Ambiguous claims can invalidate patents

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Ambiguous claims can invalidate patents

pills.jpg

The result

Supreme Court of Canada invalidated Pfizer’s patent on the active ingredient in Viagra

The impact

The sufficient disclosure test must be applied to the patent as a whole

In Teva v Pfizer, generic manufacturer Teva Canada sued Pfizer, alleging that its patent on sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, was invalid.

The patent covers seven claims, with claim 1 describing a formula which covers 260 quintillion compounds. Claims two to five successively narrow down the ranges of compounds. Claims 6 and 7 each cover a single compound, with claim 7 describing sildenafil. The patent lists nine "especially preferred" compounds, including sildenafil. However, it fails to specify that sildenafil is the only compound that Pfizer found induced erections.

Teva argued that the patent, number 2,163,446, failed to properly disclose the invention, as required under Section 27(3) of the Patent Act. Pfizer disagreed, also arguing that under Section 58 of the Act, courts are required to consider valid and invalid claims separately. Despite describing claims 1 to 5 as "red herrings", The Federal Court of Appeal upheld the patent on this basis.

But the Supreme Court of Canada overruled the decision, concluding that the test was whether a skilled person could reproduce the invention using only the information in the patent. Pfizer's patent would require experimentation to discover whether claim 6 or 7 contained the effective compound.

The court invalidated the patent 18 months before its expiration date. The day the Supreme Court released its ruling, Teva launched Novo-Sildenafil, a generic version of Viagra.

This case was selected as one of Managing IP’s Cases of the Year for 2012.

To see the rest, click on one of the cases below.

The 10 cases of the year

A fillip for the EU pharmaceutical sector

Relief for trade mark owners in red sole saga

Australian TV streaming service held to be illegal

Smartphone war hits front page in the US

Liberalising the EU’s software market

India allows parallel imports

Victory for fair dealing in Canada

Lacoste loses its trade mark in China

Google prevails in Android attack

EU test case clarifies class headings

Ten you might have missed

Canada: Ambiguous claims can invalidate patents

Russia: Certainty on parallel imports

Italy: TV formats win copyright for the first time

First FRAND cases litigated worldwide

Monsanto loses in Brazil

Data exclusivity backed by Mexican courts

China: A shift over OEM manufacturing

Authors in the US able to reclaim joint copyrights

Germany: Knitted trainers a sign of the future

India: Financial Times loses trade mark

more from across site and ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Law firms avoid strategy rethink after district court ‘reaffirms the value’ of a strong trademark
We discuss Kathi Vidal’s departure from the USPTO, how IP business Qantm is using its private equity investment, and the latest AI trends spotted by law firms
Sources say they have found the social media platform Bluesky to be a good place to post IP content, while others plan to watch the site closely
The USPTO’s internal ban on AI use, a major SEP ruling rejecting an interim licence request, and the EUIPO’s five-year plan were among the biggest talking points
Speaking to Managing IP, Kathi Vidal says she’s looking forward to helping clients shape policy when she returns to Winston & Strawn
AA Thornton and Venner Shipley’s combination creates a new kid on the block, but one which could rival the major UPC players
Amit Aswal explains why you should take on challenges early in your career and why the IP community is a strong, trustworthy network
Five members of Qantm’s leadership team, including its new managing director, discuss how the business is operating under private equity ownership and reveal expansion plans
In our latest UPC update, we examine an important decision concerning the withdrawal of opt-outs, a significant victory for Edwards, and the launch of a new Hamburg-based IP firm
The combined firm, which will operate under the Venner Shipley name and have 46 partners, will go live in December
Gift this article