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A-425-78
Schlumberger Canada Limited (Appellant)
v.
Commissioner of Patents (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte and Ryan JJ. and Kerr D.J.—Ottawa, May 21 and June 15, 1981.
Patents — Appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents rejecting an application for a patent — Application discloses a process whereby measurements of soil characteris tics from boreholes are recorded on magnetic tapes, transmit ted to a computer programmed according to the mathematical formulae set out in the specifications and converted into charts, graphs or tables — Commissioner held that the appel lant was claiming a monopoly on a computer program which is not an invention — Whether the application discloses a pat- entable invention — Appeal is dismissed — Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4, s. 2.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
D. A. Hill and L. Webster for appellant. A. 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
PRATTE J.: This is an appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents rejecting an applica tion for a patent made by the appellant.
The purpose of the alleged invention is to facili tate the exploration for oil and gas. That explora tion is normally made by drilling boreholes through the geological formations thought likely to contain hydrocarbons and by passing instruments up and down those boreholes to effect various measurements of the characteristics of the soil. For reasons that need not be explained here, those measurements are not always very useful to geolo gists. However, the authors of the invention claimed by the appellant have discovered that those measurements may be combined and analyzed so as to yield more meaningful informa-
tion. The appellant's application discloses a pro cess whereby the measurements obtained in the boreholes are recorded on magnetic tapes, trans mitted to a computer programmed according to the mathematical formulae set out in the specifica tions and converted by the computer into useful information produced in human readable form (e.g., charts, graphs or tables of figures).
The Commissioner founded his rejection of the appellant's application on the reasons stated by the Patent Appeal Board in their recommendation. That recommendation, as I understand it, was based on the view that the appellant in effect claimed a monopoly on a computer program and on the further view that such a program, even if it were new and useful, is not an invention within the meaning of section 2 of the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4.'
The appellant attacks the decision of the Com missioner on the ground that it is based on a false characterization of the invention claimed. Accord ing to the appellant's counsel, the invention claimed is not a mere computer program, it is a process whereby a series of calculations are per formed mechanically so as to extract useful infor mation from some measurements. In order for the invention to be put into practice, it is, of course, necessary to program computers. But the inven tion, it is said, is not the computer program, it is the complex process, which is effected by comput er, of transforming measurements into useful information. As the Patent Act contains no provi sion specifying or even implying a limitation of the meaning of the word "invention" in section 2 of the Act so as to exclude inventions involving com puters, there does not exist any reason for saying that the discovery claimed by the appellant, assuming it to be new and to have required inven tive ingenuity, is not a patentable invention within the meaning of section 2 of the Act.
' Section 2 of the Act provides that:
2. In this Act, and in any rule, regulation or order made
under it,
"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;
In order to determine whether the application discloses a patentable invention, it is first neces sary to determine what, according to the applica tion, has been discovered. Now, it is obvious, I think, that there is nothing new in using computers to make calculations of the kind that are pre scribed by the specifications. It is precisely in order to make those kinds of calculations that computers were invented. What is new here is the discovery of the various calculations to be made and of the mathematical formulae to be used in making those calculations. If those calculations were not to be effected by computers but by men, the suject-matter of the application would clearly be mathematical formulae and a series of purely mental operations; as such, in my view, it would not be patentable. A mathematical formula must be assimilated to a "mere scientific principle or abstract theorem" for which subsection 28(3) of the Act prescribes that "no patent shall issue". As to mental operations and processes, it is clear, in my view, that they are not the kind of processes that are referred to in the definition of invention in section 2. However, in the present case, the specifi cations prescribe that the calculations be made by computers. As a result, as I understand the appel lant's contention, those calculations are not mental operations but purely mechanical ones that consti tute the various steps in the process disclosed by the invention. If the appellant's contention were correct, it would follow that the mere fact that the use of computers is prescribed to perform the calculations prescribed in the specifications, would have the effect of transforming into patentable subject-matter what would, otherwise, be clearly not patentable. The invention of the computer would then have the unexpected result of giving a new dimension to the Patent Act by rendering patentable what, under the Act as enacted, was clearly not patentable. This, in my view, is unac ceptable. I am of opinion that the fact that a computer is or should be used to implement discov ery does not change the nature of that discovery. What the appellant claims as an invention here is merely the discovery that by making certain calcu lations according to certain formulae, useful infor mation could be extracted from certain measure ments. This is not, in my view,,,an invention within the meaning of section 2.
For those reasons, I would dismiss the appeal.
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RYAN J.: I agree.
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KERR D.J.: I agree.
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