The in Arti Srivastava Vs. The Assistant Controller of Patents:11.05.2026: C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 252/2022: 2026:DHC:4132:Tushar Rao Gedela,H.J.
Delhi High Court upheld the rejection of a patent application relating to a counterfeit product detection system on the ground of insufficiency of disclosure under Sections 10(4)(a) and 10(5) of the Patents Act, 1970.
The patent application titled “Method and System for Detecting Counterfeit Products” proposed a mechanism using visible and hidden alphanumeric codes on product labels to enable consumers to verify product authenticity through a data centre using SMS, phone, email and internet-based communication.
The Assistant Controller of Patents had rejected the application on 31.01.2014 on grounds of lack of inventive step and insufficiency of disclosure.
During the appeal, the respondent did not press the inventive step objection as one of the cited prior art documents had been published after the filing date of the application.
However, the Court examined whether the complete specification adequately disclosed the working methodology of the invention.
The Court held that the patent specification failed to explain essential technical aspects such as code processing, digital verification mechanisms, system architecture, authentication logic, communication protocols and storage methodology required for practical implementation by a Person Skilled In The Art (PSITA).
Relying upon precedents including Farbwerke Hoechst v. Unichem Laboratories, 1968 SCC OnLine Bom 118, Titan Umreifungstechnik GMBH v. Assistant Controller of Patents [Judgement dated 02.05.2023 in C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 114/2022] and Caleb Suresh Motupalli v. Controller of Patents [Judgement dated 29.01.2025 in C.M.A. (PT) No. 2 of 2024] the Court reiterated that a patent specification must fully and clearly disclose the invention and its best method of performance.
Holding that the claims were not fairly based on the complete specification and that substantial further research would be required to implement the invention, the Court dismissed the appeal and upheld rejection of the patent application.
Disclaimer: Donot treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain subjective errors.
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
#DelhiHighCourt, #PatentLaw, #PatentDisclosure, #Section10PatentsAct, #PatentLitigation, #PatentSpecification, #PatentEnablement, #IPRIndia, #IntellectualPropertyLaw, #PatentCaseUpdate, #CounterfeitDetectionPatent, #PatentAppeal, #JusticeTusharRaoGedela, #IndianPatentLaw, #PatentDrafting, #PatentRejection, #LegalNewsIndia, #IPLawUpdate, #DelhiHighCourtJudgment, #PatentProsecution, #IPUpdate, #AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, #IPAdjutor
=====
Suggested SEO Titles
Arti Srivastava v. Assistant Controller of Patents: Delhi High Court Clarifies Sufficiency of Disclosure under Section 10(4) of the Patents Act
Delhi High Court on Patent Specification Enablement: Analysis of Arti Srivastava v. Assistant Controller of Patents
Insufficiency of Disclosure in Patent Law: Detailed Study of Arti Srivastava Case
Section 10(4)(a) of the Patents Act Explained Through Arti Srivastava v. Assistant Controller of Patents
Can a Patent Be Rejected for Inadequate Technical Disclosure? Delhi High Court Answers in Arti Srivastava Case
Inventive Step vs Sufficiency of Disclosure: Delhi High Court’s Landmark Patent Ruling in Arti Srivastava
Patent Enablement and Fair Basis Requirement under Indian Patent Law: Analytical Review of Arti Srivastava Judgment
Delhi High Court on Patent Specification Drafting Standards and PSITA Test in Arti Srivastava Case
Counterfeit Detection Technology Patent Rejected: Important Lessons from Arti Srivastava v. Assistant Controller of Patents
Detailed Legal Analysis of Arti Srivastava Patent Case on Section 10(4) and Section 10(5) of the Patents Act
Analytical Article
Patent Claims Unsupported by Disclosure Violate Section 10(5) of the Patent Act 1970
Introduction:
The decision of the High Court of Delhi in Arti Srivastava Vs. The Assistant Controller of Patents is an important judgment concerning the law relating to sufficiency of disclosure in patent specifications under the Patents Act, 1970. The judgment was delivered on 11 May 2026. The Court examined whether a patent application describing a counterfeit product detection mechanism sufficiently disclosed the manner in which the invention was to operate and be performed.
The case is significant because it clarifies that merely identifying an inventive concept is not enough for grant of a patent. A patent applicant must also fully explain the working methodology of the invention so that a Person Skilled In The Art (PSITA) can practically implement the invention without conducting further research or inventing additional mechanisms. The judgment also discusses the distinction between inventive step and enablement, and explains the legal requirements under Sections 10(4)(a) and 10(5) of the Patents Act, 1970.
The Court ultimately dismissed the appeal and upheld rejection of the patent application on the ground that the complete specification lacked sufficient disclosure regarding transmission, processing, authentication, storage, and communication mechanisms involved in the invention.
