[2023] UKSC 49
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 1374
JUDGMENT
Thaler (Appellant) v Comptroller-General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks (Respondent)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Kitchin
Lord Hamblen
Lord Leggatt
Lord Richards
20 December 2023
Heard on 2 March 2023
Appellant
Robert Jehan
Professor Ryan Abbott
Jacob Turner
(Instructed by Williams Powell)
Respondent
Stuart Baran
(Instructed by Government Legal Department)
LORD KITCHIN (with whom Lord Hodge, Lord Hamblen, Lord Leggatt and Lord Richards agree):
Introduction
This appeal concerns two applications made under the Patents Act 1977 (“the 1977 Act”) for the grant of patents for products and processes which are said (and are accepted for present purposes) to be new and not obvious developments of anything known before. One unusual feature of the applications is that any inventions they disclose and describe are said to have been generated by a machine acting autonomously and powered by artificial intelligence (“AI”). Another is that the appellant, Dr Stephen Thaler, maintains that he is entitled to make and pursue the applications on the basis that he is the owner of that machine.
The Hearing Officer for the Comptroller-General of Patents (“the Comptroller”) found that the applications must be taken to have been withdrawn, essentially for the following reasons: first, on Dr Thaler’s own case, the machine made the inventions, but the machine did not qualify as an inventor within the meaning of the 1977 Act; secondly, Dr Thaler was not entitled to apply for patents for any inventions described in the applications given that, on his case, they were made autonomously by the machine; and thirdly, in these circumstances, the applications were defective because Dr Thaler had failed to identify any person or persons whom he believed to be the inventor or inventors, and he had failed properly to indicate how he derived the right to be granted the patents. An appeal by Dr Thaler to the High Court was unsuccessful. On further appeal by Dr Thaler to the Court of Appeal, a majority (Arnold LJ and Elisabeth Laing LJ) agreed with the Hearing Officer and the judge that the applications must be taken to have been withdrawn. Birss LJ, dissenting, would have allowed the appeal and permitted the applications to proceed.
These two applications are part of a project involving parallel applications by Dr Thaler to patent offices around the world. As the Court of Appeal explained, Dr Thaler and his collaborators seek to establish that AI systems can make inventions and that the owners of such systems can apply for and secure the grant of patents for those inventions. This is therefore one of a number of test cases, and it raises issues of some importance.
It has also been drawn to our attention that this is a project in which Dr Thaler and his collaborators have achieved only limited success although, for my part, I do not consider that to be a point which provides the Comptroller with any assistance in relation to the issues arising in this appeal, for its outcome depends on the meaning and application of the relevant sections of the 1977 Act.
The factual background
On 17 October 2018, Dr Thaler filed an application for the grant of a patent for what was said to be an invention for a new kind of food or beverage container (United Kingdom patent application GB1816909.4). On 7 November 2018, Dr Thaler filed another application for the grant of a patent for what was said to be an invention for a new kind of light beacon and a new way of attracting attention in an emergency (United Kingdom patent application GB1818161.0).
Dr Thaler made both applications under the 1977 Act. Neither application designated a human inventor, and no separate document designating a human inventor was ever filed. Instead, the request for grant forms accompanying the applications stated that Dr Thaler was not an inventor of the inventions described in the applications.
It is not uncommon for a person who is not an inventor to apply for a patent for an invention, and to do so entirely properly. Such a person may take this course for one of a number of different reasons. For example, an employer may make an application for a patent for an invention on the basis that an employee made the invention in the course of his employment. Or it may be because the applicant is the successor in title to the inventor or a person who was at the time of the making of the invention entitled to the property in it.
In such a case, an indication of how the applicant has derived the right to be granted a patent will usually emerge at an early stage from the nature of the application, or from the applicant’s replies to inquiries made by the United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office (the “UKIPO”).
