HOW HIGH HAS THE BAR BEEN RAISED? THE AUSTRALIAN PATENT OFFICE ISSUES ITS FIRST OPPOSITION DECISION ON A POST RAISING THE BAR PATENT APPLICATION

Similar documents
APPENDIX 1 THE CURRENT AUSTRALIAN TESTS SUFFICIENCY

HOW 2016 PLAYED OUT FOR AUSTRALIAN ANTI-CORRUPTION ACTIVITIES

AMENDMENTS TO COMPETITION AND CONSUMER ACT 2010 (CTH)

NEW FALSE ACCOUNTING OFFENCES COMMENCE OPERATION IN AUSTRALIA

INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION: ENFORCING ARBITRAL AWARDS AND INDEMNITY COSTS

Eli Lilly v Actavis. Mark Engelman Head of Intellectual Property

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

AMENDMENTS TO THE HEAVY VEHICLE NATIONAL LAWS: SIMPLIFYING THE LAW, INCREASING THE PENALTIES

Standing Committee on the Law of Patents

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAWS AMENDMENT (RAISING THE BAR ACT) 2012

Attention: Ms Chung Ka Yee 29 January Re: Feedback on Proposed Changes to Chapter 8 Of The Examination Guidelines For Patent Applications

Keywords: patent, construction, infringement, Amgen, equivalents, protocol

Harmonisation across Europe - comparison and interaction between the EPO appeal system and the national judicial systems

HAVE RECENT CHANGES TO FOI CAUSED A SHIFT IN AGENCIES PRACTICES?

Current Patent Litigation Trends: UK and Germany

LEGAL GUIDE HANDY CLIENT GUIDE TO PRIVILEGE

An introduction to European intellectual property rights

The Evolving State of the Law on Utility. Teresa Stanek Rea Crowell & Moring LLP April 16, 2015

Working Guidelines Q217. The patentability criteria for inventive step / non-obviousness

Patent Enforcement UK perspectives

Claims and Determining Scope of Protection

OPT OUT AND CLAIM REGISTRATION NOTICE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA Treasury Wine Estates Class Action

FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA. Scott & Taws v OZ Minerals class action NOTICE SHAREHOLDER CLASS ACTION AGAINST OZ MINERALS LIMITED

PATENT DISCLOSURE: Meeting Expectations in the USPTO

The relationship between insufficiency and clarity Clear or unclear?

Comparative Aspects of the Non- Obviousness Assessment under European and US Patent Law

Design Life Warranties and Fitness for Purpose in Construction Contracts: the Position in Australia and England

Australian Constitutional Law

Questionnaire May 2003 Q Scope of Patent Protection. Response of the UK Group

Information for Associates

MULTIPLE AND PARTIAL PRIORITIES. Robert Watson FICPI 17 th Open Forum, Venice October 2017

COMMENTARY. Antidote to Toxic Divisionals European Patent Office Rules on Partial Priorities. Summary of the Enlarged Board of Appeal s Decision

Questionnaire on Exceptions and Limitations to Patent Rights. The answers to this questionnaire have been provided on behalf of:

United States Court of Appeals

THE CHAIN OF RESPONSIBILITY LEGISLATION IN QUEENSLAND FRAMEWORK

Claim interpretation by the Boards of Appeal of the EPO

Title: The patentability criterion of inventive step / non-obviousness

Guidance Statement No. 7 Limited scope representation in dispute resolution (Published 8 June 2017)

The Patent Examination Manual. Section 7: Meaning of inventive step

Hamilton Securities Limited (to be renamed Dawney & Co Limited)

Added matter under the EPC. Chris Gabriel Examiner Directorate 1222

Teva vs. Leo Pharma. Oliver Rutt RSC Law Group IP Case Law Seminar 18 November 2015

Dawn of an English Doctrine of Equivalents: immaterial variants infringe

Joint Inventorship and Ownership: the importance of contracts in collaborative research in Australia

Where are we now with plausibility?

For personal use only

19 Comparative Study on the Basis of the Prior User Right (Focusing on Common Law) (*)

ACN NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING PROXY FORM EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM. Date of Meeting Tuesday, 23 November Time of Meeting 11.

