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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Glaxo Group Ltd v Genentech Inc & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 23 (31 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/23.html Cite as: [2008] Bus LR 888, [2008] FSR 18, [2008] EWCA Civ 23 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
MR JUSTICE LEWISON
HC07 CO0367
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
GLAXO GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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GENENTECH INC BIOGEN IDEC INC |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
MR DANIEL ALEXANDER QC and DR JUSTIN TURNER (instructed by Rouse Legal) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 3rd August 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery (giving the judgment of the court):
Introduction
"The question of a stay of national proceedings pending opposition in the EPO arises frequently. The current practice of the Patents Court differs to some extent from the practice in commercial litigation.
Guidance from the Court of Appeal (as ratio rather than obiter) is needed."
Post-hearing developments
Undertakings
Lewison J's judgment
"66. Balancing all the factors together, I conclude that the balance of justice comes down in favour of allowing these proceedings to go to trial. I therefore refuse the application.
67. I would, however, add that the practice now adopted in patent cases does seem to be to some extent out of line with the more usual commercial case which comes before our courts. The guidance has stemmed largely from obiter observations of Aldous LJ. It may well be time for the Court of Appeal to examine the current practice to see whether it is justified and if it is, to say so definitively, once and for all."
" In Australian Commercial Research and Development Ltd v. ANZ Mc Caughan Merchant Bank Ltd Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V.-C. approved the statement in the eleventh edition of this work that where the same plaintiff sues the same defendant in England and abroad it is not likely that the court would allow, except in very unusual circumstances, the continuation of proceedings in two different jurisdictions. The court would put the plaintiff to his election. In that case the Vice-Chancellor said that if the plaintiff opted to continue the foreign proceedings the English proceedings would not merely be stayed; the plaintiff would have to discontinue them. "
"42. ….In my judgment the correct approach for me to adopt is that there is a presumption, although not a strong one, in favour of a stay, and that it is for the party resisting the stay to overcome the presumption. In the end, I must decide where the balance of justice lies."
Genentech's submissions
"The fact that there may be proceedings both in the national courts and before the EPO is inevitable as patents rights, both under the Convention and under the Act, are national rights to be enforced by the national courts with revocation and amendment being possible in both national courts and in certain circumstances before the EPO. That overlap can mean that there are parallel proceedings in this country and the EPO with the potential for conflict. It is desirable for that to be avoided. Therefore the Patents Court will stay the English proceedings pending a final resolution of the European proceedings, if they can be resolved quickly and a stay will not inflict injustice on a party or be against the public interest. Unfortunately that is not always possible as resolution of opposition proceedings in the EPO takes from about 4-8 years."
"(at page 243) ..the popularity of the EPO has raised difficulties in achieving that aim [sc. Of completing opposition proceedings in two years], so that delays are encountered. That has led to difficulties due to overlapping jurisdictions when actions in the national courts have been taken after grant and opposition proceedings are still before the EPO. The courts of some countries order a stay of the national proceedings until after the EPO has completed its opposition procedure, but others, such as this country, are prepared to accept the anomalous situation of having two overlapping proceedings if justice requires.
(at page 245) It is not sensible for a court in this country to allow proceedings to be heard in this country which duplicate those in the EPO unless justice requires that to happen. At the time that the 1977 Act was enacted, it was envisaged that proceedings before the EPO would be concluded with reasonable expedition. The consequences would be that any overlap between EPO proceedings and national actions could be prevented by staying the proceedings in this country for a short period. In some cases the Patents Court has refused to stay proceedings in this country, despite the obvious desirability of taking that action because of the injustice it would cause.
(at page 250-251) I have already referred to the option to stay proceedings in this country which, in my view, must be the preferred option when opposition proceedings are before the EPO. Unfortunately the judge did not consider whether in this case a stay would cause injustice. He referred to lengthy periods during which good and valuable patent rights would be unenforceable but did not consider the possibility that interlocutory relief could be granted in the meantime."
Discussion
The EPC context
"…the Patents Court will stay English proceedings pending final resolution of the European proceedings, if they can be resolved quickly and a stay will not inflict injustice on party or be against the public interest. Unfortunately that is not always possible as resolution of opposition proceedings in the EPO takes from about 4-eight years."
"8. Broadly the EPC did two things. First it prescribed what Member States should have as their substantive patent law, essentially following the Strasbourg agreement [the 1963 Convention]. Second it set up the EPO. This is a common office to which a patent application may be made seeking patent protection in the states chosen ("designated") by the applicant. The application is processed and examined there.
9. If it survives examination a "European Patent" is granted. The term is a misnomer. The legal effect of a grant by the EPO is a series of national parallel patents each treated in each national law of the "designated" states as if it had been granted by the patent office of the state concerned.
