"Inventive step" in India: getting a better understanding
Alternately fascinating and frustrating those who seek to work within its parameters, the Indian Patents Act 1970 is increasingly coming under scrutiny by patent owners and by their competitors, as well as by investors. Is it fit for purpose in a post-TRIPS era and, if so, for whose purpose? In this guest post by fellow blogger Sai Deepak ("The Demanding Mistress", here), the author takes a closer look at how the Indian statute law treats one of patent law's most fundamental concepts, "inventive step". He writes:
Merpel notes that "inventive step" is a remarkably flexible concept and that, in jurisdictions in which precedent is taken seriously, seems to be not so much a precisely-defined concept that can be applied consistently to any set of facts, but rather an accolade awarded to patents that the courts consider worthy of being valid. Accordingly there always seem to be two lines of acceptable and authoritative precedent -- one that enables a finding of "inventive step" to be made, while the other enables it to be denied.
The definition of “inventive step” under the Patents Act 1970 is usually equated to “a non-obvious technical advancement” which, though this appears correct, may not convey the definition’s complete scope and import. Inventive step under the Act is defined in Section 2(ja) as follows:The IPKat thanks Sai for taking the trouble to explain this.“inventive step” means a feature of an invention that involves technical advance as compared to the existing knowledge or having economic significance or both and that makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the artA question that could be asked is, wouldn’t reducing the scope of the definition to “a non-obvious technical advancement”, amount to a flawed abridgment? If inventive step were to only mean a “non-obvious technical advancement”, it renders nugatory the use of “or having economic significance or both” in the definition. Perhaps, a simpler way of understanding the definition is to expand it as follows:1. Inventive step means a feature of an invention that involves technical advancement over the prior art and that (reference here is to the feature, not "technical advance") makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the artIn other words, inventive step refers to that feature of the invention which satisfies the following twin criteria:
2. Inventive step means a feature of an invention having economic significance and that (reference here again is to the feature, not "technical advance") makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the art
3. Inventive step means a feature of an invention having technical advancement and economic significance and that (reference here too is to the feature, not "technical advance") makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the art.1. The feature involve a technical advance or must have economic significance or both; andAccordingly, inventive step does not refer solely to a “non-obvious technical advancement”, but in fact refers to a “non-obvious feature” which involves either a technical advance or has economic significance or both.
2. The feature must be non-obvious to a person skilled in the art.
The corollary is that the definition distinguishes “technical advancement” from the requirement of non-obviousness. Simply put, under the definition, a technical advance by itself is not non-obvious since, if that were to be the case, a “non-obvious technical advance” would be a pleonasm.
Since one of the principles of statutory interpretation is that no word or term or phrase used in a statutory provision must be rendered redundant/repetitive, it follows that a “technical advance” merely refers to a feature which is technical in nature, the qualitative contribution of which is to be further assessed by the requirement of “that makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the art”.
Another important consequence is that the presence of technical advance is not the sole criterion to judge if an invention has an inventive step. Economic significance of a non-obvious feature too could help the product or the process satisfy the “inventive step” requirement. Therefore, in the absence of a technical advancement, a patent may be granted over a non-obvious feature owing to its economic significance.
This interpretation finds tacit support in the Indian Supreme Court’s Novartis decision [on which see, among other items, Wikipedia here, IPKat here and Spicy IP here]. Extracted below is para 90 of the decision:“90. On a combined reading of causes (j), (ac) and (ja) of section 2(1), in order to qualify as “invention”, a product must, therefore, satisfy the following tests:Although the Supreme Court has not expressly endorsed the interpretation suggested in this post, its representation of the definition of inventive step appears implicitly to support it. One hopes this interpretation is of use to patent applicants before the Indian Patent Office in instances where inventive step is sought to be established on the basis of the economic significance of a non-obvious feature of a product or a process. In particular, this interpretation may come handy when a patent is sought over a process which results in significant cost savings.
(i) It must be “new”;
(ii) It must be “capable of being made or used in an industry”
(iii) It must come into being as a result of an invention which has a feature that:
(a) entails technical advance over existing knowledge; or
(b)has an economic significance
and
(c) makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the art.”
Merpel notes that "inventive step" is a remarkably flexible concept and that, in jurisdictions in which precedent is taken seriously, seems to be not so much a precisely-defined concept that can be applied consistently to any set of facts, but rather an accolade awarded to patents that the courts consider worthy of being valid. Accordingly there always seem to be two lines of acceptable and authoritative precedent -- one that enables a finding of "inventive step" to be made, while the other enables it to be denied.