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A-164-83
Imperial Chemical Industries Limited (Appellant)
v.
Commissioner of Patents (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES LTD. V. COM MISSIONER OF PATENTS
Court of Appeal, Heald, Ryan and Stone JJ.— Ottawa, May 16, 1984, March 19, 1985 and April 8 and 21, 1986.
Patents — Appeal from Commissioner's decision rejecting method claims — Invention relating to method of cleaning teeth with aqueous composition — Claims rejected as process treatment of human body — Tennessee Eastman decision applied in holding method not process in economic sense Patent Act designed to protect — Appeal dismissed — No error in characterizing invention as having medical function — Test in Burton Parsons case met as one of main purposes of invention reduction of caries and/or periodontal disease, sup porting conclusion leading function of invention medical — Product can have two main purposes: medical and cosmetic — No error in Commissioner considering Tennessee Eastman binding — Latter not restricted to factual situations where s. 41(1) of Act applies — Tennessee Eastman deciding methods of medical treatment not contemplated in definition of "inven- tion" as kind of "process" — Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4, ss. 2, 41(1), 44 — Patent Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 203, s. 2(d).
This is an appeal from the Commissioner's decision rejecting method claims of the appellant's application for patent. The invention relates to a method of cleaning teeth by applying an aqueous composition. The Patent Appeal Board recommended the rejection of the method claims, finding that the applicant's process is a treatment of the human body and following the decision in Tennessee Eastman Co. et al. v. Commissioner of Patents (1970), 62 C.P.R. 117 (Exch. Ct.); affd. [1974] S.C.R. 111; (1972), 8 C.P.R. (2d) 202. The Board concluded that the applicant's method was not a process in the economic sense which the Patent Act was created to protect. The Commission er accepted the Board's recommendation. The appellant argued that the Commissioner erred in characterizing the subject- matter of the claims as a method of medical treatment and in holding that methods of medical treatment are per se unpatent- able. The appellant submits that only medical treatment involv ing the use of compositions governed by subsection 41(1) of the Patent Act are unpatentable per se.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
The appellant submitted that the Commissioner erred in failing to apply the test established by the Supreme Court of Canada in Burton Parsons Chemicals, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard (Canada) Ltd., [1976] 1 S.C.R. 555; (1974), 17 C.P.R. (2d) 97. The Burton Parsons case is a case under subsection 41(1) involving "substances prepared or produced by chemical pro cesses and intended for ... medicine". The case at bar is not governed by subsection 41(1) since the compositions are not produced by a chemical process. However, because the process is directed towards cleaning or treating a part of the human body, it is a treatment of the human body and thus equivalent to a medical treatment. Because of the factual differences, it is doubtful that the Burton Parsons test applies to this case. However, assuming its applicability, the requirements of the test have been satisfied. One of the main purposes of the invention was the reduction of caries and/or periodontal dis ease. As most of the population suffers from caries or periodon tal disease, there was sufficient evidence for the Commissioner to conclude that a leading function of the invention was medi cal. It is also possible for a product to have two main purposes, as here, one medical and the other cosmetic. There was no error in characterizing the invention as having a medical function simply because it may also have another leading function, namely, a cosmetic one.
The appellant argued that the Tennessee Eastman decision does not stand for the proposition that methods of medical treatment are, per se, unpatentable. The appellant argues that Tennessee Eastman only prohibits the patentability of medical methods which utilize materials prohibited pursuant to subsec tion 41(1), namely, materials produced by chemical processes. In its view, where as here the materials are produced by a physical rather than a chemical process, the rationale of Tennessee Eastman does not apply.
The sole issue in the Exchequer Court was whether the method for surgical bonding of body tissues is an art or process or an improvement of an art or process within paragraph 2(d) of the Patent Act. There was no reference to the application of subsection 41(1). Although the Supreme Court of Canada decision discusses the impact of section 41, it clearly and unequivocally states that "methods of medical treatment are not contemplated in the definition of `invention' as a kind of `process'." The force of that pronouncement cannot be restrict ed to factual situations where subsection 41(1) of the Act applies. The Commissioner did not err in considering himself bound by the ratio of Tennessee Eastman.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Tennessee Eastman Co. et al. v. Commissioner of Patents (1970), 62 C.P.R. 117 (Exch. Ct.); affd. [1974] S.C.R. 111; (1972), 8 C.P.R. (2d) 202.