Factual and Procedural Background:
The appellant, Arti Srivastava, filed Patent Application No. 1774/DEL/2006 on 03.08.2006 for an invention titled “Method and System for Detecting Counterfeit Products.” The invention related to a system intended to help consumers verify whether a product was genuine or counterfeit. The application proposed the use of labels containing two alphanumeric codes affixed to products. One code was visible while the second code was hidden beneath a scratchable coating.
The invention contemplated that a consumer would transmit both codes to a data centre through communication methods such as telephone, SMS, fax, internet or email. The data centre would compare the received codes with stored records and return a message indicating whether the product was genuine. The system also proposed maintaining records of repeated verification attempts in order to detect possible misuse or counterfeit activities.
The appellant filed a request for examination and early publication on 08.03.2007. The First Examination Report (FER) was issued on 29.06.2011. The appellant submitted a response on 21.05.2012. A hearing notice was issued on 03.06.2013 and the hearing was scheduled for 16.07.2013. Subsequently, post-hearing written submissions along with amended claims were filed on 02.12.2013.
On 31.01.2014, the Assistant Controller of Patents rejected the patent application. The rejection was based on two principal grounds. First, the invention allegedly lacked inventive step under Section 2(1)(ja) of the Patents Act. Second, the complete specification allegedly failed to sufficiently disclose the invention as required under Section 10(4)(a) of the Act.
The appellant challenged the rejection order before the Delhi High Court by filing C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 252/2022.
Dispute Before the Court:
The central dispute before the Court revolved around whether the invention disclosed in the complete specification met the legal requirements under Section 10(4)(a) of the Patents Act.
The appellant argued that the inventive feature of the invention lay in the simultaneous use of two codes on the product packaging , one visible and another hidden under a scratchable layer. According to the appellant, none of the cited prior art documents disclosed such a mechanism. The appellant further contended that the complete specification, flow charts and diagrams adequately explained the operation of the invention and that further technical details regarding transmission and processing were matters obvious to a PSITA.
The respondent, namely the Assistant Controller of Patents, argued that the patent application did not sufficiently disclose how the claimed system actually functioned. According to the respondent, the specification failed to explain how the codes would be digitally processed, authenticated, converted, transmitted, stored or communicated back to the user. It was argued that essential technical details regarding system architecture, workflow, verification mechanisms and processing logic were absent.
Interestingly, during the hearing, the respondent did not continue to press the objection regarding inventive step under Section 2(1)(ja). Instead, the focus shifted entirely to insufficiency of disclosure under Section 10(4)(a).
Reasoning and Analysis of the Court:
The Court first analysed the nature of the invention. The invention related to counterfeit detection by using visible and hidden identification codes on product labels. The Court noted that the system was intended to allow ordinary consumers to authenticate products without specialized tools.
The Court carefully reviewed the complete specification and the figures provided by the appellant. It observed that the invention described a process in which a user transmits visible and hidden codes to a data centre, which thereafter verifies authenticity and communicates the result back to the user. However, the Court found that the specification merely described the broad objective and not the detailed operational mechanism.
The Court noted that the specification did not adequately explain how the transmission and processing of codes would actually occur. There was no detailed disclosure regarding digital conversion mechanisms, verification logic, authentication protocols, data handling, storage systems, or communication architecture. According to the Court, these were essential aspects of the invention and could not be left entirely to the imagination or further research by a PSITA.
The Court specifically observed that the specification lacked sufficient details regarding:the manner in which the data centre would process the incoming codes,the mechanism through which digital information would be authenticated,the protocols and architecture for communication between user and data centre,the storage and reuse of processed information, andthe safeguards against repeated misuse of already verified codes.
The Court emphasized that under Section 10(4)(a), a complete specification must “fully and particularly describe the invention and its operation or use and the method by which it is to be performed.” The Court interpreted this provision to mean that the invention must be practically reproducible by a PSITA without requiring further inventive effort.
The Court further held that although the invention identified communication modes such as SMS, internet and email, it did not disclose the actual implementation mechanism. Merely mentioning communication mediums was not enough to satisfy the enablement requirement.
The Court also held that the best method requirement under Section 10(4)(b) had not been satisfied. Though several communication methods were mentioned, the specification failed to disclose which method constituted the best mode known to the inventor for implementing the invention.
In reaching its conclusion, the Court relied upon several important judicial precedents.
The Court referred to Farbwerke Hoechst v. Unichem Laboratories and Ors., 1968 SCC OnLine Bom 118, where the Bombay High Court explained that insufficiency of disclosure has two aspects. First, the specification must disclose an embodiment of the invention. Second, the disclosure must enable implementation without requiring further inventions. The Delhi High Court applied this principle and concluded that the present specification failed both requirements because essential technical details were missing.
