infringement of the patent. That may be because the prior art discloses the same invention. In that case there will be no question that performance of the earlier invention would infringe and usually it will be apparent to someone who is aware of both the prior art and the patent that it will do so.
….whether or not it would be apparent to anyone at the time, whenever subject-matter described in the prior disclosure is capable of being performed and is such that, if performed, it must result in the patent being infringed, the disclosure condition is satisfied."
"To anticipate the patentee's claim the prior publication must contain clear and unmistakeable directions to do what the patentee claims to have invented ... A signpost, however clear, upon the road to the patentee's invention will not suffice. The prior inventor must be clearly shown to have planted his flag at the precise destination before the patentee."
"[24] … anticipation requires prior disclosure of subject-matter which, when performed, must necessarily infringe the patented invention."
"be prepared to display a reasonable degree of skill and common knowledge of the art in making trials and to correct obvious errors in the specification if a means of correcting them can readily be found" per Buckley LJ in Valensi v British Radio [1973] RPC 337, 377 (quoted with approval by Lord Hoffmann at [27]).
"If, on the other hand, the prior publication contains a direction which is capable of being carried out in a manner which would infringe the patentee's claim, but would be at least as likely to be carried out in a way which would not do so, the patentee's claim will not have been anticipated, although it may fail on the ground of obviousness."
Obviousness
"[112] Fletcher-Moulton LJ's judgment in British Westinghouse v Braulik (1910) 27 RPC 209 is as true today as when it was first said:
'I confess 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 inventors'"
Obviousness on appeal
"[114] Here the Judge was really in a difficult position to decide obviousness. For he had already concluded that the claims were anticipated. So, looking at Windsurfing step (3), he had decided there were no differences. His views on obviousness were therefore inherently conjectural."
In the nature of things less weight can be placed on a conjectural view than one which was decisive.
The Common General Knowledge ("CGK")
"[15] Both experts broadly agree that there are three kinds of cut: a knife cut, a shear cut and a burst cut. However, a knife may cut in one of two ways: either by itself slicing through the printed product; or by being in cutting engagement with another knife which slices through the product.
(i) In the simple knife cut (using one knife) the knife usually cuts down into a cutting strip or cutting stick set into a horizontal cutting table. The blade must penetrate the strip or stick in order to cut the lowest sheet.
(ii) In a shear cut the paper is subject to shearing load between a first and a second knife (called a "knife" and "counterknife" respectively). Ordinary domestic scissors perform a shear cut. The first knife typically has a narrow wedge angle to enable it to penetrate the stack, whereas the second knife can have a wedge angle between 80o and 90o. The first knife must pass close enough to the second knife to avoid the bottom sheet being creased or bent, but does not need to contact it. What is necessary is that the knife and counterknife must be in "cutting engagement". Cutting engagement means that they must be close enough (around 15-20 µm apart) for the product not to get caught between them. It does not mean that they must make actual contact. Indeed, if they are actually in contact, then the continual contact may cause excessive wear on the knives. In addition, it is not necessary for the counterknife to penetrate the product being cut.
[16] A burst cut is most suitable for flexible materials. The material is held between two clamping points. It requires no cutting table or counterknife.
[17] The forces exerted by a cutting knife will tend to move the printed product being cut. To resist this movement it is usual to clamp the product by clamping means located as close as possible to the cutting line of the knife.
[18] In addition a cut may be an "open" cut or a "closed" cut. Punching (which is a closed cut) is a sub-group of the "single-knife cutting principle". An example of a practical use of this punching mechanism is the punch-cutting (punching) of playing cards in order to make the corners rounded. Other examples include the punch-cutting of labels or tabbed, indented books, including dictionaries or large reference books which have the successive letters of the alphabet indented into the pages on the front edge. With punch-cutting, the cut occurs basically at one time, with the blade parallel or near parallel to the product. The cut does not normally occur progressively, with the blade at a large angle to the product. The product and the blade are brought together in parallel and perpendicularly to each other. It is normal for the product to be punch-cut to be fully supported during the cutting process; and that includes both the part of the product that will remain after cutting and also that part of the product that is to be cut away. The familiar hole punch, curiously, operates by means of a shear-cut: the circular opening acting as a counterknife to the punch itself.
[19] On trimming machinery there are two types of blade: plane knife blades and rotary knives. Rotary knives or rotary cutting disks can either have a continuous cutting line, a saw line or several milling cutters.
[21] ….
(i) In most cuts trimming is performed by arranging trimming knives so that cutting occurs progressively from one edge of the paper to the other so as to achieve a steady and not a sudden increase of the cutting force as cutting starts. A progressive cut is a characteristic of a shear cut. It is not a characteristic of a punch-cut.
(ii) Signatures are normally cut at right angles to their surface.
