Gemak Trust v Jempak Corporation 2022 FCA 141 Mactavish JA: Gleason, Roussel JJA
revg Gemak v Jempak 2020 FC 644 Lafrenière J
2,276,428 / 2,337,069
In the decision under appeal Lafrenière J granted summary judgment dismissing
Gemak’s action for patent infringement against Jempak. My last post dealt with the
FCA’s holding that Lafrenière J erred in deciding the matter on a motion for summary
judgment. While that was sufficient to dispose of the appeal, the FCA went on to hold
that Lafrenière J also made two further errors, namely an error of law in assessing the
common general knowledge, which Mactavish JA chose to address in order to provide
guidance in future cases [92], as well as error in assessing testing evidence.
Common General Knowledge
On the first point, in a passage quoted by Mactavish JA [94], with emphasis added,
Lafrenière J stated that in assessing the common general knowledge:
[FC 97] The Court must assess what knowledge the skilled person would have
obtained through a diligent search conducted using the means available at the
relevant time.”
Focusing on the emphasized phrase,
Mactavish JA pointed out that there is a well-established distinction
between the prior art—any matter available to the public, no
matter how obscure [97]—and the common general knowledge, which is more
limited
than the entire prior art, and indeed does not even encompass all
information available
to the skilled person.*
Mactavish JA then held that it was an error to apply the concept of a reasonably diligent
search to the common general knowledge:
[99] The requirement of the reasonably diligent search has been applied - not
with respect to the identification of the common general knowledge of the
POSITA - but rather with respect to the discoverability of prior art relevant for
the purpose of the obviousness or anticipation analyses: see, for example, E.
Mishan & Sons, Inc. v. Supertek Canada Inc., 2015 FCA 163 at para. 22.
As a preliminary point, Mishan v Supertek was an obviousness case, and, so far as I
know, the the requirement of the reasonably diligent search has never been applied in
the context of anticipation; it has long been accepted that all prior art is relevant to
novelty (subject to historical restrictions restricting foreign prior art to printed matter,
presumably for evidentiary reasons, which were removed by the new Act in 1993). The
concept of a reasonably diligent search had been applied in the context of obviousness,
though, as Mactavish JA went on to note, that was changed by Hospira 2020 FCA 30, so
that all prior art is now potentially potentially relevant for the purpose of the
obviousness analysis [99]–[100]. (To be clear, that is not to say that all prior art is part
of the CGK even in the obviousness context.)
Mactavish JA continued:
[100] That said, knowledge that is only discoverable through a reasonably
diligent search is not, and has never been, considered to be part of the common
general knowledge. The Federal Court thus erred in finding otherwise.
This is a negative definition—it says that information that is only discoverable through a
reasonably diligent search is not considered to be “generally known” and so cannot form
part of the CGK. This raises the question of whether the CGK excludes information
requiring any kind of search. Lafrenière J [FC 97] had begun that paragraph by defining
the common general knowledge as being “the knowledge generally known by the skilled
person at the relevant time, and includes what the skilled person may reasonably be
expected to know and be able to find out.” Mactavish JA [93] quoted this passage as
being a correct statement of the law, “at least to the extent that the common general
knowledge includes what the skilled person may reasonably be expected to know,” thus
casting doubt on the phrase “and be able to find out.” However, in Novopharm v
Janssen-Ortho / levofloxacin 2007 FCA 217 [25.3] the FCA defined the CGK as
including “what the person may reasonably be expected to know and to be able to find
out” (my emphasis). That was recently endorsed by the FCA in Tetra Tech v
Georgetown Rail Eqpt 2019 FCA 203 [28]. Mactavish JA cannot have intended to cast
doubt on these cases, which were not mentioned.
Further, allowance for at least some degree of search seems necessary. As Laddie J noted
in Raychem Corp’s Patents [1998] RPC 31 (Pat) 40:
for something to qualify as common general knowledge it is not necessary to
show that all or a majority of the workers in the field knew it, in the sense of
having memorised it. For example in the days before the ready availability of
pocket calculators, most technicians needed to use log tables for mathematical
calculations. Few if any of them could memorise any of the log conversions in
such a table yet those conversions would be common general knowledge in the
patent sense.
Thus the view that information that can only be found through some sort of search,
albeit perhaps very limited, is thus well supported by authority and logic.
This does not imply that the CGK extends to knowledge discoverable only through a
reasonably diligent search. Looking up logarithms is routine. Perhaps the CGK includes
information that the skilled person would reasonably “be able to find out,” but does not
include information that is only discoverable through “a reasonably diligent search.”
This distinction would reconcile Mactavish JA’s holding that knowledge that is only
discoverable through a reasonably diligent search is not part of the CGK with the FCA
decisions in Levofloxacin and Tetra Tech. I have not seen this distinction explicitly
made before in Canadian law, but it does have antecedents in UK law.
