Mickala Mining Maintenance Pty Ltd v Southern Cross Mining Services Pty Ltd
[2020] FCA 1635
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2020-11-12
Before
Adam P, Besanko J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (6 paragraphs)
- The application for leave to appeal be refused.
- The applicant pay the respondent's costs of and incidental to the application. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
Introduction 1 On 27 July 2020, a judge of this Court made an order that an application by Mickala Mining Maintenance Pty Ltd (Mickala Mining) for leave to amend its statement of cross-claim in support of the Notice of cross-claim be refused as to the proposed amendments to paragraphs 5(a)(vii) and 5(d) of the statement of cross-claim. Mickala Mining seeks leave to appeal from this order insofar as it relates to paragraph 5(d) of the statement of cross-claim. Southern Cross Mining Services Pty Ltd (Southern Cross Mining) opposes the grant of leave to appeal. 2 Southern Cross Mining is the registered proprietor of Australian Innovation Patent No 2013100095 (the 095 Patent). In this proceeding, Southern Cross Mining brings a claim for infringement of claims in the 095 Patent against Mickala Mining and Mr Damien Englebrecht. Southern Cross Mining alleges that Mr Englebrecht is Mickala Mining's sole shareholder, sole director and secretary, and guiding mind. Mickala Mining defends the claim of infringement and, in addition, has brought a cross-claim in which it seeks an order for the revocation of the 095 Patent relying on s 138(3)(b) of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) (the Act). That paragraph provides that the Court may order the revocation of a patent if the invention is not a patentable invention. Section 18(1A) of the Act describes the circumstances in which an invention is a patentable invention so far as claimed in any claim for the purposes of an innovation patent. Mickala Mining's cross-claim raises a number of grounds in support of its contention that the invention is not a patentable invention and they include a lack of novelty, a lack of inventive step and secret use. 3 Section 18(1A) of the Act provides as follows: Subject to subsections (2) and (3), an invention is a patentable invention for the purposes of an innovation patent if the invention, so far as claimed in any claim: … (d) was not secretly used in the patent area before the priority date of that claim by, or on behalf of, or with the authority of, the patentee or nominated person or the patentee's or nominated person's predecessor entitled to the invention. This is the relevant ground for the purposes of the application for leave to appeal. The aspect of the proposed amendments which is relevant is the provision of further details concerning the claim that the pleaded invention was "used in secret", being the plea in paragraph 5(d) of the statement of cross-claim. 4 The proposed amendment to paragraph 5(d) of the statement of cross-claim is as follows: Secret Use (d) Further or in the alternative to the allegation that the alleged invention was not novel by reason of the matters particularised in paragraph (a)(i) above, Tthe alleged invention, insofar as is claimed in Claims 1 to 5 of the 095 Patent, is not a patentable invention within the meaning of s 18(1A)(d) of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) because it was used in secret by the Cross-respondent in Australia before the priority dates of each of Claims 1 to 5 for the reasons that: (i) the Cross-respondent caused the advertisement that appears on pages 2 to 3 of the Summer 2011-12 volume of the Australasian Mine Safety Journal to be published in Australia on or before 8 January 2012; and (ii) by placing the advertisement the Cross-respondent's object was to bring about a sale of one or more lighting towers made in accordance with the alleged invention. 5 The following important points about this plea should be noted: (1) The plea is based on the specified advertisement published in Australia on or before 8 January 2012 and it is pleaded that Southern Cross Mining's object in publishing the advertisement was to bring about a sale of one or more lighting towers made in accordance with the alleged invention; (2) The 095 Patent claims an earliest priority date of 30 January 2013; (3) Mikala Mining also alleges that the advertisement is an anticipation (paragraph 5(a)(i)) and the plea of secret use is an alternative argument in the event that the essential integers (or some of them) of the invention were not publicly disclosed; (4) There is no express plea in paragraph 5(d) to the effect that: (a) the concealment of the essential features of the process or product before the priority date was a deliberate concealment; (b) the advertisement itself was the commercial benefit or that it resulted in actual sales by Southern Cross Mining. The significance of these two matters will become apparent. 6 It is convenient to note at this stage that at one point in the proceedings before the primary judge, Mickala Mining proposed to introduce a further plea of secret use by a paragraph 5(e) which was as follows: (e) Further to the matters in (d), the alleged invention was used in secret by the Cross-respondent in Australia before the priority dates of each of Claims 1 to 5 by it: (i) causing lighting towers to be made in accordance with the alleged invention at dates unknown to the Cross-respondent but prior to 30 January 2012; and (ii) stockpiling those lighting towers for the purpose of sale at dates unknown to the Cross-respondent but prior to 30 January 2012. As to the requirements of Rule 34.46 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth), the Respondents are not aware of whether the lighting towers in question remain in existence and cannot at this time particularise where or whether they can be inspected. Mickala Mining did not pursue its application to amend the statement of cross-claim to add paragraph 5(e) before the primary judge. There was an attempt by Mickala Mining to revive it in the early stages of the application for leave to appeal, but ultimately Mikala Mining made it clear that it was abandoned.