(iii) Where trimming arrangements use a shearing action, the cutting angle can change as the cut proceeds e.g. as in a hand controlled guillotine.
(iv) Trimming requires that the product to be cut is supported. In a shear cut the paper is supported by the combined action of the knife and counterknife. In a knife cut it can be supported by a surface on which the product is situated and in a burst cut by tension in the product.
(v) Clamping of the paper during the cutting motion is an important factor in obtaining a reasonable quality of cut. For example it was generally known that signatures conveyed in shingle streams could be clamped by using top belts and pressing rollers during trimming.
(vi) It is common to trim the head and foot edges simultaneously and the front edge either beforehand or afterwards. Sometimes this is done at different locations, and sometimes at the same location at different times.
(vii) A skilled engineer will arrange the knives in trimming machinery in such a way as to result in lower cutting forces (within the context of the machine he is designing).
(viii) A skilled engineer will choose a cutting angle suitable to his design, and be aware of the range of possibilities as to profile and cutting edge and direction and movement of knife. The ability to design and choose appropriate shear angles is part of the basic training of an engineer in this field.
(ix) In addition to using knife blades with cutting edges, print room trimming was also commonly performed with rotary cutting disks.
(x) A common feature in trimming machines cutting a shingle stream of signatures was for the knives to operate on more than one product at a time. The skilled engineer can adjust the spacing of the signatures to allow more than one to be cut at the same time.
(xi) Where trimming was carried out in a continuous operation (and in particular in in-line rotary trimming) the type of cut employed was a shear cut. It was not generally possible to cut along the full length of all three open sides of a signature at the same cutting station using a shear cut, because of the risk of conflict between blades.
(xii) Accordingly, where trimming of three sides of a signature took place at a single cutting station, the type of cut employed was usually a single knife cut.
(xiii) Knives used to trim signatures become blunt after sustained use and the normal practice was to sharpen them as required.
(xiv) Any steel component to be used as a knife or counterknife will be hardened to ensure low wear and ground to achieve a high quality surface and accurate edge.
(xv) A knife with a straight blade is made of one piece, rather than multiple pieces joined together. This is because the blade must be free of irregularities.
(xvi) It was normal practice to align printed products before trimming."
"[37] Professor Fritsch described a variety of machines that were in use in the 1980s. Professor Lüthi did not disagree. They were:
a. trimmers used in-line with gatherer-stitchers or as single machines, which cut with two knives per edge cut (i.e. a shear cut);
b. trimmers used in-line with perfect binders or as single machines, which cut with a single knife per edge cut;
c. different types of in-line rotary trimmers for print finishing inline behind web-fed printing presses;
d. sheet cutters (guillotines) for smaller circulations.
[38] Where products were cut in a continuous process, the type of cut used was a shear cut, as with the in-line rotary trimmers."
[39] … The printed products enter the machinery in shingle flow. They are aligned; and then pass between two rotary cutters, which cut the head and foot respectively. Each cutter consists of a knife and a counterknife; one of which rotates clockwise and the other anti-clockwise. At the moment of cutting the peripheral speed of the counterknife corresponds to the speed of advance of the shingle flow. The other rotary knife moves much faster. The same process would work equally well with products laid end-to-end or spaced, as opposed to being in shingle flow. Having been cut at both the head and foot, the product moves onto a second conveyor, at right angles to the first, thus exposing the front edge for cutting. The front edge is cut at a second cutting station, again by a rotary knife and counterknife. Although all the pairs of knives and counterknives rotate, they are fixed in position. They move together, rather than independently of one another. This kind of machine requires a "bump turn" between the first and second cutting stations.
[39] The typical layout of this kind of machine looks like this"
i) Shear cutting when used for trimming always involved cutting the edge right off;ii) This was because actually making a knife and counterknife to the high degree of precision required would pose technical problems. You do not want them actually to touch (unlike a pair of domestic scissors or garden shears) but you must get them closer than the thickness of a sheet of paper. Anything other than a straight edge is too difficult, save for a circular hole such as is made by a hole punch.
iii) It was also because a straight edge makes disposal of the trimmings easier.
iv) So in all prior-art two-knife (i.e. shear cut) systems cutting takes place at different locations whereas in all one-knife systems cutting takes place in the same location (but at different times).
The point here (relevant to Stobb) is that a diagram showing an angled blade is not a necessary indication of the type of cut.
The Patent in Suit
"[2] Multilayer, particularly printed products, e.g. journals folded one or more times, generally have to be cut on at least one, but usually two or three sides. In industrial in-line production of such printed products, which are generally conveyed away from the rotary press in the form of a scale flow, the aim is to integrate the cutting process into the dynamic production process, i.e. to cut at the full rotation capacity of e.g. 80,000 copies per hour."
