On Sep 27, 2017, Court of Hague issued decision in Rituximab case
& revoked Roche/Genentech’s patent EP1951304B1, because it lacks novelty
since priority was denied. EP’304 is
entitled "Method for Treating
Joint Damage". The patent - in short - refers to a use
of rituximab in the treatment regimen for joint disease in rheumatoid arthritis
(RA).
Celltrion by judgment seeks declaration that
defendants are not entitled to enforce the Dutch part of EP’304 against
Celltrion & ask to pay the reasonable and proportionate costs of the
proceedings. In support of its claim, Celltrion stated that EP’304 is not
entitled for priority because inventors have not validated their rights of
priority and transferred in time to defendants, thus rendering the Keystone- publication becomes novel
harmful state of the art. Defendants argued that the priority
right at the time of its creation was automatically transferred on the basis of
the agreement between inventors and his employer from 2004. The
court must therefore first assess whether the text of the agreement is clear as
to the alleged automatic transfer of priority rights.
Celltrion claims that the agreement
does not regulate that a priority right automatically passes. Article
10 of the agreement shows that a separate legal act is required for the
transfer of a priority right. Defendants contest that and argue that
Articles 4 and 5 show that there is an automatic transfer, in which they rely
on an explanation of the agreement in accordance with the parties' intention.
The court after analysing the facts
said that the agreement does not contain an explicit provision governing the
manner in which priority rights are transferred. Indeed, the term ' priority right' does not appear as such in
the agreement. The court rejected the defendant’s argument that the active assignment contained in Article 5 should be
considered not only refers to Proprietary Information, but also to priority rights as
belonging to the group of patent-related rights.
No comments:
Post a Comment