Key points
- The OD decided that D1 was the closest prior art and that the claim was inventive over D1. By way of obiter, the OD gave reasons why the claim was also inventive over D11, wich was an inventive step attack presented late by the opponent.
- "During the oral proceedings in opposition, at the very end of the discussion of inventive step, after the relevant decision on inventive step starting from document D1/D15 had been announced, the appellant [opponent] brought up an objection of lack of inventive step starting from document D11 as an alternative closest prior art document against the subject-matter of claim 1."
- "The decision under appeal also contains an obiter dictum in point 9.10, [...] In this section the opposition division mentioned that document D11 was not the closest prior art, and thus it would not be necessary to decide on its basis. For the sake of completeness, however, and at the request of the opponent, an assessment of inventive step had also been provided on the basis of document D11. In that assessment, the opposition division found that the subject-matter of claim 1 was inventive over the disclosure of document D11."
- The Board: "An obiter dictum is any general statement, either implicit or explicit, in a decision which does not constitute a ratio decidendi of said decision."
- I'm not entirely sure why this definition is limited to general statements.
- Accordingly, in decisions of the boards of appeal it was stated that observations in an obiter dictum do not, by definition, form part of a decision [...]
- "Form a purely legal point of view obiter dicta have no significance for the decision of the specific case and have no binding force. They normally deal with issues that were not raised in the proceedings as a whole, or on which a decision does not actually have to be made. Accordingly, if a legal opinion expressed as an obiter dictum has no influence on the legal dispute, it cannot, by itself, constitute an infringement of one party's rights."
- "[The right to be heard] is not violated if a party did not have the opportunity to comment on observations in an obiter dictum "
- As a comment, the implication is that they form no part of the decision for the purposes of Article 12 RPBA either. In an appeal against a refusal, if the Board indicates it agrees with the obiter, this is a new objection of the Board.
- "A genuine obiter dictum does not make it necessary to file additional evidence [with the Statement of grounds]."
- In this case, the OD's decision that the claim was inventive, was inherently based on rejecting the inventive step attack over D11 and the use of an obiter was not appropriate.
- "After having decided that the subject-matter of claim 1 was inventive starting from document D1, the opposition division should have addressed further objections of lack of inventive step, if any were on file. Therefore, the opposition division should first have taken a decision on the admittance of the inventive step attack starting from document D11. Only if admitted, it should have then fully decided upon inventive step by also taking into account document D11 as the closest prior art after having heard both parties. Had the opposition division formally decided not to admit the attack based on document D11, there would have been no need for an obiter dictum."
- "the board also notes that in cases in which the skilled person has a choice of several workable routes, i.e. routes starting from different documents, which might lead to the invention, the rationale of the problem-solution approach requires that the invention be assessed relative to all these possible routes, before an inventive step could be acknowledged (see e.g. T 967/97, point 3.2 of the Reasons and T 21/08, point 1.2.3 of the Reasons)."
- Or the attacks be rejected as inadmissible, of course.