[3] Numerous cutting mechanisms are already known. Thus, e.g. CH-A-650 967 and EP-A-17 878 in each case disclose a mechanism for the lateral cutting or trimming of paper sheets, in which the latter occurring in scale flow form are conveyed on a planar conveyor belt against one or more rotating cutting knives and are laterally cut by the latter. Although in this way generally acceptable cutting results are obtained, said mechanisms suffer from certain disadvantages. Thus, it proves to be difficult and costly to accurately orient the individual printed products in the scale flow. In addition, in the scale flow there is a gap between the individual products and the substrate, so that particularly when thicker material has to be cut the cut edges are torn, particularly the first sheets and irregular cutting tracks occur. If the products are not only to be cut on the sides parallel to the conveying direction, the scale flow must be turned by 90o or the printed products must be individually turned, which is prejudicial to an optimum spatial arrangement of the production line and is technically complicated.
[4] The result is that a cutting or trimming in scale flow has a number of disadvantages and generally does not satisfy the requirements for high-quality cutting, so that the Applicant has already proposed solutions, in which the printed products are not cut in scale flow.
[5] A further apparatus according to CH-A-583 611, with which the printed products are individually cut, comprises a rotating cell or bucket wheel, whose individual cells or buckets are in each case intended for receiving a printed product and are provided with movable knives operable by means of common control cams and counterknives cooperating therewith. The construction of this apparatus is relatively complicated and it is therefore costly to maintain.
" [6] Thus, the known cutting technologies in the case of dynamic high-performance product processes do not meet the quality requirements or only do so at the cost of high constructional expenditure. However, the same cutting qualities as in static or alternating processing processes are not obtained, the latter having highly developed cutting technologies with which by a suitable guidance of the cutting forces excellent results are obtained. Thus, e.g. entire paper packs, which rest on a fixed substrate acting as the counterknife, are cut by a swinging or dropping knife, which cuts the product on an accurately defined path (e.g. logarithmated shape) with excellent accuracy."
[7] The aim of the present invention is to obviate this problem. On the basis of the prior art as known from CH-A-583 611, the set problem is to provide a reliable and accurate method and a simple, maintenance-friendly and inexpensive apparatus, with which a high-quality cutting of multilayer printed products in a continuous process and in particular in a high-performance production process is possible. This problem is solved by the characterizing features of the independent claims.
"[8] In conventional dynamic cutting processes, as stated hereinbefore, either the printed products are supplied continuously or individually to a cutting mechanism, in which the knife and counterknife are fixed, or there are a plurality of cutting mechanisms at least temporarily moving with the printed product and also comprising a knife and a counterknife. These known cutting mechanisms, no matter whether they are fixed or moved together, consequently always comprise substantially two parts, namely a knife and a counterknife, which are associated with one another pairwise and in fixed manner.
"[8] The invention takes a new route, in that it breaks with the conventional knife – counterknife unit and the two knife parts are positioned and moved independently of one another, one knife part being fixed relative to the material being cut and is only temporarily brought into a clearly defined cutting engagement.
"Thus, a cutting method comparable to the aforementioned static method is integrated into a dynamic process."
This is saying that at the moment of cutting you have in effect got what happens in the static processes.
"[9] The essential advantages of the invention are that on the one hand the throughput required for a dynamic high-performance process is obtained and simultaneously through the knife parts fixed relative to the material being cut and preferably the counterknife, a cutting quality comparable with that of static cutting methods is obtained. Through a suitable choice and arrangement of the second knife parts (preferably the cutting knives), it is possible, as a function of the characteristics, size and thickness of the printed products to be cut, to fix the cutting curve much as in the aforementioned static cutting mechanisms in such a way that an optimum distribution of the cutting forces occurs over the entire cut edge. Thus, the qualitative advantages of a static and the performance advantages of a dynamic cutting process are combined. In addition, through a corresponding arrangement of three cutting knives, the printed products can be cut on three sides in a single path, without requiring any turning or deflection of the product flow."
"[22] The term "fixed" used hereinbefore in conjunction with cutting knives and rollers naturally does not exclude the possibility of the cutting mechanisms being adjustable with respect to the drum rotor, as a function of the printed product and the desired cut. It in fact means that there is no change to the position of the cutting mechanisms during operation.
It is true that this is said in the context of his description of the specific embodiment, but clearly the notion of "fixed" there given is intended to apply to the general concept of the invention. You get one knife part "fixed" in relation to the signature and the other part (which is not just a counterpart of a pair) then cuts. Always there is a shear cut (2-knife cutting) and the cut is from one side of the signature to the other so that the trimmings are in strips.