Alchemy in the UK: the Supreme Court in Eli Lilly V Actavis transmutes sodium into potassium but will it provide gold for patentees?

For personal use only

For personal use only

A guide to the new privacy landscape for the Commonwealth Government

ACTAVIS UK LTD v ELI LILLY & CO

This document gives a brief summary of the patent application process. The attached chart shows the most common patent protection routes.

For personal use only

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

GUIDE TO RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF ICA ARBITRATION AWARDS IN THAILAND LEGAL GUIDE FIRST EDITION

ENERGY QUEENSLAND LIMITED RISK AND COMPLIANCE COMMITTEE CHARTER. [March 2018]

publicly outside for the

Immigration Law Conference February 2017 Panel discussion Judicial Review: Emerging Trends & Themes

For personal use only

Recent EPO Decisions: Part 1

Advisory Council on Intellectual Property

EPO Decision G 1/15 on Partial Priorities and Toxic Divisionals: Relief and Risks

Security of Payment Legislation and Set-Off Under Commonwealth Insolvency Laws

AIPPI - 41 st Congress of the International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property (AIPPI) Boston, 6-11 September 2008

PATENT. Vexed pemetrexed UK Supreme Court rewrites the law on scope of patent protection. no.60. Full Story Page 02. August 2017 In this issue:

EUROPEAN GENERIC MEDICINES ASSOCIATION

DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND GOVERNING LAW CLAUSES IN INDONESIA-RELATED CONTRACTS LEGAL GUIDE FIRST EDITION

Clinical Trial Research Agreement

112 Requirements. January Disclosing A Genus Of Compounds. g Supporting A Negative Limitation By Disclosing A Reason To Exclude

YEARBOOK YEARBOOK ANNUAIRE JAHRBUCH ANNUAIRE JAHRBUCH ANNUAIRE YEARBOOK 2016 / IV

ENDEAVOURS OBLIGATIONS:

IN THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF ARBITRATION GOOD HEALTH COMPANY DIRECTOR OF IP, STATE OF MARU SUBMISSIONS OF COUNSEL FOR THE CLAIMANT

Intellectual Property Reform In Australia

2008 Patently-O Patent Law Journal

Federal Circuit Tightens Standards for Inequitable Conduct

Patents Bill 2008: Patentability of Computer Programs

Software patenting in a state of flux

Private Equity and Tax Reform: Fund, Transactions and Portfolio Company Strategies

Oil States, SAS Institute, and New Approaches at the U.S. Patent Office

IPFocus LIFE SCIENCES 9TH EDITION WHEN IS POST-PUBLISHED EVIDENCE ACCEPTABLE? VALEA

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

Contract for Consultancy Services (Small)

18 March The Manager Company Announcements Office Australian Securities Exchange ( ASX ) PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT 2015 ILUKA RESOURCES LIMITED

Disney-Pixar Cars 3 Pit Stop Competition - Terms and Conditions - Game of Skill. Competition Terms and Conditions

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Seeking Preliminary Injunction for Pharmaceutical Patent Infringement in Sweden

THEOPHANOUS v HERALD & WEEKLY TIMES LTD* STEPHENS v WEST AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPERS LTD*

FICPI 12 th Open Forum

WHAT IS A PATENT AND WHAT DOES IT PROTECT?

THE RISE AND RISE OF MERITS REVIEW: IMPLICATIONS FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW AND FOR ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

ACTAVIS V ELI LILLY SHOULD WE HAVE SEEN IT COMING?

House Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs

Firmus Energy (Distribution) Limited 1 LICENCE FOR THE CONVEYANCE OF GAS IN NORTHERN IRELAND

Disclaimers at the EPO

REGALPOINT RESOURCES LIMITED A.C.N Circular to Shareholders. Including NOTICE OF MEETING EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM PROXY FORM

Inside IP. Intelligent patents for artificial intelligence. European Intellectual Property Attorneys PAGE 11

Case Nos , UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT ARIOSA DIAGNOSTICS, INC., ILLUMINA, INC.,

FAILURE TO GIVE PROPER, GENUINE AND REALISTIC CONSIDERATION TO THE MERITS OF A CASE: A CRITIQUE OF CARRASCALAO

Transcription:

