PatLit is pleased to welcome the following guest post from fellow blogger Sai Deepak (of The Demanding Mistress, here). Here Sai addresses a fundamental issue, that of entitlement to a patent. This is what he has to say:
Does India Follow “First to File” or “First
to Invent” Rule in Patent Filing?
It
is a common perception that, under the Indian patent regime, whoever files a
patent application over an invention first, is the one entitled to a patent on
it. But does this perception have a basis in the Patents Act, 1970?
Importantly, is this perception correct?
One
of the things that a litigator’s training teaches you is that, no matter how
pedantic it may seem, interpretation of the law must not be based on what
people think or assume, but must be solidly rooted in what the statute says,
which is further backed by logic and common sense. In short, the letter of the
law must be given its due, and the enquiry must begin with the wording of the
provision, as opposed to a pre-conceived notion of what we think the law is, or
ought to be.
If
one applied this proposition to the issue at hand, the provision to look into
is Section 6 of the Patents Act:
6.
Persons entitled to apply for patents
(1)
Subject to the provisions contained in section 134, an application for a patent for an
invention may be made by any of the following persons, that is to say,—(a)
by any person claiming to be
the true and first inventor of the invention;(b)
by any person being the assignee of the person claiming to be the true and
first inventor in respect of the right to make such an application;(c)
by the legal representative of any deceased person who immediately before his
death was entitled to make such an application.
(2)
An application under sub-section (1) may be made by any of the persons referred
to therein either alone or jointly with any other person.
From
the above, it is clear that Section 6 governs the entitlement of a person to
file an application for a patent. The provision says that “any person claiming
to be the true and first inventor
of the invention” may file an application for a patent. The provision uses both
“true” and “first”, in that order. This means the
person must have invented the invention by himself (or by themselves in case
there are several inventors) without free-riding on the efforts of another
person. The second condition is that the person must also be the “first one to
truly invent” the invention. Nowhere does the provision seem to convey a “first
to file” rule where entitlement is based on prior filing.
Given
this, where do we get the conclusion from that India follows a “first to file
rule” when the emphasis is clearly on the first person to truly invent the
invention?
Merely
because a person files an application for a patent “claiming to be the true and
first inventor”, does it follow that his claim is irrebuttable? Since the
requirements under Section 6 are conjunctive and hence two-fold i.e. “true and
first”, even if the person’s claim of being the true inventor is in fact true,
it is possible that he may not be the first inventor. It is only his belief/claim that he is the first inventor because
to the best of his knowledge no one seems to have published the invention in
public domain or has filed for a patent.
Be
that as it may, his belief could be misplaced, and it might be possible for
another person to prove that he (the other person) is not only the true
inventor, but was also the first one to invent the invention. If so, does the
Act provide for a remedy which could be invoked to prove “true and first
inventorship”?
To
the best my knowledge and understanding, there is no such remedy under the pre
and post-grant opposition mechanisms in Section 25(1)(a) or (2)(a) since both
refer to an invention which has been “wrongfully obtained”, which is also dealt
with under Section 64(1)(c) which deals with revocation of patents. Reproduced
below are the relevant provisions:
25.
Opposition to the patent
(1) Where an application for a patent has been
published but a patent has not been granted, any person may, in writing, represent
by way of opposition to the Controller against the grant of patent on the
ground—
(a)
that the applicant for the patent or the person under or through whom he
claims, wrongfully obtained the
invention or any part thereof from him or from a person under or through whom
he claims;
(2)
At any time after the grant of patent but before the expiry of a period of one
year from the date of publication of grant of a patent, any person interested
may give notice of opposition to the Controller in the prescribed manner on any
of the following grounds, namely:—
(a)
that the patentee or the person under or through whom he claims, wrongfully obtained the invention or
any part thereof from him or from a person under or through whom he claims;64.
