Patents County Court | High Court (including Patents Court) | |
Types of IPR handled | All | All |
Types of claim | Generally suited to simpler, lower value claims up to £500,000 in damages value | More complex, higher value claims |
Statements of case | Must contain the facts and detailed arguments on which the parties rely | Relatively brief: must contain the facts on which the parties rely |
Extensions to time limits for filing statements of case | Only if allowed by the court | May be made by consent or by order of the court |
Standard disclosure of relevant documents | No | Yes (but scope of disclosure limited in patent cases) |
Specific disclosure of documents | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | If ordered following an application to the court |
Fact evidence | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | Yes |
Expert evidence | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | Generally permitted |
Experiments | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | Generally permitted in relevant cases |
Written submissions (skeleton arguments) prior to trial | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | Yes |
Cross examination at trial | Only if ordered by the court at the case management conference | Yes |
Trial length | 1-2 days | Typically 2-15 days: often 4-5 days or more for patent cases |
Costs recovery | Capped at £50,000 for cases determining liability | Generally the loser pays the winner’s costs, typically around 70% of amount spent - no cap |
The PatLit weblog covers patent litigation law, practice and strategy, as well as other forms of patent dispute resolution. If you love -- or hate -- patent litigation, this is your blog. You can contact PatLit by emailing Michael here
Tuesday, 26 October 2010
To PCC or not to PCC? Here's a helpful chart
Published here in the current issue of the UK Intellectual Property Office's IP Insight, in "IP enforcement in UK: Cheaper and simpler new procedure", but first published here as one of its IP Updates, is a very helpful chart prepared by international IP firm Marks & Clerk. PatLit thanks Graham Burnett-Hall for letting us reproduce it for the benefit of our readers.
Etichette:
choice of court
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2 comments:
Copyright cases cannot be heard in the PCC, unless the claim is ancillary to a patents, designs or trade mark case (see McDonald v Graham [1994] RPC 407).
Also, the £500,000 limit is not in place yet.
In fact, copyright cases can be and regularly are heard in the PCC. The PCC's special jurisdiction does not include copyright, but the PCC has the ordinary copyright jurisdiction of the Central London County Court. In adddition, copyright cases commenced in other county courts tend to be transferred to the PCC.
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