Weltevrede Nursery (Pty) Ltd v Keith Kirsten's (Pty) Ltd and others [2004] 1 All SA 181 (SCA) Division: Supreme Court of Appeal Date: 28 November 2003 Case No: 515/2002 Before: Harms, Streicher, Mthiyane, Conradie JJA and Southwood AJA Sourced by: PR Cronje Summarised by: MT Naidoo Parallel Citation: 2004 (4) SA 110 (SCA) . Editor's Summary . Cases Referred to . Judgment . [1] Patents and inventions Infringement Plant breeders right Plant Breeders' Rights Act 15 of 1976 Provides for the application and registration of plant breeders rights Court had to examine the validity of the Plaintiff's plant breeders right. Editor's Summary The Respondent, Keith Kirsten (Pty) Ltd referred to as "the Plaintiff" in the court a quo held a plant breeder's right certificate ("the certificate") in terms of a particular variety of plant ("tropicanna"). The Appellant, Weltevrede Nursery (Pty) Ltd "the Defendant" in the court a quo realised that there was an export market for it so they obtained an export order for a substantial number of the tropicanna rhizomes. The Plaintiff had become aware of this and obtained an order in terms of which the rhizomes in the Defendant's possession were attached pending infringement proceedings. In the court a quo the Defendant made a conditional admission to "infringement". The admission was subject to the failure of the defence of invalidity of the Plaintiff's registration and a counterclaim for the termination of the plant breeder's right. The court a quo gave judgment for the Plaintiff. This was an appeal against this decision. Held The Court looked primarily at the validity of the Plaintiff's plant breeder's right and examined the relevant statutory provisions. The relevant statutes were the Plant Breeders' Rights Act 15 of 1976 ("the Act") which was amended by the Plant Breeders' Rights Amendment Act 15 of 1996 ("the amending act"). The Court found that the Plaintiff's application and the grant by the Registrar both predate the 1996 amendment. The validity of the Plaintiff's rights had to be assessed under the provisions of the Act prior to the amendment. Other matters such as the content of the plant breeder's right and the permissible court orders had to be determined under the amended act. The Court held that both the court a quo and the Plaintiff had assumed that all the issues had to be decided under the 1996 amendment. The Court looked at requirements prescribed by the Act in terms of a plant breeder's right. Description of new variety The Court held that Plant Breeder's right was granted consequent to registration and like any other intellectual property rights dependant on registration that right had to appear ex facie the register. The right granted must bear a relationship to the right applied for. A new variety had to be "distinct" or in the words of the amending act "it is clearly distinguishable from any other variety" and its characteristics "precisely describable". All this must appear from the register. Page 182 of [2004] 1 All SA 181 (SCA) The Court held that the prescribed mandatory requirement of a description of a new variety was not complied with since the application form filed with the Registrar contained no trade description of the plant. The Applicant and the Holder Section 20(2)(a) of the Act required the Plant Breeders Right certificate to be issued to the person who applied for it. The Court found that the certificate was issued to the Plaintiff yet the applicant for the Plant breeder's right was Morgenzon. Further, the Government Notice in which the application was advertised, indicated Morgenzon as the applicant. The Breeder In terms of the Act only a "breeder" could apply for a plant breeders right. The question asked by the Court was whether the Plaintiff had "developed or discovered" the plant. The Court held that multiplying and testing a plant are not the same as developing it and successfully developing a market is also not the same as developing a plant. The Court found that the Plaintiff having sent rhizomes to Morgenzon for testing and bulking purposes did not mean that the plaintiff had "developed or discovered" the plant. Novelty Section section 2(1)(a) of the Act provided that an application for plant breeders' rights had to be in respect of a "new" variety and a plant was deemed to have been new if it complied with the prescribed requirements found in section 2(2) of the Act. The Act as amended, stated when a variety would have been deemed to have been new but in the process