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Enlarged Board of Appeal reshuffles cards for EPO rules of priority

Post Time:2023-10-18 Source:Konstanze Richter Author:juve-patent Views:
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The EPO is not permitted to reject patent applications based on the applicants not being identical to those in the priority application. Furthermore, no formal transfer of rights of priority is now required. The Enlarged Board of Appeal handed down this decision in its ruling in cases G 1/22 and G 2/22, thus putting an end to years of practice.


The Enlarged Board of Appeal’s decision simplifies the transfer of priority rights for an application to the EPO. Following its latest decision in cases G 1/22 and G 2/22, the EPO now takes it as a given that the applicant has the priority rights. This will be the case even if the applicant is different from the applicant of the priority application, and despite there being no formal proof of a transfer of priority rights.


The responsibility to prove otherwise lies with a potential opponent in an opposition proceedings. The development is likely to have far-reaching consequences for patent application practice. Many patent attorneys suggest that it will create greater legal certainty in the future.


EPO clarifies priority rights


The decision is based on two proceedings between patent owner Alexion and opponents Novartis, Hoffmann-La Roche and Chugai Pharmaceutical over patents for the antibody eculizumab, claimed for preventing transplant rejection (case IDs:T 1513/17andT 2719/19).


The EPO Opposition Division and the Examining Division respectively found the priority claim to be invalid, because not all inventors named by the US patent application had assigned the priority right to the applicants of the respective European patent applications before the filing of the PCT application. The Boards of Appeal heard both cases jointly, then referred them to the Enlarged Board of Appeal for clarification of the interpretation of the priority rights.


So far, the reaction of the patent community is generally positive. Koen Vanhalst from Belgian patent attorney firm De Clercq & Partners writes on LinkedIn that it is “a well-reasoned decision that gives the benefit of the doubt to the applicant/proprietor and shifts the burden of proof to the party alleging non-entitlement to the priority right invoked.”


Greg Sach, owner of Valet Patent Services, comments, “It is a bit of a relief for the whole European patent industry”. Further, patent attorney Brian Cronin writes, “It looks as though common sense has prevailed over legal prejudice.”


Problem stems from US priority


The problem regularly arises in priority claims based on US applications, since in the US, until the introduction of the new America Invents Act 2012, applications had to name the inventors as patent applicants.


This practice continues to this day, although legal entities that are not the inventors are now able to apply for a US patent. This includes, for example, the company at which the inventors are employed, or on whose behalf they have developed the innovation.


At the EPO, on the other hand, companies often file the patents. If the documents of the first application do not make it clear that the priority rights for the application in other countries were transferred from the inventors to this company, until now the EPO has often declared the applicant’s priority rights claim to be invalid.


Where, at the time of filing, this was not already the case, competitors were often successful in oppositions by attacking the priority claim.


No formal requirement


According to the European Patent Convention (EPC), no formal requirement for the transfer exists. UnderArticle 87 (1)“any person who has duly filed […] an application for a patent […] or his successor in title, shall enjoy, for the purpose of filing a European patent application in respect of the same invention, a right of priority during a period of twelve months from the date of filing of the first application.”


In addition, some national laws also allow informal transfers of priority rights. Therefore, the Enlarged Board of Appeal has now decided that this also applies to applications at the EPO.


In the future, the applicant’s entitlement to priority is presumed to exist if the formal requirements for claiming priority are fulfilled (case ID:OJ EPO 2022, A92). This is because the copy of the priority application required for the PCT application is only available to applicants entitled to claim this priority.


In future, if the applicant can produce this copy, the EPO’s Examining Division may assume that the priority rights were transferred to them by the initial applicant. This presumption now applies in any case where the priority applicant is not identical to the subsequent applicant, and regardless of whether the subsequent application is a PCT application.


Jurisdiction confirmed


Parties can challenge this presumption. However, a challenger must demonstrate facts that support serious doubts about the applicant’s entitlement to priority.


In addition, the Enlarged Board of Appeal had to decide whether the EPO has any competence to assess the formal entitlement to priority of a PCT application. In one of the referred cases it was suggested that, under the Paris Convention, this is the responsibility of the national patent offices. The judges found the EPO competent to decide on this, according to Article 87 (1) EPC.