The Court of Appeal of the Unified Patent Court (UPC) delivered a landmark decision on 2 June 2026 in Fujifilm v Kodak (UPC_CoA_312/2025 et al.), addressing both substantive patent infringement issues and, more significantly, the scope of the UPC’s international or “long-arm” jurisdiction. This ruling provides the most comprehensive guidance to date on whether—and how—the UPC may adjudicate disputes relating to national designations of European patents in territories outside the UPC, such as the United Kingdom.
At the level of substantive outcome, the Court of Appeal overturned the first-instance judgment of the Mannheim Local Division, which had previously found infringement and granted injunctive relief in both Germany and the UK. The appellate court held that Kodak did not infringe Fujifilm’s patent and allowed Kodak to rely, inter alia, on a defence of prior use under German law. The injunctions were therefore set aside, although the patent itself was upheld as valid.
This outcome illustrates a key feature of UPC litigation: even where the Court accepts jurisdiction over a claim with cross-border dimensions, success ultimately depends on establishing infringement and liability under the applicable substantive law.
Notwithstanding the reversal on the merits, the decision’s principal significance lies in its treatment of international jurisdiction under the UPC framework. The Court firmly rejected the argument that Article 34 of the UPC Agreement (UPCA) limits the Court’s jurisdiction to the territory of participating Member States. Instead, it held that Article 34 merely defines the territorial scope of UPC decisions as a default rule, but does not restrict the Court’s competence to hear disputes involving non-UPC territories where jurisdiction is otherwise established.
This interpretation positions the UPC as a court capable of exercising jurisdiction in a manner comparable to national courts applying EU private international law rules.
Central to the Court’s reasoning is the interaction between the UPCA and the Brussels I bis Regulation. The Court emphasized that jurisdiction may be grounded in Article 4 of Brussels I bis, which provides that defendants should generally be sued in the courts of their domicile. In Fujifilm v Kodak, the presence of Kodak entities in Germany constituted a sufficient jurisdictional anchor, allowing the UPC to hear claims relating not only to German patent rights but also to the UK designation of the same European patent.
This approach is consistent with established case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union, including Owusu v Jackson and BSH v Electrolux, which precludes EU courts from declining jurisdiction on the ground that a non-EU forum might be more appropriate.
A central conceptual contribution of the decision is the distinction between “accepting jurisdiction” and “exercising jurisdiction.” While jurisdiction may be readily established under Brussels I bis, its exercise must be tempered by considerations of international comity and procedural fairness.
This distinction enables the UPC to adopt an expansive approach to jurisdiction while simultaneously imposing limits on how that jurisdiction is used in practice, particularly in relation to foreign patent rights.
To operationalise this distinction, the Court articulated a structured framework for handling cases involving extra-territorial patent designations.
First, the UPC cannot entertain standalone revocation actions concerning non-UPC patent designations; such matters remain within the exclusive competence of national courts.
Second, in infringement proceedings involving foreign designations where validity is contested, the Court should adopt a flexible case-management approach. This may include inviting the patentee to withdraw extra-territorial claims, allowing the defendant to initiate revocation proceedings before national courts, or staying the UPC proceedings pending those outcomes.
Third, where the patent is found valid and infringed within the UPC territory, the Court may proceed to grant relief extending to non-UPC territories. However, such relief is typically made conditional upon the patent being upheld by the competent national courts. Should those courts subsequently invalidate the patent, the UPC’s decision will cease to have effect.
This conditional relief mechanism reflects a pragmatic attempt to reconcile effective enforcement with respect for national sovereignty over patent validity.
The Court further clarified that the UPC’s jurisdiction extends to claims of joint tortfeasorship, meaning that liability may arise even where a defendant does not directly commit infringing acts. However, such liability must still be established under the applicable national law governing the alleged infringement.
In the present case, Fujifilm’s UK infringement claim failed not because of jurisdictional limitations, but due to insufficient evidence under UK legal standards, particularly concerning attribution of infringing conduct and the requirements for joint liability.
From a policy and practice perspective, the decision significantly enhances the strategic importance of the UPC as a forum for multinational patent litigation. It confirms that, under certain conditions, the Court may adjudicate disputes with effects extending beyond the UPC’s formal territorial boundaries, including major markets such as the UK, Spain, and Switzerland.
At the same time, the Court has imposed meaningful safeguards to prevent overreach. National courts retain ultimate authority over the validity of patents within their respective jurisdictions, and litigants must carefully navigate the procedural mechanisms outlined by the Court.
In conclusion, Fujifilm v Kodak represents a foundational judgment in the evolution of UPC jurisprudence. It establishes that the UPC possesses potentially far-reaching international jurisdiction, grounded in EU procedural law, while simultaneously delineating the limits of its exercise through principles of comity and procedural balance. For practitioners, the decision underscores both the opportunities presented by the UPC as a centralised forum for cross-border patent disputes and the continuing importance of national legal systems in determining substantive outcomes.
Court of Appeal case IDs: UPC_CoA_312/2025, UPC_CoA_880/2025, UPC_CoA_333/2025, UPC_CoA_882/2025
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