22 March 2017

T 1946/15 - Late appeal of opponent

Key points

  • The Board follows established case law that in case an opponent files its Notice of appeal late, no re-establishment of rights is available (G1/86). Moreover, the late filed Notice of apppeal is then deemed to not have been filed and the appeal fee is reimbursed.



EPO T 1946/15 - link

Reasons for the Decision
1. The first question to be decided is whether an admissible appeal was validly filed.
2. The impugned decision was dispatched on 26 June 2015 and the notice of appeal was received on 4 November 2015. It is not disputed that the notice of appeal was not filed within the two-month period under Article 108 EPC.
3. It is established jurisprudence that merely paying the fee for appeal does not give rise to a validly lodged appeal, in the absence of a notice of appeal filed in due time (J 19/90 of 30 April 1992, Reasons, 1.2.2, T 778/00 of 6 July 2001, Reasons, 2.1 and 2.2, T 371/92 of 2 December 1993, Reasons, 3 and most recently T 1325/15 of 7 June 2016, Reasons, 41 and 42). This is also not disputed.
Re-establishment of rights
4. Therefore, it is necessary for the Board to consider the request for re-establishment of rights.
It is established jurisprudence that opponents are not entitled to re-establishment of rights under Article 122 EPC in respect of the two-month period for filing an appeal under Article 108 EPC (G 1/86 of 24 June 1987, Reasons, 6 and T 210/89 of 20 October 1989).


According to these decisions, re-establishment of rights under Article 122(1) EPC is available to an applicant for or a proprietor of a European patent, as expressly stated in this article. Whilst the wording of this article does not exclude a priori all other parties, the historical documentation relating to the Convention and a comparison of the national laws of the Contracting states suggest that opponents may not have their rights re-established in respect of missed time limits for appealing. This exclusion is justified in particular because their situation is different from that of applicants or proprietors. Having lost their right to appeal, opponents can still pursue actions for revocation before national courts. In contrast, once applicants or proprietors have definitively lost their possibility to appeal, the limitation or revocation of their patent by the first instance's decision becomes final and the corresponding rights irrevocably lost.
The appellant argued that this question could have been decided differently by making no distinction between patent proprietors and opponents and thus allowing opponents too to have their rights re-established in respect of the time limits for filing the notice of appeal. In the Board's opinion, this unsubstantiated assertion provides no basis for it to reconsider earlier decisions of the Enlarged Board and of the boards of appeal. Furthermore, the Board supports the analysis and the conclusion laid down in the established jurisprudence and sees no reason to depart from it.
The appellant further argued that the exclusion of the opponent from re-establishment of rights in respect of the time limits for filing the notice of appeal constituted unbalanced and unequal treatment. The decisions cited above concluded however that an opponent should not enjoy the same right to restoration under Article 122 EPC as the applicant or proprietor because their respective legal situations were objectively different. Hence, the principle of equality of the parties before the law does not apply in a manner that would enable an opponent to enjoy the same rights as an applicant or a proprietor on this matter (T 210/89, Reasons, 9).
Lastly, the appellant indicated that he doubted that provisions excluding opponents from re-establishment of their right to file an appeal were present in the national laws of the Contracting states. The appellant provided no evidence for this assertion. For that reason alone, the argument cannot succeed. Furthermore, the Enlarged Board cited Contracting states' provisions supporting its position (G 1/86, Reasons, 5).
The Board therefore concludes that the request for re-establishment of rights is to be refused.
Notice of appeal
5. Without re-establishment of rights, the notice of appeal was not filed in due time under Article 108 EPC.
In the absence of a notice of appeal fulfilling the requirements of Article 108 EPC and in view of the general rule that no distinction is to be made between the late filing and the non-filing of a document, the Board considers that no appeal has ever existed in the present case (T 371/92, Reasons, 3.9, T 778/00, Reasons, 2.2 and T 1325/15, Reasons, 41 and 43).
The Board therefore concludes that the appeal is deemed not to have been filed.
Reimbursement of appeal fee
6. In the absence of an appeal, there is no legal basis for paying the fee involved, which must therefore be reimbursed (T 371/92, Reasons, 6, T 778/00, Reasons 2.2 and T 1325/15, Reasons, 43).
Order
For these reasons it is decided that:
1. The request for re-establishment of rights is refused.
2. The appeal is deemed not to have been filed.
3. Reimbursement of the appeal fee is ordered.

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