Physicality in Australian patent law

B. McEniery
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Abstract

It is generally understood that the patent system exists to encourage the conception and disclosure of new and useful inventions embodied in machines and other physical devices, along with new methods that physically transform matter from one state to another. What is not well understood is whether, and to what extent, the patent system is to encourage and protect the conception and disclosure of inventions that are non-physical methods — namely those that do not result in a physical transformation of matter. This issue was considered in Grant v Commissioner of Patents. In that case the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia held that an invention must involve a physical effect or transformation to be patentable subject matter. In doing so, it introduced a physicality requirement into Australian law. What this article seeks to establish is whether the court’s decision is consistent with the case law on point. It does so by examining the key common law cases that followed the High Court’s watershed decision in National Research Development Corporation v Commissioner of Patents, the undisputed authoritative statement of principle in regard to the patentable subject matter standard in Australia. This is done with a view to determining whether there is anything in those cases that supports the view that the Australian patentable subject matter test contains a physicality requirement.
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澳大利亚专利法中的物质性
一般认为,专利制度的存在是为了鼓励构思和公开体现在机器和其他物理设备中的新的和有用的发明,以及物理地将物质从一种状态转变为另一种状态的新方法。尚不清楚的是,专利制度是否以及在多大程度上鼓励和保护非物理方法发明的概念和公开,即那些不导致物质物理转化的发明。这个问题在Grant诉专利专员案中得到了考虑。在该案中,澳大利亚联邦法院的合议庭认为,一项发明必须涉及物理效果或转化才能成为可专利的客体。在这样做的过程中,它在澳大利亚法律中引入了身体要求。本文试图确定的是法院的判决是否与判例法在这一点上一致。它通过审查高等法院在国家研究发展公司诉专利专员一案中作出的分水岭裁决之后的关键普通法案件来做到这一点,专利专员是澳大利亚关于可专利客体标准的无可争议的权威原则声明。这样做是为了确定在这些案件中是否有任何证据支持澳大利亚可专利主题测试包含物理性要求的观点。
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