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European Case Law Identifier: ECLI:EP:BA:2005:J000205.20050301
Date of decision: 01 March 2005
Case number: J 0002/05
Application number: 99109539.9
IPC class: G01N 21/90
Language of proceedings: EN
Distribution: C
Download and more information:
Decision text in EN (PDF, 68.806K)
Documentation of the appeal procedure can be found in the Register
Bibliographic information is available in: EN
Versions: Unpublished
Title of application: Optical inspectation of transparent containers using two cameras and a single light source
Applicant name: OWENS-BROCKWAY GLASS CONTAINER INC.
Opponent name:
Board: 3.1.01
Headnote:
Relevant legal provisions:
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 33(4)
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 78(2)
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 79(2)
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 106(1)
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 112(1)
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 121
European Patent Convention 1973 Art 122(3)
Rules relating to fees Art 9(1)
European Patent Convention 1973 R 9(3)
European Patent Convention 1973 R 68(2)
European Patent Convention 1973 R 85a(1)
European Patent Convention 1973 R 85a(2)
Keywords: Extension ordinances on the extension of European patents
Catchwords:

Cited decisions:
G 0001/02
J 0008/81
J 0013/83
J 0026/87
J 0013/92
J 0002/93
J 0024/94
J 0014/00
T 0934/91
Citing decisions:
J 0022/10
J 0009/11
T 0007/07
T 1196/08

Summary of Facts and Submissions

I. The appellant is the applicant in respect of application No. 99 109 539.9 filed on 12 May 1999. Having been informed that the application was deemed to be a request to extend the application and the patent to all states with which the EPO had reached an extension agreement and that such extension would only take effect if the prescribed extension fee was paid, the applicant declared under No. 34 of form 1001 (request for grant a European patent) its intention to pay extension fees for the following states marked with a cross: AL, LT, LV, RO, SL, MK. After the mention of the publication of the European Search report for the application on 26 July 2000, the applicant paid on 17 January 2001 a total of DM 3.121,44 as designation fees for the states marked with a cross on Form 1001, which included an overpayment of DM 743,20. On 22 March 2001 the EPO refunded the overpayment.

II. In a letter filed on 6 September 2003, the applicant requested a decision that the payment of these fees had been made in time, or, as auxuliary request, restitutio in integrum under Article 122 EPC with respect to the time limit for the payment of the extension fees and it also paid the extension fees for five states (AL, LT, LV, RO, SL), together with surcharges. It argued, that contrary to the procedure of payment of designation fees, no communication under Rule 85a (1) and Rule 69(1) EPC had been sent indicating the non-payment of the outstanding fees. This was not in line with the overall principle of good faith and gave rise to at least a case for re-establishment of rights, having regard to the fact that all due care required by the circumstances had been taken, its well-trained employee Ms. Sanchez having in a single and inexplicable error erroneously failed to describe in the payment advice the fees being paid.

III. In a communication dated 26 March 2004 the formalities officer of the Examining Division agreed to consider three extension fees as having been paid in time by virtue of the overpayment of DM 743,20. However, for two extension states, which were identified later by the appellant as SL and AL, the payment of 6 September 2003 was not in time. If the appellant should disagree with this communication, the Examining Division referred to the possibility of requesting an appealable decision pursuant to Rule 69(2) EPC. With regard to the request for restitutio, the examining Division referred to Article 122(5) EPC.

On 29 May 2004, the appellant requested an appealable decision. Answering this request by a letter dated 4 November 2004 the formalities officer of the Examining Division pointed out with reference to decision J 14/00 that re-establishment of rights in respect of the payment of extension fees is not possible and that the EPC provisions concerning remedies and appeals are not applicable in extension procedures but only under the national law of the extension states.

IV. In a letter filed on 3 January 2005 the appellant lodged an appeal, paid the appeal fee and filed his grounds of appeal at the same time. In a further letter dated 1 February 2005 it answered a communication from the Board setting out its preliminary opinion based on the reasons for the decision in case J 14/00.

V. The appellant’s arguments are summarised as follows:

1. Having regard to the admissibility of the appeal the reasoning of decision J 14/00 was not pertinent because the present case is different from that decided in case J 14/00.

2. As restitutio in integrum has been requested under Article 122 EPC before the first instance the formalities officer was not competent to issue the contested decision (or communication) but only the Examining Division or the Legal Division. For the admissibility of the appeal it should not be decisive which instance made the decision but which instance is competent according to the EPC.