It says:
"[11] Figs. 1a and 1b show the principle of the method according to the invention. In Fig. 1a the spatial sequence is considered from the side, whilst Fig. 1b, for the better understanding thereof, shows the sequence from above. Phase 1 e.g. represents the printed products 2 e.g. conveyed in the form of a scale flow 1, i.e. partly overlapping one another and such as are conventionally conveyed away from a rotary press. The scale flow is broken up and with each individual, or as shown in the drawing, plurality of printed products together is associated a first knife part 3 concomitantly moving with the printed products (phase II). Obviously the printed products conveyed in the scale flow 1 can in each case comprise several elements. The printed products designated 2 in the drawing can consequently comprise several individual products, e.g. superimposed journals or interinserted parts of a newspaper. When reference is subsequently made to a "printed product" this fundamentally covers one or more, possibly only temporarily unit-combined individual products.
[12] The printed products and associated first knife part 3 are oriented along a cut edge 4 and engaged (phase III) and moved past a second knife part 5. The first knife part 3 and second knife part 5 are brought into cutting engagement, so that they cut or trim the printed products 2 along the edge 4 (phase IV). The second knife part 5 is shown in Fig. 1 as a fixed, rotary cutting knife. "
"[13] It obviously falls within the scope of the invention to give a different shape and function to the second knife part. Thus, the second knife part can e.g. be constructed as a stationary, non-rotating blade or as a movable, non-fixed knife part."
What is meant by a "movable non-fixed knife", given that claim 1 calls for movement past "a second fixed knife part"? To this I must return when construing claim 1.
[13] ….. Although the rotating knife part 3 is preferably constructed as a counterknife and the knife part 5 as the actual cutting knife, their functions are naturally also interchangeable. Thus, it is unimportant for the purposes of the described method, whether the printed products are conveyed in as a scale flow or in any other arrangement. Thus, the situation can be such that the printed products are supplied individually or in groups from a preceding working process."
"This shows that as they enter the cells 12 at location A, the printed products 2 are travelling at a completely different velocity to the first knife parts 31. Having entered the drum, the printed products 2 continue to move towards the centre of the drum, and therefore in a different direction to the knife parts 31. After being cut by the fixed blade 15, the printed products immediately start to move outwards (away from the centre of the drum, and therefore in a different direction to the knife parts 31) so as to be cut by blade 16. As they exit the cells at location B, the printed products 2 are travelling at a completely different velocity to the first knife parts 31."
Claim 1 and Infringement
"(1) Method for cutting or trimming continuously conveyed, multilayer printed products in a continuous process,
(2) in which at least one first knife part is jointly associated with each one or several printed products,
(3) in which at least one first knife part and the associated printed product are moved at substantially the same velocity and are engaged with one another along at least one cutting edge,
(4) characterized in that the first knife part and the associated printed product are moved past a second, fixed knife part,
(5) in order to be brought into cutting engagement therewith, so that the printed product is at least cut along an intended cutting edge."
"[122] The following description is taken from the product and process description. A conveyor rotates around an axis in an anti-clockwise direction. The angular speed of the conveyor is steady. Each printed product is held between a pair of leading and trailing clamp pieces. The products move as the conveyor rotates. Each leading clamp piece is attached by a spring to a point inward and ahead of it on the conveyor. Accordingly, when the leading clamp piece follower rolls are free the printed products are clamped between each leading clamp piece and its corresponding trailing clamp piece. Each pair of leading and trailing clamp pieces is pivotally journalled on a pivoting bolt. The centres of these bolts are disposed at a constant radial distance from the centre of the conveyor and are equally spaced at intervals of 20°. Each trailing clamp piece has a follower roll at the end of a lever arm. The rolls are constrained by cam surfaces, which together comprise a guide track. This causes the leading and trailing clamp pieces (and the printed products held between them) to rotate into different angular positions with respect to their respective radial directions as the conveyor rotates.
[123] The trimmer comprises six rotating knife parts which are disposed on a circumference at equal 60 0 spacings. The rotating knife parts of the trimmer rotate clockwise about an axis. Each printed product makes contact with a rotating knife part at about 10 o'clock. The trimmer includes a single fixed knife part. The inner edge of the rotating knife part passes the fixed knife part at approximately 11 o'clock at which position the printed product is trimmed at its end by being cut between the two knife parts. The drawing in the PPD is partially reproduced below."
"[124] Thus if we follow the progress of a printed product, it is shown clamped in position 1. The clamp moves anti-clockwise through positions 5 and 9. Meanwhile the rotary counterknife is rotating clockwise. The fixed rotary knife is rotating anti-clockwise. The counterknife and the printed product come into contact just before position 13; and the cut takes place between positions 13 and 14. The speed of the rotating counterknives is constant. However, the speed of the printed product varies during this process. Between positions 1 and 10 it moves quickly. The purpose of this is to allow the printed products to fan out so that they can be placed more easily between the rotating knife parts. Then the printed products are slowed down suddenly, so that by the time of the cut itself they are moving at the same (or almost the same) speed as the rotating counterknives.
