PATENT RE-EXAMINATION BOARD V.
BEIJING WINSUNNY HARMONY SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD. AND DAIICHI SANKYO
CO., LTD. (2016)
Administrative Retrial No. 41, SPC
Cause of action: Administrative dispute over
invalidation of patent rights in an invention
Collegial panel members: Qin Yuanming | Li Rong | Ma
Xiurong
Keywords: amendment, invalidation
proceeding, inventive step (non-obviousness), Markush claim
Relevant legal provisions: Patent Law of the People’s
Republic of China, article 31(1) Rules for the Implementation of the Patent Law
of the People’s Republic of China, article 34
Basic facts: In the retrial of an administrative
dispute over the invalidation of an invention patent under a “Markush claim” between the Patent Re-examination Board
of the National Intellectual Property Administration, PRC (hereinafter the
“Patent Re-examination Board”) and Beijing Winsunny Harmony Science &
Technology Co., Ltd. (hereinafter “Winsunny”), with Daiichi Sankyo Company Ltd.
(hereinafter “Daiichi Sankyo”) joined as a third party in the first-instance
proceedings, Daiichi Sankyo was the holder of an invention patent No.
97126347.7 entitled “The preparation method of the pharmaceutical composition
for the treatment or prevention of hypertension”. The patent claims were
written in the form of a Markush claim. Winsunny asked the Patent
Re-examination Board to invalidate the patent on the basis that it involved no
inventive step.
On August 30, 2010, Daiichi Sankyo made the following amendments to the
claim:
(a) it deleted “or ester” in the phrase “or its salt or ester which can be
used for medicinal purposes” in Claim 1;
(b) it deleted “alkyl with 1 to 6 carbon atoms” under the definition of R4
in Claim 1; and(c) it deleted the other technical schemes except carboxyl and Formula
COOR5a under the definition of R5 in Claim 1.
During
the oral proceedings, the Patent Re-examination Board informed Daiichi Sankyo
that the deletion of “or ester” in Claim 1 was approved, but that the other
deletions were unacceptable since they did not conform to the relevant provisions
under article 68 of the Rules for the Implementation of the Patent Law of the
People’s Republic of China. Daiichi Sankyo and Winsunny did not object to this.
On
January 14, 2011, Daiichi Sankyo submitted a revised claim for replacement in
which “or ester” in Claim 1 was deleted. The Patent Reexamination Board issued
Examination Decision No. 16266 on the Request for Invalidation (hereinafter
“Decision No. 16266”), in which it decided that Claim 1 of the patent involved
in the case was non-obvious as compared to that in Evidence #1, had an
inventive step and conformed to article 22(3) of the Patent Law of the People’s
Republic of China. Thus, on the basis of the revised version submitted by
Daiichi Sankyo on January 14, 2011, the Patent Reexamination Board held that
the patent right involved remained valid.
Opposing
the decision, Winsunny initiated an administrative case before the Beijing No.
1 Intermediate People’s Court, which ruled that the Patent Reexamination Board
had not erred in its application of law when it rejected Daiichi Sankyo’s
revised text, as submitted on August 30, 2010, on the ground that it did not
comply with article 68 of the Rules for the Implementation of the Patent Law. The
court held that Claim 1 of the patent in question is non-obvious as compared to
that in Evidence #1 and involves an inventive step; hence the Court decided to
affirm Decision No. 16266.
Winsunny
was not satisfied with the ruling and appealed. At second instance, the Beijing
Higher People’s Court held that the Markush claim is a special type of parallel
technical solution and that the revised text that Daiichi Sankyo submitted on
August 30, 2010, narrowed the scope of protection for the patent involved,
which complies with article 68(1) of the Rules for the Implementation of the
Patent Law. The effect of a specific formulation covered by the claim of the
patent involved is equivalent to the technical effect of Formulation #329 of
the existing technology in Evidence #1. Claim 1 of the patent involved did not
achieve the unexpected technical effect and therefore the second-instance courtheld that it did not involve the necessary inventive step.
Unhappy with this decision, the Patent Re-examination Board applied for permission
to appeal to the Supreme People’s Court.
Held: On April 1, 2011,
the Patent Reexamination Board issued Decision No. 16266, in which it affirmed
that the patent right involved was valid.
Opposing the decision, Winsunny lodged an appeal with the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate
People’s Court, which decided on December 20, 2011, to affirm Decision No.
16266. Winsunny refused to accept the first-instance judgment and appealed to
the Beijing Higher People’s Court, asking the court to overturn both the
judgment and Decision No. 16266, and to order the Patent Re-examination Board
to make a new examination decision. On September 24, 2013, the second-instance
court did indeed decide to overturn the decision at first instance and the
Patent Re-examination Board’s Decision No. 16266, and to order the Patent
Re-examination Board to review the case and arrive at a new examination decision.
Opposing this decision, the Patent Reexamination Board applied for
permission to appeal to the Supreme People’s Court, which heard the case and
delivered its judgment on December 20, 2017, reversing the second-instance
decision and affirming that at first instance.
Reasoning: The Supreme People’s Court held as follows.
