Written by Haoyu ZHOU (Elliot)
It
is commonly known that any inventions made (or partially made) in China must first
obtain a foreign filing license from
the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) BEFORE it
can be filed as a patent application in countries/regions outside China.
Failing to do so will violet Article 20.1 of the Chinese Patent Law and will
result in an invalidation of the corresponding Chinese patent.
But,
in practice, there were almost no successful cases which relied on Article 20.1
of the patent law to invalidate a Chinese patent, in part because it was
difficult for the petitioner to prove WHERE
the invention was made, and in another part because there were not that many
foreign patent filings in the past.
Interestingly,
the Re-examination Board of the CNIPA recently published a first Patent
Invalidation Decision (No. 55586) where the patent was held invalid in its
entirety due to “a failure to obtain the foreign filing license”. This Decision
was published on May 9 of 2022, and it informatively showed the attitude of the
Re-examination Board of the CNIPA on how to prove WHERE the invention was made.
(I)
The address of the patentee.
The
Re-examination Board held that, according to the bibliographic information of
the patent and the prospectus published by the patentee, it can be understood
that the R&D of this invention was likely done in China. Since there is no
counter-evidence showing that the patentee has any R&D capacity in
countries outside of China, it is likely that the invention was made in China
and;
(II)
The nationality of inventors.
(i)
There are 4 inventors for this Chinese patents,
and three of them are Chinese
citizens with no permanent
residence in any other countries. Some of the inventors have never
travelled to other countries during their employment in the patentee’s company.
So, the Re-examination Board held that, in the absence of any contrary
evidence, it is likely that the invention was made in China, at least partly
and;
(ii)
The patentee counter-argued that the invention
was primarily done by one of the Chinese inventors during his stay in the U.S.
back in 2016. However, the passport record of said inventor showed that he has
only stayed in the U.S. for 10 days
between November 13 and November 24, 2016 prior to the filing date of the U.S.
provisional application. The Re-examination Board held that it does not make
much sense for a complete technical conception and solution to be done within a
period of just 10 days, let alone the contributions made by other inventors.
In
view of the above, it is apparent that the Re-examination Board consider the address of
the patentee and the nationalities of inventors are two important
criteria to show where the invention was made. Thus, if a petitioner wants to
rely on Article 20.1 to invalidate a Chinese patent, the petitioner should
focus on these two criteria to prepare the draft petition. If the patentee
can’t provide sufficient counter-evidence to rebut any of the two criteria
above, the decision will likely be more in favor of the petitioner. However, if
the patentee can show that (i) they have R&D capacity outside China, and/or
(ii) the Chinese inventors have stayed for a sufficiently long period outside
China to complete the invention, then the Re-examination Board would probably find
it difficult to support the petitioner.
In
any event, as more and more Chinese entities and inventors are filing their
patent applications outside China, obtaining a foreign filing license from the
CNIPA would be necessary and unprecedentedly important. Regarding how to obtain
the foreign filing license from the CNIPA, I wrote an article in 2021. Please
refer to my article at
http://foundin.cn/en/bbs/board.php?bo_table=ip_trends_en&wr_id=24&page=3 for details.
If
you have any questions in relation to this topic or any other topics about
Chinese Patent Law and Practice, please do not hesitate to contact Mr. Haoyu ZHOU (Elliot) at patent@foundin.cn.