Revocation of patents.—
(1) Subject to the provisions contained in this Act, a
patent, whether granted before or after the commencement of this Act, may, be
revoked on a petition of any person interested or of the Central Government by
the Appellate Board or on a counter-claim in a suit for infringement of the
patent by the High Court on any of the following grounds, that is to say—
(c)
that the patent was obtained wrongfully
in contravention of the rights of the petitioner or any person under or
through whom he claims;
“Wrongfully
obtained”, as understood from these provisions, refers to a situation where the
true inventor has been defrauded by another person who has applied for a patent
or who has been granted one. In other words, the patent applicant/patentee is
not the “true inventor” since he has obtained the invention “wrongfully”. If
the true inventor’s challenge under these provisions is successful, the patent
application/patent shall be transferred to his name pursuant to Sections 26 and
52 respectively.
However,
an allegation of an invention being “wrongfully obtained” is distinct from the
issue under discussion. The distinction is that while Sections Section 25(1)(a)
or (2)(a) and 64(1)(c) address a situation where fraud is committed on the true
inventor, the issue under discussion refers to a situation where the patent
applicant has not committed fraud, but is merely under the factually misplaced belief
that he is the “true and first inventor”.
Based
on my reading of the Act, the remedy for the second situation lies in Section
64(1)(b) which provides for a ground of revocation based on to “entitlement to
apply for a patent”. This, in my opinion, is a reference to Section 6 which
says who says who is entitled to apply for a patent. Reproduced below is Section
64(1)(b):
64. Revocation of patents.
(1)
Subject to the provisions contained in this Act, a patent, whether granted
before or after the commencement of this Act, may, be revoked on a petition of
any person interested or of the Central Government by the Appellate Board or on
a counter-claim in a suit for infringement of the patent by the High Court on
any of the following grounds, that is to say—
(b) that the patent was granted on the application of a person not entitled under
the provisions of this Act to apply therefor:
To
cut a long story short, while Section 64(1)(c) addresses an allegation of the
invention being “wrongfully obtained”, Section 64(1)(b) addresses a situation
where the “true and first inventor” challenges the grant of a patent by virtue
of him being the “true and first inventor”. Therefore, if a person X believes
that another person Y ought not to have been granted a patent since X conceived
of the invention before Y, and Y is merely the first filer of the patent
application, X has a remedy under Section 64(1)(b) after the patent has been
granted. Surprisingly, such a remedy has not been provided for under the pre
and post-grant oppositions in Section 25(1) or (2). Consequently, X has to wait
until a patent is granted in order for him to challenge its grant.
However,
what is certainly clear from the above is that the statute adopts a “first to
invent” rule, and not “first to file”. Despite the absence of any ambiguity in
the statutory framework, it is indeed intriguing that most people assume that
India follows the “first to file” rule.
The
policy argument that could be used to support the “first to invent” rule is
that if the true and first inventor does not wish to file for a patent, and
instead wishes to protect his invention as a trade secret, why should another
person be granted a patent merely because he is the “first to file”?
2 comments:
Insightful piece!
However, on the last argument: if a person doesn't want to file for a patent but want to preserve it as a trade secret...isn't that the voluntary risk he takes when it comes to trade secrets? Once somebody can ape it and applies for a protection, it is no longer a secret. If one chooses to let a trade secret remain a 'secret' one is probably confident enough that the secret is well-guarded.
A policy counter to that could be: If a person is ‘first to invent’ but doesn’t file for a patent, it probably makes sense to grant this patent then to the person who is the ‘first to file’ (because they wish to disclose their invention and that is quintessential in many industries, for example, the pharmaceutical industry).
You are confusing the two terms. Wrongful obtaining of an invention is different from an independent, parallel invention.
While in the US, your lab note book can establish that since you were the first to 'invent' it, you have the right to patent it, though someone else filed for the patent first and this second filer's lab note book (or similar evidence) establishes that the date of this invention is later to yours.
However, in India, in case of a similar situation, whoever, files first for a patent-irrespective of who first 'invented' it, gets the patent. No interference proceedings available/entertained.
The sections you are referring to merely provide remedy against 'inventions obtained wrongfully'. For example, employer usurping employees' right or a guide claiming the invention of his/her student.
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