In France, the doctrine of equivalence can only be relied upon if the patent claims cover a "general means" and not a "particular means". In other words, the first question is to assess whether, even if the literal wording of the claims appears to be directed to a specific means or embodiment, the scope of protection is actually broader and extends to the function performed by such embodiment and thus extend to certain variants. That will be the case when the function performed by the claimed means is a new one. In such cases, the test for equivalence applies. Under such test a variant is considered equivalent if, despite having a different form, it performs the same function in order to achieve a similar result.
The French test for equivalence can be summarised as follows:
- Is the function performed by the claimed means a new one?
- If yes, does the variant perform the same function?
- If yes, does the variant achieve a similar result?
Courts have considered the questions of when a variant can be said to perform the same function and when it can be said to achieve a similar result.
In relation to the requirement that it performs the same function, a variant's function is considered to be the primary, direct and immediate, technical effect produced by the means for the relevant application(s).
In relation to the requirement that it achieves a similar result, a variant's result is considered to be the practical advantage provided by the means. Traditionally, case law considered that the result achieved with the variant needed not be identical to the original, just of the same nature, including of a lesser quality. More recent case law suggests that a stricter approach now prevails, with an identical result being required for infringement by equivalence to be characterised.
Unlike in other jurisdictions, the French test of equivalence is an objective one, and does not have subjective elements. It is therefore not relevant, for the purposes of determining infringement by reference to the doctrine of equivalents, whether the variant was obvious to the person skilled in the art at the priority date or whether the patentee intended to cover the variant.
However, judges can take into consideration declarations made during prosecution, or in foreign proceedings, and file history. That said, in a recent case between Eli Lilly and Fresenius Kabi, the Paris Judiciary Court said that the prosecution file is only an optional tool for judges when determining the scope of protection and made a distinction in this respect between different types of amendments to the claims made during examination of the patent, namely between:
- amendments made to distinguish the invention from prior art, such as to overcome an inventive step, which may be interpreted as limiting the scope of protection; and
- amendments made to overcome a formal issue, such as added matter, which should not affect the scope of protection.
Interestingly, in this case, the Paris Judiciary Court found that Eli Lilly's patent for pemetrexed was infringed literally by Fresenius Kabi's product, rather than on the basis of the doctrine of equivalents, despite the patent’s claims being directed to a specific embodiment. This finding was based on a broad interpretation of the claims in view of the description. The dispute between Eli Lilly and Fresenius Kabi has come before courts in other European jurisdictions too, but while those courts concluded that there was infringement of Eli Lilly’s patent, unlike the Paris court this was determined on the basis of the doctrine of equivalents. This demonstrates differences in national approaches which is a relevant consideration for clients that may consider raising such arguments in future disputes.
The French doctrine of equivalents can lead to a very broad scope of protection, very favourable to patentees. However, this is not without risks for them. As there is no bifurcation in France, courts will consider both validity and infringement at the same time. As a result, those defending an infringement claim may be able to raise a so-called squeeze argument when the scope of protection is so broad that it covers variants from the prior art, which would render the patent obvious and invalid.
There may also challenges in enforcing patent rights when relying on the doctrine of equivalents in the context of preliminary proceedings. In France, a preliminary injunction will only be granted if the patent is considered to be valid and infringed from a summary analysis, which requires that there are no serious arguments on either invalidity or non-infringement.
In the Saint-Gobain v Knauf case in 2017, the Paris Judiciary Court said that, as a matter of principle, preliminary injunction proceedings were not available when the patentee relied on infringement by equivalence, as this type of infringement would require an assessment which "goes beyond the prima facie case required for interim proceedings". However, more recently in the Eli Lilly v Zentiva case in 2021, the Paris Judiciary Court granted a preliminary injunction relying on both literal infringement and infringement by equivalence. Whilst the court did not take a position in principle, this may suggest that it now considers that preliminary injunctions would be available even if relying on the doctrine of equivalents.
Germany
In Germany the position is different still.
Infringement by equivalence is only possible if patent owners satisfy two separate legal tests.
The first test is comprised of three steps. In summary, they must demonstrate:
- that the variant solves the problem that the invention is designed to solve with means that objectively have the same effect;
- that the person skilled in the art, using the common general knowledge, would have realised at the priority date that the variant has the same effect, and;
- that the considerations which the skilled person takes into account for the variant in the light of the meaning of the invention were close enough to the considerations taken into account for the literal solution protected by the claims, such that the skilled person will consider the variant as a solution which is equivalent to the literal one.
The so-called ‘Formstein defence’ is a defence to infringement by equivalents, which originated from the so-called ‘Formstein’ judgment of the German Federal Court of Justice issued in 1986. This defence provides that if a patent is not infringed literally but would be under the doctrine of equivalents, the accused embodiment will nevertheless not be considered as infringing if the embodiment would not have been patentable over the prior art at the priority date of the patent.