Key points
- The case is mostly about novelty and inventive step over a public prior use. The invention concerns a thermoforming packaging machine. The feature at issue is "a measuring unit (51, 42, 45) is provided which is configured to detect a contact between the upper tool part (7) and the lower tool part (3)". (all quotes are machine translations).
- The opposition division [held that] knowledge of the source code [of the public prior use apparatus] was necessary in particular in order to recognize whether contact between an upper part of a tool and a lower part of a tool was being measured. Accordingly, feature K2 was not known from the obvious prior use.
- " The source code was not accessible to the customer Wolf (or other third parties) for factual and legal reasons. This was not disputed by the parties involved. "
- The Board: "an alleged disclosure can only be considered implicit if it is immediately apparent to the skilled person that nothing other than the alleged implicit feature was part of the disclosed subject matter (cf. RdB, ibid, IC4.3). It therefore depends on whether the skilled person, in view of the information available to him on the obvious prior use, specifically recognises the real possibility of configuring the measuring unit to detect contact between the upper and lower parts of the tool, and not whether such contact is hypothetically conceivable."
- The Board concludes after consideration of the facts of the case that the feature was not implicitly disclosed because a "reference run" would have been necessary, and alternatives were conceivable.
- As a result, the Board is convinced that the skilled person cannot directly and unambiguously derive feature K2 from the public prior use "Power PAK RT 520".
- Regarding inventive step, "the parties unanimously formulated the technical task associated with the distinguishing feature K2 as improving or facilitating the adjustment of a known foil punch, for example, when changing tools.
- Note, if the feature was actually present in the public prior use device, then there is no actual technical improvement over that device.
- "The appellant [opponent] merely argued that the expert would like to prevent the control of a known foil punch from going beyond the contact point. However, this consideration alone does not provide any reason or indication for providing feature K2. In fact, there is no obvious reason for this in the prior art in the proceedings. "
- The feature is held to provide for an inventive step.
You can find the link to the decision and an extract of it after the jump.