HOW HIGH HAS THE BAR BEEN RAISED? THE AUSTRALIAN PATENT OFFICE ISSUES ITS FIRST OPPOSITION DECISION ON A POST RAISING THE BAR PATENT APPLICATION 21 January 2016 Australia, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney Legal Briefings By Rebekah Gay and Reginald Leones In the first opposition decision of the Australian Patent Office to apply the post- Raising the Bar disclosure and support requirements, the hearing officer applied principles derived from UK and European case law to find that the opposed application did not meet the new requirements. Under the new requirements, the specification must provide an enabling disclosure to allow a person skilled in the art to perform the invention across the whole scope of the claim without undue burden i.e. as a matter of reasonable trial and error. The financial cost of the trial and error may render it unreasonable, such that it constitutes an undue burden. For the claims to be properly supported by the disclosure in the specification, the scope of the claims must correspond to the technical contribution to the art as described in the specification. Where a claim is broadly drafted, the specification must teach a general principle by which the invention will be achieved in order for the support requirement to be met. BACKGROUND Some of the most significant changes to Australian patent law introduced under the Raising the Bar legislation 1 were changes intended to set higher thresholds for the level of disclosure and support required in a patent specification. The Australian Patent Office (APO) has now issued its first opposition decision on a patent application under these new provisions in CSR Building Products Limited v United States Gypsum Company [2015] APO 72 (CSR). 2 The APO rejected the claims as being too broad for the level of disclosure and support provided in the specification. This article examines the reasons for the rejection, and the decision s implications.

WHAT HAS CHANGED? Historically, Australian patent law required that a patent specification describe the invention fully and that the claims be fairly based on the matter described in the specification. If a person skilled in the art could perform the invention by making something within the scope of the claims, this was considered a sufficient level of disclosure. 3 The fair basis requirement was considered satisfied if the specification contained a real and reasonably clear disclosure of what was claimed. 4 However, the Raising the Bar reforms amended the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) to require that: a complete specification must disclose the invention in a manner which is clear enough and complete enough for the invention to be performed by a person skilled in the relevant art(s 40(2)(a)), and the claim(s) must be supported by the matter disclosed in the specification (s 40(3)). These amendments were intended to bring Australia in line with overseas jurisdictions (such as the UK and Europe) by ensuring that the person skilled in the art can extend the teaching of the specification to produce the invention across the full width of the claims, 5 and that the scope of the claims is not broader than is justified by the extent of the description, drawings and contribution to the art. 6 (emphasis added) THE PATENT APPLICATION AND CLAIMED INVENTION IN CSR The patent application in issue in CSR involved fire resistant building panels made from a gypsum core that includes high expansion particles (such as high expansion vermiculite). These particles provide the core with a defined density and hardness. The specification provided example compositions of 20 different sample panels having high expansion vermiculite. The specification also provided fire resistance test results for each of these samples according to particular industry standards. However, some of these samples failed to pass any of these standards. Critically, since each claim is directed to a fire resistant panel, the APO held that the person skilled in the art would understand that this means the panel must meet some recognised fire resistance standard. Therefore, the claims were construed to define gypsum panels having high expansion particles, and other defined properties, and fire resistance (i.e. that it meets a relevant industry standard). THE PATENT OFFICE DECISION IN CSR The requisite level of disclosure under s 40(2)(a): The hearing officer, after referring to UK case law, summarised the relevant question as Can the skilled person readily perform the invention over the whole area claimed without undue burden and without needing inventive skill?. 7 To answer this question, the hearing officer adopted a three-step approach, namely: construe the claims to determine the scope of invention as claimed,

