G 1/22 and G 2/22 decided - Competence of EPO to assess whether a party is entitled to priority & possible implicit agreement of a transfer of priority
Yesterday, a Press Communiqué was published as the Enlarged Board had issued its decision in consolidated cases G 1/22 and G 2/22 and the decision became available in the register, and today on the Recent Decisions page. The Enlarged Board concluded, in the order, that:
"I. The European Patent Office is competent to assess whether a party is entitled to claim priority under Article 87(1) EPC. There is a rebuttable presumption under the autonomous law of the EPC that the applicant claiming priority in accordance with Article 88(1) EPC and the corresponding Implementing Regulations is entitled to claim priority."
"II. The rebuttable presumption also applies in situations where the European patent application derives from a PCT application and/or where the priority applicant(s) are not identical with the subsequent applicant(s). In a situation where a PCT application is jointly filed by parties A and B, (i) designating party A for one or more designated States and party B for one or more other designated States, and (ii) claiming priority from an earlier patent application designating party A as the applicant, the joint filing implies an agreement between parties A and B allowing party B to rely on the priority, unless there are substantial factual indications to the contrary."
Summary of Facts and Submissions
Reasons for the Decision
Order
This decision G 0001/22 (Competence of the European Patent Office to assess whether a party is entitled to claim priority under Article 87(1) EPC (Entitlement to priority)) dd10-10-2023 (pdf) has European Case Law Identifier: ECLI:EP:BA:2023:G000122.20231010. The file wrapper can be found here. Figure taken from reason 74 of the decision.
I am surprised at consideration 99: 'In most jurisdictions, rights to obtain a patent can be transferred without any written agreement or other formalities'
ReplyDeleteThis is (IMHO) in contradiction with the position of EPO as follows from the 'designation of inventor' form 1002. This form 1002 recognizes, see its footnotes, only three cases: (explicit) assignment executed on a specific date, inventions by employees, and succession by inheritance, and it insists upon a date in case of 'agreement'.
If the EBA is right in that 'rights to obtain a patent can be transferred without any written agreement or other formalities' another category should be present on form 1002, something like: 'non-written transfer with unknown date'
In my practice the present form 1002 creates significant problems: I represent a lot of 1 or 2 person companies as applicant, and then the owner/inventor (not employee!) requests that the applicant should be his company. (It can be considered a gift, decided upon at some unrecorded moment in the past). There is at present no way I can file an application in such a case without seriously bending the truth.
Statement 99 of the EBA in this case is therefore very welcome to me in supporting in the future why none of the three cases on form 1002 is applicable.
"103. The content of the priority application is, in general, not published or otherwise made accessible to third parties before the expiry of the twelve-month time limit for filing subsequent applications. A copy of the priority application must be filed with the EPO within sixteen months after the filing of the priority application under Rule 53(1) EPC while the publication of the priority application normally occurs eighteen months after its filing date. Moreover, the applicant of the subsequent European application must provide documentation that cannot normally be obtained without the cooperation of the priority applicant. In particular, a copy of the priority application certified as correct by the authority where the priority application was filed, must be filed with the EPO (Rule 53(1) EPC, see also Article 4D(1) Paris Convention)."
ReplyDeleteand
"109. Priority entitlement is not relevant before the priority is claimed by the subsequent applicant in accordance with Rule 52 EPC, normally at the filing date of the subsequent application or otherwise within sixteen months from the filing date of the priority application. Consequently, the presumption of entitlement exists on the date on which the priority is claimed and the rebuttal of the presumption must also relate to this date."
However, if the subsequent application is a PCT application, and no certified copy of the priority application is filed within the 16m of PCT Rule 17.1, the applicant may file the certified copy at entry in the EP phase (normally 31m after the priority date) or even only after an invitation issued early in the EP phase (with a time limit of 2m) -Rule 163(2)-, so much later than publication of the priority application.
So, would in that case the relevant date be the expiry of the time limit of the R.163(2) invitation?
In my view, in item 109, the EBA refers to the date at which the priority is claimed (e.g. in the PCT request form or later, i.e. within 16 months after the filing date of the priority application). Put differently, the EBA does NOT refer to the date in which the certified copy of the priority application is submitted to the IB or EPO. Thus, the relevant date is not the expiry of the time limit of the R. 163(2) invitation because at this point of time, a priority claim can no longer be validly made, i.e. it is (much) too late.
DeleteWhat is interesting regarding the decision are in my view the following points:
1.
As far as I know, it has previously been assumed in many (if not all cases) that if the subsequent application mentions A and B as applicants and the priority application only mentions A as applicant, the priority right must be valid because A and B form a group sharing the right to priority. Since the right to priority relates to all PC countries (Art. 4A(1) PC), it does not play a role whether the subsequent application is filed with applicants A and B for separate countries (i.e. for different designated states). In short, applicant B MUST have the right to priority for every country with this (previous) concept.
However, headnote II of G 1/22 now states that this is not necessarily the case, i.e. there must be an implicit agreement between A and B that allows B to have the right to priority, which implicit agreement may be disputed. Put differently, the EBA abolishes the concept that A and B necessarily form a group sharing the right to prority if the sole applicant of the priority application was A. Importantly, in case of succesful dispute, B actually does not have a valid right to claim priority. In so far, in my opinion, G 1/22 stipulates stricter requirements regarding a validity to the right to priority than previous practice.
2.
Under item 4. of the decision, it is states that the right to priority was denied by the OD because, among applicants A, B and C, only applicant A assigned the right to priority to the patent proprietor (i.e. to one of the co-applicants D and E). However, since A, B and C appear to have been coapplicants of the subsequent PCT application (i.e. said application listed A, B, C, D and E as applicants), an assignment of the right to priority to D and E would not have been necessary with the previous "applicant group"-approach, even if A, B and C only designated US, because the designation does not change that A, B, C, D and E formed a group of applicants of said PCT application. If G 1/22 is followed, the missing assignment of B and C to D (or D and E) now implies that an implicit wish to assign has to be assumed, but which can be questioned, e.g. by B and C denying that they wished to transfer the right to priority to D (or D and E) at the date mentioned under item 109.
Supplement to my comment above:
ReplyDeleteSee also "joint applicant"-approach in the GL (2023) A-VI, 1.6, 4th and 5th para.:
"Since the international application has been filed jointly – which shows that the applicant who filed the earlier application consents – there is no need for a special transfer of priority right to the other (additional) applicant(s)."
"For example:
– The earlier application from which priority is claimed names X as applicant. The international application names X and company A as applicants. A transfer of the priority right from X to A is not required in order for A to enjoy a priority right in the proceedings before the EPO as designated Office."