India’s Supreme Court declines to hear compulsory licence appeal

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

India’s Supreme Court declines to hear compulsory licence appeal

India’s first compulsory licence has survived its latest and likely final court challenge

Last Friday, the Supreme Court handed down a two-sentence long order rejecting Bayer’s petition for special leave for appeal of the compulsory licence granted for its Nexavar cancer drug.

In July, the Bombay High Court held that there was no reason to overturn the compulsory licence originally granted by the patent controller and later upheld by the Intellectual Property Appellate Board.

India’s patent law has several provisions that allow for compulsory licences. Section 84 of the Patents Acts allows generic manufacturers to apply for a compulsory licence if it can show that: (a) the reasonable requirements of the public with respect to the patented invention have not been satisfied, or (b) that the patented invention is not available to the public at a reasonably affordable price, or (c) that the patented invention is not worked in India.

The patent controller sided with Natco on all three grounds, granting the licence with a royalty rate of 6% of net sales. The IPAB in March 2013 upheld the decision, though it questioned the patent controller’s holding that a drug is not being worked if it is imported into India rather than produced domestically. The Bombay High Court again upheld the compulsory licence and made a point of agreeing with the IPAB on the issue of whether importation constitutes the working of a patent.

A possible but unlikely challenge

Though the Supreme Court denied the special leave petition, Bayer may still choose to file a review petition with the Supreme Court. Such a petition would be reviewed by the same bench that handed down the original denial, which may be overturned if Bayer can prove that there is “apparent error”. If this is denied, the Supreme Court may further consider a curative petition to prevent abuse of process or to cure gross miscarriage of justice.

However, one India lawyer suggests that this will be a difficult to get the Supreme Court to reverse its own decisions absent a strong case. One of the more high-profile examples, he explains, is the so-called 2G spectrum scam cases, where the Supreme Court agreed to review parts of its own decision to cancel 122 licences for spectrum for use with wireless communications.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Regulatory changes and damages risks are prompting Canadian firms and clients to opt for settlements in generic and biosimilar cases
News of Via Licensing Alliance adding two new members and Nokia’s proposal to extend interim licences to Warner Bros Discovery and Paramount were also among the top talking points
A new claim filed by Ericsson, and a request for access to documents, were also among recent developments
Cooley and Stikeman Elliott advised 35Pharma on the deal, which will allow GSK to get its hands on S235, an investigational medicine for pulmonary hypertension
Simon Wright explains why the UK should embrace the possibility of rejoining the UPC, and reveals how CIPA is reacting to this month’s historic Emotional Perception AI case at the UK Supreme Court
Matthew Grady of Wolf Greenfield says AI presents an opportunity in patent practice for stronger collaboration between in-house and outside counsel
Aparna Watal, head of trademarks at Halfords IP, discusses why lawyers must take a stand when advising clients and how she balances work, motherhood and mentoring
Discussion hosted by Bird & Bird partners also hears that UK courts’ desire to determine FRAND rates could see the jurisdiction penalised in a similar way to China
The platform’s proactive intellectual property enforcement helps brands spot and kill fakes, so they can focus on growth. Managing IP learns more about the programme
Hire of José María del Valle Escalante to lead the firm’s operations in ‘dynamic’ Catalonia and Aragon regions follows last month’s appointment of a new chief information officer
Gift this article