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Paris: the Center of patent litigation in Europe

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Managing Partner, Marks & Clerk France ... Cour de Cassation. Conseils en Propri t Industrielle. Avocats. Supreme Court. Bundesgerichsthof ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Paris: the Center of patent litigation in Europe


1
  • Paris the  Center  of patent litigation in
    Europe?
  • Christian NGUYEN VAN YEN
  • Chair of CNCPI International Relations Committee
  • Managing Partner, Marks Clerk France

2
Agenda
  • Electing venue
  • Collecting evidence
  • Discussing validity reasoning on inventive step
  • Discussing infringement beyond litteral
    infringement?
  • Take away

3
Electing venue
  • The legal framework
  • Brussels Convention -gt Regulation 44/2001
  • Art 6-1 place of business of one of the
    defendants
  • Art 5-3 place of the harmful event
  • Art 22-4 patent validity can only be decided by
    national courts
  • Art 27 and lis pendens and related actions
  • A court second seized must stay the proceedings
    until it has been decided upon competence of the
    court first seized
  • Attacking
  • The spider in the web
  • ECJ seems to have stricken a blow to the spider
    strategy
  • Defending
  • The Italian torpedoe

4
Electing venue
5
Collecting evidence
  • England and Wales
  • Disclosure (ie discovery)
  • Expert witness cross-examination
  • Germany
  • Mostly written proceedings
  • France
  • Saisie-contrefaçon
  • Experts

6
Discussing validity reasoning on inventive step
  • The standard problem solution approach is the
    preferred test of German and French Courts
  • What is the objective technical problem solved by
    the differences between the invention and the
    closest prior art?
  • Would this closest prior art have prompted the
    man skilled in the art to modify this art to
    solve the objective technical problem in a way
    which would fall within the scope of the claims
    of the patent in suit?
  • There might be some nuances in applying the test
  • French courts are less dogmatic in defining the
     objective technical problem  and can find more
    easily patentable subject matter in Computer
    Implemented business method inventions

7
Discussing validity reasoning on inventive step
  • The UK Courts apply a different test (from
    Windsurfing Int vs Tabur Marine)
  • What is the inventive concept?
  • Consider the man skilled in the art with his
    common general knowledge
  • Distinguish the differences with the prior art
  • Decide if these differences were obvious for the
    man skilled in the art
  • Even if the test is not very different
  • There is a systematic reference to the common
    general knowledge
  • The result has proven to be a higher standard of
    non obviousness in the UK

8
Discussing infringement beyond litteral
infringement?
  • Judges in all member States are normally bound by
    Art 69 EPC and the Protocol on Interpretation
  • The specification and the drawings can be called
    in to interpret the claims
  • This interpretation should not lead to a too
    narrow construction based on a litteral reading
    of the claim (the UK way) or a too broad
    construction where claim wording has little
    importance (the German way)
  • EPC2000 has explicitly accepted the notion of
    equivalent
  • But the Diplomatic Conference could not agree on
    a common definition of equivalents

9
Discussing infringement beyond litteral
infringement?
  • Before EPC2000, UK judges have always been very
    reluctant to accept the notion of equivalent
  • Justice JACOB recently declared that the patent
    world would be better off without the doctrine of
    equivalents which creates a lot of uncertainty
    for third parties
  • They prefered to apply a purposive construction
    of claims to analyse litteral infringement - Cf
    the 3 Catnic or Improver (Epilady) questions
  • Same material effect
  • Similarity obvious at the date of publication
  • Language of the claim not obviously meaning that
    strict compliance is an essential requirement

10
Discussing infringement beyond litteral
infringement?
  • German judges have always accepted a broad notion
    of equivalence, but the recent trend of BGH is to
    come closer to the UK approach
  • The first two questions are the same
  • Same material effect , this similarity being
    obvious
  • The third is less stringent
  • Is the variant an equivalent solution?
  • French judges have a different approach
  • First question is the same
  • Same function same material effect similar
    result
  • No obviousness of similarity test
  • Novelty of the function gt Equivalent
  • An example of divergent decisions
  • Müller vs Hilti re EP 0 319 521 (Pipe clamp)

11
Take away
  • Navigating through the various procedural and
    substantive laws in the EU can be complex
  • In general terms
  • DE tends to be pro patent but complex (Validity
    and infringement are separate actions) and costly
  • GB is more on the defendant side and very costly
  • FR tends to be a jurisdiction where a balance is
    kept between the interests of the patentee and
    third parties
  • Cost efficient way to collect evidence and
    conduct proceedings
  • There is a need for more harmonisation
  • But it will take time and in the meantime
    professionals in the EU are here to advise their
    clients on the best options to optimise
    management of their case

12
  • Any question?

Christian NGUYEN VAN YEN Managing Director, CPI,
EPA Tél 33 1 41 48 45 68 Mail
cnguyen_at_marks-clerk.com
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