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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> DLP Ltd, Re UK Intellectual Property Office Decision [2007] EWHC 2669 (Pat) (16 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2007/2669.html Cite as: [2008] 1 All ER 839, [2007] EWHC 2669 (Pat), [2008] Bus LR 778 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF UK Patent No. 2 394 175 B | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF an appeal by DLP Limited in relation to the Decision of a Hearing Officer of the UK Intellectual Property Office dated 26 April 2007 pursuant to section 74B of the Patents Act 1977 |
____________________
Michael Tappin (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Comptroller
Hearing date: 26 October 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Kitchin :
Introduction
i) Should this court entertain such an appeal at all?ii) If it does, what approach should it adopt?
The legal framework
"(1) The proprietor of a patent or any other person may request the comptroller to issue an opinion-
(a) as to whether a particular act constitutes, or (if done) would constitute, an infringement of the patent;
(b) as to whether, or to what extent, the invention in question is not patentable because the condition in section 1(1)(a) or (b) above is not satisfied.
(2) Subsection (1) above applies even if the patent has expired or has been surrendered.
(3) The comptroller shall issue an opinion if requested to do so under subsection (1) above, but shall not do so-
(a) in such circumstances as may be prescribed, or
(b) if for any reason he considers it inappropriate in all the circumstances to do so.
(4) An opinion under this section shall not be binding for any purposes.
(5) An opinion under this section shall be prepared by an examiner.
(6) In relation to a decision of the comptroller whether to issue an opinion under this section-
(a) for the purposes of section 101 below, only the person making the request under subsection (1) above shall be regarded as a party to a proceeding before the comptroller; and
(b) no appeal shall lie at the instance of any other person."
"(1) Rules may make provision for a review before the comptroller, on an application by the proprietor or an exclusive licensee of the patent in question, of an opinion under section 74A above.
(2) The rules may, in particular-
(a) prescribe the circumstances in which, and the period within which, an application may be made;
(b) provide that, in prescribed circumstances, proceedings for a review may not be brought or continued where other proceedings have been brought;
(c) make provision under which, in prescribed circumstances, proceedings on a review are to be treated for prescribed purposes as if they were proceedings under section 61(1)(c) or (e), 71(1) or 72(1)(a) above;
(d) provide for there to be a right of appeal against a decision made on a review only in prescribed cases."
The opinion
The review
"Review of opinion
77H.-(1) The patent holder may, before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date on which the opinion is issued, apply to the comptroller for a review of the opinion.
(2) However, such proceedings for a review may not be brought (or if brought may not be continued) if the issue raised by the review has been decided in other proceedings.
(3) The application shall be made on Patents Form 2/77, and shall be accompanied by a copy and a statement in duplicate setting out fully the grounds on which the review is sought.
(4) The statement shall contain particulars of any proceedings of which the applicant is aware which may be relevant to the question whether the proceedings for a review may be brought or continued.
(5) The application may be made on the following grounds only-
(a) that the opinion wrongly concluded that the patent was invalid, or was invalid to a limited extent; or
(b) that, by reason of its interpretation of the specification of the patent, the opinion wrongly concluded that a particular act did not or would not constitute an infringement of the patent.
Procedure on review
77I.-(1) Upon receipt of the application, the comptroller shall send a copy of the form and a statement filed under rule 77H-
(a) to the requester (if different from the applicant); and
(b) to all persons who filed observations under rule 77F.
(2) The comptroller shall advertise the application in such a manner as he may think fit.
(3) Before the end of the relevant period, any person may file a statement in support of the application or a counter-statement contesting it (which in either case must be in duplicate), and on so doing shall become a party to the proceedings.
(4) The relevant period is the later to end of the following periods-
(a) the period of four weeks beginning with the date that the application is advertised under paragraph (2);
(b) the period of two months beginning with the date on which the opinion is issued under rule 77G(2).
(5) The comptroller shall send to the other parties a copy of each statement or counter-statement filed under paragraph (3).
(6) The comptroller may give such directions as he thinks fit with regard to the subsequent procedure.
Outcome of review
77J.-(1) Upon the completion of the proceedings under rule 77I the comptroller shall either-
(a) set aside the opinion in whole or in part; or
(b) decide that no reason has been shown for the opinion to be set aside.