3. It is true that the wording of the Cooperation Agreements (CA) and the Extension Ordinances (EO) for the different extension states is the same, but there are obviously important differences regarding the interpretation of these provisions by both the EPO and the national patent authorities. In view of the national regulations of the extension states the different interpretation and application of Rule 85a(1) EPC as to contracting and to extension states respectively would appear to be unjustified and in contradiction to the intention of the legislator. That is why Article 6 CA should be understood as a general reference to all provisions of the EPC relating to payment of fees, Rule 85a(1) EPC included, even if Article 6(3) CA only refers to Rule 85a(2) EPC.

4. Furthermore, the EPO’s interpretation of the EOs is not in line with the intention of the Administrative Council (AC) when Rule 85a EPC was adopted. The AC acknowledged that a period of grace with respect to missing important time limits would be of great importance in such cases since restitutio in integrum was not possible. But the grace period would only be effective if the applicant could be informed of missing a basic time limit.

5. On the other hand when applying Article 122(5) EPC no difference is made between fees for contracting and extension states. This would be inconsistent. If a distinction between designation and extension states is made under Rule 85a EPC then this should be made as well with regard to Article 122(5) EPC, as this provision only excludes restitutio with respect to payment of designation fees.

6. Moreover, the current practice of not sending a communication according to Rule 85a EPC to the applicant in cases of non-payment of the extension fee is not comprehensible in view of the official request form 1001.1 11.98. There the contracting states are all automatically marked with a cross according to No. 32.1. or specifically according to No. 32.2. respectively. In the latter case the applicant may request that no communication under Rule 85a EPC is notified regarding states not marked with a cross.

In the case of extension states, however, it would serve no purpose to mark the specific states if no communication under Rule 85a EPC was to be notified with respect to the extension fee. That is why the applicant marking the extension states was thus explicitly expressing his wish for a Rule 85a EPC notification in case of failure to pay the fees, as a period of grace can only be effective, if the applicant is actually informed of missing the basic time limit. Otherwise he has no fair chance to recognise the failure of non-payment of the extension fee. Thus, the principle of good faith would require application of Rule 85a EPC equally with respect to both extension and contracting states, and for the EPO to act in the same manner according to the requests submitted.

7. The EPO’s current interpretation of Rule 85a EPC with respect to the extension procedure would have severe consequences for the applicant as there is no chance to correct a failure in paying the extension fee either under the EPC or under the national law of the extension states as it is obvious from the letters of its representatives in these countries. Moreover, it is not practicable if the national patent authorities have to revise a decision of the EPO regarding the payment of the extension fee. In addition, it cannot be accepted that a formalities officer may decide on the correct payment of fees without an independent instance being entitled to review the decision. This is not in line with the fundamental constitutional principles of the contracting states to the EPC.

8. Finally the appellant remarks that the legislative body regulating the EPC has recognised the difficult situation of the applicants with respect to Article 122 EPC and will – as already adopted by a Diplomatic Conference in 2000 – enlarge the applicability of Article 121 EPC to all cases of missing a time-limit for payment of fees.

VI. During the oral proceedings held on 1 March 2005 the appellant re-inforced its arguments and requested:

– that the decision under appeal be set aside and that the payment made for the extension states AL and SL be accepted as made in time;

auxiliary:

– to grant re-establishment of rights;

further auxiliary:

– to remit the case for further prosecution to the department whose decision is appealed.

It further requested referral of the case to the Enlarged Board with the following questions:

1a) Is in general an appeal according to Article 106 EPC against a decision of a formalities officer that an extension fee was not paid in time not admissible?

1b) If question 1a) is answered with “yes”, is such an appeal even then not admissible, if the implementation of the Cooperation Agreement between the EPO and an extension state is made by regulations in the national patent law of the extension state and this patent law expressly lays down that the EPC and its regulations are applicable.

2a) Is Rule 85a(1) EPC to be applied in general with respect to the payment of the extension fees to provide the applicant with a fair chance to recognise the failure in case the fee was unintentionally not paid by the applicant.

2b) Is Rule 85a(1) EPC to be applied with respect to the payment of the extension fees, if the applicant has crossed a specific extension state on the application form 1001 in addition to the automatic designation of all extension states provided by the form.

