Existing Knowledge, Skilled Person and Inventive Step under Indian Patent Law and the Problem of Borrowings

Authors

  • Victor Vaibhav Tandon Saikrishna & Associates, New Delhi — 110 003, India
  • Ashwini Siwal Faculty of Law, University of Delhi, Delhi — 110 007, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56042/jipr.v30i2.11939

Keywords:

Inventive Step, Person Skilled in the Art, Prior Art, Inventiveness

Abstract

Assessment of inventive step is difficult, with several tests being laid down for the same in different jurisdictions. However, borrowing such tests, e.g. the Windsurfing test, the TSM test, or the concept ofPHOSITA from U.S. Law, into Indian jurisprudence must be done with caution. As we argue here, Indian Law has certain peculiarities- (i) it requires something more than a mere difference from prior art; it requires technical advance compared to existing knowledge, and (ii) the person judging such technical advance for existence of obviousness is not ordinary, not average nor super-skilled but a capable skilled person. Any interpretation or borrowing which loses sight of this statutory requirements can result in interpreting the skilled person as less capable than what the Indian Act/ legislature expected it to be. This can result in lowering the inventive step standard. This can have repercussions on the quality of granted patents, since it is the quality of innovation and not merely the quantum thereof which ought to matter.

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Published

2025-03-04

How to Cite

Existing Knowledge, Skilled Person and Inventive Step under Indian Patent Law and the Problem of Borrowings. (2025). Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (JIPR), 30(2), 138-150. https://doi.org/10.56042/jipr.v30i2.11939

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