In Raychem, Laddie J noted that in General Tire [1972] RPC 457 (CA), which remains
the leading case on CGK, in Canada as much as in the UK, the Court at 482 described the
CGK as being derived from “a common-sense approach to the practical question of what
would in fact be known to an appropriately skilled addressee.” Laddie J continued (my
emphasis):
The court is trying to determine in a common sense way how the average skilled
but non-inventive technician would have reacted to the pleaded prior art if it had
been put before him in his work place or laboratory. The common general
knowledge is the technical background of the notional man in the art against
which the prior art must be considered. This is not limited to material he has
memorised and has at the front of his mind. In includes all that material in the
field he is working in which he knows exists, which he would refer to as a matter
of course if he cannot remember it and which he understands is generally
regarded as sufficiently reliable to use as a foundation for further work or to help
understand the pleaded prior art.
The notion that the technical background of the skilled person is not restricted to what
they would have memorized has been extended to what is sometimes called the
secondary common general knowledge. (That phrase seems to have been coined by
Arnold J, as counsel in Actavis v Novartis [2009] EWHC 41 (Ch) [128]; while it does
not seem to have caught on, even in the UK, it is a convenient term.) As Pumfrey J
explained in Novartis v Ivax [2006] EWHC 2506 (Pat) [25]:
It is well settled that the common general knowledge is knowledge that must be
attributed to the skilled person, without which the latter may be taken not to be
skilled. To it must be added any knowledge that every skilled person should be
taken to acquire before he embarks on the problem to which the patent provides
the solution, as, for example, the relevant properties of cyclosporin if the problem
is to formulate cyclosporin.
As this passage indicates, knowledge that a skilled person would acquire only when
faced with a particular problem is not strictly part of the CGK. In KCI Licensing [2010]
EWHC 1487 (Pat) [108], Arnold J has described it as “information that, while it was not
part of the skilled addressee's common general knowledge, would have been acquired by
him as a matter of routine before embarking on the problem to which the patented
invention provides the solution.”
So, some information which the skilled person would not have memorized, but would always
have readily to hand, is part of the CGK (logarithms), while other such information
which the skilled person would acquire as a matter of routine, but only when faced with
a specific problem (the properties of cyclosporin), is not part of the CGK. (Always with
the proviso that the information must be regarded as a good basis for further action.)
Jacob LJ made this distinction in Generics v Daiichi [2009] EWCA Civ 646 [25]:
Of course material readily and widely to hand can be and may be part of the
common general knowledge of the skilled person – stuff he is taken to know in
his head and which he will bring to bear on reading or learning of a particular
piece of prior art. But there will be other material readily to hand which he will
not carry in his head but which he will know he can find if he needs to do so (my
emphasis).
This distinction may be important in some cases, as Jacob LJ went on to explain at
[25]–[28]: in addressing the problem solved by the invention, the skilled person may
acquire certain information through routine inquiry, and that information can then be
brought to bear on that particular problem. But, unlike the common general knowledge,
the skilled person would not have that information at hand in addressing an entirely
different problem. If A would be discovered by routine inquiry in addressing problem X,
and B would be discovered by routine inquiry in addressing problem Y, this does not
mean that it would be obvious to combine A and B to solve problem Z, even though it
might be obvious to combine A and B to solve problem Z if both A and B were part of the
CGK, strictly defined.
In effect, UK law draws a distinction between two types of information that the skilled
person would not have memorized, but which they would find as a matter of routine:
there is information which they know is of general usefulness, and which they would
apply to any problem, and information which they would only seek out in when faced
with a specific problem. The former is part of the CGK, and the latter is not. To draw an
analogy, a mechanic might have a toolbox he carries with him to work sites,
corresponding to information the skilled person has memorized; then there are tools,
such as a hex wrench in a non-standard size, that he does not have in his toolbox, but
that he keeps back at the shop, and he knows it is available if necessary, corresponding
to logarithm tables. These are both part of the CGK. Then there are special tools to
remove a custom fastener on a particular brand of machine. When the mechanic comes
across such a fastener, he will know he can readily get it from the manufacturer, and he
will know how to use it to fix the machine, without the exercise of any ingenuity on
either front; this corresponds to the secondary CGK. But he will not think to combine
the special tool for one machine with the special fastener from another machine, to solve
a problem he faces on a third kind of machine.
So, at least in English law, there is a distinction between information which the skilled
person knows is available as a matter of routine, and information which the skilled
person can find without undue burden when faced with a specific problem. The former
is part of the CGK and the latter is not.
This may be the kind of distinction Mactavish JA had in mind, though I’m not entirely sure. After all,
she seemed to cast doubt on the idea that the CGK includes information that the skilled
person would be able to find out, but it is clear that information may be part of the CGK
even if the skilled person would not have it memorized. And it is by no means clear that
the distinction necessary to reconcile Mactavish JA’s decision in this case with
Levofloxacin and Tetra Tech—which is to say the distinction between information the
skilled person would be able to find out and the information discoverable in a
reasonably diligent search—corresponds to the distinction drawn in UK law. On the
other hand, if we consider that the information discoverable in a reasonably diligent
search corresponds to the secondary common general knowledge, as that term is used in
English law, then it is indeed true that such information is not and never has been part
of the CGK.
