Katrina Howard SC Selborne Chambers, Level 9 174 Phillip Street, Sydney, NSW, Australia Tel: +61 2 9233 5188 Fax: +61 2 9233 1137 Mob: +61 416 230 288
Katrina Howard read and practised at the Melbourne bar, before moving to the Sydney bar in
1993. She was appointed senior counsel in 2006. She was head of Wardell Chambers, level
15, from 2006 until she moved to Selborne Chambers, Level 9, in 2011. In 2008, she was called
to the Bar of England and Wales and is a door tenant at Three New Square, Intellectual
Katrina Howard specialises in the field of intellectual property, especially patents. Most of her
patent related work has been in the biological sciences including pharmaceuticals and
biotechnology. She has acted in most of the major cases in these areas in the last twenty years
in Australia, listed below. Many of these cases have been part of multinational litigation, parallel
to cases conducted in the UK and USA. However, she acts in cases involving any field of
technology. More recently, she has acted for Samsung in its battle against Apple over
Katrina Howard has a Bachelor of Science with Honours (pharmacology) (First Class), Monash
University (Melbourne) and a Bachelor of Law with Honours (Class IIa), Melbourne University.
She is the author of Designs Law in CCH Industrial and Intellectual Property Reporter, and has
published several articles in her areas of interest.
In 2006, she completed a specialist course in international intellectual property law at a summer
school in Cambridge, UK. In 2009, she prepared a submission on various aspects of the
Raising the Bar Bill 2011 (which amended the Patents Act in 2013) on behalf of the Australian
Institute of Patent Attorneys, after consulting with international experts in the UK, Europe and
USA. She has given numerous presentations at local, national and international conferences
(including on a panel of patent experts from the US, Europe and Japan at the 2012 BIO
International Convention in Boston, USA, and at Patski in St Anton, Austria, in 2013).
In 2012, Katrina Howard was voted best female lawyer (intellectual property) in Australia, in
Doyle’s Guide to the Australian Legal Profession.
On 27 June 2012, she was appointed as the Patent and Trade Marks Attorneys Disciplinary
She was one of only two Australian barristers listed in the International Who’s Who of Patent
Principal cases (patents)
• Kimberley-Clark v Arico (sufficiency of patents, nappies) • Grain Pool of Western Australia v The Commonwealth (constitutional validity of Plant
• Astra v Alphapharm (inventive step, omeprazole formulation) • UWA v Gray (entitlement, special leave refused) • Samsung v Apple (interlocutory injunction, special leave refused)
• Alphapharm v Tanabe (patent for a beta-blocker, term extension trial) • Asahi v Grace (patent for shrink wrap plastic, trial and appeal) • Murex v Chiron (patent for the hepatitis C virus, trial) • Tidy Tea v Unilever (patent for dripless teabags, trial and appeal) • Biochem v Emory (patent for the drug 3TC, used to treat AIDS, hearing and appeal) • Genetics Institute v Amgen (patent for the hormone, erythropoietin, trial and appeal);
also Genetics Institute v Johnson (prior claiming, appeal from patent office)
• New England Biolabs v Hoffman La-Roche (patent for the enzyme, taq polymerase,
• Atlantis v Schindler (patent for drainage cells, appeal) • Clark v Coffey (patent for a method for detecting opal deposits, trial)
• 3M v Tyco (patent for electrical connectors, trial and appeal) • Gambro v Fresenius (patent for dialysis machines, trial, appeal and trial as to damages) • Eli Lilly v Pfizer (patent for use of Viagra to treat erectile dysfunction, trial and appeal) • Mycogen v Monsanto (patent for genetically engineered cotton plants, trial) • Conor v Angiotech (patent for drug-eluting (taxol) stents, hearing and appeal on
entitlement; also a member of the team of barristers that argued the equivalent case in
• Hexal v Hoffmann La Roche (patent for use of carvedilol to decrease mortality from heart
