My contribution to a discussion on the Implications of Brexit on Intellectual Property Law at Queen Mary University of London on Monday 12 Feb 2018. A "unitary patent" would have been a single European patent for the territories of some but not all of the EU member states and the Unified Patent Court would have been a single patent court for all the participating countries with jurisdiction to determine disputes over unitary patents and all other European patents, As a result of Brexit and litigation in the German Constitutional Court it is unlikely ever to come into being.
1. Implications of Brexit on Intellectual
Property Law: What can be salvaged
from the UPC Agreement?
Jane Lambert
Barrister
2. The European Patent Convention
● European Patent Convention (“EPC”) is a “special agreement for the
protection of intellectual property within the meaning of art 19 of the Paris
Convention.
● It is not an EU treaty although all EU member states are party to the EPC.
● EPC establishes a patent office known as “the European Patent Office”
(“EPO”) which examines application for, and grants, patents known as
“European patents” on behalf of the governments of contracting parties.
● European patents are treated for all intents and purposes as though they had
been issued by national patent offices and they are enforced by national
courts in accordance with national law.
3. The Unified Patent Agreement
● Since 1949 there have been many at least 7 attempts to establish a Pan-
European patent within the framework of the Council of Europe, the EPC,
EEC and EU.
● The latest initiative is the Agreement for a Unified Patent Court (“UPC”) to
settle disputes relating to European patents and European patents with
unitary effect (“unitary patents”) of 19 Feb 2013 (“the UPC Agreement”).
● Regulation (EU) No 1257/2012 provides for unitary patents.
4. British Interest in a Pan-European Patent
● HMG has supported every initiative for a Pan-European patent since it joined
the EEC in 1973.
● According to TaylorWessing’s Patent Map, London remains the most
expensive forum for patent litigation in Europe despite the Intellectual
Property Enterprise Court (“IPEC”) and cost management reforms: £900,000
to £1 million in England compared to €200,000 to €800,000 for France,
€100,000 to €200,000 for infringement and a similar range for validity in
Germany and as little as €5,000 to €15,000 in Lithuania.
● Hargreaves estimated the duplication of litigation costs alone as somewhere
between €120 million and €240 million a year,
5. Ratification of UPC Agreement
● Art 89 (1) of the UPC Agreement provides that the instrument comes into
force 4 months after it has been ratified by 13 EU member states including
France, Germany and the UK.
● So far, 15 EU member states including France have ratified the UPC
Agreement but not the UK and Germany.
● On 28 Nov 2016 Lady Neville-Rolfe, minister with responsibility for IP,
indicated that HMG would ratify the UPC Agreement notwithstanding our
withdrawal for EU.
6. Ratification of UPC Agreement
● On 11 Jan 2017, her successor Jo Johnson MP told the Commons Science
and Technology Committee that he regarded the UPC as an international
agreement and our continued participation after Brexit as a matter for
negotiation.
● The Privy Council has approved the UPC Privileges and Immunities Order.
● Draft statutory instruments for the ratification of the UPC Agreement are
ready to be laid before Parliament.
● The upper and lower houses of the German parliament have passed
legislation ratifying the Agreement.
● Presidential assent has been withheld pending litigation in the German
Constitutional Court over a challenge to ratification of the Agreement.
7. Ratification of UPC Agreement
● As art 50 (3) of the Treaty of European Union provide that the Treaties will
cease to apply 2 years after the notification of withdrawal, it is possible that
the UK will leave the EU before the German litigation is resolved.
● Even if the litigation is resolved and Germany ratifies the UPC before 29
March 2019, the UK will cease to be a member state on that day even if it
accepts a transitional arrangement by which EU law continues to apply to the
UK until 31 Dec 2020.
8. Questions on the Future of the EU
● Can the UK continue to participate in the UPC and host part of the Central
Division of the Court of First Instance during an implementation period and
afterwards?
● Will the remaining EU member states have sufficient incentive to revise the
UPC Agreement to allow it to continue after the UK’s withdrawal?
9. Can the UK continue to participate in the EU?
● Art 84 (1) UPC Agreement makes clear that the instrument is open for
signature only to EU member states
● The Agreement makes no provision for the withdrawal of a contracting party
from the EU.
● Richard Gordon QC and Tom Pascoe advised in Sept 2016 that it was
theoretically possible to draw up a supplemental agreement to allow
continued British participation but that might be struck down by CJEU.
● The European Patent Litigation Agreement was abandoned because it was
regarded as incompatible with EU law.
10. Can the UK continue to participate in the EU?
● Art 20 UPC Agreement provides: “The Court shall apply Union law in its
entirety and shall respect its primacy.”
● Regulation (EU) No 1257/2012 will cease to apply to the UK after 31 Dec
2020 at the very latest.