construe the description to determine what it discloses to the skilled person, and decide whether the specification provides an enabling disclosure of all the things that fall within the scope of the claims. 8 Applying this approach, the hearing officer held that the specification did not meet the requirements of s 40(2)(a) as it did not provide an enabling disclosure across the full width of claim In particular, the hearing officer held that the specification failed to provide an enabling disclosure for panels having the defined parameters for fire resistance. This was because there were a number of variables in relation to process and starting materials that affected whether a panel met the defined parameter. However, the specification did not disclose how to adjust the process and materials so as to achieve with certainty a fire resistant panel. 9 In addition, the evidence showed that it was prohibitively expensive (up to US$50,000 or more) to test whether a sample fire panel met one of these standards. The hearing officer considered that the work involved in adjusting the composition of the panels to meet the parameters therefore did not amount to reasonable trial and error, 10 in the absence of a high expectation that the sample will pass. The hearing officer therefore concluded that it would be an undue burden to develop compositions of fire retardant panels with the defined properties, other than those compositions used as examples in the specification. Support under s 40(3): The hearing officer, after referring to UK and European cases, concluded that support required that the scope of the claims should correspond to the technical contribution to the art. 11 In assessing this requirement, the hearing officer again followed a three-step approach, namely: construe the claims to determine the scope of invention as claimed, construe the description to determine the technical contribution to the art, and decide whether the claims are supported by the technical contribution to the art. 12 In applying this approach, the hearing officer concluded that only some of the sample preparations using high expansion particulars produced a low density, fire resistant gypsum panel. As a result, the technical contribution to the art was limited to the particular examples shown to produce panels having the desired properties. Comparing this technical contribution to the scope of the claims, the hearing officer held that the scope of the claims were to gypsum panels that contain high expansion particles AND are fire resistant. 13 As there was no general principle disclosed for achieving the result of a low density, fire resistant gypsum panel, the claims travelled beyond the matter disclosed in the specification and therefore failed to comply with s 40(3). CONSEQUENCES FOR POST RAISING THE BAR PATENT

APPLICATIONS Had the patent application in this case been assessed according to the pre-raising the Bar disclosure and fair basis requirements, it is likely that the decision would have been different. Since a person skilled in the art could have made something within the scope of the claims by making a panel according to one of the samples that did pass a recognised fire resistance test, the application would have satisfied the old sufficiency requirement. Similarly, the claims also could have satisfied the fair basis requirement, since there was consistency between the invention as described and claimed, and a real and reasonably clear disclosure of the claimed invention. This decision therefore demonstrates the change wrought by the Raising the Bar legislation and provides long-awaited guidance on the revamped approach of the APO to the new disclosure and support requirements. In particular, it confirms the relevance of UK and European case law. It is also an indicator of the APO s view that the specification must include sufficient information for the person skilled in the art to be able to diverge from the examples and produce something that falls within the scope of the claims, without undue burden. The APO may consider the claim invalid if it is unreasonably difficult or costly to verify whether new embodiments fall within the scope of the claims. The new support and disclosure requirements have yet to be considered by the Australian courts. Although it is to be expected that the Courts will adopt a similar approach to the APO, the extent to which Courts will rely on overseas case law remains to be seen. ENDNOTES 4. 5. 6. Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Act 201 Available at this website. Kimberly-Clark Australia Pty Ltd v Arico Trading International Pty Ltd (2001) 207 CLR 1, 17; Lockwood Security Products Pty Ltd v Doric Products Pty Ltd (2004) 217 CLR 274, 297. Lockwood Security Products Pty Ltd v Doric Products Pty Ltd (2004) 217 CLR 274, [69]. Explanatory Memorandum, Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Bill 2011 [2012], 47. Ibid, 49. 7. CSR, [91]-[94] (citing Novartis AG v Johnson & Johnson Medical Limited [2010] EWCA Civ 1039, [74]; Eli Lilly & Co v Human Genome Sciences, Inc [2008] RPC 29, [239]; Kirin-Amgen Inc v Hoechst Marion Roussel Ltd [2005] RPC 9, [103]). 8. 9. 10. CSR,[98]. CSR, [102]. CSR, [104]. 1 CSR, [109]-[110] (citing Fuel Oils/EXXON (T409/91) [1994] OJ EPO 653, 659 and Generics (UK) Ltd v H Lundbeck A/S [2009] RPC 13).

1 CSR, [115]. 1 CSR, [118]. KEY CONTACTS If you have any questions, or would like to know how this might affect your business, phone, or email these key contacts. REBEKAH GAY PARTNER, SYDNEY +61 2 9225 5242 Rebekah.Gay@hsf.com LEGAL NOTICE The contents of this publication, current at the date of publication set out above, are for reference purposes only. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication. Herbert Smith Freehills 2018 SUBSCRIBE TO STAY UP-TO-DATE WITH LATEST THINKING, BLOGS, EVENTS, AND MORE Close HERBERT SMITH FREEHILLS LLP 2018