The UKIPO responded to Dr Thaler’s applications by letters dated 19 November 2018 and 27 November 2018, respectively, seeking further information, as it was required to do. In each case it notified Dr Thaler that he would need to file a statement of inventorship, that is to say, a statement identifying the person or persons whom he believed to be the inventor or inventors of each of these inventions and where, as here, Dr Thaler maintained that he was not an inventor, indicating how he derived the right to be granted the patent for which he was applying. He was told he would need to file these statements within sixteen months of the filing date in accordance with section 13 of the 1977 Act and rule 10(3) of the Patent Rules 2007 (SI 2007/3291) (the “rules”), to which I will come.
Dr Thaler filed what he considered to be statements of inventorship, one for each application, on 23 July 2019. He filed them, as required by the rules, on separate forms (Form 7s). These forms and the letters which accompanied them reported Dr Thaler’s belief that each of these inventions was created by the AI of a machine called DABUS and that he had acquired the right to the grant of the patents for which he had applied because he owned that machine.
The UKIPO replied to these communications on 8 August 2019, informing Dr Thaler that he had not complied with the requirements of the 1977 Act in respect of either application because he had failed to identify a person whom he believed to be the inventor of the invention described in the application, and had failed to explain how he derived the right to apply for a patent from that person.
Dr Thaler was therefore asked by the UKIPO to file replacement forms which did comply with the requirements of the 1977 Act and made good the deficiencies it had identified. Dr Thaler was warned that if he failed to do so within the prescribed period, the applications would be taken to be withdrawn.
Dr Thaler’s response to these requests was set out in a letter from his patent attorney, Mr Robert Jehan, a partner in the firm of Williams Powell, dated 28 August 2019. Mr Jehan maintained that the Form 7 had been filed correctly in respect of each application and that the requirements of the 1977 Act and the rules had been met. He argued that the mention of the inventor was a procedural requirement and it had been satisfied. Nevertheless and, as he put it, for the avoidance of doubt, he enclosed with the response an amended Form 7 with an accompanying statement making it clear that Dr Thaler identified no person whom he believed to be an inventor because the invention was “entirely and solely conceived by DABUS”. It followed, said Mr Jehan, that DABUS must be named as inventor. He concluded with a request for a hearing if the objection was maintained.
The proceedings
The objection was indeed maintained, and a hearing took place by telephone on 14 November 2019. It was taken by Mr Huw Jones, the Deputy Director and Hearing Officer for the Comptroller. Mr Jehan appeared on behalf of Dr Thaler with Professor Ryan Abbott from the University of Surrey.
On 4 December 2019, the Hearing Officer issued his decision on behalf of the Comptroller (BL O/741/19). He explained that DABUS was not a person as envisaged by section 7 or section 13 of the 1977 Act and so was not an inventor (decision, paras 18-20). It followed that DABUS had no rights that could be transferred. Further and in any event, DABUS did not have any power to transfer anything that it might have owned (decision, para 21). Yet further, Dr Thaler was not entitled to the grant of a patent on the basis that he owned DABUS (decision, para 23). The Hearing Officer held that the applications would be taken to be withdrawn at the expiry of the sixteen-month period specified by rule 10(3) (decision, para 30).
Dr Thaler’s appeal to a judge of the High Court against the Comptroller’s decision was dismissed by Marcus Smith J on 21 September 2020: [2020] EWHC 2412 (Pat), [2020] Bus LR 2146. The judge found that section 13 of the 1977 Act had to be read in context and unless an applicant fell within the parameters of section 7, the Comptroller was justified in finding (indeed obliged to find) that the application was deficient. Here Dr Thaler, the applicant, was a person but, on his own case, was not the inventor of any invention described in either application. Further, his contention that he was entitled to the grant of the patents for some other reason was hopeless and bound to fail (judgment, para 49).
A further appeal by Dr Thaler to the Court of Appeal was dismissed on 21 September 2021 ([2021] EWCA Civ 1374, [2022] Bus LR 375). That court held by a majority (Arnold LJ and Elisabeth Laing LJ) that DABUS did not qualify as an inventor within the meaning of the 1977 Act because such an inventor was required to be a person; that there was no general rule of law that any intangible property (including an invention) created by a machine was the property of the machine or the owner of the machine; and that the Comptroller had been right to find the applications would be taken to be withdrawn because Dr Thaler had not identified the person or persons whom he believed to be the inventor or inventors; nor had he identified any proper basis for deriving a right to be granted the patents when he simply asserted, wrongly in law, that it was sufficient that he owned DABUS.
