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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 >> Tulane Education Fund v The Comptroller General of Patents [2012] EWHC 932 (Pat) (17 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2012/932.html Cite as: [2013] Bus LR 53, [2012] EWHC 932 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
IN THE MATTER OF s28, sl28B and Schedule 4A of the Patents Act 1977
-and-
IN THE MATTER OF Application No. SPC/GB99/033 in the name of TULANE EDUCATION FUND
-and-
IN THE MATTER OF an appeal from the decision of the Comptroller General of Patents dated 20 July 2011
____________________
Between: TULANE EDUCATION FUND |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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THE COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF PATENTS |
Respondent |
____________________
MISS CHARLOTTE MAY instructed by The Treasury Solicitor appeared the Respondent.
Hearing date: 24 January 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Ground 1 - Application of Rule 107
(1) Subject to paragraph (3), the comptroller may, if he thinks fit, authorise the rectification of any irregularity of procedure connected with any proceeding or other matter before the comptroller, an examiner or the Patent Office.
....
(3) A period of time specified in the Act or listed in Parts 1 to 3 of Schedule 4 (whether it has already expired or not) may be extended under paragraph (1) if, and only if -
(a) the irregularity or prospective irregularity is attributable, wholly or in part, to a default, omission or other error by the comptroller, an examiner or the Patent Office; and
(b) it appears to the comptroller that the irregularity should be rectified.
Mr. Laddie submitted—and speaking for myself, I would have thought this was right— that the proviso only comes into operation on three conditions. First, the applicant has to show that the Patent Office is guilty of an error, default or omission; and by "omission ", I mean an omission to do something which it can be said there is some sort of obligation to do, and that I think does not include, as in this case, the answering of routine letters within any particular time limit.
Secondly, he has to show that such error, default or omission can be said to have contributed to the failure to meet the time limit.
Thirdly, Mr. Laddie's submission is that the contribution must be shown to have played a "significant" or a "substantial" part in the applicants' failure. I find that submission an acceptable one, subject to this that it seems to me that it is to some extent a matter of words. It is always dangerous to paraphrase statutory wording but it seems to me that the word "attributable" involves the concept that what has to be demonstrated is that the error, default or omission upon which reliance is placed, does play an active causative role in the irregularity which has taken place. It clearly does not have to be the sole cause, but it has I think, to be something more than a mere causa sine qua non so that it can be said to be a partial cause of the irregularity in the sense of having actively brought it about.
Ground 2 Restoration under Section 28 of the Act
28. -(l) Where a patent has ceased to have effect by reason of a failure to pay any renewal fee, an application for the restoration of the patent may be made to the comptroller within the prescribed period
....
(3) If the comptroller is satisfied that the failure of the proprietor of the patent -
(a) to pay the renewal fee within the prescribed period; or 25
(b) to pay that fee and any prescribed additional fee within the period ending with the sixth month after the month in which the prescribed period ended,
was unintentional, the comptroller shall by order restore the patent on payment of any unpaid renewal fee and any prescribed additional fee.
128B.- (1) Schedule 4A contains provision about the application of this Act in relation to supplementary protection certificates and other provision about such certificates.
(2) In this Act a "supplementary protection certificate" means a certificate issued under -
(a) Council Regulation (EEC) No 1768/92 of 18 June 1992 concerning the creation of a supplementary protection certificate for medicinal products 13
(b) Regulation (EC) No 1610/96 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 July 1996 concerning the creation of a supplementary protection certificate for plant protection products
Procedure
I. In the absence of procedural provisions in this Regulation, the procedural provisions applicable under national law to the corresponding basic patent shall apply to the certificate, unless that law lays down special procedural provisions for certificates.
Section 28 is not one of the sections listed in Schedule 4A to the Act as being one which applies to supplementary protection certificates...the drafter has now set out explicitly which provisions of the Act apply to SPCs.... It is reasonable to assume that the drafter specifically intended those sections of the Act...not listed in [sub-]paragraph (2)...not to apply to SPCs (Decision, [39]).
Article 19 however requires me to look at the provisions applicable under UK national law. In the UK a fee must be paid up front in order to bring the SPC into effect, which is very different from the way that patent renewal fees operate in the UK.... the provisions for restoration of lapsed patents set out in section 28 only apply when a patent has ceased to have effect by reason of a failure to pay any renewal fee. In the present case the SPC has never been brought into effect and therefore cannot be said to have ceased to have effect. (Decision 44).
1 the wording in section 25(3) of the 1977 Act is that the failure to pay renewal fees leads to a requirement that the patent shall "cease to have effect" and so it is "lapsed" (cf the heading for s. 28);
2 where the annual fee for a supplementary protection is not paid it is "lapsed" (see Article 14(c));
3 if, which is not accepted, paragraph 5 of Schedule 4A is intra vires, it is only so where, on failing to pay the fee so prescribed, the certificate "lapses";
4 it would be contrary to the Regulation to allow any "additional fee" to be charged to bring the certificate into force (see Ground 3 below).
In addition, I can find nothing in the Regulation, its travaux préparatoires or the jurisprudence of the Court to suggest that there was ever an intention that Art. 18 should not encompass procedures which can be found in all national patent laws of the Member States... ([42]).
Policy background
7.1 The 1992 Regulations and 1996 Regulations have been criticised for only applying the provisions of the Act to supplementary protection certificates in a very general way. This instrument therefore replaces these Regulations and makes clear on the face of the Act which of its provisions apply to supplementary protection certificates, and in what manner.
6. Separately, existing UK legislation sets out that, in general terms, the provisions of the Act apply to supplementary protection certificates ("SPCs"). Where a patent for a medicine or plant protection product has expired after 20 years, an SPC can give the patent holder up to an additional 5 years of exclusive rights. This extra period of protection is intended to compensate the patent holder for the fact that, during the patent lifetime, the product will have had to undergo a lengthy period of regulatory testing before being released to market. However, the existing UK legislation has been criticised as being too vague in meaning, and leaving users uncertain as to the detailed legal framework which implements SPCs in the UK.
7. The new Patents Regulations therefore amend the Act to show in detail, on the face of the Act, which of its provisions apply to SPC's and which do not. Terms such as "patent" and "patent application" are glossed so that the the provisions which apply to SPC's read correctly. This also ensures that the new Rules package – and particularly the provisions on litigation - can incorporate updated rules governing SPCs. This again brings more consistency between how patents and SPCs are treated, and more clarity as to the law which applies to SPCs in the UK.
Ground 3: Paragraph 5 of Schedule 4A is ultra vires
A supplementary protection certificate does not take effect unless the prescribed fee is paid before the end of the prescribed period, or
the prescribed fee and any prescribed additional fee are paid before the end of the period of six months beginning immediately after the prescribed period.
"The certificate shall lapse ...(c) if the annual fee laid down in accordance with Article 12 is not paid in time;"
Note 3 See OJ C. 114/12, 8.5.90 (Article 10(1) read “Member States may require that the certificate shall be subject to the payment of renewal fees....”). [Back]