10. Thus the 1977 Act did two main things, first it made substantive patent law accord with that laid down by the EPC and second it deemed a patent granted by the EPO with a UK designation (called a "European Patent (UK))" to have the same effect as if it had been granted by the UK Patent Office pursuant to an application made to it."
"13. Third parties have no direct say in the examination procedure. There is no means by which a third party can formally oppose grant. Those who created the EPC thought, almost certainly rightly, that if true opposition (i.e. opposition against the actual grant) proceedings were available, patentees would be likely to suffer too much delay before they could actually enforce their patents. That had indeed been the case in this country, for instance under the opposition procedure of the 1949 Patents Act. As an alternative it would have been possible to leave all post-grant revocation proceedings to national courts. This potentially would have required (at least in theory) proceedings attacking the patent in all the designated states to clear the way for the whole of Europe. That was felt to be wasteful. On the other hand the parties to the EPC were not prepared to leave all questions of validity to the EPO. So a compromise was reached.
14. The compromise was that within 9 months of the grant, third parties can make a central attack on the patent (by now strictly a bundle of national patents) in the EPO. The proceedings are called "opposition" although they are in reality proceedings for revocation. The use of the word "opposition" is an indication that in some respects the proceedings are regarded as a continuation of the examination process. Perhaps for that reason the original examiner normally sits as part of the opposition division panel-judging his or her prior decision to grant the patent. Proceedings at this level are called "administrative" rather than "judicial" though it is difficult to see why –after all the opposition division is deciding a dispute between rival parties. Appeal lies to a Board of Appeal whose members, as I have said, clearly operate in a judicial capacity.
15. Apart from procedure by way of opposition, however. The EPC also allowed attacks on validity (only for the state concerned, of course) in the national courts. Such an attack can be made from the date of grant right down to expiry and even beyond-you are not required to wait until an EPO opposition is over before you can attack a patent in a national court. And likewise the patentee can sue from the moment of grant, and indeed it happened in the present case.
16. At the time of making of the Treaty it was thought that opposition proceedings would be relatively quick. But that has not proved to be so. Partly this is due to the success (in terms of numbers) of the EPO. There may be other reasons- for instance I have long wondered whether if the 9 month period were abolished, people would not bother to oppose unless they had to whereas now they have to get their opposition in often before they know whether the patent matters commercially. In the UK when the time limit for attacking a patent in the patent office was abolished in 1977, the result, contrary to what was expected, was an almost total collapse of proceedings for revocation in the patent office. It may well also be that matters could be improved by way of procedure, for instance by tightening up on adjournments and avoiding as far as possible remission of cases from a Board of Appeal back to the Opposition Division as frequently happens now. Whatever the reasons, it is currently the case that opposition proceedings can take many years.
17. No one pretends that the compromise is satisfactory- it was a fudge at the time and remains so. Unless and until sensible judicial arrangements are put in place, the litigation of European Patents in various national courts and the EPO will remain a messy, expensive and prolix business. One would hope that the politicians would find a way to put various national interests on one side for the sake of European industry as a whole. But despite attempt after attempt that has not yet been possible.
18. The result of the EPC compromise is that a national court system can find a patent valid by a final and conclusive decision and yet later, in opposition proceedings it is determined that the patent is invalid or must be reduced in scope. That is what happened here."
"I have already referred to the option to stay the proceedings in this country which, in my view, must be the preferred option when opposition proceedings are before the EPO. Unfortunately the judge did not consider whether in this case a stay would cause injustice. He referred to lengthy periods during which good and valuable patent rights would be unenforceable, but did not consider the possibility that interlocutory relief could be granted in the meantime. The judge looked at the matter as a point of principle so as to decide what was the ambit of the discretion given in section 75 in circumstances when opposition proceedings were in being. He went on to decide that he should confine consideration under section 75 to those matters which would be taken into account by the EPO under their jurisdiction. The fallacy of that approach is that the legislative jurisdiction of the EPO differs to that of the court under section 75 and more importantly the limitation of the court's jurisdiction proposed by the judge does not meet the vice of having two tribunals considering the same question with the risk that they could come to different conclusions."
" 25. This does not help here. Of course in principle the preferred option is to stay UK proceedings if there are corresponding EPO proceedings. And it may in some circumstances be the case that an interim injunction could serve to hold the fort whilst these proceed. But all must depend on the circumstances and particularly the timing. Normally, although a stay is in principle the preferred course, it would be wrong to prevent the patentee from enforcing his patent here if the EPO opposition will not be concluded reasonably soon-as all too often it sadly is not. Take this case: the action was started here in May 2002 and was finally over by November 2005. The EPO proceedings are still running and could still be doing so at the end of next year. Business needs to know where it stands-and a patentee is entitled to enforce his patent without undergoing the risks inherent on the cross undertaking in damages – especially if the period involved could involve years."
General guidance on stay of parallel proceedings
Result