DISTINGUISHED:
Burton Parsons Chemicals, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard (Canada) Ltd., [1976] 1 S.C.R. 555; (1974), 17 C.P.R. (2d) 97.
COUNSEL:
A. David Morrow for appellant. Arnold S. Fradkin for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Smart & Biggar, Ottawa, for appellant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is an appeal pursuant to section 44 of the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4, as amended, from a decision of the respondent Com missioner dated August 10, 1982, rejecting method claims 1 and 2 of the appellant's application for Patent Serial No. 304,853 "Lanthanum Cation for Cleaning Teeth."
Claims 1 and 2 in subject application are method claims. Claims 3, 4 and 5 are composition claims. The only claims under appeal are claims 1 and 2 since the Commissioner's refusal to grant a patent was restricted to those claims. In his ruling, the Commissioner directed that if the first two claims were removed from the application within six months of his decision, the application was to be remanded to the Examiner to resume prosecu tion of the remaining claims. The effect of this direction was to delay his decision respecting claims 3, 4 and 5 for the period given to the appellant to either remove claims 1 and 2 or to appeal the decision rejecting them.
The Abstract of the Disclosure relating to sub ject invention states (A.B. Vol. 1, page 77):
The invention relates to a method of cleaning teeth by applying thereto lanthanum, and to compositions, such as mouthwashes, toothpastes and dental gels, for use in such a method.
Claims 1 to 5 read as follows (A.B. Vol. 1, page 89):
1. A method of cleaning dental plaque or stains, including tobacco stains, from human teeth by applying thereto an aqueous composition which consists of an unbound lanthanum cation in the form of a dissolved water-soluble salt in such a concentration that an individual dose contains from 0.01 m mole to 1 m mole of the cation, said composition being substan tially free from any ingredients which precipitate the lan- thanum cation as a water-insoluble salt, being designed for direct application to the teeth and being in a form for use in a non-sequential manner.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the lanthanum cation is present in the form of the chloride salt.
3. An oral hygiene composition having the ability to clean dental plaque or stains, including tobacco stains, from teeth, which is an aqueous composition which consists of an unbound lanthanum cation in the form of a dissolved water-soluble salt in such a concentration that an individual dose contains from 0.01 m mole to 1 m mole of the cation, said composition being substantially free from any ingredients which precipitate the lanthanum cation as a water-insoluble salt, being designed for direct application to the teeth and being in a form for use in a non-sequential manner.
4. A composition as claimed in claim 3 in which the lanthanum cation is present in the form of the chloride salt.
5. A composition as claimed in claim 4 which is a mouthwash, toothpaste or dental gel.
It will thus be seen that the claims under appeal herein (claims 1 and 2) relate to a method of cleaning dental plaque or stains, including tobacco stains from human teeth by applying to the teeth an aqueous composition of a type which is generic to the oral hygiene composition claimed as a novel composition under claim 3. It is also clear that claims 3 to 5 claim patent protection for oral hygiene compositions per se. As noted supra, the Commissioner has made no decision with respect to claims 3 to 5. The Patent Appeal Board ren dered a written report in which it recommended that the Examiner's rejection of method claims 1 and 2 be affirmed. By his decision of August 10, 1982, the respondent Commissioner accepted that recommendation, adopted the reasoning and find ings of the Patent Appeal Board and refused to grant a patent containing claims 1 and 2. This appeal is brought from that decision.
The Patent Appeal Board stated the issue before it to be:
... whether or not brushing teeth with a composition contain ing a lanthanum cation releasing material is directed to a process which is patentable. [A.B. Vol. II, page 205.]