[125] A pair of side trimmers are placed at a different position on the circumference of the conveyor, usually upstream. One trimmer is in front of the drawing, the other behind it. As each printed product passes the side trimmers it is caused to move to the positions 1 to 17 as shown on the drawing. The side trimmers have their axes parallel to the plane of the drawing and to a radius corresponding to position l3 of the printed product, and so perpendicular to the axis of the conveyor. The distance between the fixed knives on the two side cutters is equal to the width of the product after trimming."
"[126] The essential difference between NewsTrim and the patent in suit is that in NewsTrim the counterknife does not travel with the printed product. The printed product is conveyed by a separate clamp. Of course the counterknife makes contact with the printed product at the time of the cut; otherwise the cut could not take place."
"[78] The description of the process in the specification says that during Phase II the first knife part is "concomitantly moving" with the printed products. This is the phase in which the knife part "catches up" with the printed products. In Phase III (i.e. before cutting) the printed products and the first knife part "are … engaged". The use of the word "engaged" must mean (at least) that the first knife part and the nearest of the printed products are touching. Indeed the products must be clamped in the cell before being cut. In Phase IV both the printed product and the first knife part "are moved" past the second knife. The use of the passive voice both here and in claim 1 suggests that they move together, rather than independently. The basic idea behind the invention is that the two knife parts move independently of each other, and that the first knife part is "fixed relative to the material being cut"; and that the cutting engagement is temporary. This is in contrast to known machines, where the knife parts move temporarily with the printed product, but where they are fixed relative to each other. It is in my judgment clear that the word "associated" requires a physical association; and not merely predictability.
[79] The second area of dispute was whether the association must last longer than the mere moment of cutting. In my judgment it must. One of the purposes of the cell is to hold the printed products in a clamp. The product must be aligned before cutting and then re-aligned (still in the cell wall) before the final cut. The patent teaches that the first knife part must be "fixed relative to the material being cut" which itself suggests that the association is more than merely momentary. It contrasts this with the cutting engagement, which is only temporary. In addition the claim requires that the first knife part and the printed product "are moved at substantially the same velocity and are engaged with one another along at least one cutting edge". This is clearly a reference to Phase III, since it precedes the movement past the second knife. The requirement that the velocity of the knife part and the printed products be the same means that they must be moving at the same speed and in the same direction. The claim goes on to require that the first knife part and the associated product are "moved past" a second knife. Thus the physical association (same speed and direction) lasts from at least Phase III until the product has gone past the second knife, which is necessarily after it has been cut."
"[18] ….The printed products can also be so fixed in their cells by a clamping mechanism, that they cannot be further displaced until they have passed the second cutting knife 15."
i) the "association" between the "one knife" and "each one or several printed products" called for by the claim is that during the process a knife part which is to cut a product or group of products is allocated to the product or group;ii) the association must continue until after the cut;
iii) there must be a period during which the knife part and product or products have substantially the same velocity;
iv) that period must cover the period of cutting;
v) but it need not be any longer.
"The essential difference between NewsTrim and the patent in suit is that in NewsTrim the counterknife does not travel with the printed product. The printed product is conveyed by a separate clamp. Of course the counterknife makes contact with the printed product at the time of the cut; otherwise the cut could not take place."
"Clearly the parts of the cutting mechanism, if they are rollers or rotating or oscillating blades, will move. What is important is that there is no change to the overall position of the mechanism during the operation. The contrast that the claim is making is therefore between the first knife, which travels continuously with the product at the same velocity, engaging with the intended cutting edge, and the second knife which remains behind at the same position or station, even though it may move."
"[130] However, up to that point [i.e. that of cutting] they are not moving at substantially the same velocity. This can be seen most easily by comparing the position of the counterknife along the length of the printed product. Professor Lüthi carried out rather more sophisticated calculations which showed the same thing. The printed product is located between two counterknives at position 11. The trailing counterknife "catches up" with the printed product at position 12. From then on until the cut at position 13 they move at substantially the same speed. But between position 12 and position 13 the counterknife has moved further from the uncut edge of the printed product, so that they are not travelling in the same direction. Thus they are not travelling at the same velocity. At position 13 the printed product and the counterknife are moving at the same velocity for an instant of time, necessary to perform a cut. Immediately afterwards their directions of travel diverge. When dealing with the meaning of the word "displacement" in the patent in suit Mr Mellor argued forcefully that the skilled practical person would not be concerned with "infinitesimal" displacement. I think that the same approach is warranted when considering whether the counterknife and printed product in the NewsTrim machine are moving at the same velocity. The practical person would not be concerned only with the precise instant at which the cut takes place. If one lifts one's eyes from the exact moment of cutting, the counterknife and the printed product do not move at the same velocity."
