Jozef Frans Nelissen v OrthoApnea S.L. Order of 21 September 2023

Andrew Sharples
October 18, 2023
#
UPC
#
Recent cases
#
Preservation of evidence

The UPC has published its third decision to preserve evidence (following the related Orders of 13 and 14 June 2023 in Oerlikon Textile GMBH & CO KG v Himson Engineering Private Limited and v Bhagat Group).

In this case, the Defendant, OrthoApena S.L. is a Spanish company which produces devices for the treatment of apnea. OrthoApena was a gold sponsor of a symposium then due to be held in Belgium, and was expected to promote one of its products, the "NOA" at this symposium.

The Applicant (whose name was redacted in the Order, but appears in the "Decisions and Orders" list in which the Order is posted, and is the publicly listed patent owner) is the proprietor of a patent which is in force in Belgium, Germany, France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, although notably not Spain. The Applicant claimed that NOA infringed this patent and sought an ex parte order from the Brussels local division of the UPC, enabling the seizure of NOA devices, and the associated promotional and technical documentation, for evidentiary purposes.

The Applicant was able to establish that it was plausible that it holds a valid patent which the Defendant threatened to infringe with the NOA product. The Applicant's petition is stated as being attached to, and forming part of, the Order; however, at the time of writing, the petition is not available on the CMS so that it is not clear to what lengths the Applicant went to render this plausible.

The Applicant's request was also urgent, given that the petition was filed on 20 September, with the symposium taking place on 22 and 23 September. The standing judge (who decided the application pursuant to Rule 194(4) RoP in view of its extreme urgency) noted that it was "unfortunate" that the request was made at the last possible moment, given the Applicant had known about the Defendant's expected attendance since 30 June 2023; nevertheless, this did not count against the Applicant in the court's assessment sufficient to refuse the requested Order.

Finally, the court was convinced that it was appropriate to grant the order without hearing the Defendant. This was to avoid irreparable harm occurring, as if the Defendant had advance notice of the order, it may decide not to exhibit its NOA product, so that evidence for a future litigation would not be available.

Consequently, the court ordered that the goods and associated materials could be seized. An expert was to accompany the bailiff in seizing the goods, and would then have seven days to produce a report setting out the details of the products and materials seized. That report may then (only) be used in future proceedings for patent infringement.


2023-09-21-ld-brussels-upc-cfi-329-2023-ord_57590-2023-act_574133-2023-decision-preserving-evidence-anonymized.pdf (unified-patent-court.org) (in Dutch)

Recent Case Reports

Prosecution history in claim interpretation at the EPO
10 June 2026
In Agathon v Intercom, the UPC's Milan Local Division confirmed that statements made during EPO prosecution are not binding but can offer low-weight guidance on the skilled person's view — here narrowing 'abuts' against the patentee.
Revocation of an order to inspect and preserve evidence as Applicant did not start proceedings on the merits, R. 198.1 RoP
09 June 2026
In Otec v Steros, the UPC's Dusseldorf Local Division revoked an ex parte inspection order after the applicant failed to sue on the merits in time, ordering all preserved evidence returned and destroyed.
UPC Court of Appeal reverses infringement ruling in both Germany and UK
05 June 2026
On 2 June 2026 the UPC Court of Appeal overturned the Mannheim Local Division's infringement findings against Kodak in both Germany and the UK, on a prior user right in Germany, and on lack of defendant liability in the UK, while upholding the validity of EP 3511174 as amended and laying down a structured framework for exercising jurisdiction over non-EU designations.