27 February 2026

T 0749/23 - Any embodiment as starting point (Mite composition)

Key points

  • Claim 1 of AR-3 at issue  “is for a composition comprising (i) a population of individuals from a Phytoseiid mite species, (ii) a food source for the mite individuals selected from rearing prey from the suborder Astigmata and (iii) stacked carrier elements selected from millet husks, where the carrier elements comprise shelters for mite individuals”
  • Documents D3/D9 describe five mite compositions comprising, as equal alternatives, the carrier elements wheat bran, buckwheat husks, rice husks, saw dust and corn cob grits”
  • “The patent proprietor contended that the composition comprising rice husks of documents D3/D9 was not a suitable starting point for the assessment of inventive step for various reasons. First, they argued that buckwheat husks, rather than rice husks, should be taken as the starting point since buckwheat husks were used in the examples of documents D3/D9 and were therefore highlighted.”
  • The Board: “The starting point for assessing inventive step is normally a set of features disclosed in combination in a document, typically in the form of an embodiment or example.”
  • “the board considers that each of these embodiments [of the five compositions] can be used as the starting point for assessing inventive step. All embodiments are presented as suitable, and there is nothing in documents D3/D9 that would disqualify any of them. Since each embodiment can be used, the board also agrees with the opponents that the assessment of inventive step can be based on a mite composition containing rice husks as carrier elements as the starting point.”
  • “the board does not concur with the patent proprietor's view [that the rice husk embodiment of D3 is not a starting point].  First, Article 56 EPC requires that an invention, having regard to the state of the art, not be obvious to a person skilled in the art. The state of the art for the purpose of considering inventive step is the entire state of the art as defined in Article 54(2) EPC, without any ranking or distinction (T 2140/22, Reasons 1.9.1).”
  • “if inventive step is to be acknowledged, the claimed subject-matter must be inventive starting from any starting point in the prior art. Conversely, if the invention is obvious to the skilled person from at least one starting point, an inventive step is lacking (Case Law, I.D.3.3). Neither the EPC nor the case law of the boards stipulate that the starting point for assessing inventive step must be the entire disclosure, an example, or a preferred embodiment in the prior art. Rather, the starting point may be any disclosure in the prior art.”
    • Still, it may not be obvious to a skilled person to develop a non-preferred embodiment.
  • “There is also no requirement that an embodiment must be exemplified for it to be considered in the assessment of inventive step. There is, likewise, no requirement that the prior art contain any pointer, suggestion or incentive to select a particular embodiment for further development for this embodiment to qualify as the starting point in the problem solution approach”.
  • “as a matter of principle and in agreement with T 2001/23 (Reasons 3), that if the subject-matter of a claim is found to lack an inventive step starting from a particular disclosure, as is the case here (see below), it is not possible to establish inventive step by proposing that the assessment be started from a different starting point.”
    • The Board then distinguishes T 1126/19 on the facts.
  • “Third, G 1/23 does not support the patent proprietor's argument that the skilled person is the relevant point of reference in selecting the starting point for the inventive step analysis. Points 93 to 95 of decision G 1/23 are concerned with the impact on novelty and inventive step of accessible but not fully reproducible products which the Enlarged Board of Appeal accepted as being part of the prior art. According to these considerations, the relevance of such a product for assessing inventive step, namely its suitability as a starting point or secondary source of information, depends on the available information associated with the product, i.e. it depends on what is disclosed to the skilled person.”
  • “ The Enlarged Board of Appeal [in G 1/23] did not make any finding that the choice of starting point in the problem-solution approach requires motivation by the skilled person. In the case in hand, all carrier elements disclosed in documents D3/D9 are available, and all can be used. Indeed, the patent proprietor never argued that rice husks would be obviously defective or not enabled.”
  • In view of T 2759/17: “In the case in hand, as correctly noted by opponent 2, the starting point for assessment of inventive step, namely a composition comprising rice husks, is disclosed for the same purpose as the compositions comprising other carrier materials disclosed in documents D3/D9, namely the rearing of predatory mites, which is also the purpose to which the patent is directed. The board concludes that in the case in hand, a composition comprising rice husks would also be a realistic starting point under the approach set out in T 2759/17.”
  • “The patent proprietor's assertion that documents D3/D9 did not disclose a list of equal alternatives to the skilled person is based on the results in Example II of the [opposed] patent, in which millet husks performed better than bran. Since the closest prior art must be assessed from the skilled person's point of view on the day before the filing or priority date valid for the claimed invention, the assertion must be rejected for this reason alone.”
  • One would expect that, starting from the embodiment of D3 with rice husk as the carrier element, the distinguishing feature would lie in the other components of the composition. However, the difference is that the patent claims the use of millet husk as the stacked carrier elements. The Board does not acknowledge any technical effect of that difference. “the patent describes that millet husks have a sheltering effect in comparison with the non-sheltering carriers wheat bran and vermicullite (paragraphs [0005] and [0006], experiments I and II). The patent does not indicate any advantageous effect of millet husks over rice husks.” A post-published document was not admitted, as filed late (namely, in appeal).
  • The patent is revoked.
  • “The objective technical problem is the provision of alternative carrier elements for a mite composition comprising a population of a phytoseiid predatory mite species and a factitious host population which comprises at least one species selected from the family of the Carpoglyphidae.”
    • I think a key question could have been whether the OTP was indeed simply providing an alternative, given that the advantages of risk husk were unrecognised in the prior art document D3.