"[131] In addition, I agree with MM that the two rotating knife parts of the NewsTrim machine are fixed (in the sense that they remain in the same overall location during the trimming process) and are associated with each other as a pair (in pairwise manner). Thus, in my judgment, they more closely fit the patent's description of conventional cutting machines than the new route that the patent claims."
Validity – Stobb (US Patent No. 4,496,140)
The disclosure of Stobb
"[46] … In Stobb, a trimming station is integrated into a stacker (a "compensated stacker"). Stobb takes three fixed blades arranged in a "U-shape", and the signatures are moved past those blades by means of a rotary motion. Two of the blades are adjustable.
…
[47] The operation of the Stobb process can be seen from Figure 1 of Stobb (partially reproduced).
[48] A conveying means (12) and (13) drops a signature (10) into a clamp, formed by members 18 and 19, pointing vertically upwards, and then rotated anti-clockwise past two fixed side cutters (16) and a fixed front cutter (17) and cut. The figure shows four clamps in a cruciform arrangement. The blades on the side cutters (16) are shown as angled or sloping blades. Once cut, the clamped signature continues to rotate anti-clockwise until the clamp points vertically downwards. The clamp releases the signature, and it falls into the compensated stacker (not shown). The stacker sits on a rotating table, which is rotated periodically by 180o so that the signatures stack evenly. The patent explains that although the embodiments show the signatures being rotated past the cutters, the cutters could be rotated past the signatures.
[49] Figure 4 explains how the clamp and the side cutters can be adjusted.
"A cross bar 47 is connected at the extending ends of the bars 46, and that determines the spacing between the outer edges 48 of the bars 46 and that spacing is the width of the signature after it is trimmed. When it is desired to change the width of the trimmed signature, then the cross member 47 is changed and a member of a different length can be inserted between the bars 46 and connected thereto, and that will change the spacing between the edges 48 and thus change the width of the signatures to be trimmed, and of course it will be recognised that the side cutters 16 will also be adjusted to have their cutting edges 49 in the plane of the edges 48 for trimming the signature overhang designated 51 in FIG 5."
[50] The final paragraph of the specification in Stobb says:
"It will be seen that the arrangement is such that the holder or clamp member 19 is fixed with the shaft 15 to rotate therewith in the direction of the arrow B, and that rotation is such that member 19 becomes a bed knife relative to the three cutting blades 16 and 17. Thus, the holder 18 is used for pressing the signature against the member 19 which then serves as the main member against which the cutting is accomplished".
Figure 5 shows the side cutters (16) in the plane of the leading and trailing edge of the clamp (46). The clamp is shown as symmetrical. The view is a head on view; and the front of the clamp (corresponding to member 19 in figure 1) is shown as being made of three pieces (46, 47, 46). It is this member that "becomes a bed knife".
Anticipation by Stobb?
"two side cutters 16 and one end cutter 17 are operative on the signature 10 when it is in the trimmer 14" (col. 159-60)
This is not the language one would use if 16 and 17 were only parts of a 2-knife cutting system, the other parts being the edges of the clamp.
i) There are not two knife parts;ii) There is no cutting engagement between two knife parts;
iii) There is no first knife part moving at substantially the same velocity as the product along a cutting edge.
"[100] In my judgment Professor Lüthi had the answer to this point. He said that Stobb was not a blueprint for the manufacture of a working machine. It was a schematic presentation. A skilled addressee would construct member (19) as a counterknife and would realise that there needed to be marginal clearance between the leading edge and the trailing edge of the clamp. The kind of clearance required would be no more than a few microns. The details were not difficult to achieve. The edges of member (19) could be mitred corners, which any skilled person would adopt in constructing a working model of Stobb. To build in a measure of clearance was straightforward engineering. They do not fall outside the scope of trial and error experiments to make the machine work. I accept Professor Lüthi's view ("if it moves like a duck, and quacks like a duck …"). For practical purposes member 19 is a counterknife in a two-knife shear cut. In my judgment Stobb discloses a counterknife (or, in the language of the claim a "first knife part"). "
"rotation is such that member 19 becomes a bed knife relative to the three cutting blades 16 and 17."?
i) The expression "bed knife" is not a recognised technical term. It is true that Prof. Fritsch rather unsatisfactorily tried to establish otherwise, but his failure in that regard merely leaves the court in the position that the skilled reader would have a conundrum as to what Stobb meant;ii) It is wholly improbable that Stobb meant 19 actually to be constructed as a knife part. It is not merely that he has not said so, it is that what he has actually described in detail about the adjustability of the clamp means it cannot be a knife part;
iii) The language used – "becomes a bed knife" – is not that which one would use if 19 simply had a knife edge: actual knife edges do not "become" so. They are always so.
i) only two kinds of cutting are known, single and 2-knife;ii) single knife cutting always requires a cutting strip - you need a chopping board to chop an onion;
iii) no cutting strip is shown in Stobb and indeed you could not have one because you need the rotation of the clamp past the knives;
iv) So Stobb must be 2-knife cutting.
