The applicant filed an appeal against the refusal of its application by
the Examining Division (ED). The ED considered that the requests on file did
not comply with A 123(2), A 84 and A 56. The inventive step objection was based
on documents D1 (a Japanese application) and D4 (a French application).
The Board found the request before it to be allowable and then dealt
with the request for reimbursement of the appeal fee:
[7.1] The appellant
argued that the ED committed a substantial procedural violation by not providing a translation of
document D1, which justified the reimbursement of the appeal fee. […]
[7.3] According to R
67, first sentence, EPC 1973 the appeal fee shall be reimbursed in the event of
interlocutory revision or where the board of appeal deems an appeal to be
allowable, if such reimbursement is equitable by reason of a substantial
procedural violation.
The board however
finds that, even if the alleged procedural violation occurred in first-instance
proceedings, it would not have been equitable to reimburse the appeal fee in
the present case for the following reasons:
In the contested
decision the ED relied on document D1 to deny inventive step of the
subject-matter of claim 1 of the main request then on file […]. However, the
contested decision is also based on other reasons for refusing the main request
then on file and contains reasons […] why claim 1 of the main request was not
clear (A 84 EPC 1973) and why the subject-matter of that claim extended beyond
the application as filed (A 123(2) EPC). Thus, even if the inventive step
objection including the appraisal of document D1 in the decision were
disregarded, the contested decision would still be negative and be reasoned,
and an appeal including payment of the appeal fee would have been required in
order to obtain a reversal of the first-instance decision. Hence the alleged
procedural violation could not have been the immediate and only cause of the
need to appeal and to pay an appeal fee.
Moreover, if the
board had found that the alleged procedural violation in relation to the ED’s
finding on lack of inventive step had indeed occurred, such a violation would
not have been considered by the board as fundamental, justifying a reversal of
the decision under appeal and a remission of the case to the department of
first instance.
Thus, regardless of whether a substantial procedural
violation occurred or not, the appellant, requesting that a patent be granted,
had to appeal in order to obtain a reversal of the first-instance decision.
Under these circumstances, a reimbursement of the appeal fee would not have been
equitable in the present case and, therefore, the question whether any
procedural violation was in fact committed by the ED can be left open.
[7.4] In view of
the above, the request for reimbursement of the appeal fee must be refused.
Still, it would have been nice to tell us whether, in the opinion of the
Board, the fact that no translation had been provided as such could have constituted a substantial
procedural violation or not.
Should you wish to download the whole decision, just click here.
The file wrapper can be found here.
4 comments:
My guess is that the board would not consider the missing translation a procedural violation, although this may depend on the quality of the abstract. The abstract, if understandable, shifts the burden of proof to the applicant who has to show that the content of the document is indeed different from what the abstract suggests. Moreover, the abstract is a document in itself and if enabling and timely published may be state of the art on its own.
It thus depends on the facts of the case.
The chairman of the examining division is now a member of the board of appeal. This may explain why there was no opinion on the procedural violation...
Post a Comment