Key points
- When is a statement proven? What is the role of the standard of proof?
- The Board: "The Enlarged Board's reference in G 2/21 to a judge's personal conviction makes clear that it is the state of mind of the members of the fact finding body which is decisive in the evaluation of evidence. This is always the case, regardless of which standard of proof is to be applied. In other words, referring to the deciding body's conviction that an alleged fact occurred (see T 1138/20, Reasons 1.2.1, last paragraph, and T 1311/21, Reasons 3.2.1(d)(vi)), does, strictly speaking, not yet say anything about which standard of proof should be applied by the deciding body to arrive at this conviction."
- "As to "the required standard of proof" referred to by the Enlarged Board in G 2/21, different concepts have been developed in the case law of the Boards of Appeal. The EPO standard of proof is generally the balance of probabilities. By way of exception, the standard of proof is that of beyond reasonable doubt, mainly in opposition proceedings where only the opponent has access to evidence concerning, usually, an alleged public prior use "
- As a comment, I'm not sure that 51% likelihood is generally sufficient, see also below.
- "[S]tandards of proof relate, in legal systems based on the principle of free evaluation of evidence, necessarily to a mental state, namely to the nature or degree of conviction of the members of the fact finding body. Accordingly, it is difficult to quantify the difference in the required degree of conviction between "the balance of probabilities" standard and the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard. In fact, attempting to describe this difference in the form of numerical thresholds, for example as a certain percentage of likelihood that an alleged fact occurred, can even be misleading. In regard to the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard, it thus seems more expedient to focus on the term "reasonable". In the present Board's view, this expresses that the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard does not require absolute certainty, and that it is sufficient if the (majority of the) members of the deciding body have no reasonable doubt that[t] an alleged fact occurred. In other words, even if there is some remaining doubt, the "beyond reasonable doubt" standard of proof can be met as long as the remaining doubt is not reasonable, which can be understood as overall insubstantial in view of the entirety of the available evidence."
- "if the higher one of two disputed standards of proof is met, it can be left open which of these standards must be applied when assessing the evidence in question. Hence, if the deciding body is convinced beyond reasonable doubt that an alleged fact occurred, there is no need to decide which standard of proof is applicable (see, for example, T 2466/13, Reasons, 2.1.1). For the reasons given below, this is the situation in the present case."
- The opponent had filed evidence of the publication date of a document. "D39 is a digital forensic report by the company BIT4LAW SRL created "in the interest of" the opponent (see D39, page 1, and chapter 2, page 4: "Introduction". D39 establishes, inter alia, the upload dates of certain documents [including D9] from the opponent's computer system to a public web server (see chapter 5 starting on page 13)."
- "the Board considers that D39 - a document only cursorily mentioned in the appealed decision and not considered in substance - establishes that D9 was publicly available on the internet at least on 19 November 2014, i.e. well before the priority date of the patent (29 March 2017)."
- "The data on page 21 of D39 also contain the information that version 1.0 of the document in question was last updated by Daniela Volpin on 19 November 2014. Ms Volpin confirmed in her affidavit (D38) that on 19 November 2014 she "personally uploaded on the Carel website the release 1.0 dated 30/10/2014 of the Technical Manual of the Heos device". The information in D38 is thus consistent with that in the report D39."
- There was further supporting evidence in the form of affidavits.
- An interesting point is the level of evidence required in this case to show the publication date of the document. "Up to the hilt" is not limited to prior use.
EPO
The link to the decision can be found after the jump.