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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Haberman v Comptroller General of the Patent Office & Anor [2003] EWHC 430 (Patent) (5 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2003/430.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 430 (Patent) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
Of the High Court)
____________________
Mandy Haberman | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
(1) The Comptroller General of the Patent Office (2) Playtex Products Inc | Respon-dents |
____________________
Mark Van Hegan (instructed by Treasury Office) for the 1st Respondent
Michael Hicks (instructed by Mewburn Ellis) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates : 26 February 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Prescott QC:
Introduction
To See Ourselves As Others See Us
O would some Power the gift could give us
To see ourselves as others see us!
It would from many a blunder free us.
If we – the international patent system – were granted the gift to see ourselves through the eyes of a Mrs Mandy Haberman, what might we learn? Would we be pleased with ourselves? Going by this case: I do not think so. I am bound to say that Mrs Haberman would seem to have every right to complain.
European Patent 0634922
Regenerating Your Priority Date
Mrs Haberman's Two Applications
You indicated that you are not yet happy with the final form of design for the trainer cup.
Meanwhile, we are faced with the approaching date of 8th April 1992 by which we would normally have to complete the present application by adding claims and an abstract and requesting the standard statutory novelty search …
At this same stage we can add to the disclosure, albeit by actually filing a new application claiming priority from the original application. If your evaluation of the modified design is complete by that time, this would be the sensible course to adopt.
(i) So that was option No. 1: if you have perfected your design before 8 April 1992, file a further application describing your refinements, but keep your priority date (8 April 1991) for the basic idea you have already described in GB-1.
(ii) Then Mr Deans proceeded to advise Mrs Haberman about an alternative option, No.2. He wrote:-
If you are still not satisfied that you have what is effectively the final form of the trainer cup as we approach 8th April 1992, you may prefer instead to withdraw it and to file a new application when your evaluation of the final form of design is complete. The danger, of course, is that such new application would only take its actual filing date so that in theory someone else might have had the same or a closely similar idea in the interval and so in effect have leapfrogged over you. There is nothing we can do about that possibility.
(a) Mrs Haberman
We will be dropping [GB-1] and filing a new GB application as soon as possible not claiming priority.
Please find enclosed a draft patent application. This has been based on the original application [GB-1], but includes the additional figures and references thereto, and also a set of claims.
…
This substitute application [my emphasis] can be filed as soon as we have your approval by telephone.
Mrs Haberman's Patents
The European Opposition
The Twist in the Case
When Was GB-1 withdrawn?
The applicant is no longer interested in pursuing the abovementioned application, and therefore the application is hereby withdrawn.
1. It would have been pointless to write such a letter on 9 April because GB-1 would have died a natural death anyway on 8 April, the day before. This is because GB-1 was filed without any claims defining the scope of the invention; as is allowed by section 15 of the Patents Act 1977. However, it is allowed on condition that claims are filed within the prescribed 12 month period. In other words, by 8 April 1992. As I have shown above, Lloyd Wise were well aware of that requirement and were planning what to do about it in March. I would add this. To dispose of an unwanted application by letting it die its natural death (and not by writing an unnecessary letter) is standard procedure in the world of patent prosecutions.
2. Like any other firm of patent agents, Lloyd Wise had a Records Department. It is the job of such a department to make sure that crucial dates are not missed. Lloyd Wise's records showed that GB-1 had to be actioned by or before 8 April 1992, certainly before 9 April, or the case would be lost. As Mr Deans puts it in his witness statement:
[Our] records department would have been constantly reminding us that action had to be taken on this application by 8 April 1992. This is, of course, standard procedure in a patent agents' practice because of the risk of dates being missed. At [Lloyd Wise], no matter how senior the individual, the records section were empowered to badger that individual until such time as they have been satisfied that the appropriate action has been taken. Thus Sarah Roques [his assistant] and myself would have been fully conscious of this date.
I have stressed some words in the above text because they fully reflect what I would have expected to happen based on my own experience. The word "badger" is a strong one in the English language: it means pester or harass, only more so. That records staff are empowered to badger anyone, even the Senior Partner, is because the alternative is even worse – at best, constant anxiety and loss of sleep. That is the reality of the situation.