I. Nature of the Markush claim
A Markush claim is a special way of writing a claim in applications for chemical
invention patents – that is, any patent application that covers the identification
of multiple parallel optional elements in one claim. The way in which a Markush
claim is written is designed to solve the problem in the field of chemistry
wherein many substituent groups cannot be summarized by a common upper-level
concept. It has been considered to be a structural expression rather than a
functional expression. The Markush claim requires the definition of parallel
optional elements instead of additional claims, where all of its optional
compounds have common properties and functions and a common structure, or all
of the optional elements belong to the same compound recognized in the domain
of the invention. Although the Markush claim is written in a special way, it
shall also comply with the requirements of unity expressed in provisions under
the Patent Law of the People’s Republic of China and the Rules for the Implementation
of the Patent Law of the People’s Republic of China. The strength of the
Markush claim is its ability to generalize. Once the patent is granted, the
scope of patent protection will cover all compounds with the same structure,
property or function as that claimed, and the patentee’s rights and interests
will be maximized. In essence, a patent right is the monopoly on a certain
right, which means that the greater the scope of the rights enjoyed by the
patentee, the more restrictions to which the public will be subject. For this
reason, from the point of view of fairness, the Markush claim shall be interpreted
strictly. No matter how many variables and combinations it includes, the
Markush claim should be regarded as a general combination solution. The choice
of a variable should generate a drug with the same effect, while the choice of
different molecular formulas should produce different drugs, but there should
not be too much difference in the drug’s efficacy and the drugs should be mutually
replaceable, and the expected effect should remain the same. That is the reason
why the Markush claim was created in the first place. Therefore, the Markush
claim should be regarded as a collection of the Markush elements rather than of
many compounds. Normally, the Markush elements should be understood as a class
of compounds with common properties and functions, which would present
themselves as a single compound only under certain circumstances. If it is
determined that the compounds expressed under the Markush claim are a
collection of many compounds, then the claim is inconsistent with the
requirement of unity. It was consequently incorrect for the court of second
instance to decide that the Markush claim is a parallel technical solution and
its decision should therefore be corrected.
II. Amendment to a Markush claim in invalidation proceedings
The 2010 Guidelines for Patent Examination stipulate that, during the review
stage of an invalidation request, any amendment to the new invention and utility
patent documents shall be limited to the claims and shall adhere to the following
basic principles.
(a) The title of the original claim shall not be changed.
(b) The scope of protection of the original patent shall not be extended
as compared to the granted claim.
(c) The technical features shall not go beyond those of the original
specification and claim.
(d) Generally, technical features that are not included in the granted
claim shall not be added.
In the present case, however, the method of amendment employed, aside from
meeting these principles, was specifically limited to the deletion of a claim,
the deletion of a technical solution, the further limitation of a claim and the
correction of an obvious error. “Further limitation of a claim” refers to the
addition of one or more technical features recorded in other claims, so as to
narrow the scope of protection.
It can be seen that, in invalidation proceedings, the amendment of patent documents
can be effected in multiple ways. However, there are many special issues in the
examination of patent application for chemical inventions, such as the fact
that whether a chemical invention can be implemented needs to be confirmed by
means of an experiment, that some chemical products need to be defined by means
of parameters or preparation methods, and that the discovery of new properties of
and uses for a chemical product do not mean changes in its structure or components.
In view of the peculiarity of chemical inventions and given the fact that, in
drafting a Markush claim, a patent applicant has had the opportunity to put as
many structures and formulas as possible into one claim to obtain the maximum
scope of protection, any amendment to a Markush claim at the invalidation stage
should be strictly limited in scope. Amendment to the Markush claim shall be
allowed only when the amendment will not generate a class of compounds, or a
single compound, with new properties and functions; however, individual cases that
merit exception should also be duly considered. If a patent applicant or a patentee
is allowed simply to delete any option within any variable, then, even if such
deletion will narrow the scope of protection and will not impair the rights and
interests of the public, there will be such uncertainty in the possible new scope
of rights protection that it will undermine the reasonable expectations of the
public, as well as jeopardize the stability of the patent rights system. The decisions
of the court of second instance in this regard are obviously improper and should
be corrected.
III. Method for assessing the inventive step within a Markush claim
Assessment of the inventive step within a Markush claim should follow the
basic “three-step method” stipulated in the Guidelines for Patent Examination.
Unexpected technical effect is a contributing factor in judging the inventive
step: it is a special kind of negative method of judgment and it does not have
universal applicability. Thus only when an assessment of non-obviousness cannot
be made based on the “three-step method” should a patent application be judged to
involve an inventive step based only on unexpected technical effect. Generally,
it would be inappropriate to skip the “three-step method” and directly apply
the unexpected technical effect to determine whether or not a patent
application involves an inventive step. As for the comparison of technical
effects, in this case, the Patent Re-examination Board did not, in the
invalidation proceedings, compare Formulations #10, #17, #50 and #69 of Document
1 with those of the patent and base its decision on that comparison; in the
court of second instance, a direct comparison and decision was made, which
obviously went beyond the scope of the requested review. Such a practice does not
conform to the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Law of the People’s
Republic of China and relevant judicial interpretations, and should be corrected.
Winsunny, which brought the invalidation proceedings, held that Claim 1
within the patent involved lacked the inventive step and used Evidence #1 as
the closest comparative document. When deciding whether Claim 1 involves an
inventive step or not, the Patent Re-examination Board and the court of first
instance strictly followed the “three-step method”, finding that there are two
distinguishing technical features between the compounds of Formula I in Claim 1
and the compounds of Formula I in Evidence #1. After analyzing the non-obviousness
of the two distinguishing technical features, they believed that it was
justified to declare that Claim 1 involves an inventive step. This Court affirms
that finding.