VII. At the end of the oral proceedings the Board announced its decision.

Reasons for the Decision

1. The appeal was filed, and the appeal fee was paid within two months of the date of the communication (4 November 2004) alleged by the appellant to be appealable (Article 108 EPC). The appeal therefore meets the requirements of Article 108 EPC. It is, however, inadmissible, because, in the present case, there is no right of recourse to the EPO’s Boards of Appeal under Article 106 EPC.

1.1 According to the exhaustive provisions of Article 106(1) EPC relating to decisions capable of being the subject of an appeal under the EPC, appeals lie only from decisions of the Examining Divisions, Opposition Divisions, the Legal Division and from decisions of the Receiving Section.

1.1.1 The fact that the letter of 4 November 2004 from the Receiving Section which is the subject of the appeal was in form of a Communication rather than identified as a decision does not make a substantive difference in this respect. The legal character of an official document does not depend on its form. What determines its legal character, and hence whether or not an appeal can lie against it within the meaning of Article 106(1) EPC, is its substantive content. If the document conveys nothing more than a legal opinion, it cannot be said to be a decision. The same applies if it is quite obvious that the author does not have the authority required to either write or send the document. If, on the other hand, legal relations between the Office and an applicant under the provisions of the EPC are determined by a document, then irrespective of the form of this document, according to the established case law of the Boards of Appeal it represents an appealable decision within the meaning of the Convention (see J 8/81, OJ EPO 1982, 10; J 2/93, OJ EPO 1995, 4; J 13/92; J 13/83; J 24/94; T 934/91, OJ EPO 1994, 184, and so on). In the present case a number of factors point to the content of the contested communication being in the nature of a determination of the legal status and hence a decision, since the rejection of the extension of the patent application to the extension states marked in form 1001 has a determining effect on the scope of the territorial protection afforded to the application.

1.1.2 The admissibility of the present appeal is therefore not tainted by the fact that the contested letter of 4 November 2004 from the Examining Division did not include a communication of the means of redress (see J 26/87, OJ EPO 1989, 329) and was written by a formalities officer in the Examining Division. On the one hand the issue of the fundamental admissibility of an appeal does not arise in the event of non- communication of the means of redress, because Rule 68(2), third sentence, EPC expressly states that the parties may not invoke the omission of such a communication. On the other hand, appealable decisions may within the framework of the duties of the Examining Divisions be issued with legal effect by a formalities officer in so far as he or she is authorised to do so by the notice of the Vice-President Directorate-General 2 (most recent version) of 28 April 1999 (OJ EPO 1999, 504), which is based on the authorisation under Rule 9(3) EPC and was accepted as not conflicting with provisions of EPC by the Enlarged Board (see G 1/02, OJ 2003, 165).

1.2 The admissibility of the present appeal is rather precluded by the fact that, according to the exhaustive provisions in Article 106(1) EPC, only those decisions of the EPO may be contested which are taken, within the framework of their duties under the EPC, by the departments listed therein. This is not, however, the case for decisions taken by the EPO when carrying out its obligations under the Cooperation Agreements with the said states extending the protection conferred by European patents (Extension Agreement), including the associated Extension Ordinance (EO) (OJ EPO 1994, 75).

1.2.1 The respective Extension Agreements, which all came into force before the application in the case in question was filed, are in turn based on the Patent Co- operation Agreements between the European Patent Organisation and the extension states. These agreements are international treaties of the kind which the President of the EPO is authorised by the Administrative Council to conclude with the Council’s approval (Article 33(4) EPC), in order to carry out the functions assigned to him under the EPC. The agreement serves the interests not only of applicants, providing as it does a simple route to patent protection in the extension states, but also those of the extension countries, enabling them to offer patent protection for their territory simply by extending the effects of European and Euro-PCT applications and patents.

1.2.2 As the appellant points out, there are certain parallels – in particular with regard to the payment of the fee due – between the formal procedures, particularly the timetable for taking procedural steps in respect of the extension of protection under the EOs on the one hand and the designation of a contracting state under the EPC on the other (Articles 79(2), 78(2) EPC). The legal effects in each case are, however, different. Unlike the procedure for designating contracting states under the EPC, the extension procedure under the EOs generates legal effects exclusively on the basis of national law of the extension states. The EOs do not include the assignment of sovereign rights to the EPO. Instead, by way of administrative assistance, the EPO undertakes on behalf of the extension states the administrative task of collecting the fees, and, to cover the administrative costs it incurs, receives a fixed proportion of the extension fee, the greater part of the fee passing to the extension state.

