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July 12, 2010
The Mexican Industrial Property Law (IPL) grants a patentee the right for the exclusive exploitation of the patented invention. Therefore, the patent gives the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale or importing the covered invention. Briefly, in a patent infringement action the plaintiff must prove the following:
First, the plaintiff must define the scope of the approved claims. The IPL provides that the breadth of the claims is determined by the wording, aided by the description and drawings.
Interpretation of the claims and the use of the patented invention in the accused product or process are technical issues. Therefore, infringement actions require proof from experts even though the corresponding Technical Center of the Mexican PTO may render a technical report as an expert in patent matters.
The burden of proving authorization is on the defendant. The doctrine of implied licence has never been tested before the Mexican courts.
Finally, proving patent infringement in Mexico is a difficult task in a country that follows a strict civil law system of formalistic rules for both evidence and proceedings.