4.3.6 Submissions not admitted at first instance – error in the use of discretion – Article 12(6), first sentence, RPBA
Prima facie relevance is a recognised criterion for assessing the admissibility of late-filed objections in first instance opposition proceedings (see e.g. T 2883/19). In numerous decisions the boards held that the opposition division applying the prima facie relevance criterion had relied on the right principles and, in the case in hand, had applied them in a reasonable way (see e.g. T 3166/19, T 415/20, T 687/20, T 803/21, T 214/20).
T 1161/20 illustrates the importance of giving reasons as to why the opposition division's decision not to admit objections was incorrect.
(i) Party’s disagreement with the result of the substantive assessment – not sufficient to demonstrate an error in the use of discretion
The mere disagreement by the party with the result of the substantive assessment by the opposition division is not sufficient to indicate an error in the use of the discretion. This was, for instance, underlined in T 2883/19. In the same decision, the board also pointed out that it was not apparent that the prima facie relevance evaluation of the added-matter objection at issue was based on manifestly incorrect technical assumptions. The board exercised its discretion under Art. 12(6) RPBA not to admit this objection into the appeal proceedings.
Similarly, in T 61/21 the board did not accept the appellant’s (opponent’s) arguments according to which the opposition division, when deciding not to admit D10 as prima facie not relevant, had incorrectly placed excessive emphasis on the supposed remoteness of the document.
In T 307/22, however, the board reviewed the substantive basis (valid claim of priority) for a decision of the opposition division not to admit a citation. In the board's opinion, the opposition division had failed to recognise that the claimed invention had only partial priority. The board therefore exercised its own discretion. However, it too decided not to admit the citation in question (D7), on the basis that it lacked relevance for novelty. Its relevance for inventive step had been asserted by the appellant for the first time at the oral proceedings.
(ii) Insufficiently reasoned discretionary decision – error in the use of discretion
In T 2055/20 the board found that the opposition division had provided in the written decision only an unreasoned statement for the non-admittance of auxiliary request 1 filed during the oral proceedings. In particular, no reasoning was provided as to why this request, prima facie, did not overcome this objection. Moreover, according to the minutes of the oral proceedings before the opposition division, when dealing with the admittance of said request, only issues of added subject-matter were raised and discussed with the parties. The board concluded that the opposition division’s decision resulted from an error in the use of discretion and admitted the request into the proceedings.
In T 1657/20, the facts on which the opposition division had based its discretionary decision were not entirely apparent from the contested decision. In particular, the opposition division had substantiated the lack of prima facie relevance only in relation to claim 1 of the main request but not the broader claim 15. It was also debatable how rigorously the opposition division had assessed prima facie relevance for inventive step. Therefore, the board exercised its own discretion and admitted A8 into the appeal proceedings under Art. 12(4) and (6) RPBA.
See also T 1324/21 (in-house information on publicly available tablets not irrelevant, as there was no basis to assume that the analysis of the pertinent feature would present skilled person with undue burden).