The heart of the matter

Citing sections 5 and 7 of the UK Patents Act 1977, Article 8 of the Patent Co-operation Treaty and Article 4 of the Paris Convention (which section 5 is intended to put into effect in the UK), Kitchin J came to the logical conclusion (at para.95 of his judgment) that the effect was clear:
"A person who files a patent application for an invention is afforded the privilege of claiming priority only if he himself filed the earlier application from which priority is claimed or if he is the successor in title to the person who filed that earlier application. If he is neither the person who filed the earlier application nor his successor in title then he is denied the privilege. Moreover, his position is not improved if he subsequently acquires title to the invention. It remains the case that he was not entitled to the privilege when he filed the later application and made his claim. Any other interpretation would introduce uncertainty and the risk of unfairness to third parties ..."The scientific paper was therefore prior art, which would thus render some of the claims invalid for lacking an inventive step over it. Cook appealed.
This morning, in [2010] EWCA Civ 718, a three-man Court of Appeal (Lords Justice Jacob, Moore-Bick and Etherton -- who read the judgment of the Court) dismissed the appeal. Sadly, while the appeal was based on a number of grounds, its dismissal on grounds relating to claim construction made it unnecessary to revisit the issue of "who can claim priority". Discerning readers will however note that this issue also lay at the heart of last week's Patents Court ruling of Mr Justice Arnold in KCI Licensing Inc and others v Smith and Nephew plc and others [2010] EWHC 1487 (Pat), noted here by the IPKat. This is obviously an up-and-coming subject, of which we shall doubtless hear more in the near future.
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