1.3 The procedure for payment of the extension fee is determined by the EOs alone. Despite certain similarities with European law, the EOs’ validity is, however, based not on the provisions of the EPC, but on national law alone, in the performance of which the EPO simply offers administrative assistance within the framework of the national provisions. This legal assessment follows not only from the wording of the EOs, which in itself is quite clear, but also from its structure, as well as its intention and purpose.

1.3.1 Thus Article 3, second paragraph, EO clearly and unequivocally applies the period of grace under Rule 85a(2) EPC to failure to pay the extension fee on time, and under Article 3, third paragraph, EO the EPO Rules relating to Fees apply mutatis mutandis to payment procedures. Article 10 EO, however, stipulates that the provisions of the EPC and its Implementing Regulations do not apply unless otherwise provided in the EO. The EO thus makes it absolutely clear that references to provisions of the EPC are exhaustive and thus that there can be no corresponding application of other provisions, including those of Articles 106 et seq EPC concerning the appeals procedure.

1.3.2 Neither is there anything in the structure or legal nature of the EOs to support the appealability of the letter of the Examining Division of 4 November 2004. As a bilateral ordinance, the EOs essentially deal – exhaustively and strictly separately from the EPC – with matters pertaining to the integration of extended European applications and protective rights into the national law of the extension states and their relationship to national applications and rights based on the national law on industrial property (see for Slovenia Blatt für Patent-, Muster- und Zeichenwesen 1993, 303).

This includes, in particular, the conferral of the same effects on extended applications and patents as on national ones, the obligation to provide the national Patent Offices with a translation of the claims into the national language, the national authentic text of extended applications and patents, their prior-art effect with respect to national applications and patents, and, finally, simultaneous protection. None of these provisions give rise to any obligations on the part of the EPO. Under the EOs, the EPO merely undertakes vis-à-vis the extension states to assist with the administrative tasks associated with the extension of European patents, namely receiving requests for extension, levying extension fees and, after deducting an amount to cover its expenses, forwarding the remaining amount to the national Patent Offices.

1.3.3 It is clear from its provisions that the EOs are governed by the principle of minimal intervention in the sovereign rights of the extension states. Thus, for example, Article 10 EO precludes the application of the provisions of the EPC – including those of Articles 106 et seq EPC relating to the appeals procedure – in the extension procedure. For the same reason, and unlike the arrangement under the EPC, Article 9 EO stipulates that the renewal fees for extended European patents be paid in full to the national Patent Offices.

The EPC on the other hand is based amongst other things on the delegation of national sovereign rights to the EPO, on the participation in and control of the administration of the EPO by the Administrative Council, and on the division of renewal fees between the EPO and the contracting states involved.

1.3.4 The EO does not afford any of the rights and obligations associated with accession to the EPC. Contrary to the appellant’s assertion, it thus does not set up a jus tertii for services rendered by the EPO in fulfilment of its obligations under the EO either. As a result there is no right of recourse to the Boards of Appeal in respect of extensions of patent applications and patents to other states. Instead, in cases such as the one at issue, it is the respective national jurisdiction which is responsible. For example Article 6(2) of the Slovenian Law provides for appeal proceedings against decisions of the Slovenian Patent Office.

1.4 Nor can the appellant invoke the principle of good faith to obtain legal recourse to the EPO’s Boards of Appeal. The Board recognises that this principle is one of the fundamental principles of European patent law. However, as far as the extension procedure is concerned, the EPO is not acting within the framework of the EPC, but is simply assisting with the establishment of national property rights in extension states. Moreover, in its introduction to the EOs, the EPO expressly states that the EOs are based on national law only (see for example OJ EPO 1994, 75) and that the extension procedure and its effects are governed solely by national law.

2. The Board considers that there is no need to refer questions to the Enlarged Board of Appeal because there is no contradictory case law and the board is itself in a position to resolve the points of law raised in the present case without any doubt.

3. Nevertheless the case gives rise to a final remark. As the appellant points out it is in a thoroughly unsatisfactory situation since, either under the EPC or the national legislations of the extension states it is guaranteed that administrative acts of the patent authorities can be reviewed by an independent court. Therefore it would be appropriate that the EPO, before agreeing the extension of European patents to a particular state, considers whether the national legislation of that states observes fundamental legal principles and provides for the judicial control of administrative acts.

ORDER

For these reasons it is decided that:

The appeal is rejected as inadmissible.