He added that this is reinforced by the fact that knives 16 and 23 are shown sloping so that they make a progressive cut.
"[98] However, I do not consider that a knowledge of the principles of visco-elasticity would have been part of the mental toolbox of the skilled addressee of the patent at the time."
But you do not have even to be skilled in the art of trimming to know that if you slash at an unsupported membrane (e.g. a falling piece of paper) with a knife you may cut it, whereas if you only push gently against it, it will just move away. It is fair to say, however, that no-one had actually used an unsupported single-knife to trim in this way.
"When it is desired to change the width of the trimmed signature, then [specified adjustments can be made], and of course it will be recognised that the side cutters 16 will also be adjusted to have their cutting edges 49 be in the plane of the edges 48 for trimming the signature overhang…(Col 352-61)"
He seized on the reference to in the plane of saying that it is only in 2-knife cutting that you have cutters in the same plane. But that is not right. Even for 2-knife cutting you must have a small difference in plane, as was well-recognised. And even more significantly the passage is in the specific context of Stobb's adjustability. It is not possible to spell out of this phrase in this context that side cutters 16 each form part of a pair of shear cutters, the other member of the pair being the sides of the clamp.
"Apparatus for handling a signature, comprising a conveyor for moving a signature and having a terminal end for releasing the signature, a rotatably mounted signature holder (movably) disposed adjacent said terminal end for receiving the signature from said conveyor and with an edge of the signature extending beyond said holder, a stationary cutter disposed adjacent said holder and in the path of movement of the extending edge of the signature for trimming the extending edge of the signature when the signature is rotationally moved past said cutter."
This is simply not the language one would use if the holder itself was to be provided with a knife-edge. It is the "stationary cutter" which is to be in the path of the "extending edge" of the signature. There is nothing requiring a cutting engagement between the cutter and the holder. And nothing about the "holder" having knife edges or being a "cutter."
"[85] Mr Floyd submits that the "intended cutting edge" is no more than the edge along which it is intended to cut. If it is intended to cut along the whole of the (uncut) edge of the product, then that is the intended cutting edge. But if it is intended to cut only half way along the (uncut) edge, then that is the intended cutting edge. Mr Floyd also drew attention to claim 18 (an apparatus claim) in which it is claimed that the apparatus is so constructed that "the edges of the printed products are cut from one end to the other". This, he says, shows that the patentee knew how to describe a cut along the whole length of the (uncut) printed product. He had not done so in claim 1.
[86] Mr Mellor, on the other hand, points to the embodiments of the method. The figures consistently show that the printed product is cut along the whole of its (uncut) edge. Moreover, it is clear that the patent is concerned with two-knife cutting: its whole point is the separation of knife and counterknife. In any two-knife cut the line of engagement of the two knives must extend beyond either side of the product to be cut. This is a general principle of two-knife cutting. Consequently the skilled addressee, reading the patent in context would understand the expression "intended cutting edge" to mean the whole edge of the (uncut) product.
[87] I do not consider that claim 4 sheds any light on this debate. It is true that it refers to cutting from "one end" to "the other". But from one end of what? From one end "of the intended cutting edge" to the other. So the precise meaning of the intended cutting edge is still at large. All that you can say about it is that it has two ends. So I put claim 4 on one side.
[88] Although I see the linguistic force of Mr Floyd's submission, I consider that it places insufficient weight on the context of the patent; and the common general knowledge that the skilled addressee would bring to bear on his reading of it. The argument is the same sort of argument that the House of Lords rejected in Catnic ("vertical" contrasted with "substantially horizontal"). The skilled addressee would know that the trimming of products is typically performed by arranging trimming knives so that cutting occurs progressively from one edge of the paper to the other. This was common ground between the experts. So if the product was not to be cut from end to end the skilled addressee would, I think, have expected to be told that in terms. He would also notice from the description of the preferred embodiment that as the process unfolds "the observer-facing lateral edge of the printed product is trimmed"; and that the final cut is that of "the top edge of the printed product". He would also know that if the printed product was not cut along the whole of its (uncut) edge, there would be waste still partially attached to the partially trimmed product, with no clear means of disposing of it. Read in context, I conclude that the intended cutting edge means the whole length of the uncut product.
