Jane Lambert |
According to its Implementation Roadmap, the Unified Patent Court ("UPC") will open for business on 1 April 2023. It published a list of judges on 19 Oct 2022 (see Unified Patent Court judicial appointments and Presidium elections 19 Oct 2022) and will launch a new website on 7 Nov 2022 (see New Unified Patent Court website launch 13 Oct 2022).
The UPC judiciary will consist of 85 judges. Thirty-four of them are legally qualified and fifty-one technically qualified. The President of the Court of Appeal will be Klaus Grabinski, a justice of the German Supreme Court, and the President of the Court of First Instance will be Florence Butin of the Paris Court of Appeal. Sadly there will be no British judges despite the contribution of British lawyers and others to the UPC's establishment because of the British government's withdrawal from the UPC Agreement (see Volte Face on the Unified Patent Court Agreement 29 Feb 2022 NIPC News).
The announcement of a new UPC website states that it will contain the following information:
- Court locations;
- Registry and Sub-Registries contact information;
- Legal documents published;
- Committees Representatives;
- Official communications from the UPC;
- Job vacancies
- Information on the judges.
Even though the UPC will have no jurisdiction over the UK, a court that will cover the territories of most of the EU member states will be of interest to British businesses and institutions. It should simplify enforcement and reduce costs and the uncertainties of litigation.
Anyone wishing to discuss this article is welcome to call me on +44 (0)20 7404 5252 during British office hours or send me a message through my contact page.
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