The Court also relied upon Titan Umreifungstechnik GMBH and Co. KG v. Assistant Controller of Patents and Designs & Anr., C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 114/2022 decided on 02.05.2023, where the Delhi High Court had explained that patent specifications must provide clear and complete descriptions enabling a PSITA to reproduce the invention. The Court clarified that working examples may not always be mandatory, especially in non-chemical inventions, but sufficient operational disclosure remains essential.
Another important precedent relied upon was Caleb Suresh Motupalli v. Controller of Patents, C.M.A. (PT) No. 2 of 2024 decided by the Madras High Court on 29.01.2025. In that case, the Madras High Court held that absence of technological enablement and workable implementation details results in failure under Sections 10(4)(a) and 10(5). The Delhi High Court adopted this reasoning and observed that the claims in the present case were not fairly based on the disclosure in the complete specification.
The Court also referred to The General Tire & Rubber Company Va The Firestone Tyre and Rubber Company Limited and Others, [1972] R.P.C. 457, and Biogen Inc v. Medeva Plc, [1997] R.P.C. 1, while discussing clarity, fair basis and enablement requirements under patent law.
A notable aspect of the judgment is the Court’s treatment of the inventive step objection. The Court observed that prior art document D1 could not have been relied upon because D1 was published on 10.08.2006, whereas the subject patent application had already been filed on 03.08.2006. Therefore, D1 was not valid prior art against the application. Consequently, the objection relating to lack of inventive step under Section 2(1)(ja) did not survive.
Nevertheless, despite the appellant overcoming the inventive step objection, the Court held that the patent application still failed because of insufficiency of disclosure and lack of fair basis under Sections 10(4)(a) and 10(5).
The Court concluded that the specification did not provide enough information for a PSITA to implement the invention without conducting further research and experimentation. Since the essential technical architecture and operational methodology were absent, the invention failed the enablement requirement.
Final Decision of the Court:
The Delhi High Court dismissed the appeal and upheld the rejection of Patent Application No. 1774/DEL/2006.
The Court held that the invention suffered from insufficiency of disclosure under Section 10(4)(a) of the Patents Act, 1970 because the complete specification failed to fully describe the operation, implementation methodology and best mode of performing the invention.
The Court also held that the claims were not fairly based on the complete specification and therefore violated Section 10(5) of the Patents Act.
Accordingly, the rejection order dated 31.01.2014 passed by the Assistant Controller of Patents was sustained.
Point of Law Settled in the Case:
The judgment settles the important legal principle that a patent specification must do more than merely identify the inventive concept. The complete specification must disclose sufficient operational and technical details enabling a Person Skilled In The Art to practically implement the invention without requiring additional inventive effort or substantial research.
The decision further clarifies that:A patent may fail even if inventive step exists, where the invention is not sufficiently enabled.
Essential implementation details relating to architecture, processing, workflow, verification and communication mechanisms cannot be omitted.
The best method known to the inventor must be disclosed.
Patent Claims that extend beyond the disclosed technical teaching violate Section 10(5) of the Patents Act.
The judgment therefore reinforces the importance of detailed patent drafting and comprehensive disclosure standards in Indian patent law.
Case Title: Arti Srivastava Vs. The Assistant Controller of Patents
Date of Order: 11 May 2026
Case Number: C.A.(COMM.IPD-PAT) 252/2022
Neutral Citation: 2026:DHC:4132
Court: High Court of Delhi
Hon’ble Judge: Justice Tushar Rao Gedela
Written By: Advocate Ajay Amitabh Suman, IP Adjutor [Patent and Trademark Attorney], High Court of Delhi
Disclaimer: Readers are advised not to treat this as substitute for legal advise as it may contain errors in perception, interpretation, and presentation.
SEO Tags
Patent Law India, Delhi High Court Patent Judgment, Section 10(4) Patents Act, Sufficiency of Disclosure, Patent Enablement, Patent Specification Drafting, Section 10(5) Patents Act, Inventive Step Patent Law, Counterfeit Detection Patent, Patent Rejection India, Patent Litigation Delhi High Court, Patent Claims and Disclosure, Person Skilled in the Art, PSITA Patent Law, Indian Patent Jurisprudence, Arti Srivastava Patent Case, Patent Specification Requirements, Fair Basis Rule Patent Law, Patent Drafting Standards India, Patent Appeal Delhi High Court, Intellectual Property Law India, Patent Examination India, Patent Prosecution India, Patent Case Analysis, Patent Disclosure Standards, AdvocateAjayAmitabhSuman, IPAdjutor,
Headnote
The Delhi High Court in Arti Srivastava v. Assistant Controller of Patents held that a patent specification must provide sufficient technical disclosure enabling a Person Skilled In The Art to practically implement the invention without further inventive research. The Court clarified that broad functional descriptions without adequate implementation details regarding processing, transmission, authentication and system architecture violate Sections 10(4)(a) and 10(5) of the Patents Act, 1970. The Court upheld rejection of a patent application relating to counterfeit product detection on the ground of insufficiency of disclosure despite the inventive step objection not surviving.