Zusammenfassung von EPC2000 Art 016 für die Entscheidung J0011/20 vom 25.07.2024
Bibliographische Daten
- Entscheidung
- J 0011/20 vom 25. Juli 2024
- Beschwerdekammer
- 3.1.01
- Inter partes/ex parte
- Ex parte
- Sprache des Verfahrens
- Englisch
- Verteilungsschlüssel
- Nicht verteilt (D)
- EPC-Artikel
- Art 109 Art 113 Art 123(2) Art 16 Art 90(5)
- RPBA:
- -
- Andere rechtliche Bestimmungen
- -
- Schlagwörter
- competence of the Receiving Section - formal requirements of the patent application documents - drawings - interlocutory revision
- Zitierte Akten
- G 0003/89G 0011/91J 0007/83J 0004/85J 0033/89J 0007/97J 0018/08J 0004/09J 0002/12J 0005/12J 0008/13J 0011/15J 0001/18J 0010/20T 0012/03
- Rechtsprechungsbuch
- IV.A.2, IV.A.6.3.1, 10th edition
Zusammenfassung
See also abstract under Article 113(1) EPC In J 11/20 the applicant appealed a decision of the Receiving Section refusing their application under Art. 90(5) EPC in conjunction with R. 58 EPC. The sole reason for the refusal was that the four amended drawings filed by the applicant to remedy formal deficiencies in the application documents were not in agreement with the application documents as originally filed and, despite the invitation by the Receiving Section, the applicant had not corrected this deficiency in due time. In the statement of grounds of appeal, the appellant had objected that the Receiving Section had committed a substantial procedural violation by exceeding its competence when issuing the communication concerning the formal requirements of the application documents by addressing substantive matters that belonged to the competence of the examining division. Thus, the first question addressed by the Legal Board concerned the competence of the Receiving Section and, in particular, whether the Receiving Section had acted ultra vires. The Legal Board recalled that the Receiving Section was responsible for the examination on filing and the examination as to formal requirements of the application (Art. 16 EPC). It was established case law that the responsibilities of the Receiving Section did not involve any technical examination of the application (J 5/12, J 7/97, J 33/89 and J 4/85). Within this framework, the Legal Board explained that the Receiving Section was competent under R. 58 EPC to identify inconsistencies in the application documents which were immediately apparent from the face of the documents, including whether formal discrepancies were present between amended documents and the documents as originally filed, provided no technical knowledge was required. In the case in hand, the deficiency noted by the Receiving Section was of a purely formal nature and did not involve any assessment in terms of disclosure. Hence, no procedural violation was committed in this respect. The Legal Board also assessed whether the Receiving Section should have granted interlocutory revision of the appealed decision. The Legal Board referred to J 18/08 and explained that a deficiency on which a decision under Art. 90(5) EPC is based could be corrected at the appeal stage. Such a case was different from the situation where the non-observance of a time limit automatically led to the application being deemed to be withdrawn, i.e. where the legal consequence automatically ensued when an act required within a specific time limit was not performed. In the case in hand, the Legal Board observed that, when the appeal was filed, the deficiency had already been remedied, albeit late, with the filing of the correct drawings. Considering that the ground for refusal of the application under Art. 90(5) EPC had been remedied, the Legal Board established that the Receiving Section should have granted interlocutory revision in accordance with Art. 109 EPC.