Obviousness over Stobb
i) Stobb is not dealing with the same problem as Ferag, keeping the trimmer up with the speed of delivery from the printer and binder – speed of 80,000 copies an hour. Stobb as shown has a feed which would operate at much slower speeds (as was common ground). So it is not likely to be of interest to a man concerned with the problem of high speed trimming – how to keep up.ii) Stobb is a single-knife cutter with three blades;
iii) As a single-knife cutter depending on a punch the skilled man would have caution as to Stobb's approach. His use of a phrase which was unknown to him ("becomes a bed knife") would, I think, regard Stobb as perhaps a man who has not thought his idea through very clearly.
iv) Stobb produces U-shaped trimmings which at best would be a nuisance to get rid of.
i) The trailing part of the clamp (Stobb's 19) was provided with knife edges;ii) The leading part of the clamp was made of slightly lesser dimension than the trailing edge so as not to interfere with a shear cut.
iii) The front edge of the clamp was non-adjustable;
iv) The slope of at least one side cutter was reversed in comparison with the printed product during cutting;
v) The front and side knife edges were displaced. Stobb shows the side cutters 16 at their front end level with the front cutter 17 and sloping away downwards;
vi) The front knife edge extended beyond the side cutters at each end so that there was no simple U-cut – the "vertical" arms of the U each were partially cut by the front knife extension.
The two models varied in that in one the front knife part was displaced up above one side cutter and in the other down below both side cutters. Neither were as shown in Stobb where the knives are level.
"[113] In my judgment the heart of the invention (and hence the inventive concept) is the separation of knife and counterknife: the one travelling with the printed product (but fixed relative to the printed product) and the other remaining fixed (in the sense I have described). This means that there can be many counterknives per knife (i.e. the knife and counterknife are not associated with each other "pairwise"). Of equal importance is the feature of the counterknife that it is (or is part of) the cell wall, and therefore also acts as a part of the clamp. The invention is limited to cutting products from end to end."
Rösner (GDR Patent 112,380)
"[41] Rösner dates from the mid-1970s. It describes a process for trimming paper stacks, principally book blocks, by one or more straight knives while the product is moving. This is achieved by trimming the book blocks by means of a cutting knife as the book blocks are moving, and by then pivoting the book blocks about 90°, again as they are moving, before they are trimmed further by another similar cutting knife. The blocks are held on a trolley or carriage. Rösner describes the cutting knife as follows:
"One advantage is that the knife movement can be chosen at will, anything from a straight-line knife movement in a guide cam to a circular movement if the knife represents the coupling link between the cranks of a parallel crank drive fixed to the frame."
[42] The embodiments show both single knife cutting and also two knife cutting. It is the latter that is relevant for present purposes. As Rösner states:
"The so-called bottom cutting tool which may be a bottom knife for shear-cutting or a cutter board for knife-edge cutting is more effective if fixed to the guiding arrangement although it can be in a fixed position in the machine's cutting station."
[43] In the two-knife cutting, the cutting knife engages the cutting edge of the book block, and a shear cut is achieved against the edge of a counterknife, also associated with the cutting station. As Rösner states:
"It goes without saying that the movement of the knife is synchronised with the movement of the carriage in such a way that the cutting procedure always takes place when the carriage has run into the guiding arrangements and the guiding arrangement briefly moves at the speed of the carriage for the duration of the cutting procedure."
[44] The upper, or cutting, knife moves, guided by a cam, so that it both follows the book block horizontally as it moves through the cutting station, and descends on the book block so as to cut it in cooperation with the lower knife. However, as Professor Lüthi demonstrated, when the cutting process takes place the book block (with the counter-knife attached) moves past the cutting knife, although not all the way past.
"[105] As I have said, Professor Lüthi demonstrated that the book block and the lower knife moved part of the way past the upper knife. They did not move the whole of the way past. Rather the blade of the upper knife retracted, and then the book block moved on. In addition, the movement of the book block and the lower knife was the conveying process, rather than part of the cutting process itself. In other words the movement did not take place "in order" to bring the two knives into cutting engagement. In my judgment Rösner did not disclose this integer."
"Just as with Müller Martini the counterknife here does not move with the paper throughout the conveying process. It is associated with a particular cutting station and it only moves briefly with the paper as it is brought into engagement with the cutting knife. So paper comes in, and just at the point where you are going to cut you introduce the counterknife, you slice through it, and it moves on, just as with Mueller Martini. That is why it is an important squeeze document. The only real difference from the Müller Martini system which can be identified is that the cutting knife in Rösner, although it is fixed to the cutting station, has an element of movement relative to the frame of the station. We have seen how it swings into the path of the paper as it moves through. In the specific embodiment of Rösner it is rotating about two fixed points."
So the knife simply does not "move past etc."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Tuckey: I agree.
Lord Justice Mummery: I also agree.