● Draft provisions of the withdrawal agreement relating to the proposed
transitional agreement will exclude provisions on enhanced cooperation from
the laws that will apply to the UK after its departure.
11. Will the EU 27 renegotiate the UPC Agreement?
● Businesses outside the EU including those in the UK would benefit from a
unitary patent and Unified Patent Court even if the UK has no part in it.
● There is less incentive for the remaining states to adopt a unitary patent or
UPC as the costs of litigation in their countries are much lower than in the UK.
● Spain and Italy challenged the UPC Agreement in the CJEU because of
language objections and such objections could resurface particularly if Milan
replaces London as the host for the Central Division.
● Remaining EU member states have priorities other than Brexit.
12. Further Information
● LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/nipclaw/
● Facebook https://www.facebook.com/jane.lambert.587
● Twitter @nipclaw
● NIPC Law blog http://nipclaw.blogspot.co.uk/
● NIPC Brexit blog http://nipcexit.blogspot.co.uk/
13. Any Questions
4-5 Gray’s Inn Square
London WC1R 5AH
T 020 7404 5252
E jlambert@4-5.co.uk
www.4-5.co.uk
Editor's Notes
The Agreement on a Unified Patent Court (“the UPC agreement”) was signed by most but not all EU member states on 19 Feb 2013. It establishes a court for the determination of disputes relating to European patents including European patents with unitary effect (“unitary patents”).
A European patent is a patent granted by the European Patent Office (“EPO”) in accordance with the European Patent Convention (“the EPC”).
A unitary patent is a European patent for the territories of the contracting states as a whole rather than the individual countries.
The EPC is not a European Union treaty although all the EU member states are party to it and the EPO is not an EU institution.Our participation in the EPO will not be affected by our withdrawal from the EU.
The UPC Agreement is the latest of 7 attempts to establish a Pan-European patent since 1949.
Christopher Wadlow reports that the first attempt was to create a Pan-European patent for the member states of the Council of Europe.
The European Patent Litigation Agreement would have created a European Patent Court within the framework of the EPC which would have allowed Switzerland, Turkey and Norway to participate. It was abandoned after a European Parliamentary legal opinion that is was incompatible with EU law.
Patent litigation is much more expensive in common law countries than civil law ones because of our adversarial system. It is probably a reason why the UK lags behind Switzerland and the Netherland as well as Germany and France in the number of European patent applications.
The UK has favoured of a Pan-European patent ever since it ratified the Community Patent Convention in 1975..
UPC Agreement and Reg 1257/2012 come into force when 13 countries including France, Germany and UK ratify the agreement.
So far over 13 countries including France have ratified the agreement but not the UK or Germany.
However the UK has said it will ratify notwithstanding Brexit.
According to Alan Johnson of Bristows the UK is now ready to ratify but Germany is not.
Both houses of German parliament have passed the necessary legislation but presidential assent has been withheld pending resolution of constitutional challenge in German federal constitutional court in Karlsruhe
The UPC agreement is open to signature to member states of the EU but no provision is made for the withdrawal of a contracting party from the EU.
As art 50 TEU provides that EU law shall cease to apply to a member state 2 years after the notification of withdrawal it is quite possible that the UK will withdraw from the EU before the German litigation is determined.
Jo Johnson MP thought we could because it was an international agreement outside the treaties and that our continued participation could be subject to negotiations over the withdrawal treaty.
Unlikely because:
Art 84 makes clear it is open t signature only to EU member states
Reg 1257/2012 is a Council regulation which conflicts with HMG’s red lines that EU law shall cease to apply after Brexit
Agreement is peppered with provisions on supremacy of EU law
Agreement provides for references to CJEU on preliminary issues
ELPA failed as it was incompatible with EU law
Draft treaty provisions exclude enhanced cooperation from law that will apply to UK in implementation period between 29 March and 31 Dec 2020.
Unlikely because:
Art 84 makes clear it is open t signature only to EU member states
Reg 1257/2012 is a Council regulation which conflicts with HMG’s red lines that EU law shall cease to apply after Brexit
Agreement is peppered with provisions on supremacy of EU law
Agreement provides for references to CJEU on preliminary issues
ELPA failed as it was incompatible with EU law
Draft treaty provisions exclude enhanced cooperation from law that will apply to UK in implementation period between 29 March and 31 Dec 2020.
Pan-European patent project largely driven by the UK to level the playing field. Once we go there will be much less of a difference in the cost of litigation because most remaining states are civil law countries.
Language problem may resurface with the departure of the largest English speaking member state, especially if Milan takes over the Central Division f the Court of First Instance from London.
Member states have more urgent priorities like refugees and Hungary and Poland so may never get round to negotiating the agreement.
Blogs and social media accounts in which I discuss these issues