20 January 2017

T 0123/15 - Repeating opposition, inadmissible

Key points

  • A decision illustrating that admissibility of an appeal of an opponent requires more than simply reiterate the Notice of opposition. Rather the opponent-appellant should give precise reasons why the Opposition Division's decision is incorrect in the Statement of grounds.


EPO T 0123/15 - link

Reasons for the Decision
1. The appeal was filed within the time limits laid down in Article 108 EPC. From the assertion in the statement of grounds of appeal that the patent is to be revoked due to lack of patentability the Board deduces that the appellant's request within the meaning of Rule 99(1)(c) EPC is to set aside the decision under appeal and to revoke the patent. The lack of a proper request within the meaning of Rule 99(1)(c) EPC is therefore as such not a reason to declare the appeal inadmissible.


2. Rule 99(2) EPC requires that the statement of grounds of appeal "shall indicate the reasons for setting aside the decision impugned". If the statement of grounds of appeal does not comply with this provision, the appeal shall be rejected as inadmissible (Rule 101(1) EPC).
3. According to board of appeal case law on Rule 99(2) EPC, if the appellant submits that the decision under appeal is incorrect, then the statement setting out the grounds of appeal must enable the board to understand immediately why the decision is alleged to be incorrect and on what facts the appellant bases its arguments, without first having to make investigations of its own. There must be a causal relationship between the arguments in the statement of grounds of appeal and the reasons given in the decision under appeal (Case Law of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO, 8**(th) edition 2016, IV.E.2.6.3 a)).
4. The statement of grounds of appeal discusses none of the reasons given in the decision under appeal, but is nearly identical with the notice of opposition, the only difference of substance being the citation of a new document, A7, replacing the citation of document A6. The appellant has not even redrafted the text in order to adopt the numbering of documents used in the decision under appeal.
5. Thus the statement of grounds of appeal is effectively equivalent to a simple reference to the notice of opposition. According to the established case law, merely referring to one's own submissions in the earlier proceedings cannot normally replace an explicit account of the legal and factual reasons for the appeal (Case Law of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO, 8**(th) edition 2016, IV.E.2.6.4 a)). A statement of grounds of appeal that is identical or nearly identical to the notice of opposition can as a rule not be considered to contain arguments as to why the decision under appeal is incorrect (T 2077/11, T 39/12).
6. In the present case, in addition to an ad verbatim repetition of the contents of the notice of opposition a new document was cited. Apart from the fact that the introduction of this document is subject to scrutiny for admissibility under Article 114(2) EPC and Article 12(4) RPBA, and no reasons for its late filing have been given, the appellant has not established any link between this document and the decision under appeal. Therefore the submission of this document cannot be considered as a valid reasoning on the basis of which it could be concluded that the decision under appeal is incorrect either.
7. As neither of the parties has requested oral proceedings, and both parties have been heard on the preliminary view of the Board that the appeal should be rejected as inadmissible, the Board is in a position to give its decision in writing.
Order

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