No.
Neither the Swiss Patent Act (hereinafter âPatAâ) nor the Swiss Patent Ordinance (hereinafter âPatOâ) make any reference to a plausibility requirement.
As mentioned above, plausibility is not an explicit requirement in Switzerland.
If a plausibility requirement was recognised at all, which has not been the case so far, it could become relevant as part of the inventive step (PatA 1[2]) or sufficiency/enablement analysis (PatA 50[1]).
No.
According to the PatA, patents for inventions are granted for new inventions applicable in industry (PatA 1[1]); anything that is obvious with regard to the state of the art is not patentable as an invention (PatA 1[2]). Furthermore, the invention must be described in the patent application in such a manner that it can be carried out by a person skilled in the art (PatA 50[1]). All of those requirements are also grounds for nullity of a patent (PatA 26[1][a] and PatA 26[1][b], respectively).
As indicated above, the issue of plausibility is considered under the title of inventive step and/or sufficiency of disclosure (possibly also industrial applicability), as is the case in other jurisdictions. However, see also the answers to questions 5) and 6) below.
No.
Swiss courts tend to follow the case law of the European Patent Office (see FSC 137 III 170 para. 2.2.1, âAlendronsĂ€ureâ). In EPO proceedings plausibility is discussed primarily in the context of the inventive step and sufficiency requirements. However, the plausibility case law of the EPO has not been adopted by Swiss judgments yet.
A reference to plausibility is only made in the Patent Examination Guidelines when assessing sufficiency of disclosure (Guidelines, chapter 4.2, 28), although not necessarily in the context discussed in this Question. Such guidelines for examiners issued by the Federal Institute of Intellectual Property are not a legal act and have no legally binding effect.
As stated above, there is no explicit plausibility requirement in Swiss law. The Swiss Group does not exclude that considerations that are relevant in the context of âplausibilityâ are also taken into account in Switzerland when assessing inventive step (Art. 1[2] PatA) or sufficiency of disclosure (Art. 50[1] PatA). Yet, so far neither Swiss case law nor doctrine has referred to a âplausibilityâ requirement as such or explicitly mentioned a âplausibility requirementâ as part of those criteria in court judgments.
As a consequence, the assumption that an implied plausibility requirement implicitly applies under Swiss law or practice seems far-fetched and construed. Thus, questions 6 to 14 do not apply.
n/a.
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n/a.
n/a.
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n/a.
No. The Swiss Group is satisfied with the current state of the law in this respect.
Yes. In Switzerland, technological progress is considered important for economic growth. The patent system provides one option to incentivize technological progress. The prevalent theories on the legitimation of patent law, i.e. the reward, incentive and contract theory refer to two justification arguments: the earnings/profit argument and the disclosure argument. Patents enable the right holder to obtain a return relative to the economic benefit of its invention and to recoup his/her investments. With the grant of the patent, the inventive technical knowledge is generally accessible and can be used as the basis for further research and development (disclosure and dissemination emanating from the patent system).
Switzerland employs a first-to-file system, i.e. patent rights are granted to the applicant with the earliest valid priority date. The âfirst-to-file systemâ provides motivation to file a patent application as early as possible and thus also for a disclosure of inventive knowledge as quickly as possible â provided that a âcompletedâ invention exists. A patent application should convince a person skilled in the art that a technical problem underlying the invention has been solved. The technical problem according to the invention must be solved in its entirety by the means included in the patent application. It only discloses a solution if the person skilled in the art can reproduce the invention according to the technical teaching with constant success and without undue burden.
Therefore, the Swiss patent law aims at an early disclosure of âcompletedâ inventions. However, it does not involve a mandatory requirement of a âbest modeâ.
No.
As mentioned under point 16), the incentive for an early disclosure does not come at the expense of the patentability requirements. An explicit, standalone plausibility requirement has not yet been recognized in Swiss law and practice (see questions 1 to 5 above). An implied plausibility requirement, if any, is applied as a way to determine whether patentability requirements such as sufficiency of disclosure and inventive step are met, and therefore does not interfere with the early disclosure incentive (which itself requires fulfilment of the patentability requirements).
