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Documentary record defeats inventor’s entitlement claim: contract assignment construed; guidance on privilege waiver/redaction in Hill v Touchlight Genetics [2025] EWHC 107 (Pat)

Published on: 06 May 2025

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Hill v Touchlight Genetics Ltd and other companies [2025] EWHC 107 (Pat) What are the practical implications of this case?

Rarely in patent litigation does the outcome hinge so squarely on human shortcomings, but here it did: the claimant-inventor’s account proved unreliable. Judges are acutely aware that memory can be fragile, and over the many years of this quarrel it appears the claimant’s recollection of what happened shifted. The dispute neatly illustrates how testimony of fact fares when set against contemporaneous paperwork. Courts often attach great weight to documents made at the time. Where the two versions part company, a witness’s credibility will usually be damaged. Legal advisers often face a sensitive dilemma when evaluating a witness’s reliability—particularly where the witness is also their client. A central task for an adviser is to coolly test the merits of the client’s case, which may necessitate a candid discussion. That responsibility also covers scrutiny of construction arguments. Although the judge articulated a five-fold framework for contract construction, ‘the natural and ordinary meaning of the clause’ comes first. The court requires solid justification to wander far from that and endorse a more adventurous reading. Of additional practical note is the approach taken here...

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