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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Blacklight Power Inc v The Comptroller-General of Patents [2008] EWHC 2763 (Pat) (18 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2008/2763.html Cite as: [2009] Bus LR 748, (2009) 32(1) IPD 32004, [2008] EWHC 2763 (Pat), [2009] RPC 6 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE PATENTS ACT 1977
AND IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS GB 0521120.6 AND GB 0608130.1
IN THE NAME OF BLACKLIGHT POWER INC.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
IN THE MATTER OF THE PATENTS ACT 1977
AND IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATIONS GB 0521120.6 AND GB 0608130.1 IN THE NAME OF BLACKLIGHT POWER INC.
____________________
BLACKLIGHT POWER INC. |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF PATENTS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Michael Edenborough (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: October 22nd 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Floyd :
Introduction
The nature of an appeal from the Office
The statutory framework
"1.-(1) A patent may be granted only for an invention in respect of which the following conditions are satisfied, that is to say –
(a) …;
(b)…;
(c) it is capable of industrial application;
(d) …
and references in this Act to a patentable invention shall be construed accordingly."
"4.-(1) An invention shall be taken to be capable of industrial application if it can be made or used in any kind of industry, including agriculture."
"(2) Every application for a patent shall contain –
(a) …;
(b) a specification containing a description of the invention, ….
(3) The specification of an application shall 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 art."
"(2) On a substantive examination of an application the examiner shall investigate, to such extent as he considers necessary in view of any examination carried out under section 15A above and search carried out under section 17 above, whether the application complies with the requirements of this Act and the rules and shall determine that question and report his determination to the comptroller.
(3) If the examiner reports that any of those requirements are not complied with, the comptroller shall give the applicant an opportunity within a specified period to make observations on the report and to amend the application so as to comply with those requirements (subject, however, to section 76 below), and if the applicant fails to satisfy the comptroller that those requirements are complied with, or to amend the application so as to comply with them, the comptroller may refuse the application.
(4) If the examiner reports that the application, whether as originally filed or as amended in pursuance of section 15A above, this section or section 19 below, complies with those requirements at any time before the end of the prescribed period, the comptroller shall notify the applicant of that fact and, subject to subsection (5) and sections 19 and 22 below and on payment within the prescribed period of any fee prescribed for the grant, grant him a patent."
The Hearing Officer's decision
"The main criteria may be as follows: a) the explanation provided by the theory is consistent with existing generally accepted theories. If it is not it should provide a better explanation of physical phenomena than do current theories, and should be consistent with any accepted theories that it does not displace; b) the theory should make testable predictions, and the experimental evidence should show rival theories to be false and should match the predictions of the new theory; c) the theory should be accepted as a valid explanation of physical phenomena by the community of scientists who work in the relevant discipline….. When I refer to the "truth" or validity of a scientific theory in this decision it is in that sense."
"If, as in the present case, an applicant proposes a new theory and claims an invention dependent on it, it would be unfair to the applicant if the patent was refused but the theory turned out to be true. If on the other hand patents were allowed to be granted on inventions depending on any theory, however speculative, then in the words of Paez's Application (BL O/176/83) "it would be completely wrong and against the public interest to bestow upon misleading applications the rights and privileges of a granted patent". I consequently take the view that it is appropriate to demand a real but moderate level of confidence in the truth of the theory. I will therefore make the assessment on the basis that it should be more probable than not that the theory is true if I am to allow the applications to proceed." (original emphasis)
"in most cases the experiments produce some level of excess heat that the scientists find hard to explain".
"Some accounts consider the possible reasons for excess heat and are unable to suggest anything other than hydrinos".
and that:
"Although the authors tend to mention the hydrino theory they do not in the main conclude that it explains any excess heat".
"My impression is that these authors did not find evidence in their work which supported [GUTCQM]."
"Criterion (c) takes on greater importance since I am unable to address (a) or (b) directly"
"I find them even less convincing in relation to acceptance of the theory by the physics community at large. It seems to me on the evidence supplied to me by Blacklight that there is substantially no acceptance of the theory by the physics community"
"In summary, it appears that [GUTCQM] upon which these inventions depend, does not reach the threshold that I set for this assessment, namely that it should be more likely than not that it provides a valid description of atomic systems."
The grounds of appeal
To what standard must an applicant establish patentability?
"Furthermore, at the patent office stage, the benefit of the doubt should be given to the applicant. Refusal of the grant on the basis of a faulty appreciation of what is involved cannot thereafter be remedied."
"The reference to the benefit of the doubt is probably intended to signify that if there is substantial doubt then the burden has not been fulfilled. I do not consider that it means that if there is any doubt (legal or factual) then the application should succeed. It is not intended to import something like the criminal burden of proof into the proceedings. The tribunal still has to consider whether the exception applies, and it can come to the conclusion that it does without having to find that there is no doubt at all about it."
"…we should record also that we accept [counsel for the Comptroller's] submission that any pure question of law involved should be decided during prosecution. …. Of course if a debatable question of pure fact is or may be involved at the application stage, things are different one cannot then say that the decision at that point must be the last word on the subject. Then the applicant must be given the benefit of any reasonable doubt."
"Standard of certainty, benefit of the doubt
3.67 When a prima facie objection of lack of inventive step is contested the examiner will determine the matter on the balance of the evidence available, the standard of certainty being the same pre-grant (ex-parte proceedings) as post-grant (inter partes proceedings), ie it is determined on the balance of probabilities.
3.68 An objection of obviousness should not be pursued if there is a genuine possibility that there is an inventive step. The possibility must however be real and it is far from sufficient in rebuttal of an objection that there is merely a case to be answered, or that the applicant asserts that there is doubt. The matter should be decided on the balance of the evidence available.
3.69 If the substantive examiner is unable to reach a conclusion on inventive step because of lack of technical knowledge which he cannot readily rectify and there seems a strong prima facie case that the invention is obvious, it is reasonable for the examiner to put a specific query to the applicant or to object that there is no inventive step and see what reply the applicant makes. If expert evidence would be required for him to judge whether the applicant's reply to an objection establishes that there is invention, only then must the applicant be given the benefit of the doubt."
"One further class of "invention" which would be excluded, however, would be articles or processes alleged to operate in a manner clearly contrary to well-established physical laws, e.g. a perpetual motion machine."
"Processes or articles alleged to operate in a manner which is clearly contrary to well-established physical laws, such as perpetual motion machines, are regarded as not having industrial application, as was held in Paez's Application (BL O/176/83) and Webb's Application (BL O/84/88). An alternative or additional objection may be that the specification is not complete enough to allow the invention to be performed under s.14(3) (see 14.79)."
The arguments on the appeal