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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV v Nintendo of Europe GmbH [2014] EWHC 3177 (Pat) (17 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2014/3177.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3177 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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KONINKLIJKE PHILIPS ELECTRONICS N.V. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NINTENDO OF EUROPE GmbH |
Defendant |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4046 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR. BRIAN NICHOLSON (instructed by Rouse Legal) appeared for the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BIRSS:
a. There was a finding of added matter, which meant that claim 1 needed to be amended.
b. There was a finding that claim 2, which was dependent on claim 1, was valid.
c. There was a finding that claim 3, which was also dependent on claim 1, was invalid.
"63. Relief for infringement of partially valid patent.
(1) If the validity of a patent is put in issue in proceedings for infringement of the patent and it is found that the patent is only partially valid, the court or the comptroller may, subject to subsection (2) below, grant relief in respect of that part of the patent which is found to be valid and infringed.
(2) Where in any such proceedings it is found that a patent is only partially valid, the court or the comptroller shall not grant relief by way of damages, costs or expenses, except where the plaintiff or pursuer proves that the specification for the patent was framed in good faith and with reasonable skill and knowledge, and in that event the court or the comptroller may grant relief in respect of that part of the patent which is valid and infringed, subject to the discretion of the court or the comptroller as to costs or expenses and as to the date from which damages should be reckoned.
(3) As a condition of relief under this section the court or the comptroller may direct that the specification of the patent shall be amended to its or his satisfaction upon an application made for that purpose under section 75 below, and an application may be so made accordingly, whether or not all other issues in the proceedings have been determined."
Section 72(4) of the Act provides:
"An order under this section may be an order for the unconditional revocation of the patent or, where the court or the comptroller determines that one of the grounds mentioned in subsection (1) above has been established, but only so as to invalidate the patent to a limited extent, an order that the patent should be revoked unless within a specified time the specification is amended under section 75 below to the satisfaction of the court or the comptroller, as the case may be.
"It is true also that Zipher has conceded that the patent is partially invalid. But the important word, I think, is "partially". If it is partially invalid, it is also partially valid so Zipher is, in my judgment, asserting a legal right. Section 63 of the Patents Act 1977 recognises that relief may be given where a patent is partially valid. The practice of revoking a partially invalid patent is, in my view, just that; a practice. Nothing compels its revocation."
"If the grounds for revocation only affect the European patent in part, revocation shall be pronounced in the form of a corresponding limitation of the said patent. If national law so allows, the limitation may be effected in the form of an amendment to the claims, the description or the drawings."
"If the grounds for revocation affect the European patent only in part, the patent shall be limited by a corresponding amendment of the claims and revoked in part."
"8. He [Mann J] first considered the question of discretion. This arises under section 75 of the Act:
"75(1) In any proceedings before the Court or the Comptroller in which the validity of the patent is put in issue, the court or, as the case may be, the Comptroller, may, subject to section 76 below, allow the proprietor of the patent to amend the specification of the patent in such a manner and subject to such terms as to advertising the proposed amendment and to costs, expenses or otherwise as the Court or Comptroller thinks fit."
There are different situations in which the exercise of the discretion to allow amendment of a patent may be sought: (a) before a trial; (b) after trial, at which certain claims have been held valid but other claims held invalid, the patentee simply wishing to delete the invalid claims (I would include here also the case where the patentee wishes to re-write the claims so as to exclude various dependencies as in Hallen v Brabantia [1990] FSR 134. There the patentee is in effect continuing to claim which he had claimed before but in a much smaller way); and (c) after a trial in which all claims have been held invalid but the patentee wishes to insert what he hopes are validating amendments.
9. Clearly, if the amendment is proposed in sufficient time before trial the defendant has a full opportunity to attack the proposed amended claims, not only on their allowability or in the exercise of discretion, but on their ultimate validity. The existing procedure for an application to amend the patent specification is governed by CPR Part 63.10. The procedure is by way of an application notice, service on the Comptroller, subsequent advertisement and so on. The procedures can, in appropriate circumstances, be gone through quickly or gone through provisionally on the basis that probably no third party will ever come in to oppose. It may be noted that the rules specifically require by Part 63.10 that the patentee must state whether he will contend that the claims prior to amendment are valid. That means that in advance of trial everyone knows where they stand. The patentee is either saying that the original claims are all right or not, and he is plainly also saying that the proposed amendment claims are all right.
10. In case (b), after trial but where effectively no more than claim dependency is being dealt with, again the position is clear. Following a conclusion that some claims are valid and others are not, the patentee is normally entitled to relief pursuant to section 63 of the Act. Normally the court will impose as a condition of relief that the invalid claims be amended by deletion. Problems may arise if it were held that the patentee had been covetous in some way or other and ought not to be allowed to amend at all. Nothing of the question arises here.
11. Class (c) involves something different, a proposed claim which was not under attack and could not have been under attack prior to trial. If the court is to allow such a claim to be propounded after trial, there is almost bound to be a further battle which would arise in the proposed amendment proceedings. That battle will be over whether or not the proposed amended claim is valid. I say "almost bound" because I can just conceive a case where the point was covered by the main litigation in some way or other."
(a) it will not assert or commence proceedings based upon claims 1 or 3 (or any other dependent claim insofar as such claim is relied upon as dependent upon either of claims 1 or 3) of European Patent No UK 2,093,650 in the form as allowed by amendment pursuant to paragraph 5 below against any persons;
(b) it will not assign European Patent No UK 2,093,650;
(c) it will serve a copy of this order on the Controller General of Patents Trademarks and Designs [and will make an application under Rule 47 of the Patents Rules 2007 to register this order on the Register of Patents and, in particular, to register the declaration in paragraph 2 of this order.];
(d) it will not grant any exclusive licence under claims 1 and 3 or any other dependent claim insofar as any such claim is relied upon as dependent upon either of claims 1 or 3 of European Patent No UK 2,093,650 in the form as allowed by amendment pursuant to paragraph 5 below.