(2) A decision under paragraph (1)(a) or (b) shall not estop any party to proceedings from raising any issue regarding the validity or the infringement of the patent. "
"The patent holder may apply to have an adverse opinion set aside, and this would include an opinion which suggested that the patent was only partially valid. It is important to provide this opportunity since – in the absence of a third party launching revocation proceedings or committing an allegedly infringing act – the patent holder may have no other way of tackling an adverse opinion on validity that he feels is wrong.
The patent holder may also apply to have an adverse opinion on infringement set aside, but only where the opinion has come to that adverse view as a result of (what the patent holder believes is) an erroneous construction of the patent specification. Generally speaking, if the opinion has concluded that no infringement is taking place and the patent holder disagrees, he may sue for infringement. This could include the circumstances where the patent holder disagrees with the way that the claims have been construed. But suing for infringement is not possible if the opinion was sought on a potential or hypothetical act, and in such circumstances it would be unfair to deny the patent holder a chance to overturn an infringement opinion based on a construction of the claim which is adverse to him. Thus it is proposed to allow a review of an infringement opinion where the sole issue at stake is the construction of the claims."
The appeal
"No appeal under section 97 shall lie from decision to set aside the opinion under rule 77J(1)(a), except where the appeal relates to a part of the opinion that is not set aside. "
"Under section 74B(2)(d), the right to appeal a decision on a review may be limited to prescribed cases. If an opinion adverse to the patent holder is set aside on review, it would be disproportionate for the original requester (or anyone else) to be able to appeal that decision, and have the court consider in full proceedings whether to reinstate a non-binding opinion. Such a person will in any event be able to have the issues determined by a court by bringing revocation proceedings or proceedings for a declaration of non-infringement, Thus rule 78K [now rule 77K] does not allow for such appeals. Under that rule, a review decision will only be appealable if it upholds an opinion either wholly or in part. In other words, if after a review an opinion adverse to the patent holder remains, the patent holder will be entitled to appeal."
Right of appeal
"My Lords, in my opinion, the House should decline to hear this appeal on the ground that there is no issue before us to be decided between the parties. The difficulty is that the terms put on the appellants by the Court of Appeal are such as to make it a matter of complete indifference to the respondent whether the appellants win or lose. The respondent will be in exactly the same position in either case. He has nothing to fight for, because he has already got everything that he can possibly get, however the appeal turns out, and cannot be deprived of it. I do not think that it would be a proper exercise of the authority which this House possesses to hear appeals if it occupies time in this case in deciding an academic question, the answer to which cannot affect the respondent in any way. If the House undertook to do so, it would not be deciding an existing lis between the parties who are before it, but would merely be expressing its view on a legal conundrum which the appellants hope to get decided in their favour without in any way affecting the position between the parties."
And at 114:
"The research which has been given to the matter does not discover any previous decision in which the House of Lords has undertaken, on the petition of an unsuccessful appellant, to review the decision below when the opposite party has been finally settled with, and I think it is an essential quality of an appeal fit to be disposed of by this House that there should exist between the parties a matter in actual controversy which the House undertakes to decide as a living issue."
The nature of the review and the appeal process
"As the terms of r.52.11(1) make clear, subject to exceptions, every appeal is limited to a review of the decision of the lower court. A review here is not to be equated with judicial review. It is closely akin to, although not conceptually identical with, the scope of an appeal to the Court of Appeal under the former Rules of the Supreme Court. The review will engage the merits of the appeal. It will accord appropriate respect to the decision of the lower court. Appropriate respect will be tempered by the nature of the lower court and its decision making process. There will also be a spectrum of appropriate respect depending on the nature of the decision of the lower court which is challenged. At one end of the spectrum will be decisions of primary fact reached after an evaluation of oral evidence where credibility is in issue and purely discretionary decisions. Further along the spectrum will be multi-factorial decisions often dependent on inferences and an analysis of documentary material."
The position of the Comptroller on appeal
This appeal
"A shower tray comprising a trough along one or more sides of the tray and means for clamping flexible floor covering material and/or a flexible edge of a ramp device in the trough (s)."
"The shower tray described above can thus be installed into one of a plurality of different installation configurations equivalent to a wet floor former, a low level shower tray and a surface mounted shower tray. The particular configuration can be selected by the installer at the time of installation. Surrounding flooring material and/or an access ramp may be inserted and retained by the clamping and sealing device arrangement located within the tray periphery. The peripheral trough feature within the shower tray allows the installer a wide margin of error in the trimming of the floor covering material while still achieving an effective water seal and floor covering clamping mechanism."