Would the person skilled in the relevant art and science, based on their skill and knowledge but without a scintilla of imagination have been led to this invention?
#1: S.28.3 = What qualifies as prior art [previous invention]
Test person: would the person skilled in the relevant art and science to which patent pertains, based on their skill and knowledge but without a scintilla of imagination have been led to this invention?
If inventor discloses information before 1 year of filing application = prior art and is obvious
Or if any person who discloses information before the claim date before information becomes public
Research assistant.
Case example: Apotex v Sanofi
TEST:
Requirement for obviousness
Was the invention obvious to try [POISTA]
There must be evidence to convince a judge on a balance of probabilities that it was more or less self evidence to try and obtain the invention
Mere possibility that something might turn up is not enough
POSITA def’n + Need to identify person + common knowledge of that person
Obviousness inquiry TEST
POSITA: would the person skilled in the relevant art and science based on their skill and knowledge but without a scintilla of imagination have been led to this invention?
Identify the notional person skilled in the art
Identify the relevant common general knowledge of that person
Identify what, if any differences between the matter cited as forming part of the state of the art and the inventive concept of the claim as construed
Difference between the 2 claims and state of art?
Viewed without knowledge of the alleged invention as claimed, do those differences constitute steps which would have been obvious to the person skilled in the art or do they require any degree of invention
Once you know difference would they be obvious to the POSITA? Look at additional factors below
Is it more or less self-evidence that what is being tried ought to work?
Bulk of application process; includes background information relevant to invention + describes invention in levels of detail
Goal: to allow POSITA to reproduce the invention just from reading the description and looking at the drawings
Claims
IMPORTANT—legal basis for protection
Several claims for each patent
S.27(3): Requirement for specification of invention
Application has to be truthful
S.53(1)
Patent is void if any material allegation in the ptetition is untrue or if specification in drawing contain more or less than is necessary and the omission or the addition is willfully made for the purpose of misleading
Drawings
Must be included so that it’s easier to understand the patent itself if your invention can be illustrated visually
Final step
File for patent and pay required fees
$400 standard fee—reduced for small entities’
Policy Question: How can patent encourage innovation
Decrease application fee; increase the term of protection; perhaps modify the patent system isn’t the answer. Tax incentives
After filing for patent
10 months after relevant date, application is open for public inspection
s.10(2)
Continue to pay maintenance fee
Request examination if you choose
S.35(1)
Objections
Patent office & applicant to exchange “OFFICE ACTIONS AND RESPONSES” until it is allowed or rejected or you abandon
If you reject: gets forward to patent review board for review
Commissioner is required to refuse application if your not entitled to be granted a patent [don’t satisfy requirement of Patent Act[
If approved; patent granted
You can appeal refusal to federal court
S.53
Valid claims survive in the face of invalid claims
You request examination, its reviewed, the object to certain claims but that doesn’t mean that your entire application is invalid.