After reviewing the record of the application, the submissions of the appellant's agent and the find ings of the Examiner, the Board concluded (A.B. Vol. II, page 205):
From the application we find that the purpose of Applicant's process is to clean teeth by removing plaque and stains by the action of lanthanum in cation form, and by so removing the plaque remove the potential breeding spot for bacteria. Because Applicant's process is directed towards cleaning or treating part of the human body, i.e. the teeth, we are of the view that the process is a treatment of the human body. We believe that Applicant's application is directed to subject matter which is similar to that adjudicated in the Tennessee Eastman decision, supra.
The Board then quoted a number of extracts from that decision, thereafter stating (A.B. Vol. II, page 207):
We are led by the Tennessee Eastman decision to the view that Applicant's method is not related to, nor does it produce, "... a result that is essentially economic" within the meaning of which is acceptable in patent law. We find therefore that the method claims are directed to a treatment of part of the human body, and is equivalent to a method of medical treatment which may be applied by persons not in the field of medicine. Further more, the method does not contribute to the productive arts. What individuals do to their own teeth as they stand before a mirror in their bathrooms is not a process in the economic sense which the Patent Act was created to protect.
In his submission to us, counsel for the appellant alleged two errors in law on the part of the Com missioner. The initial error, in his view, was in characterizing the subject-matter of claims 1 and 2 as a method of medical treatment, it being the appellant's view that those claims do not define a method of medical treatment. The second error in law, in the submission of counsel, was that even if the subject-matter of claims 1 and 2 were properly characterized by the Commissioner, he erred in holding that methods of medical treatment are, per se, unpatentable since, in the appellant's submis sion, only methods of medical treatment involving
the use of compositions governed by subsection 41(1) of the Patent Act are unpatentable per se.
CHARACTERIZATION OF THE INVENTION
Counsel for the appellant treated the question of characterization as a threshold issue and submit ted that the Commissioner erred in failing to apply the test established by the Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Burton Parsons Chemicals, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard (Canada) Ltd., [ 1976] 1 S.C.R. 555, at pages 569-570; (1974), 17 C.P.R. (2d) 97, at pages 109-110. One of the attacks on the validity of the patent in that case was that the product claims were invalidated by subsection 41(1) of the Patent Act' as being for "substances prepared or produced by chemical processes and intended for ... medicine". Pigeon J. speaking for the Court, said [at page 570 S.C.R.; at page 109 C.P.R.] that he agreed with the finding of the Trial Judge that the conductive cream there in issue was not "intended for medicine" within the meaning of section 41. He expressed the view that the Tennessee Eastman case, supra, established that substances intended for use in surgery were included in the expression "intended for medi cine". He added [at page 570 S.C.R.; at pages 109-110 C.P.R.]:
I have no doubt that a conductive cream is apt to be used whenever electrodes are applied to the skin during surgery. However, there is nothing in the evidence which would justify the conclusion that such is the main or primary use of the product. [Emphasis added.]
Based on the words above emphasized, appellant's counsel submits that the method claims here in issue are simply a method of cleaning teeth using certain patentable compositions. He says that the method can be practised by anyone, that its prac tice is clearly not restricted to doctors and that it is
'Subsection 41(1) reads:
41.(1) In the case of inventions relating to substances pre pared or produced by chemical processes and intended for food or medicine, the specification shall not include claims for the substance itself, except when prepared or produced by the methods or processes of manufacture particularly described and claimed or by their obvious chemical equivalents.
not, in its main and primary function a medical method, any more than the simple act of brushing one's teeth is a medical method.
With respect, I am unable to accept this submis sion. My first comment with respect to the Burton Parsons case would be that it is a case under subsection 41(1) involving substances prepared or produced by chemical processes and, "intended for ... medicine." It was common ground, on the argument of the appeal, that the case at bar was not governed by subsection 41(1) since the compo sitions here produced are not produced by a chemi cal process. What was said in Burton Parsons relates only to substances which:
(a) are produced by a chemical process; and
(b) are intended for medicine.
In the case at bar, the substance is one not pro duced by a chemical process but, because the process of application of that substance is directed towards cleaning or treating a part of the human body it is said to be a treatment of the human body and thus equivalent to a medical treatment.
