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UPC Agreement | Internal Competences

UPC AGREEMENT | WHAT ARE THE COMPETENCES OF THE UNITED PATENT COURT?

Part 2 | INTERNAL COMPETENCES (BETWEEN UPC MEMBER STATES)

Full  article can be downloaded here [1].

The introduction of the European patent with unitary effect is accompanied by the creation of a unified patent court with exclusive competences to hear certain actions concerning this new type of patent and some other similar titles. The forthcoming entry into force of the agreement establishing the Unified Patent Court (“UPC”) provides an opportunity to discuss here, without going into too much detail, the main rules that will determine the UPC competences in the EU Member States parties to this agreement (“UPC States”). For the other countries, see Part 3.


 

As a reminder, the structure of the UPC has two levels:

 

The Court of First Instance consists of :

 

As a preliminary note, the UPC’s material competences are limited to the actions listed in Article 32 of the UPC agreement (mainly infringement actions, declarations of non-infringement, invalidity actions or actions against decisions of the EPO concerning unitary effect).

Actions outside these competences are handled by national courts and are distributed internationally under the rules-of-competence of the so-called Brussels Ibis Regulation and the Lugano Convention (2007) (which no longer binds the UK).

Titles subject to UPC competences: it should also be recalled that the Unified Patent Court (“UPC”), described as a “common” jurisdiction for the UPC states, has competences to hear disputes concerning:

 

The following is a brief outline of the rules applicable within the UPC States’ territories to determine the competent division of the UPC Court of First Instance. Some procedural implications are also discussed when there are multiple actions.

| DISTRIBUTION OF DISPUTES WITHIN THE UPC

The parties may, by mutual agreement, bring their disputes falling within the competences of the UPC before any division. An exception is an action against decisions of the EPO (registration of unitary effect), which must always be brought before the central division of the UPC.

Absent such agreement between the parties, the following rules apply:

 

| SPECIAL RULES

An action may be brought before the same division against multiple defendants located in different UPC states only if those defendants have a commercial connection and the action relates to the same alleged infringement.

Situations of lis pendens (different claims between the same parties concerning the same patent) are resolved by a preference rule in favour of the division implicated first.

 


 

For any questions or assistance, please reach out to our Intellectual Property Team | upc@simontbraun.eu [2]

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This newsletter is not a legal advice or a legal opinion. You should seek advice from a legal counsel of your choice before acting upon any of the information in this newsletter.