Process for challenging patent validity scrutinized

2018 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-26
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Bonginkosi Shozi ◽  
Yousuf Vawda

In October 2019 the Constitutional Court (CC) handed down judgment in the matter of Ascendis Animal Health (Pty) Limited v Merck Sharpe Dohme Corporation 2020 1 SA 327 (CC). This is its first judgment dealing with the validity of a patent and, as it concerns issues that go the heart of patent law, the judgment potentially has far-reaching implications for patent litigation in South Africa. At issue was the question of whether a court's finding of patent validity on one ground in a revocation hearing ought to have a bearing on a subsequent infringement hearing on the same patent, to the extent that the alleged infringer is barred from raising a different ground to attack the validity of a patent. In essence, did the attempt to do so offend the principle of res judicata? This was a direct appeal to the Constitutional Court after the High Court ruled that it did so offend, and the Supreme Court of Appeal refused leave to appeal. The Constitutional Court was deadlocked on this issue, with the result that the decision of the High Court refusing Ascendis' application to amend to introduce a new ground of attack stands, and the res judicata objection was upheld. The decision raises important questions about the application of the principle of res judicata in such cases where the Patents Act allows dual proceedings for revocation and infringement actions, the meaning of provisions of the Act as they relate to the certification of patent claims, and the broader public interest considerations implicated in patent law adjudication. This note observes that while the outcome sends a strong signal about the courts' displeasure at attempts to prosecute "repeat litigation", an unsatisfactory outcome is that patents can apparently be validated on the basis of merely one of the mandatory requirements for patent validity as required by the Act. It argues that such an outcome is undesirable and does not serve the public interest. This is because it closes the door to further challenges while potentially thousands of patents, which would not have passed the validity test had they been subjected to substantive examination, remain on the patent register.


Science ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 253 (5023) ◽  
pp. 952-952
Author(s):  
M. Berninger
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

We have studied all final patent validity decisions issued by the federalcourts between 1989 and 1996 reported in United States Patents Quarterly.We test this dataset to determine a number of facts of interest to scholarsand patent litigators, including the rate at which patents are held valid,the subject matter of the patents litigated, the rate at which judges andjuries hold patents valid, the most common grounds for invalidity, howvalidity decisions fare on appeal, and numerous other hypotheses.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lemley

The United States Patent and Trademark Office is tasked with the job ofreading patent applications and determining which ones qualify for patentprotection. It is a Herculean task, and the Patent Office pursues itsubject to enormous informational and budgetary constraints. Nonetheless,under current law, courts are bound to defer to the Patent Office'sdecisions regarding patent validity. In this Article, we argue for reform.Deference to previous decision-makers is appropriate in instances wherethose previous decisions have a high likelihood of accuracy, and the patentsystem should endeavor to create processes that fit this mold. But grantingsignificant deference to the initial process of patent review isindefensible and counter-productive. Patents should be vulnerable tochallenge until and unless they are significantly evaluated in aninformation-rich environment. At that point, they will have earned andtherefore should be accorded a presumption of validity. Such an approachwould better serve the patent's systems long-run incentive goals, and itwould give patent applicants better incentives to file for genuineinventions but leave their more obvious and incremental accomplishmentsoutside the patent system's purview. Here, we therefore suggest thecreation of a two-tier system of patent validity, with patents that aresubject to intensive scrutiny accorded a strong presumption of validity,while untested patents are left to be evaluated more fully in court.


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