Because of those factual differences, I doubt that the Burton Parsons test relied on by the appellant necessarily applies to the instant case. However, assuming its applicability, I think that, on this record, the requirements of that test have been satisfied. Black's Law Dictionary [Fifth Edi tion] defines "main" as "Principal; leading; pri mary; chief." It defines "primary" as "First; prin cipal; chief; leading."
The disclosure of the invention emphasizes two main benefits from the invention:
(i) the cosmetic value; and
(ii) the reduction in the incidence of caries and/or periodontal disease.
The record shows that only a very small percent age of the population in industrialized countries is free from caries or periodontal disease (in the
U.S.A., approximately 0.1% of the population). On this basis, I think there was sufficient evidence for the Commissioner to conclude that a leading function of the invention was medical. I also think that it is possible to have more than one main purpose in a product. The evidence here suggests that this product had two main purposes, one medical and the other cosmetic. Accordingly, I see no error in law by the Commissioner in character izing the invention as having a medical function simply because it may also have another leading function, namely, a cosmetic one.
THE PATENTABILITY OF METHODS OF MEDICAL TREATMENT AND THE APPLICABILITY OF THE TENNESSEE EASTMAN DECISION
In deciding that methods of medical treatment are unpatentable per se, the respondent Commis sioner considered himself bound by the decisions of the Exchequer Court and the Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Tennessee Eastman Co. et al. v. Commissioner of Patents (1970), 62 C.P.R. 117 (Exch. Ct.); affd. [1974] S.C.R. 111; (1972), 8 C.P.R. (2d) 202. The appellant submits, how ever, that the Tennessee Eastman decision does not stand for the proposition that methods of medical treatment are, per se, unpatentable. In his view, methods of medical treatment are, per se, patentable as "arts" or "processes" since there is no limitation inherent in the words "art" or "proc- ess" as used in section 2 of the Patent Act which would exclude medical arts, or a medical process. 2 It is further submitted by the appellant that it is only methods of medical treatment that invoke the use of compositions governed by subsection 41(1) of the Patent Act that are, per se, unpatentable on the authority of that decision. Put another way, the appellant's position is that Tennessee Eastman only prohibits the patentability of medical methods which utilize materials prohibited pursuant to sub section 41(1) of the Act, namely, materials pro duced by chemical processes. Accordingly, where,
2 "Invention" is defined in section 2 of the Patent Act as follows:
2....
"invention" means any new and useful art, process, machine, manufacture or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement in any art, process, machine, manufac ture or composition of matter.
as here, the materials are produced by a physical rather than a chemical process, the rationale of the Tennessee Eastman decision does not apply, in its view. In short, the appellant submits that since Tennessee Eastman is a decision to which subsec tion 41(1) of the Act applies and since subsection 41(1) does not apply to the case at bar, that decision was not binding on the Commissioner and he erred in so finding.
In Tennessee Eastman, the appellant had sought, in patent claims, to obtain a patent for an invention consisting of a surgical method for bond ing the surfaces of incisions or wounds in living animal tissue. The Exchequer Court affirmed the Commissioner of Patents in rejecting the patenta- bility of such claims. The essential portion of the Acting Commissioner's reasons reads:
In applicant's application, we are concerned with a process of medical or surgical treatment of living tissues.
Applicant's arguments with respect to the words "art" and "process" also have been noted. However, not all methods or processes fall within the meaning of "art" under Section 2(d) of the Patent Act. The word "art" cannot be taken in its broadest meaning for there are arts which are excluded by statutes for instance by Section 28(3), others by well known and accepted court rulings such as business system, method of teaching, etc., and other by other statutes such as the Design Act and the Copyright Act.
Mr. Justice Kerr, in affirming that decision said, at pages 154-155:
In my view the method here does not lay in the field of the manual or productive arts nor, when applied to the human body, does it produce a result in relation to trade, commerce or industry or a result that is essentially economic. The adhesive itself may enter into commerce, and the patent for the process, if granted, may also be sold and its use licensed for financial considerations, but it does not follow that the method and its result are related to commerce or are essentially economic in the sense that those expressions have been used in patent case judgments. The method lies essentially in the professional field of surgery and medical treatment of the human body, even although it may be applied at times by persons not in that field. Consequently, it is my conclusion that in the present state of the patent law of Canada and the scope of subject-matter for patent, as indicated by authoritative judgments that I have cited, the method is not an art or process or an improvement of
an art or process within the meaning of s. 2(d) of the Patent Act.