3. The above is corroborated by the witness statement of Mr John Miller, the head of Lloyd Wise's records department, and by the lady who was Mr Deans' secretary at the time, Ms Teri Collins. Ms. Collins had good reason to be acquainted with the practice at that office. She testifies that:
We would have been receiving from our Records Department reminders that action had to be taken in relation to [GB-1]. Those reminders would have increased in frequency and urgency as 8 April approached.
Mr Miller testifies that by 1992 Lloyd Wise's records system was computerised. He says that under this system:
All partners and their secretaries are provided at the beginning of each week with a detailed list of all pending dates and the actions which need to be taken with the earliest dates at the top of the list. That will include a list of all actions which need to be taken that week. The latter element (i.e. actions to be taken that week) is then updated by means of lists circulated to each partner responsible and their secretaries on a daily basis.
He explains that there was a firm rule by which the Records Department had to be satisfied that all deadlines had been complied with by the date in question or a satisfactory explanation obtained from a partner. There was a system in place to make sure this rule was obeyed. Like annoying barking dogs, the staff of the Records Department are not allowed to give up unless and until a partner calls them off. He must give a satisfactory explanation for doing nothing. Mr Miller goes so far as to say that "there was no possibility of the date simply being missed or overlooked by default". It should be noted that Mr Deans was himself the partner with overall responsibility for the Records Department: as the reader will have gathered by now, such responsibility is not allocated lightly.
4. As a further incentive to memory, the files at Lloyd Wise always bore the filing date in large letters on the cover. The file for GB-1 was no exception: see exhibit "MJPD12". It was standard practice that any partner who signed a letter – and none but partners could do so – would be supplied with the file. In my opinion, the date (8 April 1991), when presented to any partner in early April 1992, would burn in his mind like a hot wire.
5. During the litigation against Jackel certain papers of Lloyd Wise were lost, possibly by a photocopying agency. Mr Deans remembers this because the events happened in November 1998, less than a year before he made his witness statement. One of the missing papers that Mr Deans remembers is a hand-written note from him to his assistant instructing her to withdraw GB-1 and then file GB-2.
Mrs Haberman's Request for Information
(1) After publication of an application for a patent in accordance with section 16 above the comptroller shall on a request being made to him in the prescribed manner and on payment of the prescribed fee (if any) give the person making the request such information, and permit him to inspect such documents, relating to the application or to any patent granted in pursuance of the application as may be specified in the request, subject, however, to any prescribed restrictions.
(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, until an application for a patent is so published documents or information constituting or relating to the application shall not, without the consent of the applicant, be published or communicated to any person by the comptroller.
(3) Subsection (2) above shall not prevent the comptroller from –
(a) sending the European Patent Office information which it is his duty to send that office in accordance with any provision of the European Patent Convention; or
(b) publishing or communicating to others any prescribed bibliographic information about an unpublished application for a patent;
nor shall the subsection prevent the Secretary of State from inspecting or authorising the inspection of an application for a patent or any connected document under section 22(6) above.
(1) Where a person is notified that an application for a patent has been made, but not published in accordance with section 16 above, and that the applicant will, if the patent is granted, bring proceedings against that person in the event of his doing an act specified in the notification after the application is so published, that person may make a request under subsection (1) above, notwithstanding that the application has not been published, and that subsection shall apply accordingly.
(2) Where an application for a patent is filed, but not published, and a new application is filed in respect of any part of the subject-matter of the earlier application (either in accordance with rules or in pursuance of an order under section 8 above) and is published, any person may make a request under subsection (1) above relating to the earlier application and on payment of the prescribed fee the comptroller shall give him such information and permit him to inspect such documents as could have been given or inspected if the earlier application had been published.
(4) 'Where, after an application for a patent has been filed and before the patent is granted, a new application is filed by the original applicant … in accordance with rules in respect of any part of the matter contained in the earlier application … the new application shall be treated as having, as its date of filing, the date of filing of the earlier application.'
A typical instance would be a person who finds that his original application disclosed two different inventions and that he is not allowed to cover both in one patent. So he "divides out" so as to get two. Since both have a common origin, both are allowed to retain the priority date of the original.
Result
Conclusion