I must say that it strikes me as somewhat harsh for Mactavish JA to have criticized
Lafrenière J on this point. The distinction is “subtle,” at least in the opinion of Kitchin J
(now of the UKSC), at first instance in Generics v Daiichi [2008] EWHC 2413 (Pat)
[40]. Moreover, the error, such as it was, made no difference in this case. There was no
dispute as to the common general knowledge [FC 4], [FC 101], so there is no particular
piece of information that was include by Lafrenière J that would be excluded by
Mactavish JA’s approach.
Further, it is worth pointing out even if information that is only discoverable in
reasonably diligent search is not part of the CGK, that does not imply that it cannot be
applied outside the context of obviousness. For example, it is very well established that
patent is enabling even if the skilled person cannot practice the invention without
carrying out some experiments, so long as those do not require undue effort: see BRP v
Arctic Cat 2018 FCA 172 [78]. Presumably the skilled person can also be expected to
carry out a routine literature search. When the patent claims a compound that can be
made using conventional methods, it is common for the specification to say as much,
typically referring to a leading handbook or a journal article for the details of the
method. Such a specification is undoubtedly sufficient, even if the ordinary skilled
person might have to actually consult the work referred to in order to carry out the
synthesis. Suppose the specification stated that the compound could be prepared by
conventional methods, but failed to actually cite the leading textbook. The specification
would no doubt still be sufficient if the details of the method could be found in the
standard textbook that the skilled person would consult as a matter of routine. The
parallel with secondary CGK in the obviousness context is exact, as the skilled person
attempting to practice the invention in light of the specification is faced with a specific
problem, and so can be expected to carry out routine research to address that problem.
So far as I can tell, the distinction between information that a skilled person knows of
and would be able to find out as a matter of routine, and information that the skilled
person would find out after a search in light of a particular problem, only matters in the
context of obviousness, and the problem of combining obscure prior art. The point made
by Jacob LJ, that secondary CGK is not CGK strictly speaking, means that two pieces of
prior art that are both only secondary CGK cannot be combined to make the invention
obvious. This point would be better addressed explicitly, as part of that ongoing
discussion, rather than with an abstract definition of the CGK.
*As an aside, Mactavish JA stated that a piece of knowledge only becomes general
knowledge “when it is generally known” and “accepted without question” by those
skilled in the art [96], quoting from Cefaclor liability 2009 FC 991 [97], which quoted
from General Tire [1972] RPC 457 (CA) 482–83, which in turn quoted from British
Acoustic Films Ltd v Nettlefold Productions (1936) 53 RPC 221 (Ch) 250. However, as
the English Court of Appeal noted in General Tire, 483, in a passage also quoted in
Cefaclor liability 2009 FC 991 [97], “accepted without question” may be “putting the
position rather high”; the Court of Appeal indicated that “generally regarded as a good
basis for further action” is preferable. The “good basis for further action” formulation is
now generally accepted: see also Mylan v Eli Lilly / tadalafil 2016 FCA 119 [24].
Nothing turned on the point and I am sure that Mactavish JA did not intend to hold that
“accepted without question” is the correct standard, as her focus was on the distinction
between the prior art and the common general knowledge; that is, the decision focuses
on what it means for information to be eligible to be part of the CGK because it is
“generally known”, while recognizing that not all information that is generally known is
part of the CGK.
Testing Evidence
Turning to the testing evidence, a key issue was whether Jempak’s detergent pods had
detectable levels of carboxymethyl cellulose [CMC] in the coating, which was an
essential element of the claims. Jempak’s expert gave evidence that there was no
detectable CMC, and this evidence was criticized by Gemak’s expert on the basis that the
testing method used by Jempak’s expert was not sufficiently sensitive. Lafrenière J
rejected this, partly on the basis that Gemak’s expert did not have experience with the
kind of detergent formulations at issue, and consequently he “did not provide an opinion
from the perspective of the skilled person of the Patents” [FC 129], [107]. But Mactavish
JA pointed out that Gemak’s expert was not construing the claims, but rather was
providing expert evidence with respect to the question of infringement. Infringement is
a question of fact. In this case, the question was whether or not the coating in fact
contained CMC, not whether a person skilled in the art would have been able to detect
the CMC as of the date of publication. Consequently, there is no requirement that the
testing method used by the expert witness is one that would have been used by the
skilled person:“Reviewing courts have . . . endorsed the use of analytical chemistry
techniques that would not have been available to a POSITA at the relevant time or that
would have been beyond the abilities of a POSITA” [108].