European Patent Office

Zusammenfassung von Art 13(2) RPBA 2020 für die Entscheidung T2482/22 vom 22.05.2024

Bibliographische Daten

Beschwerdekammer
3.2.04
Inter partes/ex parte
Inter partes
Sprache des Verfahrens
Englisch
Verteilungsschlüssel
An die Kammervorsitzenden verteilt (C)
EPC-Artikel
-
EPC-Regeln
-
RPBA:
Rules of procedure of the Boards of Appeal Art 13(2) 2020
Andere rechtliche Bestimmungen
-
Schlagwörter
amendment after notification of Art. 15(1) RPBA communication (yes) - exceptional circumstances (no) - validity prevails over other considerations (no) - legislator's intent - convergent approach
Zitierte Akten
G 0007/95
Rechtsprechungsbuch
V.A.4.5.4a), 10th edition

Zusammenfassung

In T 2482/22 the appellant (opponent) raised for the first time during the oral proceedings before the board an objection of lack of novelty over D1. The appellant's representative justified the late submission by arguing that he took over the case from a colleague, who had overlooked the novelty objection when he drafted the grounds of appeal. The appellant also argued that, because this concerned a European patent, it was of utmost importance that there be no doubts concerning validity. None of these arguments convinced the board of the existence of exceptional circumstances under Art. 13(2) RPBA. As regards the meaning of the term "exceptional circumstances", according to the board it was established jurisprudence of the boards that such circumstances concerned new or unforeseen developments in the appeal proceedings, such as new objections raised by the board or another party. In the present case, the appellant had already overlooked that objection when they drafted the notice of opposition, which was signed by the appellant's present representative. Thus, the fact that another representative of the appellant overlooked the novelty objection when drafting the grounds of appeal was not a development of the appeal proceedings, let alone a new or unforeseen one. The appellant alone had to bear the responsibility for any such errors and mistakes. The board understood the appellant's further argument as implying that the legitimacy of the European patent system depended on the strength of validity of patents issued by it, and that therefore any concerns of validity had to trump any other considerations, e.g. those of procedural economy and transparency or the nature of appeal proceedings as a judicial review. The board pointed out that the legislator had seen this differently, as was evident from Art. 12(2) RPBA as adopted by Decision of the Administrative Council of 26 June 2019, according to which the primary object of the appeal proceedings is to review the decision under appeal and a party should direct their appeal case at the requests, facts, objections, arguments and evidence on which the decision under appeal is based. As a consequence, the possibility of a party to change its case or add to it was very limited, increasingly so as the appeal procedure progressed (see document CA/3/19, points 47 and 48, explaining the convergent approach underlying Art. 12 and 13 RPBA, as well as the explanatory remarks to these articles, reproduced in OJ 2020, Supplementary publication 2). The board further explained that Art. 12 and 13 RPBA lay out the criteria by which the boards have to exercise their discretion when considering amendments to a party's appeal case. Art. 12(4) and 13(1) RPBA do still include criteria that could be seen as reflecting on the merits or relevance of new submissions (e.g. suitability to address issues), albeit subject to justifying reasons. Indeed, and following established case law (G 7/95, OJ 1996, 626), at an early appeal stage it might still be possible to consider novelty, even if not raised before, vis-a-vis a closest prior art already cited against inventive step, but only in the context of assessing inventive step. The board pointed out, however, that such criteria are entirely absent from the wording Art. 13(2) RPBA which was purposely chosen to express the much more stringent criterion applicable at this last stage of the appeal proceedings. The board rejected the approach according to which merit or relevance were somehow subsumed in the sole criterion of "exceptional circumstances". As was clear from the examples, these only concerned circumstances that arose from the way the proceedings had developed, i.e. from the procedure itself and not its subject.