Please consult with relevant in-houseâ /â industry members of your Group in responding to Part III.
Yes.
A harmonization of principles applicable in the context of the validity of European patents that are governed by the same EPC rules appears desirable. A wider harmonization throughout different legal systems appears to be challenging.
No.
It is the Swiss Groupâs view that at present plausibility should not be a standalone requirement. The EPO appears to consider plausibility as an aspect of two main patentability requirements, namely sufficiency and inventive step (which are validity criteria already harmonized through the EPC for all European patents). Against this background, it does make sense to clarify and harmonize the corresponding standard under sufficiency and inventive step, yet it does not seem practicable to institute plausibility as a new standalone patentability requirement.
No.
In general, an invention must somehow show a âsurprising effectâ, otherwise it could not be considered inventive. Therefore, the existence of a surprising effect should not make an invention implausible.
However, when the technical effect described in the patent application is âincredibleâ in that it clearly contradicts the prior art as understood by the skilled person, it should be clarified in a credible way why and how the invention achieves the claimed effect irrespective of the common perception in the prior art.
Pursuant to established case law and literature, patentability criteria are assessed from the viewpoint of a person of ordinary skill in the art. This applies independently of questions related to plausibility/credibility. There is no different standard applicable specifically to plausibility/credibility questions.
Not necessarily, but protection (in an appropriate generalized scope) is only awarded to those promises, for which it has been (credibly) shown that they are achievable.
In principle, yes.
A patent application should either make plausible how a certain technical effect is achieved or show that this technical effect can be achieved.
A speculative filing arises from an insufficient disclosure or lack of sufficient evidence. A non-speculative filing is achieved if at the time of filing the technical effect is made plausible through sufficient evidence, whether in the form of technical data, based on prior art or common general knowledge or by being self-evident from the patent application.
Whether the invention is obvious is determined in comparison to the state of the art, including the common general knowledge. A technical effect has to be made plausible by the application as filed in order to be considered in the assessment of inventive step. How the technical effect has been shown to be plausible, namely whether it is implied or self-evident from the specification, is not the relevant test for the inventive step.
No.
Plausibility should not be understood as a specific prohibition of prophetic examples, but rather as a standard in the assessment of enablement. The number and nature of examples, whether prophetic or not, is not determinative in the assessment of patentability. The question is rather, whether the application as a whole contains sufficient credible and enabling support to enable the skilled person to work the invention without undue burden.
Thus, while the inclusion of prophetic examples (only) may increase the hurdle for a showing of enablement (in particular for unpredictable technologies), they do not necessarily deny plausibility as such.
See question 22 above.
No. See question 22 above.
Non-prophetic examples can facilitate a showing of enablement but are not a prerequisite.
The relevant point in time should be the effective date of the application (i.e. the priority date or the filing date if no priority is claimed). A technical effect that appears plausible at the effective date, but which later proves to be wrong, may be used as a ground for refusal of the application or revocation of the patent.
Conversely, if the application has already been finally refused, there would be no remedy.
No. The rationale underlying the plausibility test should be the same for all types of claims. Rather it is the extent of evidence necessary to show plausibility, which may change with the nature and predictability of the technology.
The burden of proof resides with the applicant in case of a pending application (or the third party in case of a third-party observation). The burden of proof resides with the opponent in case of a granted patent. In inter partes proceedings, the burden of proof may be shifted according to standard practice at the EPO.
It should be noted that a first-to-file system (like that in Switzerland) creates a greater urgency for the applicant to file a patent in the early stages of the invention than a first-to-invent system, which allows more time to carry out and collect evidence to show a technical effect. Thus, it may be appropriate to have a lower standard for the examination of plausibility in countries with a first-to-file system.
n/a.
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Members of the working report: Andrea Carreira (lead), Lara Dorigo, Louisa Gailbraith, Birgit Matl, Christian Neuhaus, Beatrice Stirner, and Marco Zardi. |