  • Partiality of the OD?
  • “opponent 2 submitted that the chairman of the opposition division stated during oral proceedings that in coming to the conclusion that auxiliary request 3 was inventive over document D9 as the closest prior art, it was also taken into account that the claims were restricted to particular mites and that, from the perspective of a work-around, there were sufficient possibilities.”
    • The Board dismisses the objection on the ground that the reasoning about the workaround is not part of the OD’s written decision. Furthermore, “an objection on the ground of suspected partiality before the department of first instance can be disregarded if it is not raised immediately after the party concerned becomes aware of the reason for the objection (G 5/91, Reasons 4 [...]”
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.



3 comments:

  1. With regard to the choice of the CPA, I have noted with great interest the addition to the CLR in the July 2025 version of sections I.D.3.2 « Approaches to selecting the closest prior art » and I.D.8.1.2 « Point at which the skilled person enters the stage3, which signals a major divide between the BOAs precisely over this issue.
    The CLR refers to a first approach in which it is for the deciding body to select the closest prior art, and to a second approach in which he selection relies on the skilled person. In respect of that second approach, the CLR emphasises the « firm conviction in T 2759/17 that, in line with the established case law, the skilled person was the relevant point of reference right from the start of any inventive-step assessment » and states that « excluding the skilled person for part of the inventive-step assessment would lead to artificial and thus technically meaningless results. »
    The CLR seems to find quite convincing, if not endorse, the reasoning of the board in T 2759/17 when it explains : « The board
    found that unlike the first approach, the second approach was based on a technically meaningful and thus realistic scenario. More specifically, the skilled person was normally confronted with a certain purpose or effect to be achieved in a certain technical field. With this in mind, the skilled person would then look for a prior-art disclosure that was in the same technical field and aimed at the same or a similar purpose or effect. »
    Another comment is that the Board refers to the skilled person without defining the "art" of the skilled person. I personally think this should be the first step of the PSA.

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  2. I don't find T 25759/17 very helpful, in that it suggests to oppose the Board and the skilled person as the decision-making authority. However, the skilled person is fictitious and does not make decisions. In cases where the proprietor and the opponent do not agree on the CPA/starting point(s) for inventive step, it is always the OD/Board that decides.
    The headnote of T 2579/17 is totally fine, I don't think any other Board would dispute it: "A disclosure within a prior art document can only be considered to represent a suitable starting point for assessing inventive step if the skilled person would have realistically started from it. An important consideration in this assessment generally is whether this disclosure aims at the same or a similar purpose or effect as that underlying the patent in question"

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    Replies
    1. The skilled person is fictitious but the “art” of the skilled person is not. The art is the field to which the problem as set out in the application pertains, which is consistent with your conclusion that the CPA should have the same purpose or effect as the invention in question.

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