The case law of the EPO Boards of Appeal is not binding on the EPO member states and different national courts acting on different cases may take a different view of patentability under Art. 52(2) EPC. The decision of EPO (directly or in appeal proceedings) not to a grant a European patent can however not be challenged in national courts. Any European patent issued by the EPO may be revoked in a
patent infringement lawsuit or revocation proceedings before a national court if for instance the court judges the invention as non-patentable in view of new prior art evidence or in view of a reconsideration of the available prior art. Furthermore, member states have certain degree of freedom regarding exceptions: the extent to which another party may use a patent, for example to decompile software that would otherwise infringe a European patent.
United Kingdom Peter Prescott QC, while sitting as a Deputy Judge in the UK High Court, and in consideration of ''CFPH's applications
noted that the EPO decisions are prescriptive, but not binding on the UK courts, but also recalled the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Fujitsu's application'' which stated that it would be disastrous if there was any substantial divergence between the interpretations given by the UK courts and the EPO to Article 52(2) EPC. The judgement in ''CFPH's applications'' was the first in a flurry of UK court cases since 2005 involving re-consideration by the High Court of patent applications refused by the UK Patent Office. The two patent applications in question both involved networked interactive wagering on the outcomes of events. Each application was refused as relating to a method of doing business as such. The applications were not refused as relating to a computer program as such, because the computer program was simply a tool that was being used to implement a new set of business rules and the invention was not really about the computer program. Although the judgement stressed that the reasoning used was quite different from the type that would have been applied by the EPO, the judge was satisfied that the EPO would have come to the same conclusion using their own reasoning. The decision criticises the EPO's reliance on insisting that an invention must provide a technical contribution, and not merely a business based contribution. As evidenced by the judgment in
Dyson v Hoover the commercial background to an invention may help to show that a certain technical advance was or was not obvious. In
Research In Motion UK Ltd. v Inpro Licensing SARL, the UK High Court had the opportunity to consider a patent that had been granted by the EPO. The patent involved the 'pretreating' of web pages before they were downloaded to machines of modest processing capacity.
Mr Justice Pumfrey came to the conclusion that the claimed invention was obvious, but specifically rejected the allegation that it was excluded from patent protection as a computer program as such. He noted that "all modern industry depends upon programmed computers, and one must be astute not to defeat patents on the ground that the subject matter is excluded under Article 52 unless the invention lies in excluded subject matter
as such" (emphasis added). The UK Court of Appeal judgment in ''
Aerotel v Telco and Macrossan's Application'' criticised EPO practice to deem non-technical subject matter, such as new music or a story, as part of the
prior art as not being intellectually honest. The EPO Boards of Appeal have since responded by saying that the technical effect approach (with the rider) applied in the Aerotel/Macrossan judgement is irreconcilable with the European Patent Convention.
Germany In
Germany, in the case
Logikverifikation (13 December 1999), the German Federal Court (German:
Bundesgerichtshof or
BGH) ruled on a case involving a national patent application claiming a computer-implemented invention, namely a "method for hierarchical logic verification of highly-integrated circuits". Going against the run of previous case law, it overruled the German Federal Patent Court (German:
Bundespatentgericht or
BPatG), and came to the conclusion that the claimed subject-matter did properly meet the 'technical' requirement, can not be excluded from patentability for that reason and that the court has to go into substantial examination. and
Suche fehlerhafter Zeichenketten (German BGH, 17 October 2001). In the
civil law tradition of mainland Europe however, legal precedent does not necessarily acquire the same formally binding character that it assumes in the
common law traditions typical of most English-speaking countries. In fact, more recently the same court has repeatedly upheld the rejection of patent claims to computers and programs operating thereon, as in
Rentabilitätsermittlung as well as in
Informationsübermittlungsverfahren.
France France was the first European nation that excluded ("programs or series of instructions for the procession of operations of a calculating machine", i.e. computer programs) from being an industrial invention in 1968 in
Loi n°68-1 Article 7. Two relevant decisions, namely
Mobil Oil Corp., and
SA SAGEM, rejected the patentability it was determined that a patent cannot be invalidated only because it uses a computer program as part of the technical process. In
Infomil, the court declared that a claim for an information system always has technical character and is therefore patentable.
Unified Patent Court The
Unified Patent Court is a court common to several member states of the European Union, including Germany, France and Italy. It has jurisdiction regarding European patents as any national court would do. With the entry into force of the Unified Patent Court Agreement, patent proprietors also have the possibility to request
unitary effect for European patents: which means that the European patent after grant will be regarded a single undividable patent for those EU countries that participate. For the latter patents, the Unified Patent Court will generally have exclusive competence. Regarding software, Article 27k of the Unified Patent Court Agreement allows decompiling of software, even without the consent of the patent owner. Groups opposed to
software patents have argued that the proposed Unified Patent Court may have strong ties to the patent industry. They assume therefore it allows software patents to be enforced despite rules that forbid them – such as explicitly allowing decompiling of software protected by patents in the Unified Patent Court Agreement – and failed attempts by the
European Parliament to bring those provisions under EU law rather than under Unified Patent Court law. == Referral to the Enlarged Board of Appeal ==