Birss LJ agreed with the majority that an inventor within the meaning of the 1977 Act must be the person who devised the invention. Further, a machine is not a person. It followed that DABUS was not and could never be an inventor. In his view, that was not determinative, however.
Birss LJ turned next to the requirements imposed by the 1977 Act on an applicant for a patent. He found that Dr Thaler had complied with these requirements because (in summary):
he (Dr Thaler) had identified the person whom he believed to be the inventor (DABUS) and how he claimed to have derived the right to be granted a patent (because he owned DABUS);
it was no part of the Comptroller’s function to find that a patent application must be deemed to have been withdrawn because the applicant’s statement did not identify a person who was the inventor; it was enough that the statement that the inventor was DABUS reflected Dr Thaler’s honest belief; and
the Comptroller did not need to be satisfied that Dr Thaler’s claim to be granted the patents was a good and sound one.
It followed, Birss LJ continued, that the fact that the creator of the invention was a machine was no impediment to the grant of a patent to Dr Thaler. He would therefore have allowed the appeal and declared that Dr Thaler had satisfied the relevant requirements of the Act in respect of both applications, and there was no basis for a finding that the applications were to be taken to have been withdrawn.
I will consider aspects of the reasoning of the various judges who have addressed these applications and appeals in more detail when I deal with the grounds of appeal to this court and the various issues to which they give rise. First, however, I must outline some essential parts of the statutory scheme which governs the right to apply for and secure the grant of a patent for an invention under the 1977 Act.
Sections 7 and 13 of the 1977 Act
The 1977 Act introduced significant changes to our domestic patent system and law. Part I enacted a code of domestic patent law which embodied many of those changes and was intended to assimilate much of that law to that of the European Patent system established by the European Patent Convention and in some ways to that of the Community Patent Convention and the Patent Co-operation Treaty. The provisions intended to have that effect are listed in section 130(7) of the 1977 Act. Rather strikingly, however, the key provisions of the new domestic law for present purposes, that is to say, sections 7 and 13 of the 1977 Act, are not so identified.
It is nevertheless of some interest that the equivalent application made by Dr Thaler to the European Patent Office (the “EPO”) was also refused by the Receiving Section of the EPO by decision of 27 January 2020. On appeal, the Legal Board of Appeal issued a preliminary opinion affirming the decision of the Receiving Section and then, on 21 December 2021, rendered its decision (J8/20) dismissing the appeal. A request to refer questions to the Enlarged Board of Appeal was refused.
Section 7 - the right to apply for and obtain a patent
Section 7 of the 1977 Act deals with the right to apply for and obtain a patent:
Any person may make an application for a patent either alone or jointly with another.
A patent for an invention may be granted—
primarily to the inventor or joint inventors;
in preference to the foregoing, to any person or persons who, by virtue of any enactment or rule of law, or any foreign law or treaty or international convention, or by virtue of an enforceable term of any agreement entered into with the inventor before the making of the invention, was or were at the time of the making of the invention entitled to the whole of the property in it (other than equitable interests) in the United Kingdom;
in any event, to the successor or successors in title of any person or persons mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b) above or any person so mentioned and the successor or successors in title of another person so mentioned;
and to no other person.
In this Act ‘inventor’ in relation to an invention means the actual deviser of the invention and ‘joint inventor’ shall be construed accordingly.
Except so far as the contrary is established, a person who makes an application for a patent shall be taken to be the person who is entitled under subsection (2) above to be granted a patent and two or more persons who make such an application jointly shall be taken to be the persons so entitled.”
“7 Right to apply for and obtain a patent.
This section fits into a larger scheme, as I will explain. But some preliminary observations may be helpful at this stage on three particular issues: the meaning of the term inventor in this context; who may make an application for a patent for an invention; and to whom a patent may begranted.
First, section 7(3) identifies the inventor as the actual deviser of the invention. Sometimes two or more persons may devise an invention together and in such a case they will be joint inventors.