In the Exchequer Court, the appeal was argued on the basis of an agreed statement of facts and issues. Kerr J. reproduced that statement in his reasons for judgment at pages 126 and 127 of the report. It reads:
"For the purpose of this hearing only, it is agreed that:
"1. The claims generally describe a surgical method for joining or bonding the surfaces of incisions or wounds in living body tissues by applying the compounds described in the claims of a liquid state, directly to at least one of the tissue surfaces to be bonded.
"2. The discovery that these particular compounds had an unexpected property of bonding body tissues is new and useful and unobvious but the compounds described in the claim were old and well known.
"3. The ground on which the Commissioner refused to grant a patent to the applicant was that the method for surgically bonding the surfaces of body tissues as covered by the claims in the said application does not constitute patentable subject matter under subsection (d) of section 2 of the Patent Act, in that it is neither an art, or a process within the meaning of said subsection.
"4. The issue before this Honourable Court is whether the method for surgical bonding of body tissues by applying to one of the tissue surfaces to be bonded, one of the compounds described in the claims, is an art on process or an improvement of an art or process within the meaning of subsection (d) of section 2 of the Patent Act.
"5. The parties agree that on the hearing of this appeal any of the documents appearing in the record file of this application, together with the matters therein contained, may be adduced in evidence without formal proof thereof, and the facts stated in the affidavit of David W. Fassett and in patent application serial number 884,804 are accepted as true.
"6. The parties agree that the issue stated in paragraph 4 is the only one which was considered by the Commissioner, and in the event the appeal is allowed and the Commissioner's decision to refuse to grant a patent is set aside, the appellant Ethicon, Inc. will be at liberty to resume the prosecution of its application."
It seems clear from paragraph 4 supra, that the sole issue in the Exchequer Court was whether the method for surgical bonding of body tissues by applying to one of the tissue surfaces to be bonded, one of the compounds described in the claims, is an art or process or an improvement of an art or process within the meaning of paragraph (d) of section 2 of the Patent Act [R.S.C. 1952, c. 203]. There is no reference in the agreed statement of facts and issues to the application of subsection 41(1) of the Patent Act. Likewise, I cannot find
any reference to the possible application of that subsection in the rationale of Mr. Justice Kerr's judgment. This is not surprising in view of the sole issue before him as set out in paragraph 4 supra.
Coming now to the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, Mr. Justice Pigeon delivered the Court's decision. He commences his reasons by setting out the agreed statement of facts and issues. At pages 114-115 S.C.R.; at page 204 of the C.P.R., he reproduces, with approval, that portion of the reasons of Kerr J. set out supra. It is true that he does discuss the impact of section 41, presumably since that case was a subsection 41(1) case. However, after that discussion, at page 119 S.C.R.; at page 207 of the C.P.R., he states:
Having come to the conclusion that methods of medical treatment are not contemplated in the definition of "invention" as a kind of "process", the same must, on the same basis, be true of a method or surgical treatment.
In my opinion, this is a clear and unequivocal statement that "methods of medical treatment are not contemplated in the definition of `invention' as a kind of `process' ...". That was the sole issue before the Court and it is here answered in unmis takable and unambiguous language. Accordingly, in my view, the force of that pronouncement cannot be restricted merely to factual situations where subsection 41(1) of the Act applies. It fol lows, therefore, that the Commissioner did not err in considering himself bound by the ratio of Tennessee Eastman.
Counsel for the respondent, at the hearing of the appeal, advanced an additional basis for non-pat- entability of claims 1 and 2, namely, that claims 1 and 2 are obvious or consist in the application of ordinary knowledge. In view of my conclusion that the Commissioner did not err in the basis upon which he refused those claims, it is unnecessary to reach a conclusion on the issue of obviousness.
For all of the above reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
RYAN J.: I agree. STONE J.: I agree.
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