3.14. Wirkungen eines erfolgreichen Überprüfungsantrags
3.14.1 Aufhebung der Entscheidung der Beschwerdekammer
Ist der Antrag begründet, so hebt die Große Beschwerdekammer die Entscheidung der Beschwerdekammer auf und ordnet die Wiedereröffnung des Verfahrens vor der Kammer an (R. 108 (3) EPÜ). Die Beschränkung des Überprüfungsantrags auf einen selbständigen Teil der Entscheidung (z. B. die Nichtrückerstattung der Beschwerdegebühr) ist zulässig.
In R 19/12 vom 12. April 2016 date: 2016-04-12 vertrat die Große Beschwerdekammer folgende Ansicht: Wenngleich die Möglichkeit einer nur teilweisen Aufhebung einer Entscheidung in Art. 112a (5) EPÜ und R. 108 (3) EPÜ nicht explizit vorgesehen sei, folge diese aus allgemeinen prozessrechtlichen Grundsätzen (s. auch R 16/14).
In T 379/10 vom 21. September 2015 date: 2015-09-21 verwies die Kammer auf R 21/11, wonach den Parteien bei Wiedereröffnung des Beschwerdeverfahrens nicht erneut die Möglichkeit zur Äußerung zum gesamten Streitstoff gegeben werden müsse. Der Gegenstand des nach einem erfolgreichen Antrag auf Überprüfung wiedereröffneten Verfahrens sei vielmehr auf die Behebung des in der Überprüfungsentscheidung festgestellten Mangels zu beschränken.
In T 695/18 legte die Kammer Art. 112a (5) EPÜ und R. 108 (3) EPÜ aus und stellte fest, dass das EPÜ keinen Hinweis darauf enthält, dass es sich bei dem im vorliegenden Fall durch die Entscheidung R 3/22 der Großen Beschwerdekammer wiedereröffneten Verfahren um das Beschwerdeverfahren handelt. Die Kammer betrachtete die Entscheidung der Großen Beschwerdekammer in R 3/22 als eine, die ein "Nebenverfahren" eröffnete, um festzustellen, ob der Antrag auf Berichtigung der Rücknahme der Beschwerde begründet war: Sollte der Antrag für begründet befunden werden, würde das Beschwerdeverfahren fortgesetzt; andernfalls würde das Beschwerdeverfahren mit dem Zeitpunkt des Wirksamwerdens der Rücknahme der Beschwerde als beendet gelten.
- R 0011/23
In R 11/23 the petition was based on Art. 112a(2)(c) EPC, i.e. the fundamental violation of Art. 113(1) EPC. It was alleged that the clarity objection against auxiliary request 8, which had led to the board's finding that said request had been unallowable, had never been discussed, neither in the written nor in the oral proceedings, but had been brought forward only in the board's written decision..
Specifically, the petitioner argued that there had been two distinct clarity objections against claim 1 of auxiliary request 8: the alleged lack of clarity regarding what "maintaining currents in an allowable range" meant (the "allowable current range objection") and the alleged lack of information on which components were to be protected by the protective circuit (the "unspecified components objection"). The petitioner acknowledged that it had been heard in the context of the "allowable current range objection" but it asserted that it had been confronted with the "unspecified components objection" only when reading the written decision.
The Enlarged Board held that it did not see any clear indication that the "unspecified components objection" had been raised implicitly, for example as an aspect of an overarching clarity objection..
The Enlarged Board agreed with the petitioner in that it was not sufficient for a relevant specific aspect such as the "unspecified components" to be covered or encompassed by a broader clarity objection that had been discussed if the parties had not been aware of the specific aspect during the discussion. In this context, opponent 2 had referred to paragraph [0018] of the patent which had been mentioned in point 7.4 of the decision under review. The Enlarged Board could not see that such a reference implied that the "unspecified components objection" had been discussed. Furthermore, it did not regard the wording of point 7.5 of said decision as evidence that the "unspecified components objection" had been discussed, because it was not clear whether the phrase "as the appellants and the infringer [sic] correctly argue" was linked to the "unspecified components objection".
According to the Enlarged Board, since it had no power or ability to investigate further whether other facts or indications might suggest that the petitioner could be aware that the board had had doubts about the specific aspect of clarity (namely, the "unspecified component" issue), it had to rely on the parties' submissions in this respect. In the absence of any such indication, it was not for the party alleging a breach of its right to be heard to prove that there had been no such facts or indications (see R 15/11). Any doubts remaining on whether a decision under review was based upon facts and considerations on which the parties had had an opportunity to comment must be solved to the affected party's benefit (see R 2/14).
For these reasons, the Enlarged Board concluded that the "unspecified components objection" had not been discussed during appeal proceedings and its use in the written decision had therefore come as a surprise to the petitioner.
As in the appeal case underlying R 2/14, a broader objection had been discussed during appeal proceedings in the present case but not the specific aspect encompassed by the broader objection that turned out to be decisive for the case. In such cases, the "grounds" as referred to in Art. 113(1) EPC may have a more specific meaning than a broader objection like "lack of clarity" or "insufficiency of disclosure". In the present case, it was irrelevant that the broader clarity objection had been discussed. The critical aspect, namely the question of which components needed to be protected, had not been discussed during the appeal proceedings and the board's conclusion on this aspect had come as a surprise to the petitioner.
The "unspecified components objection" which had not been discussed during the appeal proceedings eventually was the reason for the board's finding that the patent was invalid. The Enlarged Board concluded that a fundamental violation of Art. 113(1) EPC had occurred. The decision under review was thus set aside and the proceedings before a board reopened..
On the latter, the Enlarged Board, referring to Art. 112a(5) and R. 108(3) EPC, explained that the board responsible for the reopened proceedings was not automatically the board which had issued the decision underlying the review proceedings. Rather, the allocation of the reopened proceedings had to be determined in accordance with the business distribution scheme as applicable when the proceedings were reopened.