• Merck v Genrx (patent for the drug, alendronate, used to treat osteoporosis, interlocutory
• Merck v Arrow (patent for the drug, alendronate; trial and appeal) • Pfizer v Commissioner of Patents (extension of patent for the anti-fungal drug,
• Emperor Sports v Commissioner of Patents (acted for the Commissioner in appeal
• IGT v Aristocrat (games for poker machines, trial and appeal) • Alphapharm v Lundbeck (patent for the anti-depressant drug, escitalopram, trial and
appeal; appeal to AAT regarding extension of time and appeal to Full Court)
• DuPont v ICI and the Commissioner of Patents (acted for the Commissioner in appeal
• Sheiman v Novopharm (conspiracy claim relating to patent applications for sterilisation
• Interpharma v Lilly (patent for gemcitabine, anti-cancer agent, interlocutory injunction) • Inverness v MDS (pregnancy testing kits, trial) • Hospira v Amgen (patent for PEG-GCSF, a pegylated hormone used to increase blood
• Novozymes v Danisco (patent relating to an enzyme (lipase) used in baking bread, trial
• Apotex v Eli Lilly (patent for olanzapine, used to treat schizophrenia, trial and appeal) • Apotex v AstraZeneca (patents relating to rosuvastatin, a cholesterol-lowering agent,
• Samsung v Apple (smartphone technology, trial) • Merck v Apotex (mometasone furoate nasal spray, interlocutory injunction) • DSM v Suntory (arachidonic acid containing composition and microbial process for
• Reckitt Benckiser v Glaxo SmithKline (liquid dispensing apparatus, interlocutory
• Hoffmann-La Roche v Apotex (patent relating to valganciclovir, an anti-viral drug)
Appearances before the Australian Patent Office in many cases, including the following
• Genentech v Celltrix (insulin like growth factor binding protein) • Tioxide v Kerr McGee (process for manufacturing titanium dioxide) • CSIRO v Bio-Care (method for controlling termites) • DSM NV v Novo Nordisk (patent for Aspergillus tubigensis XYL b enzyme) • Affymax v Diversa (patent for DNA shuffling) • Human Genome Sciences v Ludwig (VEGF2 protein) • SmithKline Beecham v Lek (combination of amoxicillin and clavulanate) • Genentech v HGS (VEGF–related protein) • Bluescope v IGS Technologies (coated steel compositions) • Novogen v GJ Consultants (entitlement) • Novozymes A/S v DSM N. V. (methods for expression cloning in filamentous fungi) • Nestle v Effem (canned pet food) • Oravax v CSL (Helicobacter vaccine) • Bayer v Novartis (endoparasiticidal agents) • Ashmont v Nature Vet (anthelmintic formulations) • Orenco v Everhard (septic tanks) • Merck v Sherman (enalapril formulation) • Fexco DCC v Mainline (method for foreign currency conversion) • Euro-celtique v Grunenthal; Grunenthal v Mundipharma (opoid formulations) • Unilever v Nestec (ice confections) • CSR v Renouf (laminated insulating material) • Sheiman v Novapharm (sterilisation apparatus) • Vistakon v Novartis (contact lenses) • NewSouthInnovations v Kaczmarek (entitlement) • Alphapharm & 3 Ors v Lundbeck (anti-depressant – extension of time application,
following opposition and subsequent appeals)
• Haas v Steiner (anti-microbial agents) • Novartis v Bayer (endoparasiticidal agents) • Martek v Suntory (process for manufacturing oils used in infant formula) • Shell v Exxon (process for removing contaminants from gas)
• Apotex v AstraZeneca (rosuvastatin formulation) • QNL v Cominco (process for extraction of minerals from ores) • Sandoz v Euroceltique (tramadol formulation)
Other areas of interest:
Any case relating to technology in any field of law.
In her early years at the Bar, Katrina Howard appeared in various cases alleging personal injury
as a result of exposure to extremely low frequency radiation from high voltage power lines, and
appeared on behalf of the Electrical Supply Association of Australia (representing all electrical
utilities in Australia) in the Government Inquiry into Community Needs and High Voltage
Transmission Line Development conducted in 1991.
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