Secondly, section 7(1) provides that any person may make an application for a patent and may do so either alone or jointly with another person. This includes a conventional case in which the application is made by a natural person or by one natural person jointly with another. But it is not so limited. The words of the subsection are clear: any person may make an application for a patent. This is necessary for reasons to which I will come.
Thirdly, the section provides a hierarchy of groups of those persons to whom a patent for an invention may be granted. The first group consists of the inventor or the joint inventors of that invention. The Act says that a patent for an invention may be granted primarily to the inventor or joint inventors (section 7(2)(a)).
Nevertheless, by operation of section 7(2)(b), in preference to the inventor or inventors, the patent may be granted to any person or persons who, by operation of law, or foreign law, or treaty or international convention, or by virtue of any enforceable term of an agreement entered into with the inventor or inventors before the invention was made, was or were at the time of the making of the invention entitled to the whole of the property in it (other than an equitable interest). As I have foreshadowed, this is a familiar provision to those used to dealing with, for example, inventions made by employees in the course of their normal duties or in the course of specifically assigned duties, and where the circumstances in either case were such that an invention might reasonably be expected to result from carrying them out. In these cases, section 39 of the 1977 Act provides that an invention made by an employee is to be taken to belong to the employer.
The last group is addressed in section 7(2)(c) which provides that a patent may be granted to the successor or successors in title of any person so mentioned earlier in section 7(2).
Section 7(2) and the definition in section 7(3) in this way provide an exhaustive code for determining who is entitled to the grant of a patent. As Lord Hoffmann explained in Rhone-Poulenc Rorer International Holdings Inc v Yeda Research and Development Co Ltd [2007] UKHL 43, [2007] Bus LR 1796, para 18, this is made clear by the words “and to no other person”. This is a matter to which I will return in addressing the issues upon which the outcome of this appeal depends.
Further, in saying that the patent may be granted primarily to the inventor, section 7(2) emphasises that a patent may only be granted to the inventor or someone claiming through the inventor. The claim through the inventor may take place under one of the rules in paragraph (b), or under paragraph (c), as successor in title to an inventor or someone entitled under one of the rules in paragraph (b). Again, this is a matter to which I must return.
Finally, I must mention section 7(4) which applies another presumption: in this case and save so far as the contrary is established, a person who makes an application for a patent shall be taken to be the person who is entitled under section 7(2) to be granted a patent and two or more persons who make such an application jointly shall be taken to be the persons jointly so entitled. Again, this reinforces the overall scheme in that the default position, unless the contrary is shown to be the case, is that a natural person making an application for a patent will be taken to be the inventor of the invention described in that application and entitled to be granted a patent for that invention.
Section 13: the right to be mentioned as inventor, and the provision of information by the applicant
Any applicant for a patent under the 1977 Act must also satisfy the requirements of section 13. This addresses the right of the inventor to be mentioned as inventor in any patent granted for that invention, and imposes an obligation on an applicant for a patent under the Act to provide certain information to the UKIPO:
The inventor or joint inventors of an invention shall have a right to be mentioned as such in any patent granted for the invention and shall also have a right to be so mentioned if possible in any published application for a patent for the invention and, if not so mentioned, a right to be so mentioned in accordance with rules in a prescribed document.
Unless he has already given the Patent Office the information hereinafter mentioned, an applicant for a patent shall within the prescribed period file with the Patent Office a statement—
identifying the person or persons whom he believes to be the inventor or inventors; and
where the applicant is not the sole inventor or the applicants are not the joint inventors, indicating the derivation of his or their right to be granted the patent; and, if he fails to do so, the application shall be taken to be withdrawn.
Where a person has been mentioned as sole or joint inventor in pursuance of this section, any other person who alleges that the former ought not to have been so mentioned may at any time apply to the comptroller for a certificate to that effect, and the comptroller may issue such a certificate; and if he does so, he shall accordingly rectify any undistributed copies of the patent and of any documents prescribed for the purposes of subsection (1) above.”
“13 Mention of inventor.