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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> GW Pharma Ltd & Anor v Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1462 (08 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1462.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1462 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
PATENTS COURT
Mr Ian Karet sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
HP-2021-000039
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
and
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
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(1) GW Pharma Limited (2) GW Pharmaceuticals Limited |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Limited (a company incorporated under the laws of Japan) |
Respondent |
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James Segan KC and Ravi Mehta (instructed by Powell Gilbert LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 12 October 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Birss:
Background
"To those unfamiliar with the world of patents this might sound irrational – why should royalties be payable (and apparently be unrecoverable) for a licence under a patent claim ultimately held invalid? There is a rational answer to this. Everyone knows that patent law can, at least at its edges, be uncertain – and that different results can arise in parallel litigation in different countries. By taking such a licence MedImmune have achieved a number of clear desirable commercial objectives: (1) they know they are free to develop and market products irrespective of the question of validity; (2) they are free so to do across the globe; and (3) their competitors may have to face litigation from Celltech in a variety of jurisdictions whereas they, MedImmune, stand in the shelter of the patents, valid or invalid. It is not irrational that they should pay for such benefits."
The judgment
The grounds of appeal and respondent's notice
Grounds 1 and 2 – the Moçambique principle
"All that is left of the Moçambique rule (except to the extent that it is modified by the Brussels I Regulation) is that there is no jurisdiction in proceedings for infringement of rights in foreign land where the proceedings are "principally concerned with a question of the title, or the right to possession, of that property". So also article 22(1) of the Brussels I Regulation does not apply to actions for damages for infringement of rights in land."
33. In its claim for a declaration in these proceedings, Chugai does not claim that the 771 Patent is invalid. Obviously, it does not seek a declaration of invalidity, but this is not merely a question of form, it is one of substance. Chugai contends that its construction is correct and does not contend, on this construction, that the 771 Patent is invalid. As a subsidiary argument, it points to the consequences for validity if UCB's construction is correct. If Chugai succeeds on its subsidiary argument, this would lead to a finding that its tocilizumab product falls outside the scope of the claims of the 771 Patent, and therefore no royalties are payable under the Licence. It is not asking the English court to conclude that the 771 Patent is invalid, as it contends that UCB's construction should be rejected.
34. In the circumstances, I reject UCB's submission that Chugai is challenging the 771 Patent's validity by formulating its claim as a contractual one for a declaration concerning royalties, or by characterising it as one concerned with infringement of the 771 Patent. I accept Chugai's submission that it does not claim that the 771 Patent is invalid, but merely requires the court to ask itself, as a guide to construction, what would be the hypothetical consequences for validity of the rival interpretations. Furthermore, the arguments advanced in the Disputed Paragraphs are incidental to the essential nature of Chugai's claim, which is a claim for determination of its royalty obligations under the Licence.
"i) There is basis for drawing a distinction between claims for infringement and invalidity of patents. A claim of infringement is an action in personam, which affects the parties to the action. A patent is a monopoly right in rem, which applies to the entire population of the territory in which it is granted.
ii) This distinction is reflected in the allocation of jurisdiction in the Brussels I Regulation. Article 24(4) compulsorily allocates jurisdiction over a dispute concerning the validity of a patent to the courts of the Member State in which (or for which) that patent is registered; the article does not apply to claims for infringement.
iii) The rule in Moçambique no longer applies to claims for damages for trespass. However, it continues to apply to actions for the determination of the title to, or the right to possession of, foreign land. Infringement of patent is analogous to trespass, whereas validity is analogous to a challenge to the title to or right to possession of land.
iv) As well as comity, the Moçambique rule is founded on the principle of territoriality. Lord Neuberger stated in Shergill v Khaira [2014] UKSC 33; [2015] AC 359 at [41] that the rule was "probably best regarded as depending on the territorial limits of the competence of the English courts or of the competence which they will recognise in foreign states".
v) Patents are local monopolies which involve local policies and local public interest. Their effect is territorially limited. Their validity should be matters for the local judges of the country in which the patent right was first created: see Lucasfilm [2009] EWCA Civ 1328; [2010] Ch 503 at [175] per Jacob LJ."
The Moçambique rule and contracts
"…the court has no jurisdiction to entertain proceedings for the determination of the title to, or the right to possession of, immovable property situated outside England, except where:
a) the claim is based on a contract or equity between the parties; …"
"…in one sense it has always been possible to call into question both the validity and the scope of a foreign intellectual property right. For instance, where the defendant has agreed to pay royalties to the claimant on any product covered by a valid claim of a foreign patent and the agreement is governed by English law and confers jurisdiction upon the English courts. A recent instance is Celltech (Adair's) US Patent [2004] FSR 35 : indeed at first instance Jacob J said [2003] FSR 433 , para 8: "... I found myself receiving submissions on US case law just as if I were a US district judge." When this happens our courts are not considered to act in breach of comity. Even though they might appear to be inquiring into the validity or scope of an intellectual property right granted by a foreign sovereign. But in truth, they are not purporting to tell the American public, say, that one of their patents is invalid, or that the scope of its claims is not what it might appear to be. They are merely settling the rights of two private litigants who have chosen to submit their dispute to the adjudication of our courts. Once again, this involves rights in personam, not rights in rem."
Assessment on grounds 1 and 2
Ground 3 – foreign act of state
"… in England the foreign act of state doctrine has not been applied to any acts other than foreign legislation or governmental acts of officials such as requisition, and it should not today be regarded as an impediment to an action for infringement of foreign intellectual property rights, even if validity of a grant is in issue, simply because the action calls into question the decision of a foreign official."
i) Blad v Bamfield [36 ER 992]; (1674) 3 Swan. 604, in which the English Court of Chancery refused to judge the validity of letters patent granted by the King of Denmark,
ii) comments to the effect that granting a patent 'was an exercise of national sovereignty' in the Jenard Report on the Brussels Convention OJ 1979 C59, pp 1, 36, cited by the CJEU in GAT v LuK at paragraph 23, and
iii) Article 24(4) of the Recast Brussels Regulation (Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012).
Ground 4 – forum non conveniens
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker:
Lady Justice Thirlwall: